State press e C opyright, S tate P ress, 1987 A rizona State U niversity’s M orning D aily T e m p e , A r iz o n a Tuesday, August 25, 1987 Beginning day of classes plagued by lines, delays By b en McCo n n e ll State Press Long lines of people and cars snaked slowly nearly everywhere on campus Monday, but few tempers flared and most students seemed to take one-hour delays in stride. “ I t ’s u tte r ch a o s,” said R ichprd Landreth, assistant director of parking services. “Because of all the construction going on, people are driving around not knowing where they’re going.” Landreth spent most of Monday morning surveying the University’s 54 parking lots. Although 2,300 new parking spaces were created this summer, Landreth said most lots were filled since a large number of ASU’s 42,000 students arrived for the first day of classes. He said, “All the visitor spaces w ere full at 8:40 a.m. . . . and a few tempers flared with some students saying, ‘What do you mean the lot’s full, I have a class to go to. ’ ” Landreth also said a woman’s car stalled at the card-access entrance to Lot 40 on Rural Road and backed up traffic for blocks. Nearly 2,000 students applied for parking decals, jamming the second floor of the MU for most of the day. “ In previous years, we would process up to 17,000 applications in a three-week period,” Landreth said. “This year, because of the high number of people who paid for decals in advance, that number will probably be anywhere from 12,000 to 13,000.” Downstairs in the MU, long lines for the first day of fall semester business at McDonald’s clogged pedestrian traffic. A sp o k esperson for the fast-food restaurant would not provide figures for Monday’s sales but said they w ere “incredible.” Hundreds of students lined up in and around the Social Sciences Building to drop and add classes. ASU Registrar E. E. U n derw ood r e p o r te d th e w ord a t registration sites was “go-go-go. ” “ I t ’s busy a ll over, but nothing exceptional,” he said. “Obviously, the morning effort is very heavy and then it tapers off in the afternoon.” Enrollment figures will be announced the second week of September, Underwood said, declining to speculate on the figures. Sandra Boggs, a clerk in the Student Financial Assistance Office in Matthews Center, said the long line that extended into a nearby hallway was “astounding.” “It’s like a theater line for a bargain matinee,” she said. Boggs attributed financial-aid lines to “people thinking they can get a loan right before school starts” and incomplete financial aid applications. “People are not getting their Financial Aid Forms turned in soon enough, ” she said. “A lot of them don’t know about FAF’s because (regulations have) changed completely. Nest year it shouldn’t be so difficult.” ASU Associate Director of Public Safety Doug Bartosh said the first' day of fall semester was “not as bad as I expected . . . but it’s definitely pretty busy.” “Not all the detour signage was up,” he said. “But we’re going to keep an eye on things and if they need to be changed, we’ll change them.” inside today ASU WEATHER Sunny skies today with an expected high o f 101. W HAT’S NEW AT ASU Part two of a series about campus changes for the fall. Today, a look at ASASU’s plans for the upcom­ ing year. Page 6. C lassified.......................................................................... 18 C om ics...............................................................................11 O pinion................................... 4 Sports........................................................ Todd G reen/S tateP ress Students make their way through crowds and construction congestion during the first day of classes at ASU. Cam pus less congested than expected Pedestrian traffic hindered because of library expansion By SCOTT LUCK State Press Although Cady Mall has been narrowed into a tiny Hayden Library access way, a majority of ASU students chose the route Monday instead of the detour campus administration intended. Despite the absence of signs and patrolmen directly in front of the library and detour, pedestrian traffic never reached the levels anticipated, an ASU official said. “Traffic on campus was much less congested than expected,” said Bob Beeman, ASU President J. Russell 15 Nelson’s executive coordinator. “Secondly, there was a lot less confusion, which is attributable to orientation.” Beeman said orientation was supposed to prepare new students for the various construction detours and problems on campus. But most students were unaware of detour routes east of the library and did not look at directional signs and maps around campus. “ I didn’t know anything about it,” junior finance major Tim Jones said. “A guy gave me a map by the sign at the other pedestrian access, but I threw it away.” Library expansion project manager Tim Keneipp said more directional signs are being made for locations such as Hayden’s north access point, where students can choose to take the detour or cross the bridge. Keneipp said larger signs were not placed in front of the library accesses and detours because of disagreements about their benefits. F irm to h e lp s tre a m lin e u n iv e rs itie s ’ s p e n d in g By DANA LEONARD State Press PHOENIX — An Arizona Board of Regents’ task force to investigate waste in university spending voted Monday to bring in a consulting firm to maintain objectivity and avoid public criticism about being a biased group. Allan P rice, the regents’ assistant director for public affairs, said the task force was criticized by Gov. Evan Mecham for conducting a self-investigation. ‘‘(Bias) was a concern of his,” said Ron Bellus, a Mecham spokesman. The task force on Excellence, Efficiency and Competitiveness, which was created in March, is made up of Arizona business people; Sen. Carl Kunasek, R-Mesa; Rep. Joe Lane, R-Phoenix; and an eight-member support staff from the three universities and the regents. But during its Monday meeting at the League of Cities and Towns in Phoenix, task force members agreed that a private consulting firm should advise them on the efficiency, or spending, segment of the investigation. Firms will bid on the contract to be awarded Oct. 5. Robert MacVicar, executive coordinator for the task force, said the firm will be paid from $300,000 in resources designated specifically for consultants. But Bellus said the governor’s office has other complaints about the regents’ study. “ The regents and the universities complain about not having enough money,” he said. “But out of the blue they came up with half a million to conduct this study.” The revised operating budget allocates more than $1.2 million for the study over the next 14 months. ASU, NAU and U of A each have contributed their own state-appropriated funds to the investigation, using a formula based on the universities’ individual budgets. In addition to spending efficiency, the task force will investigate the quality of education at undergraduate levels and state and national academic competitiveness of the three universities. Other task force concerns include access to university education, problems faced by minority students and the role of research in developing the state and the university system. Members also will consider potential incentives to c re a te m ore efficient university management. Bellus said although Mecham does not support the task force, he “does welcome any good to come out of the study.” In other business, EEC Chairman Jack Pfister annouced the appointment of the group’s second woman and only black member, Laura Bank, of Tucson. Pfister said the group soon will add a Hispanic to its 12-member task force, and MacVicar said two graduate student interns will also be sought. The interns, who MacVicar said will offer staff support according to their background, interests and capability, will be paid $7,500 each for approximately 10 months work. Turn to LIBR AR Y, pago 14. Nelson, KZZP create candor over Cady Mail construction project A SU ’s n o r m a lly c o n s e r v a tiv e president J. Russell Nelson joked about the “giant swimming pool” replacing Cady Mall Monday with KZZP radio disc jockeys. When asked about the “giant jacuzzi” near Hayden Library, Nelson responded, “I’m not sure whether it’s a giant swimming pool or a small yacht harbor.” The “giant swimming pool-jacuzziyacht harbor” is not another water den for fountain frolickers, but the first phase of the $1L5 million Hayden Library expansion. KZZP Disc Jockeys Bruce Kelley and Rob “ Icem an” Izenberg, an ASU graduate, were displaced by elaborate construction. They were moved from their usual position near the fountain to outside the Language and Literature Building. — VICTOR BARAJAS Page 2 State Press Tuesday, August 85,1987 w orld/nation in b rief U.S. ships, helicopters in Persian Gulf chase Iranian ship away from tanker MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — U.S. helicopters and warships escorting Kuwaiti tankers out of the Persian Gulf chased away an Iranian warship Monday in the first major confrontation of the U.S. convoy operation, witnesses said. The mine-damaged Bridgeton and three other reflagged Kuwaiti tankers in the convoy later cleared the Strait of Hormuz, gateway out of the gulf, and a new convoy of three U.S.-escorted tankers steamed through the strait and into the gulf. From a Navy UH-1 helicopter circling over the gulf, the approach of the Iranian ship prompted what looked like a full-scale naval maneuver as crews on five U.S. warships went on full alert and manned all deck guns, said Richard Pyle, an Associated Press reporter covering the escort operation in a news pool. In a separate incident, a U.S. destroyer Bred a machine gun across the bows of two small sailboats that approached the outbound convoy. Marine given 30 years in prison for disclosing secrets to Soviets QUANTICO, Va. (AP) — A military jury on Monday sentenced Sgt. Clayton Lonetree, the first Marine ever accused of spying, to 30 years in prison for disclosing U.S. secrets to the Soviets. The eight Marine officers sitting as jurors also fined the former Moscow Embassy guard $5,000, reduced him to the lowest pay scale and ordered that he forfeit all pay and allowances and be dishonorably discharged. If Lonetree fails to have his espionage conviction thrown out on appeal, he will be eligible for parole in 10 years. The jurors had begun deliberating on the sentence after Lonetree told them he would accept whatever punishment they decided, which could have been as much as life in prison. Lonetree, 25, of St. Paul, Minn., was convicted Friday of 13 counts alleging he gave the KGB the identities of CIA agents and floor plans of the U.S. embassies in Moscow and Vienna, where he served as a guard, in exchange for sex from a Soviet lover and cash from a Soviet spy. 3 Florida brothers with AIDS return to school amid controversy ARCADIA, Fla. (AP) — Three brothers carrying the AIDS virus returned peacefully to their school under court order and police guard Monday despite threats and a boycott by frightened parents that kept up to half the pupils at home. Escorted by their parents and an attorney, Richard Ray, 10, Robert, 9, and Randy, 8, returned to Memorial Elementary School for the first time in nearly a year. Only 337 youngsters showed up out of a projected first day enrollment of 632, or 53 percent. District-wide attendance was only slightly higher, 63 percent, and school bus ridership was only one quarter of last year’s first day. “Ricky, Robert and Randy were very excited about their first day of school,” Ray family lawyer Judy Kavanaugh of Sarasota said after the school day ended. “They enjoyed their first day arid are looking forward to tommorrow.” Doctors believe the brothers, all hemophiliacs, were exposed to the virus through plasma-based medication they take so their blood will clot in case of injury. They do not have any symptoms of AIDS. 75-year-old civil rights pioneer dies after surgery in New York NEW YORK (AP) — Bayard Rustin, the civil rights pioneer and activist who organized the Washington rally at which Dr. Martin Luther King gave his “I have a dream” speech, has died. He was 75. Rustin died Sunday at Lenox Hill Hospital, where he had undergone surgery Friday for a ruptured appendix, said Norman Hill, president of the A. Philip Randolph Institute. Rustin, co-chairman of the institute, went to the hospital with stomach pains on his return from a trip toHaiti. He had gone to Haiti with a labor group to assess the prospects for democratic change there, said Hill. A pioneer, planner and thinker of the civil rights, peace and labor movements all his adult life, Rustin survived a major heart attack in 1971 and continued to campaign actively around the world agairist violence and injustice. today •T h e Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU. Any campus club or organization can subm it entries to the calendar fo r publication to the State Press, located in the basem ent of M atthews C enter, Room 15. Entries w ill not be taken over the phone. Deadline fo r the entries w ill be 1 p.m . the previous business day. Meetings •T h e Council o f Liberal Arts and Sciences Students (CLASS) will meet at C 3:30 p.m . today in the M U , Graham Room. •T h e Fellowship of Christian Athletes will be meeting today at 7:30 p.m . in the S alvatio n A rm y B uild in g , corner of University Drive and M yrtle Avenue. •A S U Forensics w ill hold its 1987-88 organizational meeting today at 3:30 p.m. in Stauffer H all, Room 317. Students interested in debate, interpretation, and public speaking are invited to attend regardless of their past experience. Those interested but unable to attend can contact r u is e T o T Maintain the right image at ASU! The Commons provides an alternative to thé dorm lifestyle with an on-campus atmosphere. Totally Furnished (dishes, towels, etc.) Washer/Dryer in Each Suite Microwave Study Areas Spa Pool Sand Volleyball Court Organized Events Social Activities Priced Like The Dorms Deposits are now being accepted on a first com e first serve basis. Hurry and reserve your space now. Dr. Qlark Olson at Stauffer, Room 355A or call 965-3825. Lectures •T h e Coalition Against the War In C en tral A m erica is sponsoring an appearance by Sister Annie W ihbey at 7:30 p.m . today at the Newman Center, College Street and University Drive. Wihbey has been training health-care workers in Nicaragua and worked with Benjamin Linder, who was recently killed in a Contra attack. h e C o m m TH E C avIM C N S TJ 1215 E. Lem on St. 1111 E. Apache Blvd. CALL (6 0 2 )9 6 8 -6 4 3 7 OUT OF ARIZONA (8 0 0 )2 4 2 -6 1 4 1 Corrections Suzanne K olarlk Underwood, an ASU assistant professor o f architecture who died In the Aug. 16 crash of Northwest Airlines Flight 255, was a graduate of Princeton University. The State Press incorrectly reported the alm a mater Monday. Also in Monday’s issue, a band scheduled to play at a Rock Against Mecham concert S ep t. 12, Poet’s Com er, was incorrectly identified as “ Pete’s C om er.” o n s State Press Prof blam es student protests for continued unrest In K orea By VICTOR BARAJAS State Press South Korean workers protesting the death of a fellow worker have plunged the country into turmoil once again, and an ASU specialist on Asia said the labor unrest stems from successful student protests earlier this year. The political side of it has to do with the student protests of the last year or so that «ith such success>” Sheldon Simon said. “Labor took its cue from the student success and decided that it too would use direct actions the best it could.” Student protests against the ruling party this summer ended last month when South Korean P arty Chairman and Interim President Roh Tae Woo announced his support for a direct election of the country’s next president. m Simon, also director of the ASU Center for Asian Studies, said labor resentment has been brewing in the country for several years because Korean management obtains “ m assiv e p ro fits” from exports to industrial countries. “Very little of this very large profit has been shared with labor,” he said. Simon attributes the protests to long hours and low wages, adding that South Korea has “the worst pay scale of any industrial country in the world. ” But ASU political science professor YungHwan Jo and graduate student Kim Dohjong, both of South Korea, said the student demonstrations were never as severe as most people believed. “It’s nonsense,” said. Dohjong regarding the dem ocratic versus authoritarian demonstrations that kept his country in m A?ASU'S VERY OWN social unrest for several weeks. “I think the worst is over.” Jo, who met with South Korea’s opposition leaders in July, agreed: “It’s not as bad as people often picture it. I t’s getting better and better.” Jo and Dohjong both have relatives in South Korea but said they are not concerned with their safety because the country is still under control. “As a m atter of fact, my relatives are worried more about me coming here,” said Jo, who came to the United States after the Korean War. Although conditions in South Korea seemed to be improving, Jo said he expects tensions to erupt again. “The demonstrations will continue in the fall when the students return to the university (in Seoul),” he said. “But I don’t think it will be anywhere near as intensive as it was about a month ago.” Meanwhile, President Chun Doo Hwan rem ains unpopular with m ost South Koreans, including Dohjong. “ (Chun) is bad,” Dohjong said. “I’m going to vote for a candidate from the opposition party.” Jo, who also favors the opposition, said Chun is an “underrated president in spite of the effort he has been making.” He credits Chun for his part in luring the 1988 Olympics to South K orea and improving the economy. But he said other candidates planning to run in the upcoming fall elections could be more efficient. One candidate is opposition leader Kim Dae Jung, whom Jo said will be the next president if there are no “drastic” student demonstrations. 219 E. Baseline C A L IF O R N IA B EA C H W EA R A N D S W IM W E A R LA TEST S E N S A TIO N S Between College & Mill 839'9600 C h ic k e n - J ^ iq u e f ì a ll ¿ a stia i W ear ’ R a d ica l t6 R e g u la r a fe a tu rin g the healthy alternative to beef! Breasted chicken that is lip smackingood! We also offer an excellent marinated chicken that has been baked to a tasty, golden brown. Located in the MU between Summerfields and Sturgeon TO E GRAND General in M A R K E f f P lA C E ome B ack! pissed y o u !!! hipments have , 30%0FFALLASUSHIRTS SAVE ON EVERY TANK, T-SHIRT & SWEAT •Now from $7.00 • “Official” Collegiate ASU Designs •Four Great Styles •Choose from Burgundy, White or Heather Grey With this coupon only thru 8/30/87 The World's Finest Sunglasses Are At The World's Finest Sunglass Store! We carry Phoenix’s largest selection of Rayban, Suncloud, Vuarnet Carrera, Porsche Design, Gargoyle, Laura Biagiotti & Liz Claiborne Collections. 1 pacific £yes &Ts Tow er Plaza Christown M all 38th S t & Thomas 19th Ave. & Bethany Home 244-9119 433-2949 W estridge Mall Cornerstone C enter 75th Ave. & Thomas Tempe: 725 S. Rural Rd. 873-2607 966-5560 opinion Page 4 State Press Tuesday, August 254,1987 Parents have a right to know Meet Susie. She’s sweet; she’s 16. She can’t vote. She can’t go to an R-rated movie. She has to get mom and dad’s OK to get her ears pierced. Yet she can have an abortion without parental consent, according to a ruling last week by a federal judge. r— R ITTE R jurisdiction over their child’s activities, and an activity as serious as surgery, at that. Susie needs her parents’ John Hancock to get her appendix removed. Why then not for the removal of her unborn child? Surely the traumatizing effects of the abortion itself dictates the involvement of the parents as a support system — one that won’t likely be paralleled by a c lin ic ia n U.S. District Judge Charles L. Hardy struck down Arizona’s new law requiring parental consent before a girl under age 18 can receive an abortion, one day before it v_Of course, when die law is revived on the was to take effect. Judge Hardy deemed the legislative floor as anti-abortion advocates law unconstitutional in part because it have promised, certain safeguards should denies minor girls the right to get “timely” be 'a d d e d th a t w ill se c u re S u sie’s abortions, a right determined by the U.S. constitutional rights. Since the right to abort is the law of the land, a pregnant teen should Supreme Court. have timely access to legal procedures to Criticized as “ complete lunacy” by a override a parent’s decision because of m e m b e r of Gov. E v a n M e c h a m ’s unusual circumstances. administration, the ruling secures pregnant In this regard, Judge Hardy is justified in girls’ right to have an abortion, but it denies his ruling by recognizing the need for clear parents their right to be notified or to give cut guidelines for a girl’s legal recourse to consent for their daughter to undergo get an abortion. medical procedure. Regardless of our position on abortion, it The issue here is not pro-choice vs. rightis the law. And while we can’t deny a woman to-life, it’s parental authority vs. a child’s her right to have an abortion, we should be autonomy. able to determine the circumstances by The ruling has stripped parents of some which a teen has one. PR65S“ THEn e w .AMERICAN FAMILV R R lO T T ? Malaise E d u c a tio n C o lle g e n e e d s s tr o n g e r s e n s e o f c o m m u n ity Ed S chubert Columnist §§j Welcome to — or back to — Arizona State University. I would like to extend a particularly warm welcome to those of you who are just beginning ASU’s teacher certification program in the College of Education. This is a special time in your lives: You are coming into the huge lecture hall adjacent to the F an n er Education Building full of enthusiasm and dedication to your calling. But be warned: From time to time the education college will do its level best to beat that enthusiasm and dedication, out of you. I speak from experience. At the end of last semester, I finally emerged from the college with a secondary teaching certificate — five semesters and thousands of borrowed dollars after starting. This essay is an assessment of the ASU College of Education based on that experience. In many particulars, it was a very positive experience. I’ve had some of the best instructors of my college career. On the other hand, I’ve also had a couple of the absolute worst instructors I’ve ever encountered anywhere. And it came as quite a shock: You’d think (anyway,! thought) that an education professor would at least be a competent teacher. Think again. But the problem in the education college is not the faculty. Though the fact that someone is an education professor doesn’t guarantee that he/she will be a good teacher, nevertheless education professors, by virtue of their training and experience, are some of the best teachers to be found at tiie University. Now, the college has recognized that it has some problems of an organizational nature and the new dean, Gladys Johnston, has wrought sweeping changes in the year she’s been with the University. But the college’s main problem is not organizational, either. The college’s real problem is that it suffers from a malaise of the spirit — a sense of disorientation, confusion, and coldness. It’s somewhat difficult to put into words, but I’ll try: ‘The education college w ill do its level best to beat that enthusiasm and dedication out o f you.’ As you go through the program, you will hear education professors tell you how very important it is for classroom teachers to be observed by senior educators, and how very crucial such mentoring is for a teacher’s professional growth. Then you look around and ask: Who’s observing the education professors? The answer is usually No one. As a result, there is a sense of discontinuity. No one has a “big picture” of what’s going on or what’s being taught. In going through the program, I heard almost nothing about Lee Canter and “assertive discipline” or Madeline Hunter and “Essential Elements of Instruction” —yet both are regarded as educational orthodoxy throughout the nation. Also, in some ways, the college of education is a soulless place. Aside from the classroom, there is little opportunity letters Of all the changes that could come to the college of education, an active NEA student chapter would be one of the most positive because it could lead to other changes, because it could lead to a greater sense of community within the college — and because it can be accomplished by students acting on their own. quotable Education is what survives when what has been learnt has been forgotten.” Killer tubas Editor: Friday, a swarm of South American tuba players, bred to be more aggressive than their northern counterparts, congregated menacingly around the fountain. Since they are called “killer tubas” by tropical natives, I soon found myself cowering under a bench along with a few other students. Suddenly, a fearless ASU policeman leaped into their midst and drove them off, but not before one of them could get off a few bars of the theme from Dragnef. Yes, just as we feared, he had a lot of brass. What would we have done without the gallant effort of the police ? Before the new school year gets underway, I can see that order will be maintained despite the antics of a few rowdy malcontents who just don’t understand the tranquil, village-like for students to engage their interest in education through education-related activities. And if the classroom proves too painful, as it often does, a student’s interest in the profession may smother. What (he College of Education heeds right now is not a better faculty, or more reform, or even more inoney. What it needs is a stronger sense of community among faculty, administrators' and students. It needs new lines of communication, new patterns of relationship among the people within the institution. The college’s main problem is not academic or organizational, but hum an. Which is easy enough to say. But what can be done? Well, the student division of the National Education Association has about 260 members at ASU. Education students join the NEA almost inadvertently, at the recommendation of the college, in order to get the malpractice insurance that comes with membership. But there is no active student chapter of NEA to organize workshops and seminars, to send delegates to national conventions, to address local issues, to provide opportunities for students, professors and administrators to meet one another socially, and to do all the other things professional organizations do in other collèges. The NEA is currently seeking to strengthen its student division, and it is willing to spend money to do so. If you are an education student interested in organizing a student chapter of NEA here, you might want to contact its Arizona affiliate, the Arizona Education Association, at 264-1774. atmosphere that a modern university needs to develop good citizens of tomorrow. None of this extemporaneous a rt or music or speaking that used to be the hallmarks of tiie decadent Old Republic can be tolerated today. We all know where that led the radicals: revolution. It’s like a jovial, kind-hearted policeman explained to me last year — “This is not public property, it is owned by the State.” He straightened me out. T he v a rio u s tra n s ie n t p re a c h e rs , politicos, and musicians who once paraded through here from time to time have to be stopped. Be seeing you. Jerry E. Ellison, Jr. Philosophy — B .F. Skinner EDITORIAL BOARD Judie Gaillard M ANAGING EDITOR Darrin Hostetler O PINIO N EDITOR Khali Crawford EDITOR Bob E. H eiler C O PY C H IE F M ike Rowell W IR E ED ITO R Stete Pres« Reagan era gives way to ‘conservative crack-up’ wondering whether they are going to be done in by a peace plan.” Bob Dole and Pete du Pont voiced similar worries. All of them said they believed in the Old Reagan of the “freedom fighters” and the Reagan Doctrine, not this newly minted substitute. D avid Broder Washington Post Writers Group WASHINGTON — The rage on the right over President Reagan’s turn to diplomacy in Nicaragua may be a symptom of deeper disquiet among conservatives about the state of their movement. As the 1988 election approaches, we’re hearing the kind of static in that sector of the political spectrum that usually comes from forces much further to the left. You had to be deaf to miss the howls of rage over Reagan’s embrace of a “peace plan” advanced by House Speaker Jim Wright (D-Texas). That, plan was soon supplanted by a somewhat similar but squishier proposal from five Central American presidents, and the White House — to the further dismay of conservatives — called that “a positive” initiative as well. “Fiasco,” cried the Wall S treet Journal in an editorial titled “Reagan’s Bay of Pigs.” C olu m n ist W illiam S a fire saw “appeasement” and others on that side of the aisle claimed it was a sellout of the contras. Republican presidential candidates joined the uproar, with Jack Kemp saying the administration apparently has “no strategy to deal with the Soviet threat in Central America.” Even loyal Vice President George Bush felt the need to assure Miami listeners that the United States would “not leave the contras twisting in the wind, This is not just the political version of New Coke vs. Classic Coke. True, the electorate in the Republican primaries tends to be as far right of center as the Democratic prim ary voters are to the left. But something more than pandering has caused so many conservatives to bail out on Reagan on this issue. It’s a symptom of the decline of his moral authority, even within the Republican Party. Sure,, any one of the GOP’s 1988 hopefuls would Idee Reagan’s endorsement (which he’s not likely to give). But they also sense an erosion of his standing with the conservative activists and a need to tell those folks, who com prise the most im portant constituency within today’s Republican Party, that they are prepared to be more principled than the president. P art of this is the legacy of selling arm s to Iran. That act stripped Reagan of his reputation for consistency and moral rectitude. It clearly undercut his stated view that the United States should never traffic with terrorists. It left him vulnerable to being “snookered” by a bunch of folks that conservatives, even more than most other Americans, find obnoxious. But the erosion of Reagan’s moral authority has deeper roots. It goes back to his themeless 1984 re-election campaign and to the frequent signs of passivity in the face of provocations his fellow conservatives thought should have stirred him to anger and to action. Disillusionment is the theme of a roundtable in the September issue of The American Spectator, a favorite magazine of the right, in which eight well-known conservative writers discourse on what Spectator editor R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr., calls “the coming conservative crack-up.” They say hard things about the advertised “Reagan revolution.” In a typical lament, columnist and National Review editor Joseph Sobran writes: “Reagan gave conservatism a ‘This is not ju s t the political version of New Coke vs, Classic Coke.’ It galls these writers that in a heavily delegated presidency, Reagan has chosen three successive chiefs of staff, Jam es A. Baker, III, Donald T. Regan and Howard H. Baker, Jr., who have no roots in the c o n s e r v a t i v e m o v e m e n t a n d no commitment to its future. It angers them even more than they are plagued by what Ernest van den Haag calls “habitually cliquish and sectarian . . . divisiveness” in their own ran k s.. Some of this rhetoric is probably just the seventh-year itch. The realization is sinking in that Reagan is nearing the end of his second t er m and th at m ost of his achievements are behind him. But it’s more than that. beachhead in Washington, but he didn’t follow through. For a few rounds he was dazzling; then, when he seemed about to score a knockout, he ran out of gas and spent the better part of a year trying to rope-adope his way through the Iran-contra mess.” Tyrrell and several of the others put less blame on the man, and more on the INTRODUCING the NEW Patio Grill movement. Here’s Tyrrell trashing his friends: “The conservatives were not resourceful enough to insulate their p r e s i d e n t a g a i n s t d i s s o l v i n g i nt o sentim ental appeasem ent toward his Iranian foes. In six years of presidential power, the conservaties never significantly affected the climate of American ideas . . . The conservatives have not adapted to an era that is moving beyond the problems of the early 1980’s.” When Reagan muddies the message, as he did by selling arms to the Ayatollah and now by seeming ready to subordinate the contras’ cause to a negotiated settlement in Nicaragua, the morale of his most ardent supporters suffers. It looks as if the first challenge facing Reagan’s would-be Republican successor is to restore a sense of confidence and coherence to the conservative activists. And that may be tougher than anyone supposed. W O R LD X T C o m p u te r riesented by M ic r o faet Paul Renden:Tech. Sales 1208 E. Broadway Rd. # 1 1 0 ,Tempe, 9 6 7 -4 9 9 9 $569 N o t Y our T ypical F ast F ood Burger 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. /C Z - COMPLETE BASE SYSTEM! N Includes 640K Memory Dual Disk Drives 8 Slot Turbo Mam Board A T Style Keyboard Baby A T Case w /K eylock 150W Power Supply Monochrome M onitor G raphics/Printer Card A SU ’s Very Own Outdoor Picnic . . . BARBEQUE! The best burger you ’ve ever tasted. You need to taste it to believe it!!! tomPUTER WAREHOUSE BACKTOSCHOOLSPECIAL M IT XT System 640k, 2dr.......................................................$699.00 640k, ldr, 20meg Hard Drive.................... $985.00 T his Includes: High Resolution Mono Monitor Monographies Card w/printer port Serial Clock Calendar Surge Protector M I T AT System 1024k, 1.2dr.................. $1279.00 1024k, 1.2dr, 30meg H ard Drive............ $1879.00 This Includes: High Resolution Mono Monitor Monographies Card w/printer port Multi I/O Surge Protector Panasonic Printer 10801 / 120 CPS / Build-in Tractor........... $149.00 Microsoft W ord......................... ..................... T urbo Pascal...................................................... MS Basic.............................................................. » 7 .0 0 T urbo C ........................... $57.00 2222 E. Indian School Rd., Phoenix, AZ 85016 602-954-6109 Students mention this ad and receive 2 boxes of disks FREE with system purchasel Flip Sofa cL- $ 3 8 ™ $168 Opens into Tw in size bed Other Specials! * 4 draw er chest *Bed Sale Twin set Full set Bean Bags $28 $69 $79 $28 5 Piece Oak Finish Bedroom S et $158 O ak E n te rta in m e n t C e n te r Your Choice $ 1 6 8 ° ° FUBNITI Clearance Center In Tempe **P LU 8 2 0 7 7 E. U n i v e r s it y , 9 6 6 -6 2 5 2 Sofa & Love S eat $168 new at asu Paseó State Press Tuesday, August 25,1987 Kunasek A S A S U p re s id e n t h o p in g to in c re a s e s tu d e n t in v o lv e m e n t By AARYN KEMP State Press New Associated Students President Karrin Kjmasek has a lofty goal for ASU studerrts-T “We want to hear people talking abounm portant issues and ideas instead of whakjhey’re going to do Friday night.” KunaSfek^vho was elected last semester to replace outgoing ASASU President Chris Cummiskey, said she wants “a more intellectual environment on campus.” Besides stimulating intellectual thought on campus, Kunasek said improving student involvement is the main goal of Associated Students this year. “Associated Students has a $1 million budget that is funded by the students,” Kunasek said. “ I think that everything possible should be done to return this money to all the students through programs and activities, but it is going to take the participation of the students themselves.” Kunasek said she met with college deans this summer in an effort to improve student advisement, the academic environment, and discuss financial aid and tuition. She is throwing her support behind the “road map” program initiated by College of Business Dean John Kraft and Marigold Linton, director of educational services in the College of Education. The program would “m ap out” what classes students have taken and which ones are needed to complete their degree, Kunasek said. The information would be included with every grade report the student receives. “ This is not designed to rep lace advisement and leave students on their own,” Kunasek said. “It is designed to speed up the advising process. “ If students come into the advising office already knowing these things, the process will go much more quickly.” Developing more interaction between faculty and students is another goal of Kunasek’s. She said she is planning a faculty-staff lounge to facilitate greater interaction. A riz o n a’s poor r a n k i n g in s ta te a p p ro p riated financial aid concerns Kunasek, who said she will work to improve the state’s 49th ranking out of 50 states. “As tuition goes up, financial aid becomes increasingly important,” Kunasek said. “As the federal funding has cut back, it is my impression that the state is supposed to pick up the slack. Our state Legislature has not done that.” Tuition has increased over 20 percent while financial aid has only gone up 8 percent, she said. Loans comprise 60 percent of all current fin a n c ia l aid. The Arizona Board of Regents has a five- year plan for tuition hikes that will require students to pay an increasing percentage of the cost of education. Kunasek said in-state students now pay 20 percent of their total education cost. The regents’ plan would increase student contribution one percentage point each year until 1992 when students will pay 25 percent of their total education cost. The regents claim the plan will add “predictability” to tuition increases, but Kunasek said she feels “it isn’t going to make the increases any more predictable because no one is sure how much the cost of education is going to rise.” “We don’t know what we’re going to be paying 25 percent of (in 1992).” Other ASASU officers also said they hope to increase student awareness this year. Activities Vice President John Fees said he is pleased with the number of students who participated in orientation week and the activities fair. Student participation doubled from last year, a sign that maybe more students are interested in becoming involved, he said. “My main concern is to find programs people care about,” he said. “The only way for us to know what people want is for them to tell us.” “We’re here to represent students,” said Campus Affairs Vice President Vince Micone. “Personally, my goal is to improve services that already exist on campus, such as the Bike Co-op, Book Exchange and Faculty Course Evaluation Program along with several others.” Improving awareness of college councils is a goal of Executive Vice President Will Daly because “college councils are a chance for students to become more involved in their educatimi. ’’ 2 pair of Daily Wear Soft Contacts* $ 5 9 9 9 plus one pair of eyeglasses ( single vision only) J ? 4P n a t io n w id e w io n FIVE CONVENIENT VALLEY LOCATIONS c e n te r PHOENIX 5130 N. 19th Ave. MESA 437 S. Gilbert Rd. GLENDALE 5030 W. Peoria #103 One block north of Camelback Rd. Southeast comer of Broadway & GUbert Rd One block east of 51st 2 4 2 -5 2 9 2 8 4 4 -7 0 9 4 ' . “At Nationwide Vision Centers The Cost o f Quality Eyecare Isn’t Out o f Sight.. PARADISE VALLEY/SCOTTSDALE 3241 E. Shea 81vd. Amufilm 9 9 7 -1 0 4 7 PHX/SCOTTSDALE 3620 E. thomas Rd. Weiss Guys Curiosi 994 3629 — E Y E G L A S S E S * ----EYEGLASSES _______Two P air $ 3 9 . 9 9 Sin gle v is io n only. BIFOCALS ........... Two P air $ 7 9 - 9 9 (F T 2 8 .) DAILY WEAR CONTACTS & GLASSES . . . . . . . . . B oth P air $ 3 9 - 9 9 EXTENDED WEAR CONTACTS & GLASSES . . . . . . . . . B oth Pairs $ 5 9 - 9 9 EYE EXAM Indudes Glaucoma Test . . . . . . $ 1 8 .0 0 C o n ta ct le n s f ittin g a n d fo llo w -u p c a r e ad d ition al. Outside Eyeglass Prescriptions Welcome Options available at additional cost Acrossfrom Target in Sunshine Square 9 5 4 -2 0 1 2 “N E W *’ Make Your Brown Eyes Blue $ 1 5 9 .9 9 onepair P U I S y o u r c h o ic e o n e pair c le a r c o n ta c ts o r e y eg la sses [-S O F T C O N T A C T S * DAILY WEAR . . . . . . . . . Two P air $ 3 9 - 9 Softm ate B, C Q 4 •»TENDED W E A R ........... Two P air $ 5 9 . 9 FREE* S oftm ate M, S o ftco n EW FREE O n e c o lo r e d , o n e clear. Sunglasses with Contact Lens Purchase Dr. Mark A. Hechdaaa — Dr. Neal A. Weinstein k Assoc, licensed Doctors of Optometry e l 0°'*' Refund on contact lenses if not completely satisfied within 30 days. * Specialty lenses excluded. Open Mon.-Sat. Most Contact Prescriptions Available TheSame Day ‘Some restrictions apply. DAILY WEAR COLORED. Two P air $ 7 9 - 9 : DAILY CONTACTS FOR ASTIGMATISM (toric) . . Two P air $ 1 9 9 - 9 ! H ydrocurve. > COLORED EXTENDED w e a r CONTACTS . . . . . Two P air $ 9 9 . 9 O n e c o lo r e d , o n e d e a r . Outsidecontact lens prescriptionswdcomewith Olher brandsavallastea anMddJtiooal cha*ft. StalePress MemorioI Union Building 1987-88 o handy guide to your Memorial Union Food Services featuring T O E G R A N D M A R K E 1 P IA C E located on the first flo or level just o ff the m ain h a llw ay and up o couple o f stairs ,ns La Cuisine /u m m fin original line o f good old fashioned cooked to order breakfasts and specialty sandwiches, hot dogs, and baked potatoes. Be sure to try our french Dip sandwiches or bur unique Curly Q french fries. C h ic k e n ' fine dining in a quiet, pleasant atmosphere. Now open for breakfast featuring our unrivaled "pan style" breakfasts, as w ell as homemade belgian waffles, lunch features a variety o f unique food offerings, (reservations are recommended 5 -3 46 4) e r f ie ld x The fast, grab it and go product line featuring healthy, life style sandwiches, and a vast assortment o f salads, everything is just right for the nutritionally conscious Individual who is also In a hurry. I A A 1 T « M « I A D T 1 7 Vour mom would be so L V A a a w A i i m s E l pleasedH fi wide variety of nutritious, homemade soups and breads - perfect for the llte eater. The healthy alternative to b e e f. . . broasted chicken that Is lip smackin’ good! UJe also offer an excellent, marinated chicken that has been baked to a tasty, golden brown, fill packaged for a quick and convenient exit-so you can enjoy in your own quiet, secluded parts of campus. 'S tu r g e o n U J # - - No one con resist the pleasing aroma of fresh baked danish, sticky buns, donuts, cookies of any number of other sweet tooth fantasies including our devilishly good “Sin a min fioil". < N S take FUDGE STOP TUB? nuPE mi Bblf hQTC,,5SE ,M O ne o f our most popular i ns» H Bw™ 8 HhiiimPiJBwI I tmrestaurants, now with 2 iw e e l sides to serve you. Features a traditional 'New Vork Style’ Deli, with an abundance of breads, sliced meats and cheeses and fresh, homemade salads. fi southwest favorite. Popular Mexican food catering to unique, regional tastes: an abundance o f burros, chlmls and enchiladas, are smothered with salsa, guacamole or sour cream, d e l G W W TO SH Patio grill com e TREE UUhat b etter way to start your day then with a cup o f fresh brewed gourmet coffee o r capucdno. filso features some delectably sinful premium desserts and flesh squeezed orange juice. Fudge - or should we say Fun Stop, ft great place to pickup a quick snack. . . especially a Mega Muffinl Seeing is believing and tasting is even better! fin old fashioned 'malt shop' with hand dipped k e cream, soft serve or frozen yogurt fill just right for that much needed study break. The nutritionally balanced favorite of all generations. Wild Pizza Is handmade with only flesh, real ingredients. By the slke or a whole pie. Or maybe you prefer a tangy pasta salad or “Wild" Calzone sandwich. This is an excellent place for lunch or your next group meeting, (maybe not) "O sole mio. . . ” Italian food a t its finest: flam chicken cocciatore to lasagne, it’s everyone’s godfather's favorite. Ves. . . it is the food for lovers. fi popular ride on the O rie n t' express provides an old world flavor In a vast Chinese menu. fih-Sol fi typtcol fast food style burger? Not Q uitell The Patio Grill offers o premium, gourmet style burger or chicken breast sandwich cooked over on open flam e beneath arches made o f palm trees. €njoy a picinc lunch In the fresh air, without the n eo n . , . and hardly any antsl _ General Mother Nature made seafood nutritious. . . We made it Delicious, fi wide variety of healthy seafoods and salads, are providing excellent sources of low fat protein and less cholesterol, find remember. . . Sturgeon General has determined that eating seafood is great for your health. V l/f a Newly remodeled for convenience and speed of service featuring hot entrees just like mom used to make, including a special salad by the ounce salad bar. The ultimate in cofeteria dining. C y r la lJ b v p a C D « 2 io 2 r JL Jl P n /ir n lucy’s own Continental Breakfast -conveniently arranged in the Maricopa room, this Is the ideal place to start your day, or just to read your paper in peace. Created especially for the busy professional. Page 8 State Pr*«« Tuesday, August 85,1987 Forget exam s, grad es — M U A B offers crash courses in fun MIKE HOEHN State Press Mild-mannered physics and engineering students by day can become acting nuts and glamorous runway models by night with a new program offered by the MU Activités Board. “ Crash Courses in Fun” are “something fun to do and a way to meet people” said Sebrina Keen, class coordinator. F orget exam s and grades, “ crash courses” offer participants a chance to improve rather non-academic skills and knowledge. ASU faculty, staff, student body and their families can choose from 14 courses, including Runway Modeling, Basic G O IN G O N Acting, Environmental Issues in Arizona, Marketing Yourself for the Perfect Job and Medical Conditions and Nutrition. Keen said classes in gaming, dance and aerobics also are available. “This program is not being subsidized (by. University funds),” Keen said. “Students pay a fee for the classes and if a c la ss' does not meet the minimum enrollment, it is canceled.” Fees range from $25 for most classes, to $50 for Runway Modeling and Basic Acting and students need not register but pay the first day of class. Keen said the fee is inexpensive compared to the cost of private, specialty-school courses. “These classes are affordable,” she said. “Our sub-theme is fun classes for the affordable man.” Six free workshops also will cover topics like memory skills, diabetes, AIDS and social relations improvement. Students can sample the crash courses at a fair from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Aug. 31 through Sept. 4 in the MU Rendevouz Lounge. “The fair is going to be informal with instructors doing demonstrations for students,” Keen said. Class dates are staggered throughout the fall, with the first courses beginning Sept. 14. Registration is in the MUAB office. LABOR MY SALE! NOW ! • O PEN LABO R DAY M O N D A Y , S E P T . 7, 9 A M -6 P M • SA L E C O N T IN U E S TH R O U G H N E X T W EEK l:CRI:NZA " $ 1 0 9 9 F O R E N Z A ® C O T T O N -B L E N D S W E A T E R S (s-m - l) value $49 FO RENZA ® 1 0 -B U T V O N H E N LE Y SW EATERS (S-M-L) VALUE $48 FO RENZA ® & O U T B A C K RED® C O TTO N PLEATED P A N TS (Misses 6-14) VALUE $40 s w e a ts d d 114921699 bT F L E E C E R E LA T E D S E P A R A T E S (S-M -L) VALUES $ 3 8 -4 4 7 1 0 9 4 " h is W m Æ n COTTON c o n o D EN IM JEA N S I la m in r 8 w 1 0o0% % COTTON SH IRTS io (Junior 5-13) VALUES $31-38 OTHERS EEi ^■IBRR tc jL-L) i t VALUES $ 2 1 -2 8 (S-M O X F O R D S H IR T S & 1 0 0 % C O TTO N S H IR TS (S-M -L) VALUES $ 1 8 -2 8 NOW A C R Y L IC (S-M -L) VALUE $16 FASHION GAL EVERYDAY SAVINGS OF UP TO 70% ON FIRST QUALITY NAME BRAND FASHIONS FOR JUNIORS & MISSES PHOENIX Phoenix West Plaza, 4344 W. Indian School Rd, 247-0196; 19th Ave. & Thunderbird, 866-1690; 35th Ave. & Northern. 841-2951; 7th Ave & Betham, „„ ■ ___ 32nd & Shea. 867-2964; TEMPE Tempe East Shp. Ctr, 935 f i Broadway, 966-1987; MESA Fiesta Village Shp. Or, (Alma School & Southern) s m r r ^ T . c m 5^ 60;,2^ St & lndian Sch0° 1' 955‘78° f , HOURS; M-Fri, 9:30am-9pm; Sat. 9:30am-7pm; Sun. 12noon-5pm. Advertised styles representative of stock--occaslonally. specific stvles mav m i ho , CDowe Plaza 7750 E McDowell. 949-8067. WATCH FOR THE ORA NO OPENING OF OUR TENTH PHOENIX X AREA LOCATION AT jb t ALIA aS MESA « . . . PLAZA! ^w a y/exchange. S te te F r e i « police report Sexual assault, robbery suspect remains at large By MIKE BURGESS State Press A m an who allegedly robbed and sexually assa u lte d a 19-year-old doughnut shop clerk this weekend remains at large, Tempe police said. Police said the clerk was working in the kitchen of Winchell’s Donut House, 808 W. Broadway Road, when a suspect entered the store with a blue steel semi­ automatic pistol about 3:48 a.m. Saturday. Rape Suspect The suspect came in and approached the clerk in the kitchen and held the gun to her head and sexually assaulted her twice,” police spokesman Roger Clay said. “After the sexual assault, he had her go to the cash register and remove the cash and place it in a white canvas bag.” Clay said the suspect fled with $89. The clerk described the suspect to police as a black man in his mid-20s, 6 feet tall, 160 lbs. with short black hair. •A Tempe convenience store clerk surprised a knife-wielding Dandit by “displaying a knife of his own” and foiled a robbery attempt Monday morning, Tempe police said. Police said the suspect entered the 7-11 at 1006 S. McClintock Drive about 3:10 a.m. brandishing a four-inch knife with a black handle. “The suspect confronted the clerk carrying the knife and demanded he remove cash from the register,” police spokesman Roger Clay said. “Then the clerk displayed a knife of his own.” Clay said the clerk told police the suspect was a frequent customer and had made a purchase about an hour before the robbery attempt. The clerk described the suspect as a hispanic man, 5 feet 9 inches with black hair, dark brown eyes and a dark mustache. •A Tempe man believed to have stabbed two Glendale men with a barbeque fork at a Tempe cookout early Saturday morning remains at large, Tempe police said. Police said Nacho I. Rojas, 23, and Lawrence Skinner, 33, were were stabbed after a fight broke out between friends and residents in the 1000 block of Fogal Way in Tempe. Police spokesman Roger Clay said both men were treated at Maricopa County Hospital in Phoenix. He said police believe the suspect is related to a resident of the Tempe neighborhood. •Four Tempe businesses have been burglarized in the past four days, but Tempe police say none of the incidents are connected. Police said the first burglary occurred early Saturday morning when an unknown suspect broke the glass door of Critic’s Choice Video, 3415 S. McClintock Drive, with a rock and stole two VCR’s valued at $400. CG’s Hair Design, 5058 S. Price Road, and Hendle’s Air Conditioning, 5060 S. Price Road, had their front glass doors broken with a rock early Sunday morning. Both stores were ransacked and CG’s was robbed of $200. The latest burglary occurred early Monday morning at Radio Shack, 917 S. Mill Ave. An unknown suspect threw a rock through the store’s front window and stole VCRs and police scanners valued at $1,400. Measure up yo u r $ $ savings State Press Classifieds N . B a s e m e n t M a tth e w s C e n te r C ARPET IREMNANT DOMINO’S PIZZA OFFERS YOU TWO 2 5 0 GREAT COCA-COLA SPECIALS TO GO ALONG W ITH AN EQUALLY GREAT DOMINO’S PIZZA! NO COUPONS ARE NECESSARY-JUST ASK FOR THE COKE SPECIALS BY NAME! THESE Carpet starting at $ 2 .9 9 s/y MESA 1826 W. Broadway At DotaOR/bA K-mart ad PriesCM COKES ONLY 25 0 fo r a 12 o u nce can SPECIALS ARE GOOD FOR A o f COKE C LA SSIC . Valid LIMITED TIME ONLY. p iz z a 890-1152 p u rc h a s e o n ly . on L im it 6 per order. WESTSIDE .m a h ktltamilMm 269-3261 k 6-P A C K FO R 9 9 0 i G ET A 6-PACK O F COKE C LA S S IC FOR 990 w ith th e purchase of a 16” extra large EXTRAVAGANZZA™. O ne 6-Pack p er order. If every student staff and faculty member donated one dollar, we could keep ASU ’s carts for the disabled running. THE PIZZA PEOPLE OF ASU 968-5555 Rural & University N O W A C C E P T IN G A P P L IC A T IO N S F O R FU L L A N D P A R T -T IM E E M P L O Y M E N T . A P P L Y 1 : 0 0 - 3 : 0 0 P .M . A funding shortage has le ft the fu tu re o f Disabled Student Re­ sources cart system In question. Disabled Student Resources needs to raise at least $50,000 to continue transporting dissbled and tem porarily disabled stu­ dents. faculty and staff around cam pus. Please help us continue an in­ valuable service to ASU. You’ll never know when you’ll be tem po­ rarily disabled with a sprained ankle and need to bp transported around campus! Please help us keep ASU's carts for the disabled runnlhg by mak­ ing a donation today. M all o r bring in your check made payable to Disabled Student Resources to: State Press, ASU M atthews Center Tem pe, AZ 85287-1502 Thank you tor your •upport $1.25 OFF any 16” extra large 2 or more item pizza. One coupon per pizza. Expires: 9/15/87 Fast, Free Delivery™ 968-5555 903 S. Rural Rd. A S U -S P 8 -4 FAST, FREE DELIVERY 0s DOMINO’S PIZZA D ELIV ER S’ CO Ò z < I n o n o a ® HOURS: 11:00am - 1:30am Sun-Thurs 1 1 :00am • 2:30am Fri-Sal Our drivers carry le s s than $ 2 0 .0 0 Limited delivery areas. © 1967 D om in os P izz a Inc. Page 10 Stete Pres» Tuesday, August 25,1987 Road construction hurts Mill Avenue merchants Walk-in business suffers in downtown Tempe area By DANA LEONARD and TERRI SEABERT State Press Mud, dust, potholes, rocks, heavy equipment and road signs have become familiar obstacles for Mill Avenue travelers and an unwelcome deterrent to customers of area businesses. Several Mill Avenue workers said Monday that the first day of school, usually a busy time for the street, brought little or no additional business. David Mueller, manager of Tempe Blueprint, said “hardly anyone” braved the construction to seek out his shop, while Tim Little, manager of Paradise Bar and Grill, said the start of the school year did little to pick up what has been a “pretty slow” summer. Construction on the street, from Third Avenue to University Drive, began June 12 and is not expected to be completed until Oct. 30, according to engineer Jam es Agerly, a worker for the street construction contractor, CMX Group.’ But public works director Jim Jones said much of the $2.3 million construction will be completed before Pope John Paul IT’s Sept. 14 visit. “All the pavement and signal lights will be in, and there will be no detours,” he said. The project goal is to improve the road and to enhance the downtown Tempe image, Agerly said. But many merchants said the inaccessibility to their shops along Mill Avenue has caused a drastic drop in sales. “Our walk-in business has dropped off by about 70 percent,” Mueller said. “ Our pick-up and delivery business is what’s kept us going.” Lack of parking space is keeping some customers away, said Denise Teichert, manager of Esprit in Hayden Square. Marsha Maguire, owner of Circus Clothing, Gifts and Candy, said her business has decreased between 30 and 60 percent, and Penguin’s Frozen Yogurt owner Kelly Zien gauged a 40 percent drop in sales since construction began. “For a while you couldn’t get within four blocks of here,” Zien said. “ I certainly wouldn’t make the effort to come down here and have to park four blocks away and drive in circles to find a place to park, and come in for five minutes for a yogurt. It’s an inconvenience.” Zien said she was not aware of the upcoming construction when she signed the lease, and her landlords told her they L . M ohr/S tate Press one week ago today Tempe motorists were greeted by dirt roads and construction signs at the intersections of Mill Avenue and Seventh Street. Progress has been made — most of the dirt has been removed. were not informed either. affected our business much.” “But I can’t believe that construction just started with only Happy Trails, a shop for tobacco paraphernalia, has not two months planning,” she said, adding if she had known experienced a drop in monetary exchange, although there about the construction she would have “done the lease are fewer “browsers,” manager Bill Merrell said. differently.” “People don’t have anywhere else to buy this stuff,” he Besides discouraging customers, the dusty mess also said. “They’ll park in Tucson and walk.” creates hassles for employees, according to Circus clerk Happy Trails employee Valerie Miles said there has been a Jennifer Hinfey. decrease in the number of walk-in customers. “ It’s been definite stress,” she said. “I can’t tell you how “I think it’s the inconvenience of not being able to park,” many pairs of shoes I’ve ruined in the mud walking from my she said. “People run in and run out of this shop. They can’t car to here. And it causes tension between employees, after do that now. People aren’t strolling around anymore either. what you have to go through to get to work.” Hinfey said the noise of the construction trucks also is . “Mill Avenue has always been known as the best place to take a walk.” irritating. But several Mill Avenue workers agreed the construction But not all businesses have been affected by the will enhance future business with wider sidewalks to promote construction. Vikki Kaufhold, assistant manager of Homespace Ltd., pedestrian use. said: “We’re a unique furniture shop, and people are willing “Hopefully, this will all be for the best,” Little said. “It to make the trip to come here. The construction hasn’t should be, for $2.3 million.” M E X IC A N M A D N E S S B IG S T U D E N T at W IL S O N 7 p.m .-close D IS C O U N T S C A M E R A at •All darkroom supplies »Film developing •Full line camera store Rural & Apache Free Tacos 8 -? 750 P acifico M argaritas S traw berry M args Shots o f C uervo G old from 7-9 $1.25 9-close LENSES TELESCOPES • BINOCULARS ASU TEMPE 204 E. University (Behind The Chuckbox) ■ 894-8337 7 valley locations Just a snort walk from campus at Forest & U niversity Happy H our — 2 6-ft. Subs: 4-7 DJ & Dancing Every Night NEVER, EVER A COVER I I i i f i l m 12 ex p . $ 1.99 2 4 exp. ..........$ 2 .9 9 3 6 ex p . ............ $ 3.99 • 1 3 5 , 110, 1 2 6 s iz e s on ly • G lo s s y o r te x tu re d •All n e g a tiv e s individually s le e v e d Ffvo roH lim it p er customer. Photos double hand-inspected. ! I. Expires 9-25-87. N ot va tu w ith any other otter o r discount. Stet» N u Tu«da^Augm2jj^1987 gage 11 comics BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed . 47 FMOIU 0R&AN6. .. 200 M/CB5 OFPFUCATF pioop vesoas...tzmillion COMPLEXCHmiCñL RFPCT10Ñ5 TO COPRFCTLYHAPPEN every secoNP... .MT HITBYA BUS, FALL ON A FIFTY SOUPSPOON ANP CATCH AIPS'T YOU \ , UNP6RSTANP / ivory to w e r s t v ~> ASU's very own ./ Sturgeon , General by M ike R itter featuring: your favorite nutritious & healthy seafoods and salads. All provide excellent sources of low fat protein & less cholesterol Dear S tu d e n t, Welcome to M id-S tate Univer­ sity and Ivory Towers Residence ", Hall. If you a r e returning to Ivory Towers, you a r e already fam iliar with o u r i modern facilities.. ...Comfortably fu rn is h e d roomb~ M ■STotWJW SPECIAL kbmu® tuna . T h e S tu rg e o n G e n e ra l h a s d e te rm in e d t h a t e a tin g sea fo o d is g o o d fo r y o u r h e a lth . íá É f e S BEAT THE located in the M.U. between the Grill and Chicken Out in the Grand Marketplace State Press Classified Happy Hour 7-9 a.m. L in e r ads b ro u g h t to M atthew s C e n te r 172 PRICE Reach your Prime Market State Press Classifieds 965-6731 w e n a w s to p a s id m We know that a cheap calculator can cost you blood, sweat and time. Investing in a Hewlett-Packard cab culator, on the other hand, can save you time and again. HP calculators not only have better func­ tions. They function better. Without stick­ ing keys and bad connections. Through October 31, you can get the cream of the calcula­ tors at a non-fat price. We’re cutting $10 off the HP-12C. That buys you more builtin functions than any­ one else’s financial calculator. And we’re giving away a free Advantage Module, a $49 value, with every HP-41 Advanced Scientific calculator you buy. This 12K-byte plug­ in, menu-driven ROM was designed spe­ cially for students. So drop by your campus bookstore and compare HP calcula­ tors with the rest. By midterm, you’ll see what a deal this is. Bob’s Bicycle Barn FREE$49HP-41 1ADVANTAGEMODULE 1 Cruiser Headquarters Sun D evil Cruisers B e s t p r ic e s in t o w n . C h e c k u s o u t , n e w a n d u s e d . A ll t y p e s , r e p a ir s a n d s e r v ic e .' Major credit car trades w e lco m e | ■ 190« E. Apache. Tam pa 2 block a aaat o f M cCKntock with purchase of HP-41. Purchase must be made between August 15,1987, and October 31, 1987. See your local HP dealer for details and official redemption form. Rebate or free Module will be sent in 6-8 weeks. I 1 . ■ 1 OR $10OFFAN HP-12C. 1 IM-estt I_________________________I © 1 9 8 7 H ew lett-P ackard C om p an y P G 12703 W ha% n E W L E T T WLFM PACKARD Pasc 12 State Press Tuesday, August 25,1987 By STEVE NOLEN State Press Phoenix-area air travelers will feel a heightened sense of risk following last week’s Northwest Airlines disaster, according to an ASU clinical psychologist. “That one salient, concrete incident makes you feel more v u ln e r a b le ,” psychology professor Clark Presson said. “You know somebody who knows somebody on that plane.” Because so many people from the Phoenix area died in the air crash, Presson said “we were all touched by it.” T he c r a s h of N o r t h w e s t Airlines flight 255 on Aug. 16 claimed the lives of 111 Arizonans. P resson said because a ir travelers have no control over S e n s e o f ris k lik e ly fo r a ir p a s s e n g e rs Selling in the classifieds. ReNt a Memorial sendees fen- the eight ASU victim s of F lig h t 255 will be noon Wednesday at Gammage Center. The public is invited to attend, and professors may opt to cancel classes. Killed in last week’s crash were Tom Barberio, a botany student; Sharon Briggs, an education technology graduate student; Michael Cichan, an associate botany 'professor; Susie Cody, an administrative assistant in the School of Social Work; Marshall Johnson, the alumni advisor for the Sigma Chi fraternity; Jane Tanfield, an assistant professor in the College of A rchitecture; Jea n n a Tawzer, a communications student; and Suzanne Kolarik Underwood, an assistant professor in the College of Architecture. Gammage doors will open at 11 a.m. for the half-hour service. A S U 's V e r y O w n PARKING PROBEMS? A Piece o f Cake M em orial their safety, they experience an increased perception of risk than in situations where they feel in contrpl. “ It’s unlikely that reading an account of a terrible accident caused by a drunk driver would have the impact of an air disaster,” he said. “People feel that if they were driving, they could have done something to avoid the accident. “ If airline travel was purely optional, people might decide not to fly. But air travel often isn’t optional.” He said some people will change airlines and avoid flying through Detroit. The action is not likely to increase a person’s safety but might bolster the sense of being in control, Presson said. space f rus. $50 PER SEMESTER State Press 965-6731 South sibe o f caMpus DELIVERY CALL 967-354? H ot & IP M T A i m - n s s W ild ik r f lH l □ has moved □ G et W ILD at hom e T O N IG H T !! Y o u r f a v o r ite I ta lia n fo o d s a re n o w lo c a te d a t th e FREE DELIVERY 5 p.m. to midnight 7 days in T H EG R A N D M A R K E p lA P R You can even use your cash value card L O C A T E D IN T H E M A IN H A L L W A Y , M E M O R IA L U N IO N B U IL D IN G MUAB M e m o r ia l U n io n A c t iv it ie s r e c r e A U G . r u it m c p 2 6 e 2 • e n t i o p . m t n . -5 p . m . M e m o ria l U n io n A lu m n i L o u n g e y o u r a ve n u e to s t u d e n t a c t iv it ie s e v e r y o n e w e lc o m e □ 9 6 5 -6 6 4 9 State N m Tuesday, August 95,1987 ^P ag eJ^ Judge allows malls to ban recall petitions PHOENIX (AP) — A Maricopa County judge granted an injunction Monday allowing shopping malls to shut out petition signature-gatherers from the (Gov. Evan) MtWmm Recall Committee. Superior Court Judge Rudolph Gerber rejected the Recall Committee’s claim that access to shopping malls falls under the First Amendment right to free speech, ruling instead that malls must be considered private property. “As such, they cannot be invaded even by proponents of initiative and recall absent permission from the private property owners,” Gerber said in granting a preliminary injunction. On Aug. IS he had granted a temporary restraining order to the same effect. Recall Committee founder Ed Buck said the decision will be appealed, adding, “It’s going to make our lives a little more difficult, needless to say.” Hie committee reported on Aug. 13 that it had gathered 103,379 signatures during its first month of operation. The committee must get 216,746 valid signatures of registered voters by Nov. 3 to force Mecham to face a recall vote next spring. Recall Committee attorney Alice Bendheim said the appeal probably would be filed as a special action to the state Supreme Court. Gerber’s ruling said, “Arizona’s constitutional provisions regarding free speech and recall in particular are not broad enough to override the right of private property.” The injunction was sought by Paradise Valley Mall, Metrocenter and P ark Central Mall in Phoenix, Fiesta Mall S ta te P ress C la s s if ie d s 965-8731 in Mesa and Los Arcos Mall in Scottsdale. Three other Phoenix-area shopping malls have permitted the committee to gather signatures. Buck said he is still convinced his group will come up with enough signatures to force a recall election, and that it still will ask mall owners for permission to collect signatures there. During oral arguments earlier Monday, attorney Terry L. Rakow, representing the malls, said that ordering the malls to admit petition-gatherers could “create a nightmare of sorts” and lead to many other people seeking the same right of access to other private property. In court papers, the malls claimed that if the Recall Committee were granted unlimited access to shopping malls “there is no rational basis for prohibiting the Hell’s Angels from crashing private parties to solicit signatures for a change in the traffic laws or the Neo Nazi party from invading the Arizona Biltmore seeking signatures for petitions establishing Arizona as an Aryan State.” Rakow told the judge, “Once that door is open there is indeed no stopping . . . and that the implications are manifestly beyond control.” WELCOME BACK ASU STUDENTS Join the madness every Wednesday night with 2 for 1 KAZI’s all night long 5 th S treet & F orest, T em p e 1 block from Sun D e v il S tadium 9 6 6 -4 4 3 8 However, Ms. Bendheim said the malls had made themselves “quasi-public areas” by advertising themselves as places where “the action is.” Malls want people to come and shop but to “leave your First Amendment rights outside on the street,” she said. I r i n l r o am S lin H K P 'S ATTENTIO N PROFESSORS: ANNOUNCING PROFESSORS, END TH E PA PER CHASE 1 E. 5th St., Tempe CUSTOM SCREEN PRINTING COMPLETE DESIGN & ART SERVICES, MULTICOLOR WORK OUR SPECIALTY •Sweats • Sewn on letters • Shorts 7 E . 5 th S t . 9 6 8 -4 2 0 8 USE KINKO'S PROFESSOR PUBLISHING SERVICE Let Klnko's transform your loose class notes, diagrams, reading selections, lecture synopses and homework problems into bound class readers. •N o charge to you or your departm ent •L ow cost to your students •A lte rn a tiv e to library reserve room or copious class handouts •Quick turnaround •W e ’ll help organize and assemble materials •P ick up and delivery •Open early, open late, open weekends CALL U S FO R M O RE IN FO RM A TIO N Daily 7:00 a. m.-10:00 a.m. R eservatio ns ^recom m ended, b u t n o t req u ired 9 6 5 -3 4 6 4 n i i M i T E M P E 715 S. Forest 1840 w . Southern (Forest St university) 9 6 9 -3 3 2 6 II T E M P E III 933 E. university Hardy & university 8 9 4 -1 7 9 7 9 2 1 -0 1 6 8 8 9 4 -9 5 8 8 c a s s e tte D u p lic a tin g Kinko s now offers full service laser word printing 966-2035 * Page 1 4 State Press Tuesday, August 85,1967 Library. C ontinued fro m page 01. of the library, west of the Social Sciences Building. E ast of the Social Science Building, three ASU police officers moved about two dozen bikes from the main entrance to the quad. Many bicyclists ignored or failed to notice the small “ no-bicycles” sign to the right of each library access. ASU police will cite bike violators beginning today, said Sgt. Bill Wright, head of the Bicycle Education and Safety Team. Wright said the fine is $18, but it can be waived for first-time offenders by attending a bicycle safety course held every Friday from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Language and Literature Building, Room A-18. C onstruction on the $11.5 m illion expansion is expected to continue until February 1989. Pathways will be restricted until then. “First of all, there is a great different 3 in opinion as to what the right numb«' of i ¡ns is,” he said. “Some people think that you can put too many signs up.” Beeman said, “The powers-that-be found it unnecessary to put up larger signs.” Some students seemed to resent the inconvenience, but most said they thought the University’s expansion plan will be beneficial in the long run. Only a slow trickle of traffic could be seen on the alternate route behind the library Monday morning, but by 11:30 a.m. the student flow was steady. Beeman said there was unexpected congestion at the north end of the MU, where the bike racks overflowed, and admitted to a lack of racks on the north side 8 ts v s M o u n tm r/S ta t, Press Pedestrian traffic along the temporary Hayden Library bridge was not as congested as the ad­ ministration had anticipated. 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Expires 9-15-87. G et R e a d y F o r S ch o o l 8 9 4 -M A M A 106 E. University _____ _ L a rg e 1 6 " 1 T o p p in g O ne coupon per pizza. G ood at ASU location only. Expires 9-15-87. Saved 730 a.m.-10:30 a.m. Mon.-fri. 0 3 S c ra m b le d E g gs □ H o m e m a d e P o ta to e s □ T o .is t. B u tte r, J a m Open Sun.-Th«iff$ 11 a.m#-1 a.m FrL-SaL 11 a.m.-2 a.m. 829-1717 $279 3° SALE PRICE Benotto 600 Model 10 speed touring bicycle S1QQ00 I 9 9 SALE Includes F R E E U shape lock with $1,000 guarantee Benotto 800 Expires S ept. 1 ,1 9 8 7 . (^ D E V IL S G R E A T 1 6 ” P IZ Z A S o n ly $ 9 . 4 9 & tax Large size pizzas with cheese and one item. Extra items and extra cheese available at additional cost. O ne coupon per customer. VALID ON DELIVERY TOOI N ot valid with other offers. N ot valid on Sicilian pizzas. 106 E. University Expires S ep t. 1 ,1 9 8 7 . 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 (Sale Items Excluded) HOURS: M-Thura t-7 pm PH. S-S pm Sat H pm Sun. 11-4 pm AvallaM* _____ •0 Day Layaway I—— I or 90 Day Financing _ NO INTEREST U-Shape Locks with a $1,000 guarantee SPECIAL $12.95 DOM ENICS CYCLINE IMPDRWS 1004 S. Mill Ave. Tem pe AZ „ 9 6 7 -7 7 0 0 sports gust 25,1987 ______ Page 15 Dreams becom e reality; 2 Devils head for Rome By CHRIS DORSEY State Press aiaiB r r m pnoio ASU hurdler Andrew Parker practicing and Sun Angel track stadium last season. Parker won a gold medal in last week’s Pan-Am Games. Some d ream of com peting in an international event with the best athletes in the world. For two ASU students, Andrew Parker and Mark Senior, the dream has become a reality. Both of the former ASU track and field members will leave for Rome, Italy today to compete in the World Championships for their home country, Jamaica. This will not be the first time the two will run against international competition. Parker and Senior have just returned from Indianapolis, Ind., where they took part in the 1987 Pan Am games for Jamaica. Both brought home medals for their efforts, as Parker claimed a gold medal in the 110 high hurdles, one of his country’s two gold medals. Senior claimed a bronze medal for Jam aica in the mile relay, where he turned in a time of 45.10. For Senior, the Pan Am games were not his first priority following the NCAA championships. After finishing his final season for ASU, he left the United States for Jam aica to begin training and to take part in the trials for the Pan Am games, where he turned in the second-best time in the 400 meter run. The next step for Senior was the Central American Caribbean Games. In those games, the 400-meter relay and mile relay teams that he ran on crossed the wire first, giving the team a boost in confidence going into the Pan Am Games. Senior will be running against new competition at the World Championships, nam ely the Soviet Union and E a st Germany. Previously, Senior participated in the 1964 Olympics, which were boycotted by the two communist countries. “It is going to be rough, but if everyone gives their best I think we can win a medal,” Senior said about his mile relay team. “The competition is nothing new to me, and will not have any effect on my performance. In the Pan Am Games, Senior can Mark Senior remember the feeling he had when he saw the Jamaican flag raised for his team ’s efforts. . “Medaling meant a lot to me,” Senior said. “Everybody’s aim is to medal. Just seeing my country’s flag raised because of me made me feel good inside.” The World Championships w ill last two weeks before the pair retuni home. “ As their coach I feel honored,” said Duncan. “We as a family are proud to have two student-athletes compete in the World Championships.” Parker will be a member of the 1988 Jam aican Olympic team and Duncan said he should do well in Rome. “ I think he can advance to the finals,” Duncan said. “Andrew has enough talent to be in the top eight in the world.” Parker currently holds the 110 high hurdle record at ASU, and was named All-America in his final two seasons for ASU. Pan-Am Games provide something for everyone This year’s Pan-Am Games had a little something for everyone: lots of U.S. medals, lots of upsets, and of course, all sorts of controversy. On one hand, television viewers were able to watch U.S. athletes win more than twice as many medals than the runner-up, Cuba. In fact, U.S. competitors managed to haul in almost as many gold medals (168) as that hot-blooded bunch from south of the Keys did for all of their medals with 175. In the process viewers were able to watch some soon-to-belegends do their thing, namely Carl Lewis, Greg Louganis, and the Cuban baseball team. Also on display were some upand-comers, such as Kelcie Banks, Michael Carbajal, Oscar Schmidt (an ironic last name for a Brazilian, don’t you think), and Sun Devils Andrew Parker and Mark Senior, among others. We democratic types again proved that Latin America, though not lacking at all in spirit, could stand a boost in sports technology and a few more bucks for facilities. Except for soccer. I think the Brazilians and the Argentines could teach us a little bit in that sport. All in all, I enjoyed the games. There was always at least one event that had some competition each day; and boy, what an ending. Who would have ever thought the U.S. basketball team would lose a game at all, much less than to Brazil? But then again, neither was the Bay Of Pigs fiasco. S teve B rennan Sports Editor Apparently someone did, namely 12 guys on the court in Market Square Arena in Hoosierland. I must shamefully say that upset was a fitting end to this year’s games, though I would have liked to see the U.S. baseball team win the gold medal to add to the drama. As I mentioned earlier, there was a little bit for everyone at this year’s Pan Am Games. If the action was slow, there was plenty of extracurricular activity, and I don’t mean brilliant philosophical theses from Brent Musberger. Viewers had the pleasure of watching a number of Cuban exiles and patriotic U.S. citizens act really stupid at the boxing venue. All politics aside, provoking Cuban boxers into doing what they do best on one’s face is not a sign of tremendous inteUigence. By DOUG McMANUS State Press Cross-country squads prepare for tough year Intense desert heat notwithstanding, the ASU men’s and women’s cross-country teams are battling the high temperatures in preparation of this fall’s season, which begins Sept. 12 in Flagstaff. The women’s squad is led by senior All-America Laura LaMena, along with sophomores Dawn Arrigoni and Kim McKay. Head coach Ken Lehman, in his third year, said he is confident the women will improve on last year’s fifthplace finish in the Pac-West and sixth-place District 7 mark. “Laura (LaMena) will provide us with some good, experienced leadership and we have some good young people returning,” Lehman said. LaMena, who transfered to ASU from Houston last The Games had no shortage of drug scandals, either. The usual bunch of athletes didn’t pass their tests again, and with their usual excuses why. But this time, those applying the tests discovered a drug that appears to mask the use of steroids. Well isn’t that special. It is as if the athletes think they can avoid the tests completely, take their steroids, and walk away with a medal. The only problem is that most of them don’t win any medals, and wind up with bodies that don’t function all that well-after a few years. I think maybe U.S. hammer thrower Bill Green would have much preferred not to win a medal at all than to give one back and possibly lose the chance to compete in the 1988 Olympics. If they happen at all. In conclusion, I hope both the athletes and fans will learn a little bit about The United States and the Latin American countries from these games. Politics and drugs have no place in sports. Unfortunately, it is a slow learning process. Let’s shoot for a boycott-free, violence-free and drug-free Olympics in Seoul. year, finished 11th out of 62 runners at the Pac-West Championships at Palo Alto, Calif, with a time of 17:39.7 in the 5,000 meter race. McKay finished 25th and Arrigoni placed 29th. But Lehman said the men’s team will not be as fortunate, losing its top three runners from last year’s team . “We lost a lot from last year’s team ,” he said. “But we have three quality runners joining us this year that could help us tremendously.” Lehman is referring to freshmen Chris Webb, Todd Lewis and Jason Kaplan. Seniors Jeff Smith and Dave Ebbert will provide ASU with the needed experience, he said. Last year’s team recorded the highest finish ever for an ASU men’s cross-country team, placing fifth in the Pac-10 and seventh in the district meet. Page 16 Tuesday, August 25,1987 Davis proposes drug PHOENIX (AP) — Phoenix Suns All-Star guard Walter Davis, who underwent drug rehabilitation twice in a 16-month period, reportedly has offered to build a drug clinic here if Maricopa County will supply the site. Davis, 32, is involved in the project with longtime Suns booster Jimmy Walker and Joe Parham , who is the affirmative action director for Arizona Gov. Evan Mecham. Tom Ambrose, the NBA team ’s public relations director, said Davis “would prefer to wait before m a k in g any comment” on the proposed clinic, but Walker and Parham discussed the project freely on Davis’ behalf. “Walter wants to get more involved in the community,” said Walker, the former owner of the Phoenix Racquets professional S tale Presa D o n ’t F lounder A ro u n d Place a Classified Ad tennis team . “This is his (D avis’) way of giving back to society, of helping others with problems he has encountered,” Parham said; “He is interested in setting up treatment centers for youth in the E ast Valley, on the west side, and in north Phoenix and central Phoenix.” County Supervisor Tom Freestone said all he knows is that the Davis group wants to “establish a kind of clinic to educate young people against the use of drugs. Whether it be staff support of financial support they want from the county, I don’t know until I m eet with the gentlem en.” Parham said he “was called som e tim e ago by a friend of mine who is working with W alter.” State Press 965-6731 N. B asem ent M atthew s C enter STUDENTS .. .Don’t miss our 20-20 offer! Art, architecture, engineering & design students: Shop for your art supplies from The Valley's most complete selection by SEPTEMBER 20, and save a big 20%. Shop any other time an d you'll receive our standard 10% STUDENT DISCOUNT. _______ PROFESSIONAL CENTERS F R E E L S A T S E M IN A R ‘H ow To Get Into the Law School o fY o u r Choice.99 fin e arts materials And improve your LSAT score by 10 points W ed. Sept. 2nd, 1987 • 6 p.m. Room 211 ASU M em orial Union Canvas, paints, stretcher bars, brushes, frames, paper, etc. Drafting supplies $ 10 0 d is co u n t to a ll w h o e n ro ll a t sem in ar Parallel rules, triangles, templates, leads, drawing boards, technical pens (all brands) and more. F o r L S A T c la s s e s b e g in S e p t. 1 1 , 1 9 8 7 F o r re s e rv a tio n s c a ll V a le rie a t 9 6 9 -8 9 5 3 . T e rra c e Road A p a rtm e n ts Airbrush equipm ent & supplies, graphic arts m aterials a n d books. a> WALK TO SCHOOL! £ 1/2 block from C am pus. H uge w ell-fu rn ish ed *1-bedroom 1-bath, and 2-bedroom 2-b ath s, all u tilities In c lu d e d , plus large heated pool, spacious laun dry fa c ilitie s and cable TV . 9 5 0 S . T e rra c e R d . Questions about the STATE PRESS 99 CALL 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 8am-5pm DAILY f F L A X C O ., IN C . / c y >>öa \ N' a X * M a ric o p a F re e w a y 1 0 th S t r e e t & J e f f e r s o n o 2 5 4 - 0 8 4 0 • H o u r s : M o n .- F r i. 8 : 3 0 - 5 : 3 0 S a t . 9 - 5 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 JT FLAX Zn £3 R€V€RS€ 10:30 P M -1 :0 0 AM (MON., TUES., & THURS.) H i 6 th S tr e e t VR ALSO L o ts o f t r e e p a r k i n g Tuesday, August 25,1987 M olitor continues streak; shoots for 39 MILWAUKEE (AP) — Each day, as his hitting streak grows longer, Paul Molitor of the Milwaukee Brewers faces a new pitcher with one idea in mind— stopping him Some pitchers have been tougher than others. Mike Boddicker of Baltimore, for example, held Molitor hitless in three trips on Aug. 13 before he was lifted for reliever Tom Niedenfuer. Molitor hit a two-out homer in the ninth off Niedenfuer to keep the streak going. After getting Monday off, Molitor will try to extend that streak to 39 games Tuesday night when the Cleveland Indians and the American League’s most regularly rocked pitching staff come to County Stadium. Ken Schrom, 5-10, will start Tuesday for the Indians, and he’s one pitcher, according to the numbers, who hasn’t given Molitor much tremble. Molitor was 2-for-3 with two doubles and three RBI against Schrom in a series last week, and he is 3-for-6 with five RBI this season against the right-hander. “I’ve had some success against Kenny, but he’s had his days where he’s given me trouble as well. It will just be a matter of getting ahead in the count and getting some good pitches to hit.” The Indians’ other scheduled starters are Rich Yett, 2-5, and Scott Bailes, 6-6. Molitor hasn’t faced Yett this season and is l-for-4 against Bailes. In last week’s series against the Indians, Molitor was 10-for-20. But, in the opener of the series against Bailes, his only hit off the left-hander was a thirdinning bunt single. That’s the only time Molitor has kept his streak alive with a bunt. He is 67-for-160 (.419) during the streak, which is the fifth-longest in the major leagues since 1900 behind Ty Cobb (40), George Sisler (41), Pete Rose (44) and Joe DiMaggio (56). Molitor currently is hitting .371 but, because he missed 44 games in the first half of the season with a variety of injuries, he does not have enough plate appearances to be listed among the league’s leading hitters. Wade Boggs of the Boston Red Sox leads the American League with a .361 average. 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(L im ited O ffe r— Save $50) $25 INITIATION FEE»ONLY $25 A MONTH*NO CONTRACTS •1 5 ,0 0 0 sq. fe e t •W olffe tan ning b e d s •P r o sh o p •T h e World C afe J u ic e Y ogurt bar ANDAEROBICS OFSCOTTSDW m m r m 'Y m m »B rand n ew s p a c io u s facilities •H o u r ly aerobics. »A ir-conditioned »T rainers A vailable The PeadHer® $1.89 A Whatever the assignment, Pilot has the formula for writing comfort and precision. j f l F Pilot’s Better Ball Point Pen, in medium jjE p F and fine points, lets you breeze through long S f note-taking sessions. In fact, we’ve made writer's fafigue a thing o f the past! This crystal barreled veteran o f the canqxts has a ribbed finger grip for continuous comfort and is perfectly balanced for effortless writing. Best o f all, you’ll never throw it « i t because it’s refiDable. 1465 N. Hayden OTHERLOCATIONS THROUGHOUT THEUNITED SHOES, CANADA & EUROPE 945-6060 (S.E. Corner of Hayden &McDowell) 5 m inutes from ASU T he perfect teammate to th e Better Ball Point Pen is Pilot’s Pendlier 0 5 m m mechanical penefl. It has a continuous lead feed system and a cushion tip that helps eliminate the frustration o f lead breakage. T he Pendlier’s jumbo eraser does the job cleanly while the ribbed grip offers the same comfort as the Better Ball Point Pen. Pick up fo e Pilot Team at your campus bookstore today...The Better Ball Point P en and T he PenriKer. PILOT MOVE UP TO LUXURY LIVING! $200 OFF 1st Months Rent 1 /2 PRICE TUESDAY! Escape-TheDorm Special! Large One Bedroom $390Two Bedroom $470 Escape to Round Table for the freshest, best-tasting pizza in the kingdom! We make it from fine natural cheeses, fresh garden vegetables and good lean meats all baked on a fresh-rolled crust. Then toast your freedom with a cold frosty pitcher of your favorite beverage. It sure beats another night in the cafeteria! ; ■ x • Sand VofeybaN courts Present your ASU I.D. and receive a 50% discount on any large pizza. Assigned covered parking Custom mini-blinds through-out Large sparkling heated pools and jacuzzi Cable TV available Two racquetball courts •Ramadas & Barbecue Areas •S ingle parent discounts •D esigner arched windows •P rivate patios and balconies Exercise facilities Club Room M A IN * 1849 N. Scottsdale Rd. (a t the comer o f McKeUips) EV E R G R E E N VM JLAQI Z CORAL POINT CD 2 3 4 3 W. MAIN, M E S A § 8 VILLAGE APARTMENTS 844-4000 Page 18 Tuesday, August 25,1987 S trt« Frets C om pliance coordinator hired by ASU TEM PE (AP) — Bill the summer to accept the job B r y a h t , t h e a s s i s t a n t a s a th le tic d iercto r a t athletic director for student W h i t w o r t h C o l l e g e in services at the University of Spokane, Wash. Oregon, has been hired as ASU A thletic D irector compliance coordinator at Charles Harris said Bryant’s ASU, s c h o o l o f f i c i a l s responsibilities will include announced Monday. seeing that the school’s 25 Bryant, 40, replaces Jim athletic teams comply with Ferguson, who resigned over NCAA a n d P a c i f i c - 1 0 Conference rules. Bryant had been at Oregon since December 1986. He also served as academic c o o r d i n a t o r a nd NCAA liaison for the school along w ith c o o r d i n a t i n g an academic support program a n d a drug aw aren e ss program. Prior to coming to Oregon, Bryant was an assistant football coach at Northern Arizona University, Weber State and New Mexico State. ASU has been in trouble in the past with recruiting violations in sports such as fo o tb a ll, b ask etb all and baseball. I several prestigious grants and scholarships: I »Fulbright Grants, September 15, 1987 Senior status during 1987-88 academic year US. citizen [ Proficiency in language o f host country Good health Excellent academic record [•Marshall Scholarships, Septem ber 15 , 1987 Senior status during 1987-88 academic year US. citizen under 26 years o f age GPA o f 3.7 exclusive o f freshman year Broad outlook and involvement | •Rhodes Scholarship, September 15 , 1987 Senior status during 1987-88 academic year US. citizen between is and 23 years o f age Leadership and broad ability and achievement [•Truman Scholars, October 1 , 1987 Sophomore status during 1987-88 aca d e m ic year US. citizen Undergraduate major leading to public service career GPA o f 3.0 and in upper 25% o f class [interested students and faculty members shouldj | contact the University Honors Program (965-2359) for | information. m otorcycles fo r sale Classified Advertising 1984 HONDA Aero 125, seat cover, great condition. M ust sell by August 31, $300. 894-0046. THE GOOD NEWS IS 1984 HONDA Aero 125, good shape, new tires and brakes. C all 921-2818. 1985 Honda Aero 50, good shape. C all 921-2818. you’ll now have m ore tim é to place your classified ad. The deadline is noon, the day before publication. A GRANT A P P L IC A T IO N D E A D L IN E S I Application deadline dates are approaching for classifieds 1984 V45 Sabre. Very low m iles, m in t sell. $ 1 6 5 0 /o ffe r. C a ll D u ane, 833 -45 73 evenings. 1985 HONDA B ite . Good shape. $1050. C all Jay, 860-8348. THE BAD NEWS IS 1985 HONDA 700cc Shadow, 6000 m iles, imm aculate condition. Asking $1500 or best offer. C all Dave, 830-7539 evenings; 988-5662 weekdays. wé w ill no longer be able to sell classified ads in the M em orial Union. | W HAT IF YOU I D O N 'T GET INTO THE GRAD SCHOOL O F YO U R CHOKE? 1KAPLÄN STMIEYH. KARANIDUCATIONAl CENTERITD. Sure, there are other schools. But w hy settle? Kaplan prep courses help - students raise their scores I and their chances o f ■ being adm itted into their first-choice schools. Fact is, no one has helped students score higher! OTHER COURSES: MCAT, DAT, NQEX, NTE, CFA, BAR REVIEW, & OTHERS Enroll in Oct. Test and get the next two test dates FREE 967-2967 O ur office in the basem ent o f M atthew s C enter is open from 7 a.m .5 p.m ., o r call 965-6731 and use your Visa or M astercard. 50C C HONDA Hobbit moped. 500 m iles, brand new condition, $250. Contact Robert at 966-5893. HONDA SPREE, 1985. Red. 1700 m iles. $250. Excellent condition. Rita, 839-4189, 267-8924 after 5 p.m . furniture fo r sale ATTRACTIVE PLAID hide-a-bed couch, lam ps, coffee table, blocks and shelves. Good condition. Reasonable. 838-6102. DESKS, VARIOUS sizes and prices. All used but in good condition. 990-3207. KING -SIZE w aterbed. W hite lacquer with cabinets. M ust see. It’s a steal! Call Jon, 967-4419. announcements INTERN FOR college credit for fall 1987 in United States Senator Dennis DeConcini’s office. For more information call Mimi Burns, 261-6756. J E S U S C H R IS T SUPERSTAR M esa Am phitheatre Sept. 11,12,18,19 & 20 SPECIAL ASU DISCOUNT $8 fo r $12.50 ticke t KING SIZE w aterbed, includes heater, headboard and m attress, $50/offer; Couch, loveseat and matching chair, $100/offer. 966-4215. NEW Q UEEN size O rtho box and m attress. Stored, never used. $149. Can deliver. Phone orders accepted. 272-8286. FULL SIZE bed. Still in factory package. $99. Can deliver. Phone orders accepted. 272-8286. Q UEEN-SIZE sleeper sofa, good condi­ tion, $95; large coffee table, $35; both for $120. 438-1087. Must be purchased at Mesa Community Center Box Office before Sept. 4. RENT FURNITURE STUDIO PKQ: $36/m onth 3 ROOM PKG: $49/m onth 6 Month Lease plus Tax & Delivery CROW N FU RN ITU RE LEASING W arehouse Show Room ZS S. 40th S t., Phoenix Info; 834-2560 2444)424 autos fo r sate 1973 VOLKS WAGON Super B eetle, auto­ m atic transm ission, low m ileage on new engine. $1500. 7304)131. 1974 MGB-GT. Excellent condition, new interior, low m iles, runs perfectly. Moving, must sell. $1600. 831-6873. 1977 FIA T Spider convertible. 45,000 m iles. Excellent condition, body and engine. $3100. 9614)770. Things M other Never Told Ybu. it p a y s y o u . . “Don’t get sick — or hurt in an accident. Because if you do — you have to pay the bills!” But wait — don’t panic The ASU Student Health Insurance Plan is better than ever . . . and easier to understand! • For preadmission hospital tests • For M ajor Medical expenses up to $25,000.00 — for each covered accident or sickness — including services, supplies and ambulance service • For Student Health Center X-ray and lab services with no deductible • For mental health care Stop in at the Student Health Center and ENROLL TODAY O r call 965-2411 during regular business hours, Monday through Friday for details. 1979 DATSUN 210. Excellent running condition, $875. Days, 382-4045; even­ ings, 230-8345, Lynn. 1880 FO RD Fairm ont, autom atic, power steering/brakes, air, new tires/battery. Runs good. $1000 or beet o iler. 841-4766. "/Omaha.VL/ People you can count on... Mutual of Omaha Insurance Company Home Office: Omaha, Nebraska Approved and recommended by the Arizona Board of Regents and the Student Health Advisory Committee. m iscellaneous fo r sate 19” COLOR television, $80; 26" color console, $100. Good condition. Call 254-1412. CONVERTIBLE 1973 Fiat: Silver, needs some engine work, partial paint. Must go to good home. Asking $500 or best offer. Call 831-1995, ask for M ichele. COM PACT DORM refrigerator, used only 4 months, value $312, will sell for $175/offer. (32” tall, 21” w ide.) Call 838-2379. motorcycles fo r sale M OVIE. POSTERS: Lost Boys, Predator, Snow W hite, Robocop, Top Gun, and m ore. Call Joel, 784-8970. 1977 SUZUKI G S750, now seat, air shocks, good tires, runs great. $800. 844-7598, leave message. m iscellaneous fo ria te RANCHO TEM PE m obile home: 14x70, 3 bedroom . 1 % bath, w asher, dryer, refrigerator, dishwasher, storage shed. 4605 S. Priest, space 131. $11,000. 279-7096. RECO NDITIO NED VACUUM S, $29.95 up. Ace Fix-it Shop. New location, 1936 E. University, Tempo. Tired of schoolwork already ??? # • Mesa Computer Mart is a dealer fo r A pple C o m p uter H igher Education Purchase Program. A u th o rized D ealer The ASU Plan is underwritten by: Mutual dT \ W AREHOUSE SALE: Desks from $44, chairs from $4, bookshelves from $19, end tables, typing tables, com puter tables, file cabinets, storage cabinets, dining tables, plus lots more. Arizona O ffice Liquidators. 4010 S . 43rd Place, between 40th Street and 48th S treet, north of Broadway. 437-2224. 1865 HONDA CRX 81, low m ileage, air, AM-FM cassette, 5 speed, custom wheels, tint, bra, $8500. 945-6171. Don’t wait — enrollment ends 45 d a y s after the first day of classes for this semester! See your Student Insurance Brochure for full details of coverage and benefits. TABLE, DINETTE with 6 chairs, $100; arm chair, $100; dining table, w hite rattan with 4 chairs, $200; w hite iron king headboard, $40. 730-0131. Item * M acintosh Plus w/keyboard 8 M acintosh SE w /keyboud 8 M acintosh I I C P U w /keyboud 8 A pple* M ac H M onochrome M onitor Y o u r P rice $ 1349,00 $ 1786.00 $ 2391.00 S 289.00 For prices ion these and many more go to the Compass Center on plam walk. O r call Todd at $33-1155 State Pros bkydcs for sale 'W O M EN’S RALEIGH 10-speed. New tires, etc. $75. 493-0229. *• • Page 19 Tuesday, August 85,1987 State Prete ■■ U ä. apartm ents fo r rent BEAUTIFUL NEW large one and two bedroom apartm ents, walk to ASU, pool, laundry, one block south of University on 8th Street and Gary. Ask about move-in specials. 968-5238. ONLY 3 blocks to ASU! Sunrise Apart­ ments has 1 and 2 bedroom apartm ents for lease. Close to everything! Plenty of parking, clean laundry rooms, sparkling pool. 1014 E. Spence. Monday through Friday, 1-4 p.m i 926-1218. PR bFESSO R’S FAMILY will provide sm all but private studio apartm ent free plus $80/m onth in exchange for 20 houre/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 . real estate fo r sale 2, 3, 4 bedroom houses, condos, townhouses, near ASU for sale and rent. Call Alumnus Robert Bullock, Trencor Realty, QUESTA VIDA 2 bedroom plus loft. Includes washer, dryer, refrigerator, pool, spa, racquetball, and more. N ear Univer­ sity and Hayden. $750/m onth plus utilities. Call 991-5735. 951-5800, 860-0460. ASU AREA. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Furn­ ished, appliances included. Hudson Manor. Fenced yard. Lot 75x150. $69,900, assumable ^HA loan. 967-3658: GOOD IN V E S TM E N T near ASU: 2 bedroom split plan, each has full bath, clean, earthtones, washer, dryer. Assum­ able FHA loan. C all Evelyn, 831-1152, ERA Karstetter Realty. HO T DEAL! 3 bedroom s, fireplace, vaulted ceilings, all appliances. This sharp townhouse has pizazz! O ne m ile from ASU in attractive area. Priced at $61,900. Call M elinda, 838-7428; Tradewinds Realty, 820-3333. HOUSING PROBLEM? Live in this one, then sell your parents on a w inter home in a few years! Darling one bedroom condo. Professionally decorated. Fun complex with pool and spa. $57,900. Three miles from ASU. C all D ixie, 820-2100 or 827 -00 51. C entury ■ 21 A m bassador Realtors. INDIAN BEND Gardens townhomes, low 70’s, 2 and 3 bedrooms, double garages, next to beautiful park, M iller and M cKellips. Delisa Realty, 990-9501. LARGE ASU townhome. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, vaulted ceilings, fireplace, w et bar, microwave, and m ore. O ver 1600 square feet. Bike to ASU. Priced in the $80’s. Call Dana, Coldwell Banker, 839-8200. M UST SEE. Close to everything. Cheaper than rent. M obile hom e, $6500.844-7447. PAPAGO PARK Village. M odel 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 $64,900. C all Dana, Coldwell Banker, 839-8200. STOP RENTING . Good selection of 2 ,3 .4 bedroom townhomes from less than $2500 total move-in cost with no qualifying. Bill or Grace at Tradewinds R ealty, 820-3333. TO W NHO USE, TEM PE, 1645 square feet, 2 large bedrooms, Vz baths, covered patio, covered parking. $4000, assume 9% % FHA loan. 820-1544, 839-1547. 2 W HY W ASTE your money on rent when you can own during your 4 years at college? Beautiful all-new condo, 2 large bedrooms, 2 baths, all appliances, tennis, pool. $59,900. Fantastic financing. Call Donna Stevens, ERA SaveCom Realty, 831-0998. 345-7940. U.S. GOVERNMENT SALE WHYRENT? Anyone can buy ... special terms, no escrow fees ... call Paul for a FREE LIST) BR/BADOW N 2/1 $1,400 3/2 $1,700 2/2 $2,300 3/2 $3,100 4/2 $2,900 4/2 $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., Tempe apartm ents fo r rent $ 4 2 5 :2 bedrooms, 2 baths, washer, dryer, refrigerator, dishwasher. 1077 W ; 1st St. (at Hardy). Apartm ent 101. 497-0450. ARBOR APARTM ENTS. Spacious, clean 2 bedroom. Pool. $390. No pets. 1548 W. University D r., Tempo. 967-6319. ASU O NE m ile. 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo. $150/each, 2 persons; $300 one person. 966-1729, 979-1971. DON’T M ISS out! At Terrace Road Apart­ ments w e have two openings: a large two bedroom, two bath, and a spacious one bedroom, one bath. Laundry facilities, beautiful pool, courteous m anagem ent, W block from cam pus, 950 S. Terrace Road. 966-8540. VERY LARGE 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo­ minium adjacent campus. W asher, dryer, refrigerator included. Im m ediate occupan­ cy. $675/m onth. Call Ben, 820-0500, 831-5158. WALK TO ASU. O ne bedroom furnished, washer, dryer, pool, covered parking. $385 plus utilities. 991-1701. homes fo r rent CENTRAL SCOTTSDALE. 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo. All appliances, all am enities of a resort. $700/m onth. 946-8982. CONDO FOR rent. Papago Park Village, near campus. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Call Phil, 982-9449. NICE TH REE bedroom home on Orange. W alk to campus. $550. Call D an Murphy at 966 9331. Q UIET 2 bedroom house, one mile from ASU. W ood floors, patio, atrium doors leading to large back yard. Call David, 968-3591. rental sharing CENTRAL SCOTTSDALE, 10 minutes from cam pus. Luxurious condo. Every­ thing new. Includes aH utilities, nice pool, lots of extras. $275.. 941-4550/m essage. COLLEGE STUDENT, fem ale preferred. Nice three bedroom. Own room , own bath. Husband, w ife, 2 year old. W e work 7-5. S c o tts d a le R o a d /M c K e llip s a re a . $225/m onth includes all. M aybe some evening babysitting. Jeff or M arcie, 9 96 2935, 951-4462. FEMALE NONSMOKER to share m aster bedroom in nicely furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath Papago Park Village II condo. V h miles from ASU. $210 plus Vb utilities. 9666394. FEMALE NONSMOKER needed for townhouse 1 m ile from campus. Very nice and spacious, $200. 921-1768. FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted to share com pletely furnished 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhouse. Own phone. Backyard. $300 month, Vz utilities. Nonsmoker. No pets. Debbie, 4361099. FEMALE ROOMMATE w anted. Large m aster bedroom. 3 bedroom condo. Private bath and entrance. $230 plus Vs utilities. Scottsdale. 947-1693. FEMALE TO share nice 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Fully furnished, washer, dryer, microwave, cable, computer. $250 plus Vs utilities. 8269411. FEMALE TO share 2 bedroom furnished apartm ent. Pool, tennis court, jacuzzi. $210/m onth, 1/z utilities. 346 7136. FEMALE TO share nice 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartm ent, Broadway and Rural area. Pool, w eight room, jacuzzi, etc. $250 plus V i utilities. 955-3973. HAYDEN SQUARE, a 3 bedroom condo, fully furnished. Fem ale, nonsmoker. Move in by Septem ber 1. Beautiful place. $25 6$350 per month plus Vi utilities. Call Eric, 9 66 2916. _________ _________ _ HAYDEN SQUARE: Need two room­ mates, share bedroom in brand new condo. Living room , den, furnished, washer, dryer, pool, jacuzzi. Call M ichelle, 921-0887. MALE STUDENT to share 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Five minute w alk to ASU. W asher, dryer, pool, jacuzzi. Available imm ediately. 829-8275 or 836 1601. MATURE STUDENT. Share 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Nonsmoker, no drugs. $250, Vi utilities. 968-4414. MESA FEMALE roommate^ Beautiful new 3 bedroom, 3 bath patio home. Microwave, VCR, large screen television, pool. $275. Vi utilities. Call H eidi, 497-1358. rental sharing help wanted FREE ROOM and board in exchange for child care, ages 11, 8. Prefer nonsmoking fem ale. Good hours for college student. Free hours 6 3 , Monday through Friday. Most weekends off. Private room, tele­ phone, pool, spa. Must have own car, references. Call 951-2388 for interview. F IN A N C IA L S E R V IC E S organization needs secretary 3 days a week. Good appearance. Must type. 4866875. ONE MALE roommate needed. Condo near Price and University. $195/m onth plus Vs utilities. 836 5196, 8365270. PEOPLE O RIENTED nonsmoking fem ale. Own room in 4 bedroom home. $185, V* utilities. Pool, bar, laundry, fireplace, microwave. C all Shari, 8367467. RESPO N SIB LE FEM ALE. Furnished, private room. Nice house, good neighbor­ hood. Laundry, cable, extra goodies. 4 miles ASU and MCC. $250, free utilities. Nonsmoker. M ardell, 831-5599. ROOM IN private home, 1 fem ale student. Everything furnished. Pool, spa, cable, etc. $200/m onth includes everything. 947-4912. ROOMMATE TO share nice 3 bedroom hom e.' W asher, dryer, microwave, pool, spa. Stapley/Baseline. Prefer nonsmoker. $250/m onth plus V t utilities. 497-9601. ROOM W ITH mother and teenage girl. Fem ale only. South Tempo. $200 includes utilities and kitchen privilegees. 838-6224. business opportunities A T T E N T IO N : N A T IO N A L S u n c a re Company has opened offices in Scotts­ dale area. W e are looking for people to train in direct one-on-one sales of sun and skin care products on prestigious resort pool 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 9467083. SENIO R INVESTM ENT brokers seek FIN or C IS majors with 2 to 3 sem esters to graduation; reasonable pay, possible intern credits, 20 hours a week. Submit resum e to Donald Morrow, or Richard Lund, Grubb and Ellis Comm ercial Broker­ age, 2390 E . Camelback Rd., Suite 1Q0, Phoenix 85016. help w anted ASU IS calling on you! ... On-campus location, convenient work schedule, $4/hour plus bonus, nightly incentives, gain valuable telem arketing experience. If you have sales ability, call the ASU Telefund at 9666754. BABYSITTERS NEEDED part-tim e, full­ tim e live-in nannys. Call Friends Forever, 436 1099. CAFE LOOKING for sandwich making and counter help during lunch hours 11 a.m .-3 p.m ., flexible hours. Hiring imm ediately. 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 Tem pe couple. Near Rurai/Southem . Monday-Friday, 6 6 p.m . $4/hour, supper, errands m ileage. Prefer upper classman. Must have car, references. Call Stefanie 6 5 p.m ., 952-3048; after 6 p.m ., 836 1643. COLLEGE STUDENTS, earn $6-$10 per hour working part-tim e on cam pus. For more inform ation call 1-806932-0528. DAY CARE help needed in our m edical office. Several openings, flexible hours. $3.35/hour. Priest/Southern. 829-8741 daytim e; 826 2280 evenings/weekends. DISABLED INDIVIDUAL needs assistance w ith personal care and/or dom estic chores. To apply and for more information contact: Jim Hemauer a t 9661234. DISABLED W ORKING professional is looking for part-tim e and/or live-in person­ al aide. Must have transportation and live near Ahwatukee area. Kevin, 256 2758 days; 893 8779 after 7 p.m . DISHW ASHERS, HOSTESSES, and deliv­ ery drivers. Delivery drivers must have own insured vehicle. Apply in person at W acky W illy's, 1120 E. Apache on the com er of Apache and Terrace. DRIVERS W ANTED: Earn $6-$8 per hour as a delivery person with Domino's Pizza. W e are number one in delivery nationwide with over 3500 stores; Drivers earn excel­ lent hourly wage plus tips and m ileage. Full or part-tim e, flexible day or evening hours. A fun and rewarding job. Many delivery people advance to our manage­ m ent training program. Must be 18 or older, with a good driving record, car, and insurance. W e want dependable, cleancut people w illing to hustle. Applications w ill be accepted at 903 S. Rural Road, Tem pe, 9 6 6 5555. And other valley loca­ tions after 11 a.m . daily. Equal opportunity FRATERNITY RESIDENT advisor wanted. Must be responsible grad student. Free room and board. Contact Jim Harris, 839-4727 after 6. HARRY AND S teve’s Chicago G rill accepting applications for dishwashers, cooks, and hosts. Call 844 8448 for appointment. HOUSE CLEANING, 2 mornings a week. Scottsdale. $5.50/hour. 9462003. KAY JEW ELERS, part-tim e position avail­ able, Paradise Valley M all. Contact Jeff, 9962112. L IV E -IN B A B Y S IT T E R /h o u seke ep er wanted. Hours 1 8 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. C all for interview after August 26. 967-5682. LIVE-IN HO USEKEEPER wanted for cleaning, laundry, and child care. Flexible hours. Nonsmoker. Own transportation and references required. Room, board, plus salary. 9918879. LOW STRESS jobs. Part-tim e office clean­ ers needed. W ork 2 8 hours per night. E venin gs M onday through F rid ay. Advancem ent opportunity. Scottsdale locations. Call 945-4994. MESA YM CA is now accepting applica­ tions for prim e-tim e school-age child care program. Must be 18 years or older. Part-tim e hours from 2 8 p.m . Monday through Friday, $ 3 .5 6 $ 5 per hour. For more inform ation, call 9698166. NEAR ASU! The Courtyard by M arriott Hotel is hiring full and part-tim e 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 inform ation call 966 4300. help w anted SCIENCE TUTOR for high school student, 3:3 6 5 :3 0 p.m . weekdays. $10/hour. Own transportation. Mesa, 9462003. ATTENTIO N: STARDUSTERS- M eeting changed. W ednesday, August 26, room 222, M ohave Room in M U. Bring money for dues! See you there! SOM ETHING THAT everyone needs to survive, w ater! Mary earned $10,000 her first month. Opportunities to m ake money unlim ited. C all after 7:30 p.m. 9918417. SIGM A CHI little sisters: M eeting tonight at 5:30. Im portant rush information. STOP NUCLEAR weapons testing. Ad­ m inistrative assistant to fund raiser, full­ tim e, some computer. Im m ediately. Need car. To $1000 per month. Call 921-3090. STUDENT W ANTED for child care. 3 8 p.m . Monday through Friday. Fiesta Mall area. 2562402, 836 2 1 8 4 after 6 p.m . T.C . EGGINGTON’S Brunchery, an excit­ ing breakfast and lunch restaurant is interviewing for waitress positions. Apply in person after 2:30 daily. 1660 S. Alma School, M esa. TEM PE MARKET research firm needs telephone interviewers for evening and/or weekend shifts. No sales. 967-4441. TH E ARIZONA Educational Information System (AEIS) 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 inform ation which entails operating a copy m achine and handling telephones. Neat appearance required. An opportunity to gain educational information on-the-job. H o urs fle x ib le . C a ll 965 -71 61 fo r appointm ent. TH E LOOP, a new fast-food concept in a totally authentic setting of yesteryear Chicago. Needs full-tim e/part-tim e, male or fem ale help. Apply daily 11 a.m .-9 p.m . Southwest com er of Lemon and Terrace, Tem pe. W ANTED: ACCOUNTING m ajor inter­ ested in CPA firm experience. Close to ÁSU. Part-tim e. Call Eileen, 968-3326. NEED EXPERIENCED sales people for swim shop in M esa Monday, W ednesday, Friday, 1 6 1 ; Saturday 1 0 8 . Phoenix, Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday. Hours m ay vary. C all 264-7774; W ANTED: NOTETAKERS for notetaking service. Teachers assistants, graduate students and seniors with a 3.5 grade point average or better qualify. The job pays $7 8 1 0 an hour. Call 966-4225, to set up an interview. A great opportunity to earn while you leam . C all today! PART-TIM E HELP needed. The Picture Place, lower level of the M em orial Union. Apply in person. W ANTED: PART-TIM E attendant/akfo for 33 year old gentlem an. Apache Terrace area. Inquire, 9688871. PART-TIM E, light industrial, warehouse, and errands runner position. 15 minutes from ASU. Flexible schedule. 2562402. PART-TIM E, FULL-TIM E set your own hours. Tem pe area. Sm all Business Distri­ butors of Am erica is looking for several well-spoken, dependable people to help us m arket a new idea nationwide over watts lines. If you would like to m ake an above average income w hile talking to people in »n ice air conditioned office, give us a call. Ron, 921-9966. PART-TIM E DATA entry person needed for sm all office that produces art festivals. Evenings. DBase III or- computer exper­ ience required. M ill Avenue Merchants Association, 520 S. M ill, Suite 201. 967-4877. PART-TIM E PO SITIONS available. Deliv­ eries, hostesses, and waitress. Salads Plus, 68th Street and, Thomas. 994-9849. PART-TIM E DATA entry positions avail­ able evenings near ASU. Start $4 per hour. Requires typing 60 words per m inute, 10 key by touch. Contact Becci at Reality Sim ulations, 9678424. P A R T-TIM E W O R K. Flexib le hours, housewares and sporting goods, student m anager training. $10.25 per hour, East Valley location. Call 826 7 8 0 3 noon to 4 p.m . W est Valley, 6 1 2 , 2798630. -— •■ i.,PERFECT PART-TIM E job. 4 :3 6 9 . Q uali­ fied leads m ake our telem arketing easier. $4/hour plus commission plus bonuses equals $61Q /hour. O ur south Scottsdale office is dose to campus. 947-0508. 4 . POOL M ANAGERS. Need m otivated persons to sell Panam a 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 1 0 8 . Good money and excellent working conditions. Call between 1 6 5 . Five Star Resort Pool Managem ent. 941-2751. PROFESSOR'S FAMILY w ill provide sm all but private studio apartm ent free plus $80/m onth in exchange for 20 hours/week childcare: Monday to Thursday, 2 8 :1 5 p.m .; Friday, 7-9 a.m . Two blocks from campus. 968 8 6 7 6 after 6 p.m . SALES TRAINEE, no experience neces­ sary. 8 week training program. $7/hour guaranteed salary to start. 2 shifts avail­ able, 4 :369:30 a.m . and 3 :3 6 8 p.m . Sell industrial tools nationwide via wats. Call John, 8367847. on-campus W ANTED: SEVERAL highly motivated students! Do you enjoy working with pepple? Are you looking for a job that is challenging and w ill look good on your resume? No nights! No weekends! For information and applications inquire at the Student Employment O ffice, Matthews Center Lobby, and ask for a referral to job 284A. Begin 9 8 8 7 , continue through spring and sum m er (Especially looking for students who are available 6 1 2 , MondayFriday.) W OMAN NEEDED for part-tim e help in my home. Dobson and Elliott. Joe, 732-0811. Swensen’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. F/P tim e days & nights avail. W elcom e back! STARDUSTERS RUSH: You’ve got one day and that’s it, so don’t miss the best little sister rush with the Kappa Sigmas at ASU! Starting at 8 a.m . with breakfast and lasting all day! Come on girls, don’t miss it - be there!! W E REGRET to inform you that the State Press w ill no longer be able to take classified ads in the M em orial Union. Our office in the basem ent of M atthews Center is open from 7 a.m . to 5 p.m ., or call 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 an d use y o u r V is a or M astercard. ATTENTIO N UNIVER SITY departm ents, organizations, and clubs: Need to place a display ad in the State Press? Your campus representative is Jackie ElcJridge. Call 966 7572 8 a.m . to 5 p.m . daily. personals BE SURE to read the On-Cam pus column for any m eetings or events! ALPHA GAMMA D elta pledges: W elcome! W e’re so glad to have you in our sister­ hood. W e love you! Let’s have a great year!! The actives. BODY, M IND, spirit. W hich are you? Call Hubbard Dianetics Foundation, 264-2381. BROW N EYED, brunette beauty: I saw you Friday at U Tan and I have to see you again. W e talked politics, remember? Scott M . FIF1, “ I died in your arms last night, must have been some kindof kiss." TopGun. IS IT possible to increase your intelli­ gence? Call Hubbard Dianetics Founda­ tion, 264-2381. THETA DELT Dolphsters, I missed you this summer too. Glad to be back, espe­ cially with you! Love, your Pleeby. WHEEL o r REGISTRATION W IN $25!! I w ill p a y S25 to A nyone W illing to D rop JRN 301 (R eporting) Providing I a m a b le to Pick-up th e Class. Ya d o n 't w in. it Ya D on't Play! C all A IM f f lU S 438-1886 ot tW -T W n tffc services EX-CHIPPENDALE available for private functions. 2348014. EXPRESS AUTO Service. W e come to you. O il change, air condition charge, radiator service, from $12.95. All services done at your home in our no-mess selfcontained vans. 4369023. PROTECT YOURSELF! Have a peephole installed in your door. $15. C all 921-2637 or 921-2214. TR I-C ITY M ini Storage, 1445 E. M cKellips, Tem pe between McKellips and M iller. G reat location, managed by ASU grad and best of all, reasonable prices. Rent a 5x5 for $18/m onth to store your extra books, clothes, bikes, etc. O r share one with a friend and split the cost. Call 945-0343. P ric e & B aselin e transportation instruction AEROBIC INSTRUCTO RS Certification W orkshop, weekend of Septem ber 12th at ASU by National Aerobics Training Asso­ ciation. Call 966 9415 or 8969289. FRENCH LESSONS. Teaching or tutoring availab le. $ 5 -1 0 7hour. C all M artino, 9628332. G R E -G M A T-L S A T C O A C H IN G Crack The System The Princeton R ev ie w 9 5 2 -8 8 5 0 ATTENTION: FREE cars to all major cities. 21 or older. Call AAA Driveaway, 277-9979. CARS AVAILABLE - 21 or older. All States Drive-away, 992-5200. travel A IR LIN E CO UPONS w anted: United Bonus tickets; W estern Extra; others. Up to $350 each. 8 0 6 2 5 6 4 0 6 0 . PLANE TICK ET to Albuquerque over Labor Day weekend, $45 roundtrip. Call Claire, 9678284. ty p in g / word processing pets FREE KITTENS (4) to caring home. Call M ark, 8948152. on-campus $1.25 DOUBLE spaced page. A-1 letter quality word processing. 32 years exper­ ience. M arian, 839 4289. CALL M E tor fast, accurata, quality service at com petitive prices. Close to ASU. 966-2188. em ployer. NEED 3 nonsmoking fem ales to sahre 4 bedroom townhouse near Rural and Guadalupe immediately. Pool, tennis. Dawn, 897-9625, 8966872. OLDER, SERIOUS fem ale student seeks same to share 2 bedroom, 1 bath, peace­ ful courtyard apartm ent, 40th S treet/ Thomas. $200, Vi utilities. 955-5271. E X P E R IE N C E D B A N Q U E T servers needed. W e work around your schedule. Sam e week pay. Call today, 831 8145, Snelling Tem poraries. EXPERIENCED PIZZA m aker part-tim e. Apply in person, Tony's New Yorker, 107 E. Broadway. DISCJOCKEYS No experience necessary, we train M ale/Fem ale Part-tim e Reliable vehicle required 968-9898 On-Campus 1908 The Norm al Echo, October 16, 1908: "Advice to new students: The drink­ ing fountains are not broken. If you are thirsty use them . If you’re not thirsty, iu m them on anyway. You’ll be thirsty all right by the tim e your cup’s fu ll." SHO RT O F TIM E? I can help. R ea­ so n ab le. P ro fess io n a l. G u aran teed . Experienced In academ ic. C all Jessie 945-5744. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G , s e c re ta ria t services. 23 years experience. Student discount. SW com er. M iller and Chapar­ ral. 994-8145. Page go State Tuesday, August 25,1987 ALPHA TAU OMEGA’S House Christening II Greek men only—all girls Friday, August 28th, 7:30 P.M. £L □L m " »1 o ' i • •rñeaiV^'i AID Raising money to fight muscular dystrophy through sponsors like these ... H O N D A °T h e ° ; l o d o C o rn e r s to n e ESTABLISHED 1984 E J ■BANGERRESOURCES' 4221 N. Winfield Scott Plaza• Suite 1 • Scottsdale. Arizona 85251 (602)946-2222 T O P S LIQUORS, IN C Tempe Center 909 South Mill Tempe, AZ 85281 q c 7 c c y io W f -0 0 ^ 0 BOB MEYER AIR CONDITIONING & HEATING 5030 E. VALLEY V IS TA LANE PARADISE VALLEY, A R IZO N A 85253 P H O N E 265-1098 UNIVERSITY TOWERS E A ST E R N W e earn our w ings ev e ry d a y ® (6 Cornerstone M all 894-2254 Sle P i c t u r e P la c e BARNEYS Beer A Wine KEG W ORLD C O U € G € TOURS 01 602-263-8520 C H IC A G O GRILL 844-8448 C O M PLEIE CATERING COMPANY th e Tempe Center 4 5 5 4 N. Cantra) Averto*. Phoenix. AZ 8 5 0 1 2 1042 S. Terrace, Tempe 968-6622 (com er o f Lemon & Terrace) 966-9900 M 99 JAM'S 967-9040 d erred The h a ir p e r fo r m e r s gentlem an Cinnamon Tree Center 903 S. Rural Rd., Tempe CALL 967-1689 FOR DETAILS! 965-4444 8 9 4 -0 1 8 4