S ta te p fe s s Vol. 70 No. 1 • Copyright, State Press, 1987 A riz o n a S ta te U n iv e rs ity 's M o rn in g D a ily Monday, August 24,1987 T em pe, A rizo n a M e m o r ia l Victims mourned in Valley services By VICKIE CHACHERE M W li State Pram ' SCOTTSDALE — The 156 victim s of Northwest Airlines Flight 255 w ere rem em bered Sunday in a statewide day of mourning that included services fo r an ASU student, her husband and two children. Sharon Briggs, an educational technology graduate student, her husband Donald, 13-year-old-son Matthew and 8-year-old daughter Megan w ere eulogized at a public service Sunday afternoon along with 11 other Scottsdale victim s of the crash. About 100 people gathered at Mountain View Presbyterian Church to rem em ber the victim s, whom the Rev. Ralph J. M eredith described as “ people who w ere part o f our lives in one instant and gone the next. ” Several members of Megan B rigg’s Brownie troop attended the service and rem em bered their playm ate as a considerate and cheerful little girl. “ They w ere just here a year,” said a friend of the fam ily who asked not to be named. “ W e had lots of fun with Megan and her mother. They w ere always helping us with our Brownie troop. “ I know they are looking down at us from heaven.” The fam ily moved to Scottsdale from A m Arbor, Mich., last year when Donald Briggs, a manager at the General Motors Desert Provin g Grounds, was transferred. They Were in M ichigan to visit relatives. In Phoenix, about 450 people gathered Saturday to rem em ber Marshall Johnson, a stockbroker for R .L. Kotrozo,-Inc. and the alumni adviser for ASU’s Sigma Chi fraternity? Johnson, 31, was returning from a Sigma Chi leadership conference in London, Ontario. ? He is survived by his w ife of eight months, Carolyn. About 200 fraternity members laid white roses, the fraternity flow er, on Johnson’s coffin. “ (The fratern ity) was a real big part o f his life ,” ASU chapter president G ary McMahon said. “ It was a life-long commitment fo r him .” McMahon was one o f fiv e ASU Sigma CM members who had tickets fo r the Northwest plane but changed their flight plans because tickets on Am erican Airlines w ere $20 less. The fiv e learned of the accident at 2a.m . the next day when their plane landed in Chicago. McMahon said they didn’t know fo r sure that Johnson was on the plane until they arrived in Tempe. McMahon said the fraternity w ill go about business as usual during rush because “ that’s what the guy would have wanted.” “ You can’t re a lly stop life ,” he said. Keith Thompson, executive director o f Terros, a Phoenix counseling service, said his organization has received a steady stream of calls from people wanting to talk about the crash, but few have been from fam ily members. He said people Who are grievin g fo r the victim s, or parents whose children have been disturbed by the crash, are the most frequent callers. Thompson added that the shock o f the crash is fin ally w earing off, and the real mourning and grief w ill begin after the funerals. “ For fam ily members, it’s going to be two or three weeks down the road, once all the business has been taken care of,” he said. S u n t Mohr/SMe P ra n A mother and daughter comfort each other at an afternoon ser­ vice Sunday in Scottsdale remembering the 156 victims of Right 255. “ The reality factors are very different with this kind of accident. Even for the fam ily members that went to D etroit it has to be something unreal.” f A SU cracks dow n on drugs w ith stiffer policies, penalties By VICTOR BARAJAS State T o coincide with Arizona’s tougher drug law, ASU is strengthening its own anti-drug effort With an education program and penalties wMch could mean dismissal from ASÜ on a student’s first drug offense. Betty Turner. Asher, ASU vice president for Student A ffairs, said: “ i f a student is caught with the possession of drugs, they are likely to get dismissed from ASU ” Under the new law, wMch took effect Aug. 18, people who sell, use or possess even sm all amounts of marijuana could face a minimum ja il term of 3,75 years or a fine o f at least $2,000. A person with three drug convictions can be sentenced to life in prison. Asher said mass m ailings, posters and brochures from the ASU O ffice o f Student A ffairs have kicked o ff a plan to make in sid e to d a y ASU WEATHER Partly sunny skies to­ day with an expected high of 102. WHAT’S NEW AT ASU Part one of a series about campus changes ‘ for the fall. Today, a look at construction and food services. Page 6. Classified..........38 Com ics..»14^ Entertainment..........19 Opinion......... f....... — A Sports JÜt. ¿ 4 ,. •»—••■»25 students aw are of the new drug law. “ The only w ay to (inform students) js to literally blitz the campus as much as possible with information regarding the law and regarding the sanctions,” she said. as age, location and amount. F or exam ple, a person convicted of drug abuse that involves a child uniter age 15 could be subject to a 20-year prison term . ‘ ^ ASU President J. Russell Nelson warned freshmen about the new law via personal letters sent out this month. He also spoke about the law during freshman orientation last week, “ For a long tim e we have been interested in drug education program s on campus,” Nelson said. “ W e want people to understand drugs and their consequences.” “ I certainly do not like to see young people placed in ja il, but neither do I like to see young people breaking the law ,” ■Asher said. ‘ * • “ What I do have strong feelings about is our obligation to inform students about what (the law s) are so they .can be inform ed decision-makers.” I Although Nelson previously had been involved with anti­ drug warnings, her said the letters sent a stronger message. “ I think that (sending letters) is appropriate,” he said. “ When a problem is as significant as the drug problem, and the state takes a stronger position, as it has, students need to know about it.” The law varies penalties for different circumstances such She »added that many students com e from states and countries with different drug laws and need to be inform ed about Arizona'laws. “ I don’t know where else,a law has changed so severely in such a short period of tim e,” ,said George Cathcart, assistant director of the ASU news bureau. W ."-*.- , Turn to DRUGS, page 17. 2 ASU students arrested on drug charges $1 m illion in cocaine, cash, vehicles seized By MIKE BURGESS State Press . &JL | Two ASU students and a Phoenix man, whom police have accused o f being “ m ajor dealers” of cocaine to ASU students, are being held on $1 m illion bond each at the Maricopa County Jail. The three men wore arrested last week after police seized m ore than $1 m illion in cocaine, cash and cars from their Phoenix home and a Tem pe apartment, wMch police said m ay have been a “ stash house.” , Jarrett L. WMte, a 22-year-old junior ASU architecture m ajor, was charged with four counts of conspiracy to sell cocaine and one count, of possession of cocaine over $250. Terrance H. Collins, 22, an unclassified ASU student, and Cary N. Johnson, 23, each were charged with two counts of possession o f cocaine over $250. The three men resided at 4617 E. Valley View in Phoenix. Sgt. John Blaisdell^ head of the Tempe police vice/narcotics unit, said the arrests § ended an eight-month undercover operation to break up a cocaine ring that has supplied ASU students with an estim ated two pounds of cocaine a week fo r the past two years. Police believe the cocaine. was being brought to Tem pe from California. “ It appears to be directly related to the campus,” Blaisdell said o f the drug ring during a Friday press conference at Tem pe police headquarters. “ This was a business, and they ran it as such.” Blaisdell said police seized nine pounds of cocaine with an estim ated street vallie of $1.2 m illion, $40,000 in cash and eight veMcies,including two BMWs, two Jeep Cberokees, a Chevrolet E l Camino and m otorcycles, Police believe the veM cies either w ere purchased with drug money or used to transport the drugs. Todd Green/StatePress Blaisdell said police also found Rolex N watches, gold chains, expensive luggage and television sets along with several shot guns and an Uzi machine gun. Police spokesman Roger Austin displays nine pounds of cocaine and more then $40,000 seized from a Phoenix hdme and a Tempe apartment. Page 2 State Press Monday, August 24,1987 ■ H mm - .C - v - V - -J •The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at M U . Any campus ciub or organization can submit entries to the calendar for publication to the State Press, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries will not be taken over the phone. Deadline for the entries will be 1 p.m. the previous business day. n p I I M eetings •T h e Coalition for World Peace will be discussing summer peace activities at noon today in the MU, room 209. ' OAN«rr OUTDOOR ' ' |— - Announcem ents •T h e Program for Southeast Asian Studies is Offering two new languages; E le m e n ta ry T h a i an d E le m e n ta ry Indonesian. Th e Thai class will b e offered from 6:40 to 8:55 p.m. Monday through W ednesday, and Indonesian from 3:40 to 4:30 Monday through Thursday. For more information, call Southeast Asian Studies at 965-4232. — Stay* MountMf/Stat* P rèti Sole Survivor A billboard at Van Buren and Third atraata In Phoanfx axpraaaaa aympathlea for Cacalla Clchan, the Iona aurvlvorof tha Northwest Flight 255 craah In Detroit Aug. 18. Clchan Is the daughter of ASU botany professor Michael Clehan, who was killed In the crash. See story page 13. M ain tain the righ t im age at A S U ! M o v e u p to T h e We know fr ie n d p u t d o w n ' a d e p o s it a n d si£ n a le a s e at and A p a c h e o r L e m o n , y o u w i ll re c e iv e a p r io r it y w it h an o n -c a m p u s fers p la n n e d social activities and organ ized , W ASH ER AND events, DRYER in le a c h s u it e ,-ic d n a k e ff, m ic ro w a v e , totally fu rn ish e d , co m ­ p le te h o u se w a re s (d ish es, to w e ls, p ack age e tc .), spa, h eated p o o l, san d v o ile y b a ll c o u rt, c o v e re d Storage, c o v e re d b a rb e q u e s, p ark in g gazebo, in c lu d e d and The m iss T h e C o m m o n s p ro v id e s an altern ative to the d o rm life s t y le “ w o n ’t w a n t to p a rt a p a rtm e n t of you C o m m o n s O n L e m o n o r T h e C o m m on s O n A p ach e. atm osph ere. “ T h e U ltim ate C o llegiate L ifesty le” o f­ n u m b e r w h ic h C o m m o n s. ” \ ^ h e n w i ll a llo w you y o u «-and a to se le c t your th e c lu b . c h o ic e o f su ites. W h e th e r y o u lik e a p o o l v ie w o r a n y v ie w y o u m u st act q u ic k ly as th e p r im e sp o ts lo ca te d w ith in w a lk in g distance o f cam pus, d o w n ­ a re g o in g t o w n an d sh o p p in g . In a d d itio n to a ll o f these fin e q u ic k ly ! f JMJ||| on i H u rr y an d jo in A p a c h e also o ffe rs a recreatio n R e se rv e your sp ace center/ lo u n g e w ith stu d y area, get a fre e “ C o m m o n s ” t-sh irt! am en ities, \ T h e - C o m m o n s in d o o r R A C Q U E T B A L L sauna, * an d an ex ercise COURT, now and T h e C o m m o n s , T h e U ltim a te facility. C o lle g ia te L ife s ty le ! Lemon only East Lemon St. CALL 468-6437 - --- ------------- 1111 East Apache Blvd. or OUT OF ARIZONA ^ h h ¡^ h 1 ' .-,. Mondar, August 84,15 in ¡brief Wing flap controtjaHI| D E TR O IT (A P ) — Federal investigators hope the discovery o f devices that controlled 'the wing flaps mi N orth w estFligh t 255will revea lclu esto the plane crash. The National Transportation Safety Board officials, said a flap control lever and a drive mechanism fotmd Saturday m ight revea l hew the plane’s,flaps w ere set before it crashed Aug. 16 on takeoff from D etroit Metropolitan Airport. “ W e can’ t confirm the lever was in any certain position (b efore the crash) without studying it in a controlled environm ent,” said Jack Drake, a spokesman for theNTSB. The drive mechanism consisting o f an electric m otor and a screw jack, considered key toactiva tin g the plane’s flaps# was found heavily damaged by searchers Saturday, Drake said. “ It w as broken to the extent that w edon’ t expect it to tellu s much,’ ’ Drake said ot the drivfe mechanism which is located in a plane's wing. The Detroit Free Press reported Sunday that an investigator fo r the Federal Aviation Administration who asked not to be indentified said the d rive mechanism retrieved from the mash site indicated that the plane’s flaps and slats w ere retracted during takeoff, a setting experts say could cause the crash. Investigators have found contradictory evidence during their probe o f the crash, much o f it focusing on the whether the plane’s flaps and slats, which help give the aircraft lift, ?$ *re properly set before takeoff. B lp fficia ls said a cockpit voice recorder showed the pilot and co p ilo t did not mention the flaps and slats in their verbal prefligh t check-off. And a computer voice warning, which should have told the crew in tim e to abort the fligh t if the flaps and slats w ere not extended fo r takeoff, did not show up on the cockpit tape. * The Free Press quoted an unidentified management pilot with Northwest as saying Cockpit crews sometimes disarm audio alarm systems by disconnecting,»circuit breaker. The F fe e Press also saidian unidentified investigator and officials with the airplane’s manufacturer said the warning system depended on data supplied by the fligh t crew. HMer-Staflnpact proteald MOSCOW (A P ) — Thousands of- people in the Baltic capitals braved police barricades Sunday to protest the 1939 Hitler-Stalin pact that allowed the Soviets to take over Datvia, Lithuania and Estonia, sources said. Simday was the 48th anniversary at the hon-aggression pact between N azi German dictator Adolf H itler and Soviet leader Josef Stalin, which delayed Russian fighting in World W ar II and deeded control o f the Baltic republics to the Soviet Union. C , B altic residents told W estern reporters in Moscow that hundreds of police turned out to control demonstrations in die capital cities o f R iga, La tvia ; Vilnius, Lithuania; and Tallinn, Estonia. Janis Roskalns, a Latvian nationalist who laid a wreath at R iga ’s monument to w ar victim s, told The Associated Press by telephone that at least *2*000 gathered at the m em orial around noon. Wb JL * \ M ore rioting bites Seoui SEOUL, South Korea (A P ) — Riot police on Sunday fought hundreds o f striking shipyard workers protesting the death of a fellow w orker in a previous dash, news reports said. A policem an was reported seriously injured. The death on Saturday o f 22-year-old L ee Suk-kyu was the M lf if f l State Press M ia Parents of victims of 1985 air era ttle out of cou n A $24,7 m illion lawsuit filed by the parents o f two ASU students killed in a 1985 a ir collision near Camp Vérde has been settled out o f court fo r an undisclosed amount o f money. The parents o f Samantha Fraser and Tim othy Streit filed: suit in M aricopa Couhty Superior Court m ore than two years ago against pilot Robin Thompson, who was convicted on two counts o f or the 5 th & M ill 966-9199 Best Prices In Town SHO RTS « .S P O R T S Largest Selection N O W OP Nike Woolrich Sportco Dolfin Dolt Sportif Flófo Cal Sport Club y Copperstone Sportswear ^ D u ffle O P E N A r iz o n a s h o k | b u c k $ 2 ! Go Sun Devils 5 th & M i ll Tem pe, A Z 9 6 6 -9 1 9 9 Summit unconfirm ed LOS ANGELES (A P ) Administration official& say they have no reason to believe a report that Soviet leader MikhailGorbachev is planning to m eet President Reagan next month. The Los Angeles Times reported Sunday that Krem lin officials have told the United States that Gorbachev plans to visit the United" Nations, then go to Washington to visit Reagan. The newspaper quoted officials as saying that if an agreem ent is reached beforehand in the stalled talks on banning short-range and medium-range nuclearm issiles, the Soviet and U.S. leaders would hold a fu ll scale summit to sign an arm s accord. manslaughter and two counts o f reckless endangerment for the A pril 14, 1965 crash. /, Attorneys on both sides declined to specify the term s o f the settlement. The lawsuit was one in a series o f four claim s filed in Maricopa County Superior Court against Thompson, who was piloting one o f the two single-engine planes that collided. Tw o other students, Kim berly M arbel and Paid Bjom stadt, w ere injured in the crash. . Thomas Tom e, Thompson’s attorney, said M arble has filed a claim fa r $10 m illion in actual and punitive dam ages and another $12,000 fo r m edical bills and lost wages. Bjornstadt, who was piloting file second plane, has filed suit fo r a t least $300,000 and is asking fo r unspecified compensation fo r m edical M ils and lost income. Semester? Coupon gpodfor $2 off any pair of shorts in stock [« 2 first in a month o f national labor turmoil. A Labor M inistry officia l said meanwhile that fo r the first tim e, the number of labor disputes settled Sunday exceeded the number of new disputes. But he said disputes at 494 workplaces still affected hundreds o f thousands of workers. The officia l would not allow use o f his name. Bus service in Seoul returned almost to normal after a partial walkout Saturday, but foreign and domestic flights at Seoul’s airport w ere delayed Sunday as 500 ground workers walked out for the second consecutive day. In K ojeon the southern coast, the police o fficer was badly hurt in a dash with shipyard w oikers when he tried to persuade about 500 workers to release L ee’s body fo r an autopsy in another hospital with better facilities, news reports said. .. ‘.irJ —* The workers w ere keeping watch over the body at a hospital mortuary. They had sealed o ff the mortuary with welding torches because they feared that police m ight try to forcibly take aw ay Lee’s body to destroy evidence, news reports said. u = $l.oo Burgers— llam~ 11pm Build your own w/our I/3 lb. Devil Burger S o u r bread baked fresh daily! > 3 pm -llpm $1.95 Monster Beers $1.95 Ibas Com ing Soon: ON FOUR GIANT VIDEO SCREENS 1 Buck per short Expires 10H-87S| | Sun Devil House zsrrsÈMÉtÊÊÊ i S tate P m i Page 4 For all they do, this paper’s for you R IT T E R m It’s fa ll at ASU. Excellence fo r a new semester. H A few things have changed around here, fo r those o f you who have been gone over thé' summer. W e hardly noticed, though — just little things, like the disappearance o f W est Lawn and Cady M all, and the increasing possibility o f Evan Mecham’s lease on the ninth floor o f the Capitol building runningout prematurely. But these things w ill pass. The Hole w ill be refilled someday, even if it is after w e all graduate. The recall controversy w ill crane to a conclusion, one w ay or another. Change on the ASU campus is inevitable, like graduation and parking tickets. As a m atter o f fact, you hold in your hands the daily chronicle o f change on this campus. I f the athletic department is offering resistance to ranting out Sim D evil stadium to a professional football team , you can read about it right here, during your 7:40 French 102 class. I f Arizona officials are planning to nail your hide to the w all for marijuana possession, you’ll find that in here, too. I f the LG AU is suing Associated Students officers because they refused to fund them, w e’ll give it space. I f the leader o f the w orld’s largest religious organization is going to make a stop in Tempe, w e’re going to cover it. That’s the first reason w e’re here: the dissem in ation o f in form ation to the students, facu lty and staff o f ASU. ■ M V ' •• That function is perform ed through the news pages o f the paper. The secondary, functions fa ll to this page and the facing one. These pages are to o ffer interpretation of the inform ation in the news pages, and responsible, reasoned opinion on m atters of public interest. That is, on the good days. On the bad days, which w e hope w ill be rare, they w ill o ffer shameless demagoguery. It ’s the w orld’s most ridiculous gam e of You be the Judge. * 60V. EVAN MECHAM THE BWGK S T O fS UP-STAIRS" y In any event, one thing is to be noticed about this tri-fold purpose: each of the three segments are designed with the reader in mind. With no readers, our advertising department would have a pretty tough tim e keeping us afloat. A ll the tripe about the State Press being financially dependent on student fees would become true. And w e certainly don’t want to see that happen. ", So w e’re in this together. Without us, you have no paper that has your interests specifically in mind. Without you, we have no jobs. *1 , gjÿ W e’re a ll going to try to rem em ber that. Americans Opinion? It’s a festival of stupidity at the Bircher bookshop ta n in H o ste tle r Opinion Editor The Am erican Opinion Bookstore is one o f a group o f tiny shops near the corner o f Camelback Road and Central in Phoenix. It has the appearance o f a sm all “ mom and pop” operation, with a homemade sign proclaim ing “ Am erican Opinion” hanging in the large stqrefront riuidow. What is unique about the shop, which is d e ra te d by the ultra right-wing John Birch Society, is its close proxim ity to the headquarters o f an organization that is seeking to rem ove a man from the highest office in Arizona, a man who is «^perhaps the most visible standard bearer o f JBS principles — Gov, Evan Mecham. About ig feet down the sidewalk from Am erican Opinion is the central o ffice o f the Mecham R ecall Committee. Separated only by á check cashing store and some cracked asphalt, these two diam etrically opposed groups m ake for very strange bedfellows. But their presence illustrates perfectly the need for the recall effort, and demonstrates that the Am erican Opinion storefront is just that; a front, albeit a dangerous one, masking serious deficiencies in our elected leader’s fundamental philosophies. Am erican Opinion vigorously promotes Mecham’s book, “ Crane Back Am erica,” displaying numerous copies in the storefront display case. W ritten in 1982, “ Crane Back Am érica” is Mecham’s Mein Kampf, his autobiography and political thesis statement. I dropped by the store F rid a y morning to see exactly what else American Opinion promotes. A quick tour revealed that the several hundred volumes dotting the three or four bookcases in Am erican Opinion were old and printed on low-quality paper that yellows with age. The covers w ere bright and flashy, reminiscent o f 1950’s science-fiction pulp magazines. Only" instead of warning about “ The man-eatihg lizard monster from M ars,” the titles o f these books scream ed out about “ saving Am erica” from the “ red m enace.” I thumbed through a book entitled “ Thé National Education Association: Propaganda Front for the Radical L e ft,” and examined a prominently displayed book by the late Sen. Joseph McCarthy, featuring a black and white photo o f M cCarthy bellowing at an accused “ communist.” I surveyed volumes criticizin g the civil rights movement, saw petitions protesting a holiday honoring Martin Luther K ing, Jr., and glanced a t a b rief history of Klu Klux Klan activity in the south. There w ere many books, but only a few themes and variations; white Am erican m ale supremecy, intolerance bigotry, mindless fear and hatred. A veritable smorgasbord o f ignorance. Cloaked in-the flag, an artificia l sense o f patriotism and godliness, the books are m erely a front for the JBS gn-'- to w ipe out a ll those who do not believe as they do. These are the works o f men without substance, without character and devoid o f humanity. They lack understanding and respect for the very document they claim to want to “ save” — the Constitution. They are, to borrow a phrase from T.S. E liot (who, by the way, is mentioned in an Am erican Opinion pamphlet listing w riters “ unsuitable for school age children” ), “ hollow men.” And found right along side their writings? A book by the STA TE PRESS KHALi CRAWFORD Editor KIM MATTINGLY ......... . b e n McCo n n e l l MIKE ROWELL Wire Editor.................... ..... ........... .........DARRIN HOSTETLER ...........SHELLY 8CHAFFÇR News Editor..... Sport» Editor.......................... A n t Sports E M o r~ ~ ....... — Copy Chief............ .............. Photo Editor......................... REPORTERS: Victor Barajas, Mika Burgess, Vickis Chachers, Marissa HaHare, Mika Hoehn, Michelle Hoffman, Aaiyn Kemp, Robie Kakonge, Dana Leonard, Scott Luck, Stave Noton, Keky Pearce. Twyla Pumroy, Terri Seabed, Tracy Scott.' ' ’ ^ m B M irrMi ARTS REPORTERS: Chuck Hadd, Tod McCoy, Scott Seeks), Cerise Wltoon. SPORTS REPORTBlS: Oarol Boos, Chris Dorsey, Joan ^ H H H p r y Oast- ' quotable He knows nothing; he thinks he knows everything — that clearly points to a political career.” JUDIE GAILLARD Managing Editor :<% toasw: governor, who called the JBS a “ fin e group of: Americans” during a speech at their national convention in June. I asked the lone cleric in the shop if there had been any problems with the recall people being so hear. “ No,” she said. “ We leave them alone.” But the recall comm ittée w orkers tell a different story. They tell of visiting Am erican Opinion, only to have the cleric spray them and everything they touched with Lysol disinfectant, to “ k ill the AIDS virus.” W orkers say bookshop employees call them “ faggots” and “ communists” because of their recall involvem ent ' „ A fter speaking with a few reca ll personnel, I went back over to Am erican Opinion and puiraiiased a copy of “ Come Bade Am erica.” ** • I ’m going to read it, because I believe the saying “ know thine enemy” has a vital application in Arizona — if you’re a minority, or a “ dissident D em ocrat,” or a homosexual, or just somebody who feels the educational, environmental or economic policies of the governor are incorrect, it certainly applies to you. To those whose works*are on sale at American Opinion, we Are all the enem y— a real threat to be dealt with harshly. j 4 And so the American Opinion, M echam style, must also be dealt with harshly. Bigoted, neanderthal political anti social c :>ac pts, dfegmséd by nationalist' or religious fervor and rhetoric, are dangerous and deadly weapons. Proponents of such philosophies must not be ligh tly dismissed as radical fringe groups. A fter all, one o f their own obtained enough votes to become governor o f Arizona. I ’ll read “ Come Back A m erica.” And when I ’m done, I ’m going to watch the recall com m ittee show that the American Opinion isn’t really the Arizona Opinion. And I ’m going to watch Arizona citizens close the book on Evan Mecham. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Todd Green, Sean L, Mohr, Steve Mountaer, Mika Scully. — G eorge B ernard Shaw COPY EDITORS: Bridgal Shelton, Marty Sauerzopt: ARTIST: MVw Ritter ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Veronica ¿Karo, DanieUe Carbone, Judy Crane, Joa Cuff, Ola Hasadhtratana, Tom Hutchison, manager of Mesa, Emsd Mugharbel. Mark Psteroen, Kevin Rasp, Rich Tommie«, Laura W hite ■PRODUCTION: Leighayn Green, Chris Hogg, Mark McKin­ ney, Bruce Peterson, Alice Pittman, Lynne Senzek. The State Prase Is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona Stale University, Tempe AZ 85287. Newsroom: 965-2282. Advertising & Production: 985-7572 The State Press Is the only newspaper exclusively published tor and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in hds newspaper pm not necessarily those df the ASU administration, faculty, staff or etudpm body. a The State Press s ta ff w ishes to e x p re s s its de ep est sym pathies to the fa m ily and frie n d s o f th e e ig h t m em bers o f th e A rizona S tate U n iv e rs ity co m m u n ity tost in the tra g ic A ug. 16 crash o f N o rth w e s t F lig h t 255. O u r tho ug hts are w ith you d u rin g th is m ost d iffic u lt tirile . i State Prêt» Page 5 ^ ^ n d o ^ A ¡g u stS O te7 j ■«■«■■■■■i» Smoking Sun: Criminals are burnincpo sue the police body sometimes referred to as “ private they w ere arrested.” parts.” . He’s right. In recent years there have When the police caught him, Candelario been many such suits. A kidnapper in Utah tried to shoot it out with the cops. When they -ss was clutching his groin and saying ” oW, ow,” or words to that effect. shot back at him, he sued on the grounds The wounds healed, but from his cell that they w ere excessively violent. A thief in California fe ll through the Candelario has recently filed a suit against skylight of a building he was burglarizing, the c itk o f Oakland and the police, H e said then sued the landlord fo r negligence. the cops made fun o f his injury and his sexual preference, which is gay, and that “ But this latest case takes the cake,’ ’ m y cau sed him p erm a n en t “ e m o tio n a l cop friend said. “ What a pathetic mope.” He was talking about a young bank robber dam age.” He also sued the company that m akes the smoke bomb, charging that their named Daniel Candelario, who is doing tim e in a California prism . prochict caused pain and suffering, both to Last year, Candelario robbed a bank in his emotions and his m ale appendage. “ An absolute lack o f professional pride,” Oakland, When he grabbed the money, he m y cop friend said. “ When you think' o f the didn’t know that the teller had slipped a tiny tradition of bank robbery in this country — smoke bomb into the wad. The idea, o f cotirse, is fo r the smoke bomb guys like John D illinger, P retty Boy Floyd, to detonate so the cops can spot the thief on a W illie Sutton and going a ll the.way back to crowded street. the James brothers and the Daltons. Butch That’s exactly what happened. Candelario Cassidy and the Sundance K id — can you put the money in his trouser pocket and im agine any o f them suing because they had dashed out o f the bank. a burnt wee-wee ?” Then the smoke bomb went o ff in his NO, it’s as the Duke said to an incompetent pocket. Unfortunately fo r Candelario, the robber in his last m ovie: “ You better find deu ce did m ore than smoke. It becam e very another line of work this one sure don’t hot. Am i it caused burns to that part o f the suit your pistol.” T h en m a n y Of th e c le a n yo u n g s u b u r b a n ite s d e c id e d to b e c o m e revolu tion aries and build bombs and overthrow the governm ent. W e w orried M îk e R o yko about that until we discovered that they Tribune Média usually blew themselves up w hile making their bombs. Services Then w e have the chronically poor, the deteriorating old cities, the F B I catching hordes o f corrupt politicians in b ig towns and sm all, and the vicious, ugly suspicion It can get very depressing, listening to the that tins year’s baseball has been juiced up. experts give pessim istic reports oh this W ith so much evidence o f the decline of e c l i n e . ■ country’s d our society, you would think there wouldn’t They point to countries like Iran, taunting be anything m ore to w orry about. us m ilitarily. Or ¿apan, outhustling us econom ically. But I'v e found it. Or at least a cop friend o f m ine has. . * ,./ ’ i j - y , > There are the preachers w hosay that as a As the cop explained: “ There is a definite so ciety w e h ave becom e too sin fu l, decline in tins quality of our crim inals. M ore lascivious and greedy. and m ore o f diem have becom e spineless Then, as if to prove their point, the whiners. p r e a c h e r s t h e m s e lv e s b e c o m e "“ There was a tim e when a crim inal took spectacularly sinful, lascivious and greedy. his chances. I f he was caught, he went to W e went through a decade o f w orrying cqurt, lied, was found gu ilty and then went because clean young suburbanites decided o ff to prison and kept his mouth Shut and to becomé hippies and said they (fidn’t care took his punishment like a man. about success or money, but just wanted io “ N o w , they go to prison and they file have long hair, w ear d irty underwear, m ake lawsuits because they didn’t like the way love and keep their brains addled. M IR A N D A S C IN N A M O N R O L L S W ELC O M ES Y O U R R U N S B A C K MufBa* -B lu e b e rry , B an an a, B ra n a P in e a p p le -C o co n u t, C h o co la te -O ra n g e ; ysCinnamon Bob§ . A p p le , Z u c c h in i, W h e a t, U a sp b e rry . C a rro t C o co n u t s th e O rig in a l. 215 E, 7th St. Suite 112 8 9 4 -0 1 2 3 Hours: 6 a.m.-7:30 p.m. N t W TE A M « U N IF O R M S ? EQUIPM ENT Regular Drink jppd i n H Cinnamon Roll or Muffin for /Team *f Discounts ithst Softball • Baseball Basketball •Soccer Most Sports 'Uniforms «T Shirts C aps‘ Lettering^ Custom Silk Screens, Numbering Church rib a m ' Business % $ t |K > Univentty W A H fl— S a ve 7s c w ith th is c o u p o n . M ONDAY ^ \ ' Z - 7,’s¿ ß 11>'J-.* ‘ -■ liW B lin lE M (Every M onday 7 p.m.-Closé) at Jack Daniels welcomes back ASU students / s .0 . all night J.D. T-shirts & other giveaw ays ki HR $ 2 P o n y P itc h e rs $ 3 L a r g e (5 0 lo z .) P itc h e rs $ 2 L o n g I s l a n d I T ’s Free Happy Hour Buffet 4-7 Free Pizza 8-? Never,-ever, ever, ever, ever a cover g U lg iiir a l & pppsaMl f ili A p a c h e iP H t ^ m i » I i 1 Ill new at asu Suite Pitu Page 6 in 3 -y e a r e x p a n s io n By SCOTT LUCK ' Stats Press W hile most students evacuated the V alley and its infamous heat this summer, construction companies turned on the « afterburners fo r ASU’s three-year, $100 m illion campus expansion project. . Tw o parts o f the 10-point plan already have been completed, while work on four structures has kicked into high gear. “ This is a marvelous, tremendous boost for us,” said_Bob Beeman, the ASU president’s executive coordinator. “ It adds over 600,000 square feet of classroom, lab, office and study space that directly impacts the students,” not including hall, closet and recreation space. v M pN Beeman said about l.ft m illion square feet o f “ usable space” w as needed before the recent projects, which he A f l E p l j ¿Sr* called the beginning o f long-term expansion to fu lfill the deficiency. ' ~ ' rXSi fòSSIS 'dipi»e«»Most funding for the projects was provided by government bonds, which Beeman said would be repaid through student i fees and tuition. • j . •-/'fe J I He said construction funding does not cut into the amount o f money the University receives jto fu lfill academic requirements fo r accreditation. ' . “ Funding comes from different pots of money,” Beeman said. -, | The first project completed was a $2.7 m illion, 827-vehicle| parking garage at M cA llister Avenue and T y ler S treet.’ Construction crews prepare what was once West Lawn for the Hayden Library expansion. Another garage, costing $2.3 m illion and accommodating 513 The three-story, 100,000-square-foot structure is slated for vehicles, recently was com pleted west o f Stauffer H all and Excavation began July 1, and the m ajor portion o f the first fnm platinn in Decem ber to consolidate student services into phase ended Friday, according to Hayden Library the A rt Building. 5: one building. Richard Landreth, ABU assistant director q f Parking ami Expansion Project Manager Tim Keneipp. “ The Student Services Building provides one-stop Building the 97,000-square-fpot underground expansion w ill Transit, said the structures w ere built entirely from parking shopping,rtBeeman said. fees and tickets, without any state aid. . ; begin in Novem ber. Keneipp said ASU w ill start soliciting Studentscan conduct all their business at a central location bids on Sept. 8 and expects to receive bids Oct. 7. The most obvious construction on campus is the $11.5 rather than “ having to bounce a ll around campus,” he The library’s two-level addition w ill provide shelf space for m illion Hayden Lib rary Expansion, expected to be added. , ;* -•-V' § £ g s i * about 375,000 books and room for 1,500 students. completed in February 1989. On the west side o f campus, the $1$ m illion Fine Arts Complex and Paul V. Galvin Playhouse are being builrnext Another project nearing completion is the $10 million Excavation o f almost 100,000 cubic yards of dirt and rock to the Music Building. Student Services Building west of the Administration has left a 30-foot deep trench between W est H all, and the Turn to EXPANSION, page 10. Building. j $ ' !• - . j ’jj library, where the south end of Cady M all used to be. MU McDonald’s quickly becomes busiest campus food service By KELLY PEARCE State Press With sales of almost 3,660 B ig Macs and 4,100. ord ers o f fr ie s , the new M U McDonald’s has become one o f the most populated hotspots on campus and could m ean som e 'to u g h c o m p e titio n fo r traditional U niversity food services. According to Manager Manuel Torres, the popular fast-food restaurant + one o f only six on U S. campuses 4- has been setting record sales since it opened in the M U lower level Aug. 12. . \ An extensive opening ceremony, com plete with a string quartet and news cameras, was held the week the restaurant opened. One ASU student called it absurd. “ A fter all, it’s only a McDonald’s,” said Steve Cartqr, a graduate student in ceram ic arts. V *. ^ But MU acting associate director Randy Johnson said, “ We wanted to have a true burger alternative.” f L . Johnson said it is too early to determine whether the franchise w ill hurt the business o f other food establishments in -th e MU Grand Marketplace. ' : “ I hope McDonald’s w ill have a positive ‘ effect, and I know it w ill create a com petitive atmosphere,” he said. R etail food service director Haildun Yasa said the restaurant w ill create “ fa ir and peaceful competition,” and Marketplace em ployees Joyce M yers and Robert M ills said they «don’t think their business w ill be jeopardized. Torres said he is amazed and “ m ore than happy” with the crowds McDonald’s is attracting. Owner and operator Connie Talam antez said the franchise is setting state records for u crowds, blit it is run like any other store in the VaUey. She said its busiest hours begin between 10 a.m. and noon and continue until 1:20 pm The rushes bring in between 1,200 and 1,300 The m eal deal includes a large Sandwich, regu la r frie s and a medium drink. Talamantez said they have not sold many punch Cards because students don’t know about them. • : I S , ' So fa r, the McDonald’s m ost popular item s are B ig Macs, QuarterPounder By KELLY PEARCE State Press In contrast withMcDonald’s ever-popular “Jast” food, new residence hall food services are focusing on nutrition this fall, the MU acting associate director said. Randy Johnson said soup-and-salad, bars, yogurt machines and Vegetarian entrees are a few of the new services debuting in re s id e n c e h a lls from the M a rrio tt Corporation. A 35-item salad bar, called “ Naturefest,” has been installed in every cafeteria, Johnson said, and every noon and dinner -m eal w ill include hot vegetarian and meat entrees. Mike McCoy, • history major, reaches tor a cold drink from a newly installed Pepsi machine. or Coke, ■... students w ill use whatever is convenient-” Most students asked said they w ill use the Pepsi machines no m atter what their preference. . The balls’ popular “ steak nights” w ill be held bi-monthly instead of last year’s once a month service, he added. said the ASU food-service contract was split three ways this year to con sist o f fa s t food,' residen ce-h all cafeterias and campus concessions M Hhopéd thM afi? three areas w ill potoibaUy complement each other and help ASU;” he sen t " ^ Hamburgers,- Garden Salads and Super Drinks^ she said. Talam antez said teamwork has resulted in a smooth operation to date; and she added that “ w e pride ourselves on service and helping the customer.” ''I s S H r a TTie only dilem m a occurred last Friday when an exhaust fan went out, and the restaurant w as closed fo r 40 minutes. “ You have to expect these things with new Construction,” Talam antez said. “ It’s like a car, and you have to le t it settle.” Sbe$aid when U niversity officials invited McDonald’s owners to bid fo r a restaurant in the MU, ' “ it was an offer I couldn’t refuse.” . VJohnson said McDonald’s was «elected on the basis o f sales record, customer service and percentage Menu hotline-phone 965-FOOD for the day's menu Soft serve yogurt machines p t 3 d iffe re n t dining hails throughout campus Hamburgers & hotdogs every lunch and dinner ^ N aturefestTW— art extensive solad b o r ^ » Jj, ■ Soup and 7 way chili bar doily Fresh orange iUtee a t every meal' .. R build-your-owh w affle bar a t every breakfast Twice os many steak nights w | TH€ CflflflVRN — The traveling food show. 7 fun themes including Chinatown, Cafe O le, Fisherman's Wharf, W urst Bar, New Vork Deli, Pizza. Party, Pasta Cxtravaganza; each offered in your own dining hail on alternating' nights, one every night. jjt ■. Vaur very own Pizza Delivery. Featuring . Just phone 965-4444 for fa st, free delivery from 5 PM to m idnight, 7 days per week. Save 6 1/2% on Pizza Delivery or any Grand M arketplace food purchase! Just buy a cash value cord fo r as little as $25.00. " : • ViAffordable weekend meals: Brunch and dinner offered on Saturdays anc^Bundays throughout the ocademic year. Many meal plans to choose from. *‘ (lie hove mode the dining experience an €V€NT, not a chorel R fun dining experience, featuring revolutionary & sweeping Innovations. . . like no other resident dining program in the countryll m Den' ÈkM »BV-'ÎP^TÏÎfliSs? purdiose *1 p ie n i m Page 8 IliiS a !m M m ¡ By SCOTT LUCK ' State Press W hile campus construction causes minor inconveniences fo r most of the U niversity population, it could become a nightmare fo r ASU’s m ore than 500 disabled students. With unfam iliar fences, bridges, detours and the occasional closure of F orest-M all by working vehicles, U niversity officials said they must cooperate to make the campus safe fo r disabled students. ja y Taska, program coordinator for the visually impaired, said the ASU campus was difficu lt for blind students even before construction began. Now the added confusion of unexpected obstructions has made campus travel increasingly difficult fo r ASU’s 55 blind students, he said. Taska said he personally leads the students on a campus walk-through to acquaint them with class schedules and new obstructions. He said he is kept up-to-date on the latest obstacles by ASU’s Planning and Construction Department. “ It’s been a total team effort,” said Bob Beèmap, ASU President Ji Russell Nelson’s executive coordinatin'. “ We’ve got people working together here, inLthe Physical Plant, in (the Department o f Public Safety^and Disabled Student Resources to ease the problems jura identify them before they pop up.” Tim Keneipp, project m anager fo r the Hayden Library expansion, said he has worked closely with DSR to address the needs of disabled students. —A DSR associate director Tedde Scharf said her office was inform ed about ensuing obstructions months before construction began. ■ ém Slsm * I ■ .. “ It’s been terrific/ ’ she said. “ I can’t say enough for the kind o f help w è’ve received. They’ve been really anxious to get advice and input from us.” Scharf praised the Planning and Construction Department fo r directional signs strategically placed around campus. She said the installation of sidewalks east o f Hayden L ibrary to widen the pathway particularly w ill be helpful. • M ore than 500 disabled students w ill work with DSR this year, including the 55 blind and 265 òrthopédically disabled students, Scharf said. U niversity officials agreed the prim ary concern is for blind students and the orthopedically disabled, who must travel on. campus much further than previous semesters. “ We’ve been spending three times as much tim e as last year On basic m obility training,” Taska said. Junior Ray Basabilvazo, a blind computer-engineering m ajor, said construction noise also hinders campus travel for Mind students. He said many of the students listen for sound cues, such as the fountain east of the Language and Literature building, as sources to guide their progress. , But when the sound is masked by construction noise, it is easy for blind students to get lost, especially those who use canes. * * Slam Mounteer/State Press Junior computer-engineering major Ray Basabilvazo, shown with his seeing-eye dog Buford, said that contruction noise makes it harder for blthd students to gauge where they are on campus. Cam pus construction causes re-routing of ped By SCOTT LUCK State Press Students returning to ASU have been greeted by a wave of dem olition and excavation as the form erly w ell-traveled Cady M all has becom e the site fo r m assive construction trucks, tractors and a canyon­ like trench. Chain-link fences now cordon o ff what was once the south end o f the m all and West Lawn, and pedestrian tra ffic has been r e - . routed around the30-foot deep hole. Directional signs and maps fo r alternate routes now dot the campus to aid . in W IN E . 4. W ELL. students’ attem pt to expediently reach their destinations. path is so narrow, any bikes would cause a possible hazard.” j Project hpanager Tim Keneipp said a tem porary Wooden bridge was constructed over the Hayden Library moat this summer to provide access to the library, not to substitute fo r Cady M all. He said campus administration is trying to make the construction “ as painless as p o s s ib le ” b y p r o v id in g a d d itio n a l information tables, directional signs and ASU police patrol. Tem porary paths w ill be monitored throughout the project, which Keneipp said should be com pleted in February 1989. But the key to smooth operation is the cooperation of students, he said. Doug Bartosh, ASU acting director of public safety, said the west HaydonCSbrary access is closed to bicycle^because “ the It is “ crucial” for students to o b ey construction fla g people and the directional signs, he said, adding that there have been no accidents yet. D RAFT T H E R E IS N T A N Y T H IN G NEED T O 9 1 9 E. APAQHE BLVD [b u d l ig h t ] KNOW 921- ( next d o o r to the TEM PE H O L ID A Y INN) traffic A t M ill Avenue and 10th Street, Bartosh said bicyclists should dismount their bikes and walk them onto campus to avoid construction vehicles. T h e D ep a rtm en t o f P lan n in g and Construction suggests usingthO walkway east o f the library, next to the Central Plant, as a substitute fo r Cady M all. In addition to the Cady M all obstruction, construction vehicles Occasionally travel across Forest M all, and its access is restricted to one-half o f the regular path w ay.'. ' \ gagc9 S tate P m sr service planned for 8 victims of crash By VICKIE CHACHERE State Press prom ising career.” *v ^ M em orial services fo r the eight ASU students, professors and sta ff members killed last week in the crash o f Northwest A irlines Flight 255 w ill be held noon Wednesday at Gammage Center. ASU officials have planned a half-hour service fo r the eight victim s who w ere among at least 156 killed when a DC-9 c ra s h e d on ta k e - o ff fr o m D e tr o it M etropolitan Airport. The public is invited to attend the service. “ ASU lost a large number o f respected and valued members o f its c o m m u n it y ,” said Bob E llis, ASU associatevicepresident fo r U niversity relations. “ W e want to say good-bye to them in a most appropriate w ay.” • M ichael Cichan, a 22-year-old assistant botany professor, joined the ASU faculty in 1985. He was traveling With his w ife Paula, 6-year-old son* D a vid and 4-year-old daughter Cecilia. Cichan and his w ife and son w ere killed iq jg e crash. “ This guy was a star,” said Stan Szarek, one o f Cichan’s colleagues. “ He had a very 'i Journal o f Botany. Szarek said the professor was studying the evolution o f plant anatomy when he left fo r Philadelphia to visit with relatives. Cichan, who was awarded his Ph.D. in 1984 a t Ohio State University, gained national prominence as a botanist fo r his research. Szarek said his research was being funded by the National Science Foundation. “ In botany, that’s the most prestigious funding,” he said, adding that Cichan also was a popular teacher. “ He never had large classes, but you would find almost everybody who took his first class would have turned around and taken the second,” be said. “ Some w ere even scheduled to take the third this fa ll.” Cichan began his college career at La S alle U n iversity in Philadelphia and attended graduate school at Rutgers State U niversity in New Jersey. In l984 he was awarded the Outstanding Graduate Student Aw ard from the botany department a t Ohio State University. Cichan’s last article w ill be published in the Novem ber 1987 issue o f The Am erican X ER O X ® C O P IES Jane Tanfield, an assistant professor of architecture, joined the U niversity faculty in fa ll 1986. She is survived by her father, who lives in England. _ R o g e r S c h lu n tz, d ir e e to r o f th e architecture school, said Tanfield m oved to Arizona from a large firm in San Francisco to teach upper-division architecture classes. “ She had a real interest in teaching,” Schluntz said, “ ft was a m eans o f rejuvenation fo r her own professional creativity, and th e . students provided a special m otivation fo r her.” T a n fie ld w as re tu rn in g fro m th e Educators in Landscape A rch itectu re conference in Rhode Island, where she jointly presented a paper with Suzanne Underwood, an ASU assistant professor of architecture, who also was killed in the 'accident. ■ ' 3 » Michael Cichan Christie Woolsey, who w ill teach parttim e this fa ll in the architecture school, knew both Tanfield and Underwood. W oolsey said. “ They w ere just really liked by the students. I know there aTe going to be “ They w ere really loved and respected,” Turn to VICTIMS, page 12. $1 OFF ALL BEAUTY SUPPLIES PARADISE BAR & GRILL INTRODUCES: PARADIS! PIZZA AT O U R NEWEST ADDITION! ■ C R IM P E R S L T D (S elf Service) OFFER LIM ITED TO ASU STUDENTS WITH VALID 1.0. THIS OFFER IS GOOD THROUGH 9-16-87 CALL 968-7771 401 M-F u:oo-? 5-S n:oo-? 1250 E. Apache, Suite 112, Tempe, Arizona 85281 S. MILL 9 6 7 -2 2 3 3 WALKING DISTANCE 966-5192 FROM ASU W/COUPON ONLY. ONE ITEM PERCOUPON. 8’/4”x11" 20# Bond White Paper S P E C IA L i i 216 E. University i! H fl 967-2557 ro L L ge g I ASU • A ll d a rk ro o m su p p lie s •F ilm d e ve lo p in g •F u ll lin e ca m e ra sto re FO REST .M E R A .a LENSES • VIDEO • TELESCOPES • BINOCULARS il W b s ■if ASU tE M P E p ^ * , 8 9 $ m Introducing. CYROS sandwiches ^ O servlng frozen yogurt | j 2 0 4 E . U n iv e r s it y p S (Behind The Chuckbox) H 894-8337 ; | ’jH H H Q f i 7 valley location^ Just a «hurt, w alk 1rom cam pus a t Forest & University f il m D E V E L O P IN G 12 exp . W ^ W r S t . 9 9 24 e x p . ......... % 2 .9 9 3 6 exp . S 3 .e e * I ‘ L i,- 'photos ( í X v ’ í b ' ííS Ú Í - s p e c ia l '*1 3 5 , 1 1 0 , 126 sizes only «G lossy o rte x tu re d «A il negatives individually sleeved^ fiv e aptlim ro ll Umititper per customer. customer. Rye freí Î ! other otter o r discount. * • * * ** 8 on-cam pus d e llv e ry . ■ /, ' Page 1 0 . State. f ■. Monday, August 2 4 ,19jD Expansión Continued from page 6. “ The fine arts college never had adequate dance or theater rehearsal space or a decent gallery to hang art,” Beeman said. The 90,000-square-foot structure should be completed by mid-September 1988. It w ill house the ASU A rt Museum and a 500-seat theater for students in the Departm ent of Dance and provide m ore classroom and office space. On the east side of campus, workers are putting the final touches on the $2 m illion expansion and renovation of Arm strong Hall. A new library w ill be included in the twostoiy addition, as w ell as office and classroom space. P roject manager Paul Fiedler said the 17,228-square-foot expansion and 14,200-square-foot rem odeling should be completed in Decem ber. The $12.175 m illion School of Architecture expansion has been postponed from its initial August starting date until mid-December because of complications with utility lines, project m anager Jason Eslam ieh said. Construction was delayed because $700,000 in unexpected, additional funds w ere needed to install appropriate utility lines, he said. Additional funding had to be approved t)te the Arizona Board of Regents before construction. * The expansion w ill cover 100,000 square feet at University D rive and Forest Avenue, where the historic Frankenberg House used to stand. It w ill provide space for teaching, research, exhibition and computer facilities. The Frankenberg House was dismantled over the summer by a local contractor who hopes to rebuild the house somewhere in Tempe. “ Everything is going wonderfully,” Eslamieh said, adding the construction docket is 50 percent complete and should be finished b y mid- or late September. Several projects are on the drawing board for the near future. An $8 m illion Sun D evil Stadium expansion, including an addition o f 1,700 loge-level seats, should begin promptly after the 1988 Fiesta Bow) and should be completed by the end of 1988. Assistant Athletic D irector Tom Collins said the additi w ill endose the stadium at the loge level and “ give the soul end zone a complete look.” He said a six-story'expansion w ill include offices and sports-medicine and rehabilitation floor, while a basemeiJ level w ill house locker rooms, ticket o ffice and a main lobbj] He said the new offices w ill relieve currently crampe quarters in the Department o f Athletics. ^ Later this spring, construction should begin on a $15 millio Physical Sciences Complex addition. It w ill provide tw lecture halls, chemistry, physics and geology classrooms an ASU’s Nininger M eteorite Collection. About 340 parking decal holders from Lot 46 will b transfered to Parking Structure Two. A long-range project is the $20 m illion Student Recreation! Complex; construction is slated to begin in January and conclude in June 1989. The center, to be located at College Avenue and Apache Boulevard, w ill include 135,000 square feet o f recreation area CALIFORNIA BEACHWEAR AND SWIMWEAR LATEST SENSATIONS W O R LD X T C o m p u te !f iese»ted by MicroNet Paul Renden:Tech. Sales (208 E. Broadway Rd. # 1 1 0 ,Tempe, 9 6 7 - 4999 $569 C O M PLETE BASE S Y S T E M ! Includes. • / _ ____ ____ _ " X 100% IBM Compatible I fjnique^kül Casual Wear •Radical toiRegular 640K Memory □ Dual Disk Drives : , s' 8 Slot Turbo Main Board AT Style Keyboard Baby AT Case w/Keylock 150W Power Supply Monochrome Monitor Graphics/Printer Card Students mention this ad and receive 2 boxes of disks FREE with system purchase! j I o I I ty=J p I A | | - v fm "\ L= L= one v i ; - H . Even w h e n th e w e a t h e r c o o l s o f f , y o u w il l b e s iz z lin g w ith s t y le w i t h as n e w h a i r s t y l e f r o m C R IM P E R S , T h is y e a r , o u r d e s ig n e rs h a ve re tu rn e d w ith n e w s ty le s fro m J IN G L E S of L O N D O N . C o m e in a n d e x p e rie n c e th e u ltim a te . s a l o n , C R I M P E R S U N I V E R S I T Y 5 2 5 S, T O W E R S F O R E S T B 2 B - 3 B 5 1 H H L T D 9 6 6 - 5 1 3 2 Sfrittoti» Sparky won’t attend papal visit By TRACY SCOTT State Press When Pope John Paul II comes to Sun D evil Stadium Sept. 14, ASU’s Sparky w ill not be attending the Mass. Until last week, there w ere five Sparkys in the stadium, but the south-end scoreboard has been repainted with the Rose Bowl emblem, and only four Sparkys remain on each side of the auxiliary scoreboards. The four Sparkys are the logo of the Sun D evil Club, an ASU booster club, and not the “ o fficia l” University Sparky carrying a pitch fork. But even the four w ill be covered with yellow-and-white Fiesta Bowl buntings to make the stadium cosm etically appealing for a worship service, said Jim O’Connell, executive director of ASU public events. ASU adm inistrators and Diocese of Phoenix officials insist there was not a conscious effort to cover up the Sun D evil. “ W e’re not trying to cover up a ll reference to the ‘D evil,’ but covering up the scoreboards,” O’Connell said. Sun D evil Club m em ber Reid Southern said the club was not inform ed of its logo cover-up. ------------- E “ l am not opposed to the action,” he said. “ It w ill look nicer when it is being used for the pope.” j •I "T h e Rev. D ale Fushek, the vicar of worship fo r the Diocese of'Phoenix, said the stadium w ill be decorated fo r a non-athletic event, and the scoreboards w ill not be used. “ The stadium is being turned into an environment fo r prayer,” he said, but added that the diocese is not taking a stand against the U niversity’s impish Sun D evil. . Some controversy surrounded the mascot earlier this year when Jack Thompson, a proclaim ed born-again Christian and leader of the drive against devil mascots in the Los Angeles area, designated Sparky as his next \ target^. But Thompson said last week he currently is not pursuing his anti-Sparky crusade. The name “ ASU Sun D evil Stadium” on the auxiliary scoreboards w ill be visible during the papal service, O’ Connell said. » ASU assistant athletic director Tom Collins said the athletic department spent $9,000 to repaint the south-end scoreboard lást week. H e said the scoreboard has been scheduled fo r repainting since the Rose Bowl victory. mm Chris Carlson of Pearson painting puts a new coat of paint on the score board at the south end of the football stadium. ASU officials busy preparing for September’s papal Mass By TRACY SCOTT State Press While ASU students are busy finding classes and buying books, ASU officials are putting together final preparations for Pope John Paul I I ’s Mass here Sept. 14. “ This is going to be the most w idely publicized event in the history of ASU,” said Jim O’Connell, executive director of ASU public events. The pontiff’s visit w ill be his first trip to the V alley and his second pastoral visit ,to the United States. The stature of the pope and the presence of international press w ill bring w orld attention to campus, O’Connell said. The three-hour Mass begins at 6:30 p.m., but people may begin entering Sun D evil Stadium at 2 p.m. University officials expect more than 250.000 people to invade Tempe, but only 73.000 w ill be allowed inside the V alley’s largest outdoor arena. O’Connell said security w ill allow no opportunity to see or hear the pope outside the stadium, and ASU w ill not hold activities in the surrounding area. “ We want to-b e prepared to provide human services for people who show up, but we don’t want to attract them,’ ’ O’Connell said. “ We have been planning with the idea that the campus and downtown Tempe w ill be clogged with hundreds of thousands of people that day.” Inform ation centers, m edical facilities and w ater facilities w ill be available to the public. U niversity officials are hoping many of the pope’s followers w ill opt to attend the open papal Mass in San Antonio the day before he comes to the Valley, O’Connell said. M ore than 500,000 worshippers are expected to attend the San Antonio Mass, sa id Jan et Knutson, a d m in istra tive assistant for the state media coordinator. Six of the pope’s nine Masses in the United States w ill be ticket-only events: Phoenix; Los Angeles; San Francisco; D etroit; Charleston, S.C. and Carm el, Calif. Phoenix marks the fifth stop of the pope’s AZ SUB DEVIL » P IZ Z A • S U B S » S A L A D S IT A L IA N D IN N E R S 3' - 4' - 6' SU B S F O R A L L O C C A S IO N S P A R T Y T R A Y S N O W A V A IL A B L E PITCHERS OF BEER STILL $2.00 BEER O N TAP: MILLER, MILLER LITE, BUD & LOWENBRAU DARK BOTTLED BEER: DELIVERY AVAILABLE MILLER DRAFT, HEINEKEN &CORONA 967-8091 UNIVERSITY IN TEMPE CENTER Sex & Drugs & Rock ’n R oll1 nine-city tour. People without tickets to the ASU Mass can see the pontiff in Phoenix along his motorcade route down Central Avenue, between Catalina D rive and Thomas Road, or at the Phoenix C ivic P laza, Where he w ill speak before the ASU Mass. To a lleviate some of the crowds flocking to ASU and Tem pe, Monday classes w ill be canceled. But students are required to make up the lost day Dec. 11, traditionally a study day before fin al examinations. The Hayden Library administration has requested approval for Hayden and Noble libraries to rem ain open from 8 a.m to 7 p.m, to service students on campus. The decision is pending. The MU w ill be open 6:30 a.m. to m idnight. M U restau rants, including McDonald’s, .will follow normal operating hours, and F ollette’s Hallm ark w ill be open 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. To cut down on tra ffic and parking problems, ASU w ill operate with a lim ited staff," said Susan M alaga, ASU director of personnel. M alaga said ASU adm inistration is considering Sept. 14 to be a regular workday but encouraging employees to use vacation or compensatory tim e off. THE VÍDEO TRIVIACg AM E 1. Who was P la yb o y's first playmate of the month? 2\ Peruvian marching powder is another name for what drug? 3.^Sordon Sumner is better known by what name? Send check or money order for $19.95 plus $2.50 for shipping and handling to: SEX & DRUGS & ROCK -n R0LL P.O. Box 22226/Denver, Co. 80222 | Please print your name and address and specify VHS or Beta. Allow 2-3 weeks for delivery. Greenbacks Ma*kelmg. Inc ’2212 So Yosemite Cir Denver. Co HOURS Papa Jay’s Pizza M on.-Jhurs. 4-12 Friday 4-1 Saturday 12-1 Sunday 12-12 FAST FREE DELIVERY (L im ite d Free D e liv e ry A fe a ) $4.95 M in im u m F o o d O rd e r 804 South Ash, Tem pe (2 blocks West of M ill Avenue, south o f University) Pope more liked than Church, poll says LOS ANGELES (A P ) — Most Americans think highly of Pope John Paul II, but disagree sharply with many of his beliefs and those of the Roman Catholic Church, according to a Sunday Los Angeles Times poll. The survey of 2,040 adults, including 957 Catholics, found that while Americans expressed admiration fo r the pope, the m ajority disagree with his church’s position on birth control, artificial insemination and women in the priesthood. The poll hara.4 percent margin of error. M ore thatynalf of Protestants interviewed said they liked the pope and only 8 percent expressed dislike. Of the Catholics polled 75 percent said they adm ired the pope. Among a ll Am ericans polled the pontiff won 61 percent approval, but nine out of 10 Catholics polled said they disagree with church policies but continue to be loyal followers. 9 6 6 -1 0 0 3 o r 9 6 6 -4 2 9 2 SAVE! COUPON S A V E !_ Seventy fiv e percent said they do not believe the pope is infallible as church doctrine teaches. ■ l¥ m c _o S M s 'T 5 "F R Ë i" iT Sixty percent of Catholics disagree with thè church’ s ban on wom en in the priesthood. Only 25 percent of the Catholics agreed with the pope that artificial birth còntrol is sinful. $5.95 $6.95 $7.95 I LARGE .. Sun Devil Combo ! PLUS TAX Overall, Catholics w ere evenly split on w h e th er s e x u a l r e la tio n s b etw een unmarried people were sinful, but néarly two-thirds of Catholics unde» 40 said such activity was not sinful. /b 2-MEATBALL Oft SAUSAGE SUBS I (includes choice of up to 4 toppings) SMALL MEDIUM I LARGE | I 2 lltfG S O Í P G p S I with Durchase of ^ | |I (with Ma coupon) Al Prices Subject to Change Without Notice w /C heese 11 t W I r l t t A O ¡ | f Ptuo Tax Al Price* Subject to Change Without Notice (Mon.-Fri. between 6 p.m. & 8 p.m.) 2-LASAGNA DINNERS 2-SALADS • 2-24 OZ. PEPSIS A à llìl t o o c 0N j.Y » 3 r? 5 (wMIt Me coupon) tou» T u (MeatbaNs Additional) ¡■ ■ a fire 2 LARGE I AMC ITPM PI77AQ ! (Mon.-Fri. betwoon 10 p.m. S 12 p.m.) 2-24 OZ. PEPSIS DINNER SPECIAL a to Change Without N ofee f LITE MIGHT SNACK ■ ONLY $7.50 • : ONLY *1 1 .0 0 % » T* h the coupon) *On Regular, not « cairn Style Al Priooo Sub|oct to Change W hom Nofeo I $1.50 OFF ANY LARGE Sicilian Style Pizza* with two or iriora toppings *XtrS T h ic k Crust Not an » c la n Chet (with Me coupon) A l Prices Subject to Change Without N efeo Page 12 Mon gust 24,1987 V ic tim s Continued from page 9. | §p a lot o f students who are going to be surprised and saddened when they find out they are gone.” ig S W 0& W o o ls e y s a id T a n fie ld w i l l b e rem em bered for her dry sense o f humor and her love o f spending tim e with friends and entertaining. “ Jane was a fabulous cook,*’ she said. “ I rem em ber going to her house fo r dinner, and she’d always have something strange and exotic. W e had toasted garlic one tim e. ” Suzanne Underwood is survived by her husband M ax Underwood, who is also an assistant professor of architecture, and her brother W iliam Kolarik of Phoenix. U nderw ood lea d the ASU sum m er architecture program in Italy, directed second-year design courses and chaired the school’s curriculum comm ittee. She began teaching at ASU after her husband M ax was recruited to the school. She, was a graduate of the U niversity of Texas at Arlington. “ I f you would sit her down and talk to her about architecture she would talk for hours,” Woolsey said. “ That was her love and her passion. That’s one of the reasons the students got so much energy from her.” She said both Underwood and Tanfield’s teaching styles made them favorites among the architecture students. “ They went beyond teaching,” she said. “ They would come by the studios at night to see how w e w ere doing. “ They were much m ore concerned that the students got something out o f it, that they helped them learn, than about grades.” W oolsey Said Underwood’s other love was fo r her three w ire-fox terrier dogs. “ That was her true love,” W oolsey said. “ Some people carry pictures o f their “ '‘ •children in their w allets, Suzanne carried pictures of her dogs in her wallet. “ When her dog had puppies, she canceled a field trip so she could stay home and babysit her puppies.” Tom Barberio, a resident o f Lansing, Mich., was a 24-year-old botany m ajor. Andy W alker, B a rb erio ’s childhood Jane Tanfield Suzanne Underwood Susie Cody friend, said Barberio wanted to be a teacher and to coach either basketball or football after he graduated. “ He just loved to work with kids,” Walker said. “ It gave him great jo y just to be able to teach. He started thinking about other m ajors, but when he got into teaching, he knew that was right.” W alker, a graduate student at the U niversity of Michigan, said he and Barberio, along with six or seven other friends, m et in junior high. The friends had spent the weekend together in D etroit before the fatal crash. W alker said they almost always were together until Barberio decided to move to Arizona. “ He just wanted to get away and try something different,” W alker said. “As soon as he got into town we w ere all together again, a ll week. Tom kept us laughing all the tim e.” • Barberio is survived by an older brother and an older sister. Susie Cody, was an administrative assistant for the School of Social Work since 1986. She began working at ASU in 1978 as a secretary in ASU’s Indian Education Center and (hen as a secretary in the College of Education. Her 15ryear-old daughter Jennifer also was killed in the crash. Cody is survived by her husband William, her son J effery ^ , and her 7-month-oJd son Jason. Cody had traveled to Detroit for a friend’s wedding. The fam ily spent a week at Camp! Michigani on Waloon Lake and visited is Downtown! P e g g y H illga m y er, one o f C ody’ s colleagues, said: “ The last tim e I saw her was on Friday when she was in m y office doing work. She could hardly wait. “ She was excited about her daughter going with her. It was the first tim e she was away from her (7-month-old) son.” Sharon Briggs, a Scottsdale resident, was working toward a Ph.D. in the College o f Education. She had traveled to Michigan with her husband Donald, son Matthew, 13; and 8-year-old daughter Megan. relatives in Detroit. The four moved here a y e a r a go when D onald B riggs was transferred to manage the General Motors Desert Provin g (Ground. Sharon B riggs taught in Ann Arbor public schools and started classes in educational technolgy here in Janary. Jeanna Taw zer, a 23-year-old Scottsdale resident, would have, entered ASU as a communication m ajor this fall. She was w ith her fian ce, 29-year-old Matthew McLaughlin, a form er ASU student also killed on the flight. Troyce Hudnell, a friend of the couple, said they w ere traveling to Detroit to tell McLaughlin’s parents they were engaged. “ They had just gotten engaged a day or so before the crash,” Hudnell said. “ It (the engagem ent) was just kind of a surprise.” State Press reporter Michael Burgess also contributed to this report. HELP Has Finally Arrived You can now m ake y o u r apartm ent y o u r hom e. Low Rental Rates available for: C lo t h ir ig M e r c h a n ts VCRs 19" C o lo r TVs 13" C o lo r TVs C om pact R e frig e ra to rs C ordless P hones Personal C o m p u te rs Phone A n sw e rin g M a ch in e s M icrow ave O vens R ent by th e day, th e w e e k, o r th e m o n th W E ALS O R EN T VHS M O VIES Hayden Square Office Tower-Ground Floor 967-8747 Monday thru Friday 10-7 Saturday 10-7 p.m. Sunday 11-4 p.m. Best selection available Open till m id n ig h t 7 days a week FREE MEMBERSHIP ■ GO Cinnamon Tree Center 903 S. Rural Rd. *1 0 6 - — Tampa, AZ 85881 Stile C e c e lia ’s By VICKIE CHACHERE State Press jjSJJjij Cecelia Cichan’s doll has been found. The four-year-old survivor of the nation’s s«:oh d worst air disaster asked for the doll during brief periods of consciousness la s t week, but doctors didn’t know what had become of the toy. Sunday, John Turck, a Spokesman fo r the U niversity o f Michigan M edical Center where Cecelia is listed in serious condition, said the doll was found amid the wreckage of Northwest Airlines Flight 255 in a sm all daypack Cecelia was carrying. Turck said doctors w ill decide today whether to let the little girl hold the doll, but he added they are hesitant because of the risk of infection. When Cecilia awoke fo r the first tim e last week, she asked for her mother, her doll and her grandfather. Now, Turck said, Cecelia has been asking for her father, klichael Cichan, an ASU botany professor. Turck said doctors and nurses caring for Cecelia have answered her questions about her parents “ truthfully,” but he declined to elaborate on what m edical sta ff members w ere saying. M ichael Cicban, his w ife Paula and their 6-year-old son D avid w ere killed when the Nothwest A irlines DC-9 crashed on take o ff from D etroit Metropolitan A irport Aug. 16. The fam ily was returning from Philadelphia where they w ere visiting relatives. Cecelia was saved by her mother, who shielded her with her body as the plane crashe<| into a highway over-pass. She was found minutes a fter the crash by a doctor at the scene. ,. ‘ j Cecelia’s grandfather was able to identify her by a chipped tooth and purple nail polish painted by her grandmother. NEW! Turck said Cecelia is still in serious condition at the hospital burn center hut is making progress. She underwent skin graft surgery on her right hand and arm late last week. Turck said doctors have reduced the number o f Cecelia’s sedatives to allow-her m ore tim e to be awake. Doctors also are allowing her to eat some foods, including three cherry Popsicles, Turck said. The cards, letters and gifts continue to pour into the hospital. Saturday’s m ail brought 200 packages fo r Cecelia, and wellwishers have sent m ore than $16,000. Ann Boyce, M ichael Cichan’s step-sister, said the out-pouring of sympathy for the fam ily has been “ overwhelm ing.” “ It’s am azing,” she said. “ I just cannot believe it. We have been getting calls from a ll over the United States.” Sm n L. Mohr/State Presa Photos of Cecilia and David Cichan adorn the desk of the late Dr. Michael Cichan. COPIES HALF OFF JPASU’S v e r y o w n Chicken- First 100 A h V J i v P L O W A IR FARES T R A V E L “ 18” co p ies o f o n * o rig in a l Writ 100 copies - re*, price Next 100 Prkas apply to white, lettar size popor. For Vi o il prizes on other popan , coll in. the healthy alternative to beef! B reasted chicken that is lip sm ackin good! W e also o ffe r an excellen t m arinated ch ick en that has been baked to a tasty, gold en brow n. Open Saturday 9 a.m .-l p.m. •C redit cards accepted, «Free ticket delivery WELCOME BACK! Great copies. Great people. Copies • Reductions • Enlargements Oversize Copies • Passport Photos Binding • Cassette Duplicating Located in the MU between Summerfields and Sturgeon THEGRAND General in MARKETPLACE M ESA TEM PE 1840W. Southern 715S. Forest 969-3326 894-9588 949-8888 $2.50 kmko's featuring 7155 E . Thomas, Suite 106 Scottsdale, A Z 85251 T E M PE II TEM PE III 933 E. University Hardy&University 894-1797 ‘921-0168 Remember to purchase your holiday tickets early to get the lowest fares! Round T rip Airfares: Chicago.............. $128 Denver.,........... . $138 Kansas City.......... $100 Los Angeles......... . $38 Minneapolis/St. Paul... $131 New York $168 Certain restrictions do apply. Fares subject to change without notice. Get Ready For School ASU! Don't wait—shop Dómenles Cycling for all your biking needsl Racing—Triathlon—Touring—Mt. Bikes—Cruisers Domenics T-shirt with every bike purchase over $350°° Water Bottle and Cage with every new bike! Benotto BOO I Benotto 600 Model 10speed touring bicycle SALE w/Shimano light action SIS Index $399°° *199°° -30% OFF *27930 includes FREE U shape lock with $1,000 guarantee SALE PRICE Benotto 800 ^ S D E V IL S All members receive 20%off on all non-sale items. Just show your Devils Cycling Club card Show your ASU I.D. and receive discount on our everyday low prices DOMENICS HOURS: M -Thurs 9-7 pm Fri. 9-6 pm Sat. 9-5 pm Sun. 11-3 pm (Sale Items Excluded) CYCUNIMPORTS 1004 S. Mill Ave. Tempe AZ 967-7700 Available . 60 Day Layaway or 90 Day Financing NO INTEREST State I M o n d «ftA u g u s C 2 4 ^ 2 ® ii by Berke Breath« BLOOM C O U N T Y police report ASU football booster dies ASU football booster Orest J. “ Babe” A lex Jr., indicted last March after being linked to a local gam bling ring, died early Saturday o f injuries suffered in a car accident Friday night, police said. Phoenix police said Alex, 66, o f the 8500 block o f East Laredo Lane, Scottsdale, apparently failed to yield at a stop sign at the intersection of Chaparral Road and 64th Street, when his 1986 Oldsmobile collided with a 1981 Ford mustang. Alex, a form er Sun Angel Foundation board m em ber and 1985 football booster of the year, died at about 8:30 a.m . at Scottsdale M em orial Hospital-Os born. The driver o f the Mustang, 23-year-old M ark M cFarland is listed in fa ir condition. Alex, who disassociated him self from the U niversity last October after being linked to the gam bling probe that police said handled almost $1 m illion in sports bets, was scheduled to enter his plea in die case this week. Police said no citations w ere issued and die accident remains under investigation. In other incidents^, • A 30-year-old inmate at the Tem pe City J ail apparently hanged him self in his cell Saturday morning after being taken to police headquarters fo r questioning, police said. Rodney Samuel Yazzie, o f the 1900 block o f East U niversity Drive, was found dead by a ja ile r fiv e minutes after police interviewed him. Yazzie was arrested earlier Saturday on a Scottsdale warrant. He also was wanted fo r questioning on Tem pe charges currently under investigation. Police said Yazzie apparently fashioned a noose from his shirt and tied it around a bunk fram e in the cell. An autopsy w ill be perform ed by the M aricopa County m edical exam iner’s office. Th e case is s till under investigation, police said. • A suspect in the stabbing death o f a Tem pe man last Sunday escaped b riefly from the Tem po C ity Jail on Friday, police said. Robert Burton Rutledge, 35, o f 1343 Vista D el Cerro, was returning to ja il from Tem peJjjsti^e Court. 600P MORNING ANP HAPPY BfRJHPAY. 'W r-A-J Y F A R d ... ^ J0STL The ON, VA— m g'_ sy J 7 J ru m Flip Chair Rip Sofa $38 $ 1 6 8 Opens into Twin size bed O th e r Specials! * 4 draw er che st *Bed Sale Twin s e t Full s e t Bean Bags $28 ( Ä $69 $79 $28 of a & Love S eat 5 Rece Oak Finish Bedroom Set $ 1 6 8 $ 15 8 Oak I Entertainment Center ■ W ■ Y our Choice $ 1 6 8 °° Clearance C enter In Tempe « L _ l El, **P L U 8 Oak W all U nit 60x72 2077 E. U n iversity U nive rsity F.P. ASU 966-6252 -MIKE BURGESS I.T S J ite r M arkov VON\ AW, C0M6 ' Police said Rutledge bdftetPthrough the jail’s main entrance when the door was opened to let in a clerk. Rutledge ran into a stairw ell and out o f the building. He was captured by police about two blocks aw ay at M ill Avenue and Third Street. MY G0P~MY CfiR WONT RUN FOR TWO MONTHS WITHOUT 30MRTH1NÒ OUSTING. HOW LONG CAN MY LUCK HOU? OUT?? ,.m m m re , frpo ilf ORGANS...ALL PUMPING, cranking , w hirring ALONG WITHOUT A GUTth FOR FORTY MY INTERNAL 30PY PARTS ARC FORTY YCARS OLP \ Liquor Barn Vodka 80 proof | wiBoóÑs ©ä r b 7 5 lite r ä ita M iy G in * ■ 80 proof Your Choice $ 7 7 5 Y O U R C H O IC E ^ $399 a $10.99 value) 6 pak bottles $199 $ 4 4 9 6 pk bottle White Zinfandel.......... 750 ml for «5 °® Cabernet Sauvignon or Chardonnay..... 750 ml $999 2 /$5 °° 12 pk cans Lyness Creek Wines 2 S eagram ’s W ine Coolers RO LLING ROCK 1 ,0 0 0 s q u a r e fe e t o f $299 YOUR CHOICE W a lk -In B e e r C o o le r ! BUD OR STRUM ^ 6 pak bottles I Ip REG. OR LIGHT Expires 9-1-87. $3995 N 0 .1 1 A SAFEWAY e LIQUOR BARN BROADWAY ROAD SOUTHERN B . 930 E , B ro a d w a y , T e m p © 8 9 Í 4 JIÉ 0 6 * W W W WÊÊÊÊ Gladly accepted. OPEN: Mon.-Thurs. 9-9, Fri 9-10 Sat. 8-10, Sun. 12-8 MILLEROR COÖRS $3495 COM B G ET Y O U R B O O K S !/ ^ o v * Î Æ r , a - ÿ ^ R^ ! 4^ . H J ^A» V » E « \ ^^3 0 °K S ! For your convenience .. Thé Student Book Center will be open Monday through Thursday early morning to late at night — Friday until 5:30 p.m. And we’re easy to find, just one block north of campus on College Ave. with free parking at rear of building. Mastercard, BankAmericard, American Express, and personal checks accepted. O ne H our FR EE_Parking w ith m inim um $10 purchase — 7TH S T. PAR K IN G ju s t b e hind S tu d e n t B ook C enter. Largest selection o f listed books . • Largest selection o f new books • • For tnose who prefer new textbooks, the Student Book Center also maintains a large inventory of new books and study aids. Buying used textbooks makes sense. It means greater savings to you, at a time when you need it most. It means extra cash to meet those other back to school expenses. Because of extensive buying trips throughout the United States, the Student Book’ Center can offer the ASU student the largest and mpst complete selection of good used textbooks. Largest selection o f supplies « . • The Student Book Center sells more than just books. Take advantage of our fine selection of quality school supplies, ASU shirts, shorts, jackets, etc., Fraternity sind Sorority giftware and much more. -V Used books sell fa s t . . . Hurry and buy early as used books are always the first to go. But don’t worry if you buy the Wrong book, we will gladly refund your full purchase price through Sept. 5 when books are returned undamaged with your receipt. A Few O f Our Great USED BOOK BARGAINS! COURSE CIS 200 GNB 305 MGT301 QBA 221 QBA222 ENG 101 PGS100 REL100 LIA100 GPH1.11 JUS 100 BIO 330 PHY 111 MAT 115 CHM113 MAT 270 MAT 210 AUTHOR O’LEARY WHITMAN KREITNER KAZMIER ANDERSON D’ANGELO MYERS NIELSON PAUK MULLER VETTER MILLER , GIANCOti KEEDY BROWN SWOKOWSKI BITTINGER TITLE COMPUTERS &INFORMATION PROCESSING THE LEGAL &SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT OF BUSINESS MANAGEMENT BASIC STATISTICS FOR BUSINESS & ECONOMICS AN INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT SCIENCE PROCESS AND THOUGHT IN COMPOSITION . PSYCHOLOGY RELIGIONS OF THE WORLD HOW TO STUDY IN COLLEGE PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY TODAY CRIME AND JUSTICE IN AMERICA LIVING IN THE ENVIRONMENT PHYSICS ALGEBRA AND TRIGONOMETRY CHEMISTRY CALCULUS APPLIED CALCULUS NEW $30.95 $25.00 $35.95 $37.95 $36.95 $19.95 $31.95 $30.00 $18.50 $35.00 $31.95 $36.25 $42.25 $29.95 $42.95 $47.50 $36.95 (S fü d e n T USED $23.20 $18.75 $26.95 $28.45 $27.70 $14.95 $23.95 $22.50 $13.90 $26.25 $23.95 $27.20 $31.70 $22.45 $32.20 $35.65 $27.70 SAVE’ $7.75 $6.25 $9.00 $9.50 $9.25 $5.00 $8.00 $7.50 $4.60 $8.75 $8.00 $9.05 $10.55 $7.50 $10.75 $11.85 $9.25 i ¿B ook’j Center* 704 S. College Ave. 1 B lo c k N o r t h o f A S U 966-6226 Page 16 Stale! Monday, August 24,1987 1987 j A S U FO O TB A LL S tu d e n t S e a s o n T ic k e ts The only tickets left are student season tickets ... and when they’re gone, they’re gone. So don’t delay! ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY FOOTBALL STUDENT SEASON TICKET POLICY SEASON SALE ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ASU students w ill be given the opportunity to obtain tickets for the entire season at one tim e. Seats will be made available on a general admission basis. General admission seating will allow friends to sit together as a group giving everyone an equal chance for the best seats. Beginning W ednesday, August. 26, students may participate in the season ticket sale. Ticket office hours are 8:30 a.m . to 4:00 p.m . Monday through Friday, and 8:30 a.m . until noon on Saturdays. PURCHASE DETAILS Only full-time ASU students carrying seven or more hours m ay purchase student tickets. Student season tickets are priced a t $28.00, $4.00 per gam e for a seven-game home schedule. Students participating in the season sale must obtain an order form and bring it to the ticket office at Sun Devil Stadium along with a validated student ID and appropriate payment for each season ticket ordered. The order form will require the student’s name and Student ID number (social security number). INDIVIDUAL GAME SALE Individual gam e tickets will be sold only if available after the season ticket sale. Single gam e tickets for full-time ASU students are priced at $8.00 each, and will go on sale Tuesday, Septem ber 15. At the tim e the students purchase tickets, they must present valid student ID . Students m ay purchase tickets for other students who wish to attend. There are no restrictions regarding the number o f tickets students can purchase at one tim e as long as they present the appropriate number of valid IDs. 1. A valid student ID must be presented along with the ticket in order to enter the stadium. 2. All student tickets must be accompanied by a valid student ID. No exceptions! Therefore, student tickets will not be upgraded to generil public tickets. 3. Student tickets will not be sold the night of the gam e. 4. Students are to enter the stadium through designated student gates. 5. Student general admission sections will be marked. 6. Seating will be on a first-come, first-serve basis. Under no circumstances will saving seats be permitted. 7. No one is permitted to exit and re-enter the stadium until the start of the second quarter. 8. No refunds or exchanges. 9. Lost, stolen or destroyed tickets canhot be replaced. t 1987 HOME SCHEDULE September 19 vs. PACIFIC, September 26 vs. NEBRASKA (H all of Fame game), October 3 vs. TEXAS-EL PASO, October 17 vs. W ASHINGTON STATE, October 31 vs. UCLA, November 7 Vs. .O R EG O N (Homecoming), November 28 vs. ARIZONA. STADIUM DIAGRAM Student general admission sections are identified by shaded areas on Sun Devil Stadium Diagram. __js GUEST TICKETS I « jja ; « Students who have not previously purchased their student tickets may purchase one student ticket from the student section and one guest tiOket no sooner than the W ednesday of the gam e. This will permit the sale of guest tickets, only if seats are available, after giving ASU students th e first opportunity to purchase tickets. Students pay half price, non-students pay full price. v ' • r ARIZONA SPOUSE CARDS STATE SUN An ASU student who is married and is registered for seven or more hours may purchase a spouse card. The cost is $15.00 and is good for athletic events during the semester. Application must be made at the Sun Devil Ticket Office. The student applicant must present his/her valid ID card and proof of marriage. ID CARDS ® » 20 DEVIL 30 40 UNIVERSITY STAOUM SO 40 30 >0 «0 T STANM I 11 Students must present a student photo ID card, validated for the 1987 Fall semester, when purchasing tickets. Student photo IDs can be validated at the Gam m age or Sun Devil Stadium box offices. Students will be asked to present a validated student photo ID when purchasing tickets or when gaining admission to student discounted events. T~ “ 10 112 m 1 n o 9 6 ? JOS 11071 106 I 6 ; 5 T w T »2 1101 L J Clip on dotted line and return to Sun Devil Stadium, South Endzone. N am e____________________ ________D ate P hone. S tu d e n t ID N o , A d d re ss______ F oo tb all S e aso n T icke ts a t $28.00 e a c h S p o u se ’s N a m e . (spouse cards only) C o n ta c t N am e__ ___________________ _ _ _ P hone. S pouse C ard a t $15.00 (for group sales only) Make checks payable to ASU TOTAL PAYMENT >r 1 * S fitte P K » LGAU president expects changes in ASASU to prevent disputes By DANA LEONARD State Press protests and a “moot” lawsuit, the president of the Lesbian and Gay Academic Union said a “radical change” in Associated Students this year will, prevent skirmishes and more lawsuits. , , . * * * spring ASASU elections revam ped the makeup of the students governing body, LGAU co-chairman Denise Heap said she is optimistic about the LG AU ’s chances to receive University club funding. •J^lere s a rad*cal change in the senate this year,” Heap said. “ I feel w e’ll get a fa ir shot.” The battle between the LGAU and Associated Students last year ended in an anti-clim actic dismissal June 5, when Federal District Court Judge W illiam P. Copple declared the case “ moot.” A fter the ASASU senate refused to fund the LG AU last spring, the group filed a lawsuit Feb. 17 against ASU, the Arizona Board o f Regents, President J. Russell Nelson, Vice President for Student A ffairs Betty Turner Asher, three 1986-87 student vice presidents and 13 Associated Students senators. Drug Continued from page 01. “ I think the University is concerned about substance abuse throughout society. W e’re not ju st w arning students about the law .” M a rv a le n e Hughes, associate vice president for student development, said the only way to combat substdhee abuse is through education. “ We have a responsibility o f enforcement o f the law, bljt^at the same tim e we are concerned with the long­ term e ffe c t,” she said. “ W e’re not just concerned a b o .u t t h e l e g a l consequences; w e are concerned about the mental and physical consequences.” A 1985 study of drag abuse at ASU showed that alcohol and n icotin e, the m ost socially accepted drags, are the most used at ASU. About 83 percent of those surveyed believed that they could obtain marijuana if they wanted. Asher said that ASU’s d r u g p r o b l e m is “ comparable to problems of any city of 60,000 people.” Other sections o f the law include: • A felony charge for those who abuse drugs within 300 feet o f a school. • A minimum $750 fine and 24 hours o f com m unity service for any amount of any illegal drag used.' • Suspension o f d riv e r’s license for any minor caught with an illegal drug. • C o n fis c a tio n of a ll property involved with drug dealings. Jeeves, lease keep the ■>ot warm till I jet back from the State Press. ¡fied lin e r ro ugh t to >ws C enter basem ent) m 7-9 a.m. 1/2 PRICE The senate based its decision not to fund the group on an ASASU bylaw provision, which prohibited the funding of any group considered “ controversial.” However, on the day the suit was /tied, the word “ controversial” was struck from the bylaws. “ W e had not amended the lawsuit (to accommodate the new w ording), so the case was dismissed,” Heap said. “ However, the court never dealt with the issue o f funding the organization.” The LGAU claim s its constitutional rights to free speech, association, equal protection and due process w ere violated by the senate’s refusal to allocate funding. In a written opinion follow ing the dismissal, Copple said that the LG AU did not clearly establish that ASASU violated its constitutional rights. He said because ASASU senators w ere “ clearly engaged in a discretionary function . . . there is some question as to whether ASASU would be violating the first amendment rights o f those students who object to (LG A U ) by using those students’ mandatory fees to fund P la in tiff.” ASASU Executive Vice President W ill D aly said he was “ dism ayed” at the dismissal because the question of constitutionality was ignored and the problem was not resolved. Following the dismissal, an agreem ent was reached between LG AU attorney Paula Ettelbrick and ASASU attorney Bruce Meyerson in an attem pt to prevent further litigation. * The University made four concessions to the LG AU in the agreem ent: • ASU w ill co-sponsor two forums per year in residence halls on lesbian and gay students, their lifestyles or the problems of AIDS. • T h e A SA S U sen a te w ill a tten d a sem in a r on “ im perm issible discrimination based on sexual preference” during its first or second m eeting 6f the fa ll sem ester. • V ic e President o f Student A ffairs Betty Turner Asher w ill have the right to “ disapprove” any ASASU bylaw that is deemed unconstitutional by ASU attorneys. •A sh er also w ill have the right to “ disapprove” any ASASU funding bill fo r campus organizations if a club has been unconstitutionally denied funding. According to Daly, ASASU was not told about the concessions until they w ere made. Op&iaSunDeiril CheckingAccountand mmadem In theshade. And great-looking shade it is too Just be one of the first 500 students to take advantage of Chase Bank’s Sun Devil Instant Banking, and a terrific pair of sun glasses is yours, free. Even if you’re hot one of the first, you’ll still have it made with Sun Devil Instant Banking. When you open an account, you’ll be given temporary checks, and an ATM card to access thé Memorial Union ATM. You can even order special Sun Devil checks and covers. It doesn’t get much easier than that MEMBER FCHC CHASE BANK OF ARIZONA 1987 Stop by this. week. We’ll be happy to discuss Chase services offered to ASU students, faculty and staff, as well as educational financ­ ing needs. Tèmpe-MeClìntock Office, 6350 & McClintock, 248-8670 Tfempe-Broadway Office, 1105E. Broadway Rd, 248-6362 O ía s e B a n k o f A r iz o n a Shouldn'ttheedgebe onyourside? Page 18 State! Monday, August 24,1987 ASU M echam R ecall group says 10,000 nam es gathered v By MICHELLE HOFFMAN usually one to fiv e key people,” who State Press organize, plan and attend meetings and A t least 1,000 notarized signatures have fo llo w th rou gh w ith a c t iv it ie s and been gathered by ASU Mecham recall commitments, Rosenhaus said. petitioners on campus, and another nearly “ But, w e have 30 (key people).” 10,000 signatures need to be verified, R ecall petitioners set up daily in front of according to the campus organizer. the MU or inside it when they have reserved Am y Rosenhaus, chairperson o f the a room. Mecham Recall Com m ittee at ASU, said, H ie support o f the recall by students, “ The response has been very positive,” as , facu lty and sta ff has been “ grea t,” 72 petition sheets have been returned with Rosenhaus said, adding, “ W e’ve probably m ore in circulation. had less than 20 negative responses since we - “ A lot of students are getting involved began last spring.” who have never been in anything political F iv e free Saturday-night concerts of Rock before.” A gainst M echam a re scheduled fo r M ore than 300 faculty, sta ff and students September and October, she said. The first have volunteered as deputy registrars and w ill be Sept. 12 in the MU Pim a Room, petition circulators, she said, and the group featuring P ete’s Comer and Nutrients. hopes to gather at least 15,000 signatures by Rosenhaus, a data processor in the the Nov. 3 deadline. zoology department and a part-time ASU “ (The volunteers) are very persistent,” student, became involved in the recall Rosenhaus said. “ They don’t lose interest. through her participation in the American “ I ’ve seen people 40 or 50 years old who Federation of Teachers and University have never voted or registered in their lives Em ployees. The group is behaved to be the and are doing so just to sign the petition.” first local union to publicly support the Since February, recall workers statew ide ■ recall. J • Rosenhaus said petitions are available have distributed flyers, made phone calls and prepared for the petition drive that across the campus, along with about 20 began in July. deputy registrars who Can register people “ In any grassroots organization there are as voters fo r eligibility to sign. J. MICHAEL HOEHN State Press The ASU College o f Business is tackling its past problems and striving to retain accreditation this year by hiring m ore full- tim e faculty and support staff, college Dean John K raft said. The college’s accreditation was deferred in spring 1986 by the Am erican Assem bly o f Collegiate Schools of Business because of inadequate student-faculty ratios and support staff and too many non-business m ajors in the college’s classes! Last spring, the AACSB decided to reaccredit the college although som e prim ary problems, such as too few faculty with doctorates, remained. “ W e w ere w ay out o f line,” K raft said. “ So consequently, they (AACSB) went ahead and reaccredited us even though w e did not satisfy-all the contingencies. “ We didn’t have the budget last year to solve a ll our problems, so when they review ed us they had to go on what w e said w e w ere going to do.” A $1.6 m illion increase over last year’s budget is funding the new hires, K raft said. “ This budget w ill allow us, when w e are fu lly staffed, to support 210 faculty positions and teach the appropriate student credit hours allowable by AACSB,” he said. Under AACSB guidelines, a 210-member faculty would allow 82,000 student credit f r e e l s a t s e m in a r “How To Get Into the Law School o fY our Choice” i And improve your LSAT score by 10 points Wed. Sept. 2nd, 1087 • 6 p.m . Room 211 ASU M em orial Union $100 discount to all w ho enroll at sem inar For LSAT classes begin Sept. 1 1 ,1 9 8 7 For reservations call V alerie at 969-8953. diversified travel ine. Kinsinger C. Roland Haden, the dean o f the College o f Engineering and Applied Sciences, tem porarily w ill assume the $100,000-a-year job until a search com m ittee finds a permanent replacement. The position should be filled by July 1, 1988. Kinsinger recently accepted a position as\ president and ch ief exectivé officer of Chicago Osteopathic Health Systems. 9 6 7 -7 8 5 5 “ Your Home Town T ra ve l Agency i s MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS N O W ! Thanksgiving, C hristm as and Ski Season are ju s t around th e corner! Apache hours to be taught in the college. The college now has 190 faculty members, allowing 75,000 credit hours. That figure is 8,000 credit hours few er than w ere taught last year and 10,000 few er than 1985. K raft said college officials hope to fill 18 additional faculty positions this year to bring the total to 201. An appropriate increase in student credit hours would follow next fa ll, he added. The hiring has been complicated because o f a shortage of qualified personnel and because the college received its budget late this summer, K raft said. Last year, ASU’s business college was criticized by Jim Cooper, Gov. Evan Mecham’s form er education adviser. Cooper accused K raft o f “ pMying games” and trying “ to get the sympathy of the stu den ts.’ ’ H e blam ed the c o lle g e ’ s accreditation problem s oti inadequate program m ing and planned to investigate how the college’s funding was spent. . “ I think (Cooper) was proven incorrect and e rro n e o u s ,” K r a f t said. “ And essentially with the statements he made, we w ere lucky w e w ere reaccredited.” Broadway Serving Sun Devil C ounty for the past f 7 years a t thè corner 0f M ill & Broadway in Tempe! Terrace Road Apartments WALK TO SCHOOL! 1/2 b lo ck from Cam pus. H uge w e ll-fu rriis h e d 1-bedroom 1-bath, and 2-bedroom 2-baths, a ll u tilitie s in clu d e d , plus large heated pool, spacious la u n d ry fa c ilitie s and cab le T V . 9 5 0 S. Terrace Rd. 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 Kraft said he has heard no more about the investigation, and he is not worried about it. “ I have no concerns about Mr. Cooper or anyone else investigating us,” he said. K raft adm itted there w ere still problems in the college with class availibility and admission to the upper division courses. “ W e have to file reports, ahd if we are out of compliance, I ’m sure AACSB would yank our accreditation right aw av.” K raft said •S U B W A Y ? Kinsinger accepts post in Chicago By TERRISEABERT State Press A fter five y e a r s as ASU’s vice p resid en t fo r A c a ­ dem ic. A f­ fairs, Jack K in sin ger w ill be abandonin g a ca d em ics and m igra­ ting east to accept a p o s t in h e a l t h systems. Jack n PROFESSIONAL CENTERS Business school expands stall Larger faculty planned to retain accreditation b “ I have enjoyed m yself at ASU and am sure o f its success in the future,” Kinsinger said, adding he is not abandoning ASU but took the position because o f the “ nice opportunity and execellent position they offered m e.” C hicago Osteopa thic Health Systems is a m edical college and m edical education system. W hile at ASU, Kinsinger earned the Faculty Wooten’s Association A ffirm ative A ction A w ard fo r changing wom en’s promotion and hiring procedures and for encouraging fa irer evaluation o f University women. H e also helped strengthen ASU’s honors program and change the general studies requirements. Haden said he w ill not be a candidate for the full-tim e vice president’s position, despite the $3,575 annual salary hike. . As soon as the search com m ittee recruits a vice president, he w ill return as dean to the engineering college. “ Roland brings experience, a breadth of view because of his nine years as dean here, good connections in the community and decisiveness in his work,” ASU President J. Russell Nelson said. “ He should be able to m ove things along expeditiously.” Sandwiches & Salads O P E N T IL L 2 A J (Except Sunday till M idnight) WE BAKE OUR O W N B R EAD HOURLY! 9 9 « ■ ANY FO O TING SUB OR SALAD Offer good at: BuV any foot-long sandwlch or sale exp ires 8-31-87. 0-31-87. Expires OP Expires 8-31-87. a c ii salad and medium ^drink, and A5U 8 29 -7 2 13 get a sandwich of equal or 4 E. 10th S t lesser value for 99C S ubsmsv" (ne comer lotti a tini) a n y foot -long sub or salad «.»i «sfcwÀgg !■ 1 mm H i L off any 4 E. 10th St. foot-long * * comer noth a hum sub or salad e n t e r t a in m e n t Monday, August 24,1987 M i Hollywood’s ‘Top Gun’ celebrates its 75th Editor’s note: The following two pages are the first in a twopart series honoring Paramount Pictures’ 75th anniversary. almpst unheard-of feat then. His first Success cam e after he acquired the rights to the By GREGORY ROBERT KRZOS F ren ch film , “ Queen .E liza b eth ” (s ta rrin g Sarah Bernhardt), and collaborated with Daniel Frohman to State Press prem iere the landmark picture in Broadway’s Lyceum rankie may be the “ Big Kahuna” on the Theater in July of 1912. The triumph o f that film paved the beach, but in Hollywood, it’s Param ount way fo r Zukor to form a new company called Famous Players Film Company. Pictures w ho’s king of the show business The partnership of Zukor and Frohman expanded when ■ sandcastle. This year, Paramount’s 75th in the spotlight, Tinsletown’s top gun celebrates a birthday like no other. In nearly eight decades, the popular movie company has undeniably lived up to its original slogan — “ If it’s a Paramount Picture, it’s the best show in town.” Indeed the firm with the famous mountain-top logo is perhaps the most renowned in the entertainment industry, having produced over 3,000 motion pictures and TV shows that have repeatedly captured top spots on the popularity ladder With its first Oscar-winning film , “ Wings” in 1929 (which in fact is the first Academy Award-winning picture), Paramount embaTked on a trend of excellence and in the years to follow made a big name for itself with such renowned film s as “ Oliver Tw ist,” “ Treasure Island,” “ The Ten Commandments,” the “ Road” film s, “ Going M y W ay,” “ Psycho ’ ’ “ The Odd Cpuple,” “ Love Story,” “ The Godfather Part I and II,” “ Grease” and this decade’s “ Term s of Endearment,” “ Raiders of the Lost A rk " and “ Top Gun.” Paramount’s climb up the hill of recognition began in 1912 when Hungarian immigrant Adolph Zukor decided to get involved in the latest trend of the day - motion pictures. Zukor left his Chicago furrier business behind, headed to New York and bought a chain of nickelodeons. It wasn’t long until Zukor decided to expand to variety shows and to máking his own movies on single reels, longer than 10 minutes - an A fter a few executive turnovers — Hodkinson resigned, Goldfish was bought out — Zukor decided to officia lly change the now Famous Players-Lasky to Paramount Pictures. The rest is history. In the years to follow , Paramount started creating a legendary soap opera story that no script-writer could even top. The studio began making stars out of aspiring talents. M ary Pickford, Lillian and Dorothy Gish, Douglas Fairbanks and Roscoe “ Fatty” Arbuckle a ll rose to fam e. In 1921 Paramount met face-to-face with scandal when Arbuckle, the studio’s top comedy star, was acused of rape and murder. Arbuckle was acquitted, but his career took a nose-dive. Sound pictures came to Paramount in 1928, which brought on another group of celebrities including Ethel Merman, Ginger Rogers, George Burns and Gracie Allen. — The ’30s brought on corporate shakeups. Although Paramount survived most o f the after-effects of the stock market crash, its profits eventually plummeted, and in 1933 Edwin Porter, director of the legendary nickelodeon picture the studio declared bankruptcy. Zukor, also suffering losses, no longer had the votes to maintain the head position of thè “ The Great Train Robbery,” was signed onto Zukor’s sm all corporation. W all Street gained control of Paramount and staff. It was in 1914 when Zukor gathered with several other Zukor wound up acting as chairman o f the board. producers and bought 10 percent of a centralized film The 40s were brighter as Dorothy Lamour, Bob Hope and releasing compdhy- owned by W.W. Hodkinson called Param ount Pictu res Corporation. Iron ically enpugh, Bing Crosby starred in a series o f critically-acclaim ed Hodkinson had “ borrowed” the Paramount name from a musical comedies. The trio became the studio’s biggest draw particular apartment building he always passed. A snow­ with “ Road to Singapore” (1940) and its fiv e Paramountcapped peak from his hometown in Utah eventually lead to produced sequels (the seventh, “ The Road to Hong Kong,” the famous mountain logo. was produced by United A rtists). That decade m arked Several years rater Zukor and company eventually merged another in power fo r Barney Balaban, who assumed their talents with film .producer Jessie Lasky and a young presidency of the company in 1936 — a post he held until the Cecil B. DeM ille, who haaboth form ed a company sim iliar to mid-sixties. Eventually, Paramount found itself back on an upswing Famous Players. Lasky, D eM ille, and Samuel Goldfish with Oscar winners Olivia de Havilland, G loria Swanson and (Lasky’s brother-in-law, who later changed his name to Cecil B. D eM ille, who won awards fo r their work in “ The Goldwyn) signed on with Zukor with D eM ille as director Heiress” (1949), “ Sunset Boulevard” (1950) and “ The Ten general and Goldfish taking the general m anager post. Commandments” (1956) respectively. The alliance popped like a firecracker. Turn to 75th, png* 20. ‘If it ’s a Paramount picture it’s the best show in town. ’ the original slogan T J Page 20 State Pra«« lanwenary * * * mmmm G u lt* W e * te m Com pany ' C u ll* W « tl« r o 1 Com pany 8 fn/wfftaru SuH•Western Company Olivia Newton-John and John Travolta, tilted le ft, create greeted llghtn day eeaaon, “ Star Trek IV,” above, atarrlng Leonard Nimoy and Wllllan “The Brady Bunch,” gave the studio further recognition. { . , . :/’ - Audrey Hepburn, left, acquired a considerable amount of recognition for her role In Paremount’s 1961 feature, “ Breakfast at Tiffany’s.” Paramount scored big bucks with last summer’s "Top Gun,” above, starring teenidol Tom Cguise and Kelly McGillls. The film grossed over $170 million. Left, Har­ rison Ford skyrockets studio profits with “Raiders of the Lost Ark.” Bing Croaby, Dorothy Lamour and Bob Hope, above, engage Para­ mount on the “Road” to box office heaven with “Road to Singapore" in 1940. Left, Charlton Heston gets a vision of power in “The Ten Commandments” in 1956. Monday, August 84,1987 C h eers’ ---- Paramount finds happy days on TV By DAVID MILLER State Press It’s not easy being paramount Television. It can’t be. A fter all, not only do they have to keep the cooler stocked with enough booze and Otter Pops to keep George (N orm ) Wendt and John (C liff) Ratzenberger on payroll at “ Cheers,” but they have to keep trillions o f little hands o ff NBC’s star attraction Michael J. Fox. “ He’s just great, everybody loves him,” said Paramount and “ Fam ily Ties” publicist Carina Sayles of Fox. “ And next season, sparks are gonna fly with his character.” And his character probably won’t be the only one. create greased lightning In 1978’a box office smash, “Grease.” Over the 1986 hollrd Nimoy and William Shatner, made $109 million for Paramount. Tilted right, TV’s gnition. f - ^ a. - , NBC’s “Family Ties,” tilted, now dominates the ratings. Above from left, Donny Most, Henry Winkler, Anson Williams and Ron Howard saw “ Hap­ py Days” in the ’70s. Left, Jack Klugman (top) and Tony Randall were the “Odd Couple.” “ But that’s not the only reason ‘Ties’ is a success,” she continued. “ W e’ve got a great cast and a great producer as w ell.” That also describes another Paramount series. “Star Trek’s” winning combination of ensemble and production could be said to have taken it to the stars. “ Star Trek” begins a new journey this fa ll. “ It’s set 85 years after' the original series,” said M ary Ann Ridim, a Paramount publicist, “ and it w ill have the sam e theme as the o rig in a l it m a k e s man look a t him self in a new direction.” As is Paramount’s specialty. Coming Wednesday Look fo r P a rt two of Paramount’s 75th anniversary tribute with a special look at the Top 10 film s and television shows o f the studio, plus a look at the “ Road” film s, starring Bob Hope, Bing Crosby and Dorothy Larnour. Also, Madonna’s latest flick, “ Who’s That G irl” is review ed. Page 22 Monday, August 84,1987 State Press I State Press Page 23 Monday, August 64,1987 to appear at Tempe happy hours? By DAVID MILLER , ■ State Press || gr v ' “ There w ill be fiv e required texts for this course. You w ill be required to turn in no less than seven 15-page term papers and give fiv e 20-minute oral reports on any of the following subjects, or you m ay do nine oral reports and fiv e written, in addition to the four required book reports. There w ill be fiv e tests, not including the mid-term and the final, which w ill be in two parts .. “ I ’m sorry to tell you this but because we inadvertantly overbooked this hall by 900 people w e’re going to have to expand the occupancy of your room. I ’d like you to meet Mohammed, Sydney, Juglesh, Lonnie and Kent. You should have lots to talk about.” A ll right, that’s just. About enough. host Robin Leach, a list o f the best Friday happy hour spots has been prepared. So ft’s Friday again, actually the first Friday of the new semester, The first m ajor panty-raid/voodoo ritual and the first of many weekly blowings-off-of-steam. And for some, it’s even the V E R Y first (i.e. the freshman moment of im pact). •Known for its no-nonsense attitude, Cannery Row ’s (705 S. Forest Ave., Tem pe) sim ple interior makes it the the ideal establishment for fraternity men and Norw egian w arriors alike. You know Arnold Schwarzenegger would drink here. •Utopia, 919 E. Apache Blvd., features a modern, two-story area for socializing. Moderate drink prices and a generous happy hour food selection make it a local favorite. But where can one do it fo r free? Nowhere, actually. But if you play your cards right, you can eat cheaply, drink heartily and carouse liberally. The knowledge and the technology have arrived. And now, in honor o f “ Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous” •Likewise with Minderbinder’s, 715 S. Hayden Rd, Tempe. Joseph H eller would be proud to party here. Turn to GUIDE, page 24. All You Can Eat Chinese Japanese j Mandarin / d ' * 1/2 P R IC E * LUNCH OR DINNER Buy One Buffet a t Regular Price and G et Second for % Price. Oftar expkM 9-2-87...Offer dOM riot apply to taka-out ontaral A n n o u n c in g The R e tu rn o f T aco S u n d a y ! ° TACO 'BELL Hours: Sun.-Thurs. 10 a.m .-2 a.m . Fri. & Sat. 10 a.m .-3 a.m . R e g u la r T a c o s o n ly 4 9 4 ta c o s a ll d a y " n o lim it " 9 3 6 E. A p a c h e B l v d . , T e m p e Mama Gelardi’s 1 0 6 E . U n iv e r s ity D riv e , T e m p e WE DELIVER! 8 9 4 -M A M A BUFFALO m YOUR CLOTHES FOR R A IL L IM IT E D O F F E R ! CHEESE PIZZAS 2 GREATo n14” ly $7.99 & tax Medium size pizzas with cheese. Extra items and extra cheese available at additional cost. One coupon per customer. VALID ON DELIVERY TOO! Not valid with other offers. Not valid on Sicilian pizzas. 106 E. University ExpiresSept. 1,1987. i S * buffalo / ' bef-a -1 lö / f r to express one’s inner self and/or beauty by outfitting the physical being with clothes ■;/ procured by means of trade for cash and.br 7?; select clothing items GREAT 14” 1-ITEM PIZZAS ■ o n ly $8.99 & tax Medium size one-topping pizzas. Extra items and extra cheese available at additional cost. One coupon per customer. VALID ON DELIVERY TOO! Not valid with other offers. Not valid on Sicilian pizzas. 106 E. University Expires Sept. 1,1987. 2 L Tem pe: 968-2557 <227 W. University Dr. GREAT 16” PIZZAS o n ly $9.49 & tax Large size pizzas with cheese and one item. Extra items and extra cheese available at additional cost. One coupon per Customer. VALID ON DELIVERY TOO! Not valid with other offers. Not valid on Sicilian pizzas. 106 E. University Expires Sept. 1,1987. su rrü L u C A L n a i ivrc Buy e Sell • Trade C ontem porary a n d V in tag e C lothing for M en & W om en if Page 24 State Prei» G u id e ______ Continued frontpage 23. •Another selection is a little out of the way for ASU students on two wheels or on foot, but Embassy Suites, 4400 S. Rural Rd., delivers a classy happy hour alternative. •A personal favorite among students who’ve been around long enough to know what’s hip is Sub Stop, 222 E. U niversity Dr., T$mpe. A rich deli, pastry and beverage menu punctuates the relaxing atmosphere of this establishment. The best spot choice could actually go either way, depending on who’s w illing to give m e free drinks after this article, but The Dash Inn, 731 E. Apache Blvd. and The Warehouse, corner o f U n iversity and Forest, are the places to be fo r happy hour. So go to it. And who cares if it’s Monday. You think you’re in this fo r an education? Now go on, shoo. ASU student«, from Isft to right, Kurt Braush, Grog Young and John Moray tnjoy a smorgasbord of food whits being served by waitress M ehM N 1*k « ii*u at Utopia, a new nightclub located at Apache and Rural Roads In Tempe. * y "M y eyes are im portant, so I go to National Eye & Ear for all my contacts & glasses." National Eye & Ear 3133 S. M ill ■ Tempe, NE corner of Southern & Mill 967-3197 3 minutes from ASU 9 & W ASU's very own Ehrhardt’s Schwinn is having a BA CK TO SCHOOL ALL BIKES DISCOUNTED •1 0 S P E E D S »C R U IS E R S •A L L TE R R A IN fe a tu rin g : your favorite nutritious & health^Æeafoods and salads. A ll provide excellent sources o f low fat protein & less cholesterol The Sturgeon General has detennined th at eating seafood is good for your health. located in the M .U . between the G rill and Chicken O ut in the Grand Marketplace W e h a v e a c o m p le te lin e o f a c c e s s o r ie s : k ry p to n ite lo cks »baskets •b a c k p a c k s »etc. Cruisers from $129.95 10 speeds from $149.95 Sun Devils return; quarterback not known By CAROL BOOS State Press ASU’s football team begins practice today in Tem pe after ending a week o f three-a-day practices at Camp Tontozona, but the search for a quarterback hasn’t ended. According to head coach John Cooper, if a choice had to be made today, junior Dan Ford would win the race “ Ford left spring ball No. 1 and I didn’t see anybody play better than Ford up here,” Cooper said after Saturday’s scrimmage. Ford, who saw lim ited playing tim e last season behind ex-Sun D evil J eff Van Raaphorst, com pleted 11 o f 18 passes for 163 yards and three touchdowns. Junior John W alker is the next leading candidate. “ I have a gut feeling that I ’d like to open with a veteran in the first gam e,” Cooper said. “ Ford-W alker, W alker-Ford, it doesn’t m atter to m e.” W alker, nursing an elbow injury, missed some drills during camp. Redshirt freshman Paul Justin would probably rank third, Cooper said. Justin did hot participate at aU during the scrimm age because o f a pulled groin. Redshirt freshman Kent K eifer could be out fo r two weeks because of a shoulder injury. Overall, Cooper said any tim e you play against yourself (in a scrim m age) both the good and bad a re highlighted. “ 1was disappointed in the tight ends,” he said. “ T h ere w ere a lo t o f broken assignments, missed blocks and tripping and falling down.” The tight end position is also up for grabs. Cooper said junior college transfer Gary Knudson is the leading contender. On the brighter side, Cooper said the team got a lot o f conditioning in and there were not any m ajor injuries. “ I think w e w ill be a pretty physical team like w e w ere last year,” Cooper said. Cooper said at least now he and his staff have a pretty good idea of what his players can and can’t do. “ It’s almost as important to know what your player can’t do as much as what they can do,” he said. ASU spilt end Roy Hurd attempts to catch a pan despite the defense of roverback Rodney Dillard during practice at Camp T o n t o z o ^ T ^ u ^ Z beginpractice In Temp* today tor Mwlrflnt games against Illinois Sept 12. P omozona- The Sun Davll* Cooper said he was somewhat surprised in Shawn Patterson and said he m ight be the best player on the team. “ No one blocked Patterson a ll w eek,” he said. In addition to Patterson, Cooper said Richard Davis had a good camp. “ They (Patterson and D avis) really played w ell, they were full o f enthusiasm;” Cooper said. Cooper also singled oüt Todd Kalis, center Steve Spurting and split end Aaron Cox as having good camps. Although the qu arterback situation appears most important, Cooper said he is concerned about fillin g the cleats of Devilback Scott Stephen. “ Right now I ’m more worried about that position m ore than any other position on the team ,” he said. Redshirt freshman Terrance Johnson saw the most practice tim e last week because junior Rodney D illard missed most o f camp with a leg injury. Freshman E ric B erry also has a chance to fill the position. Senior Greg Clark, who missed Tuesday and Wednesday’s practice because he had to appear in court, pleaded guilty to assaulting a police officer. He w ill be sentenced Sept. 15. The Sun D evils have depth in the running backs. With the loss of only Paul Day, seniors Charming W illiam s and D arryl Harris return to their postions. But Cooper said he has m ore than one athlete to fill Day’s position. “ I wouldn’t be afraid to play Kirk Wendorf and I wouldn’t be afraid to play Victor Cahoon,” he said. Cooper said he hopes to find out the status o f inside linebacker Stacey H arvey today. H arvey missed camp while com pleting a correspondence course. The course ended Friday. The Sun D evils practice at night this week and start regular day practices next week in preparation of the Sept. 12 season opener at Illinois. . Prep star LaDuke denies baseball for Sun Devils Freshman says no to large contract with Padres Mlks Scully/Stata Pres* ASU free safety Nathan LaDuke in practice at Camp Tontozona. The former Phoenix prep star turned down an $88,000 bonus from the San Diego Padres to play football for the Sun Devils. By CAROL BOOS State Press Nathan LaDuke wants to be a Sun D evil. He probably won’t see one minute o f playing tim e. But he turned down $88,000 to try. LaDuke is a freshman free safety from Alhambra High School in Phoenix. His senior year in high school, he played baseball. The San D iego Padres drafted him in the 25th round o f the June free agent draft and offered him a signing bonus o f $88,000. But he said no, I want to play football. “ I ’ve played football since I was eight,” LaDuke said. “ I like the fast pace and aggressiveness of the gam e. Baseball was slow and if you struck out there was no retaliation. In football you can get back in on the next play. “ I like playing football a lot m ore than baseball,” LaDuke said last week at Camp Tontozona. “ I found baseball harder m entally.” The 6-foot 185-pound Arizona powerlifting champion is battling for a spot to replace Darren W illis in the secondary. Expected to replace W illis w ill be sophomore Bernard Jones (6-1,192) or junior college transfer J eff Mahlstede (6-3, 195). LaDuke was one of the most recruited seniors in the nation last year. He garnered honorable mention All-Am erica status last year from USA Today, Scholastic Magazine and Bally« (National High School Athletic Coaches Association). He chose ASU. “ ASU is a great school. I liked the coaches. They were sincere and I liked being close to hom e,” he said. So, LaDuke took o ff his baseball glove, put on his cleats and pads, and got on a bus headed fo r a place called Camp Tontozona where life for a freshman is often like boot camp. “ It’s been kinda rough,” he said. “ You have to pay your dues. Everyone here was pretty much a star coming out of high school, now it’s back to practice. “ You just have to learn the system. I ’m far behind. It’s a really tough gam e mentally. A lot of freshmen can’t play because they don’t have the mental .training the upper­ classmen have.” And although LaDuke is w ell aw are that head coach John Cooper w ill redshirt as many freshmen as possible, he is keeping a positive attitude. “ The coaches never told m e I ’d play. I never expected to. I just want to do m y best. I know I ’m not ready to play,” he said. I f he dosen’t play, it could be harder on him than any other freshman. LaDuke lettered in football (3 ), wrestling ( 4) and baseball ( I ) , He chalked up m ore than 2,000 yards of total offense (1,072 rushing, 1,007 passing) and 18 touchdowns in 1986. He had 110 tackles and a 40.4-yard punting average. In addition, he compiled a 95-6 w restling mark, including a 494) record as a junior and senior at Alhambra. I f he doesn’t play it might mean LaDuke could go through withdrawal. But the two-time state and four-time M etro Division wrestling champion said although he might miss the other sports, he w ill be busy with academ ics. LaDuke gained recognition fo r being named Arizona Student Athlete of the year in 1986. “ Everyone calls athletes dumb jocks,” he said. “ It ’s nice to show them w e’re not.” Don Bocchi, associate director o f football operation.*: responsible for recruiting, said LaDuke’s leadership abilities and athletic skills constitute a winner in every sense. “ He was the first player I went to see,” Bocchi said. “ I mean the first day you could go see anyone I went to see him “ You can’t have too many Nathan LaDukes. He can play defense, offense, quarterback or running back." Although LaDuke said he has no regret now about turning down $88,000, he said he m ight in the future. “ I f things don’t work out, I . can always go back to baseball,” he said. LaDuke is presently nursing a shoulder injury. “ It ’s m ostly affecting m e physically, I can’t do any contact but m entally I ’m just taking it in stride,” he said. And taking it in stride is the only w ay he knows how to do things. Page 26 Stale P re ti Sun Devil golfers ready for successful seasons By LARRY GAST * State Press ASU’s men’s and women’s go lf teams drive into the season with national rankings and a cartload o f All-Am ericas — enough to give both teams high hopes of bringing national championships back to Tempe. “ ASU’s athletic program is designed to win championships and w e’re no different,” men’s coach St^ve Loy said. “ Our goals are to w in the P a e -10 and the national championship.” Last year, the men’s squad placed 16th nationally. But this year, behind the accurate swing of the nation’s top collegiate golfer, B ill M ayfair, the Sun D evils are expected to finish easily in the top 10. M a yfa ir, a three-tim e A ll-A m erica, returns to the team as a senior. The Phoenix native has garnered All-Conference honors three tim es, and he won six o f 13 tournaments last year. “ He’s a key player,” Loy said. “ M ayfair is as important to the ASU men’s golf team as a Heisman Trophy winner is important to any collegiate football team .” M ayfair is backed up by two other top scorers. Senior Tom Stankowski has earned A ll-A m erica honors and ju n ior Jim Strickland holds an A ll-Pac -10 title. Although the trio is accountable for much o f the team ’s success, Loy is counting on his seven freshm en' and three sophomore transfers to carry a big share of the load. “ The k ey to our success is going to be thè amount of leadership and tournament wins our seniors provide us, and the depth our freshmen g iv e,” Loy said. “ If w e have two pluses in those categories, I can guarantee w e’ll be on top.” Women’s head coach Linda Vollstedt speaks no less frankly about the strengths of her squad. “ I think we should have a real good season,” she said. Vollstedt has led the team to three consecutive top-four NCAA finishes. She was also named NCAA Regional Coach of the Y ea r last season. D e s p ite lo s in g s ta r D a n ie lle Ammaccapane, the team has am ple talent and depth. The women’s squad w ill return m ore than h alf o f last year’s llth-ranked team to the greens this season. Juniors Pam W right and P ea rl Sinn, both All-Am ericas, form the core o f the women’s attack. Their highlights include W right’s first place at the Pac-W est Conference Championships, and Sinn’s selection to the Pac-W est All-Star Team . The women’s schedule begin Sept. 11, when they tee o ff at the Roadrunner Invitational Tournament in Las Cruces, N.M . The men’s team does battle Sept. 29 in the LSU Intercollegiate Tournament a t 1 Baton Rouge, La. State Prasa photo ASU golfer Pam Wright swings last season. The ASU men’s and women’s golf teams are prepar­ ing for success in 1987-88. N avy H ealth Professions S cholarship Program Fully-paid education plus m onthly incom e If you have been accepted by, or are enrolled at, an approved school of medicine or osteopathy«, you may qualify for the Navy Health Professions Scholarship Program. As a scholarship student the Navy pays: •your full tuition, authorized fees and educational expenses; •th e cost of required books and supplies (reimbursed to you); •rental fees for necessary equipment such as microscopes; and •a monthly cash payment directly to you (subject to taxes). You can use this stipend as you please. W hile at school, the Navy does not interfere with your academic life. You won’t have to attend military training or drills, or wear Navy uniforms. Your lifestyle is the same as other medical or osteopathic students. Special Training You’ll spend about six weeks of each year in an “ active service” status. However, if your curriculum doesn’t allow you to leave school, you can usually spend a portion or all of those days of active duty at your civilian school continuing your studies. During this active duty period, you’ll receive full pay and allowances of an officer in the Navy — whether you’re at school or away. That’s in addition to the regular monthly income you receive during the rest of the year. Active duty periods offqr you the chance to travel at Navy expense and gain medical experience while enjoying a break from the routine of studying. > X O bligations: •com plete school as a member of the Navy Health Professions Scholarship Program. •serve one year of active duty as a Navy medical officer for each year of scholarship participation. You must serve at least three years on active duty. Tim e spent in internship or residency does not count toward your active service obligation. Q ualifications fo r scholarships: •b e accepted for the next entering class or currently enrolled in an approved school of medicine or osteopathy in the ll.S . or Puerto Rico. •b e a U .S. citizen of good moral character. •b e physically qualified for a commission as a Navy officer. •h ave composit MCAT score of 60 or more .S3 N / jV ¡S T CALL TOLL-FREE CALIFORNIA 1-800-222-6289 IN ARIZONA CALL 1-800-228-8961 NAVY RECRUITING DISTRICT SAN DIEGO Be The Doctor You Want To Be. In Th© Navy. F a n ta s tic ! Phoenix is ready for NFL; are they ready for us? A near-capacity crowd o f 67,500 jamm ed Sun D evil Stadium Aug. 15 fo r a National Football League exhibition gam e between the Green Bay Packers and local favorite Denver Broncos. The gam e was touted as a chance for Valley residents to show support for an N F L franchise in Phoenix But is Phoenix ready for the N F L and M ajor League Baseball? T h e fans seem prepared to welcome both franchises. People in attendance — many of them dressed in Bronco orange and blue — said they bought tickets in support of a Phoenix franchise. Throughout the summer, rumors circulated that if Phoenix did not sell out the gam e, the V alley could kiss its chances of landing a team goodbye. Although organizers o f the event denied those rumors, fans rushed to box offices to buy tickets. In A pril, only 35,000 tickets w ere sold fo r the gam e — an amount sandwiched between other expansion hopefuls Jacksonville and Memphis. But the Tem pe gam e had a higher attendance than both cities. ^ There is no doubt that Phoenix is ready for football and baseball. V alley residents have supported the troubled Phoenix Suns fo r decades, and ASU football had the entire area enthralled with January’s Rose Bowl. Even the Phoenix Firebirds, a Class A A A professional baseball team, showed an attendance gain of 20,000 from 1986. M ore than 180,000 people attended 70 Firebirds games at nearby Phoenix Municipal Stadium. If it is numbers they want, AStJ baseball could help the Phoenix center remembered at memorial mass By The Associated Press P H O E N IX + Phoenix Suns center Nick Vanos, one of the passengers killed in Sunday night’s crash of Northwest Airlines Flight 255 from D etroit to Phoenix, was eulogized Friday as a p r o m is in g N B A p l a y e r whose life was snuffed out before he could reach his potential. “ The death leaves one question unansw ered + why/ Why Nick/ Why now/,” said Suns General Manager J e r r y C o la n g e lo at a m em orial service at Brophy Chapel here. “ Why do these t r a g e d i e s c o n t i n u e to happen/ He w ill be missed.” Vanos, 24, died along with his 25-year-old fiancee, Carolyn Cohen, o f Phoenix. The couple had flown to Plymouth, M ich., so Vanos could m eet Ms. Cohen’s parents. The 7-foot-2, t 260-pound Vanos was the Suns’ secondround draft pick in 1985 out of Santa Clara University. Although he played little in his first two NBA seasons, he w as p ro je c te d to be a possible starter fo r Phoenix this coming season. Suns Coach John W etzel remem bers Vanos as a hard worker who always “ showed up at practice a half-hour early, determined to make him self a better player. w tih p a r t i o p « '| n e “ The coaches and rest of « ty fc d 'S the team would come to the gym and Nick was already #13 there running the steps to M C N W C M fN 3 stay in shape,” W etzel said. “ He knew his tim e to play was going to come. He knew he was going to get a chance and he wanted to be ready. “ Days and days and days a fte r p ractice, he’d lift w e i g h t s . H e r o d e the sta tion a ry b ik e ,” added W etzel, choking hack tears. “ A lot of people didn’t know that last year, Nick went through tiie entire training camp with a broken toe. Re got it taped up every day 7oq fo rest and never complained. He wanted to make it. He never gave up and he did what he g o io g c u rh to c had to, to achieve his goal to D ave H odges Asst. Sports Editor — tiU B L cause. During the last seven home gam es o f last season — a three-game series against rival Arizona and the four-game NCAA West II regional — ASU averaged 6,262 fans. The regional was the third most-successful in term s of gross and net receipts in NCAA history. Numbers are nice, but the m ajor stumbling block between expansion teams being a dream and a reality in Phoenix is where the teams w ill play. In the past few years, various groups have been arguing over whether a domed stadium or an open-air stadium should be built, if there should be one multi-purpose stadium or separate arenas for football and baseball and if this complex should be located in downtown Phoenix or out in the boonies. ASU officials say they would be w illing to lease Sun D evil Stadium to an N F L franchise, provided the N F L accepts a minimum seven-year lease while a domed stadium is built in downtown Phoenix. Athletic director Charles H arris said any professional football team in Phoenix would hurt ASU season ticket sales, and a minimum seven-year lease is necessary to protect financial interests. But the N F L should not be playing in Sun D evil Stadium. College and pro football are very different sports and should be separated. To play in the same stadium, sometimes on consecutive days, would not only tear up the field, but create a less festive atmosphere than having two separate stadiums. There are only several stadiums that share N F L and college teams: USC and the Los Angeles Raiders at the Los Angeles M em orial Colisseum, the U niversity of Minnesota and the Vikings in the Metrodome, and Tulane and the New Orleans Saints at the Louisiana Superdome. But everybody is forgetting the m ajor problem — there is no team in Phoenix. And with the furor created with Gov. Evan M echam ’s rescinding of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, some people are worried the N F L and major, league baseball w ill boycott Arizona. The NBA has already cancelled plans to hold its annual convention in Scottsdale, and the N F L m ight do the sam e for its meetings here next year because of fea r o f an unstable political clim ate and racism. The question is not where the teams should play. A retractable domed stadium should be built in downtown Phoenix as soon as possible for both baseball and football. Phoenix w ill not get a team until the dome is built, so construction might as w ell begin now. 'The real question is: Is the N F L and MLB ready for Phoenix? Beforeyouchoose alongdistance sendee,takeaclose look. C a n ’t decide w hat to d o w it h uour h a ir j Sounds like aou need to come see us..- SAVE *4 . 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CALC TODAY £ ___ _ ■_ FLAX ¥ m in ä [ 1 Maricopa Freeway FLAX c o .( INC 10th Street & Jefferson • 254-0840 • Lots of free parking Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 $at. 9-5 STARTS FRIDAY GCC METRO CINEMA 997-6363 I 1 In s id e M e t r o C e n te r | MANN'S BELL TOWER 8 843-4593 * 5 1 s t A v e . & B e ll AMC BELL PLAZA 971-8886 AMC FIESTA VILLAGES 962-0666 3 2 n d & B e ll R d . A l m a S c h o o l & S o u t h e rn / M e s a MANN'S SUN DEVIL t 829-0344 The Cornerstone— Rural & Univ. U.A. CINEMAS 242-4525 Mall I n s i d e C h r is t o w n AMC SUN VALLEY PU ZA10 981-6200 7420 E. Main, Mesa U.A. MOVIES 947-7593 Scottsdale Civic Center O p t im is t ic Spikers open season at Illinois tourney By JOAN McKENNA State Press ® good season and definitely be in the Top 10. I f we keep im proving, we m ay go a ll the w ay to the top. ” Six hours of team practice daily broken into two intense workouts. One full-tim e and two assistant coaches splitting up the players to drill special skills. A makeshift training room overflow ing with sm all nagging injuries. No, it is not Camp Tontozona, but the P .E . East gym , as the Sun D evil volleyball team gears up fo r its seaso n -o p en in g tournament Sept. 4 in Champaign, 111. Returning fo r the Sun D evils are four of last year’s starters: outside hitters senior Tracey Barberie and junior Christy Nore, sophomore middle blocker Sue Nord and senior setter Regina Stahl. Also returning fo r her fifth year as head coach is Debbie Brown, trying to im prove on last year’s 27-7 record, ranking 12th in the country and third in the Pacific-10 Conference. “ Last year, overall, we had a great season, and generally speaking, the girls played w ell,” Brown said. “ But it would have been even better if we had beaten UCLA or Stanford.” The Sun D evils dropped two apiece to those teams. Brown is confident in her starting veterans. “ Those four have come back really strong, and their skills have been sharp,” she said. The Sun D evils could be hurting by the graduation o f two key starters: m iddle blocker Tam m y Webb — now with the U S. Olympic Team in San Diego - and Valentina Vega. However, Brown said the 1987 team “ should definitely have Some of this optimism stems from the four highly-touted freshman recruits. Tw o of them, Tina Berg and Mindy (Sowell, were named in Volleyball Monthly’s list o f the top 50 recruits in the country. B erg is a 6-foot-3 m iddle blocker from Moon V alley High School in Phoenix. B erg said she cam e to ASU because o f the quality of the players and the coaches. Gowell, a 5-10% left outside hitter, hails from Portage, Mich. An All-Am erica high school player, she is a form er team m ate to Nord. Additionally, Brown has added K elly Plaisted, a 5-11% hitter from Bellevue, Wash., who was selected to the first team, all-state. The final recruit, Jenny Halack, is technically a walk-on since the team ’s three scholarships w ere already used. From Chicago, the 5-2 freshman is a defensive specialist and w ill be used fo r specific situations. Junior hitter Debbie Lynch said, “ W e did lose a couple of strong players, but this team has enough talent and depth to do really w ell.” Brown said she is stressing fundamentals, teamwork and conditioning ifi preparation fo r the stiff competition at the Illinois Tournament, which includes Brigham Young, who last year knocked out ASU in the NCAA playoffs. The Sun Turn to V olleyball, p a ge 37. r*“—— — COUPON — —— — Todd Green/StatePress Sun Devil Dawn Meidlnger digs the ball during practice Friday. The ASU volleyball team wlH open its season Sept. 4th in Illinois. — IN TR O D U C IN G ... SIMMONS A rt S u p p lie s In c STUDENT DISCOUNTS ART & DRAFTING SU P P LIE S MESA SCOTTSDALE 2620 W. Broadw ay Mesa, AZ. 85202 7502 E. Indian Sch.Rd. Scottsdale, A Z 85251 894-2868 941-2488 ASU 203 E. 7th St. Tempe, A Z 85281 967-8172 4Í -A OSL\^ '7.M. THE SM ART C O O K IE Cookies for all occasions D " esperados BAR & G R IL L 5 2 4 W est B ro ad w ay ♦ 8 9 4 * 6 4 2 3 Corner of Broadway & Roosevelt Every Monday Come spin “ The Wheel of Fortune Cookie” every Monday for discounts CHICKEN W IN G S 3-11 p.m. •FREE YOGURT BUY ONE YOGURT GET ONE FREE (EQUAL VALUE) •FREE COOKIES BUY ONE DOZEN GET ONE-HALF DOZEN FREE •50 CENTS OFF ANY 12-INCH COOKIE wH** (Sorry, no carry-out) 99«? Tuesday Night ES / l Z a\ 3 V ' r% THE SMART COOKIE ¡l!A *!f: WELCOME ASU STUDENTS Call 966-2150 1s u n P a n c e n te r * YOUR COMPLETE TANNING CENTER BACK TO „SCHOOL SPECIALS m s visits $19.00 WOLFF 3E12 visits $40.00 STSrtM (Offer expires 9-13-87.) I •* M paSCV CATCH SOME RAYS. . . University & McClintock (behind M ay West) 921-9988 Expires 9 *8 7 . Not valid with any other coupon. STRAWBERRY MARGARITAS 6 p jn .-l am. W ELL d r in k s 7 -8 p.m. LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Tonite—Dave Hawthorn IK* GMAf i DON'T GET [INTO THEGRAD SCHOOL OF TOUR CHOKE? 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(L im ite d O ffe r— Save $50) AW AEROBICS OFSCOnSDAH $25 INITIATION FEE*ONLY $25 A M ONTH *NO CONTRACTS •15,000 sq. feet «Brand new spacious fa cilitie s •W olffe tanning beds •H o u rly aerobics •P ro shop «A ir-conditioned •T he W orld Cafe Juice Yogurt bar «Trainers Available «V I I 1465 N. H a y d e n 945-6060 (S. E. C orner o f Hayden A M cD owell) 5 minutes from ASU OTHERLOCATIONS THROUGHOUT THEUNITEDSTATES, CANADA & EUROPE I Page 34 State Press Monday, August 24,1987 Witha First Interstate ched _ . ^©iffWandthfe can youcan bank wheneveryouwant W ith a First Interstate checking account, you’ll never have to worry about getting to the bank during i “banker’s hours.” VCfe have an office right by the campus, and even when our human tellers aren’t working, our Day & Night Tellers® are. They let you get cash, make deposits, payments, and transfers any time at all. When you open a checking account at First Interstate, you automatically receive a Red First Interstate Bancard. W ith it, you can make cash withdrawals at more than 130 Day & Night Tellers all over Arizona. It also lets you cash checks at more than 185 First Interstate offices in Arizona and over 1000 in the 13 . Western States and Hawaii. Tbu may also wish to apply for a Gold First Interstate Bancard. The Gold Card does everything the Red Card does, plus, it guarantees your personal checks to more than 21000 Arizona merchants. To get your First Interstate checking account, just fill out the form below and take it to our University office. A ll we need then is your signature and initial deposit, and year’ll have the best checking account in Arizona! Choose the one that’s best for you: Access Account: Allows customers who make only a few third party payments to minimize their checking account costs. The Access Account does not offer checks, but provides, instead, convenient account access through the Red First Interstate Bancard, A ll you need is your card to make deposits and withdrawals in the branch, or through Day & Night Tellers in Arizona. A small fee is charged for each withdrawal plus a nominal monthly mainte' nance fee. Regular Checkii^: No service charge if you keep a specified minimum balance Below that, a monthly fee is charged, with no limit on the number of checks you write. Super N O W Account: Combines a market rate of interest, and the benefits of a checking account. The interest rate you earn depends upon your balance. The higher your balance, the higher the interest rate. Tfou earn a market rate of interest when your balance is $1000 or more, and an even higher rate of interest when your balance is $10000 or more. Our Super NOWAccount offers you unlimited check writ­ ing and deposits. If your daily balance falls below $1000, there is a monthly service charge. Checking^Savings Plan: By maintaining a specified minimum balance in a checking account or specially designated regular savings account, you can avoid a monthly service charge on your checking account. If both your checking account and savings account balances drop below the specified minimum balances, there will be a monthly service charge on your checking account. The balance in your Regular Savings Account earns interest. For your savings needs, please ask about our Market Interest Account. Bank NTERSKTEBANKCfARIZONA, NA srF.CUC• FederalReserveSystem EqualOpportunityEmployer 1 | ■ 1 Please print vour name (die way you want it printed on your checks) *' M ailing address ..... 1 Phone number I 1 ■ Hom e (parents’) address .. . . . Hom e (parents’) phone number I Birthplace 1 ...... Ik - ■ Your mothers maiden name 1 (for verification when you 1 phone in to check your balance) * | Your occupation (if other than student) Sodai Security Num ber | Previou« Bank f!ity State 7ip your preference 1 □ O Q O Access Account Regular Checking Super N O W A ccount Checking/Savings 1 1 ASU U niversity O ffice 707 S. C ollege Ave. Tempe, A Z 85281-0421 Tempe-M eta O ffice 1400 Apache Blvd. Tempe, A Z 85281-0340 state Pro» Intramurals, club sports start sign-ups Thursday ...rCHRIS u D K nDORSEY n flS E Y By State Press Summer break may be over, but the fun is just beginning, as the intramural department at ASU will start again today serving as a recreational outlet for all students. The intramural department has set up organized competition in many sports, including volleyball, flag football, golf, and cross country — an event that averages 500 runners, according to Juliette Moore, assistant director of intramurals. In recent years Students have participated in consistently high numbers. Last year 12,678 people got involved in intramurals. “ This is a stable figure for us,” Moore.said. “ We would like . * w to put more emphasis on publicity and get more response. We are looking forward to a great year.” There has been a drop in individual sports though, Moore said. “ We would like to get more involvement in the individual sports like racquetball, badminton and powerlifting,” Moore said. “ We encourage everyone to take part in all events.” There have been changes made in some of the programs. For example, the women’s division soccer had no response last year, so it was dropped for a sport called melonball. Melonball is a sport played on a tennis court and is a combination of volleyball, tennis and dodge ball. A co-rec flag football tournament will also be added. Men’s intramural sports are split into two classes, A and B. I ' / The higher skilled and those into intense competition are encouraged to take part in the A class. If an individual is looking to be on a team, an individuals’ meeting will be held prior to the team manager’s meeting. Fall semester entry due dates begin with badminton, Aug. 27th. For information consult the intramural department in P.E. West. The intramural department also sponsors a co-rec program, which is designed both men and women to play together. “ The co-rec program was designed for fun,” Moore said. The intramural department also plays an important role in club sports. They send people on their w ay to such clubs as rugby, lacrosse, ice hockey and soccer, to name a few. AIDS KILLS PLAY SAFE Use Condoms 1 doz. Sam pler only $7.95 Protect yourself, ca ll today: 1-800-341-1950 ext. 98 Visa, Mastercard, C.O.D. U.S. Manuf./Plain Envelope C AR PET REMNANT WHAT’S NEW shirts to checkout com parable a t $36 14 " C ' These are some great threads... and we mean threads! All-over windowpane checking of contrast stitching. Outrage­ ous on pastels, with pleated patch pockets, too. Woven polyester/rayon/ cotton from a popular maker. S-M-L-XL. fa m o u s m a ke r p a n ts com parable at $35 Carpet starting at $2.99 s/y MESA nSE Inüny At M m /M. XHWt a t Mb CM 890-1152 WESTSIDE .IWILSttMt M. !to«us ( QBan 289-3261 16 " Two great looks— there's a fashion forward smooth-and-bandless Holly­ wood waist or a more traditional full waisted style, with a button fly and side tabs. Ultra com fortable cotton twills in white, black or gray. Sizes 28 to 36. All first quality. A funding shortage has left the future o f Disabled Student Re­ sources cart system in question. H Z Guadalupe JÉ 1c Elliot Ö o 2 Warner /m a rsh alls! DLER I ArizonaAve. 1 J ______ si 7 _ ùtf » r3 Price Iff every student, staff and faculty member donated one dollar, we could keep ASU’s carts for the disabled running. Superst Southern U_ C o / Baseline !ArizonaAve. I /m arsh alls 1 ?------* TEMPE I University -8 C y Q C D Apache E Broadway Dobson O A.is.U JÉ s Ç o 2 Price ■ Dbsonl Rural For 20% to 60% off department store regular prices every day. Here’s how to g e t there... TEMPE: Southern Ave. and McClintock Dr. CHANDLER: Mervyn’s Plaza, Alma School Rd. Disabled Studqpt Resources needs to raise at least $50,000 to continue transporting disabled and temporarily disabled stu­ dents, faculty and staff around campus. Please help us continue an in­ valuable service to ASU. You'll never know when you'll be tempo­ rarily disabled with a sprained ankle and need to be transported around campus! Please help us keep ASU ’s carts for the disabled running by mak­ ing a donation today. Mail or bring in your check made payable to Disabled Student Resources to: State Press, ASU Matthews C enter. Tempe. A Z 85287-1502 Ftanfc you far your tupport « i O p e n M o n d a y thru S a tu rd a y 10 to 9 O p e n S un d ays 11 to 6 % Page 36 Monday, August 24,1987 State Preti Cecil gives leadership to Wildcats DOUGLAS (A P ) — There’s a certain ju x t a p o s it io n to re c k le s s n e s s and leadership. But they fit together perfectly in Chuck Cecil’s lexicon, and in his plans. A two-time all-conference selection, the 6-foot, 185-pound senior who anchors the University o f Arizona’s defensive backfield says “ there’s only one w ay to play football” — recklessly with his body. But also by providing leadership. Cecil, 22, has been named on several preseason a ll-A m e ric a n lists, is an academic all-American and is lauded not only by his present and past coaches but opponents. He’s noted for fierce open-field tackling, in addition to deftness at blocking punts, recovering fumbles and intercepting and deflecting passes. Former Coach Larry Smith, now at Southern Cal, said on the field it’s as if Cecil “ jumps into a phone booth, changes clothes and comes out with a big ‘S’ on his chest.” An assistant at North Carolina, which lost to Arizona and Cecil in last year’s Aloha Bowl, called him “ a heat-seeking missile.” He is looked to by teammates and coaches — and by himself — as a leader. “ I don’t think I ’ve ever seen a player who has so much respect on the part of the fellow players, the coaches and the people in the community as Chuck does,” said new head Coach Dick Tomey. “ And he’s earned that respect because of his perform ance” academically, as a football player and, he added, for “ what he is as a person — the whole package. Because Chuck Cecil is more than a football player.” Secondary coach Duane Akina said Cecil’s “ strongest asset” is his character, calling him “ somebody you’d like your son to'grow up to be like,” a leader and example for younger players who makes his job easy. “ Those young guys can just look and say, ‘Hey, that’s what an all-American practices like,’ ” Akina said. Cecil, he added, is the type of player “ you don’t want to overcoach and you don’t want to handcuff, because he’s got such good instincts -* feeling the complexion of a football play, just kind of knowing what’s going to happen, he’s got that sixth sense about him, and when he arrives there he arrives angry, he’s very intense.” He played strong safety in Smith’s system last year, intercepting six passes and returning them 142 yards, including one 100 yards against Arizona State. But this year, he has been moved to free safety, which he said is “ really highlighted Turn to Cecil, page 37. c n u cK uecu The 1/lom 9* WELCOME BACK! HAVE A GREAT SEMESTER GYROS O N LY Fast Food how -Fat, Low -Calorie, Nutritious and Fresh 2 for 1 B A C K T O S C H O O L SPECIAL Bring in student ID . and receive two for one on all main dishes all week long. W ITH THIS A D (u p to 4 san dw ich es) O FFER GO O D TH RO UG H AUG. 2 2 ,1 9 8 7 . (O ffe r expires 8-30-87.) 44 1 Hours: M on.-Frl. 10-9 • Sat. 10-6 (U nlv. P laza) V m p S BOJO 829 S. Rural Rd. 966-5543 M 1 i University A Fresh Alternative to Chinese Buffets TAKE-OUTS CaUaheadandwellhaveit readyfor you! 9 6 7 -6 9 1 1 All meals are prepared fresh on our Chinese Grill 1435 E . U niversity D r. (U niversity Plaza) i t ’ s A t " O n* Cornerstone Mall 894-2254 i m - F e w e t m h i o . o r . g e . e m a l l t t i n r i g o u t e c l a s s s o , " k a y ? ” K i t . ” Dresses The university Man And woman Hayden square 966-7904 1 statt Rum Monday, August 24,1987 Page 37 Cecil Continued from peg* 3*. in the new defense, so they’re going to be looking for me to make a lot of really big plays and to make things happen. Hopefully I won’t let them down.” Cecil, from Hanford, Calif., said he himself had “ been remiss” in leadership and believes that lack among players last season “ hurt us in a couple of games.” He said “ sometimes it takes a player-to-player type of relationship to make things really happen.” Cecil, who was redshirted after walking on in 1983, admitted there is a lot of weight on his shoulders, but said he’s always put a lot on himself. “ I feel there should be. And if I don’t play well, then something’s wrong, and I have no one to look to but myself.” That brings up his style of play. Akina and Tomey acknowledged that Cecil plays so intensely that he takes a physical pounding. Akina said his biggest problem is in slowing Cecil down. “ He has a chance of getting hurt because he does play so hard and reckless, and he’s not a real big, physical guy. After a while, when you hit the 230 pounds all the time, that 175-80 pounds is gonna give.” But Cecil said, “ You can’t go out there and be laying off or be concerned about getting hurt, because that’s when you really get hurt. “ And the only reason that I ’ve had the little bit of success that I ’ve had is because I play very recklessly as far as with my body.” Volleyball Continuad from paga 32. Devils will also face Illinois and Texas A&M. Players have been getting more individual attention due to new full-time assistant coach Steve Schlick, who is particularly strong in gym-work with the team, Brown said. Schlick is a UC-Santa Barbara graduate with a degree in physical education as well as having played collegiate volleyball. He has spent the last seven years coaching high school volleyball in the Valley and the Arizona Junior Olympic Volleyball Club. Schlick said Brown and assistant coach Sue Woodstra are “ tremendous and knowledgeable. “ I came to ASU because it is a high-caliber volleyball program run by two high-caliber coaches,” he said. “ You % GAME D EPO T IN T R O D U C IN G the N E W Patio G rill fo r th e games people play •Family Games «Role Playing Games N o t Your Typical Fast Food Burger •Strategy Games •M iniatures •M agazines «Dice, Playing cards •Chess and •Historical Reference Accessories also won’t find nicer people than Sue and Debbie.” Brown said the tough early-season schedule may actually help the team. “ It’s tough to open on the road going against top-10 teams like Illinois and BYU ,” she said. “ But on the other hand, it’s good to be tested right off the bat so that w e’re ready to play our conference games.” Featuring: Premium, gourmet style hamburgers & chicken sandwiches cooked to order over an open flame beneath our soon to be famous palm tree arches. Located: The southeast comer of the Memorial Union on the patio overlooking the business building. M ag/Books Just north o f ASU A S U ’s Very Own Outdoor P icnic . . . B A R B E Q U E ! The best burger y o u \ e ever tasted. You need to taste it to believe it!!! 708 S. Forest Ave. 966-4727 PACIFIC EYES & GIGANTIC SUPER SALE! 30%—40%—50% SAVINGS $ £05 0 (Reg. $59) SAVE 30% ON ALL PRIMATE BEACH T-SHIRTS »Many Terrific colors & styles NOW SAVE 50% ON RAYBAN® WAYFARERS • • • • Am ericas’ #1 Su nglass Excellent protection from U.V. rays Choose from 4 colors A1I purpose G-15 lens [b u d l i g h t ] SPUDS MACKENZIE T-SHIRTS •Two fantastic designs JUST •The original party animal! SAVE 30% ON EVERY TANK TOP SAVE 40% ONALL SHORTS • N o w fro m $3.50 (reg. $5) • H u g e a sso rtm e n t of s o lid s in p a ste ls and b righ ts •Beer, U n ive rsity , Su rf, party sh irts and m uch m uch m ore for g u y s & g a ls • N o w fro m $8.00 (reg. $10) • S o lid s, prints, ru n n in g sh o rts & m ore •G reat fo r g u y s & g a ls THE WORLD’S FINEST SUNGLASSES ARE AT THE WORLD'S FINEST SUNGLASS STORE! “pacific £yes&" I S Tow er Plaza 38th St. & Thomas 244-9119 Christown Mall 19th Ave. & B ethany H om e 433-2949 W estrldge Mall 75th Ave. & Thomas 873-2607 Cornerstone Center Tempo: 725 S, R ural Rd. 966-5560 Page 38 i Monday^gujt24tJI987 m fM iii *“ 7 ‘ S f o r i C o 1 E. 5 th S t.,T e m p e CUSTOM SCREEN PRINTING COMPLETE DESIGN & ART SERVICES, MULTICOLOR W O R K OUR SPECIALTY •Sw eats • Sewn on letters • S horts 7 E. 5th St. 9 6 8 -4 2 0 8 classifieds announcem ents STATE PRESS C la s s ifie d A d v e rtis in g 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 THE GOOD NEWS IS the A FRAMED POSTERS r t of (* V t Ì ) ? s n e K JSn $49.99 I I. *We have N agel« fS M t W» g. g e a ¡6 «o * £ fvunlr^ A SPECIAL C O LLE C TIO N 2021E. Apache Blvd. _ between McClintock &'Price,Tempe im m m m & m m r* 829-7101 His:M-FiIMi:SatlOö “A SPECIAL COLLECTION” ----------------- T(Co u p o n — ------------ (fô\\x\ce CUISINE OF INDIA LU NCH B Ü F F E T $4.95/PERS0N A l you cat eat, many items. 2 0 % O FF D IN N E R Regular menu 5 p .m .-ì O p.m . P L U S O TH ER D IN N E R SP E C IA L S With this cotpon. O nori only. laturala I FROZEN YOGURT you’ll now have more time to place your classified ad. The deadline is noon, the day before publication. THE BAD NEWS IS we will no longer be able to sell classified ads in the Memorial Union. Our office in the basement of Matthews Center is open from 7 a.m.5 p.m. Cash • Check Visa • Mastercard (Sorry, no billing) Ths Ststs Prsss wiH not accsgt.em­ ployment « I s based on race, religion or aex unless such qualifying factors are essential to a given position. The State Press reserves the right to edit orreject any ad deemed objec­ tionable. Check your ad! The State Press w iil only be responsible for one incorrect insertion. Erfbrs ’must be reported before noon the first day your ad appears. The State Press disclaims all. re­ sponsibility for quality and prices of goods and services offered in both classified and display advertising by its advertisers. Must be purchased at Mesa Community Center Box Office before Sept 4. Info: 8 3 4 -2 5 6 0 Every Tuesday 1-3 p.m. 40c O FF A n y Yogurt Item Children under 6, FREE Y o gu rt (child size) Senior Citizens Always 10% O ff Any Yogurt Items. N o t valid with any other coupon offers. 15% '' OFF D R Y C L E A N IN G FO R S T U D E N T S autos fo r sale CONVERTIBLE 1973 Flat: Silver, needs some engine work, partial paint. Must go to good home. Asking $500 or best otter. Can 831-1995, ask lor Michele. 1974 MGB-GT. Excellent condition, new interior, low miles, runs perfectly. Moving, must sell. $1600. 831-8873. 1977 FIAT Spider convertible. 45,000 miles. Excellent condition, body and engine. $3100. 981-0770. 1980 FORD Fairmont, automatic, power steering/brakes, air, new tirea/battery. Runs good. $1000 or best offer. 941-4766. B rin g ’em ’ro u n d ASU AREA. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Furn­ ished, appliances included. Hudson Manor. Fenced yard. Lot 75x150. $69,900, assumable FHA loan. 967-3658. FOR SALE: 1975 Volvo 164E, air condi­ tioning, sun-root, rebuilt engine (have receipts), good condition. $2300. Call 899-3077. GOOD INVESTMENT near ASU: 2 bedroom split plan, each has fuH bath, dean, earthtones, washer, dryer. Assum­ able FHA loan. CaH Evelyn, 831-1152, ERA Karstetter Realty. FOR SALE: Silver 2 door 1988 Nissan Sentra. 21,000 miles, good condition. $4200. CaH 944-1472. LARGE ASU townhome. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, vaulted ceilings, fireplace, wet bar, microwave, and more. Over 1600 square feet. Bike to ASU. Priced in the $80’s. Call Dana, CotoweH Banker, 839-8200. 1977 SUZUKI GS750, new seat, air shocks, good tires, runs great. $600. 844-7598, leave message. 1985 HONDA Elite. Good shape. $1050. CaH Jay, 860-8348. 1885 PAPAGO PARK Village. Model sharp townhome within biking distance to ASU. One bedroom in quiet cul-de-sac location, near pool: Includes washer, dryer, and refrigerator. Low cash to mortgage. Priced at $84,900. Call Dana, CofdweH Banker, 839-8200. 6000 $1500 830-7539 HONDA TOOcc Shadow, miles, immaculate condition. Asking or best offer. Dave, evenings; weekdays. 988-5662 Can bicycles fo r sale i 20" TAKARA Tribute, Mixte frame, good condition, $85. CaH 820-3942. U.S. GOVERNMENT SALE WHY BENT? Anyone can buy ... special terms, no escrow fees ... call Paul for a FREE LIST! ftim tture fo r sale KING-SIZE waterbed. White lacquer with cabinets. Must sea. It's a steal! Can Jon, 967-4419. QUEEN-SIZE sleeper sola, good condi­ tion, $95; large coffee table, $35; both for $120.438-1067, TABLE, DINETTE with 6 chairs, $100; arm chair, $100; dining table, white rattan with 4 chairs, $200; whits iron king headboard, $40. 730-0131. WAREHOUSE SALE: Desks from $44, chairs from $4, bookshelves from $19, and tables, typing tables, computer tsbiee, file cabinets, storage cabinets, (fining tables, plus M s more. Arizona Office Liquidators, 4010 S. 43rd Place, between 40th Street and '480i Street, north of Broadway. ’ 437-2234. - . RENT FURNITURE STUDIO PKG: *36/month 3 ROOM PKG: $48/month 6 Month Lease plus T$x $ Delivery CROWN. FURt^TURE LEASING Warehouse Show Room 25 S. 40th St., Phoenix m iscellaneous fo r sale - 19" COLOR television, $80; 25” color, console, $100. Good condition. Cat! 2S4?"1412. ' ; LUDWIGDRUMset, 5 piece fiberglass with hi-hat, $425. 784-9741 evenings. MOVIE POSTERS: Lest Boys, Predator, Snow White, Robocop, Top Gun, and more. CaHJoel, 784-8970. $70. SPEAKERS, ACOUSTIC Research AR-93's 3-way system with 4 speakers. Handies 125 watts. Under warranty. Sound incredible; Sacrifice for $275. 784-0411, Jim. BR/BA DOWN 2/1 3 /2 2 /2 3 /2 4 /2 4 /2 $1,400 $1,700 $2,300 $3,100 $2,900 $ 3,400 PRICE $38,000 $44,600 $56,250 $62,000 $61,900 $77,700 PAUL PASTORE 831-0322 REALTY EXECUTIVES 6197 S. Rural Rd., Tempo. TELL YOUR M ks about this! Sharp one bedroom condo. Only three years old. Ctoee to A^U In a great complex with {root, spa, and green areas $67,900. CaH Dixie, 8293100 dr 827-0061. Century 21 Ambas­ sador Realtors. TOWNHOUSE, TEMPE, 1645 square test, 2 large bedrooms, 2Vi baths, covered patio, covered parking. $4000, assume 9W% FHA loan. 820-1544, $39-1547. WHY RENT? Buy nice 4 bedroom, 2 bath, 1 mile from campus. 1711 S. Hardy. $89,900. Judy, 9554)505. 971-9112. WHY WASTE your money on rent when you can own during your 4 years at college? Beautiful all-new condo, 2 targe bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances, tennis, pool. $59,900. Fantastic financing. CaH Donna Stevens, ERA SaveCom Realty, 831-0998, 345-7940. apartm ents fo r ren t $425:2 bedrooms, 2 baths, washer, dryer, refrigerator, dishwasher. 1077 W. let St. (at Hardy). Apartment 101. 497-0450. ARBOR APARTMENTS. Spacious, dean 2 bedroom. Pod. $390. No pets. 1548 W. University Dr., Temps. 967-8316. BEAUTIFUL NEW large one and two bedroom apartments, walk to ASU, pod, laundry, one block south of University on 8th Street and Gary. Ask about move-in specials. 968-5236. . w ith a State Press Classified Buy 3, Get 1 Free 9 0 5 -6 7 3 1 ASU ONE mite. 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo. $150/sach, 2 parsons; $300 one person. 900-1729,979-1971. PROFESSOR'S FAMILY wtH provide small but private studio apartment free ptus $80/month In exchange for 20 hours/week childcare; Monday to Thursday, 2-8:15 p.m.; Friday, 7-6 a.m. Two docks from campus. 968-5678 after 8 p.m. UNIVERSITY TOWERS rental available. $300 discount tail; spring 1961-88. Take over my lease. Contact Joyce, 989-1349 daytime, or call 831-5927 after 6. VERY LARGE 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo­ minium adjacent campus. Washer, dryer, refrigerator included. Immediate occupan­ cy. $875ftnonth. CaH Ban, 8200600, 831-5158. WALK TO ASU. One bedroom furnished, washer, dryer, pod, covered parking. $385 plus utilities. 991-1701.____________ homes fo r vent ' CENTRAL SCOTTSDALE. 2 bedroom, 2, bath condo. AH appliances, all amenities of a resort. $7OOfmon0t. 946-8982. CONDO FOR rant. Papago Park Village, near campus. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. CaH Phil, 982-9449. NICE THREE bedroom home on Orange. Walk to campue. $550. CaH Dan Murphy at 968-9331___________________ QUIET 2 bedroom house, one mile from ASU. Wood floors, patio, atrium doors leading to large back yard. CaH David, 968-3561. ONE LUXURIOUS condo unit for Isaac with option to buy Vi mile from ASU at 510 W. University (Hermosa Place). $525 per month. AH rent applied towards down payment. CaH for information, 968-7173 (12-6:30). rental sharing CENTRAL SCOTTSDALE, 10 minutes from campus. Luxurious condo. Every­ thing new. includes all utilities, nice pod, tots of extras. $275. 941-4550fmessage. COLLEGE STUDENT, female preferred. Nice three bedroom. Own room, own bath. Husband, wife, 2 year dd, We work 7-5. S co ttsd a le Road/M cK ellips area. $225/month includes alt. Maybe some evening babysitting. Jeff or Marcie, 990-2935, 951-4462. FEMALE NONSMOKER to share master bedroom in nicely furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath Papago Park Village II condo. \Vs mites from ASU. $210 ptus Vs utilities. 966-6394. FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share completely furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhouee. Own phone. Backyard. $300 month, Vs utilities. Nonsmoker. No pets. Debbie, 438-1099. FEMALE TO share nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Futiy furnished, washer, dryer, microwave, cable, computer. $250 plus Vs utilities. 820-9411. FEMALE TO share 2 bedroom furnished apartment Pod, tennis court, Jacuzzi. $210/month, Vs utilities. 345-7136. DON’T MISS out! At Terrace Road Apart­ ments we have two openings: a large two bedroom, two bath, and a spacious one bedroom, one bath. Laundry facilities, beautiful pod, courteous management, Vi block from campus, 950 S. Terrace Road. 966-8540. FREE ROOM and board in exchange for child care, ages T f, 8. Prefer nonsmoking female. Good hours for college student. Free hours 9-3, Monday through Friday. Most weekends off. Private room, tele* phone, pod, spa. Must have own car, references. CaH MI-2388 for interview. 2, 3, 4 bedroom houses, condos, townhouses, near ASU for sale and rent. Call Alumnus Robert Bullock, Trencor Realty, 951-5800, 860-0460. NEWLY FURNISHED apartment, Univer­ sity Villas, near ASU.' One bedroom; 2 females preferred. Cal 948-7833 attar 6 or message. 947-7646. HAYDEN SQUARE, a 3 bedroom condo, fuHy furnished. Female, nonsmoker. Move in .by September 1.. Beautiful place. $250-$350 per month plus Vs utilities. CaH Eric, 968-2918. m iscellaneous fo r sale m iscellaneous fo r sale HAYDEN SQUARE: Need two room­ mates, share bedroom in brand new condo. Living room, den, furnished, washer, dryer, pod, Jacuzzi. CaH Michelle, 921-0887. real estate fo r sale 44 M esa C om puter M a rt is > dealer for ili .r&SSr apartm ents fo r vent QUESTA VIDA 2 bedroom plus toff. Includes washer, dryer, refrigerator, pod, INDIAN BEND Gardens townhomes, tow spa, racquetbaH, and more. Near Univer­ 70*8, 2 and 3 bedrooms, double garages, sity and Hayden. $75Wmonth plus utilities. next to beautiful park, MHier and McKd- 1 CaH 961-6735. lips. Delisa Realty, 990-9501. m otorcycles fo r sale REFRIGERATOR, ROOM-SIZE. 1973 VOLKSWAGONSuper Beetle, auto­ matic transmission, low mileage on new engine. $1500. 730-0131. W I T H A S U I D. McKellips and Scottsdale in the ABCO Shopping Center real estate fo r Sale RECONDITIONED VACUUMS, $29.95 up. Ace Fix-it Shop. New location, 1936 E. University, Tempo. (Comer of Univ. & forest) HAPPY HOUR FUNTIME autos fo r sale 244-0424 J E S U S C H R IS T SUPER STA R Mesa Amphitheatre Sept. 11,12,18,19 & 20 SPECIAL ASU DISCOUNT $8 for $12.50 ticket 130 E. U N IV ER SITY, TEM PE • 967-7105 WELCOME ASU STAFF A N D STUDENTS T O O U R SPECIAL «u n i r m i Apple Computer Higher Education Purchase Program. 4 « Authorized Dealer Item Your Price 4 Macintosh Plus wAceyboard $ 1349.00 4 Macintosh SE w/Veyboard $ 1786.00 4 Macintosh H CPU wAceytxugd $ 2391.00 4 Apple* Mac II Monochrome Monitor $ 289.00 Forprices on these and many mon go to the Caanpua Center on plant walk. Or call Todd al 03-1155 MALE STUDENT to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Five minute walk to ASU. Washer, dryer, pod, Jacuzzi. Available immediatdy. 829-8275 or 838-1801. MATURE STUDENT. Share 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Nonsmoker, no drugs. $250, Vs utilities. .988-4414. MESA FEMALE roommate. Beautiful new 3 bedroom, 3 bath patio home. Microwave, VCR, large screen television, pod. $275, Vs utilities.CaH Heidi, 497-1358. ONE MALE roommate needed. Condo near Price and University. $195/month plus Vs utilities. 835-5196, 838-5270. rental sharing PEOPLE ORIENTED nonsmoking female. VWII ............. , r utilities. Pool, bar, laundry, fireplace, microwave. Call Shari, 838-74S7. RESPONSIBLE FEMALE. Fumlahed, private room . Nice houee, good neighbor­ hood. Laundry, cable, extra goodies. 4 miles ASU and MCC. $250, free u tilities. Nonsm oker. MardeH, 831-5599_________ help wanted h elp w an ted --------- - r — .wi u p i v g i c u FINANCIAL SERVICES organization needs secretary 3 days a week. Good appearance. Must type. 483-6875. WANTED for Quests Vida. Own room and bathroom. Female, nonsmoker. Call for information, 967-8827. FRATERNITY RESIDENT advisor wanted. Must be responsible grad student. Free room and board. Contact Jim Harris, 839-4727 after 6. ROOM RENTAL- Pool, patio, barbeque, microwave, game room with pool table. $150 monthly. 946-9493._______________ ROOM WITH mother and teenage girt. Female only. South Tempe. $200 includes utilities and kitchen prMlegees. 838-6224. business opportunities ATTENTION: N ATIO N AL Suncare Company has opened offices in Scotts­ dale area. We are looking for people to train in direct one-on-one sales of sun and skin care products on prestigious resort pod decks. Can qualify to travel our resort and trade show circuit across the country from Hawaii to the Caribbean. W e train, only self-starting outdoor types who like people need apply. Call 946-7083. OWN YOUR own business! Established wine and spirits store is offering Its delicatessen for lease to someone inter­ ested in developing their business skills and generating a good income. Equipment is included In the Mass and part of the operating costs are shared. The fall season is the perfect time to start some taH-gatihg and Greek functions catering. Call 898-3301 between »6 . SENIOR INVESTMENT brokers seek FIN or CIS majors with 2 to 3 semesters to graduation; reasonable pay, possible intern credits, 20 hours a week. Submit resume to Donald Morrow, or Richard Lund, Grubb and EHis Commercial Broker­ age, 2390 E. Camelback Rd., Suite 100, Phoenix 85016. help wanted ASU IS calling on you! ... On-campus location, convenient work schedule, $4/hour plus bonus, nightly incentives, gain valuable telemarketing experience. If you have sales ability, call the ASU Telefund at 965-8754. BABYSITTERS NEEDED part-time, full­ time live-in nannys. Call Friends Forever, 438-1099. CAFE LOOKING for sandwich making and counter help during lunch hours 11 a.m.-3 p.m., flexible hours. Hiring Immediately. Call or come by. 921-0785, Kevin's Comer Cafe, 1725 W. University.______________ CAT LOVER wanted to do house cleaning, basic cooking, errands, odd-jobs for Tempe couple. Near RuralfSouthem. Monday-Friday, 3-6 p.m. $4/hour, supper, errands mileage. Prefer upper classman. Must have car, references. C al Stefanie 8~5p.m., 952-3046; after 6 p.m., 638-1643. COLLEGE STUDENTS, earn 66-310 per hour working part-time on campus. For "tore information can 1-800932-0528. Place, lower level of the Memorial Union. Apply in person. per month. First donation in a calendar week $10, second donation in same calendar week $20 (Monday-Saturday). New donors receive $2 bonus on first donation. University Plasma Center Asso­ ciated Bioscience Inc., 1015 S. Rural Rd., Tempe, AZ. 968-6139. Effective until further notice. ROOMMATE TO share nice 3 bedroom home. Washer, dryer, microwave, pool, spa. Stapley/Baseline. Prefer nonsmoker. $250/rnonth plus V» utilities. 437-3001. r o o m m a te help w anted PART-TIME, light industrial, warehouse, and errands runner position. 15 minutes from ASU. Flexible schedule. 258-2402. PART-TIME DATA entry person needed for small office that produces art festivals. Evenings. DBase III or computer exper­ ience required. Mill Avenue Merchants Association, 520 S. Min, Suite 201. 967-4877. PART-TIME POSITIONS available. Deliv­ eries, hostesses, and waitress. Salads Plus, 68th Street and Thomas. 994-9849. PERFECT PART-TIME job, 4:30-9. Quali­ fied leads make our telemarketing easier. $4/hour plus commission plus bonuses equals $6-10/hour. Our south Scottsdale office is close to campus. 947-0508. GOLD CANYON Resort Golf Course beverage cart/snack shop attendant. Must be of legal age to serve alcohol. Hourly plus tips. Ask for Phil, 982-9090 extension 520. ‘ POOL MANAGERS. . Need motivated persons, to sell Panama-Jack poolside at valley resorts while catering to guests. Must enjoy talking with people and being in the sun. Must be available at least 4 days per week from 10-5. Good money and excellent working conditions. Call between 10-5. Five Star Resort Pool Management. 941-2751. HAND OUT free coupon books, 7-3 Wednesday and/or Thursday (August 26-27). $5/hour plus lunch. Also 3-7 Wednesday. $5/hour. Call 242-8322 before 7 p.m. today only. HOUSE CLEANING, 2 mornings a week. Scottsdale. $5.50/hour. 945-2003. KAY JEWELERS, part-time position avail­ able, Paradise Valley Mall. Contact Jeff, 996-2112. LIVErlN BABYSITTER/housekeeper wanted. Hours 1-6 p.m. weekdays, some ' evenings. Private room with bath. $250 per month including room and board. Two blocks south of ASU. Must have refer­ ences and experience. Call for interview after August 26. 967-5682. LIVE-IN HOUSEKEEPER wanted for cleaning, laundry, and child care. Flexible hours. Nonsmoker. Own transportation and references required. Room, board, plus salary. 991-6879. LOW STRESS jobs. Part-time office clean­ ers needed. Work 2-3 hours per night. Evenings Monday through Friday. Advancement opportunity. Scottsdale locations. Call 945-4994. PROFESSOR’S FAMILY will provide small but private studio apartment free plus $80/month in exchange for 20 hours/week childcare: Monday to Thursday, 2-6:15 p.m.; Friday, 7-9 a.m. Two blocks from campus. 968-5676 after 6 p.m. Swenson’s Tempe is hiring cooks, waitresses, counter help, bus/ dish. Must be hard working and enthusiastic individuals. Should apply in person M -F 3:00-4:30 p.m. .Good work hours. FIP tim e days & nights avail. Price & Baseline MESA YMCA is now accepting applica­ tions for prime-time school-age child care program. Must be 18 years or older. Part-time hours from 2-6 p.m. Monday through Friday, $3.50-$5 per hour. For more information, call 969-8166. THE ARIZONA Educational Information System (AElS) located in ASU’s College of Education is seeking work-study students to work as part of a team supplying information to school districts throughout Arizona. Preferred qualifications include ability to fill customer orders for education­ al information which entails operating a copy machine and handling telephones. Neat appearance required. An opportunity to gain educational information on-the-job. Hours flexible. Call 965-7161 for appointment. NEAR ASUI The Courtyard by Marriott Hotel is hiring full and part-time positions: front desk, clerk, waiter/waitress, night auditor, housekeeping, cook, dishwasher. Apply in person at 2621 S. 47th St. (University Drive and Hohokam Express­ way). For more information call 966-4300. NEED EXTRA $$$? Kelly Services is looking for individuals to stock soda in supermarkets and warehouses. Must be dependable! Day and evening hours avail­ able, weekdays and weekends. Pay is $4-$4.25/hour. Call 838-8405 for appointment. THE LOOP, a new fast-food concept in a totally authentic setting of yesteryear Chicago. Needs fuil-time/part-time, male or female help. Apply daily 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Southwest comer of Lemon and Terrace, Tempe. NEED INDIVIDUAL to deliver flyers parttime. Work around your class schedule. Shepherd's, 1123 S. Rural Road, 968-0243. WAITRESSES, BARTENDERS, and door­ men. Accepting applications on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday from 2-8. Shepherd's, 1123 S. Rural Road, 968-0243. PART-TIME, FULL-TIME set your own hours. Tempe area. Small Business Distri­ butors of America is looking for several well-spoken, dependable people to help us market a new idea nationwide over watts lines. If you would like to make an above average Income while talking to people in a nice air conditioned office, give us a call. Ron, 921-9966. WANTED: ACCOUNTING major inter­ ested in CPA firm experience. Close to ASU. Part-time. Call Eileen, 968-3326. WANTED: PART-TIME attendant/akfe for 33 year old gentleman. Apache Terrace area. Inquire, 968-8871. STUDENT WANTED for child care. 3-6 p.m. Monday through Friday. Fiesta Mall area. 256-2402,839-2184 after 8 p.m. A-PHIPLEBEY: Welcome back to school! I missed you this summer. You really are the tops. Love, your Theta Deft. STUDENT HEALTH: X-ray technician, part-time, on-call, $8.76 hour. ARRT required. EKG experience preferred. Apply ASU Personnel by September 1, 1967. Affirmative action/equal opportunity employer. . BODY, MIND, spirit. Which are you? Call Hubbard Dianetics Foundation, 264-2381. SALES TRAINEE, no experience neces­ sary. 8 week training program. $7/hour guaranteed salary to start. 2 shifts avail­ able, 4:30-9:30 a.m. and 3:30-8 p.m. Sell industrial tools nationwide via wats. Call John, 838-7847. FIR, WELCOME home. I missed you so much. No TransAms. God, I missed you. TopGun. SHERI- WE need to take up where we left off. if I don’t hear from you, you’ll hear from me. Jeff. SUSPENDERS! I’M the blond you met at Chuy’s the other night. Let’s meet. Answer in Personals. P.S. What’s your name? SCIENCE TUTOR for high school student, 3:30-5:30 p.m. weekdays. $10/hour. Own transportation. Mesa, 945-2003. WILL ASU student who had trouble with patents and discussed this with KFYI call George? 265-3405. SOMETHING THAT everyone needs to survive, waterl Mary earned $10,000 her first month. Opportunities to make money unlimited. Call after 7:30 p.m. 991-6417. «n a a L o ru a B n u m o M STOP NUCLEAR weapons testing. Ad­ ministrative assistant to fund raiser, full­ time, some computer. Immediately. Need car. To $1000 per month. Call 921-3090. Instruction GRE-GMAT-LSAT COACHING Crack The System The W IN $25!! I w ill pay $25 to Anyone W illing to Drop JRN 301 (Reporting) Providing I am ab le to Pick-up the Cass. Y a don't win, ti Ya Don't Play! C all C B M ( T U I Princeton Review 952-8850 AEROBIC INSTRUCTORS Certification Workshop, weekend of September 12th at ASU by National Aerobics Training Asso­ ciation. Call 963-9415 or 899-9289. on-campus On-Campus 1890 ASU began as the Territorial Normal School October 18, 1890. The first student newspaper was called the Normal Echo. October 18, 1890: “ The unruly Salt River has no respect for education. Three students were absent Monday because of its rise. Miss Shaw, however, came over on the tram Tuesday.” WE REGRET to inform you that the State Press will no longer be able to take classified ads in the Memorial Union. Our office in the basement of Matthews Center is open from 7 a.ni,. to 5 p.m., or call 965-6731 and use your Visa or Mastercard. ATTENTION UNIVERSITY departments, organizations, and dubs: Need to place a display ad In the State Press? Your campus representative is Jackie Eldridge. Call 965-7572 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. No experience necessary, we train Male/Female Part-time Reliable vehicle required ACE SCREENPRINT custom imprinted sportswear 968-9898 DISHWASHERS, HOSTESSES, and delivery drivers. Delivery drivers must have °wn insured vehicle. Apply in person at Wacky WHIy’s, 1120 E. Apache on the COfn* f of Apache and Terrace. 1920 E. 3rd St., Tempe, AZ 966-9425 TRI-CITY Mini Storage, 1445 E. McKellips, Tempe between McKellips and Miller. Great location, managed by ASU grad and best of aU, reasonable prices. Rent a 5x5 for $18/month to store your extra books, clothes, bikes, etc. Or share one with a friend and split the cost. Call 945-0343. METRO MUSIC DJ SERVICE State-of-the-art equipment Book now for school, fraternity or sorority events. Member of the Arizona Mobile DJ Association 4 3 9 -0 3 2 9 DRIVERS WANTED: Earn $6-$8 per hour 38 a delivery person with Domino’s Pizza. We are number one in delivery nationwide with over 3500 stores. Drivers earn excel­ lant hourly wage plus tips and mileage. Full or part-time, flexible day or evening hours. A fun and rewarding job. Many delivery people advance to our manage­ ment training program. Must be 18 or older, with a good driving record, car, and Insurance. We want dependable, deancut people willing to hustle. Applications will be accepted at 903 S. Rural; Road, Tempe, 968-5555. And other valley loca­ tions after 11 a.m. daily. Equal opportunity CALL DONNA OR JOAN 945-6302 • 947-0402 .employer. EXPERIENCED BANQUET servers needed. We work around your schedule. Same week pay. Call today, 831-0145, Spelling Temporaries. BLIND FINGERS TYPING, WORD PROCESSING AND RÉSUMÉ SERVICE McDowell/Scottsdale Road Area Cali Susan at • Flexible hours to meet your demanding schedule! • Competitive wages! • A convenient location; w e're just around the corner from you! • A fun place to work! W e’re looking for a few sm iling faces to fill FULL and PART-TIME openings on A LL SHIFTS. 1if this kind o f opportunity appeals to you, then stop by anyday, at anytime for an on-the-spot interview! G A R I/S J it. 960 E. U niversity Tempe, A Z C a r l ’s J r . E Q U A L O PPO R T U N ITY E M P LO YER M /F/H HEAPS S A L O N - « in mm 20% OFF FIRST VISIT WITH LORI MHlAvenueShops • 4th St &MW 8 29-1267 transportation • ATTENTION: FREE cars to all major cities. 21 or older. Call AAA Driveaway, ^277-9979. travel AIRLINE COUPONS wanted: United Bonus tickets; Western Extra; others. Up to $350 each. 800-255-4060. ty p in g / w ord processing $1.25 DOUBLE spaced page. A-1 letter quality word processing. 32 years exper­ ience. Marian, 839-4269. CALL ME for fast, accurate, quality service at competitive prices. Close to ASU. 966-2186. CEREUS WORD Processing. Quality guaranteed. Term papers, dissertations, theses, form letters, resumes, Dictaphone, weekends. 947-7796. w anted WANTED: 2 to 5 adult tickets for ASU/ Nebraska State game Saturday, Septem­ ber 26th. 895-8167. Get it done fast & get it done rig h t! 11 S te p I n t o 1 If you're looking for a great job and an easy way to earn extra m oney, then you ow e it to yourself to take a closer look at the advantages C a rl’s Jr. has to o ffe r TALKING [¡FOR ALL YOUR TYPING/W ORD PROCESSING NEEDS^ Exp/w APA, MLA, other formats for all your word processing needs. Rates quoted. Lead Persons Counter Personnel Assistant Managers PROTECT YOURSELF! Have a peephole installed in your door. $15. CaH 921-2637 or 921-2214. CARS AVAILABLE - 21 or older All States Drive-away, 992-5200. FORMER ASU STAFFERS a n d W a lk A w m y w ith a PROFESSIONAL RESUMES done at the lowest price in Tempe area. Development and organization of resume for $25. Professionally completed for future employment success. 967-5374 evenings. umv m iscellaneous LOVING CALIFORNIA couple wishes to adopt newborn. Pregnancy related expenses paid. Cali collect, 818-441-3204. you. OH change, air condition charge, radiator service, from $12.95. AH services done at your home in our no-mess selfcontained vans. 4338023. announces Its new est designer. . . 11 C a r l's J r . DISC JOCKEYS services 438-1856or B2V-750Vniqhfa. services DAY CARE help needed In our medical office. Several openings, flexible hours. $3.35/hour. Priest/Southem. 829-8741 daytime; 820-2280 evenlnge/weekends. DISABLED INDIVIDUAL needs assistance with personal care and/or domestic chores. To apply and for more information contact: Jim Hemauer at 965-1234. personals EXTRA MONEY is nice, but you can helo 945-1500 SESAME STREET WORD PROCESSING "W e spell it right!" $1.50/Page 329 E. Sesame St. Tempe 839-3626 SHORT OF TIME? I CAN HELP! •Reasonable •Professional •Guaranteed •Experienced in Academic CALL JESSIE 945-5744 WORD PROCESSING SECRETARIAL SERVICES 23 Years Experience SW Corner, MIDer & Chaparral STUDENT DISCOUNT 994-8145 ACCURATE WORD PROCESSING Th eses, dissertations, papers, resumes. Reasonable • High Quality Work South Tempe MaryAnn 838-4302 P R O FE S S IO N A L QUALITY SAVE TIME CALL ME FIRST WORD PROCESSING Will Edit and Correct Spelling Word Processing Theses • Dissertations • Resumes Professional Typist Carolyn 838-0959 THE PAPERWORKS Thesis, Report and Resume Typing. IBM compatible word processing. Near ASU 921-9575 TYPING REASONABLE-PROFESSIONAL Term papers, reports, resumes and essays. We correct spelling at no extra charge. Editing, proofreading, pickup and delivery available. CALL TODAY 831-0978 PROFESSIONAL DOCUMENT SERVICES Word Processing, Editing, Writing Consultation MESA SECRETARIAL 844-1876 PROFESSIONAL WORD PROCESSING • Near ASU • Evenings/Weekends • 24-Hour Turnaround (most projects) • Student Rates Carol * Business Express 967-8342 TYPING SERVICE $1 PER PAGE (No Rushes) MESA • TEMPE AREA Call Janine 832-4418 924-0581 C lip & save fo r 438-9202 fu tu re re fe re n c e . ¡p TT Page 40 m » m * mi Jtondayj^ugurtS4>1W7 WELCOME BACK ASU STUDENTS SHOW US YOUR STUDENT I.D . YO U’LL GET A DINNER This year w e're doing it again! Every Sunday (b u t ONLY on Sunday), M ike Pulos o f th e S paghetti C om pany w ill give you one FREE dinner* for each dinner you order! it's our 2 for 1 SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL. And i f s good for the w hole school year a t both our Tempe a nd Phoenix locations. Any d a y o f th e week, for lunch or dinner, The S paghetti C om pany is known for a g re at m eal a t an affordable price. But the SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL makes our already terrific prices e v e n better! O ur dinners include a fu ll course m eal w ith a ll the trim m ings-from salad to dessert. So, d o lla r for dollar, when you're hungry and you need a break, you c a n 't b e a t The S paghetti Com pany! ESPECIALLY ON SUNDAYS! W ith 2 dinners fo rth e price o f 1! But you MUST have your student I.D. ca rd w ith you to take advan­ ta g e o f this offer. O P E N A T 11:30 A .M . TO 11:00 P.M . S U N D A Y S ! 1 e iw iT B ir : - ' i ' C Y " * FRESH B A K E D PIZZA O N SOUR DOUGH BREAD P eppy P epperoni, M ozzarella C heese, S uprem e SpfehFtti (pnipaity* RESTAURANT PHOENIX S o u th on C e n tra l J u s t P asta M cD o w e ll 257-0380 Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak Di Jon, Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tender­ loin, Chicken Picatta, Veal Marsala ARE NOT included in the 2-for-1 special. TEMPE 4 th S tre e t a n d M ill 966-3848 IN OLD TO W N TEM PE