A r iz o n a S ta te U n iv e r s it y s ta te p re s s Vol. 69 NO. 83 • Copyright, State Press, T e m p e , A riz o n a 1987 Friday, February 6,1987 Demonstrators gather near Nevada Test Site; 10 Arizonans arrested By KER R Y FEH R State Press MERCURY, Nev. - About 10 Arizonans and 400 other demonstrators joined forces Thursday with actor Martin Sheen, singer Kris Kristofferson and scientist Carl Sagan by Ignoring police warnings and crossed into the Nevada Test Site. About 400of the 2,000people gathered from across the country for the day-long demon­ strations and were arrested for trespassing on the test site. Peace activists chanted ‘'Stop testing now!" and "Give peace a chance" to a pack of Nye County Sheriff's Office policemen, who unemotionally handcuffed protesters and assisted them into white buses with U.S. Government license plates. The buses shuttled the arrested protesters to Beatty County, about 65 miles north of the test site, where they were booked and issued citations. Justice officials set arraignment dates, at which time the protesters may plea either guilty, not guilty or no contest. ASU- junior social work m ajor Jayne Rowley, president of United Campuses to Prevent Nuclear War, senior history major Scott Miller and sophomore political science major Tracy Drake were among the ASU students arrested at the mass demonstration. Junior elementary education major Cathy Moran, who was arrested during the Nov. 12, 1985, protest in Nevada, also crossed the line and was arrested. Rowley received cheers from fellow dem­ onstrators lining a barbed-wire fence. She was one of the first in the Arizona delegation to Cross the line. Rowley was arrested smiling brightly and shaking her handcuffed hands in the air as a sign of victory.: Her first act of civil dis­ Todd Groon/Stoto Prow Jayne Rowley, Junior social science major, and S cott Miller, senior history major, relinquish their sign and prepare to cross the line and enter the Nevada Test Site. Both were arrested Thursday for trespassing. Todd Qreen/State Press Hordes of protesters gathered at the Nevada Test Site in Mercury, Nev., Thursday to protest nuclear testing. More than 2,000 people gathered to demonstrate and perform acts of civil disobedience by trespassing on test-site property. obedience will earn her either a fine between $150 to $250 or six days in Beatty County Jail. On the other hand, ASU graduate Keith Shcolnik will face a stiffer penalty because by trespassing Thursday, he committed his fourth misdemeanor offense. Shcolnik could receive the maximum penalty of a $1,000 fine or six months in jail. Shcolnik’s mother, Deanna Kahn, also was arrested. She was on campus last week urging ASU students to attend the rally. Many of the approximately 70 Valley res­ idents, Including at least 10 ASU students, did not cross the test site property line. Before the demonstration, peace activists urged the arrested protesters to "do the time, rather than pay the fine.” Earlier, two members of Greenpeace, an environmental group, landed a hot air balloon into the desert test site. County police arrested the men and escorted them off the property. Meanwhile, five counterprotesters stood by the property line holding signs saying “Proud new citizens sick of anti-nuke pro­ testers" and “Hooray for Nye County D.A.,” re ferrin g to the newly-elected d istrict attorney, who has said he will take a hard line against demonstrators. Before the arrests, protesters bearing signs from M issouri, T exas and C alifornia gathered in front of a stage to listen to national celebrities, six members of the U.S. Congress, the medical profession and pro­ Confidential poll indicates alcohol most frequently used drug at ASU By B E N M c C O N N E L L and KER R Y FEH R State Press ASU’s reputation as one of the nation’s top party schools was challenged by statistics in a University drug-use survey released Thursday. About 600ASU students responded to the confidential survey taken in fall of 1985. Although it indicated alcohol Is the most frequently used drug on campus, the ASU students surveyed drink 5 percent less often than other college students in the United States. Alcohol consumption at ASU is followed in popularity by nicotine and marijuana use. The 183-question survey found cocaine use among ASU students surveyed to be slightly higher than other college students in the country. S. Leellen Brigman, research coordinator for the Student Affairs office, said the ASU survey is modeled after a 10-year national study of drug use among high school and college students conducted by the University of Michigan Institute for Social Research. The Michigan study tracked the behavior of high school students for four years after graduation in 1975. The ASU survey was broken into 19 sections. In the first 17 sections, students were asked for a history of drug use. The 18th section asked how the student perceived the risks of drug use. The fin al* s e c tio n asked demographic questions. The State Frees has compared 1985 ASU figures, which the the researchers consider a representative sample, to 1985 figures among college students in the national survey. A margin of error was not indicated in the s.tudy. While the ASU survey also shows more students use stayawake pills and psychedelics than the average college student, It shows marijuana use among the students surveyed to be markedly lower than the national average. The ASU survey showed 87 percent of the respondents had consumed alcohol during the year, compared to 95 percent nationally. The ASU students had their first drink in high school at age 16, the survey showed. Thirty percent of the ASU students surveyed had smoked marijuana in 1985,11 percent below the national figure. More than 100 students of the 600 surveyed had used cocaine in 1985,1 percent higher than the national figure. Sixty-one percent of the respondents said they had smoked a cigarette at least once, at the initial age of 17, but only 19 percent had smoked in the 30 days before taking the survey. Brigman, who conducted the survey with Robin W. Knox, a School of Social Work fatuity associate, said 1,200 students were mailed a questionnaire in a stratified random sample. Brigman said the selection was skewed to Include more students who live close to campus. The results will be used in developing a substance abuse program through the Student Health Center, she said. Monty Roth, Student Health Center director, said the results Turn Ip SURVEY, page •. peace groups decry nuclear weapons testing and the defense policy of President Reagan’s administration. Sagan said: “The administration has a sequence of excuses as to why the U.S. cannot stop testing, which are dem onstrably ignorant... and insulting to the U.S. people. ‘‘We need to make the administration come to its senses," he said. Sheen, who was arrested in Nevada last month for intent to commit a crime, led protesters to hold hands and meditate for peace. Sheen said he was under a court order not to talk publicly about his plans to commit civil disobedience but did cross into the test site with other protesters. Kristofferson, who stood on the stage with­ out speaking, said afterward he was at the rally to ‘‘take some of the heat off of Martin." He said Sheen’s arrest for Intent to commit a crime sounded unconstitutional. Kristofferson said he had never partici­ pated in a protest before Thursday. Originally, demonstrators had planned ' their protest to coincide with the first nuclear weapons test of the year but were caught off guard when the Departm ent of Energy detonated the weapon Tuesday, two days earlier than planned and without notice. The Soviet Union had vowed to resume testing its nuclear weapons, ending its 18month test ban moratorium, if the United States tested during this month. inside today ASU WEATHER Clear skies with an expected high of 78 degrees. The expected low is 52. PAUL BARBERINI New federal laws will make eligibility for student financial aid stricter. Page 3 Buchwald........ ........................ 5 Comics ........................... 10 Entertain ment___...... ! !......... ..11 Police report........................ ........... 8 Sports........................ 17 Page 2 S tate Pi»«. Friday, February 6,1 9 8 7 today Meetings i Amnesty International will meet at 2:45 p.m. in the MU, Room 210. It is a general meeting and everyone is welcome. Sigma Sigma Sigma Sorority will have an informational table set up on Cady Mall from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Campus Aglow will meet from 10 a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Saturday at Danforth Chapel. Pam VeNard will share insights on daily living. Arizona Outing Club will hike the Superstition Mountains and beginners will rock-climb Cameiback Mountain Saturday. For more information, call the Arizona Outing Club hotline 990-0699. African Students Association will meet at 2 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. This is the time to be an active member. Pi Sigma Epsilon wilt meet at 5 p.m. on the second level of the MU for a perspective member meeting and a general meeting at 6 p.m. Omega Psl Phi will meet at 6 p.m. in the MU Graham Room. United Way gains funds from ‘Cam pus M an ’ via A S A S U ’s $1,000 check By M ICH AEL R O W ELL State Press M iscellaneous Alpha Kappa Psl Professional Business Fraternity will hold a car wash from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at Carl's Jr., located at Southern Ave and McClintock Dr. It will charge $2 for cars and $3 for vans. They will also hold an active / pledge picnic at 11 a.m. Sunday at Kiwanis Park. All members and alumni are invited. Sports The Rugby Club which trains on Sahuaro Field from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays, will play Emery Riddle at 1:30 p.m. in Prescott. Your support is welcomed and everyone is invited to the party afterwards. For more information, call 968-6436. Sky walker A metal worker welds connections to help complete the skeletal frame of the two story addition to the Tem pe Police Building on 5th Street, east of Mill Avenue. Andy Mrozindd/8t«te Pro s O u r th re e -y e a r a n d tw o -y e a r s c h o la r s h ip s w o n ’t m ake c o lle g e e a s ie r . Ju st e a sie r to p a y fo r. Even if you didn't start college on a scholarship, you could finish on one. Arm y R O T C Scholarships pay for full tuition and allowances for educational fees and textbooks. A lo n g with up to $1,000 a year. G et all the facts. BE ALL Y O U G A N BE. • A R M Y RESERVE OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS CALL M A JO R LINDA STAGGS ^ 965-3318, O ld Main Associated Students donated $1,000 to ASU’s United Way campaign Thursday. ASASU President Chris Cummiskey presented the check to Community Relations Director Jim Hill. The money was donated to the University through ASASU by the producers of “Campus Man,” a film shot here last semester by RKO Pictures, as a result of the student government’s efforts to recruit 2,000 extras for the film’s finale. Jeff Yehle, an ASASU presidential assistant and organizer of the extras recruitment, said nearly 4,000 students turned out for the shoot. Hill said it was the first time student government donated money to the University’s drive. He said the donation helped bring ASU’s total 1986 pledges to $120,364, a University record. State Press Friday. February 6.1987 ASA to fight bonding request if tuition hike ratified By TINA DAUN T State Press If Gov. Evan Mecham’s proposed $120 tuition increase and financial aid cuts are approved by the Arizona Legislature, the Arizona Students Association will fight the $200 million bonding request for campus construction. Chris Cummiskey, ASA member and president of Associated Students, said ASA wants to abolish future construction on campus if students will have to “foot the bill” through tuition increases. He said students are feeling the sting of budget cuts now and also are facing a $60 tuition increase already approved by the Arizona Board of Regents. And Cummiskey said present and future bonding requests will force even larger tuition increases. “I realize bonding is necessary for the growth of the University,” he said. “But we’re faced with a showdown.” “Either you eliminate classes or you eliminate construction. If you cancel classes and continue building, the students don’t get what they paid for. ” ‘If you cancel classes and continue building, the students d o n ’t get what they p a id for.’ — C h ris Cum m iskey ASÜ issued $146 million in bonds in 1986 for the construction of about nine buildings, Cummiskey said. But ASU President J. Russell Nelson said ASU must build to keep up with increasing enrollment: “The money is not used on frivolous projects,” he said. “The buildings are needed by both faculty and students. “When I first came to ASU (in 1981), the University was 1.5 million square feet short of what was needed.” Last fall, Arizona’s three university presidents requested a $96 tuition increase for 1987-88 to offset the bonding debt. A $60 compromise was reached, but Cummiskey said the amount is too small to cover the debt. “The money raised from the tuition increase will only be used to service the debt instead of investing in new programs,” he said. “The students will never see that money.” Regents President Jack Pfister said he is in favor of the $200 million in bonding, but he fears the Legislature will not approve the funding. “Now is a perfect time to build because the interest rate is so low, but at the last regents meeting, Mecham expressed some concern as to whether the state would be able to grant the bonding,” Pfister said. “As it stands, we might not get it anyway.” Hostage negotiator Waite seen in southern Beirut suburb By The A ssociated Press BEIRUT, Lebanon — Two taxi drivers said they saw missing hostage negotiator Terry Waite walking in a southern Beirut suburb Thursday with an escort of about 10 gunmen and four turbaned Shiite Moslem sheiks. Waite, the 6-foot-7 Anglican Church envoy, was last seen by reporters Jan. 20 when he left the Riviera Hotel in west Beirut to meet the kidnappers of two Americans. Since then, Waite has not contacted the church or Ids family. The taxi drivers, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told The Associated Press they saw Waite walking with his escorts in a street close to the Lebanese capital’s airport bighway.at about 3 p.m. Thursday. “I saw him smiling and waving his hand to onlookers as he walked. He wore a gray raincoat,” said one witness. “I stopped my taxicab to watch, but the escorts waved me away, shouting: ‘Don’t stop. Drive on.’ I did.” Waite wore a raincoat when he was last seen by reporters. Another taxi driver said he saw Waite at the same time in the same procession, smiling and waving his right arm to onlookers on the left side of the street. Both drivers work in the neighborhood of the Riviera Hotel, where Waite stayed between his arrival in Lebanon on Jan. 12 and the time he dropped from sight Jan. 20. Waite came to Beirut to try to win the freedom of foreign hostages. A total of 26 foreigners, including eight Americans, are missing and presumed kidnapped in Lebanon. Many are believed held by Shiite Moslem captors. The taxi drivers said that before Waite’s disappearance, they had frequently seen him walking on the beach or traveling in a motorcade. “I haven’t the slightest doubt about his identity. I know him and I saw him this afternoon,” one driver said. There have been a spate of conflicting reports about Waite. In West Germany, the mass-circulation SH O W US YOUR STUDENT I.D. Y O U ’LL G ET A DINNER .1 . newspaperBild quoted unidentified “Beirut security circles” as saying Waite was shot and critically wounded after he tried to escape from captivity in Lebanon. The newspaper, in a report prepared for its Friday editions, did not say when the alleged shooting occurred or provide other details. Shiite and Druse militia officials in Beirut scoffed at the newspaper report. “It’s absolute fantasy,” said one militia official, who also spoke on condition of anonymity. Also Thursday, police and military officials in Beirut renewed their denial of any U.S. military action anywhere in Lebanon, following rumors that U.S. Marines were landing to attack Shiite guerrillas. “We have had no report of any such attack anywhere in Lebanon, yet,” a police official said. He spoke on condition of anonymity. The rumors were sparked by the presence of a flotilla of U.S. warships off Lebanon. Some Lebanese politicians and news media said the warships were ordered into the area to put pressure on groups holding foreign hostages. Two of those groups have threatened to kill their captives in response to an attack. In Washington, sources speaking on condition of anonymity said no attack on Lebanon was planned. The Reagan administration announced the aircraft carrier USS Kennedy would begin a port call in Israel on Friday and that four of the Kennedy’s escort warships had been ordered to sail for home. The Washington sources said one of two Marine amphibious groups now in the Mediterranean soon would also be allowed to head home. “We’re dropping back a bit because our presence there is being blown out of proportion with rumors of invasions,” one U.S. official said. The naval buildup occurred after the abduction of three Americans and an Indian in Moslem west Beirut late last month and Waite’s disappearance. ."V . T6XTIIC A R T S C €N T €R O F S C O T T S D A l€ Boots G eorge, M .A. Director Classes for the serious student: Coming in February: Introduction to Fabric Pointing, Katazome: Japanese Stencil Dyeing, Kuuik Printing, Puttin' on the Glitz, Silk Pointing: UUatercolor and Thickened Dye Methods, Point a Canvas Floor Cloth, Inkodye, Draining for Fabric Artists Tuition for most dosses is $45. Fee includes oil supplies. Coll 946-7632 for o doss schedule. This y ea r w e re do in g it ag ain ! Every Sunday (b u t ONLY on S un day). M ike Pulos of th e S p ag h etti C o m p an y wilt g ive you o n e FREE dinner* for e a c h dinner you order! It's our 2 for 1 SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL. A nd it's go od for th e w h ole school y e a r a t b o th our Tem pe a n d Phoenix locations. Any d a y of th e w eek, for lunch or dinner. The S p ag h etti C o m p an y is know n for a g re a t m ea l a t a n a ffo rd a b le price. But th e SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL m akes our a lre a d y terrific prices even better! O ur dinners in clu d e a full course m e a l w ith a ll th e trim m ings-from salad to dessert. So. d o lla r for d o llar, w hen you're hungry a n d you n e e d a b re ak , you c a n 't b e a t The S p ag h etti C om panyl ESPECIALLY O N SUNDAYS! W ith 2 dinners for th e p rice o f 11 But you MUST h ave your student I D. c a rd w ith you to ta k e a d v a n ­ ta g e of this offer. Open at 11:30 a.m. to 11:45 p.m. Sundays Supplies for the Textile Artist: Cold (Hater Dyes (Fiber Reactive) and additives, 3 brands of Textile Pigments, Cotton and Silk yordoge, Botiking supplies, Inkodyes, Disperse dyes, Transfer Crayons, Point Writers, Puff Point, Glitter pens, brushes, Rhinestones, Spray bottles, Gutta bottles, Books on Batik, Dyeing, Design, Quilting, and UUeaving and much morel Hours: Tues.-Sat. 10-5 • Thurs. 10-9 P.M. Phone: 946-7632 $ p a |g l i e t t i C p n fp a ity * r e s t a u r a n t H O E N IX th on Central Pasta McDowell 57-0380 i n 0 1 d T o w n t e 'm p e Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak Di Jon, Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Plcatta, Veal Marsala ARE NOT INCLUDED in the 2-for-1 special. 4th StT66t and M ill 966-3848 Fountain Square 4110 N. 70th Street, Suite 203 N.UJ. Corner of 70th Street and Indian School 10% DISCOUNT O N f i l l SUPPLIES AND TUITION FOR RSU STUDENTS AND FACULTVII WITH RSU I.D. Time to scrap Columbus Day Well, oné of Gov. Evan Mecham’s wonderful appointees just came out with yet another foot-in-mouth comment. According to Mecham’s education adviser Jim Cooper, the stodgy Mesan who served in the Arizona Legislature for years, teachers have no right to dissuade students who think this planet is flatter than a buckwheat pancake. “If that student wants to say the world is flat, the teacher doesn’t have the right to try to prove otherwise,” Cooper said. Brilliant logic, to say the least. However, we would like to support Cooper and say that rape, murder, stealing, incest, torture ancTbreaking any law on the books is OK as long as that person believes there is nothing wrong with it. But don’t forget about the simple facts in life. Arithmetic is no longer safe as 2 and 2 equals 1,008,987,734 . . . as long as one person believes it is OK. All satire aside, Cooper seems to imply that schools cannot teach anything. Why? Because if an ignorant parent teaches his child that dog is spelled p-t-m and the child, because of his or her innocence, believes the parent, the schoolteacher has no “right” to teach the child that dog is spelled d-o-g. Thanks, Mr. Cooper. You just set education back 2,000 years. Nevertheless, we should not be surprised by Cooper’s beliefs about education. While he was in the Arizona Legislature, Cooper made no bones about the fact that he was not sympathetic to the plight of students. He even spent a good deal of time fighting students when they wanted the student regent to have the right to vote. But Cooper doesn’t like students; we wonder if he even likes education. Regardless, Cooper’s statement about the “flat” earth is nothing more than idle banter and ludicrous at best. But no one should be surprised Cooper is Mecham’s education adviser; picking questionable people (e.g. Ted Humes) seems to be Mecham’s forte. Cooper’s statement should not have any impact on education in the state of Arizona. That is a blessing upon us. If it did, though, all we would have to do is believe that Jim Cooper does not exist. And no one would have the right to prove us wrong. ‘Real m en’ lacking true m asculine characteristics Question: What would Jesus Christ, Leonardo Da Vinci, Michelangelo, Benjamin Franklin and Plato have in common if they were alive today in the United States? Answer: They would not be considered “real men.” Despite what many claim, masculinity is not a factor of how much alcohol you consume and whether you are ready to “knock a few commies off.” Instead, it is a factor of being human and treating other people the way you wish to be treated. Unfortunately, many insecure men feel their masculinity threatened when other males do things that don’t fit the status quo. I will use myself as an example. My idea of a good time is to read an Agatha Christie murder-mystery next to a blazing fire, drinking V.S.O.P. cognac and listening to my newest compact disk of Chopin’s piano creations. But, according to some men, that is unmanly and I should burn the book, grab a beer and chuck a football around in the front yard while yelling “ Hey, chickie-babes” , to every woman that walks by. Oh, boy. I can’t wait to get out of class so I can act like a complete jackass and refer to women as “broads” or “dames,” talk about how many times I “scored” this weekend and then follow it up by (in a serious tone) talking about the infatuation I have with penis size. But, then again, I have been told I am not a “real m an.” A few years ago, a book titled “Real Men Don’t Eat Quiche” hit the best-seller list as it took a satirical approach to “real men.” Unfortunately, these “real men” did not get the inside joke (but with their small brains who can expect them to do so) and are forever trapped in a life of rigidity and chauvinism. I, on die other hand, cannot thank my mother enough for teaching me how to cook, sew, clean, shop for bargains and wash clothes. Let’s face it. A lot of “real men” are out there Patrick J. Kucera O pinion Editor washing jeans with underwear (I never knew Fruit of the Loom made blue undies) or buying a box of all-temperature Cheer so they can read the back of the box to see what temperature to wash fragile permanent press (hey, guys, it’s cold to warm, depending on the type of fabric). Nevertheless, Jack Armstrong is turning in his grave at the sight of a man who is sewing or cleaning house or cooking Coq Au Vin (hey, guys, that’s chicken in a heavy red sauce). But whatever the problem these “real men” have, there is nothing as gut-wrenching as how these “real men” treat women. They conclude that in order to build their masculinity up, they have to put women down. You all know the type. “Women should be barefoot and pregnant,” they say. “I can’t wait to get married so my wife can cook and clean and so that I won’t have to do that sissy stuff,” they claim. Boy, these guys are really “men” — men in the strongest sense of the word. They are the same type of “real men” that believe a woman cannot be a friend or pal or buddy, but is a hunk of meat to have intercourse with for daily sexual gratification. (I guess all priests, ministers or men who believe in the traditional vows of love and honor are not “real men.” Pity.) But let’s (Hill those six historical figures into 20th-century America and see what happens. Well, Jesus would be ridiculed by these “real men” because he defended women many times. “Hey, Jeeeez, old pal, why’d you defend that broad?” the “real men” say. “She’s nothing more that a good time on a lonely Friday night. ” Da Vinci and Michelangelo would be ridiculed because both liked to do arts and crafts and we certainly wouldn’t want any male getting involved with painting flowers. The next thing you would know, they would open a flower shop in Tempe. Then, there was Benjamin Franklin, one of our founding fathers. But what’s this? According to some history books, Franklin passed the time away sewing and even dabbled in embroidery. So what we get is these “real men” feeling threatened because their Texas-sized egos are Competing against “nonreal men.” Someone asked me if I get upset when people challenge my masculinity because I like to cook or shop or do things other than get drunk, have sex and degrade other people, especially women. No, not really. I get a little concerned because I sometimes think that in 1987 we should have gotten over this phase of “Treating people like trash makes me a man.” But if I ever have any doubts about being a “real man,” I just read Galatians 3:28 in the New Testament which states, “There is neither Jew nor Greek; there is n e i t h e r slave nor free man; there is neither male nor female; for you all are one in Jesus Christ.” If my Lord does not care if I am one of the “real men, ” then why should I care about what others think of my “non-real man” pleasures. Now, if you will excuse me, there is a glass of 1952 Johannesburg Rheisling (hey, guys, that’s a type of white wine) , a serving of Chicken Kiev, an Agatha Christie murdermystery and a tape of Vivaldi’s “The Four Seasons” that need my attention. letters In the heart Editor: I am not normally the easily excitable type. I consider myself pretty laidback, secure in my faith in God and I live comfortably moderate in this materialistic world. The most important and sensitive issues in my life are to be able to share, love my friends and family and just be able to care about nature and mankind. I know I am not perfect, but I pray for God’s guidance and I try to envision God as being something much more greater than anything we could possibly identify with here on earth. While reading the article in the State Press concerning the pope’s visit and the ASU mascot (Sparky), I found myself pressing my lips together and raising my left eyebrow, shaking my head, thinking “not another one of those insecure, boring types that have little else to do with thentime than sensationalize something of importance into something trivial.” I often wonder why these people waste their time sensationalizing things the way they do. Are they bored? Have they nothing better to do with their lives? Are they tired of dealing with rejection and driven by the N o m ore bun tickling perils of insecurity just to be recognized at anybody’s expense? But I wonder how many people really give a damn about whether the ASU mascot is colorfully standing out in its pride and glory while the pope is giving his Mass. If you are going to see the pope and join him in Mass, then why would it m atter where it was held or what were the decor? I would think you would want to experience the pontiff’s gracious presence most of all, right? Giving you guys the benefit of the doubt, I would hope that your determination in this m atter is in reverence to the pope, not Sparky. Sometimes I wonder when I read these things where you really are placing your faith. I mean, do you honestly believe that if the world were crumbling to bits that it would make a difference where we are or what we are doing? I think it is where we are in the heart, my friends. Let us get to the heart of the matter. You know, how we feel on the inside — the very essence of our faith and love of God. Dan Richards Journalism Editor: I often find myself looking to the Tempe police reports rather than the comic strips for a good laugh. It is a saddening thought to think the police reports contain such idiotic cases, such as the woman’s buttocks that were tickled on Jan. 28. This is a gross example of a police report. A police report should inform the public of what is happening in and around their neighborhood and what the public should be concerned about. I don’t consider the reports published to be in the best interest of the public. Although the woman was harassed and robbed of $2, the State P r e s s could just as easily printed a less amusing and distasteful account of a burglary. The paper then went on to tell of a person entering a residence through a dog door and a woman spraying a man with mace. In the future, it would seem more appropriate and beneficial to print the more serious atrocities, so that we, the public, could be on the lookout for crime offenders A le x is W ilson Freshman, Economics S tan d a rd letter for Ritter haters Editor: I am writing this letter to voice my displeasure with Mike Ritter’s depiction of (write name of burning social issue here) in the (write date of publication here) issue of the State Press. While Mr. Ritter’s cartoons are usually tasteful, intelligent and thought-provoking, this one has transgressed all reasonable boundaries—it satirizes one of MY beliefs! Although I fully recognize and support Mr. Ritter’s freedom of speech, I do 110 think he should be able to use it in ways i find offensive. In future, the editorial staff s h o u ld hear my voice above that of the U.S. C o n s t it u t e and should exercise their “control” on mi Ritter when he creates garbage of this type M ic h a e l N orton Junior, Business State Press Page 5 Friday, February 6,1987 Snow Plow Initiative will help U.S. gain on Soviets Despite what the president said last week, the country doesn’t need a Star Wars program — it needs a Snow Plow Initiative. All Mr. Reagan had to do was look out the window of his limosine to realize the Capitol had been brought to a grinding halt without one Soviet missile being fired. The idea of having enough snow-clearing equipment for Washington, D.C. has always been a dream of government scientists, many who live outside the Beltway. Werner Zamblowski, a leading voice for developing the Snow Plow Initiative, claims it is not only feasible to produce such a system with present technology, but it is absolutely necessary considering the snow job the Soviets are doing on Moscow. “The United States has the technical know-how to remove the snow from its streets,” he said in his thick German accent “It’s just a question of getting Congress to pay for it. To dump tomorrow AT CORNERSTONE ". A rt Buchw ald Los Anseles Times Syndicate we must be willing to invest in the future today. Our children and their children must never be snowed in. And I see the day when Washington’s honorable mayor will actually be in town with the snowstorm comes. ” Opponents of the Snow Plow Initiative believe SPI is unrealistic. Ja rre ll Jerryboam is opposed because he doesn’t think snow removal in Washington has any future. “Once the first snowflake hits the ground,” he says, “everyone in the nation’s Capitol panics. It doesn’t matter how many snowplows you deploy, they’re only going to be blocked by people taking early leave THE °T he° fo r n e r s to n R ESTABLISHED1994 mé H OURS: SHOP 829-1743 from the Pentagon. ” Jerryboam showed satellite photographs of last week’s storm to prove that snowplows are not the anwer to snow removal. “It takes more than equipment to deter snow. The truth is that there is no response to a Washington snowfall because the chance of human error is too great.” Secretary of Defense Cap Weinberger, caught in a storm on the George Washington Parkway, told reporters in an off-the-record wiener roast that Moscow has three times as many snowplows as Washington. These plows have a throw-weight capable of clearing a six-lane highway from Pinsk to Minsk in less than an hour. Asked why Washington is so short on trucks and bulldozers, and the Soviets so big on them, Weinberger blamed liberals soft on snow for drifting from one crisis to another. He told Ted Koppel, who happened to be on the parkway doing a snow-removal report, Gino’s Roadnuuier Pizza & Subs M -F 10-9 Sat. 10-8 Sun. 12-6 F ast Free D elivery U nder New M anagem ent E xpanded M enu I I l I I I I *20.00 off any pair of V uarnet su n g la sse s in stock. E xp ires 2-20-87. Graduate USa a^ o- A T T E N T I O N COLLEGES, DEPARTM ENTS AND S TU D Y CEN TERS "MONEY-FOR-CRAD-RESEARCH-AVAILABLE" The Graduate student Research Program encourages graduate stu­ dents to submit proposals between $200 and $2,000 for research study monies. Spring semester applications are available February 2 through March 6,1987 in the Graduate student Association Office, Memorial union, Room 208. spring semester applications must be submitted no later than 12 noon on March 6,1987. The application must be submitted t o : Office, Dean o f Graduate college Wilson Hall 112 A committee composed o f graduate students and faculty members will review proposals using the following criteria: 1) is the research meritorious within its own field? 2) is the research methodology sound? 3) Are the objectives o f the project feasible to attain within the grant period and the proposed budget? 4 ) Are other sources o f funding available to the student? The program provides university support, as well as financial support and provides graduate students experience in writing and submitting grant proposals. The program attracts graduate students and is helping prom ote ASU’s national recognition as a major research ^ For further information contact Amy Abraham, Director, Graduate Student Association, Associated students, Memorial Union 208. “We’re paying the price for 20 years of salt and sand neglect.” I called the White House and asked where the president stood on a Snow Plow Initiative. A spokesman replied, “The president’s dream has always been to leave a clean Washington behind when he finished his term. He plans to go on television next week and deny that any U.S. snow-removal equipment was sold to Iran. In an address to the nation, the president will express sympathy for those who suffered during the past week and he intends to read a letter from a little girl who couldn’t go to school and pray because of the snowstorms and the Supreme Court. Finally, he will cite a true national hero — a driver of a tow truck who was buried in an embankment for three days on 1-66. When he was dug out, he was asked by the highway patrol if he had any message for the American people and he said, ‘Send me more snow.’ ” FREE C O K E Get a free quart of Coke when you buy any large or medium pizza or any 2 subs or hot sandwiches with this coupon. ! F R E E 1 2 ” P IZ Z A G e t a f re e 1 2 -in c h c h e e s e p iz z a w h e n y o u b u y a n y 1 o r m o r e ite m 1 6 -in c h p iz z a w ith th is c o u p o n . (N o t valid with any other coupon.) (N ot valid with any other coupon.) Expires 3-1-87. Expires 3-1-87. H Gino’s R oadrunner Pizza & Subs • I I I I I I 8 2 2 S. M ill Ave. Roadnm ner P izza Sörth 820-3612 2 3 W . B aseline 966-4666 Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-l a.m. Fri. & Sat. 11 a.m.-2 a.m. Sun. noon-m idnight O w n th e s k y To fly is one tiling. To fly with the Marine Corps is something else. They’ll show you die meaning ofwings. From die wings of the F-18 Hornet to the wings you wear as aM arine aviator, this is flying at its best. And your ticket to fly is your college diploma. Ifyou’d lik eto b eu p there, contact your local Marine Officer Selec­ tion Officer. 261-3880. S ee M arine C o rp s representative from 11a.m .-2 p.m. on C a d y M all Feb. 11 and 12. M arin e s \Wrelookingforafew goodmen. 1 Page 6 Friday, February 6 ,1 9 8 7 R evision s hurt potential financial aid applicants B yA A R Y N KEM P S ta te P re s s Stricter federal requirements for student financial aid eligibility will cause some students to reach deeper into their pockets next semester, an ASU official said. Paul Barberini, director of student financial assistance, said aid eligiblity requirements are now more restrictive due to the 1986 reauthorization of the Higher Education Act. Barberini said the act will affect students who will be applying for aid in the 1987-88 academic year. Most students get aid from August to May, so the new rules will affect students applying at the end of the spring semester. “It is always important to apply early for aid,” Barberini said. “But since the eligibility requirements have changed, it takes an additional four to six weeks for the analysis process to take place.” He said students should apply for financial aid by May 1 to be eligible for next semester. “We had 11,000 borrowers for die 1986-87 academic year, and my guess is that next year, 3,000 of those will not be eligible because of the new eligibility requirements,” Barberini said. He said the revision of the act has redefined the “independent student.” Independent students must prove they have not been claimed on their parents’ income tax for the previous two years before the award year, and they must document that they have earned $4,000 each year during those two years. Previous law only required independent status for one year, and there was no earning requirement. Barberini said it will be very hard to establish independence under the new rules. ‘It is always im portant to apply early for aid. B ut since the eligibility requirem ents have changed, it takes an additional four to six weeks for the analysis process to take place.’ — P au l Barberini “It impacts those who have already severed financial relationships with their parents and now have to satisfy a new set of rules,” he said. “Most college students do not earn $4,000 a year.” Students are automatically independent if they are a graduate, professional or married student not listed on hisher parents’ income tax forms as a dependent for the award year, or a student who has other legal dependents. Students who are age 24 or older, an orphan or ward of the court, a veteran of the U.S. Armed Forces or a certified independent by the financial aid administrator for extenuating circumstances are also deemed independent. The Higher Education Act also limits the amount of money students can receive in the form of Guaranteed Student Loans, Barberini said. “Many students will find it difficult to receive the same level of awards as they did in previous years,” he said. “This occurs because all students must demonstrate financial need for the major loan programs. ’’ Barberini said federal grant eligibility will be more restrictive to low income students both by definition of “exceptional need” and reduced appropriations. By implication, middle income students (students whose parents earn $15,000 or more a year) will be nearly eliminated from federal grant eligibility, he said. ASU juniors and seniors will also have to maintain a 2.0 grade point average in order to receive aid, he said. The act does not dictate a GPA requirement for freshman and sophomores. “We can help individual cases through appeals, but it is important that students apply earlier than before,” Barberini said. Barberini said annual and aggregrate borrowing limits have been increased by 50 percent. GSL loan limits, for example, that were $2,500 for all undergraduates, are now $2,625 for freshmen and sophomores and $4,000 for juniors and seniors. Limits were raised from $5,000 to $7,500 for graduate students. “Hopefully, the potential for greater borrowing will compensate for reduced grants and increases in educational expenses,” he said. “It is clear that students will borrow more, and difficulty in loan repayments will be increased as well.” Barberini said the University will be required to provide loan counseling to borrowers of all loan programs. About 5,000 to 6,000 students will need this service annually, he said. “We will be sending inserts and general brochures to students this spring, explaining the changes in the loan process,” he said. Financial aid counselors are available in the financial aid office oh the first floor of Matthews Center. Survey-__ __ Continued from page 1. will be used in the center’s Alcohol and Substance Abuse Intervention P rogram , which was developed two years ago to provide education and counseling. “Alcohol is the biggest misused drug,” Both said. “We know that from other campus surveys.” Roth said the survey will indicate whether the program is targeting the correct problems. Betty Turner Asher, vice-president for student affairs, said most universities rely P on national surveys for drug education. ASU stands out because “we felt we needed to take a bold risk for the purpose of planning programs.” Although ASU is slightly higher than the national average for cocaine use, Asher said, “There have been several highly publicized cocaine deaths nationally since our survey was taken, and we think it is likely that cocaine use has declined. ” And while the survey shows ASU ranks lower nationally in overall drug use, the re searc h ers suggested “ additional i l o l a GOOD NEWS! educational and intervention programming should be directed toward our students in the areas of cocaine and tranquilizer use.” C. Russell Duncan, ASU director of public safety, said it is too early to tell if the survey statistics reflect his perceptions of drug use on campus. EVERY WEEKDAY MORNING “I’ll have to talk with my enforcement people in the field first,” Duncan said. “We want to find out what the norm is in Mesa, Scottsdale and Phoenix before we compare any numbers. state press * a n d m is s y o u v e r y m u c h ! * fro m "In e v e ry t h i n g w ill o f G O D in g iv e th a n k s ; f o r C h r is t J e s u s — 1 t h is Z a n is c o n c e r n in g th e y o u . " T h e s s a lo n ia n s 5 : 1 8 e State Press Page 7 Friday, February 6,1987 L a w c o u n se l s a y s w e a p o n s traded for sile n c e Kerry, D-Mass., released a report naming 12 of the defendants as possible participants in contra-related criminal activity. Sheehan said, in trying to establish the framework and context in which the Pastora bombing occurred, the firm will use its subpoena power “to Uncover the historical pattern of criminal racketeering on the part of those. . .who have been guilty of generating the malaise that has captured our country for 25 years. ” Deeming it “structural sin,” Sheehan said the secret teams have operated for decades in violation of U.S. neutrality laws to eliminate the world’s communist forces. In March 1984, Congress passed the Boland Amendment which formally prohibits departm ent officials from assisting the contras. “Are people violating the law when the president says ‘yes,’ and Congress say ‘no?’ ” he asked. “Are you telling us the White House has the authority to kill others to better their own interests? “We say no.. Just like Mr. and Mrs. Reagan tell us, just say no. ” Sheehan said the Christie Institute wants to “shine the light on the deep dark world and expose it.” “Is this indeed going to be something similar to the Watergate crisis?” he asked the subdued audience. “Is this going to lead to the impeachment of a president, vice president and attorney general? Is this going to lead to the imprisonment of a number of high-level government officials as it did in Watergate? “The answer to all of those is yes.” Former hostage may have revealed U.S. plans to help anti-communists By KIM M ATTINGLY State Press The United States was blackmailed into sending weapons to contra forces in Iran to cover up 25 years of secret U.S. operations, the general counsel of a Washington publicinterest law firm said Thursday. Daniel Sheehan, general counsel and public policy director of the Christie Institute, said the United States handed over the weapons because government officials feared hostages might reveal secret operations. “ (The United States) did not trade weapons for hostages,” he said. “We traded weapons for sUence. ” Sheehan told an audience of about 200 at the ASU College of Law’s Great Hall that government officials began negotiations to free hostages in Lebanon after the 1984 kidnapping of then CIA chief of station in Lebanon, William Buckley. He said Buckley knew about secret teams of former and current government agents who have trafficked arm s and narcotics since 1959 to support anti-communist insurgencies around the world. Sheehan said that is why 40 tractor-trailer loads of arms, or “hush money,” was shipped to Iran after Buckley was tortured to death on videotape in Tehran. Sheehan said the weapons w ere transferred “months after Mr. Buckley was dead” because U.S. intelligence feared the kidnappers would reveal what Buckley, said on the videotape. The extent of Buckley’s knowledge is spelled out in a 95-page affidavit filed last month in Miami by the Christie Institute. The $23.8 million civil suit was brought by Tony Avirgan and Martha Honey, a husband-and-wife journalist team, against two dozen contra leaders and several former CIA and military officials. The lawsuit, filed in May after a two-year investigation, stems from the May 1984 bombing of a press conference held by contra leader Eden Pastora in which five people were killed and two dozen injured,including Avirgan and Honey. Pastora allegedly was targeted for assassination because he refused to take up arms with a rival contra faction he considered a puppet of the CIA. During his lecture, Sheehan described a series of U.S. covert operations that linked secret U.S.-backed teams to thousands of a s s a s s in a tio n s and q u e stio n a b le negotiations in Central America and Southeast Asia. Sheehan said President Reagan was briefed on the secret teams in meetings chaired by Attorney General Edwin Meese, and attended by former CIA director Stephan Mounteer/Stete Pr«» Christie Institute attorney Daniel Sheehan spoke In the College of Law Thursday about 25 years of secret operations and assassinations leading to today's Iranian arms scandal. William Casey and Vice President George Bush when he was elected in 1981. Under the Racketeering and Corrupt Organization Act, Sheehan said the Christie Institute was vested with federal subpoena power to “go after the members of this secret teams’ criminal enterprise.” The lawsuit names 29 men, mostly U.S. citizens, as defendants who allegedly have planned and carried out illegal covert operations, including assassinations and terrorist bombings throughout the world. In October 1986, the office of Sen. John W If / / 's s o t.v tsy t() p l a y G a ll y o u i n e a r e s t D o m i n o ’s F’i z z a s t o r t i for d e ta ils t-— --------- « D o m i n o ’s P iz z a ■ D e l i v e r s '? . COMING SOON TO ASU Contest begins February 9 Win a pizza party for your floor! The Contestants: The M ig h ty M e a l D e a l. *2.99.* Two big, juicy pieces of our original or new spicy chicken. Plus Two individual size side items. Choose from corn, fries, pie, mashed potatoes and gravy, cole slaw, and okra. Plus One 16-oz. drink. . a heapin’ helping of hearty hot and it’s ready when you are. >donly at 1135 E. Apache, Tampa (corner of Terrace & Apache) The Contest: Domino’s Pizza will award free, 25 large pizzas and $50.00 cash for liquid refreshments to the group purchasing the most pizzas starting February 9 and running through March 22. The Rules: 1. Carry-out orders and all deliveries made from your area’s Domino's Pizza store will be counted if we are given your group's name and address. 2. Any pizza over $10.00 will be counted twice. 3. The winning group’s name wiH be published in the local newspaper. 4. The location and time of the party will be convenient to both the winners and Domino's Pizza 5. The 25 pizzas will be 1-item pizzas. The winner 967-3798 for catering and ed prices for special events. tax. For each mixed order Deal, add 30«. For each all-white I Offer good for a limited time only. ja will have the choice of items. T he pizzas do not have to be the same. Manzanita (2 winners) Palo Verde West Palo Verde East Pak) Verde Main Sahuaro Ocotillo + Mariposa (2 winners) Hayden + Irish McClintock Best Choila (2 winners) Fraternities (2 winners) All floors in each group listed above compete with each other. Watch the State Press for weekly updates. a B Ö z < ï N OÜ o a. D om ino’s Pizza Delivers.“. . Fast... Free. THE PIZZA PEOPLE O F A.S.U. Fast, Free Delivery7 968-5555 903 S. Rural Rd. HOURS: 11:00am-1:30am Sun.-Thurs. 1100am-2:30am Fri. & Sa t Our drivers cany less than $20.00 Limited delivery area •1987 Domino s Pizza, Inc. State Pim m Page 8 MU gift shop opens door for cam pus convenience 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 ' RENT By R O B E R T K O S C H E K A State Press ASU students can shop for a last-minute gift or card right on campus in the MU’s latest addition — the Follett Gift Shop. The shop, which opened Jan. 19 on the MU’s lower level, offers a variety of products from coffee mugs to curling irons. Shop M anager Donna Keller said students and faculty are happy with the store’s selection, service and convenient location. “They are pleased that we sell the gifts and cards that they need,” Keller said. “Business has been very good.” The gift shop sells T-shirts, school supplies, magazines, gift wrap and candy. But the store’s mainstay is its vast selection of greeting cards, Keller said. The shop is owned by the F o llett Corporation in Chicago, which wanted to open a gift shop at ASU that students could visit during school hours. Keller said that the gift shop is not intended to compete with the ASU bookstore. She said Follett fe a tu re s a d iffe re n t inventory, and the bookstore does not sell greeting cards. BUY«SELL«TRADE COMPUTERS FOR IBM Compatibles Lowest Prices M-F 10-9 SAT 10-6 SUN 12-5 C h a n g in g H an d s CALL 371-8857 414 MIN Avenue 966-0203 Old Town Tempe PUBLIC NOTICE OPEN TO TH E PUBLIC CONDUCTED BY HOTEL-MOTEL FURNITURE LIQUIDATORS 36 HOUR FURNITURE SALE B R A N D N E W IN O R I G I N A L S E A L E D F A C T O R Y C O N T A I N E R S . SURPLUS FROM RECENT SALE AT H O LID AY IN NS, H O W A R D J O H N S O N S , R A M A D A & S H E R A T O N I N N S IN A R IZO N A CALIFORNIA, T E X A S , N E W M E X IC O , E T C . Steptwn Mounteer/SUte Press Kelli Kredlt an exerclee physiology sophomore looks for Just the right card In the new gift shop In the basement of the MU. A S U p o lic e report University police reported the following incidents in the 24-hour period ending 7 a.m. Thursday: •Police said someone stole a yellow 1986 Buick Century four-door car, valued at $10,000, from Lot 46. The man who was leasing the car from Hertz Rent-a-Car told police he and a friend were attending a conference at ASU and his friend left the keys in the car, police said. •A six-string Ibanez Lonestar Acoustic guitar and case, valued at $360, was stolen from a room at Palo Verde West Residence Hall, police said. Police said the thief probably entered the room through a window. •An ASU student’s daypack and red eelskin wallet containing various charge cards, ID cards and $130 was stolen from a locked office in the Aquatics Center, police said. Police said the estimated loss is $210. They are investigating the case. •Police arrested and charged a man for driving with fictitious license plates and a suspended license. An officer said he originally detained the man because his car was parked in a residence hall parking lot without a parking decal. Further investigation led to the arrest. •A student told police someone stole his blue Nishiki 10-speed bicycle, valued at $250, from the north side of Wilson Hall. Police said 20 minutes after the student reported the theft, he found the bike in some bushes. The student told police he saw two suspects flee the area as he was pulling his bike out of the bushes, police said. •A student told police someone took his daypack from the MU. It contained three textbooks, a w allet an d $1.50, a windbreaker, three notebooks and pictures. Police said students sitting by the man’s daypack did not see the thief. INCLUDES All 3PIECES • SOFA • lOVEStAT • CHAIR COMPLETE M AN Y OTHER 3-PC. LIVING ROOM SUITES, FAM ILY ROOM GROUPS, MODERN AND TRADITIONAL SUITES 197 CONVERSATIONAL SECTIONAL PJTBRW P Includetwo corner units, two armless chairs &ottoman Be here early for the best selection. ORIG V A L U E S TO $1000.00 R E D U C E D FO R T O T A L S E LLO U T with his pants unzipped. The women told police she was offended and scared. •A Tempe man was arrested for removing a food delivery man from his apartment without paying the full price, police said. Police said the man had the food delivered to his apartment, 525 S. Forest Ave., from Greasy Tony’s restaurant, 921E. University Drive. Police said the man only paid $2 of his $6.77 check and removed the delivery boy from the apartment. •An unknown m an peaked his head through the open window of a Tempe home and asked a women reading in bed to watch him, police said. The woman told police the man put his hands near his groin and appeared to be masturbating. She said she did not see the m an’s penis. — MIKE B U R G E S S CLASSIFIEDS 15 M atthew s C en ter W orth B asem en t 965-7572 M ANY OTHER STYLES, PA TTER N S AND FA B R IC S TO C H O O SE FROM . F R E E L A Y A W A Y UNTIL h state press ADVERTISING DESIGNED TO 6 0 WITH A N Y DECOR OR STYLE - L A U R E N M ILLETTE Tem pe p o lice report •A Tempe man was arrested for wreckless driving after he backed his pickup truck into a undercover Mesa police car, police said. Police said the man backed into the 1985 Cheverolet Monte Carlo while the Mesa police officer was doing surveillance work at 400 W. Baseline Rd. •A 17-year-old Tempe boy was arrested for stealing a 49-cent Slurpee from 7-11,1006 S. McClintock Drive, police said. •An unknown man exposed his erect' penis and masturbated in front of a Tempe woman, police said. Police said the woman noticed a man standing outside the arcadia door of her home, 811W. 13th St., and asked the man if she could help him. The woman told police the man said, “I must have the wrong door” and left. The woman then went outside to look around but did not see the man. She then went inside, shut the door, looked outside again and saw the man standing FLUSH DRAMATIC LUXURIOUS DECORATOR FABRICS BRAND NEW S h S FAMOUS POSTURE SERIES CO N TRACT FIRM VVKLTDWARRANTY $ A A FULL ..... 1 2 0 « pc V QUEEN . . . 1 4 9 « pc TWBNfcA PC KINO.. $ 4 9 i t pc PO STU RE-CLASSIC— FIRM FREE LAYAWAY IMPERIAL EXTRA FIRM • IO-YEARITOWARRANTY MEDICO-PEDIC—SUPER FIRM 15 VEANLTO warranty t w m m Tpc |WW..... tWn.pi.nMI «ahaSTEM FULL....... ¡nn.pt. Mill «UnS«K 8H S".......» n p c . rimi Vita M7U8 win....... ta n. pc. m m «ita m sK pc-. S O Q pull ........... ...............$ 4 9 « . pc. R J m V OUCEN... _____ $ 4 4 « . pc. TWINEAPC UNO....................$59«. pc. POSTURE-PROFILE-LUXURY FIRM j. $ C > 1 TWIN........HJ ta pc. MM «ata H4RM W "V JULI ...... 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DIRECTIONS: From S u p trtitio n firwy. « r ii Dab»— . O o Worth to BiMo d w a y C o m o to ra w building of Broodw ey Conto« batwaaci K -M o it A Bricé Club. Center opens; computer aid now available B ySH ELLY SCH AFFER State Press COMPASS, the computing assistance center in the second computing services trailer on Palm Walk, is sponsoring a drawing today to celebrate its grand opening. Academic Computing Specialist Jim Salverson said the computer center will end its week of grand opening activities with a series of drawings, including a $$00 grand-prize gift certificate for Computerland of Mesa. Other prizes include Dysan diskettes, Memorex diskettes and protective diskette holders. Salverson said COMPASS houses Academic Computing S e rv ic e s, In fo rm a tio n Center System s and a m icrocom puter softw are library with more th a n .50 c u rre n t c o m p u te r magazines and newsletters from other schools. “ COM PASS is a c o m b in a tio n of a microcomputer showroom and a library to provide assistance to micro and m a in f r a m e u s e r s of a c a d e m ic c o m p u tin g services systems,” he said. Salverson said students who take statistics or com puter program m ing courses find the center most useful. “There are write-ups on how to use the different systems like FORTRAN and PASCAL, ” Salverson said. He said COMPASS helps those who own personal computers to test software and to find suggestions for purchasing equipment. There are five campus sites for microcomputer networks where word processing and letter quality printers are available. “ I t ’s a re al han d ,” Salverson said. “If I were a student, I’d be using one.” In addition to the center’s permanent display, he said: “This month we have a laser printer and a desk-top publishing computer. We try out different topics that people expressed an interest in.” ASU offers a 20 percent to 50 percent discount on microcomputer purchases to faculty, staff and students, Salverson said. ASU students can enter a second drawing to win an International Business M a c h in e s p erso n al computer as a part of “ IBM Week” highlighting IBM microcomputer products. Students can enter the drawing at the center on Palm Walk anytime before the Feb. 27 drawing. Items displayed during IBM week include'the AT, XT and XT/286 computer models and the IBM Convertible, which is a tra n s p o r ta b le la p -to p personal computer that can be powered from a .battery pack or standard electrical outlet. DON’T FORGET! STATE PRESS "CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINES ARE 3 P.M. 2 DAYS PRIOR I . TO INSERTION /> , RUNDLE’S T ravel E x c u rsio n s p r e s e n t s LIQUORS a MKT. | 1 iJ lX X y lj 7 30 S. M IL L Corner M ill & S P R I N G B R E A K ’8 □ S k i R E N O PEARL BEER case DIAMONO WINE COOLER 2liter ANDRE CHAMPAGNES i PLAYBOY Used Magazines , ! 9 6 7 -9 0 7 9 1 McKELLIPS & SCOTTSDALE RDS. (ABCO Shopping Ctr.) □ S k i T A H O E $ 5 .9 9 $ 2 .3 5 ! $ 2 .9 7 $ .9 4 ! Haagen Oazs Natural Ice Cream, Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice, Wines, over 40 Imported Beers. !______ 7 University Ave. T ra n s fe rs , R e n t a c a r □ 4 N ig h t C r u is e t o E N S E N A D A , M E X I C O * 1 1 RENO......... $ 2 6 8 /person TAHOE . . . $ 3 9 5 /person CRUISE . . . $ 4 8 4 /person ! ___ 9 3 9 -5 3 4 4 \ i O pen 7 D ays \ STUDENT DISCOUNT 20% OFF DOT CLEANING S H O W I D. C A R D W IT H I N C O M I N G O R D E R Our new Friday specials SL00 No Holler Happy Hour 2pm~7pm ®1.001/3 ib. Build a B u r g e r ' Burgers >2 for 1.oo Corndogs & Tacos ® 1.oo Monster Beers ■®2.oo Jungle Juices ® 1.oo Teas ---------- 7pm - 9pm ----------- wm 25c BEERS * 5 0 c Drinks r 1.°° Teas r 1.oo M onster Beers AFTER HOURS 115am 3 3 0 am DEVIL HOUSE Page 8 State Pré«» Friday^Febfu«^6^t9^| MU gift shop opens door for cam pus convenience 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 RENT By R O B E R T K O S C H E K A State Press ASU students can shop for a last-minute gift or card right on campus in the MU’s latest addition — the Follett Gift Shop. The shop, which opened Jan. 19 on the MU’s lower level, offers a variety of products from coffee mugs to curling irons. Shop M anager Donna Keller said students and faculty are happy with the store’s selection, service and convenient location. “They are pleased that we sell the gifts and cards that they need,” Keller said. “Business has been very good.” The gift shop sells T-shirts, school Supplies, magazines, gift wrap and candy. But the store’s mainstay is its vast selection of greeting cards, Keller said. The shop is owned by the F ollett C orporation in Chicago, which wanted to open a gift shop at ASU that students could visit during school hours. Keller said that the gift shop is not intended to compete with the ASU bookstore. She said Follett f e a tu re s a d iffe re n t inventory, and the bookstore does not sell greeting cards. B U Y • S E L L • TRADE COMPUTERS FOR IBM Compatibles Lowest Prices M-F 10-9 SPRING BREAK f lO T - l i n e SAT 10-6 SUN 12-5 C h a n g i n g H ands CALL 371-8857 414 Mill Avenue 966-0203 Old Town Tempe 1- 8 0 0 - 5 2 1 -B E A C H PUBLIC NOTICE OPEN TO TH E PUBLIC CONDUCTED BY HOTEL-MOTEL FURNITURE LIQUIDATORS 36 HOUR FURNITURE SALE B R A N D N E W IN O R I G I N A L S E A L E D F A C T O R Y C O N T A I N E R S . SURPLUS FROM RECENT SALE AT H O LID AY INNS, H O W A R D J O H N S O N S , R A M A D A & S H E R A T O N I N N S IN ARIZONA, CALIFORNIA, T E X A S , N E W M E X IC O , E T C . Stephen Mounteer/State Press K e lli K red lt a n e x e rc ise p h y sio lo g y s o p h o m o re lo o k s fo r fust the right c a rd In the new gift s h o p In the basem ent o f the M U . A S U p o lic e report University police reported the following incidents in the 24-hour period ending 7 a.m. Thursday: •Police said someone stole a yellow 1986 Buick Century four-door car, valued at $10,000, from Lot 46. file man who was leasing the car from Hertz Rent-a-Car told police he and a friend were attending a conference a t ASU and his friend left the keys in the car, police said. •A six-string Ibanez Lonestar Acoustic guitar and case, valued at $360, was stolen from a room at Palo Verde West Residence Hall, police said. Police said the thief probably entered the room through a window. •An ASU student’s daypack and red eelskin wallet containing various charge cards, ID cards and $130 was stolen from a locked office in the Aquatics Center, police said. Police said the estimated loss is $210. They are investigating the case. •Police arrested and charged a man for driving with fictitious license plates and a suspended license. An officer said he originally detained the man because his car was parked in a residence hall parking lot without a parking decal. Further investigation led to the arrest. •A student told police someone stole his blue Nishiki 10-speed bicycle, valued at $250, from the north side of Wilson Hall. Police said 20 minutes after the student reported the theft, he found the bike in some bushes. The student told police he saw two suspects flee the area as he was pulling his bike out of the bushes, police said. •A student told police someone took his daypack from the MU. It contained three textbooks, a w allet and $1.50, a windbreaker, three notebooks and pictures. Police said students sitting by the m an’s daypack did not see the thief. M AN Y OTHER 3-PC. LIVING RO bM SUITES, FAMILY ROOM GROUPS, MODERN AND TRADITIONAL SUITES Unirían (strict - Arrangi la muy tlRcrcnt way* — tala-U *a last-Ottenni Club chair Mas avallaMa assimila !0 pc. sab. Dramatic decorator fabrics. ’238 ORIG V A LU E S TO $ 1000.00 RED UCED FOR T O T A L S ELLO U T M AN Y OTHER STYLES, PA TTER N S AN D F A B R IC S TO C H O O S E FRO M . F R E E L A Y A W A Y UNTIL IN CO M E T A X REFUND? BRAND FAMOUS POSTURE SERIES NEW with his pants unzipped. The women told police she was offended and scared. •A Tempe man was arrested for removing a food delivery man from his apartment without paying the full price, police said. Police said the man had the food delivered to his apartment, 525 S. Forest Ave., from Greasy Tony’s restaurant, 921E. University Drive. Police said the man only paid $2 of his $6.77 check and removed the delivery boy from the apartment. •An unknown man peaked his head through the open window of a Tempe home and asked a women reading in bed to watch him, police said. The woman told police the man put his hands near his groin and appeared to be masturbating. She said she did not see tiie m an’s penis. state press CLASSIFIEDS SOtC 'S SfcTS ONL Y CO N TRACT FIRM VVH LTD WAAAANTV $ A A F U LL . $29 aa. pc ¿ 9 Q U E E N . . . . $ 4 9 ea pc TWIN fcA PC KINO .. $49 èe. pc PO STU RE-CLASSIC— FIRM $ 4 VVEAAlTO WARRANTv TWM..........______ ...$39'ec pc. FULL...___ ______$49ee.pt. 0 QUEEN..... ....... ....$49 ee. pc. TWIN EAPC IMPERIAL EXTRA FIRM • $ 10-YEAR LTD WARRANTY y v A ltd w a r r a n t v J*1" ...... g » St- retail vim 1249.06 MEOlCO-PEDIC-SUPER FIRM IS-V C A R lT D WARRANTY $ E A S a TWIN EA PC MNQ..__________ $59ee. pc. POSTURE-PROFILE— LUXURY FIRM • # " 9 fULL ...... ggOac pc. retail «ata «260J6 twin I*, p c . WEEN...... 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TWIN ...m acpc.retail«aln0208.96 FULL ... 199 ac pc. retail valu ROSOS QUEEN .(100 ac pc. retail valu «630.95 NINO.... «00 ac pc. retail raba 1060.95 ONLY MI N U T E ^ W A ^ R O ^ E n Y W H E R ^ B ■ F IA SUPERSTITION FRWY EXIT DOBSON RD. — MIKE B U R G E S S 15 M atthew s C en ter N orth B asem ent 965-7572 197 CONVERSATIONAL SECTIONAL N T GROUP m i s a l o c a t io n ADVERTISING 268 INCLUDES All 3PIECES • SOFA* LOVESEAT • CHAIR COMPLETE - L A U R E N M ILLETTE Tem pe p o lice report •A Tempe man was arrested for wreckless driving after he backed his pickup truck into a undercover Mesa police car, police said. Police said the man backed into the 1985 Cheverolet Monte Carlo while the Mesa police officer was doing surveillance work at 400 W. Baseline Rd. •A 17-year-old Tempe boy was arrested for stealing a 49-cent Slurpee from 7-11,1006 S. McClintock Drive, police said. •An unknown man exposed his erect' penis and masturbated in front of a Tempe woman, police said. Police said the woman noticed a man standing outside the arcadia door of her home, 811 W. 13th St., and asked the man if she could help him. The woman told police the man said, “I must have the wrong door’’ and left. The woman then went outside to look around but did not see the man. She then went inside, shut the door, looked outside again and saw the man standing Of SIGNED TO GO WITH ANY DECOR OR STYLE < s|G -, N O R TH 1 A M E R IC A N 1 W AREHOUSE & S T O R A G E IN C. uei t BROADW AY CENTER IN MESA 1826 W. Broadway at Oohaon Whaa »33. Phone 844-02B8 BETWEEN K-M ART ANO PRICE CLUB HOURS FRI 10 8 SA T 10 6 S U N N O O N -6 M O N 10-8 TERM S •Cash »Check «Mastercard •VISA *AE Sorry, no mall or phone orders. EASY DIRECTIONS: Fram Superatiti«! Frwy. «ait Pobeoss. G o North ta Broadway Cantarbatwaan K-Mort A P ik a O u b — State Press Center opens; computer aid now available ByS H E L L Y S C H A F F E R State Press COMPASS, the computing assistance center in the second computing services trailer on Palm Walk, is sponsoring a drawing today to celebrate its grand opening. Academic Computing Specialist Jim Salverson said the computer center will end its week of grand opening activities with a series of drawings, including a $$00 grand-prize gift certificate for Computerland of Mesa. Other prizes include Dysan diskettes, Memorex diskettes and protective diskette holders. Salverson said COMPASS houses Academic Computing S e rv ic e s, In fo rm a tio n Center Systems and a m icrocom puter softw are library with more than 50 c u rre n t c o m p u te r magazines and newsletters from other schools. “ COM PASS is a c o m b in a tio n of a microcomputer showroom and a library to provide assistance to micro and m a in f r a m e u s e r s of a c a d e m ic c o m p u tin g services systems,” he said. Salverson said students who take statistics or com puter program m ing courses find the center most useful. “There are write-ups on how to use the different systems like FORTRAN and PASCAL,” Salverson said. He said COMPASS helps those who own personal computers to test software and to find suggestions for purchasing equipment. There are five campus sites for microcomputer, networks where word processing and letter quality printers are available. “ I t ’s a re al hand,” Salverson said. “If I were a student, I’d be using one.” In addition to the center’s permanent display, he said: “This month we have a laser printer and a desk-top publishing computer. We try out different topics that people expressed an interest in.” ASU offers a 20 percent to 50 percent discount on microcomputer purchases to faculty, staff and students, Salverson said. ASU students can enter a second drawing to win an International Business M a c h in e s ‘•p e rso n a l computer as a part of “IBM Week” highlighting IBM microcomputer products. Students can enter the drawing at the center on Palm Walk anytime before the Feb. 27 drawing. Items displayed during IBM week include the AT, XT and XT/286 computer models and the IBM Convertible, which is a tra n s p o r ta b le lap -to p personal computer that can be powered from a .battery pack or standard electrical outlet. DONT FO RG ET! STATE PRESS "CLASSIFIED AD DEADLINES ARE 3 P.M. 2 DAYS PRIOR J Dave McUlty, freshman architecture major donates plasma at the Plasma Center on University DrivA and Rural Road. McUlty gave plasma for the first time two years ago but has been doing It on i regular basis for a month. Roth said there is no tremendous health risk in donating plasma as long as the donoq keeps in the time regulations. “The worst that could happen to a persorj would be lightheadedness,” Roth said. “The] body can restore plasm a relatively quickly.” Arizona Blood Services, an affiliate ofj United Blood Services, tests each unit blood for type, antibodies, hepatitis and serology. The blood then is processed into usable products — whole blood, red blood cellsj platelets, anti-hemophilic factor, plasma and stored under controlled conditions and delivered to hospitals. By breaking the blood down, plasma is supplied to burn victims, red blood cells to surgery patients, platelets to leukemial victims and cryo-precipitate to hemophilia| patients. Howard said a common form of plasma is| the tetanus shot. “The average person will use some forn of plasma product three times in their life,’’ he said. Once a donor has passed the initial screening process, the procedure begins. Howard said the process requires the donor to give two units of blood, one at a time. Once the blood is drawn, it is taken to the centrifuge area, where it is spun at 5,000 rpm to separate the white and red blood cells. The bag then is placed in an extractor where the red blood cells sink to the bottom of the bag. Howard said the white cells float to the top, and the bag is squeezed until all the white blood cells are out. The bag with the red blood cells is sealed, and saline is added to aid the transfusion. Howard said the saline helps replace water lost in the process of removing the plasma. The red blood cells are put back into the donor, and the process is repeated. Howard said all plasma is tested. If the plasma tests positive for infection, it is sent to research. The plasma must test negative for human use. Plasma donors only can donate two times in a seven-day period, and it must be at least 48 hours between donations. BLOOM COUNTY b y B e rk e B reath ed 1 JUST N&P ft KLB5N&X. By VICKIE C H A C H E R E State Press PHOENIX — The Senate Education Committee has withdrawn a request for an attorney general’s opinion on a bill which makes the student regent a permanent post, although the bill may be unconstitutional. Allan Price, assistant director for public affairs for the. Arizona Board of Regents, said the committee will vote on the bill Monday though the measure could violate gubernatorial powers. The bill would make the student regent a permanent member of the board. The post is currently reviewed and can Ivory Towers be eliminated every three years. Student regents are appointed by the governor each year H O W CAN N W STA N D TO and are confirmed by the Senate. W A TC H A l l T H O S E C L O But because the bill requires that the post be filled by a M C V IE S , M IK E ? W H O 'S student, legislative legal counsel is concerned that the Ik ) T H I S O N E ? a requirement infringes on Gov. Evan Mecham’s power to appoint whomever he wants. • "LT 4 No other gubernatorial appointment has similar d o r o t w requirements. LAMOOR. Price said because the bill would not give student regents a vote on the board, its constitutionality is of less concern. “The decision has been made that it will be OK to just move it forward,” Price said. “The regents are very supportive of the bill and the concern was to just get it done.” He said the bill’s constitutionality would only be questioned if it was challenged in court. Diane Zipley, executive director df the Arizona Students Association, the organization that lobbied for the bill, said Shoe she was pleased with the committee’s decison. “ I think it was a misunderstanding to begin with,” she SKVIER.I jZEALLY said. “We know that the Senate fully supports the bill and we f O T T M IN P IF U££ feel confident that it will be approved.” T U E M IC ßW A V E. Mecham would not say if he will approve the legislation, but Zipley said she believes the governor will sign it. “Gov. Mecham didn’t oppose it during the regents meeting and he endorsed it along with the full Board of Regents,” she said. “ I would think if he had any opposition he would have said something at the regents’ meeting.” Get PERSONAL. Place a “P E R S O N A L ” classified ad in the S T A T E PR E S S and let someone special know just how special they are._____ 9 65 -7 5 72 i 0CCW&Am w m m c m m ssi FM R m r ÌLJ. by Michael Ritter WHO? WHAT PO W SEE IN THESE MOLPV,OU? MOVIES? WHAT DCLW0M.' * WHATSSHE WEARING?' V ------u ä 2-6 by Jeff MacNelly But I W!$u m p 510? A$KIN6 TO *NUKE A 25 > Stale Press Page 11 Friday, February 6,1987 I udd Nelson strolls out of the \J restroom and back into the dining area of a posh restaurant when suddenly all eyes are glued to him. He’s uneasy and stops abruptly, wondering what’s wrong. His eyes zoom down to his trousers — his zipper isn’t down. He gawks at his shoes — no, he didn’t drag anything from the latrine. Then the lightbulb pops up over his, head and he remembers who he is. This scene has become a familiar one for Judd Nelson. Virtually unknown four years ago, he has now become one of Hollywood’s most sought-after talents. And although he’s skyrocketed to the top of the popularity scale, the 26-year-old actor often forgets his own fame. “ A int nf tim es I wonder if my fly is down or maybe that I havetoilet papel^stuck to my shoes,” Nelson joked in a telephone interview from Los Angeles. “Success is strange. Coming from a close-knit family, I think you’re more prepared to-fail than you are to succeed. You somehow learn to keep your hands on the wheel and all those great things they tell you while you’re growing up. “But when you do succeed, you’re like ‘What is this?"’ That’s what everyone around him keeps asking. In the course of four years, Nelson’s career has soared. He has impressed many critics with his roles in “The Breakfast Club” and “St! Elmo’s Fire.” Surprisingly, he doesn’t feel “successful” yet. “I haven’t really succeeded that much,” he said. “My God, it doesn’t feel like success. I think what you have to do is learn how to throw a left jab. I’m working on my basic stiff left jab.” . .. Nelson puts these theatrical boxing techniques to use in his latest fijm, “From the Hip,” opening today in Valley theaters. In the motion picture, he plays Robin “Stormy’ Weathers, a brash, wise-cracking defense attorney who shakes up the entire political system by his ominous courtroom behavior. Although he treasures all of his film roles, Nelson feels especially close to this one for several reasons. “If I could put all my roles into a beaker and stir it up, this one would be my favorite,” he said. “My father was a lawyer and I always had that sense of work and commitment to the law, but I had no idea — It’s much more dramatic than I ever anticipated. I spent eight weeks in Boston watching other lawyers in trial. “It’s amazing!” he said and let out a deep sigh before bouncing back with another burst of energy. “I mean, I saw this woman pass out on the witness stand because of questioning — she fell out of her chair and hit her head on the floor and there was blood a n d . , . well, it was more wild than most. I even saw a judge fall asleep in the middle of a rape trial.” “From the Hip” offers the same intensity, but with a twist. “I think the film has less to say about the legal system than it does about values,” he admitted. “It’s professional ethics versus personal morality. I think one of the things the movie is trying to tell us is that lawyers are people too — hopefully you figure out that lawyers are people and make mistakes.” Nelson is just as enthusiastic playing opposite John Hurt in the film. “Hurt is absolutely the most impressive actor I’ve worked with,” he said. “It’s like playing tennis with someone that’s better than you. It raises your limits. I mean, just as a human being, he’s a great person on the planet. “He taught me a lot about just taking the pressure off.” Pressure is one thing Nelson has been growing accustomed to. Between juggling movies and his private life, he finds that he reads more scripts than anything else. “Most of the screenplays I’ve been getting are derivative of other movies,” he said and laughed. “If you have movies like ‘Rambo’ and (those starring) Schwarzenegger then everyone ends up blasting everyone. These movies are all about everything and you leave the theater and you don’t remember what you just saw.” Originally from Portland, Maine, Nelson pondered the idea of becoming a professional athlete for quite some time before the acting bug bit him. “At 18 I wanted to grow eight more inches so I could play basketball,” he said. He pursued acting at Bryn Mawr College in Haverford, Pa. Shortly thereafter, he studied acting at Stella Adler Conservatory, performing in a series of stage roles including Mozart and Don Juan. His big “acting” break came in 1984 when he appeared in “Making the Grade.” He met up with director John Hughes and “The Breakfast Club” in. 1985. Later that year he starred in “St. Elmo’s Fire, ” with Demi Moore, Rob Lowe, Emilio Estevez, Andrew McCarthy, Mare Winningham and Ally Sheedy. Eventually the popularity of both films penned the “Brat Pack” — A term he opposes openly. “I think it (the “Brat Pack” insignia) is more of a thing for the tabloids,” he said. “It’s old news! Even the Indians Counter clockwise from upper right, Judd Nelson and his role In “The Breakfast Club,” “From the Hip,” “St. Elmo’s Fire” and “The Breakfast Club.” stopped talking about Custer’s last stance. All of us were just working on the set together. The tabloids use it as an easy shot to sell.” For amusement, he sometimes looks at politics. “I think nine million things are funny,” he laughed. “But American politics? I think the ideal role would be to star in the Oliver North story. They can get — what’s her name? — Jane Wyman to star as the president’s wife, yeah, wouldn’t that kill you. Sean Connery could play the Ayatollah. Reagan could play himself but I don’t think he could learn the lines. I shouldn’t say that, he is our president.” Is this an indication that his current film role has taught him some justice? It doesn’t matter. With or without the Judd sarcasm, it’s a given that his future projects will keep shooting from the hip. — GR EG O R Y RO BERT KRZOS Page 12 Stale Press Friday, February 6,1987 e y N e ls o n ’s sto rm y a n tic s c o m m a n d ‘Fron By G R E G O R Y R O B E R T KR ZO S State Press It’s an open and shut case —■ “From the Hip,” the De Laurentis Group’s illustration of the ethics behind courtroom banter, is guilty of some powerful theatrics. Strike Up the Band: •Some of the most memorable stars from the Big Band Era will appear in concert at 8 tonight in Gammage. Among those to perform are Johnnie Ray, Barbara McNair and The Four Lads. Tickets for the Gammage concert are $10 and $8. For more information, call 965-3434. Theater • Lyric Opera Theater’s student preview of Gilbert and Sullivan’s “ lolanthe” p la y s at 8 p.m. Wednesday Jan. 18. The comic operetta of politics and pixies pokes fun at the political propriety and bureaucratic red tape. The show runs Feb. 20 through March 1. Curtain times are 8 p.m., except for a 3 p.m. matinee Sunday, Feb. 22 and March 1 when the curtain is 7 p.m. Tickets are $9.50 for adults, $5 for students and $2 for the student preview. For more information, call 965-3434. It is also innocent of a fully well-rounded script, but most films are. Brat-Packer Judd Nelson is Robin “Stormy” Weathers, a law school graduate in the fetus stage of his judicial career. Like the edge of a gavel slapping the bench, Nelson pounds a fiery, steaming performance in what could be one of his most impressive film roles. Although one has to wonder where the title was derived from, that is the least of worries here. What’s nice is seeing Nelson back in top form after the critical and box office failure of “Blue City” last fall. “From the Hip” is indeed a better showcase for the actor. The film highlights Nelson’s seldom seen acting maturity and also allows him to play up his jubilant child-like antics to extreme measures. “From the Hip” tends to balance the serious Judd with the slaphappy Judd—all too effectively. The storyline centers itself around Weathers’ unorthodox tactics and anything-goes approach to criminal defense. After rigging his way into a defense attorney’s spot in a law "From the H ip” De Laurentiis G roup ★ ★ ★ intense aggravation, cinematici air. Hurt l which can be traced t» l'ke “Midnight Expre Surprisingly, Hurt The former “Breakfa when Hurt is in the pi< firm, Weathers collaborates with an old college chum to fix a case that they are both representing separately. They decide to put on a good show in front of their elders for hopes of a promotion. It is here Nelson’s outlandish humor helped him achieve star status. He is more than energetic as his character uses every trick in the book to get what he wants — a lofty postion in the world of law. The plan works beautifully for the duo but in the back of Weathers’ mind lies a sliver of guilt, most of which is released on Jo Ann (Elizabeth Perkins), his warm-hearted fiance. Perkins appears overly cute as Nelson’s love interest. She has graduated from her first film role, “About Last Night,” with flying colors but portrays a character too sweet for her own acting energies. “From the Hip” ov Nelson’s outrageous a picture stands tall as i The crust of this theatrical pie is heated up when Nelson is asked to defend Douglas Benoit, a prominent English teacher who is accused of murder. John Hurt portrays Benoit with Directed by Bob C Hip” opens today at I and University Drive i As Benoit’s attom intuition, if not his eth Weathers’ own belief! h e b e lie v e s is guilty oj The film ultimately —are people too. In tl a hilarious and comi character sometimes Rounding out the ca and Nancy Marchand M ic h a e l J. F o x repairs s By M ARTY W EISS State Press Since the dawn of Hollywood one century ago, motion picture studios have followed the 11th commandment: place thy most popular stars into thy films and thou wilt have a blessed bank account. Unfortunately, when following that rule, filmmakers overlook the quality of the motion pictures they arrange for these superstars. Taft Entertainment Pictures provides the most recent example by using Michael J. Fox (“Family Ties,” “Back to the Future” ) in the lead role of “Light of Day.” Concerts: •Iron Maiden concert tickets at $14.50 are on sale at the Phoenix Coliseum, 1826 W. McDowell Road. The group performs in the Valley at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 25. In this film, Fox plays Joe Rasnick, a man who attempts to keep peace between his fundamentalist mother (Gena Rowlands) and his rock n’ roll/heavy metal-adoring sister Patti, portrayed by true-to-life rocker, Joan Jett. High Notes: •Soprano Laureen Vigil performs tonight at 7:30 in the Recital Hall of the Music Building. The performance is part of the Graduate Recital Series. Michael J. Fox and Joan Jett play brother and alater In “Light of Day.’ The majority of the action takes place in the Cleveland suburbs where Patti and Joe’s rock band, “The Barbusters,” performs at local nightclubs. Business is so poor for the brother- sister tea survive. As sist eventual! Fox an dreamer! this excel Other ] (“The E: and Shirl Sullivan t Benji b f rest I State Press Page 13 Friday, February 6,1987 ‘From the H ip ’ intense aggravation, offering to the film a breath of fresh cinematics air. Hurt brings with him years of acting prestige which can be traced to his work in theater and feature film roles like “Midnight Express” and “The Elephant Man.” Surprisingly, Hurt seems to enhance Nelson’s performance. The former “Breakfast Club” member is most believable here when Hurt is in the picture. As Benoit’s attorney, Weathers begins pondering his own intuition, if not his ethics. Once Benoit’s innocence is questioned, Weathers' own beliefs are put to the test. Can he defend a man he believes is guilty of murder? The film ultimately attempts to tell us that lawyers — like kids —are people too. In this process though, it gives to the audience a hilarious and commendable performance by Nelson, who’s character sometimes stops at nothing to bring his point across. ★ ★ * ★ Excellent; * ★ ★ Good; * * OK; ★ Flop “ Bedroom Window” ★ * ★ 1 2 In his first serious role, Steven Guttenberg plays a yuppie architect whose boss’ wife witnesses the assault of a young girl (Elizabeth McGovern) while having an affair with him. Sound Confusing? “The Bedroom Window” is playing at Mann’s Sun Devil Six, Rural Road and University Drive. Rated R. Rounding out the cast are Darren McGavin (“Night Stalker” ) and Nancy Marchand (“Lou Grant” ) as Weathers’ superiors. “From the Hip” overflows with power. Although often times Nelson’s outrageous antics become too far-fetched to handle, the picture stands tall as a clever and innovative piece of filmwork. Directed by Bob Clark (“A Christmas Story” ), “From the Hip” opens today at Mann Sun Devil Six Theaters, Rural Road and University Drive in Tempe. Rated PG. “Hoosiers” ★ ★ * This heartwarming story of second chances stars Gene Hackman as Norman Dale, the new coach of a small­ town Indiana high school basketball team. Based on a true story, “Hoosiers,” also starring Dennis Hopper and Barbara Hershey, is playing at AMC Lakes Six, Rural and Baseline roads. Rated PG. Elizabeth Perkin* and Judd Nelson star In “From the Hip.” >pairs se v e re d fam ily ties in ‘Light of D a y’ picture ly most ed bank verlook r these le most ’ “Back mpts to (Gena :r Patti, eveland usters,” brother- ‘L ig h to fD a y ’ Taft Entertainm ent ★ ★ sister team that one of them must resort to Crime in order to survive. As sister Patti locates all kinds of trouble, brother Joe eventually finds himself bailing her out. Fox and Jett contribute believable performances as young dreamers in the family. Audiences will love to hate Rowlands in this excellent portrayal of a religious, anti-evil mother. Other performances which stand out, include Jason Miller (“The Exorcist” ) as the father, Michael McKean (“Laveme and Shirley” ) playing “Barbuster” Bu Montgomery and Billy Sullivan as Benji, the Rowland’s younger son. Benji becomes a catalyst in the plot when Patti involves him in a shoplifting scheme. At that point, Joe sides with his mother and takes the young boy into his own custody. “Light of Day” suffers from one complication which creates a setback — it struggles to satisfy a variety of tastes by furnishing scenes for nearly every type of viewer. Individual sequences revolve around varied themes/topics like heavy metal, rock n’ roll, light-hearted comedy, tearjerking mother-daughter relationships and other intense, dramatic family ties. The most important element in “Light of Day” is the soundtrack. Of the 18 colorful entries, the title song “ (Just Around the Corner to the) Light of Day” — written by Bruce Springsteen and performed by Fox and Jett — best affects the senses. A number of tunes, including the heavy metal numbers and a song called “This Means War” would sound better in a deserted forest. “Light of Day,” directed and written by Paul Schrader (“Mosquito Coast” ), opens today at AMC Lakes 6 Theatres at Baseline and Rural roads in Tempe. “Native Son” * ★ + Richard Wright’s 1940 novel comes to the screen with the same harshness of its predecessor. Victor Love stars as Bigger Thomas, a 19-year-old Negro, who represents the anger and resentment the race has for their seemingly inescapable position in a white society. Rated PG, this film is playing at Camelback Theaters, 7033 E. Camelback Road in Scottsdale. “Platoon” ★ ★ ★ ★ A graphic depiction of the true story of the Vietnam War, “Platoon” delivers a world where good and evil are dark parodies of each other, and the limits of humanity are sorely tested. Easily the best film of 1986 — ’87, “Platoon,” rated R, is playing at AMC Fiesta Village 6, Alma School Road and Southern Avenue. I love you' for only a buck. w i t h CL V A L E N T I N E ’S D A Y P E R S O N A L in the Fri., Feb. 13 special classified section! USE-T H is”HANDY"6RDER FORM TO SAY “I LOVE YOU!” H U RRY! D EA D LIN E IS F E B . 11 A T 3 P.M . STATE PRESS VALENTINE AD ORDER N am e. Phone. $1 for 15 words or less 10* each additional word Cash • Check • Visa • Mastercard (Sorry, no billing) V IS A • G A S H • C H E C K • M O N E Y O R D E R 15 MATTHEWS CENTER STATE PRESS ASU, TEMPE, AZ 85287 ■ OFFICE OPEN 8 a.m.-5 p.m. daily ^ M U BOOTH OPEN 11 a m .-l p.m. daily 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 81.10 $1.20 $1.40 $1.50 $1.70 $1.80 $1.90 Ad deadline is February 11 before 3 p.m. m a il i t in . b r in g i t in . c a l l i t in (and place it on VISA or MASTERCARD). Page 14 Friday, February 6,1987 State Press No secret Student singer hits the high notes for local band By DAVID M ILLER State P ress ASU theater m ajor Laura Orosz is visibly excited. Her band, Double Agents, is into the last stretches of its final set of the evening and things are clicking. The 22-year-old singer bops back and forth to the beat and slaps her hands, absolutely resembling a certain “Lone Justice” powerhouse. The voice is on and she’s right in place. It’s a place that’s taken her a while to get to. “I didn’t always pursue music, but it’s the only thing I ever wanted to do,” she said in an interview following the band’s Tuesday night set a t Backstage Off Broadway. Double Agents, a group doing straight­ ahead power pop here in the valley, gives her the opportunity to do what comes natural. She takes center stage, sounding out the highs to the harder side of the top 40 they play. The band, which also includes Bryce Johnson on. guitar, Casey McNeil at the keyboards, drum m er Stuart Johnson, and newcomer A1 Ortiz on bass, fills up the sound under Orosz. But although she’s the center of attention it’s by no means as a solo act, she insists. “ You see a lot of solo careers now, but one of the problems is that people don’t know about the band,” she said. “ I like being in the group.” Orosz has been in Double Agents since CHEAP EATS SUNDAY 99 * Spaghetti w /H om em ade Sauce L o n g W 701 S. M ill Tempe, AZ o n g s 966-3147 CARPET REM NANT •Thousands in stock — 30%-70% off •H u n d reds of room size remnants — $29-$69 •W e Deliver •B u y D irect from our Factory MESA 1826W. budway At Dotaot/M. X-Mft ad Pries Oik 890-1152 NORTHEAST 156111. Cm Cn* 867-2703 WESTSI0E . 31611 3516Avt Id. Ikoms 6 total 269-3261 You can stay on top of th e new s because we do. STATE PRESS 15 MATTHEWS CENTER ASU PUBLISHED EVERY WEEKDAY MORNING September, when she answered an ad for a singer in the New Times. Everyone fit and the playing began soon after. It calledfor a slew of adjustments for this ASU senior' I didn’t pursue music, even though I always wanted to quit school to sing,” she said. “But now, what with this being my last semester until graduation, I thought ‘If I don’t try it I’ll regret it.’ “It’s funny because my family, and my father in particular, were always kind of against my performing. But now that they see how I’m doing . . . well, even Dad’s starting to come around. “This Christmas I even got all musical gifts, like a leather miniskirt, (which Mom had to fight for). The acceptance feels good.” One thing that doesn’t feel good is the juggling act: school, work and play, and any combinations thereof. “This semester I have 16 hours, including a 7:40 a.m. dance class. And the band practices almost every night. I don’t have many days off.” * “ On weekends it’s videos and homework,” she said. “Those are my roommate’s and my favorite pasttimes. But I don’t go out. This is my out,” she said, eyeing her favorite place—the stage. “I can’t believe that this is my job and that I ’m actually making money,” she said. “At theater rehearsals I put in as much tiifte but I didn’t get paid. It was a little strange getting used to. T h e agente ara Stuart Johnson, B ryce Johnson, Mike Roe, Casey McNeal and Laura Orosz, center. Not pictured Is A l Orflz. “Another problem with the theater was that on the final night a lot of friendships ended. That’s one of the things I love about this—it doesn’t end. ” And it looks like she just might be right. Double Agents will be playing Tuesday nights through February at Backstage, 530 W. Broadway in Tempe. State Pres« ______ Page 15 Friday, February 6,1987 Songwriter Souther to play Tempe club Tom Jones to appear in concert at Sundome Songwriters’ songwriter J.D. Souther will appear at 8 p.m Sunday, Feb. 8 at After the Gold Rush. The tour follows the release of Souther’s latest album, “Home by Dawn” on Warner Bros., his first major release since 1980’s “You’re Only Lonely.” Souther is no newcomer to the music industry; his career has spanned two decades. His first solo effort, “John David Souther,” appeared in 1971. However, Souther’s name may be better known by his songwriting credits. Some of the more memorable musical moments of artists like the Eagles and Linda Ronstadt are, in a large part, the result of his formidable skills. In 1968, he left college in Amarillo, Texas, to pursue an ever-elusive shot at the “big time” in Los Angeles. He met another fledgling singer/songwriter, Glenn Frey. Souther and Frey joined forces, calling themselves Longbranch Pennywhistle. The band was put to rest when Frey left to form the Eagles with Don Henley. However, Souther continued to write for Frey’s group as well as Linda Ronstadt, whose landmark album, “Don’t Look Now” he also produced. After “You’re Only Lonely,” his third solo effort, he recorded the song “Her Town Too’’ with James Taylor. Souther will be appearing at After the Gold Rush, 1216 E. Apache Blvd., with Karla Bonoff. Tickets are $11.50 in advance, $12.50 the day of the show. The dynamic Tom Jones will appear at 8 p.m. Saturday at the ASU Sundome Center. Jones, who was born in Pontypridd, Wales, now lives in the United States. Making his first public appearance at the age of 4, Jones continued to sing until he became a teenager. He offset his job doing construction work by day with singing in the local pubs at night. Gordon Mills heard the young singer in a pub and took Jones under his wing and became his manager. Songs like “It’s Not Unusual,” which was written by Mills, were followed by “Delilah,” “Green, Green Grass Of Home” and others. Television appearances and concerts throughout England, the United States, Japan, Australia, Canada and South Africa came next. Jones holds the world record for the largest contract ever signed by one individual in Great Britain for his popular TV show, “This Is Tom Jones. ” Tickets for Jones’ show are available through the Sundome, Gammage and all Dillard’s ticket outlets. Prices are $17.50, $14.50 and $12.50. For more information, call the Sundome box office at 975-1900. J. D. Souther Liberace: friends mourn candelabra king saw him during his final performance in October at Radio City Music Hall in New York. “I had a feeling he was ill,” said Diller, but she did not ask Liberace about his appearance. “I felt he would be sensitive about it. ” “He was the greatest positive thinker you could ever, ever know,” she said. “Hd loved life, he loved to laugh . . . he loved people. He was a terrific showman. He was a consummate showman. ” “Lee was one of the world’s most gifted popular pianists, a warm soul who contributed years of pleasure to millions,” said comedian Bob Hope. “He was my friend for 40 years. He will be sorely missed.” “He was a great talent and a great performer . . . and much beloved,” comedian George Burns said through a spokesman in Las Vegas, where the 91-year-old comic is appearing at Caesars Palace. B y T h e A s s o c ia te d P re ss LOS ANGELES — Fans and colleagues of Liberace remembered him Wednesday as a consummate showman who maintained in private life the onstage charm that delighted millions of fans. “There isn’t anyone who is as flamboyant and as showbiz,” said friend and fellow entertainer Phyllis Diller. “He took it to a higher level. He was like a one-man musical circus.” Liberace died at his Palm Springs home Wednesday afternoon, surrounded by family, his manager, housekeepers and friends, said Denise Collier, his spokeswoman in New York. He was 67. “It’s a great loss, but a great addition to heaven,” said fan Kathy Mays of Palm Springs as she stood qutside Liberace’s home. “I’ll remember his humor, compassion, showmanship and talent—unequaled anywhere. ” Diller, in an interview from Hollywood, Fla., said Liberace, known to his friends as Lee, appeared ill when she Tom Jones i t 'J S ess> ,VaO ta c u W d ^ cet 3 tVve « S ed " ,, c c A ° T £«,»’ tV\® r>\Me íS ^ 0 tv> a w - . * n d * ia " -ro w d * * * * * * VtfV >d.^a * _ t\\e afX te s e dW L\O fc- a\\ ro e d ' a a" ^j q í W B a t * s'S| s c o 'p . xWeS oxa1 te d v > e co ^ v ,v * # b e oT^e Page 16 State Press Friday^rtfuary^1987| B an d d en ie s s o n g ’s alleg ed anti-Arab m essa g e By C A R O L Y N N E LS O N State Press Musical group the Cure has requested its song “Killing An Arab” be removed from airplay because it has been misinterpreted by some listeners and disc jockeys as racist. According to a letter sent to albumoriented and college radio stations across the country, the Cure’s label, Elektra Records, plans to attach an explanatory sticker to all further shipments of “Standing On A Beach,” the LP, cassette and compact disc that contain the song. The sticker will also be attached to “Staring At The Sea — The Images,” a video cassette that features the song. The video is currently No. 7 on Billboard magazine’s retail music video list. Cure vocalist Robert Smith composed the text of the sticker, which will read: The song “Killing An Arab” has absolutely no racist overtones whatsoever. It is a song which decries the existence- of all prejudice and consequent violence. The Cure condemn its use in furthering anti-Arab feeling. The notice will later be printed directly on the cover of the albums, CDs, cassettes and videos. Smith, who wrote the song, maintained that “Killing An Arab” was intended to show the “utter futility of the actual action of killing.” According to the singer, the tune chronicles a part of French existentialist Albert Camus’ novel, “The Stranger,” in T h e Cure are Lawrence Tolhuret, left, Boris Williams, Robert Smith, Simon Gallup and Port Thompson- which the protagonist needlessly, kills an Arab on a beach. “Standing On A Beach” is. played predominantly on album-oriented and college radio stations and has never attained smash-hit status. David Daer, music director of KASR, said the campus radio station plays the Cure, but he was unsure of how often “Killing An Arab” was aired. He added that he would ‘‘probably not’’ take the song off the air. “I’d post the letter so the DJs can make their own decision whether to play it,” Daer said. At KSTM, Music Director Jeff Parets compared the song to singer Randy Newman’s controversy-sparking “Short People” and “Red Necks.” “If you took (those songs) at face value, they could be considered racist,” Parets said. Parets said he doubted the letter would have much effect and that the attention it called to the tune might even increase GREAT FOOD «Sto* airplay. The controversy began when the song came to the attention of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee in August 1986, after “Standing On A Beach” was reviewed in the Washington Post; said Faris Bouhafa, the ADC’s director of public relations. “We were worried that the song could be misinterpreted and misused by DJs or misunderstood by audiences who may not be able to grasp the finer points of existentialist philosophy in two minutes,” Bouhafa said. Bouhafa said the issue did not become public until a disc jockey in New Jersey announced, “This is a song about killing Arabs.” “We viewed the song as tantamount to crying, ‘F ire!’ in a crowded theater when it was used like it was by the DJ in New Jersey, ’’ Bouhafa said. The potential for the song to be used as a racist statement alarmed not only the ADC but also the Cure and Elektra. All parties agreed what measures to take. In addition to the sticker, a message also will appear in a film featuring the Cure in an effort to reach people who have already purchased the album. “Rather than try to delete (the song),” Bouhafa said, “we will take the issue and use it to send (a message) out to kids about racism — against Arab-Americans or anyone.” $1 Schnapps F a st Food Grown Up $1.50 Club D'Lites a t University Towers will deliver all around cam pus. 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From The 60 's Hermosa Piece University Sales By: ASU A Merrill Lynch R e a lty ca ö 510 W est University, Tem pe M o d e l P h o n e : 968-7173 If They Won’t Tell You About It, Then You Know It Most Be Great Purple Passion. Out of the bathtub, Into die can, and onto the shelves of your favorite store. Discover it for yourself. Bottled for World Wide Distilled Products Coaipeny By Beverage Concepts. St Louis. Mo. 6310« 15 Proof sp o rts Fourth easy victory Sun Devil bats wipe out Cal State-Los Angeles By D A V E H O D G E S State Press Mike Schwabe gained his second victory and Tony Mattia and Bob Dombrowski powered home runs as the ASU baseball team pummeled Cal State-LA, 17-3, Thursday at Packard Stadium. The victory for the Sun Devils (4-0) was the first of a threegame set with the Golden Eagles (2-2-1). The series continues today at 2:30 p.m. and concludes Saturday at 11:30 a.m. in Packard Stadium. Schwabe (2-0) pitched a complete game, yielding 10 hits and three runs, two unearned. “I didn’t have good stuff today,” Schwabe said. “I’m glad I hung in there. “Maybe that’s a good sign.” Devil catcher Tim Spehr went three-for-three with two walks. He also drove in three runs and scored four times. ASU jumped on top during the bottom of the third inning. With .one out, Spehr singled to left and Dombrowski muscled a home run — slicing through a stiff wind blowing in from center field — over the left-field fence to give the Devils a 2-0 lead. ASU added to its lead during the fourth. Mattia drilled a double to center field to lead off the inning. Dan Rumsey flied out to left field, but Golden Eagle left fielder Loy McBride’s throw into the infield missed everybody and rolled into the Eagles’ dugout, allowing Mattia to score. ASU was not through, however. With two out, Tim Esmay singled to left and Spehr walked. Then Dombrowski singled to left to load the bases. John Finn — the Devils’ starting center fielder playing in his first game of the season — laid down his second bunt single of the game, driving in Esmay. The throw from third baseman Joe Butler pulled the first baseman off the,bag, allowing Spehr to score from second and Dombrowski to sprint to third. Mike Benjamin then capped the inning by singling off Butler’s glove, driving in Dombrowski and giving the Devils a 6-0 lead. But Cal State-LA came right back and scored two unearned runs on three hits, including two consecutive bloopers to right field, during the top of the fifth inning. . “I think the wind had a lot to do with my performance,” Schwabe said. “The bloopers hurt my concentration. But I shouldn’t have let that bother me. ” The Devils put the game away in the bottom of the fifth by scoring four runs, highlighted by a solo home run by Mattia and a two-run double by Spehr to make the score 10-2. Meanwhile Schwabe was pitching well before giving up a home run to Shaun Doyle—his third in five games. Schwabe said Doyle hit the home run on a bad pitch. “It was a bad call,” he said. “I threw a change-up on a full count and he just hit it out. ” The Devils blew the game wide open during the eighth inning, scoring seven runs on two hits. Eagle pitcher Jeff Kanegan hit one batter, threw a wild pitch, and walked four while the Cal State-LA defense committed two errors — including a dropped pop foul—in the inning. Matt Shiflett (1-0) will start today’s game for ASU, and Gordy F arm er will be the starting pitcher Saturday. Stephen Mounteer/State Praaa Tony Mattia, shown here In action against San Francisco, drilled a home run In the Devils’ 17-3 victory over Cal State-Los Angeles Thursday. W ish as they might, sp orts d e sk c a n ’t please all Did you ever wonder what the world of major college journalism is really like? Have you ever thought, after seeing a State Press staffer walking down the mall with his “Arizona’s Seventh-Largest Daily” shirt on, what goes on in the Matthews Center basement? Well, you’ve come to the right place. I’ve been working in this newsroom for four semesters, three of them on the sports desk. The sports desk is near the door, so I get a sweet view of all the comings and goings around here. As a m atter of fact, about half the comings and goings involve the sports desk in some way. People are always coming down here to give us “feedback” about sports columns. I guess the page-four columns draw letters, but since many of the people reading the sports pages are only semi-literate, they come down here to vent their grievances in person. But I really would rather they’d just tell me what they think, instead of giving me “feedback.” Anyway; the other day I got a visit from the coach of the ASU soccer club team. He wanted some advance publicity for his team ’s upcoming UA game, to take place B o b H e lle r Sports Editor Saturday at 3 p.m. on Sahuaro field (subtle, huh?). Anyway, it’s not the first time he’s visited us. But he did have something funny to say. He said he understood why his team didn’t get any coverage last semester, what with all the football news; but now he figured we could get something in since there really weren’t many sports going on. Right now, we are in the midst of the following varsity seasons: m en’s basketball, women’s basketball, baseball, men’s track, women’s track, wrestling, men’s swimming and diving, women’s swimming and diving, men’s gymnastics, women’s gym nastics, m en’s tennis, women’s tennis, men’s golf and women’s golf' , Only 14 different varsity teams, plus softball starting up in less than a month. And the intramural department would like some ink, too. Really not a whole lot for a sports staff of five full-time and two parttime writers and editors to cover. We ought to be able to cover 15 or 20 more teams, right? Now I don’t mean to belittle the soccer team, or the rugby team, or the fencing team, or any of the club sports. I think it’s great that they exist. And I realize that they would like to get coverage in the pages of the State Press. But I think that, judging from attendance records, most people are more interested in some of the other sports mentioned. Except maybe in men’s basketball. They don’t draw many more than the fencing club. Anyway, he wasn’t the only interesting visitor we’ve had this week. Dean Obenauer, our Sports Analysis Editor (or SAE, as we call him behind his back) had an irate source pay him a call. It seems Carrie Gerlach, one of the “interviews on the m all” used on Wednesday’s analysis page, felt the quotation that ran with her photo was taken out of context and “made her sound like an airhead.” As a m atter of fact, she took out a personal classified ad in Monday’s paper to express her displeasure. Check it out. It’s the one that starts with “Delta Sig. ” Anyway, I saw Dean’s notes, and I have to stand by my SAE on this one. The quote was accurate, both according to Dean’s notes and the memory of the photographer that took the mug shot of Carrie, not to mention Dean’s own memory. So I’m afraid if Carrie thinks she sounded like an airhead, she really can’t blame DeanO. And the personal visits are just the beginning. I’ve gotten mail you wouldn’t believe. E verything from a letter suggesting that I apply for a job at McDonalds to an official Tournament of Roses blanket from the Pac-10 and Big 10 Conferences. In any event, it seems that everybody has their two cents to toss into the pot when it comes to the sports section. I’m not complaining about that either. I’m glad people come to visit and let us know what’s on their minds; it’s just too bad that we can’t please everyone. But, as the saying goes, if you can’t please them all, then get out of the kitchen. Page 18 Stale Press Friday, February 6,1987 Gymnasts go on the road, anxious for big victories B yCAR O L BOOS State Press The ASU men’s gymnastics team is hoping for a big win this Sunday as they travel to Santa Barbara, Calif, for the Santa Barbara Invitational, which would boost the Devils record from 6-5 to 11-5. A tournament win could also increase the Devils’ chances of recapturing the NCAA championship. The Devils will be competing against UCSanta B arbara, Cal-State Fullerton, Minnesota, UCLA and Illinois. “We’re planning on going out there to win,’ ’ Coach Don Robinson said. The Devils are coming off a disappointing loss to New Mexico last week in Albuquerque. “ New Mexico was a fru stratin g expérience,” co-captain Jerry Burrell said. “But like any bad situation, you have to go with the flow and bounce back. We’re ready now — I know we will do well.” However, UCLA could disrupt that flow. The Bruins have scored as high as 279. The Devils best this season is 273. “We’ve improved our score every time,” Robinson said. “We are capable of 279. I’m very pleased with the manner in which the team is progressing.” Sophomore Paul Linne continues to dominate on the horizontal bar, possibly on his way to postseason honors with his performances. Linne has won three of his last four competitions with scores of 9.75, S un D e v il gym nast Je rry B u rre ll p ra ctice s on th e p a ra lle l bars. 9.90 and 9.85. Last week Linne won the all-around event with a score of 56.05 against New Mexico. “Paul Linne is among the best in the country on the high bar and his current routine is of world class variety,” Robinson said. The Devils will then travel to Los Angeles, where they will take on the Bruins in h headto-head meet Sunday. The ASU women’s gymnastics team (1-3) will be in Lincoln, Neb. looking to capture a second win and keep hopes of reaching the NCAA finals alive. The Devils have been plagued by injuries and inexperience has shown in competition. But women’s gymnastics coach John Spini said they aren’t giving up. “The season could still be one of the best because we have some real talent. We just have to work on hitting and with some experience, everything should fit into place.” Leading the Sun Devils will be AllAmerica Shari Mann who won the allaround competition against Oklahoma last week. “It’s hard to keep a good attitude after losing,” Mann said. “Last year we never had to worry about losing. But as long as we keep working hard, I know we can do well. ” Sophomore Karli Urban will also help the Sun Devils. Urban injured her knee in the season opener against No. 1 Utah. M E S A N IS S A N aatâ&â m m s First thing every morning: COFFEE and THE state press Your Mornlnc Dally You can stay on top of the news because we do. S T A T E PRESS 15 MATTHEWS CTR. ASU PUBLISHED EVERY WEEKDAY MORNING Your Nissan and Datsun Service Specialists are o fferin g •Nissan-trained technicians •Genuine Nissan parts •Quality maintenance and repair work •Reasonable prices SMITH MESA NISSAN $4.00 with student I.D. $5.00 without student I.D. 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GREAT WORK, NO SURPRISES...GUARANTEED. b a c k P R IC E 1976 Eldorado Convertible BACK PR -Up, regular ;'up. regular r o l l b a c k p b |CE 8 cyl. tune-up. regular price $59-95 k95 NOW ONLY BRING THIS A D IN FO R AN AD D ITIO N AL $5 D IS C O U N T TEM PE 3135 S. 48th St. Just north of Southern on S. 48th St. Tem pe, A Z 85282 431-0222 MasterCard TUNEXKEEPSYOURUNNINGSAfOOIW S trtr Fra» Page 19 Friday, February 6,1987 Devil wrestlers prepare for conference m atches Injuries trouble Sun Devil matmen; Douglas says squad working hard B y CH RIS D O R SEY inaugural season in wrestling in the Pac-10. Douglas and his squad will visit their two opponents Feb. 7 and Feb. 8, respectively. “We have been working very hard," Douglas said. “We have increased the tempo. These matches will tell us what we have to do.” ASU and the two additions to the Pac-10 have met earlier in the season at the Sun Devil Duals. The Devils dominated their opponents on the mat, handing Fresno State a 37-5 pummeling and punishing Cal Poly, 28-6. “I think our guys will wrestle well. They State Press The Pac-10 championships are drawing near. On March 8 the ASU grapplers will be looking to win the conference crown. If successful it would be the team’s third consective and fourth Pac-10 title. The Sun Devil matmen will kick off their conference schedule this weekend against Fresno State and Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo. “We need these two wins to earn the top seed in the conference tourney,” said Coach Bobby Douglas. This will be Fresno State’s and Cal Poly’s KWSNBMS w elco m e ^ BACK ASU BEER BUST BASH! have been performing better than they have in the past,” Douglas said. Injuries have hampered the Devils throughout the season but they are starting to recuperate according to Douglas. “We are at 75 to 80 percent strength. We still have the injuries but they will be able to compete,” Douglas said. Wrestlers boasting strong performances are Zeke Jones (118 pounds) 22-5-2; Dan St. John (142 pounds) 16-9-1; Mike Davies (190 pounds) 18-7-1; and Rod Severn (HWT) 21-61. Only one grappler holds an undefeated record, John Ginther (177 pounds) is 7-0 but has missed two months with a neck injury. “The team is starting to blossom,” Douglas said. “I like the attitude, we are starting to wrestle like conference champs.” Rod Severn I always dreamed o f having a baby som eday . . . But not when / was a freshman. EVERY Friday Night 4:00 p.m. til 11:00 p.m. 5 0 6 Drafts $ 1.50 Pitchers S. College Ave. N@RMS 620968-1940 For Food A Cut A bove The Norm If you’re not yet ready, see FPI for information on: •Birth Control •Pregnancy Testing •Pregnancy Termination .O p en Mon.-Sat. 7 a.m.-9 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. FAM ILY PLANNING INSTITUTE WHOLE CHICKEN $ 3 .7 5 (Reg. $4.95) HALF CHICKEN $ 2 .2 5 TEMPE: PHOENIX: 2525 S. Rural *4 9100 N. 2nd St. 968-7471 997-7493 WE DELIVER! 106 E . U n iv e r s ity , T e m p e 894-MAMA (Reg. $2.95) 556 D ra fts 990 C o r o n a s $1.99 P it c h e r s Marinated Overnight Grilled Daily EXPIRES 2-12-87. MEDITERRANEAN KITCHEN 6 16 S. Forest Ave. Tempe, A Z 85281 (602) 9 6 6 -2 3 2 6 P IZZE R IA OPEN Any Time.. . Any Day Mon.-Sat. 11-8 p.m. M A M A G E L A R D I ’S Buy a 14” cheese pizza for $4.95 and get 2 FREE litres of Coke. Sell Us Your C lo th es 106 E. U n iv e rsity Tem pe 894-MAMA COUPON Expires 2-21-87. Not valid with other offers. M A M A G E L A R D I ’S P H IL L Y S T E A K S U B $1.00 Buy one at regular price, get one of equal or lesser value for just $1.00. VALID ON DELIVERY 106 E. U n iv e rsity Tem pe 894-MAMA COUPON Expires 2-21-87. Not valid with other offers. M A M A G E L A R D I ’S CALZONE CRAZY 996 Calzone bm Buy one at regular price, get one of equal or lesser value for just 996. SEU. TRADE Not valid with other oilers. 106 E. University 894-MAMA COUPON Tem pe Expires 2-21-87. MAMA GELARDI’S 1/2PRICE LASAGNE BUFFALO EXCHANGE TEM PE: 968-2557 2 2 7 W . University Dr. B A L L O O N S & S W E E T S Buy one at regular price, get another for half price. Includes salad and garlic bread. Not valid with other offers. 106 E. U n iv e rsity Tem pe 894-MAMA COUPON Expires 2-21-87. | Pase 20 State Press Friday, February 6,1987 W orld of tennis sh akes; C o n n o rs, M c E n ro e grin By The A ssocia te d Press PHILADELPHIA — Jimmy Connors and John McEnroe, each a four-time winner of the U.S. Pro Indoor Tennis Championship, became prime contenders for the title again Wednesday when top-seeded Mats Wilander of Sweden and third-seeded Brad Gilbert were upset. McEnroe, launching into a 1987 campaign he hopes will bring him back to the No. 1 world ranking, showed sharp form in winning from Mel Purcel, 6-2,6-1. At one stage, McEnroe ran 15 straight points — beginning with the last two points of the first set, and continuing through the first three games of the second set. He won the first point of the fourth game, but fell into errors, hitting the ball out of court four times and into the net once. McEnroe still won the fourth game after it went to deuce three times. Wilander, who is No. 3 in the world, was beaten by fellow Swede Jan Gunnarsson, 75,7-6 (7-2). Gunnarsson, No. 54 in the world, last beat Wilander in the 1980 Swedish Junior Championship final. In the second set, Wilander fought off match point at 4-5 and served an ace to tie at 5-5. He and Gunnarsson tied again at six, and the tie-breaker turned Gunnarsson’s way when he won four straight points from 3-2, each time forcing errors. He won on the second match point with a serve that Wilander backhanded over the line. Turn to TENNIS, page 22. 4 ‘TKettf The M ost P op ular, Fast a n d Fun W a y fo r G a y M on a n d W om an to M oo t S o m e o n e N ow ... 1-976-4 MEN That is, 1-976-4636 First Minute 55$, Ea Add*I Minute 45$ Recorded Personal Gay Ads L o oking fo r a h o u se to r e n t? * N O 'COPECK A P S * ALL PHO N E N U M B ER S * FREE -R ECO R D Y O U R O W N A P A F T E R L IS T E N IN G T O OTHERS! Find it in The Classifieds. CALL ^ 2 4 HRS! STATE PRESS NORTH BASEMENT 15 MATTHEWS CENTER 065-7572 OPEN DAILY 8 A.M.-5 P.M. HEAR A L L NEW A P S ' EACH TIM E YOU C A L L BACK! jfc VISA* MASTERCARD*CHECK*CASH V nba PR O FESSIO N AL C E N T E R S F R E E GMAT S E M IN A R How T o Get Into The Business School Of Your Choice” Tues., Feb. 17 at 7:00 p.m. in the M em orial U n io n A p a ch e Room $100 D ISC O U N T to all w ho enroll at sem inar GMAT Classes Begin Feb. 23 For Reservations, C a ll V alerie at 909-8953. John M cEnroe is back and hoping to regain No. 1 in the world. CH EAPSEATS Pearl*** Or/e/tf F in e d i n in g in a d e l i g h t f u l a t m o s p h e r e . F e a tu rin g C a n to n e se , M a n d a rin , a n d S z e c h u a n C u isin e . C ocktails & C a rry O u t. EXOTIC CHINESE BUFFET ALL YOU CAN EAT Lunch $3.25 Dinner $3.95 BLVD. 1 1 1 2 E. A P A C H E • 8 2 9 -7 9 3 9 (Next to Tempe Bowl) TEMPE 33 OPEN DAILY 11 a.m .-10 p.m . HOURS P a p a Jay’ s P iz z a M on .-Thurs. 4-12 Friday 4-1 Saturday 12-1 : Sunday 12-12 FAST FREE DELIVERY (Limited Free Delivery Area) S4.95 Minimum Food Order 966-1003 o r 966-4292 COUPON SUkDEmCOMBoT ï (includes choice of up to Stoppings) I SMALL MEDIUM LARGE PLUS TAX LATE NINNI SNACK a (Mon.-Fri. between 10 p.m. & 12 p.m.) I SAVE! 2} LARGE Sun Devil Comboi | Al Price* Subject to ■¡■tteSaaiaa 2 LA R G E O N E ITEM PIZZAS ! W/ChMM T B E B A IS 2-24 AOZ. PEPSIS 2-24 OZ. PEPSIS ONLY »11.00* P lu s Tax ONLY »6.50 Plug Tut j with purchase of f 2-MEATBALL OR SAUSAGE SUBS I — By Jon Basatone 2 litres of Pepsi I »5.50 »6.50 »7.50 1 Al Price* Subject to Change Without Notice F ' f r ïé I .JL Kh th is coupon) *On R egular, not StcM sn Style I I 804 South Ash, Tempe (2 blocks West of M ill Avenue, south of University) J 5 A V E !_ ■1 I I DINNER SPECIA L (Mon.-Fri. between • p.m. * 8 p.m.) 2-LASAQNA DINNERS 2-SALADS • 2-24 OZ. PEPSIS ONLY »8.95 S S T (Meatballs Additional) Al M cee Subject to Cheng* Wlhoul Notes $1.50 OFF A N Y LA R G E Sicilian Styl«lc Pizza* wMh two or more •Xtre Thick Croat m Al Prices Subject to Change without N I I I I I I I I I I I I « B 1 I I ■I ■ I I I I § Stet» Presi Page21 C o a c h e s say Bosworth will g o high in N F L draft By The Associated Press OKLAHOMA CITY — Brian Bosworth’s brash, sometimes caustic, way of doing business should not keep him from being one of the top choices at the National Football League draft. “We’d be glad to have him,” said George Young, general manager of the Super Bowl champion New York Giants, one of the teams the Oklahoma linebacker has listed among his favorites. can wear his hair any way he wants. He can wear a wig if he wants to. I’m looking for mean, tough players.” Tampa Bay will choose first, followed by Indianapolis, Buffalo, Green Bay and San Diego. All five teams could use defensive help. Philadelphia Eagles coach Buddy Ryan, whose team picks ninth, also has said he would like to get the 6-2, 240-pound Bosworth. “We don’t think he’s uncontrollable at all. I wish he would be a little bit more even with his behavior, but we’ve had others who were much more questionable characters,” Young said. “I don’t agree with thé things he does off the field, but I don’t think it’s going to affect his position in the draft,” said Gil Brandt, player personnel director of the Dallas Cowboys. Bosworth, a two-time All-America who has twice won the Butkus Award as the nation’s top college linebacker, can make himself available for the April 28 draft even though he has a season of eligibility left. Dick Steinberg, director of player development for the New England Patriots, however, said some of Bosworth’s actions “would definitely concern you if you felt you were going to be in a situation to draft him.” “You would want to sit down with him and see exactly what he’s like,” Steinberg said. “But you’re not going to say ‘forget it.’ You’d naturally want to see how much of it is a facade.” Besides the Giants, Bosworth also said he would like to play for the Los Angeles Raiders because of the emphasis they place on defense. “Everybody obviously wants to get to know him a little better, to get a feel for his personality,” Raiders coach Tom Flores said. “I don’t think anybody is going to question his talent. “I think time will tell, and certainly talent is one thing that can’t be ignored. Unless something happens, I don’t think it will be a deterrent.” But remarks he made during the 1986 season, his actions during the Orange Bowl game against Arkansas, and his flamboyant haircut have caused some to question his NFL marketability. The Orange Bowl incident prompted Coach Barry Switzer to tell Bosworth it would be in the university’s best interest if “The Boz” didn’t return for his senior season. After the player issued a lengthy apology, Switzer reconsidered and left the door open for Bosworth to play in 1987. If Bosworth does make himself available to the NFL, he almost certainly will go early. “If he can tackle and stop somebody,” said Buffalo Bills owner Ralph Wilson, “he AR IZO N A S T A T E UNIVERSITY PUBLIC S E A L E D BID Arizona State University Surplus Warehouses First Street & Price Road, Tempe, AZ 85287 VEH ICLE & MISC. ITEMS •CARS »TRUCKS »OFFICE MACHINES »COMPUTER PARTS •PICK-UPS »BUSSES »OFFICE FURNITURE »MISC. ELECTRONIC ITEMS O VER 1,000 ITEMS The University reserves the right to accept or reject ariy or all bids. The University hereby reserves the right to postpone or continue the sale for any reason. Sales are to the highest sealed bid. No refunds or adjustments will be made. No warranty or guarantees are implied and all items sold "as is and where is." Property may be inspected weekdays during the hours of 9 a.m. through 4 p.m. beginning February 2, 1987 through February 6,1987; 9 a.m. through 2 p.m. Saturday, February 7; and 9 a.m. to 12 noon Monday, February 9.1987. S u r p lu s P r o p e r t y • 9 6 5 -7 6 3 9 Terrace Road Apartments WALK TO SCHOOL! 1/2 b lock from Cam pus. H uge w ell-furnished 1-bedroom 1-bath, and 2-bedroom 2-baths, all u tilities included, plus large heated pool, sp a cio u s laundry fa cilitie s and cable TV. 95 0 S. Terrace Rd. 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 Due to the inconvenience of the construction, we will take an additional 10% off. S e c o n d kickoff classic: Iowa, T e n n e sse e meet By The Associated Press EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — For the second year in a row it will be the Big Ten against the Southeastern Conference in the Kickoff Classic at Giants Stadium. And the promoters hope that Iowa and Tennessee will provide more scoring than Alabama’s 16-10 victory over Ohio State a year ago. “We’re looking forward to an exciting offensive show,” Robert E. Mulcahy HI, president and chief executive officer of the New Jersey Sports & Exposition Authority, said Thursday in announcing the pairings for the Kickoff Classic, which for the fifth year will open the college football season, probably on the night of Aug. 31. Iowa and Tennessee finished second in passing in their respective conferences a year ago and have experienced quarterbacks returning. "Sometimes you have mixed emotions about playing an extra game against a strong opponent,” Tennessee coach Johnny Majors said Thursday. “However, the Kickoff Classic gives you national exposure. It’s the only game in the country for that one day. It’s the kind of game that gets players, coaches and fans excited. ’’ Tennessee won the SEC championship in 1985 and was fourth in the final Associated Press poll. Plagued by injuries, the Vols started 2-5 in 1986 but won their last five games, including a 21-14 victory over Minnesota in the Liberty Bowl, to finish 7-5. It is the first unranked team ever named to the Kickoff Classic. Iowa, despite a staggering run of injuries, was 9-3 last year for a No. 16 national ranking, including a 39-38 victory over San Diego State in the Holiday Bowl. The Hawkeyes averaged 32 points a game during the regular season, third best in the school’s history. Because of the numerous injuries, Coach Hayden Fry called it “the most incredible year that I’ve been associated with in 35 years of coaching.” Fry was on a recruiting trip Thursday and unavailable for further comment. OF COURSE you can place your classified ad by phone if you charge it on your VISA or MasterCard! ‘ CALL 965-7572 8 a.m.-5 p.m. daily STATE PRESS CLASSIFIEDS 15 Matthews Center North Basement 965-7572 FINE JEWELRY DIAMONDS DIAMONDS DIAMONDS ♦ MOST SIZES! ♦ M O ST SHAPES! ♦ V A R I E T Y OF QUALITIES! ♦ MORE THAN 1,000 DIAMONDS FROM .01 CT. TO 5.00 CT! ♦ STUNNING DIAMOND STUD EARRINGS"' 1 C » TOTAL WEIGHT FROM $ 4 9 * ' ♦ "CRM ULTIMATE GUARANTEE” OF LOWEST PRICES FOR COMPARABLE QUALITY ANO VALUE ON EVERY PURCHASE) ♦ THE LONDON GOLD SPY SAYS: “IF YOU DIDN'T BUY FROM US, YOU PAID TOO MUCH!” 936 w. Camelback P H O EN IX west of McDonald's Camelback Village Square N.W . P H O EN IX 51st Ave & Bell 2 7 7 -7 0 8 0 4925 W. Bell Rd. Bell Tower Village 1814 E. Southern T EM P E Southern at Mcaintock Behind jewelry Exchange SCOTTSDALE Mercado Del Lago Shopping Center 8320 N. Hayden Rd. 8 4 3 -2 2 9 3 8 2 0 -3 9 0 9 9 9 1 -4 8 1 4 Page 22 Tennis_ Continued from page 20. Wilander was fined $1,000 by the Men’s International Professional Tennis Council for failing to attend a press conference following the match. Gilbert, ranked 10th in the world, was defeated by No. 64 B roderick Dyke of Australia, 7-6 (7-3), 6-7 (4-7), 6-4. In the deciding third set, Dyke scored a service break in the seventh game to lead 4-3 and held his edge from there. Connors advanced to the third round in his first appearance by defeating Sergio Casal of Spain, 6-2,7-6 (7-2). He dominated the match until he led 5-3 in the second set. Casal, No. 59 in the world rankings, then took three straight games to lead 6-5, even denying Connors when he needed two points for victory in the tenth game. Left-handed B en Testerman had a great backhand crosscourt passing shot from behind the baseline to upset 12th seeded R a m e s h K r i s h n a n of Madras, India, 6-0,5-7,6-4. S a m p s o n m ay return befo re season ends By The A ssocia te d Press HOUSTON — Houston forward Ralph Sampson underw ent arthroscopic surgery on a knee injury Thursday and could rejoin the team before the end of the season, Rockets officials said. Team spokesman Jim Foley said the surgery was in perform ed Charlottesville, Va., by Dr. Frank McCue to remove c a rtila g e dam aged in Tuesday night’s 107-105 loss to Denver. The Rockets gave no timetable for Sampson’s return. Sampson slipped on the Summit floor in the first quarter of Tuesday’s game while trying to get into defensive position. He returned briefly in the second quarter but had to be helped from the court when he could not get full extension of his knee. Sampson said Wednesday he thought he’d be out for the season after Rockets team doctor C harles B aker recommended he choose an operation that would have fused the damaged cartilage. That would have meant a much longer recuperation period than with the arthroscopic surgery. state press classified advertising deadlines AD RUN DATE Sliie Prêts F r id a y jT e b r o a r y V 1 9 8 7 DEADLINE monday thursday 3 p.m. tuesday friday 3 p m. > Wednesday monday 3 p.m. thursday tuesday 3 p.m. friday Wednesday p.m. GASH* CHECK• VISA • MC classifieds Announcements Babysitters Wanted For Sale H elp Wanted H elp Wanted NOMINAL FEE towards rent in ex­ change for child care evenings, etc. 3 miles from campus; must have references. Let's talk. Kathy, 921-0640. IBM-XT, 2 drives, 20MB with 20MB tape backup, 1200b Hayes, Hercules color, EGA monitor, software, year warranty. $5500 retail, asking $3200 OBO. 820-7604, Eric. DOORMAN WANTED. $5 hourly cash. Small Tempe sports bar, 3-4 nights per week. Apply The Woodshed I, Mill and Baseline.___________£______ NOW ACCEPTIN G applications: lom pe’s newest night club, Thursday, Ftiday, Saturday, 9-5, 921-9560. Premier Night Club.________________ _ PART-TIME BABYSITTER needed af­ ternoons and evenings. $4/hour. Must have transportation, nonsmoker. 8933869. Babysitting Wanted LOVING CHILD care in my home. Any age. E x c e lle n t re fe re n c e s. Basel ine/Hardy area. 820-9819. AD RUN DATE monday tuesday Wednesday thursday friday DEADLINE thursday 3 p.m. friday 3 p.m. monday 3 p.m. tuesday 3 p.m. Wednesday p.m. CASH • CHECK • VISA 9 MC FINALLY! STATE PRESS T-shirts and sweatshirts are here! Beautiful col­ ors... navy, maroon, and kelly. Get 'em today, while we still have your size. T-shirts are $7, sweatshirts are $13. Stop by the STATE PRESS in Matthews Center basement, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. daily. We accept VISA, Mastercard, cash, or check. HANG GLIDE! Gently sloping hill. Safe and exciting. Lessons all day only $75. Group rates and gift certificates available. Wlndsports, 897-7121. CLASSIFIEDS WORK. NEON SIGNS for Valentine’s and any custom work. C all ASU Neon Workshop, 965-6169 (leave message). SAFE SEX Seminars. Examine your sexuality. Make informed choices. $15 for 2 hours. 279-2886,827-1345. Automobiles 1974 PLYMOUTH Duster, 48,000 original miles, AC, PS, excellent quad, stereo. $1000. Call H-967-3424, 8381236.__________' ________ 1977 HONDA Accord 5-speed. Good condition. Silver. 80,000. $1600. Cali 945-3757 evenings.____ ■ ______ _ 1978 FIAT 124 Spyder convertible. Excellent condition. $2750. New tjres, top, stereo. Cali David, 831-1512. 1980 BUICK LeSabre, good condition, loaded. What a bargain! $2500 OBO. Call Cathy, 964-5499. You can stay on top of the news because we do. STATE PRESS 15 MATTHEWS CENTER ASU PUBLISHED EVERY WEEKDAY MORNING 1980 DATSUN 210 hatchback, 53,000 miles, 5-speed, AC, $2200. 894-5330 evenings.________________________ 1981 DODGE Omni, automatic, air conditioning, AM radio, good condition, $1200 or best offer. 468-0265. 1982 CHEVROLET Camaro V6, auto­ matic transmission, light blue color, excellent condition, $4800 or best offer. 867-4231.___________ ________ 1984 FIERO SE, red, sunroof, luggage rack, mag wheels, AM-FM cassette, 4-speed, more. $7000.864-6243._______ 1984 MAZDA truck, white, 64,000 miles, AC, AM-FM cassette. In great shape. $3200.998-1560. __________ DATSUN 260Z, good condition, fast, $2000 OBO. Two seater sports car. Call Lisa, 945-1503._______ ' SUPER TOYOTA MR2,24,000 miles, fin, air, loaded, $9700. 965-2870 or ______ ' 866-7403. Must sell. Babysitters wanted BABYSITTER W ANTED Monday through Wednesday, 8 till noon, $3 per hour. References required. 967-1186, Diane. ‘ ' _____ ,_____ _ The STATE PRESS disclaims ail respon­ sibility for quality and prices of goods and services offered in both classified and display advertising by its adver­ tisers. F o r Rent or Lease 1 BED, 1 bath, walk to campus, pool, spa, partial or no furniture, $360. Call Casey, 838-1326. ___________ ' 2*3*4 bedroom condos, townhouses, houses, near ASU for sale and rent. Call Alumnus Robert Bullock, Trencor Realty, 951-5800,860-0460. 3 BEDROOM townhouse for rent, backyard. Dobson between Southern and Broadway. Contact 968-7577. Six month or one year lease._____ _______ APARTMENT AVAILABLE: 1 bedroom, partially furnished, Vz mile from ASU. Pool, laundry. Child, pets allowed. $330 permonth. Call 968-3081. _____ MEN’S 10-SPEED Centurion bicycle with combination lock, $65. Call evenings, 967-4161, Steven. Keep trying._________________________ _ NEW QUILTED Levi’s jean jacket, $35; red Powell Peralta skateboard, excellent trucks, $60.967-4229.___________ PREVENT RAPE, muggings, assaults. Electrical Stun Gun. Call Tom, 484-4438. Be safe not sorry! $69.95. REFRIGERATOR: STUDENT size. Per­ fect for dorms. Runs ' good. $60. 967-6252._________________________ SCUBA EQUIPMENT. Everything you need for a fun and safe dive. Excellent condition. $750.784-9703. _______ SHARP CALCULATOR printer for all Sharp calculators. Used very little. $35. Gary, 965-2658,968-4210. SLEEPIN G BAGBlue, small, Polarguard in excellent condition. Very warm. $60/OBO. James, 968-5023, leave message.________________________ 7 DAYS 15 W O R D S 10 D O L L A R S LARGE QUIET furnished room, private entrance, kitchenette, private bath. Available for quiet, serious student. ASU 3 miles. 831:7264,- Call STATE PRESS for details. NEAR ASU- 3 bedroom, 1 bath, freshly painted, new kitchen floor, refrigerator, ceiling fans, lots of storage, large backyard. $500/month. Gerson Realty, 831-9535.________ ' • SHARE 2 bedroom condo Vz mile to ASU. Nonsmoker, female. Furnished, pools, tennis. 921-1476. GUARANTEED 965-7572 VACUUM CLEANERS. New and used, as low as $39.95. Also rent and repair. Baseline Sew-Vac, 831-9238. 1976 RABBIT 4-speed. AC. Runs great. Glendale area. $750. Call 938-9708. AIRLIN ES CRUISELIN ES hiring! ' Summer. Career! Good pay. Travel. Call for guide, cassette, newsservice! (916)944-4444 ext. 3. _________ ARTIST SUPPLIES. Unused Grumbacher water color tubes, assorted colors. Brand new quality oil and water color paint brushes. Will sell cheaply. Call Kerri after 5,944-4242. BIANCHI RACING bike, all campagnola, celeste green. Must sell in a hurry! $500. Call Ken, 784-8813 or 784-8000. _______ ___ EXCELLENT PAIR Acoustic Research speakers. 125 watt, 3-way liquid cooled, one hour of play. Must sell now, $225. Todd, 963-8313,892-0174._______ FOR SALE: Yamaha QV 80, red, 1983, $500 OBO. 838-9047. (Must sell ASAP.) Help Wanted 246-1143 ADIA EXCELLENT TEMPORARIES - AIDA. $5.70, deliver Valentine’s February 13 and 14, Friday and Saturday. All valley locations. Must have car, current driver’s license, and proof of insurance. Call immediately, 224-5600._____ Help Wanted 25-INCH color console TV, bright picture, $100; 19-inch, $85. Excellent condition. Call 253-5016. _________ 3 KEG cooler, $300. 9047 N. 36th Dr., 973-5632, after 3:30 p.m.__________ .- CALL NOW FOR DETAILS SM For Sale 1986 YAMAHA JOG 50. Excellent condition. Must sell. Call 938-1492 after 6:30 p.m. $450 OBO.________________ —NOW HIRING— PT telemarketing positions available. Perfect hours for students, 5 p.m.-9:30 p.m. M-F, $5/hr. + bonuses! A IR L IN E S NOW h irin g . Reservationists, flight attendants, and ground crew positions available. Call 1-619-565-1630 ext. A23AZ, for details, 24 hours. ,_______ . . Flexible Work around your schedule FINANCIAL SERVICES work program for business students. Potential career opportunity. Flexible hours. Training provided. Near North Scottsdale. $4 per hour to start. Move into full-time after graduation with unlimited income. Call Craig at 991-4525._____ „ _____ FULL/PART-TIME in office sales. Salary/commission. Close to ASU. Community oriented position. 947-9008, Tim, 10-4. GOURMET DELI- Downtown Phoenix business district. Part-time. Sandwich prep and counter help. No weekends. Apply in person, 301W. Roosevelt. EARN WHILE YOU LEARN $8/HO UR TO S T A R T During 8-week Training period No experience necessary. Sell industrial tools and supplies for national firm. Rapid advancement opportunities. Daytim e Hours WALK TO ASU Hourly plus incentives 8 2 9 -3 1 9 0 8 2 9 -7 4 4 7 Interface Communications Telemarketing ™ J S____________ DANCERS, PHOENIX’S classiest want­ ed for Strip-O-Gram service. Short hours, excellent' pay. Ask for Randy or ____________ Cheryl, 939-5591. DELIVERY PERSONS needed. Tem­ porary, Valentine’s week. Must have transportation. Teddy Bear Express, 955-9430. SECURITIES SALES The Stuart-James Company will be opening offices in the Phoenix area.in the near future. We are seeking highly motivated’ professionals who are ready to unleash their full earnings potential. The Stuart-James Company is a growing investment banking firm look­ ing for people with an eye towards management. If you would like to be a part of a winning team, we would like to provide you with the training and support necessary to help you realize your maximum earnings potential. Summer Staff Wanted for Camp Akela at Shadow Valley Ranch, a children’s resident camp in Prescott, Arizona. Interviews during the end of February. Contact Student Employment for applications, m NOW HIRING for full-time graveyard position. Apply in person at Kinko's Copies, 933 E. University Dr., Tempe. PART-TIME COMPUTER clerk, local computer retail store needs a person with: Good working knowledge of MS-DOS and micros, neat appearance, and professional attitude. Call Mr. Christoff at 838-1236,10-5.___________ PART-TIME CLEANING person wanted, evening or weekend. $6/hour, transportation required. Call 945-2003._____ 2/13 WALK TO ASU, studio, $265; 2 bedroom, $395. Adults, no pets. 1031 E. Lemon. 968-2679._____ ___________ 1985 ELITE 80. Good condition, red, $750. Call 921-9471 or 966-1758. MCI TELECOMMUNICATIONS The Employment People XT-TYPE PERSONAL computer, $825 with 256K memory, monitor, floppy drive, keyboard, one year fu ll warranty, and loads of free software. The Computer People, 234-6850_________ 1977 VEGA. Good body, clean interior, all options. $650. Call evenings. 948-3996. EE OR CS student wanted for part-time programming position. 15 to 20 hours per week, hours flexible. Work will include assembly language, Baric and "C ” programming on PC’s and micro­ processor development systems. May also involve some digital design if qualified. Apply in person on or before February 6, 1987. Flow Measurement Systems, Inc., 317 S. Hayden Rd., Tempe. _____ ' no fee FOR SALE DON’T MISS out! At Terrace Road Apartments we have two openings: a large two bedroom, two bath, and a spacious one bedroom, one bath. Laundry facilities, beautiful pool, courteous management, Vz block from campus, 950 S. Terrace Road. 966-8540. EARN $120-$180 working evenings ar weekends, 20 hours per week. Cali 829-8955 for i n t e r v i e w . ________ 2/6 HIRING IMMEDIATELY!! Experienced telemarketing sales reps. Realistic potential of $25 to $50 per hour. Beautiful 9th floor office overlooking Tempe. 3 month minimum experience required. Call Eva for appointment, 345-8400._________________ _______ MAID NEEDED part-time on Mondays. Flexible hours. $4/hour. Doug, 897-7121. ____________ ___ MATH TUTOR, senior or graduate student in math EE or physics major preferred. Knowledge in statistics desirable. Transportation required. Call evenings, 945-2003. ______________ GOLDWATERS Students • Part-time We are building a staff to receive, check, and mark merchandise. Will be scheduled 20-25 hours per week between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., and pos­ sibly 8 hours on Saturday to fit your availability. (Must be available 4-8 hours per day.) Apply: 10-12 & 2-4 Monday-Friday Distribution Center 4405 E. Baseline, Phoenix (5 miles S/W of ASU) 2/11 PART-TIME SALES position available for ladies and mens clothing store at The Borgata in Scottsdale. Experience required. Call Ports International, 991-0976. ___________________ ' PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST for small Tempe plumbing company. Flexible hours. Call 966-9117 before 2 p.m. PART-TIME HELP wanted, sales/picture framer, 9:30 a.m.-1 p.m. MondayFriday; 12-5 p.m. on Sunday. Hang In There, 3 East 5th St., Tempe, 894-1520. PHONE SALES. $200 for first week paid training. After training, $7 an hour or commission, whichever is greater. Evening hours, 3-8. Call 483-7790._____ PLASMA DONORS. Earn up to $30 a week or $120 a month. First donation $10, second donation in the same calendar week (Monday-Saturday) $20. University Plasma Center, Associated Bioscience of Tempe, Inc., 1015 S. Rural Rd., Tempe, Arizona, 968-6139. Effective until further notice. _____ _ RESORT HOTELS, cruiselines, airlines, amusement parks, now accepting applications. For more information and an application, write: National Col­ legiate Recreation Service, PO Box 8074, Hilton Head, SC 29938._________ SWENSON’S IS looking for energetic and hard working individuals for the following positions: cooks, waitresses, bus/dish, and counter help. Day and night shifts available. Full or part-time. Apply in person, Monday through Friday, 3-5 p.m. Price at Baseline and Main at Stapley. _______________ _ THE ROSE Company is now hiring rose girls-guys to work in restaurants and nightclubs. Part-time evenings. Must be 21. Call for interview, 438-1314. NEED MONEY? Earn $50 to $100 per week, part-time. Our firm needs 100 students to expand market in this area. Stuff envelopes at home or in the dorm. Hours flexible. We provide complete kid — stamps, envelopes, circulars, labels. Send $1.50 handling fee for details. Call Jean Wheeler for an appointment 1-800-325-6036. STUART-JAMES INVESTMENT BANKERS Investment Bankers Member NASD SIPC 2/27 Multi-Spray Systems, Inc. P.O . B ox 2670 Dept. #106 Davenport, IA 52806 /6 2 State Press Page 23 Friday, February 6,1987 H elp Wanted Personal Personal Real Estate_____ TOP TALENT agency seeks bookkeep­ ing assistant for 90-day internship in Phoenix. Must be aggressive, show attention to detail, have professional attitude. Flexible hours. Must be career oriented in the entertainment industry. Call Olivia or Barb at 248-8109._______ Services Typing_________ A HUGE greeting card for Valentine's Day. $4.95 plus $1 P/H. 48 character message. Banner Grams, 833-5532. PAULA STEARS, you’re doing a super job with everything. I know everything will turn out perfectly! Get psyched for Barn Dance. We’ll have a blast! Love ____________________ ya, Mo, WALK TO ASU, $4000 down, assume no qualifying loan for 1985 model. Sharp Los Prados townhome 13th SUHardy. Way below new models, a steal at $68,000. Melinda, 838-7428. Tradewinds, 820-3333.______________ MATH TUTORING, beginning to ad­ vanced. Tempe and* NW Phoenix. $7/hour. Call Rick, 938-2901. FORMER ASU staffers! Word Process­ ing. Experience with APA, MLA and other formats for dissertations, theses, term, and research papers. Rates quoted. Members NASS. Call Donna or Joan, 945-6302 or 947-0402.__________ TYPIST/WORD processor for part-time or occasional work. 279-3363.________ WE PAY MORE! D’Lites fast food at University Towers needs help, all shifts. Crew - crew leaders - delivery people. A great place to work. Top salary. No experience necessary. Apply afternoons in person, 525 S. Forest at University Towers._________________ Instruction HYPNOSIS. LEARN self hypnosis easily. Improve memory and con­ centration. Remove stress, tension, test anxieties. Develop social self confidence. Stop smoking. Lose weight. Free telephone consultation, all questions answered. Lindsey A. Brady, certified hypnotist, over 14 years experience. Office near campus. Arizona Hypnosis Institute. Special rate for students. 966-8571. NATIONAL AERO BICS- Certified aerobics instructors workshop by National Aerobics Training Associa­ tion. Weekend of February 27 at ASU. Call 963-9415._____________________ Jew elry_______ _ CASH FOR gold and diamonds. Mill Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. Mill, Suite 104, Tempe. 968-5967._____________ _____ ALPHA PHI Jenny O’Connor, my kid is growing up! Good luck tomorrow! Love always, Kristy._____ A-PHI ROMINA: Keep smiling, you're almost active. You’re the best dot a mom could havel A-Phi love, Mom. ASU, ARE you ready to spend your spring vacation partying with all of your school friends and meet many more fun people? Join the fun of Mazatlanill Beautiful beaches, danc­ ing. drinking, and sunning yourselfaffordably! For more information, please call Dawn Brown, 921-1763. Spring break is only five weeks away. Start your plans for Mazatlan now! I CLASSIFIEDS DO IT. PREGNANT? CONSIDER adoption. We may be able to help with housing and medical expenses. For pressure-free counseling at no charge, cal I South­ west Adoption Center, Inc., 602-2342229 or 1-800-423-2229._____________ PREGNANT? NEED help? Call Birth­ right, 257-0958. Someone cares! Free. Confidential.___________________ PRETENDERS TICKETS for sale. Two tickets for February 17 concert, $30 total. 838-1666 evenings.____________ ATO PLEDGE Troy Jones, get ready for one hell of a semester! Your big bro Ranger._____ PSYHIC READINGS and counseling. Monday evening meditation and heal­ ing circle helps focus your energy. Claire Le Normand, 945-9572.________ ATTENTION SINGLES: Join Arizona's all new dating line. A fun way to meet interesting people. Leave your free ad. 265-8315.________ ______ _________ RJM, JUST a reminder to let you know how much I love you, and how sorry I am. Let’s have a blast at Barn Dance. Love, Suz._________ AXO PLEDGE dot Jill Ormond: A big hug to you for being such a wonderful daughter. I can’t wait for you to go active! Love, Mom._________________ BALLOON CALL US for the best. Valentine balloon bouquet from $12.50. Accent With Balloons, 954-5152. o C.D.- SO it's hard to make you laugh maybe this will: I know a Bruce Springsteen fan who wants to see you again. On the slopes?___________ _ _ COME JOIN Sigma Alpha Mu Friday night at 8 p.m. at the Holiday Inn._____ L ost $* Found PETE SABBAG. Happy b-day. 'Scuze me sir. Do it up, dude! Ren.__________ EXPRESS C r^ b b . «Champagne bouquets «Bear & Bunny bouquets 0 * L » «Gigantic mylar balloons «Corona bouquets «Cookie bouquets Valentine's Day Specials DEAR BOB: Happy birthday, babe. The big 21! I love you. Always, Carol.______ ADS ARE FREE EVERYDAY! We limit them to 20 words and run them for two days. Just call the STATE PRESS classified department, DOLL BABY, I can not .wait till you become active. J . N . ______ 965-7572 FOUND: WALLET size photos, couple with baby. Personal photos found on East Apache near ASU dorms. Don, 968-2638, leave message.___________ LOST CAT: Grey with black stripes and white paws. Female. Braided leather collar. $10 reward. 966-2645. REWARD FOR trl-color gold bracelet. Extreme sentimental value. Call Judy, 992-6279._________ ________________ REWARD: LOST 8-INCH gold chain bracelet. If found, please call 829-3731. Miscellaneous Bette Davis & Marilyn Monroe ALL ABOUT EVE Ruth Gordon w/Cat Stevens ’ music HAROLD AND MAUDE Admission Only $2.00 Call F or Showtlmes ON SCOTTSDALE RD. Just A cross The River One B lock North o f M cKellips 2/6 GARY WALTER Petersen, thank you for supporting me through Little Sister Rush. I love you so much. Hugs and kisses, S.M. ______ ____________ HEY AWISSA- You’re a terrific roomie and I love you bunches- JPG.________ HEY YOU! I love you! Happy 3 months. Marry me soon?! All my love, Me._____ SUSAN, YOU will always be Smiley to me. Let’s have a great weekend. Love, D. HI! GUYS (Mike and Kevin): You both are positively “ super” ! Hope you have a great weekend! Yours truly, “ partytlme” Theresa. ______ _____ ■ Giva the bars a break) $15 HOT tub special! You and a guest can enjoy 2 hours in luxurious private hot tub suite for only $15 SundayThursday with college ID. Fresh water spa, waterbed, ceiling mirror, private bath. Tempe Hot Tub Spa, 967-5636. JOHN THE Werewolf and Mike the Sigma Newport- Roses are red, violets are blue, spaghetti and meatballs are on the menu, so bring your appetites and a bottle of wine, and We’ll all be sure to have a good time! Love, Sporto and Killian’s Red.___________ ______ LITTLE SISTER rushees ... stop by the Lambda hut for the Hawaiian Nite Bash; 8 _______ __________ LOVE LINE: Dial 1-976-LOVE for your dates. New names added every 24 hours. 80 cents a minute. ________ LOVERS WILL be looking for their ads in the STATE PRESS Valentine’s Day Personals. Don’t disappoint yours. The deadline is Wednesday, February 11, before 3 p.m. And it’s only a buck! We have a window in the MU from 11-1, or come down to the basement of Matthews Center from 8-5.__________ MARCI, (F.A., Sponge): We love you. Happy birthday! Get ready for the big bash tonight!___________ -___ s— MR. SPUD, the last four months have been the best in my life! Thanx, P-Nut. PAM FIELDS, your pledge mom can’t wait for you to go active! Initiation will anon be here. Enjoy It. AX love, Mo. YARD SALE- Saturday. For students, by students. 534 W. University._________ Personal_____ _ AEPI LITTLE sisters- Beware of this semester's first bash! It might out-do Mexico I Eaateatanti Moat Fun Way to Moat Someone Now. . . ★ No Membership Fees ★ No ‘Coded1Ada ★ All Phone Numberal 1 976-4000 • First Min 554/Ea AdcTI Min 469 Moa^ew»^ea®8**fa^P S WSiS yw/l bn «Me fe piece yw r ewnl C o ll 24 Hours! THE MEN of Kappa Sigma invite you to their Little Sister Rush for an exciting Mardi Gras • Band Party this evening at 9 p.m.____________ _____________ _ THE RACE begins! You know your teams, you know the theme. Good luck. 56 days till Greek Week. TOP GUN (J. Whitham): Thanks for riding me (motorcycle). The vibration from your driveshaft really got my juices flowing! Lady X._____________ T.R.S.- Have a CDS class ring and M.M sweat shirt. Want them back? Call S. VALENTINE BALLOON bouquets at student prices. Free delivery from $12.50. Accent With Balloons, 954-5152. ____________________ VISA • MasterCard- Get your card today! No one refused Call 1-619-5651522 ext. C23AZ. 24 hours.___________ WITNESS A Christian music group in concert, Newman Center, Friday, February 20,7:30 p.m. Free._________ Call 14 Hour»! 479M Personal Ads • • • • New A ds Daily N o ‘Coded* Ads A ll P h on e Num bers N o M em bership Fe es 1-976-4 MEN Dial 1-976-4636 First Min SSS/Es A dd I Min 45« West—ABsi SesnlnststsSsirssS» yWShssMsI Roommate wanted $175+ 16 utilities. Nonsmoker. Grad student wanted in patio home, Rural and Baseline area. 820-7810._________ BRAND NEW 2 bedroom condo, 16 mile to ASU. Want female nonsmoker to share furnished, w/d, pools, tennis. 921-1476._______ ________________ FEMALE NEEDED! Live in University Towers for only $895 for whole semester!. Luxury, pool, recreational facilities and utilities included. Call Karen, 820-6565,844-8474. FEMALE NONSMOKER: Fully fur­ nished townhouse close to campus. 3 bedroom, 216 bath, garage, washer, dryer, private patio, pool. Rent $230 to $280+ 16 utilities. Call Christy, 894-1873.________________________ FEMALE NONSMOKING roommate wanted: Share two bedroom apart­ ment. $213/monthly plus 16 utilities. 1 block from campus on East Lemon. Newly renovated complex with pool. Call Joyce after 9 p.m., before 12 p.m., 894-6682. ________ FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for two bedroom, two bath apartment one mile from ASU. Worthington Place. Call Connie, Nita, or Kim at 921-1826.______ FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share two bedroom, one bath, semi-furnished apartment 2 miles from ASU. $240 •month, utilities included. Call 968-9882. Pets_______ _ PURRRFECT 1 year old female Siamese cat, free to good home. Also, 2 month old male butterscotch kitten. Call 968-0803.__________ ■ Real Estate LOW DOWN, no qualifying. Bike fo ASU. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, spacious townhouse. All appliances, re­ creational facilities, patio, security. 921-9904. ________________ Transportation PROFESSIONAL QUALITY word pro­ cessing. Will edit and correct spelling. Carolyn, 838-0959. _____________ T r a v e l _____________ SHORT OF TIME? I can help. Re­ asonable. Professional. Guaranteed. Experienced in academic. Call Jessie 945-5744.____________________ __ $200 CASH paid minimum! Bjying United and Western Airlines bonus/extra “ bumped” tickets. David, 5846575. Typing_________ AAKURIT TYPING- Short papers, over­ night/ long papers, prompt service/ transcribe tapesI good rates. Linda, 831-0349.___________ ‘ CLEANING SERVICE- Company? Par­ ents coming to town? Busy? We will clean your apartment, dorm, or condo spotless. For info call 829-3535. WORD PROCESSING, Mesa/Chandler area. 18 years experience. 831-8218. WORD PROCESSING- Manuscripts, legal documents, resumes, term papers, and theses. Close to ASU. 438-8864.________________________ WORD PROCESSING/typing. Term papers, resumes, form letters, etc. Rapid turnaround. Phyllis, TempeMesa, 820-7715._________ ACCURATE TYPING, word processing. West valley. Cece, 272-9215._________ ACCURATE TYPING: IBM Selectric, correcting key. Fast, reliable service. 5-10 page specialty. 838-1977. WORD PROCESSING- Theses, termpapers, etc. 32 years experience. $1.25 double spaced page. Marian, 839-4269. CALL ME for fast, accurate, quality service at competitive prices. Close to ASU. 966-2186. ___________• ■ YOUR MANUSCRIPT put into smooth professional shape. Line-by-line correction of spelling, punctuation and phraseology. $1.50/page. Special rates for book length MSS. 263-8396._______ Wanted EXPERIENCED TUTOR wanted. French conversation. Native French, Belgian, Swiss. Messages, 969-5703.______ • TELL YOUR SWEETHEART HOW MUCH YOU CARE, OR LET THAT SECRET SOMEONE IN ON THE SECRET IN THE SEEKING RESPONSIBLE female to share furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath poolside apartment. Great location. Microwave, Jacuzzi, and other amenities. $313 per month plus half phone. 345-0310. BY LISA- Silks, wraps, sculpts, tips, repairs. Call now! Lisa (business) 831-2884; (home) 839-4981. WILL DO typing/word processing. Quality work. 15 years experience. 897-9013._____________________ _ ACCURATE QUALITY typing. Reasonable rates and fast return. 831-8642. NEED ONE quiet, nonsmdking room­ mate to share spacious five bedroom house. Fireplace, pool, furnished. One mile to ASU. $250 month includes utilities. 968-1210. ____________ Services PROFESSIONAL WORD processing using NBI equipment. Term papers, theses, resumes, books. Typeset quality. The Write Type, 893-0738.________ CARS AVAILABLE - 21 or older. All States Drive-away, 992-5200._________ FAST RETURN. Professional typist will edit spelling, punctuation and gram­ mar. Accuracy guaranteed. Joan, 839-0772. WORTHINGTON . PLACE. Need male nonsmoking roommate to share beau­ tiful condo. Pool, jacuzzi in complex. $200 plus 16 utilities per month. Half off first month's rent with, signed semester lease. Contact Jeff, 968-1892 ASAP. ___________________ PROFESSIONAL WORD processingreports, theses, resumes, etc. Busi­ ness, legal, engineering experience. Rush jobs okay. 945-0058.___________ ATTENTION: FREE cars to all major cities. 21 or older. Call AAA Driveaway, 277-9979.________________________ FEMALE WANTED to share 4 bedroom house with pool, $250 including utilities. Close to campus. Call 9662360:___________ TWO NEEDED for Scottsdale townhouse. Nonsmokers. McDonald and Granite Reef area. Kitchen privileges, washer, dryer, pool, $225/month includes utilities, $100 security. Call Jerry, 994-0711 MondayFrlday 9-4:30; 945-8830 evenings and weekends.__________ NORTHWEST PHOENIX. Typing/word processing. Term papers, theses, cover letters, resumes. 938-3397._____ ____ WRITING AND editing assistance. Themes, resumes, etc. $8/hour. The English Prof., Allen, 968-1566.________ CLOSE TO ASU. Overnight typing! Reports, term papers, resumes, proof­ reading. Accurate service. 966-4523 before 4:00.____________ _ SEEKING RESPONSIBLE roommate for a three bedroom condo. WD, pool, jacuzzi, utilities, furnished, modern. $30Q/month. 968-4788, Ann. _______ LETTER PERFECT Word Processing. Rush jobs no problem. Dissertations, term papers, resumes, theses. Quality! 839-9103_______ _______ RESEARCH ASSISTANCE. Largest library of information in U.S. - all areas. Toll-free hot-line: 1-800-351-0222. BUY IT. SELL IT. CLASSIFIEDS DO IT. . TWO BLOCKS from campus, fully furnished, 2 bedroom, n2 bath condo. Washer, dryer, microwave, pool,, and volleyball. $250/month plus utilities at The Commons. Eric B., 968-7055._____ Mm a I _ a f c --- l«_a-----■---- » - a—J --- -------- ASU RUGBY Club: Practices T-Th, 4:30-6:30 p.m. ft Sahuaro Field. No experience needed. Will train. We train hard, play hard, and party hard. Social members welcomed to support and party._________________________ __ Patio Sale C t* M iP ¿ 0 + U , Recontad Personal Dating Ada IT’S HERE tonight at 8 p.m., Tau Kappa Epsilon Little Sister Rush, 1315 S. College, or call 968-2662.____________ 1984 HONDA V65 Magna, 1100CC of raw horsepower. 6-speed OD, water cooled, shaft driven. New rear tire and battery. Case Saver back rest, alarm, 2 helmets. Low mileage. Must sell. $2600 •OBO. Call Paul at 894-6906, leave message.________________ .________ O n Campus_____ SAMMYS, „ G E T psyched for. this weekend. It’s going to be a blast!_____ SIGMA NU Court of Honor pledges get psyched for activation tonight! 4 p.m. _______ sharp! Love, the actives. LADIES, PARTY with the men of Tau Kappa Epsilon tonight at 8 p.m., 1315 S. College, or call 968-2662.________ _ OLD MAN (54) has red *84 Honda Aero 125 for sale. Showroom condition, low miles, special cloth seat. Priced right, $825.949-7200. ______ SAMMY EXECUTIVE cbunsel David, Jon, Rick, Jeff, get excited for Friday night. We are! Love, Debbie and Lisa. HEY JOHN! Guess what? You’re getting married! Can’t wait for the bachelor party! Congratulations- Rich. 1984 HONDA Aero SO, blue. Includes windshield, basket. Under 600 miles. Like new. $600.482-6455. ________ _ 1986 HONDA Helix. Like new, 325 miles. $2000 OBO. Cindy or Steve, 438-0757. __________________ SAMMY ALPHAS, the end is near? SIGMA CHI little sister rushee’s: Sorry about the mix up! We can all thank GARP. Rush will be held February 10th, 11th at 8 p.m. and the 12th at 7 p.m. Can't wait to see you there.__________ KARRIN KUNASEK: Have a happy 22nd birthday! Your dot loves ya a ton._____ 1986 HONDA 150 Elite, 4 months old, best offer. Nancy, 345-2118 after 4 p.m. 2/13 HEY GIRLS! Put on your Hawaiian shirts and pick up your coconut mugs, because Lambda Chi Little Sister Rush is Friday. _____________ _ Motorcycles____ 1986 HONDA Interceptor 500, 1800 miles, bought new in October. Must sell, Aral F-1 helmet. Tom, 894-0136. 9 6 8 -4 4 4 6 WHY RENT? When you can own. Perfect for ASU student. (3) bank owned condos. Washer, dryer, re­ frigerator included. With low down you can own. Let your money work for you. Call Linda Jenkins, Century 21 Plaza Realty, 831-1300. RESEARCHING SOURCES for project takes time from study. Call on American Information Center for help. Write specifics AIC for opportunity to assist. AIC, Box 7657, Phoenix, AZ 85011. __________ .__ STATE PRESS VALENTINE’S DAY PERSONALS Friday, February 13 • o n ly $1 You ca n p la c e yo u r a d 3 w ays: CALL: 965-7572 COME BY: M atthew s C enter B asem ent 8 a.m.-5 p.m. or o u r w indow In th e MU 11 a .m .1 p.m. OR MAIL: th e ad order below w ith a check or m oney order to: STATE PRESS ASU • Tempe, AZ 85287 STATE PRESS VALENTINE AD ORDER Name________________________________ P h o n e ________________________________ $1 for 15 words or less lO t each additfonsl word COMPUTER TERMINALS for rent or sale with modem. $35 per month. Also PC/XT or AT complete. 246-6172. Cash • Check • Visa • Mastercard (Sorry, no billing) DOCTORAL STUDENT available to house-sit summer ‘87 and school year 87-88. Single, nonsmoker, excellent references. Call Peggy, Arizona Wes­ tern College, 726-1000 ext. 274, or 344-3682. __________ __________ _ NAVE UNWANTED facial or body hair removed permanently by electrolysis. Free consultation, located in Tempe. Call Sharon at Desert Electrolysis Center, 829-7829.____________ HELP IN writing, editing from top M.A. graduate. $8 hour. Call Lenore, 8206383 p.m.________________________ HELP. WILL edit papers, write re­ sumes. $1Q/hour negotiable. B.A. in English. Jane, 967-3202._____________ I’LL IRON 820-1556. for you. Call Kathie, ____________________ INCOME TAX • accounting. Over 9 years prior experience working for IRS. Bob Soper, CPA. Phone 946-9192. 81.00 81.10 81.20 81.30 81.40 81.50 81.60 81.70 81.80 81.90 Ad deadline Is February 11 before 3 p.m. Page 24 Stale Prêta Friday, February 6,1987 “SEND A TEDDY BEAR WHEN YOU REALIY CARE” Honey Bears with Balloons for all occasions Phoenix 998-4275 Order Now for — 7441 E. Butherus Rd. Scottsdale Tucson 6 0 2 - 3 2 5 - 4 9 6 9 FREE D ELIVERY Valentine s Day & Feb. 14th m B3ÜEfflaE> ô n rv T ^ k 843-459/1 j IURQUUHUMi(PC)11:45. 4:00.8:10 «W1Dmum(I) 1:45.6:00.10:00 H00SIER8(PG-13) 12:00.2:15,4:30.7:00,9:30 BE0R00M WIN00W (R) 11:45.2:15,4:45.7:15.9:45 UTTLESHOPOFHORRORS(PG-13) 12:00,2:00,4 00.6:00.8 00.10:00 STARTREKIV|P6) 12:00.2:15. 4:30. 7:00. 9:30 FROMTHEHIP|P6-13| 11:45.2:15,4:45. 7:15,9:45 OUTRAGEOUSFORTUNE(R) 11:45.1:45.3:45. 5:45. 7:45.9:45 PLATOONIR) VJ2:00,2:30.5:00,7:30.10:00 $700 O MIDNIGHT SHOWS FRIDAY & SATURDAY mm ooQ n 7 AA T a r g a i^ T r ic ? " ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 P M MON THRU FRl SAT. SUN A HOLIDAYS FIRST SHOW ONLY 1 rnsurn 004.1:71:7 MESA AT so LONGMORF The Cornerstone Rural & University & SUPERSTITION J ALANQUARTERMAIN(PG) 11:45,2:15.4:45.7:15.9:45 STARTREKIV(P6) 11:45.2:15.4:45,7’15.10:00 CROCODILEDUNDEE(P6| 12:45.3:00.5:15. 7:30.9:45 THEMISSION|R| 1:00.4:00. 7:00.10:00 OEADOFWINTER|R) 12:15.2:30,4:45,7:00.9:15 FROMTHEHIP(PG-13) 12:15.2:30,4:45,7:00.9:15 CROCODILEDUNDEE|P6-13| 1:00,3:00,5:00,7:00,9:00 STARTREKIV(PG) 12:00,2:30, 5:00,7:30,10:00 0UTRASE0USFORTUNE[R| 1:15,3:15,6:15,7:15,9:15 PLATOONIR) 11:45,2:15,4:45,7:15,9:45 BEDROOMWIN00W|R| 12:00.2:30,5:00,7:30.10:00 gmsmsm Baaam aa 249-2843 s 7G7N o >9Th a v e STARTREKIV(P6| . 11:45,2:15.4:45,7:30,10:00 GOLOENCHILOIPO-IS)12:00.7:15.930 THEMISSIONINIZ:15.4:45 FROMTHENIP|PB-I3| 11:30,2:00,4:30.7:00,9:45 OUTRAGEOUSFORTUNE|R| 12:30,2:45,5:00,7:30,9:45 DEADOFWINTER(R) 12:15.2:45,5:15.7:45.10:00 MESA AU TT1H 02E0RN.J LW U«f west SO G0L0EMCHILO(PG-13) 12:45,3:00. 5:15,7:30,9:45 CRITICALCONDITION|R| 1:00.3:10.5:20.7:30,9:45 H00SIERSIPG-13) 12:00,2:20,4:40,7:00,9:30 (■BK» aw n 1:30, SIS, 9:00 ^imuasp» asse>9U) 3:35,7:20 PIZZA — NEW YORK STYLE LARGE 16 ” — $ 4 .9 9 each add’l. item 75$ handmade • deep dish or Sicilian style $1.50 extra ITALIAN SUBMARINES • HEROES SPAGHETTI • SALADS • LASAGNA FREE DELIVERY 967-0843 T BEER 160-oz. large p itch er I $1.99 _ _ _ _ _ Ron KuczeK Jr./SUte Prea# Mann, oh Mann Shari Mann and tha raat of tha women’s gymnastics team travel to Nebraska to face the Com huskers Saturday. Mann has led the S un Devils In the all-round competition ao far this season. S ee story, page 18. HOURS: i CHICKEN1 Everyday j 4 p.m .-12 a.m. | W I N G $ ! 2 5 < each L _ _____Z T . _______________ j -1 paparazzi s SI 2 0 1 W. S outhern Ave. • # 3 2 8 D anelle Plaza • S outhern & Mill, Tem pe Must present this ad. Offer good through Feb. 13,1987.