state press Arizona State University’s M orning Daily B laze fo rce s students out of M anzanita Hall 1,000 evacuated in trash-chute fire By MIKE BURGESS State Press A first-alarm fire in Manzanita Residence Hall forced nearly 1,000 students out of their dorm rooms for several hours Tuesday night, but no one w as injured. H ie fire was concentrated in the fourth floor garbage chute, causing sm oke and extensive water dam age from autom atic sprinklers, a Tempe fire spokesman said. The fire itself caused little damage. The fifth and sixth floors of M a n z a n ita , Tempe’s tallest building, sustained minor w ater and sm oke dam age, Tempe fire B atallion C hief Steve Roninger said. Hallways w ere flooded and two residence rooms had water dam age. The building’s basem ent collected m ost of the water, Roninger said, and firefighters spent nearly two hours pumping it out. He could not provide a dollar estim ate of dam age and said the fire is under investigation. “It was definitely real,” Roninger said, responding to lethargic students who did not believe the fire was occuring. “It’s a danger if they think it’s not real.” Geoff Tan, a freshm an engineering student, said he was studying for a test when the alarm went off. “At first I didn’t think it was real. I thought someone pulled the alarm ,” he said. “Then the RA’s started yelling.” Some students reported a lit cigarette was thrown down the chute, triggering the 7:01 p.m . call. Roninger declined to speculate on the reports. Students complained the trash chute has been backed up too much this year. Susie Schneider, a freshm an business m ajor, said: “Trash chutes are always backed up or they’re alw ays locked. At first I thought (the alarm ) w as a mess-up. Then there was smoke coming out of the garbage chute. So we said, ‘Let’s get the hell out.’ ” Andy MrmmkVStat* Press Tempe firefighters walk toward the main entrance to the Manzanita residence hall Tuesday night in response to a first-alarm fire that started in the building garbage chute. No injuries were reported as 1,000 people were evacuated. G overnor’s m essage sent to 925,000 households By TW YLA PUMROY State Press IMS, P P 6 T A S & The Governor’s Report to the People of A rizona, Gov. E van M echam ’s long- Pf M IT JN StD E ' ;- m sto r y. ., », H R ,« , ................. M s#«wdepcwwbi#, pillili FHHTMU HEN BMTBI . . J rVAsrem IWtaresmssnsslassSM p t f M R H ? BemSSrsWeSSWt ■ M M M O W n M t V B U M »«U an#ihs ssi&my m m m p m tm tw ..to The front page of Gov. Evan Mecham’s report to Arizona voters displays Mecham holding up a “ Say no to drugs” T-shirt. promised tabloid to bypass a “hostile” p r e ss, w ent out to 925,000 A rizona households Tuesday. The 36-page tabloid was m ailed to all registered voters at a cost of $180,000, paid by privately funded advertising. Tile governor’s tabloid features a front­ page color photograph of Mecham holding a “Say No to Drugs” T-shirt and articles by Mecham about his accom plishm ents in office. Former 1984-85 State Press editor Len Munsil pens an article that complains the Arizona media have repeatedly violated journalistic ethics in covering Mecham. “Keep in mind that the press seeks out and reports even the m ost ridiculous criticism s of the governor, while ignoring anything said in his favor,” Munsil writes. “The press unwittingly associates Mecham in.the minds of its readers with crazies who wear white sheets or sw astikas.” Mecham’s articles address problems with Arizona universities’ budgets, the Martin Luther King holiday, the drug program, the 65 mph speed lim it and unfair press coverage of his administration. One of the tab loid ’s in sid e pages juxtaposed a positive story from the Tucson Citizen with a critical story from the Arizona Republic, both about a Mecham i Family, friends lament ‘Babe’ Alex’s death By MIKE BURGESS State Press Copyright, 1987, State P ress SCOTTSDALE — “Babe” Alex, one of ASU’s “biggest boosters,” was ready to enter his plea in a gam bling case that haunted him for months. But Alex, 65, failed to stop at an intersection during a routine drive to a friend’s house alm ost three weeks ago and collided with another car. He died the next morning. Orest John “Babe” Alex, a Sun Angel Foundation board member who accom panied the ASU football team on away gam es, w as one of five men indicted by a Maricopa County grand jury in March for allegedly operating a gam bling ring. A lex’s death has left his involvem ent in the alleged ring unresolved, although charges against him w ere dism issed when his death certificate was signed. “It was eating him up,” A lex’s w ife, Jack E ., said in a « X ... . X': ; recent interview at the modest home she shared with “Babe.” “He was absolutly devastated that they were trying to link his activities with ASU,” she said. “He was absolutely crushed.” Law enforcem ent officials say the ring, which was an alleged center for sports betters interested in placing money on professional and college sports, handled about $50,000 a week in bets and m ay have handled $l m illio n a year. Lt. Mike Frazier, head of special investigations for Phoenix police, said the gambling case has been closed and those indicted have entered pleas. He declined to comment on Alex’s case, referring inquiries to the Maricopa County Attorney’s office. Jam es Keppel, the deputy county attorney prosecuting the case, was unavailable for comment. Jack E . said her husband’s activity in the alleged ring Turn to BASE, pogo 11. — _ m eeting with Hispanic community leaders. The headline above reads: ‘You Compare — The Same Story’. The governor, who published a daily Phoenix-area newspaper during the 1960s, claim s in the newspaper that the media are “elitists,” and use selective reporting to emphasize negative stories and play down stories that portray the governor in a positive light. The governor’s office at first refused to give copies of the the tabloid to reporters, although it was being handed out to top aides and a group of former Arizona political leaders who m et with Mecham. “ T h is g o es d ir e c tly to the voter households of the state of Arizona,” Mecham spokesman Ron Bellus said, who reacted angrily when he saw that a reporter had gotten a copy. Bellus later said the tabloid was planned before the governor was elected and was never intended to address the recall issue or problems in the governor’s office. “This was a positive piece; that’s the way it was meant to be,” he said. “The governor decided before he was elected to have a direct link, in print, with the public.” R ecall volunteer and spokesman Ed Morse said the Mecham R ecall Committee also m ailed its monthly newsletter Tuesday which goes to 3,000 households. The Associated Press contributed to this report. \ — y ...... in s id e to d a y A SU W EATH ER Sunny and hot today with an expected high of 105 degrees. TR A G ED Y An A S U student w as killed In a Labor Day weekend autom obile accident in Tem pe. Page 12. C la ssifie d ................................................................ 33 C o m ics...................................... 16 Entertainm ent..........................................................17 O pin ion................................................................... 4 S p orts.... ............ 27 Page 2 Wednesday, J jP * « F H u ,1987 to d a y •The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at A SU . A ny cam pus club or organization can subm it entries to the calendar for publication to the State Press, located In the basem ent of Mattjwws Center, Room 15. Entries will not be taken over the phone. Deadline fo r the entries will be 1 p.m . the previous business day. Entries may be edited due to content or space. M eetings *Cam pus Aglow , a Christian fellow ship, w ill m eet for discu ssion today at 12:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. •Am erican Hum anics w ill m eet today at 5:40 p.m. in the M U P inal South Room. •The N a tiv e A m e r ic a n S tu d e n t Association w ill be planning for upcom ing events today at 2:30 p.m. in the MU Coconino Room . Events include a cookout in W indow R ock and a brotherhood PowWow in Tucson. •The Travel Club at A SU w ill be d iscu ssing an upcom ing ski trip and other travel-related item s today at 6 p.m. in the M U W est C och ise Room. •The W izard’s and W argam er’s G uild will be having an introductory m eeting for anyone interested in role-playing gam es today at 7 p.m. Anyone not able to attend can write to the group at Box 48, Student Life, M U Room 48. •The M UAB Gallery Com m ittee w ill hold a general m eeting today at 3:30 p.m. in the M U P inal Room North. • T h e N a t io n a l A s s o c i a t io n of Accountants w ill have an organizational m eeting today at 4:45 p.m. in B A C 211. Federal Bureau of Investigation agent Jack Sm ythe w ill speak on the accounting field in the FBI. •The ASU Rugby C lub w ill practice gam e b asics for the benefit of new members today at 6 p.m. at Sahuaro field. For more Information contact Jo e at 784-8626. •Christian Cam pus M inistry w ill be studying “ The Dark S id e of M oney” today at 5:30 p.m . in Danforth Chapel. •The A ssociation of W omen’s Active Return to Education (AW ARE) w ill meet today at 12:30 p.m. in the M U Apache Room . •The H isp an ic B u sin e ss A ssociation w ill /will have S tu d en ts’ a general m eeting today at 3:30 p.m. in B A 253. New m em bers of a ll m ajors welcom e. •The United Cam pus Christian Ministry w ill hold a B ible Study/Com m union today at 8 p.m in Danforth Chapel. Lectures 'C o lu m n is t Ja ck A nderson w ill be speaking in the M U Arizona Room today at 12:30 p.m. a s part of the A S A S U Lecture Series. See story, page 7. e v e r y m o r n in g STATE PRESS Todd Omn/StatePreu Chilling Out Sun Devil Inside Linebacker Drew Metcalf takes a break from the heat during a recent afternoon practice. The team has been doing a lot of sweating getting ready for the season opener against Illinois in Champaign on Saturday. E b w e r t o o ls f o r s ro o m * The TI-74 offers B A SIC programming with a 113 B A S IC keyword set. There's'8K Constant Memory and subroutine capability for advanced programming flexibility. T I programmable calculators have all the right functions and enough extra features to satisfy your thirst for power. To all you science and engineering majors unsatisfied w ith mere calculators, TI has good news, four power tools are G 1967 TI. ’"Trademark of Texas Instalments Incorporated here. T he TI-95 PROCALC™ is keystroke programmable and the TI-74 BASICALC™ is BASIC language programmable. Each has a foil range of scientific, m athem atical and statistical functions, and plenty o f power extras. Both have optional equipm ent such as Solid State Software™ modules, » TTk TI-95 offers powerful 7200-step keystroke programming and features our exclusive Fbuer easy access to thefunaians a n d f l e x including math, statistics and chem ical engineering, and a module with an additional 8K Constant Memory. Additional power accessories include a separate portable printer and cassette interface. So if you’re into power; look for the display m your bookstore for a demon- i b n , , ■ k ^ ^ ^ ^ stration o f our power tools. T hey build such a strong case for them selves; our com petition doesn’t know what tom ak eofth em . m Te x a s * In stru m en ts i: S M tP rc u Wednesday September 9,1987 w o rld /n a tio n in b rie f Iraq claim s responsibility for attacks of tankers near Iran’s Kharg island MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — Iraq said its warplanes attacked two ships Tuesday night near Iran’s Kharg Island oil term inal, ending a brief lull in the Persian Gulf fe»m»»r war before a U.N. peace m ission to the region. The official Iraqi News Agency said two “large m aritim e targets,” which usually mean tankers, were hit at 9 p.m . east of Kharg. It did not identify the vessels and there was no independent confirmation of attacks near the t e r m in a l in the northern gulf. Iraq’s announcement raised to 25 the number of ships reported hit since Aug. 29 by either Iran or Iraq, which have been at war since September 1980. Before the latest round, there was a six-week period after passage of a U.N. cease-fire resolution during which few raids on com m ercial shipping occurred and Iran increased its oil exports by about 20 percent. Docum ents Indicate Bush aides knew of North’s Contra relations WASHINGTON (AP) — Aides to Vice President George Bush received a stream of clues indicating Lt. Col. Oliver L. North was “chairman of the board” of a secret effort to resupply Contra rebels in Nicaragua but they never told Bush, according to depositions and documents made public Tuesday. One Bush associate, Army Col. Samuel J. Watson, said the vice president was not told of allegations that a group of corrupt p ro fiteers w ith unsavory connections w as overcharging the Contras for weapons and supplies because the information was unproven and “not m ature.” The words “resupply of the Contras” appear in a memo prepared for Bush by his staff to describe the purpose of a m eeting he and his aides were to have with former CIA agent F elix Rodriguez seven months before the Iran-Contra affair becam e public last year. Bush, a former director of the CIA and now the frontrunner for the 1988 Republican presidential nomination, has acknowledged knowing Rodriguez. Civilian volunteers aid in search for survivors of Venezuelan m udslide MARACAY, Venezuela (AP) — Civilian volunteers joined troops and civil defense units Tuesday in the search for R A Y B A N ® survivors of a 10-foot-deep tide of mud that swept hundreds of cars off a mountain road. No official casualty figures have been released. Unofficial reports said there were 150 known dead in the mudslide and floods, 250 m issing, 1,000 people injured and 20,000 hom eless. The mudslide roared down the mountain Sunday after torrential rains, wiping out three m iles of the road. Col. Hector Vargas, who was involved with the army rescue effort, pointed into the mountains in the direction of the road and said: “It is a very ugly disaster. There must be plenty of dead still up there;” Fam ilies were caught returning home from outings when tons of mud, boulders and uprooted trees swept across the highway that runs through the mountains between Maracay and the beach resort of Ocumare de la Costa on Venezuela’s central coast. C h ad overruns major Libyan base; more than 1,700 reported killed N ’DJAMENA, Chad (AP) — Chad’s m ilitary command said Tuesday its forces killed more than 1,700 Libyan soldiers and destroyed more than two dozen aircraft and scores of tanks when it overran a major Libyan base over the weekend. In Washington, the State Department defended the Chadian strike, saying there were still as many as 5,000 Libyan soldiers in northern Chad. On Saturday, Chadian troops intercepted a Libyan column en route to attack the northeastern Chad outpost of Ounianga-Kebir, routed it and chased the invaders 60 m iles back into Libya, capturing the Matan as-Sarra base. Tripoli responded Monday by sending bombers on two raids deep into Chad, losing one of their Tupolev 22 planes to an American-made Hawk anti-aircraft m issile fired by French soldiers in the capital of N’Djamena. Firefighters make slow progress battling blazes in western forests (AP) — Firefighters made slow but steady progress Tuesday against huge forest fires still burning out of control in the West, but a “gray murk” of smoke sickened som e of them , kept trucks from hauling their gear and grounded aircraft. About 1,000 people were still unable to return to their hom es in California because of fire danger. Army infantrymen traded rifles for hoes and shovels to mop up fires in Oregon. More than 1,000 square m iles of brush and timber have burned in eight Western states since lightning began setting hundreds of fires on Aug. 28. More than 1,000 fires had burned over 519,000 acres in northern California, and nearly 111,000 acres were hlackened in southern Oregon. Combined with 30,000 acres charred in Idaho, and sm aller fires in Arizona, Montana, South Dakota, W a s h in g to n and Wyoming, fires had blazed across 670,700 acres, or 1,048 square m iles. Soviets allow 3 U.S. congressm en access to controversial radar system WASHINGTON (AP) — Three congressm en who visited a Soviet radar system said Tuesday they were unable to conclude if the unit violates the 1972 Anti-Ballistic M issile treaty but they praised the Soviets for perm itting access to the secret facility. “This was an extraordinary step in confidence-building, an extraordinary visit for arms control,” said Rep. Thomas Downey, D-N.Y., in a statem ent echoed by Reps. Jim Moody, D-Wis., and Bob Carr, D-Mich. They spent a day last week inspecting the Soviet radar system at Krasnoyarsk, a facility in the central Soviet Union which has been the focus of a superpower dispute. The Reagan administration contends the radar is designed to track incoming enemy nuclear m issiles, a purpose known as battle management, and is thus banned by the 1972 treaty lim iting such system s. The Soviets argue that the radar is for tracking objects in deep space, which would not be a violation. Siam ese twins survive separation; doctors induce recuperative com a BALTIMORE (AP) — Siam ese twins who w ere separated in a 22-hour operation over the weekend remained in critical but stable condition Tuesday as doctors closely monitored their drug-induced com as. The 7-month-old infants, Patrick and Benjamin Binder, were lying “very still,” sleeping in separate cribs at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center, hospital spokeswoman Joann Rodgers said Tuesday. At least one physician and two nurses were monitoring the babies around the clock, doctors said. Doctors plan to keep the children in a pentobarbitol coma at least until Thursday, to give their brains a chance to heal from the surgery that ended Sunday morning. The pair had been attached at the head. A R E G O IN G U P E v e s & T ’s f ig h t s b a c k ! W ayfarer n o w (Old sug. ret. S A V R A E Y 3 0 - 5 0 % B A N ® S O U 4 F F N G 4 . 8 0 “ O L D * ' L A S Olympian (old sug. ret $59) N O W i S R I N E T A O U I L R P O R I O (old sug. ret. $94) N O W I C A N E S O T I C N E S T O V E C R Y K •O p tica l quality glass, lenses NOW f l } •Excellent protection from harmful ul•Ever-expanding selection of the la te st fr o m * * * ^ H | P W — travi ol et rays colors & styles W KKM M w • P e rfe c t for sports & general use ■^effective 9 /1 /8 7 , Bausch & Lomb raised all Rayban sunglasses prices by 8°/o to 20°/o (Sale good thru 9/13/87) The World's Finest Sunglasses Are At The World's Finest Sunglass Store! 'p a c ific ¡ § § i ¡ ¡ J p Tow er Plaza 38th St & Thomas Chrlstow n Mall 19th Ave. & Bethany Home 2 44-9119 4 3 3 -2 9 4 9 W estridge Mall 75th Ave. & Thomas Cornerstone C enter Tempe: 725 S. Rural Rd. 8 73-2607 I 966 -5 5 6 0 __________ opinion_______ E s s i ________________________ ;______________ There and back No ideology can alone compensate for inhumanity Meadro was dead. The news stunned the Los Angeles department store where I worked at the tim e. Meadro was a jovial little man in his 60s. He had em igrated to the United States from the Carribean — Jam aica, I think — and enjoyed a slender portion of American prosperity on his m odest w ages as a stockman. His only com plaint w as about the shopping carts he had to faring in from the parking lot several tim es a day. They had to go up a steep ramp which made a 45-degree turn before reaching the store. It was back­ breaking work. Why did he alw ays have to bring in the shopping carts?, Meadro would ask. He’d been with the store a long tim e. There were plenty of teen-age stockm en who could do the job. There were plenty of other things he could do instead. Why did the managers alw ays send him out to get the carts? He w as an old man; he had a bad heart; it affected his health. As usual, the union was useless. I asked the store’s union representative why Meadro, with his seniority, had to bring in shopping carts when there w ere plenty of young kids to do it. “Can’t do anything about that,” he replied indifferently. “It’s in his job description.” So when we cam e to work one morning and learned, one by one, that Meadro had died the previous night of a heart attack, a sickening pall gathered over the store. The managers who had been thoughtlessly sending Meadro out to get the shopping carts w ere particularly depressed; it seem ed to ruin their whole day. I had been describing m yself as a socialist for som e tim e when this happened. Meadro’s death symbolized to me the dinosaur stupidity of capitalism . The system hadn’t even profited by his death! Meadro was right: There were plenty of other people who could have brought in the damned carts without risking their health or the store’s profits. Meadro’s life had been squandered to uphold the sacred text of the job description. My interest in socialism had led m e to plan an extended visit to Israel, where I would live for several months on a kibbutz: the communal, agricultural settlem ents which, by a ll reports, represented the only experim ent with dem ocratic communism that had been successful over an extended period of tim e. I left not long after Meadro died, hopeful of finding a better, more decent and just society than that which exists in the United States. I did. And it left m e depressed, because I realized the conditions of the success of Israel’s kibbutzim (plural of kibbutz) were such that it could not be duplicated here or anywhere else. The kibbutzim are clearly a success story. Started m ainly by revolutionary Jews from Russia and eastern Europe at the turn of the c e n tu r y , th e r e a r e now about 300 settlem ents o f various sizes. Although accounting for only about 3 to 4 percent of Israelis population, they account for 40 percent of the country’s agriculture and a sm aller but increasing percent of its light industry. The kibbutzim also contribute much of the Israeli arm y’s officer corps. At the sam e tim e, they are the bastion of som e of Israel’s m ost progressive elem ents, supporting the cause of territorial compromise and peace with the Arabs: You won’t find any kibbutzim on the W est Bank. I spent more than seven months on Kibbutz Gat — about an iiou r south of Jerusalem by bus. It was typical in many w ays, such as in its population (roughly 300 members, plus a contingent of volunteers and a group of about 30 underprivileged teen-agers who had come from Israel’s slum s to the healthier agricultural setting), its products (cattle, citrus, wheat, chick peas), and its politics (radical). Typical also were its institutions: the com m unal d in in g h a ll, ro ta tio n of leadership positions, equality of housing and all m aterial benefits, policy decisions made democratically during meetings open to all m em bers, the com m unal raisin g of children. ‘The system hadn’t even profited by his death! . . . M eadro’s life had been squandered to uphold the sacred text of the job description. ’ This last practice, one of the most severely criticised of kibbutz institutions, struck m e as being one of the best. Children have plently of tim e to be with their parents in the evening after work; they have as much or more parental attention as their American counterparts. But during the day and at night their care is delegated to the professional sta ff of the “ children’s houses,” all of which were connected by phone with the parents’ apartments. There were some erosions of Marxist orthodoxy, however. The kibbutz had trouble keeping professional people who could live more comfortably elsewhere. Paying such people wages would violate the Marxist “labor theory of value,” but they did it anyway; the kibbutz nurse was the only person who had'her own private car. I w as im pressed that the kibbutz had enough common, bay-horse sense to set ideology aside if it worked against the general w elfare of the community. When the principles of dem ocracy com e in conflict with the principles of socialism , the kibbutz will alw ays opt for dem ocracy. It w as w onderful, and it left me depressed. It w as a truism there that “The kibbutz is not for everyone.” The system worked because the kibbutzniks wanted to be there, a n d w e r e w illin g to a c c e p t thè disadvantages of communal living — the lack of privacy, uniform ity of dress and living standards, gossip as the chief form of communication — in order to realize the ideals of socialism . A true socialist econom y can never really work on a national level because the one essential elem ent that m akes socialism effective on the kibbutz — the strong desire of its m em bers to live in a socialist com m unity— w ill never com e close to being realized. Indeed, one only has to look at the bloody history of forced collectivism in the Soviet Union, China, Cuba, Ethiopia and southeast Asia to see that forcing even the noblest ideals of the few onto the lives of the many leads only to human tragedy, m isery and m assacre. Certainly this century has seen the perpetration of the m ost enourmous acts of barbarism in 'a ll of human history: barbarism which w as alw ays justified by the invocatimi of any number of words ending with the suffix “ism .” So, sadder but w iser, I returned to the United States. When I think about Meadro now, I realize that he was not killed by capitalism ; he was killed by people. There is no system or ideology which, in the absense of ethics and sensitivity and ordinary kindness on the part of ordinary people, w ill ever abolish injustice — not socialism , not capitalism, not anything. le tte rs quotable What a neat idea! ‘Socialism has long been discredited intellectually. Editor: All this ASASU hubbub: c o m p u te r t e r m in a ls , appointment books, petty abuse of fiscal authority — I can’t for the life of m e understand how this w as allowed to happen. It seem s we wouldn’t have gotten into this fine m ess if a more discreet strategy had been followed. For the future, I have one to suggest. First off, w e need som e surplus football equipment — not too much, just enough to keep a program going. Now this w e could sell — discreetly — to the U of A athletic departm ent. This s a le c o u ld q u ie tly b e ch a n n elled through th e o f f ic e s o f A s s o c ia t e d Students of U of A. We m ight eyen disguise it with a few cases from Robert’s Rules of Order, just to be on the safe side. N ext, it’s sim ple. Just take th e p r o fits from th o se equipment sales and divert them to ASASU. There they cou ld be u sed fo r any extravagance you like. No one would be any the wiser! Pretty neat idea, eh? And think of how the U o fA athletic director would feel to know he w as paying to fund ASASU! Of course, I realize that this m ay violate som e stated U niversity policy. Then too, President Nelson has proven that he w ill m ake exceptions to his policies, especially in the name of vital University in terest. Considering the importance of a smoothly running ASASU to the fiiture prosperity — indeed the very e x is t e n c e — o f ou r University, one m ight well consider the U niversity’s security to be a t stake. Surely, then, such a sale and diversion would be justified. I’m surprised no one has thought of something like this sooner. But when did it get so creepy?’ — W illiam F . Buckley So think it over. T hai, if you have any questions, feel free to call m e. Consider m e at the University’s service. You never know what other neat ideas you’ll find in the head of this son of a retired lieutenant colonel. Semper fi! Scott Miller History State of disgrace Editor: There is even better news for students in the education department than Jam es Galgano presented on Sept. l . Another organization, a professional organization, not a labor union such as the NEA or the AFT, provides liability insurance for a mere $15 a year to student teachers. careful observers that m ost graduates of that “college” em erge indoctrinated by the NEA. It’s as if the rest of the University is functioning as a thinking environment — and then there’s the aberrant Department of Education controlled by the sam e factions that keep American education in a state of disgrace. I understand and sym pathize with Galgano’s irritation with the Education Department at ASU. There is no doubt to Nancy Cooper Member Arizona State Professional Educators L E T T E R P O LIC Y topic8 ***a,e PfeSS welcomes end encourages written response from our readers on eli^Weltor™ uMc«ton!yPfl<1' doublM *,ace<1 end no longer than three pages in length l Unlwreity/TnC^hon^ n n H ^ D class lending and major (or other affiliation with reasom P numb8r **«“»»* for anonymity wiUbe granted with an approf Bring8 Mters^to th e "state at the discretion of the opinion page e Photo I.D. is required. 8 Preaa front desk in the basement of Matthews Ce Un^vere^,Tem|^3^ 5^.r1 e^ d *°: Sta,e Pres8> 16 Matthew8 Center- Arizona 1 Stort» Pírea» W ednesday S ep tem b er 9 , Play it again m o re le tte rs Hart and The All-Tim e Great Democrats Howabout v™7 could revitalize 1988 presidential race they are still around. Let’s ask Clean Gene McCarthy to run again. Have him bring out the teeny-bopper brigades of adolescent precinct workers and the string quartet that played for him in the Indiana primary. Let’s unleash his unrivaled sarcasm on this year’s crop of presidential pretenders and see who has the Wit to survive. D a v id B ro d e r W ashington Post Writers Group WASHINGTON — The faint hearts in the Dem ocratic Party are telling Gary Hart not to re-enter the presidential race. I hope he doesn’t listen to them. I yearn to hear him say he w ill ignore the nay-sayers and jump back into the battle. After all, what’s a little scandal among friends? Where is it written that statesm en can’t take tim e out for a little Monkey Business? So what if his campaign workers have taken their Rolodexes to other headquarters? They can be replaced. Hart could set a wonderful exam ple by returning to the cam paign he quit so abruptly last spring after his dating habits w ere exposed. He could create the precedent that would brighten the election year’s entertainm ent prospects. A grateful public might even decide to reward the Democrats in the voting booth. Consider the situation on the eve of this 1988 cam paign Ronald Reagan, the Man of All Our Golden Y esterdays, is retiring from the White House he has adorned so w ell. Anxious Americans ask each other, “Where shall we find another such Memory M eister, who can make us forget our troubles by recalling those Magic Moments from the tiihe when he and we were young?” Reagan’s retirem ent opens a Nostalgia Gap, which the Republicans are doing nothing to fill. Reagan invoked the m agic of the silver screen and the golden moments of radio, the charm of small-town life, the romance of the Old West and the glamour of Hollywood. What do the 1988 GOP candidates offer by way of memories? The present field of Democratic contenders is also conspicuously weak, nostalgia-wise. You cannot share m em ories with people whose nam es you’ve only just heard. But oh what wonderful, stirring scenes could be recalled by the Dem ocratic stars of yesteryear! Y es, Gary Hart, jump back in. But not alone. Call your old friends and tell them , for all of us: Everyone into the candidate pool! Let’s celebrate 1988 by bringing back the great Dem ocratic stars of the last 20 years. All of them , while * Let’s beckon Ed Muskie and George McGovern and George W allace out of retirem ent to relive that wonderful 1972 campaign. This tim e, when Muskie goes to the Union Leader office in Manchester, let’s have bright sunshine, not snow, and see how New Hampshire votes without his snuffles. And how about 1976? Wouldn’t you enjoy hearing Mo Udall’s stories one more tim e, or savor Fred Harris’ explanation of his early exit from the race: “I aimed my cam paign at the little people and they couldn’t reach the levers.” On to 1980. Enter, once again, Jim m y Carter and Ted Kennedy. And let’s see if those two remember the intricate footwork they used when Carter, fresh from his acceptance speech praising “Hubert Horatio Homblower,” stalked the reluctant Kennedy back and forth across the Madison Square Garden stage, determined to win the handclasp Kennedy was equally determined not to give. This tim e, with opportunity to study the film s, Carter might com er Kennedy in less than the eight m inutes, 20 seconds it took him then. And yes, let’s rerun the 1984 tape. Bring Fritz Mondale and all his endorsements out of mothballs, and restore John Glenn with a fresh coat of The Right Stuff. Invite Fritz Hollings back to New Hampshire, but this tim e hire a translator for that incomprehensible Charleston drawl. And in the new Atlanta debate, Gary, when Mondale asks, “Where’s the beef?”, don’t hand him your book. Crown him with it. While he’s out like a light, you can wrap up the nomination. And then take off for Bimini Y es, Gary, you should re-enter the race. But not alone. Bring all your friends and playm ates with you. The Dem ocrats haven’t won many elections recently and the way things are going, they won’t win this one. Unless, that is, they remind the country of the unmatched entertainment they have provided for the last 20 years. The strategy can’t m iss. The Republicans won’t have a chance. What are they going to do? Bring back Nixon? Editor: This letter is directed to D a r r in H o s t e t le r , in response to his editorial of Sept. 3. Basically, Hostetler stated that “moving desk dividers and tables around w ill not tear away the long standing sense of alienation, intimidation and contempt th e stu d en t body fe e ls toward ASASU.” First, if that were true, which I don’t believe it is, those feelings are generated by reporters and editors such as yourself, who fail to see the worthiness of an organization such as ASASU. Furthermore, you get out what you put in. Your name is not on the volunteer list. There are approximately 200 volunteers and em ployees committed to the success of ASASU for the benefit of the student body. ASASU provides services that many are not aware of due to the lack of support from the State Press. For instance, ASASU provides the Safety Escort FTogram. Certainly that is important for the safety of the students o f th e s ix t h - la r g e s t university in the country. ASASU lecture series and c o n c e r t s e r ie s a r e responsible for bringing people like G. Gordon Liddy and the rock group U2 to campus. Legal Assistance provides f r e e le g a l a d v ic e to registered ASU students. The only other w ay to receive that benefit is to get arrested! The Tennants/Commuter Students Association serves 80 percent of the campus with the Rideshare Program and off-cam pus housing information, free of charge. There are m any other noteworthy areas of ASASU, but I think you get the point. R ealistically, only about $25 out of each student’s tuition goes to ASASU. I’d say we get a lot for our money. Which brings m e to another point. The need for a computer system is a viable one. Managing paperwork for a university with 40,000 plus students is no easy task. Add to that 3,000 plus faculty, staff and adm inistrators and a community of over one m illion people that ASASU provides services for. Might I add that over 100 p e o p le u se th o se fo u r computer term inals, not just the four executive officers. The purchase of computers for ASASU w ill provide better service to all ASU s tu d e n ts th r o u g h th is efficient, tim e and money saving system . At lea st the 200 plus em ployees and volunteers of ASASU w ill be ready for the real world with computer skills, social skills and a positive outlook on life. The question is, w ill you? Gina DePinto S e n io r , O r g a n iz a tio n a l Communication ASU R ESID EN TS.. W e w a n t t o S H O O T y o u !! Mark your calendar for your floor group photo appointment I PRIZES for the floor with the most SPIRIT! PHO TO SCH ED U LES SAH UARO Wed., Sept. 9 2:30 Sahuaro At 3:00 Sahuaro A2 3:30 Sahuaro A3 4:00 Sahuaro B1 4:30 Sahuaro B2 5:00 Sahuaro B3 CH O LLA Thure., Sept. 10 2:30 Sahuaro Cl 3:00 Sahuaro C2 3:30 Sahuaro C3 4:00 Sahuaro D1 4:30 Sahuaro D2 5:00 Sahuaro : Tues., Sept. 15 2:30 Cholla AB1 3:00 Chola AB2 3:30 Cholla AB3 4:00 Cholla AB4 4:30 Cholla ÁB5 5:00 Cholla AB6 ^ : . M A N ZA N ITA Mon., Sept. 21 2:30 Manzanita 2 3:00 Manzanita 3 3:30 Manzanita 4 4:00 Manzanita 5 4:30 Manzanita 6 5:00 Manzanita 7 - W ed„ Sept. 16 2:30 Cholla AB7 3:00 Cholla AB8 3:30 Cholla CD1 4:00 Cholla CD2 4:30 Chola CD3 5:00 Cholla C04 Thurs., Sept. 17 2:30 Chola CD5 3:00 Cholla CD6 3:30 Cholla C07 4:00 Cholla CD8 4:30 Cholla FG3 5:00 Cholla FG2 McCLINTOCK HAYDEN Tues., Sept. 22 2:30 Manzanita 8 3;00 Mahzanita 9 3:30 Manzanita 10 4:00 Manzanita 11 4:30 Manzanita 12 5:00 Manzanita 13 Wed., Sept. 23 2:30 Manzarata 14 3:00 Manzanita 15 Thurs., Sept. 17 4:00 McClintock A 4:30 McClintock B IRISH Wed., Sept. 23 4:00 Hayden 1 4:30 Hayden 2 4:00 Hayden 3' Fri., Sept. 18 2:30 Cholla FG1 PV W EST Wed., Sept. 16 Thurs., Sept. 17 3:00 Palo Verde West 1 2:30 Palo Verde West 6 3:30 Palo Wide West 2 3:00 Palo Verde West 7 4:00 Palo VerdeWM 3 4:30 Palo Verde West 4 5:00 Palo Verde Wèst 5 Tues., Sept. 15 Wed., Sept. 16 2:30 Palo Verde East 1 2:30 Palo Verde East 7 3:00 Palo Verde East 2 3:30 Palo Verde East 3 ' 4:00 Palo Verde East 4 4:30 Palo Verde East 5 5:00 Palo Verde East 6 INTENT FORM Student Life O ffice, TH E SU N DEVIL S P A R K Y EA R B O O K , Box 59, Arizona State University, T e n n e , A Z 85287 Please Print Clearly I _L M R réooÁ i i i s t v io c n t w m a t u m O YES □ NO L 4 a a i ear u m v c m it y ac co unt □ CHECK ENCLOSED!»« DORINO FALL SEMESTER W oaumiowwmaaeMewMn CnVWTATE/ZJP PAYABLE TO ARIZONA STATI UMVCMITY OPTIONAL □ Meet in the lobby of your hall 10 minutes before your time, I I I Ywnnualaalaa aihaihaf or nor you w h i p « d ar Th» Sun Owe Spart Yaaitoofc. Chech dieappinpriaia bon and alenbaloiiii-Spia dala t o l l y tim r f c c h 15 tt»s forni apphes id die toHowinfl academic yea/ Th« coal c le ad i annual is SZSdunngiha Fall »em eslsic *30 after Jantawy 1 A chacho! Yes'i/npliea an cMioaDon lo purchase the yearbook YEARBOO K? 13 l \ Tues., Sept. 22 2:30 Best C2 3:00 Best C3 3:30 Best C4 4:00 Best(S MARIPOSA P V E A S T Thurs., Sept. 24 2:30 Irish B 3:00 Irish C i i I i BEST. Mon., Sept. 21 2:30 Best Al 3:00 Best A2 3:30 Best A3 4:00 Best Bl 4:30 Best B2 5:00 Best B3 Thurs., Sept. 10 2:30 Ocotito DE2 3:00 Ocotito 0E3 3:30 Ocotito BC2 Thurs., Sept. 10 4:30 Mariposa 2 i i i i O C O T IL LO Wed., Sept. 9 2:30 Ocotito AB1 3:00 Ocotito A2 3:30 Ocotillo A3 4:00 OPEN 4:30 Ocotito BC3 5:00 Ocotillo DE1 MAX BOOK TO MAY ADOREM (ADO53 50 Ftp BOOK FORP M T M C ANDHANOUNO) FOR MORE INFORMARON WRITE TO THE ABO VE ADDRESS, OR C A L L (tOZ) I1M4» (BUSINESS OFFICE) 7M -M 49 (PRODUCTION OFFICE) RETURN ALL FORMS TO: Any Registrar site * Student Life Office, Box 5# * MU AB ■Any Yearbook Office State*»«« Architecture school banners com m em orate 2 prof s ’deaths Students still mourning tragedy of Flight 255 By MARISSA HALLARE State Press T he S ch o o l o f A r c h ite c tu r e and E nvironm ental D esign h as rep laced Marilyn Monroe paintings with two black banners to commemorate the associate professors who died in the Northwest Airline disaster last month. Jane Tanfield and Suzanne Underwood, both assistant professors of the architecture college, were among the 156 killed when Northwest Flight 255 crashed on takeoff from Detroit Metropolitan Airport Aug. 16. ASU architecture student Brian Maytum, also treasurer and sécretary of the A m erican In stitu te of A rch itectu re Students, said the black banners hanging from the south side of the architecture building represent the sorrow of students and faculty who knew Tanfield and Underwood. R o g er S c h lu n tz , d ir e c to r o f th e architecture school, said, ‘‘It w as a symbolic gesture of the students and the faculty to m em orialize their service and Cecelia’s condition upgraded to ‘goocf; gifts still pouring in their friendship.” Schluntz said the idea for the 4 x 20 foot felt banners originated with architecture students. Maytum, who is in his fourth year at ASU, said Marilyn Monroe paintings by fifth-year architecture student Mark Lymer and fourth-year student Blake Goble were painted over in white. “We painted the w alls white so they’re plain and sim ple and won’t interfere with the two black banners which are a dedication to each of the two professors,” he said. Schluntz said the banners, made of a felt m aterial, probably w ill be taken down in about a week because of wear from the weather. Lymer said students usually paint the balcony as they please. “This was the only tim e w e’ve had the (school) deal with the balcony in a certain way due to the memorial, but before students got to do whatever we wanted,” he said. ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - Doctors upgraded Cecelia Cichan to good condition Tuesday and removed the lone survivor of Northwest Airlines Flight 255 from the intensive care unit of the University of M ich ig a n B urn C en ter, a h o sp ita l spokesman said. Mike Harrison said 4-year-old Cecelia was placed in the facility’s burn rehabilitation unit. Doctors said skin grafts performed Friday were successful, but they didn’t know if she would require additional burn treatm ent. Cecelia, whose parents and 6-year-old brother died Aug. 16 in the fiery crash shortly after the plane departed from D etroit M etropolitan Airport, uses a wheelchair when she’s not in bed, he said. Suaan Schuman/State Press The School of Architecture and Environmental Design commemorates the deaths of two associate professors. The Tempe girl can’t walk yet because her leg was broken in the crash. She had been listed in fair condition before being upgraded Tuesday. Her fam ily has not decided where the child will live when she’s released from the hospital: Meanwhile, volunteers spent the weekend sorting through mounds of m ail for the child. Harrison said that through Tuesday’s m ail, Cecelia had received $116,611.83 in cash and checks, 1,533 gifts and more than 17.000 cards and letters. In northeastern Wisconsin, more than 8.000 cards and gifts were gathered for her. “These kids gave personal item s of great value to them, such as rings, necklaces, stuffed anim als,” announcer Jay Van Stiphout of radio stati'on WKFX in Kaukauna, W is., said Tuesday. “It just blew m e away. I had to just sit here for a minute and get hold of m yself to stop the goose bumps and keep the tears back.” The station organized “Project Cecelia” for Cecelia, in an effort to bring awareness to the children of W isconsin’s Fox River Valley. ‘‘It’s really neat to se e the kids’ perspective of how to deal with tragedy. They don’t use metaphors. They just say what they mean, like ‘I hope you feel better’ or T m sorry this happened to you,’ ” Van Stiphout said. Some cards showed pictures of burning planes on the outside, he said, but pictures of sunshine and happiness w ere on the inside as sym bols of C ecelia’s survival. Stete Presi Jou rn alist guru J a c k A n d e rso n to sp e a k in M U Current issues to be addressed by revered Pulitzer Prize winner By AARYN KEMP State Press Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Jack Anderson, who also has been named the “ w orld’s g rea test liyin g professional speaker,” will address current issues today at 12:30 p.m . in the Arizona Room of the Memorial Union. Anderson began his award-winning “Merry Go Round” column in 1969. The column is syndicated in nearly 1,000 newspapers around the world with a daily readership of over 30,000,000 people. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1972 and received an award from the International Platform Association in 1986 for being “the “Anderson is a very decent person. He is not m ea n -sp irited lik e som e oth er journalists. He’s not out to kill or get som ebody.” w orld ’s g r e a te st liv in g p ro fessio n a l speaker.” A n d erson ’s w ork e x te n d s beyond journalism. He is co-chairman of the Grace Coalition, the nation’s m ost powerful lobbying forum com batting w aste in government spending. Gruver said Anderson is very methodical. “He checks and re-checks and checks facts again,” he said. “His stories are alw ays balanced.” Anderson earned his status by being accurate, Gruver said, adding Anderson has “incredible insight; he has the ability to get information that others don’t have. He has been called a journalist, futurist and muckraker. But B ill Gruver, an ASU associate professor of journalism and telecom m u n ciation s who w orked for Anderson from 1974 until 1980 on his “Merry go Round” column, said the description is inadequate. Gruver said Anderson also is the best boss to work for. “He is a crusader, not a m uckraker,” Gruver said. “That is such an incorrect tag. “There is not, and probably never w ill be, another colum nist like him .” “Anderson can look at the political scene with more detachment because he has been at it so long. He is also a very fast writer. He sees it, knows it and does it.” Jack Anderson Restaurants head list of new businesses Student with AIDS virus attends Glendale classes in Phoenix area, according to ASU study GLENDALE (AP) — An elem entary school principal said Tuesday there’d been no disruption but a handful of parents said they didn’t want their children in the sam e school as a student who has tested positive for the AIDS virus. Principal Merrill E. Harlan of Glenn F. Burton School confirmed that the child with the virus was in school Tuesday, the first day of classes since it was, disclosed Saturday that the child attends the school. The school has approximately 425 students, and there was virtually no change between attendance on Friday and Tuesday, Harlan said. School and health officials have not released the name of the child, who is a hemophiliac and reportedly contracted the AIDS virus through blood-clotting agents hem ophiliacs are given. Dr. Charles Juels, Maricopa County disease control director, said the child is not infectious and poses no threat to others. M o v e U p By VICTOR BARAJAS State Press A new eating establishm ent opens every business day in the metropolitan Phoenix area, according to a study by ASU’s College of Business. Restaurants constitute the largest percentage of the 300 new businesses that open Valleywide each month, the study showed. But Lee M cPheters, ASU analyst for the College of Business, said restaurants also are the most likely to go bankrupt. “What happens is that people step into an existing restaurant and change the nam e,” M cPheters said. “They buy up all of the equipment and overnight they’re in business.” ; ASU analyst Martha Clyde estim ates new businesses added about 10,000 jobs to the Valley during 1986. More than half of a ll new businesses are part of either the services or retailing sectors, she said. T o T h e M cPheters said bankruptcy law s lessen the fear of starting a business. “There’s not such a social stigm a associated with people going bankrupt,” he said. “Because it is not as much a risk to start a business, we probably get more people starting businesses than are really prepared to do so.” Service businesses, such as hair-styling salons, constitute about 35 percent of the new businesses. The study also showed new firm s tend to cluster by type in various areas of the Valley. For exam ple, new financial and real estate firms concentrate in south Scottsdale and along east Phoenix’s Camelback corridor. New manufacturing firm s locate most often in south Phoenix and in the north and central sectors, of Tempe. “It seem s that certain types of businesses like to locate near each other,” McPheters said. Of the 3,646 businesses started in 1986, 46 percent were in Phoenix, 31 percent in the E ast Valley, and 13 percent in Scottsdale. C o m m o n s Maintain the right image at ASU! The Commons provides an alternative to the dorm lifestyle w ith an on-campus atmosphere. •T otally Furnished (dishes, tow els, etc.) •W asher and Dryer In Each Suite •M icrowave •Study Areas •Spa •P ool •Sand Volleyball Court •Organized Events •Social Activities •Priced Like The Dorms Deposits are now being accepted on a first com e first serve basis. Come alone or bring a couple o f friends. 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SHOP TODAY 10 AM TO» PM AT BILTUOBF t u d * .™ * , WE WELCOME OUR OWN BROADWAY SOUTHWEST QOIO ACCOUNT CARO, VISA®, MASTERCARD®, AND THE AMERICAN EXPRESS® CARD TO OPEN A FIESTA MAU , LOS ARCOS ANDMETROCENTER. tN A BROADWAY SOUTHWEST GOLD ACCOUNT, C A U 1-MM3W191, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY I S ï Ü Û H ! ___________________ - - - - £ 2 2 ! 2 Teach in g program forced to turn students aw ay By KELLY PEARCE State Press Next year, the College of Education w ill have to turn away students interested in its Professional Teacher Preparation Program (PTPP) because of lim ited resources, said Associate Dean Lyndon Searfoss. The number of students to be turned away is im possible to gauge now, but the PTPP w ill “attem pt to offer die best education for the amount of students we can do the best job w ith,” he said. Currently 400 students are enrolled in the program, which teaches juniors and seniors how to teach, Searfoss said, adding the program is lacking necessary funds and faculty. Searfoss heads the undergraduate program in the College of Education. The college’s dean, Gladys Johnston, said she is not under pressure to lim it enrollment. “We are not bowing to pressure and feel quality is better than quantity,” she said. Last summer, juniors and seniors camped out in the College of Education’s corridors to get student teaching positions at ASU and Phoenix-area schools. Only 70 positions Lack of funding, faculty limits size of enrollment students have a com m itm ent to kids,” Searfoss said. Students must pass a pre-professional skills test. The standardized exam is offered seven tim es a year and tests writing, reading and math skills. were available because few Phoenix-area schools have summer sessions, leaving at least 50 education students without positions, Searfoss said. He said the college cannot promise spaces that are not available but balancing students and resources is the key to dealing with deficient resources. Requirements to enter the PTPP have become more stringent, Searfoss said. When students have been admitted to the program, they m ust pass 18 hours in human growth and development and courses in academic? specialization outside of their major. “We want to give them a wide liberal arts background,” Searfoss said. “Old myths die hard, and people still believe that students take 100 hours of education courses.” Out of 126 hours in two years, a student will take 12 hours erf student teaching, 24 hours of education courses and 90 hours of courses in other fields. Searfoss said students m ust take courses in psychology, sociology and anthropology classes to learn how people think. “We think this w ill make a better teacher,” he said. Searfoss said he hopes to improve faculty caliber, accounting for fewer part-time and graduate teachers and more full-tim e professors. He said the University is being very supportive of the college and helping as much as possible. The curriculum was revamped and requirements in liberal arts were increased last sem ester, he said. Students m ust maintain a 2.5 GPA to get into the program and many students are not aware of this, Searfoss said. A form al application including essay questions on why students want to become teachers must be filled out. “We have never done this before. We hope to find out if College introduces new assessment program By KELLY PEARCE State Press Tlie College of Education is forging into the new sem ester with an assessm ent program to increase student skills outside the classroom and help in job placem ent, college Dean Gladys Johnston said. Johnston said the assessm ent program provides student support and helps students g e t th r o u g h th e “ d e v e lo p m e n ta l undergraduate years.” The program’s aim is to supplement classroom topics and let future employers know a student has more than a high grade point average, she said. The Teacher Preparation Assessm ent System is in the second stage of a three- phase development to be fully implem ented next spring, said Nelson Noggle, director of the School Personnel Evaluation and Learning Laboratory. “Our goal is to help students become confident,” he said. “It w ill help us stay on the leading edge in term s of teaching students.” Noggle said a survey has begun to find out what students have learned and what the curriculum has not addressed. Education personnel conducted surveys last year to determ ine the assessm ent program’s scope, Johnston said. She said the surveys showed the college does not have enough advisers for its students. There now are 10 counselors “who cannot possib ly se e every stu d en t,” Johnston said, adding she would like to see tw ice as many. “I would like our college to be more personal and think it is important for an institution to not come across as a sterile environment,” she said. Noggle said the initial feedback has been extrem ely positive, and Johnston said, “The im age of our college is increasing.” They said faculty and students have handled the C ollege of E d u cation ’s numerous changes over the last couple of sem esters well. “Change is difficult but the faculty has rem ained resilient,” Johnston said. Gladys Johnston Page 10 jfM C h tw W ednesday, S ep tem b er 9 ,1 9 8 7 Private financing proposed to pay for regional jetport PHOENIX (AP) - A state transportation official says private financing, possibly from freight carriers, is being considered to pay for a proposed regional jetport that would be built between Phoenix and Tucson. “We’re looking at private financing for the entire system , including the jetport, the runways, warehousing — everything,” said Jack Christopher, aeronautics director of the Arizona Department of Transportation. “Several overnight freight people tell us they would be interested in financing such a project. I don’t wish to identify them at this tim e,” Christopher was quoted as saying in a story published Tuesday by the Phoenix G azette. Executives of two such delivery com panies «[pressed skepticism or a hands-off attitude regarding the reported interest among their industry. “Preposterous!” exclaim ed Robert Withers, Phoenix district operators manager fra* Airborne Express. TEAM « U N IFO R M S m 2 e q u ip m e n t d iv e rs ifie d tra v e l ine " Y o u r H om e Tow n T ra v e l A g e n c y 9? M AKE YO UR RESERVATIONS NOW ! Thanksgiving, Christm as and Ski Season are just around the corner! •ache Broadway ¡^ o n a S ta * ® d it y iv e r s Team * Discounts; Serving Sun Devil Country far* the past 17 years a t the corner o f M U'& Broadway in Tempe! ’s . Softball* Baseball Basketball •Soccer Most Sports 'Uniforms •T Shirts Caps • Lettering Custom SHk J g s Screens B Numbering V I Church •Team w J! 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According to an annual safety report released Monday by Public Citizen, a Washington, D.C.-based specialinterest group opposed to nuclear power, the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station had 111 m ishaps last year. According to.the report, only four other nuclear power plants of the 109 in the country reported more m ishaps than Palo Verde’s Unit 1 and only 11 others reported more m ishaps than Unit 2 in 1986. The m ishaps included em ergency plant shutdowns and security breaches at the nuclear generating station. FA C TO R Y O U TLET EVERYTHING REDUCED! FOUR DAYS ONLYl Sundresses........ ....... X Dresses.............. ..... X - • .... $ • ■••• ... $10 Skirts.................. ........ .... T ops................... ........ X . . . . .... $4k S e p t, to , u , i 2 a n d 8 a . m .-6 p . m . Whatever the assignment, P3ot has the formula ^ u n itin g comfert and precision. 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MMt P m i P jSL l® A S U student killed in w eekend autom obile crash By MIKE BURGESS State Press school. “I felt the car lurch ansc\ CATCH SOME RAYS. • An unknown person who broke into a Tempe carpet store and stole $9 Sunday night remains at large, police said. Police said the suspect entered the Carpet Maintennace Company in the 1700 block of West 10th Place through an air vent, removed the cash and fled through a rear door. LOSE V0UR PET? 55 E. Broadway (at Mill), Tempe Find it with a F R E E classified y 7 ///////////////y ^ Z ^ Æ ^ y //////////////////^ ^ ^ ^ We want you to MASS SCHEDULE: Saturday 5 :30 pm . Sunday 9 :3 0 , 1 1 .0 0 a.m ., 6 :0 0 , 7 :3 0 p .m . love your hair! D a ily M ass: D anforth C hapel o n cam pus 1 1 :40 a.m . N ew m an C enter C hapel 4:45 p .m . Confession: Saturday 4 :0 0 -4 :3 0 p .m . or by app ointm en t OFFICE HOURS M onday-Thursday 8 :3 0 a.m .-9:00 p .m . Friday 8 :3 0 a .m .-5:00 p .m . Sunday 9 :0 0 -1 2 :0 0 n o o n and 5:30-8:30 p .m . begin with great h air... T he NEW M AN CENTER is a searching, b elievin g, lo v in g , w orsh ip in g com m u nity d eep ly rooted in Jesus C hrist. It is a p lace w h ere y o u can take part in th e liturgical life o f th e Church and fu lfill your religiou s n eed s. It also p rovid es fa cilities and op p ortu n ities for religiou s ed u cation , stu d y, cou n selin g and recreation. hair ns Rumors. M ost o f all th e NEW M AN CENTER is a p lace to g iv e and receiv e, lead and b e led , m ature and grow in faith . A p lace w h ere y o u can m ake n ew friends and stren gth en o ld o n es, b e an active m em ber o f a grow in g, faith -filled com m u nity or just sit in qu iet so litu d e w ith th e Lord. H A IR DESIGN & M A KE-U P NEW LOCATION: 350 S. MM Tempe Hayden Sq. 894-1888 J “ *“ " * ,, m 8.m u $ 5 .0 0 .OFF | 1 / 3 O F F A N Y S E R V IC E j M A K E -U R **£.{?£ ! free Make-upApplication SUNRISE CAFE A R IZ O N A S T A T E U N IV E R S IT Y 2 3 0 EAST UNIVERSITY DRIVE POST OFFICE BOX 1987 TEMPE, ARIZONA 85281 967-7823 o p en 6 :3 0 a .m .-l:3 0 p .m . class days on ly . L ocated in th e N ew m an C enter. Enjoy hom em ade breakfast or lun ch . comics BY GARRY TRUDEAU D oon esbu ry \R ^L S M m tV m ç j9 H l^ y YOUKNOW, HOWARD, I THINK i ONE OFMY PROUDESTLEGACIES 1 IS GOING TOBE IN CIVIL RIGHTS!(~ W *K T±> \ la ~ CM ROLANDHEDLEY. NERBATA PHOENIXSHOPPINGCENTER,THE M0VEMENT10RECALLARIZONA60V i ERNOREVANMECHAM IS PICKING UPSTEAM! IOPPOSEDTHEVOTINGRIGHTSBILL. GUTTEDAFFIRMATIVEACTION, SUP­ PORTED TAXBREAKSWRSE6REGRIED COLLEGES,ALL8UT DISMANTLED TUBC M L K 6 m COMMISSION... S fr ..ALL WITHOUT A U M FF OF SCANDAL! Universal Presa Syndicat« BUTFORA REAL PIECE OF WORKLETS GOTO ARIZONA^ YES,SIR THEY CANT TAKE THATAU/AY FROM W J. v GOVERNOR, SAY A fe u WORDS TO... V MY/WHATA OHE UTTLE PICKAWNNY! « a -W T WHY?WELL,TTALL STARTEDUX1HHIS RESaSSKJNOFTHESTATE'SMARÌ1N LUTHERKINGHOLIDAY. EVER SINCE, CRITICSSAY. MECHAMSRECORDHAS BEEN POCKMARKEDBTINSENSTTlVrTY. 0 1967 THEGOVERNOR, ITS LUDICROUS!I'M UNDERSTAND- A MORMON!TOLER­ ABLY,BEGS V ANCE S A BASIC DIFFER... TENETOFMYFATIH! SO THE CHARGES LIESIU ES SPREAD BY AGAINST QUEERS AND _ YOU... PICKANINNIES! Pope Jokes No. 1 in a series GOVERNOR, SURELY YOU KNOW THEHARDQUES, VONEVENBEFORE I " \ ASKIT.W ITHM ARLY / *23MILLION IN CANW CELLED CONVENTION ' \ BUSINESS, HAVENT J YOUCAUSEDARIZONA f GREATHARM BYRE! • - ' SCINDING THE KING X HOLIDAY? NOTAT ALL.THAT LOSS WILLBE OFFSET BY GROUPSWHOMANHAVE CONVENTIONSHERE B E CAUSE THEYADM IRE M Y STAND! / sT UH... I HESITATE TO A S K ., by Sieve Talkow ski W ELL, I CAN T REVEALTHE DETAILS, BUTW E'R E VERY CLOSE TO SIGNING A MAJOR MOTOR­ CYCLE GANG! ^ ^ ( fu r — BLOOM COUNTY /might., 6er up MISTER OLIVER "MODERN TIM ES" JO N ES / ENRAPTURED WITH ALL THAT’S NEW , EH ? FORGOTTEN THE BELOVED THUGS OF YOUR PAST. EH Ä .„LIN E W YE, YOUROL' TEDDY, EH Î EXCUSE M E. IS THIS GOING TO B E A PICKENS-ESQUe "NIGHTMARE WITH A MESSAGE * OR RATHER A TWILIGHT ZDNE-tSH "ENDUPTN-HELL * SORT OF WING? M O L Y& R IN % FO N A H e C K O F F m ur, puppy 30Y ' f Æ \ t elu n : " ... and then, after the gutter eolo, John realized he had finally hit the Mg time by Jeff MacNelly 1 ¿1& TL00K A TW Ó * v tftccHCue&emeezs, \ FRENCH FRIES,ONION RINSS, LO O K , R O Z ...W £ BOTH KNOW X HAVE AWEtôUTPPOBtHM.., „ ( ftIT QaN'TTAKE IT X f l OUTÓN1ME FOCP. ANP A HU65 MUKSMAKEi! ÎÎ by Mike Ritter Ivory Towers OU N0.„ NOT fe r n THERES ONE IN EVERV COURSES "THE fMNMKtt. QUESTiON-ASKER PROM H EU T UUeWER H € t*RE R«AN0ID MEÖ-NAZJ& OR MIUTJNT MABÖ95 THEVAlWAtó TAKE UP THE ENTIRE IfiCTUfiE A N TA G O N IZIN G PROF ABOUT" NOmiNGU toe GQJDMCtNm CLASS- MA/BEWS GtV.5 BEFER C W S& C ßSb l& T tlE WHOLE Ff*»- LEMüQpEHVbUR 0OQ- U c KINQ,R0*ES6IVE, BOURQEOlS P IT ,/!! entertainm ent State Pieu W ednesday S ep tem b er 9 ,1 9 8 7 Page 17 H ints, d électab les and other tangy tid­ b its from the clu ttered file s o f the enter­ tainm ent desk. C o n certs: •H eart, the popular Top-10 singing group, com es to the V alley at 8 tonight (see related story, th is page) at the A S U A ctivity Center. Tickets for the m usical sensation are $16 and can be purchas­ ed at the Gam m age Box O ffice. For more inform ation, ca ll 965-3434. •S ta rsh ip brings its pop-style m usic to Phoenix at 8 p.m. Friday, Septem ber 18, at Veterans M em orial Coliseum . Tickets for the sm ash singing sensation are $16.50 and can be purchased at the Col­ iseum Box O ffice. For more inform ation on the show and tickets, call 258-6711. Theater: • “ C h ris ty & C o .” bring their ritzy, cla ssy m usical styles to the Lyric O pera Theater in a benefit show at 8 p.m. Saturday. The trio, m ade up of Christy W elty, M ichell Katzenbach and Brian H all, w ill perform at the show to raise m oney for scholarships with the School of M usic. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for students. For more inform ation, call 965-3434. B o x O ffic e Bingo: • “ F a ta l A ttra c tio n ,” starring G len C lose and M ichael D ouglas opens Valleyw ide Friday, Sept. 18. The longawaited thriller involves infidelity (on D ouglas’ part) and intrigue as a m arried man discovers the woman he had an af­ fair with (Close) suddenly becom es too attached. pumps on for R ock’s red treasure By DAVE MILLER State Press B illy Joel complains all the tim e about having no freedom to go out to a nice restaurant or the mud bog and not be harassed by the press and salivating fans. Sean Penn takes it a step further and bashes chins and ankles. “Mr. P ern! Mr. Penn! Gosh, I so loved you in that film , the one where you think nasty things about Elizabeth McGovern. I was ju st wondering, see I ’m from Idaho and “Bash! Pow! Karpunza! Take that, filth. Wait, here’s one m ore! Suck on it, hog weed.’’ Glen Close and Michael Douglas battle it out in “ Fatal Attraction.” Exposed: •The Playboy Channel w ill be film ing three half-hour segm ents for its m onthly talk show, “ W omen on Sex,” Friday. The shows, attended by women only, w ill deal with the topics "C am pus S ex,” “ A ddicted to Love,” and a third to be an­ nounced. Tickets are $.60 (handling charge) at any D illard’s box office. If you would like to be on a discussion panel, ca ll Cheryl Pappas collect at (213) 854-3775. For more inform ation on the show, ca ll K S LX at 941-1007.” ________ On this day. this day in 1973,14-year-old Michael son said, “We’re always getting love rs from girls. We don’t date girls on •oad. We’d like to, but we just don’t i the tim e.” But Heart’s Mark Andes w ill have none of that. Thjs bass player is a true representative of a long-lost school of rock ’n’ roll thought wherein, although a band member may have rock-star status, he neither m aligns the press, spits on fans nor.antagonizes pit bulls. And he never, ever Complains if he’s not the star of the show. “They (Heart front-members Ann and Nancy Wilson) are the stars and that’s the way it should be. But there’s more to the show than that.” He really m eans it. “I mean it. This is a well-organized thing. There’s no intrigue. I mean, w e have slugged it out from tim e to tim e in this relationship but it’s worked. They (the W ilsons) are great to work w ith,” he said. And so now that that’s settled, it’s off to work, specifically, the kind of work that gives goose pim ples to air guitarists the world over: a rock ’n’ roll world tour. Andes is in Edmonton, Alberta this particular night and his voice rises noticeably as he talks about the schedule that w ill bring Heart down through the western United States. When it’s all through Andes, the W ilsons, drummer Danny Carmassi and guitarist Howard Leese w ill have literally been scream ed at by m illions. M illions of teen-age girls. “It’s fantastic,” Andes said. “We’re at a high-level plateau, and w e’ll just have to wait and see how (his goes, but right now it’s fantastic. . . “ (When you’re in a band) you wait for a tim e when things are like this. It’s sim ilar to being on a professional athletic team that’s on a roll. “It would be wild to experience if it gets even larger,” he said. It might. Heart, who hit early ’70s stardom with the hooks of songs like “Magic M a n ,” “ D og an d B u tte r fly ” and “Barracuda,” are making the kind of resurgence that bands dream about. It’s rare to see the kind of comeback that their four weeks of southern California teen debauchery. The m ovie stars Andrew McCarthy. I’ll get to that in a minute. E llis says that people are afraid to merge on freeways in Los Angeles. He also says that som e L.A. young people are in need of a giant spanking. And much worse than that. Some, it appears, don’t deserve to live, since they’re not really alive as we know it anyway. People are afraid to m erge on freew ays in Los Angeles. The movie industry is about to do something horrible. They’re about to make a movie. Actually, it’s already been m ade. Or alm ost made. The cast has been picked and the sets have been chosen and the script has been written. Actually, they’re just about to release it. And they’re probably about to turn an astonishingly emotional piece of artwork into so much rhino paste. Of course they’re good at this. When the chips were down and novelist John Irving’s reputation was on the line, Hollywood made low-salt lunchmeat out of “The World According to Garp.” They hit a bull’s-eye in casting- the Elm er Fudd-mocking Robin W illiam s as Garp, but in translating Irving’s finest work into celluloid, some m ovie mogul left a two-hour boil on the smith end of cinema. last two album s, “Heart” and “Bad Animals” have brought them. . “ ’Till we started working on it (“Bad Anim als”), we were a little apprehensive. We w ere stressing, but as soon as we started working on it the anxiety turned into creative fire,” Andes said. “There was a lot of pressure for our ‘Bad’ m aterial to rise to the stuff on ‘Heart,’ so we knew right off the bat that we’d have to be writing great songs. “Once we got started, though, we felt really secure,” he said. A great deal of that security also rose out of the strength of the current Heart lineup, he says. “This unit resurrected our career. It created a secure working relationship, and now w e feel comfortable trying things we wouldn’t have years ago. I joined Heart in ’82 with Danny Carmassi, and at first the band’s doing outside m aterial, and even our songs, was unheard of. “But then we did ‘How Can I Refuse’ (which appeared on ‘Heart’) and we did a Jonathan Cain (of Journey) song called ‘A llies.’ That’s when w e started re­ evaluating and things really started changing. “It’s been a great thing for the group,” he said. And for Heart fans as well. And now someone wants to do it a g a in That someone is Twentieth Century Fox, and the newest novel to go before the cokehead-producer’s court is “L ess Than Zerp,” by Bret Easton E llis. The bode is a gut-wrenching pull through But that includes Andy too. McCarthy’s acting skills rival those of another young box-office leading man: Jam es Dean. But only because Dean is dead. This could give Andrew an edge when be portrays Clay, the burned-out center of “Less Than Zero.” We’ll know in a few m onths.' But somehow I get the feeling that we’ll see, as usual, that Hollywood should have left well enough alone. Would that be asking too much? Page 18 State Prêt, .September 9,1987 A Z SUB D E V IL PIZZA • SUBS » SALADS ITALIAN DINNERS 3' - 4' - 6' SUBS FOR ALL O CCA SIO N S PARTY TRAYS N O W AVAILABLE PITCHERS OF BEER STILL $2.00 BEER O N TAP: MILLER, MILLER LITE, * BUD & LOWENBRAU DARK BOTTLED BEER: DELIVERY AVAILABLE MILLER DRAFT, HEINEKEN & CORONA 967-8091 F=X= UNIVERSITY IN T E M P E C E N T E R N E W in TM ,\\arriott£ THEGRAND MARKEffilACE F A J IT A S cinem a Hide n’ Seek New Century’s latest plays cam By HOWIE MALHAM JR. State Prese . . Take your average American housewife, make her an exMarine, and convince her she’s the ovulating Rambo. Then, just for grins; espouse her to another Marine, m ake him honest; kill him, and set him up for posterity. What have you got? Simple, it’s called “Nowhere to Hide” and they’re charging innocent people all over Tempe 15.50 te see this Hollywood excretion. What begins as a lam e, fem inist “First Blood” rip-off rapidly develops into one of the most ridiculous m ovies of the year. And for some very good reasons. Captain Barbara Cutter (Amy Madigan), her hubby Major Rob (Daniel Hugh K elly) and their darling little offspring (Robin MacEachern) are your typical, Marine family. They all live in a English tutor house, their son loves Go-Bots and they are the only Marines that French kiss while on maneuvers. At least the only ones we know about. U fe starts to get tough for Barb and her kid after Major Rob discovers why helicopters are crashing on a daily basis around the base. Infuriated, Rob decides to take his findings of unsatisfactory C-rings to the authorities. However, he’s stopped when a couple of mismatched'hitmen unload several rounds of ammunition into his chest. When Barb, whom the hitmen inadvertently spared, realizes that everyone and their beautician are in on this evil, corporate cover-up, she grabs her confused child (and his Go-Bot) and heads for the hills. While on this untimely nature walk,-they run into the friendly hermit of the hill who turns out to be the late Major Rob’s dangerously un-balanced marine buddy, known affectionately as Ben (Micheál Ironside). Ben, suffering from the Hemingway expatriate syndrome, took to the hills after giving up an society with an expired Diners Club card. Ben takes the weary renegades into his not-so-humble Jellystone Park cabin, makes them eat rabbit and eventually discloses that he dresses up like his deceased Oriental w ife every chance he gets. A t least that’s the idea I got. Needless to say, their visit is cut short. Thanks to a handy tracking device, the corrupt Marines and their villianous corporate buddies discover Ben’s covert cabin and spoil their plans to barbecue. As a result of their surprise visit, B a t is terminated most effectively and little Cutter is abducted. Barb and the Go-Bot are spared By this point, Barb’s ha< it. Coincidentally, so has thi audience. For an ex-Marim w h o ca n do v ir tual ^ everything but change a fla and who spends an hour an< a half proving she is womai and she can roar, Bari devises a plan that ori works in the movies. Does she get her son bad ? and does she avenge th I deaths of her husband am Ben? Yes. End of movie. New sent stai M id Mac And b y/ Ra Unfortunately, “Nowhere to Hide” si bank as a pathetically conti ved Holly have remained in the short Nothing saves this movi \ except eventually end. Director Mario Azzopaldi should perhaps as an organ grind sr. He Obv shallow sense of what ■the gene entertainment. He mistake Ithe publi our intelligence with infant ie writing. In short, “Nowhere to Hide” mi Mountain” look like a class c. Every theme Azzopardi personifies i beguile us by giving the “F is t Blood” doesn’t work. I suppose the real tragedy of this i sequel. This trite film will definitely appeal violence. What “Nowhere t i Hide” lac depth, it makes up in killing. Most ev screen in the two torturing hours wind anU zi. How the director was spaced, I’ll nei Good Grief. W hether you’re into business, science or engineering, TT has all the right calculators w ith all the right functions for you. Every year, thousands of hapless students w atch th eir course load become an overload. A nd every year, the sm art ones am ong them pick up a T I calculator and take a load off. T I offers every th in g from advanced scientifics th a t clock your perform ances, to programmables th at speak your language, to a solar-powered financial calculator th at highlights your answers f l j | even in lowlight conditions. And th e large, color-coded keys and simple keyboard layouts m ean you 11spend less tim e figuring out the calculator and more tim e figuring out your problem s. ©1987 TI. TrademarkofTexas Instruments Incorporated The S e ie t bidlt'i' decim integri rule, s linear analyi conve 84 fm repetit S ta tt Pres« D IR T Y D E V IL LAUNDRY /SC ames with plot that goes nowhere ' son bad it enge th f band a n # novie. “ Nowhere to H ide” A N IN V IT A T IO N T O A T T E N D : ''Minority Organizations Senate Funding Workshop" H APPY HOUR A s port of: Leadership Development Program for Minority Organizations September 10, 1987 5:00 p.m.-6:30 p.m. 2 P.M .-6 P.M . Pinal South, Memorial Union Room 215 2 for 1 Wash Sponsored by: Minority Affairs Board ofASASU SAM E DAY DRV CLEANING Wash & Fold 50«/lb. TV » Video Gam es ¡spared arb’s hat so has thi -x-Marini irtuall; nge a fia i hour ant is womai ar, Bari that onì; Pase 19 W ednesday Se p t em b e r 9 ,1987 M ON.-FRI. ★ V4 8 2 7 S. RURAL Just South o f Univ. N ew C en tu ry /V ista F ilm s p re ­ s e n t a M ario A zzo eard ir film s t a r r in g A m y M a d ig a n , M ichael Iro n sid e a n d R obin M acE ach ern . P ro d u c e d by A n d ras H am ori. -S c re e n p la y by A lex R eb ar. 968-143$ THE Rated R FAST LU N CH ! FR EE LU N CH ! Nowhertefto Hide” still lingers in m y memory illy conti;i red Hollywood creatim i that should the short story section of Guns & Ammo, his movifc, except for the fact that it does Azzopai di should seek a new vocation, ¡an grinder. He Obviously has a rem ote and the general public desires mistake! die public for morons and insults th infant le writing. here to ¡Hide” m akes “E scape to Witch :e a classic. ¡opardi personifies is too fam iliar. He tries to g the “F is t Blood” im age a new Look au d it , was spaced, I’ll never know. 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T h e T I -6 5 A d v a n c e d S c ie n tif ic offers all o f the built-in functions o f the T I-60, plus a stopwatch/ timer for labwork, eight physical constants for use in thermodynamics and physics as well as Decision Program­ ming (if...then) capabilities. There are also 100 pro­ gramming steps for repetitive calculations. T h e T l- 7 4 B A S IC A L C ™ P r o g r a m m a b le A d v a n c e d “ S c ie n tif ic is TVs BASIC language programmable calculator. In addition to offering a full range o f scientific, mathematical and sta­ tistical functions, the Tl-74offers a 113 BASIC keyword setw itha special function key that gives direct 2-keystmke access to 41 BA SIC commands. The Tl-74 also has subroutine capability for advanced programming flexibility. T h e T I -9 5 P R O C A L C ™ is keystroke programmable and also offers a full range o f scientific, mathematical and statistical functions. Featured in the T I-95 is TVs exclu­ sive Power Windows™ Operating System, which provides easy access to the functions and flexible file management system. Both the TI-95 and the Tl-74 offer optional equip­ ment such as Solid State Software™ modules, an 8 K constant memory module, a portable printer and cassette interface. T he TI B u s in e s s A n a l y s t S o la r features TI s exclusive Anylite Solar™ technol­ ogy, so you can use it in any light. Preprogrammed formulas help you speed through business problems such as interest, loans, real estate, bonds, pricing and profit. So pick up a T I calculator today. It’ll save you a lo t of grief and it m ight just save your skin. Te x a s ' In s t r u m e n t s Page SO W ednesday, S ep tem b er 9 ,1 9 8 7 p review s TV tails into Valley to film talk show segment Playboy Channel By TOD McCOY State Press Between the celluloid sheets of gleam ing, oiled bodies and lust-filled scenes ofjthe Playboy Channel lies a serious side of sex which w ill be explored in detail. On Friday, Sept. 11 at 7:30 p.m ., the Playboy Channel w ill be at the Scottsdale Center for the Arts film ing the second leg of its on-the-rbad series for its monthly talk show, “Women on Sex.” The taping is open to any women in the V alley, but the producers are emphasizing a desire for college-alged women to show up. The Center is located at 7383 Scottsdale M all, in the Civic Plaza. Hosted by Dr. Janet Lever and Theresa Crenshaw, M.D., the show is centered around panel discussions and questions asked by the audience in a talk-show format. “The focus is on audience participation,” said Dr. Lever, a sociologist who has been on the show since it began. Dr\ Lever received her doctorate in sociology from Yale University and is widely respected in her field. Co-host Theresa Crenshaw is a distinguished physician and director of the Crenshaw Clinic in San Diego. “This is not a subject m atter that many people feel comfortable w ith,” said Dr. Lever, “Some are, but even if they want to com e and be just observers, there is a lot to learn.” ! Each of the three segm ents w ill feature a different topic paired with a guest authority on that particular subject. The first topic w ill be “Addicted to Love,” with guest P en elo p e R u ssia n o ff who w ill d isc u ss a d d ic tiv e relationships; the second is “Campus Sex,” with guest Dr.' Mary Koss, an authority on college sexual relationships and date rape; and the third is “Playboy Playm ates: Sexually Speaking,” featuring five Playboy Playm ates who will discuss “love, sex and what it’s like to be the object of other m en’s fantasies.” Dr. Janet Laver Since “campus sex” and “date rape” w ill be subjects, fem ale students are invited to attend to give their views and opinions. “One of the focuses is date rape and how many of the women are victim s of their own sexuality,” she said. “While this is important (in that respect), I also want to focus on sex as pleasure. I think that it is just as im portant Q " O Q £ 7 a ¿ZZ3 CZ7 • TJrUve/v%cil The Ifancy’s AMERICA » “The show tries to shoyr both sid es.” Since the show’s inception in late 1982, the show’s production has been com prised entirely of women. Save for a few members of the road crew, there w ill be no m en around. Women w ill run the show from the panelists to the audience, right down to the cam era operators. “While som e men think it’s discrim inatory, it benefits the women all the more (because there are no m en around),” said Dr. Lever. “It creates an atm osphere that is one of sisterhood.” Men have always been excluded from the show’s production to lessen the amount of intim idation and allow women to talk freely in an unhindered environment. “The idea fqr the show com es from our m ale producer, Mike Trikilis,” she said. “He wanted to be the fly on the wall who wanted to hear the women’s point of view. “Women are really very open, much more than m en. Men w ill focus more on ‘toe w aitress with toe big boobs,’ that sort of attitude,” Lever explained! “The woman is more likely to turn to her sister or best friend, and We’re trying to create that kind of atm osphere.” Although there is no other show like this, Lever believes the potential is there and is optim istic that a sim ilar show would work for men. “If we could get men to talk candidly about sex, then I would like to see a show centered around men. “I think that a show like that would work. “There is no question and no answer that can’t be said, because it’s uncensored,” she explained. “The idea of toe show was to create a forum for women to talk about sex, and we are trying to take'advantage of the freedom of toe PUqrboy Channel.” There is no adm ission charge, however, there is a 60-cent fee if ordered through D illards’ ticket offices. For more information, call toe Scottsdale Center for the Arts at 941-1007. • RARAM QUtlT #1AerobicsProgram Ü ^ 10% O F F A N Y SER VICE FO R TH E Y EA R WITH A S U 1.0. ! d j» | WE OFFER: •PRECISION LONG & SHORT CUTS •PERMS «HENNAS «HIGHLIGHTS l FROSTING FRAMES) COLORING «HAIR CARE CBN PROFESSIONAL FORMULA u rv BIG STUDENT at Wilson Camera Js j - Beauvais’ IT S A BLAST! Up to 18 Aerobics ClassesaDay NO CONTRACTS! YOUR FIRST VISIT ISFREE W< $ 3 0 M emb e rs h ip F e e • S 3 0 p e r m o n th o r S 4 p e r w o rk o u t 5 a m -1 am M o n d m y -F rld a y m W ithin W alking Distance From Campus (at Forest) III S| ¡¡I; ■ »All darkroom supplies, paper »Film developing •Full service cam era store »Faculty discounts tool I I p - LENSES • VIDEO • TELESCOPES • ’BINOCULARS (B ih in d The C h u c k b o x ) «* • 894*397 - 7 valley locations ------- ■ ------- I lllS i— lirTH l" III I ' >sc:\ F ITN E S S & A E R O B IC C EN TER ASU TEM PE 204 E. University ' V * A Beauvais’ U W U so n iU J t - Sa m 1mm S a tu rd a y t S u n d a y • 90 new weightmachines * l^Opo lbs. of free weights * li.7 * 2 rtmate computerbikes • 2 Wolffsystem suntan beds ’ to nutritionalcounseling • Professionaltrainers torrent * instruction fornew members •A ir conditioning »Wehave no salesmen! wm. Phoenix: 4 8 4 3 North 8th Place 2 3 0 -0 0 5 5 B o d y m asters • Tempe: 1102 W. Southern Ave. 829-6969 '/liC Nautilus SPORTS M É D I C A L I t t O U S T M f S. IWC . mmmmm COMPUTE'RtZED BICYCLES State Pres» Wednesday September 9,1987 Page 21 'C O U P O N ' R A R E LION R E S A LE (jìsì/sce B uying • S e llin g • Trading Clothing* Vintage & Contemporary • 1724 W. Main Mesa (Ntx1toTn-C*yMtf) 20% OFF DINNER 844-1787 5 p . m . - I O p .m . PLUS OTHER DINNER SPECIALS ALTA S N O W B IR D P A R K C ITY S O LITU D E SKIM 89 LAKE CITY, UTAH over THANKSGIVING • NO CLUB A V /C C * " I Sponsored by ASU TR A V EL C L U B ,ncludes: Hotel, Transportation Lift Tickets Including Tram Continental Breakfast Wine and Cheese Party T R A V E L C L U B O R IEN T A T IO N M EETIN G SEPT. 9 a t W EST CO CH ISE RO O M IN MU, 6 P.M . * at SID’ S W A R E H O U S E DELI & P U B $1.99 Pitchers-1/2 gal. Bud, Bud Light, Coors Iß price on soft drink refills THURSDAY, SEPT. 10 6:00 P.M. $ 2 5 deposit for ski trip or full paym ent accepted a t Sid’s or table on m all. Deposits due by 9 -28-87. Visa/M C welcome. ASU ASU Precision Right Team Thurs., Sept. 1 0 a t 7 p.m. in TCE 201 [Technology Annex Building] For info call Dan at 985 -07 98 *P ilo ts & non-pilots welcom e. R e g u la r m e n u With tits caper. Ore-n arty. m rm n w 1 843-4593 > 1 hamburofr atu iri vs. CAL *109 NOVEMBER 13-15 B A R G A IN PRICE A LL SHOWS BEFO RE^ P.M. MON. THRU FBI. SAT . S U N A HOLIDAYS FIRST SHO W ONLY 829-0344 ™ *c " 12:00. 2:30, 5:00. 130. 103)0. 12:15 OaMMEAtTLA-n 12002m im too on iomi2oo STAKCOUTH 1230. 3:00, 5m 8:00,1030 FULLKT ALJAIRET|R|145,0061615 aoaa cor it» u m 43». 015 CAR'T OUYM LOW|PS13) 1245. 3:00, 5:15. 7:45, 9:45. 123» carawaYtm «MMa tcaoaLra too04t «« ouaum 12m 5:00.045 uhm aavuaars mi 23t nt 1201 ao WAYOUT1*1 1200. 230. 53». 7m 1000.1215 ( «aiVKMTOMKW 11:45. 215, 4:45, 7:30. 103» 1215 _ y orhciro irai» 1:15. 3m. 5:30. 7:30. 230. 123» LIVIHODAYLNATt 330. 7:45 MWAYWYm 1215. 245, 5:15. 8:00, 1030, 1230 J215,215,4:15,015,015,1015 j jß n n B D B E E E jI ^ 249-2843 5707 s o ioth a v e OMWWMYEM1200, 1:45,330 \ W 0t l IO! 6:0070:15, 10m, 1200 J Ü LAMM» 178131 11:45, 215. 4:45. 7:15.045 12m2mworntoo100012m 123». 2:30. 53». 7:45. 10:15. 12:15 cam our m im e m i» 12:15. ta t. 4:45, 7:15. 9:45.1200 FOuarapaocoroLiai 1215. 245, 5:15. IM . 1015.1215 1 o-l. C7 C7 MISAAiSOLONGMOflf g sm»tnsTmo«i J y HAMlUaOEOHILL|R] 1215. 2:45, 5:15. 7:45, 10:15,1215 house a irai» Murrini with purchase o f ski trip or any other club trip PARTY* Com e join the S4.95/PERS0N 968-6074 SffiSMI Interested in Aviation? A lyou can eat, many Hems. 10-6 Mon.-Sat. 722 S. M ill Ave., Tempo m PACIFIC COAST MTEMfOUESIATt FlYING ASSOCIATION LU N C H BU FFET Rhinestones, Glass Beads • Collectibles • Antiques • N O V . 25 -28 — — CUISINE OF INDIA Accessories* Shoes, Hats, Gloves • Jewelry • SALT Æ . OJO-LWW 035 / 147)4 „ gMESA AT 1020 V g Y SOUTHERN HAMUaSU RILL|0| 123». 2 m 5:00. 7m B J *3 12m 3:00. sm 0:00 1015,1215 me fourth nancaL m 1000 123». 2 m 4:45. 7m 1015. 12m omnaaaaaoini3i 1230.245,5:00 7:15,030 FOURTHraOTOCOL(R) MIDNIGHT SHOWS FRIDAY & SATURDAY LAIAMAmm IMMUMUMLLM 1200, 2 m 5:00, 745. 1015,1230 carr mit Mummia 1245. 3:00. 5:15. 7m IOOO. 1200 1200. 2 m 53». 7:30. 10:00 M urrn 12m 245,5:00 7:15.030 MUtY|» 1200.230.53»7:45.1015,12m SZE1**“ Transportation FAJITA PRIMA FAJITA PRIMA INTRODUCES 3 GREAT T0STADAS PRESENTS . . . ALL MADE FRESH, JUST FOR YOU! COME OVER TO FAIITA PRIMA AND CELEBRATE neh y e e r n ig h t THE GREAT TASTE 0E SOUTHWESTERN F O O D . , . AND TRY OUR NEW BEAN & CHEESE OR GUACAMOLE T0STADAS FREE WHEN YOU PURCHASE A BEEF OR CHICKEN FAIITA. (O ffer valid u n til the next new m oon.) W E D N E S D A Y S E D T . 9 th 1 8 :C C p .m . EVERY NIGHT PROM 5-8 P.M. WITH FREE SALSA AND CHIPS AND 2 FOR 1 BEER AND WINE COOLERS. .4«se S 1 .0 C LONG ISLAND IC C TCAS CO RO N A » W ELL» W IN E Sk C R A ET C H A N C E T C W IN : 2 ED EE TIC K ETS T C N EW Y C E E OPEN UNTIL Cornerstone 2:00 A.M . Corner o f Rural & University on fri. & Sat. South end of the mall AND 2 E D E E C I A N T S V S . 4 9 er* E C C T B A L L T I C K E T S S h e w y © u r N . y . e r N .J . ID a n d © et In F R E E U I /A M l L4LLL i r : L A C C H A ’ S P I M A . T E M P E (O ffer not valid w ith any other offering.) Sana 9 1 9 E . A P A C H E D L V D ., T E M P E 9 2 1 -9 7 7 9 i W Sdnœ da^Septsrnber^98^ Celebrity earnings: where the buck stops BUI Cosby speaks at M s daughter’s graduation from Wesleyan Untversity in May. Cosby's estimated earnings in 1986 and 1987 were $84 m illion. BUYeSELL«TRADE Your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no textbooks, please) we pay 30% of our re-sale price in cash or 50% in tradein credit which may be used to pur­ chase anything in the store. (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sfrt. or Sun.) Browse through our three floors of: •New A Used Books •Art Prints A Posters •Calendars A Cards •Handbound Journals M-P 10-9 S A T 10-6 S U N 12-5 C h a n g in g H ands 414 M ill Avenue 966-0203 O ld Town Tem pe Computers for Rent Now at The A rch es 122 E. University Come and visit us 921-0980 BUNDLE’S JJ> N Bob’s Bicycle Barn LIQUORS i MKT. 730 S. MILL !■ ■ ■ / i S i e A SSO C IA TED STU D EN TS Lecture Series presents C ru iser Headquarters Sun D e vil C ruisers C o m e r M ill & U n iv e rs ity A ve . MeislerBiauBetrepk........... .....$1.B8 While ML Wine Cootecs4 pic....... „.$2.49 Hannah&HoggVoikaaop 750 mi.... $4.98 Playboy Used Magazines..........70 Prince, pop singer, $23 m illion. NEW YORK (AP) — Here is a list of the world’s 40 highest- 20. 21. Billy Joel, pop singer, $23 m illion. paid entertainers and their total earnings for 1986 and 1987, 22.Stephen King, novelist and screenw riter, $21 m illion. as estim ated by Forbes magazine: 23. Paul Hogan, actor, $20 million. 1-Bill Cosby, actor and author, $84 million. 24. Panl McCartney, singer and composer, $18 m illion. 2.Sylvester Stallone, actor and screenwriter, $74 million. 25. Tom Selleck, actor, $18 million. 3. Bruce Springsteen, rock singer, $56 million. Bruce W illis, actor, $17 million. 4. Charles M. Schulz, “Peanuts” cartoonist, $55 million.26. 27. Miehael J. Fox, actor, $17'miUion. 5. Eddle Murphy, comedian and actor, $50 million. 28.Willie Nelson, country singer and actor, $17 m illion. 6.Steven Spielberg, filmmaker, $50 million. 29. Jack Nicholson, actor, $16 m illion. 7. Madouna, singer and actress, $47 million. 30. Tom Cruise, actor, $16 m illion. 8.Whitney Houston, pop singer, $44 million. 31. Phil Donahue, television host, $16 m illion. 9. M ichael Jackson, pop singer, $43 million. 32. Marvin Hagler, boxer, $16 m illion. 10.Johnny Carson, TV host, $40 million. 33.Steve Martin, comedian and actor, $15 m illion. 11. U2, four-member rock group, $37 million. 34.Sogar Ray Leonard, boxer and TV comm entator, $14 12.ZZ Top, three-member rock group, $31 million. million. 13.Jim D avis, Garfield cartoonist, £11 million. 35. Mike Tyson, boxer, $13 million. 14. Bon Jovi, five-m em ber rock group, $29 million. 36.Jane Fonda, actress and exercise m aven, $13 m illion. 15.Arnold Schwarzenegger, actor, $26 million. Julio Iglesias, singer, $13 rnilHon. 16. Kenny Rogers, country singer and actor, $26 million. 37. 38. PM1 Collins, rock singer, $12 m illio n 17.Van Halen, four-member rock group, $25 million. 39. Barhra Streisand, singer and actress, $11 m illion. 18.Wayne Newton, pop singer, $24 million. 40.Oprah Winfrey, TV host, $10 million. 19.N eil Diamond, pop singer, $24 m illion B est p ric e s in to w n . C h eck u s o u t, n ew a n d u se d . All ty p e s, re p a irs a n d serv ice. Haagen Dazs Natural Ice Cream, Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice, Wines, over 40 Imported Beers. Majorcredit cartrades welcome 1906 E . Apache, Temp# 2 blocks cast o f McCIIntock 967-9079 JACK ANDERSON Pulitzer Prize Winner and America’s Möst Widely Read Journalist CAMPUS MEN SPERM DONORS NEEDED •All ethnic oniqiNS *18-^5 yeans olb •Must be healthy FiNaNcial CoMpeNsatioN Fon Qualified D onor If you woulb like to help childless couples, please call: SW SpG R M B a N k 9 5 6 - 7 4 - S I All ReconOs $ calls A rc CoNfioeNtial C A L L 968-7771 1250 E. Apache, Suita 112, Tam pa, Arizona85281 (O n t building t u t ot A lttr T h t Qold Ruth) H O URS M O N .-TH URS. 8:30-8:30 FRIDAY 8:30-8:00 SATU R D AY 10.00-3.00 Ose Our Priority Discount Coupon* & Save World Pamoua Offer 20% OFF ASXI&SSi. 15% OFF S ch o o l & O ffice S u p p lie s FREE with Student/ASU I.D . Zl/2 Self- Serre C opies «l/SsJlXOfcWNW Bond Any Quantity Wednesday, September 9,1987,12:30 p.m. Memorial Union Arizona Room 50« OFF BINDING Pi c k Wednesday September 9,1987 Page 23 aradise not lost in ‘Casta way ”s breezy tropical tale SCOTT C. SECKEL tate Pres» "D esert, jungle, mountain, tundra, the endless w astes of e sea — these are the lonely mansions of the soul:" Anonymous. | Being stuck on a deserted tropical isle in the far western acific with an attractive member of the opposite sex is not a |tuation m ost people would describe as hell; but Cannon Teen Entertainm ent’s drama, “Castaway,” points out the , lities of such a situation in a way that might force other inclusions to be formed . . . I Producer Rick McCallum’s latest film is based on the Autobiography of Londoner Lucy Irvine (played by Amanda onohue), who answered an ad in the e n te r ta in m e n t weekly m e Out. H ie ad called for a “w ife” to spend a year with a ¿riter on a desert island. The writer was Gerald K in g sla n r i ¡Oliver R eed), the island was Tuin, and the year was ^finitely not a party. I Tuin lies in the Torres Straits, south of New Guinea and forth erf Australia. H ie pair reached this mile-long pfamk 0f nd after a long series of difficulties, not the least of which as being forced to marry by the Australian government, tod all of which point out the fact that one does not simply g0 j live on any island on a whim. Constant exposure to sun and salt water as w ell as insect ites created gaping sores and sw elling on Gerald and Lucy, “ ese afflictions are excellently, skillfully mimiokaH by the ctors and toe special effects people. Such physical problems are toe toll of the tropics and here toe film takes a wide “ Castaw ay” berth around unrealistic “Blue Lagoon”rtype crap. ★ ★ ★ This m ovie m ay seem a bit rushed to those who have Cannon Film s presents a read toe book and that is Nicolas Roeg film, starring right; it is. While viewers Oliver Reed and Amanda a r e n e v e r b o red w ith Donohoe. Based on the director N icholas R oeg’s book by Lucy Irvine. Written fa st-p a c e d w ork , it is by Allan Scott. Produced by confusing and perhaps a tad Rick McCallum. Directed by too surrealistic. It would’ve Nicolas Roeg. been nice to see perhaps a l i t t l e m o r e of the Rated R bureaucratic problems in Australia and a M e less of G e r a ld ’s sc a b b e d fe e t The photography is spectacular: fish, sharks, w aves seen from underwater, toe glare of toe equatorial sun on the land. Harvey Harrison, director of photography, did a great job under what were undoubtedly rough conditions film ing in toe Seychelles Islands north of Madagascar. In spite of all this unaverage beauty, this is not an escapist film ; any problems existing between two people in civilization w ill survive and probably be m agnified in toe bush. GORDON LIGHTFOOT spreads his wings at GAMMAGE 7 PM Tickets $1 6, T H E G fe A T E H T E K T A lH ' e n t t h a t 's * A S U students, faculty and staff r e c e iv e a $ 2 -p er-tick et d is c o u n t for this event. For m ore inform ation Sunday, Septem ber 20 J0 5 T LOOK AT All K O liver Reed and Amanda Donohue star in “ Castaway.” L X. ' call the G a m m a g e Box O ffic e at 965-3434. co m e TO GAMMAGE! ANp MTH STopENTptSCOONTS, I CAN EVEN afrd ppto Se e Th e m .' '.fa r campuswomen: IOSEWEIGHT we w ant you and BYEATWG 68POUNDSOF your friends to talk about sex on a television talk show we're searching for college women to parti­ cipate in the studio audience, as hosts and guests explore changing sexual attitudes on campus. The popular talk show produced by wom en fo r the Playboy cable Netw ork w ill be videotaped before a live audience Friday, Septem ber 11 at 7:30 p.m. at the Scottsdale Center fo r th e Arts, w e ’ll be picking a college student to be part o f the panel on campus sex th e night o f the show. FREE TICKETS CAN B E PICKED UP A T DILLARDS TICKET OUTLETS D o n 't fo rg e t to b rin g a frie n d . ¡ S o l w e'll be discussing "Campus Sex," Acquaintance nape" and “ Surviving an Addictive Relationship." Join us and share your feelings on sexual attitudes. » S First, visit your local Penguin’s Repeat the above instruc­ Frozen Yogurt Placed Then or­ tions 3 times a week for a year der the seven ounce size of our until you’ve eaten 68 pounds. rich, creamy Dutch Choco­ It's then that you’ll notice late. Next, eat it. Smile "O'—r how much you’ve afterwards. You’ve just, :l°* fo lost every time you had all the delicious o ate Penguin’s flavor of premium * * * J instead of ice cream with ____a more only half the fattening calories. P* dessert. n? FORI 2F0RÎ1 Penguin’s love to travel in pairs. So you spring for the first, and we’ll treat you to the second. Sm all, m edium o r ' i w *. L is t e n t o KSLX-FM 100.7 f o r m o re d e ta il. CHOCOLATE. M Is large yogurt. But to keep Penguin’s from becom ing an endangered sp ecies, only one coupon per customer. VERY LOW CALORIE FROZEN YOGURT 3rd & Mill (Hayden Square) c Ppnqom's Place. 1987. Not valid with any other otter Topping not included Expiras 9-16-87. Page 84 State Prest W ednesday; S ep tem b er 9 ,1 9 8 7 S T A T E PRESS Classifieds D o n ’t F lo u n d e r A ro u n d Place a C la ssifie d Ad By Phone • 965-6731 State Press 965-6731 Visa • M a ste rC a rd • S o rry, no b illin g ITS EASIER WITH A COM PUTER! Your Professor Owns One-You Should Too! AvantageX $CQ 7 Com plete System w v Includes Zenith Am ber M onitor TUBING DOWN THE SALT RIVER /* lit 640K Mem ory, M onochrom e M onitor, G raphics C a rd , Turbo, D u al 360K D rives, K eyboard, W ord P ro c., Tutor Program , and C S C Exceptional C a re Service. ^ R id e a Tube Down the S alt R iver TU BE R EN T A L AND SH U TTLE B U S SER VIC E ALL-D AY RATES S6.00 per day per person group rates available O r Shuttle B u s ticket o n ly $3 a il day • 2,000 tubes fo r rent •open 7 days a week. 9am-7pm Located 9 m iles n orth o f M ESA at the junction o f B u sh and U sery Highw ays. F or m ore inform ation, phone (602) 984-3305 o r w rite for you r free brochure and river map. A uthorized by U.S. Forest S ervice. ~ Telai IBM Compatibility Don't Drive-Call Instead Avantage286 1200B Modem $1288 -Hayes Com paL The Power -Auto Answ er Laptop . & Auto Dial -W/ Software - -80286{§>10mhz -Amber Monitor-640 K Ram p s -1.2MB Drive * -Total IBM M Compatible ( j *1399 MultiSpeed ^ CITIZEN ” Dot Matrix Printer $169 ^ EPSO N o rt D a is y /T "* " ' V Wheel Panasonic High-Speed nr Printer Includes F re e S tan d Bring this ad with you for T U B E R EN TA L $1.00 OFF •ISO C P S (J 2 N L Q Fo nts ^ -Tractor & Single S h e e tL o a d Sutter P rin t! D oes T ractor, Friction, D raft, & NLQ W o rd Perfect 4.2 T h e #1 W ord Processor WimJIbrfect E n tire f System N. Basement Matthews Center $125 lo o k Ho w Do CAD Work at Home ^ .j ■ , | , Use S AutoSketch! ASU O rder Price rréivrtú, ¡10 Pack D isks! B onus D isk F ree “ ¡ n $69s E xpires 10/1/87 ! D epartm en tal P ric in g A v a ila b le ! Ptioattg C om puter S ystem s C enter TEM PE ■ S E Com er Southern & M cClintock 838-1236 W EST SIDE * N E Com er 35 Ave. & Northern 841-0202 t o G € t r z o n H pho & j / x t o f u /V- C oupon W orks With z H L H AutoCAD Files O p e n M o n d a y -F rid a y 10-7 S a tu rd a y 10-5 M onday th ru Friday PHOENIX 1632 E. Cam el back Rd. Near 16th St. ,'nc veturti Q tA C M t T tA tc N. PHOENIX 14844 N. Cava Creek Near Greenway M arines W ehehoking&ra&wgoodm enandwom en. The intelligent approach • «. Tired of renting, commuting or student housing? C o m e hom e to Hermosa Place Condom inium s. These 2 o r 3 bedroom condos feature ail the convenience of walking to campus and the fun of campus living with q u a lity features. For what you pay in rent, move up and im prove your lifestyle! W e can show you how— you can't afford not to profit! F ro m . Sales the 60*S By: M e r r ill L y n c h Realty To se rv e a s Ju d g e A d v o c a te s in the U.S. M a rin e C o rp s. M u st be 32 year,? o ld o r less, in e x c e lle n t p h y s ic a l co n d itio n , and in tere sted in m a xim u m tria l exp erien ce. P ro g ra m s a ls o a v a ila b le fo r stu d e n ts c u rre n tly e n ro lle d in L a w S c h o o l. C o n ta c t C a p ta in C ro w e ll a t (602) 261-3880. t3 t= ï 510 W aft University, Te Model Phone: 968-7173 § i Heneóse Piece X « « f I University ASU State Pros J^dnesd^Se^ em ber^ JW 7 Page 25 ASU to come alive with'Sound of M usic' Auditions for M usical Theater of Arizona’s production of the “The Sound of Music” w ill be held Saturday and Sunday at Gammage. Equity audition tim es Saturday are 10 a.m . Sunday’s tryouts begin at noon. General call for adults will begin at 3 p.m. both days. For auditions, participants are required to bring 30 seconds of m usic — an accom panist w ill be provided. A current photograph and resum e are also required. While the popular show w ill run early next year, producers Become a L a w ye r's A s s is t a n t TO PLACE YOUR PERSONALS $ 1 .2 5 15 words or less Matthews Center (basement) 8am to 5 pm (Some restrictions apply) The Ultimate Body Is Not Out O f Reach! A C o lle g e D e g re e a n d n o p la n s ? 965-7572 STATE PRESS are starting auditions early. Nancy Dussault, from TV’s “Too Close For Comfort” w ill headline the show as Maria. There w ill be a minimum of three equity contracts a vailab le. R ehearsals begin in m id-Novem ber and performances are January 7-16 at Gammage. Dussault stepped into the Mary Martin role in “The Sound of Music” in its final year on Broadway. She later, went on to become David Hartman’s co-host on ABC-TV’s “Good Morning Am erica.” For additional information, call 946-9200. The U N IV ER SITY O F S A N DIEGO, offers an inten­ sive A B A A pproved postgraduate 14 week LAW YER’S ASSISTANT PROGRAM . This Program w ill enable you to put your education to work as a skilled member of the legal team. A representative w ill be on cam pus CLASSIFIED Tuesday, November 17th a t ll:00 am | AD. •No contracts mNo salesman •Low m onthly paym ents ¡M a n o ria l Union #217- Coconino Room That’s right! Now you can place your STA TE PRESS classified ad over the phone If you have a VISA or M ASTERCARD . Ju st ca ll 965-7572 and ask for classified advertising. 8am to 5 pm DAILY For more information ; contact your career center at: ASU H ST A T E PR ESS P Universi!)' o f San D iega 9 6 5 —2 3 5 0 “The Gym For Men & Women” L aw yer ¿A »distant Program | Room 318, Serra Hall San Oiego, C A 9 2 1 10 (619)260-4579 TEMPE 1835 East 6th Street «TNSTW O T ASU €~ N am e__ Current A ddress. 15 M ATTHEW S CEN TER NO RTH BASEM EN T A SU 965-7572 1N .S tate. C ity. Î f .Z ip . ■- lu w v m u T l 8 894“1331 New Location In Gilbert 75 Current Phone # W. Baseline Hours: 6 am -i l p.m. Mon.-Fri. 8 a m '8 pm. Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Sun. Open Every Day of Year 8 9 2 -9 0 4 2 Permanent Phone # 3 Months For $50 (No Enrollment Fee) New Members Only (Exp. Oct. l, 1987.) With This Ad yyyw W w W W w W w w W w w w w w w w W w w W W w W w W w w w w $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ m M ore than $100,000 in scholarships available to BUSINESS MAJORS ONLY ■A m m y ■ « ■ • *. ;! V«V ■i — *i ...y m _ ^vlw!vVX'!v(S&, f i l i l i M JB p Ou C■JOLMJL .w m v AW A •» m n " " ÍW M ..Ù m y To apply, complete an application form available in any College of Business departm ent office. D EA D LIN E: D E C . 15, 1987 Congratulations to our HOT New DELTA DELTA DELTA PLEDGES f $ $ $ $ $S $ $ s $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ % $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ î SHAKIANDERSON TAMI BECKER ANDREA CARLSON ASHLEY CURRY JULIE DOUGLAS KATEHEALY LIZHUNDELT DENISE JOHNSON MICHELLE KUSIEK COLLEENMcKALLOR DAYNANAULT JAMIP0MP0NI SHELLY SCANLON JULIESHANKS KARENSPADONI HM TODD DENA WELCH KIM WOLLINE DANIELLEASHMORE SAMANTHA BOLLINGER KATHY CASSANO PAMELA DOLL CAROLYN GEIST PATTYHOPPER CAROL HUTCHINSON LISA KATES KIMLITTLEFIELD emilie McLaughlin LANINELSON JENNIFER REED KRISTENSCHROEDER STACEYSHEPARD KARfNST0LLMAN x SUE WALKER DONNA WHEAT TRACY WORDEN HEATHER BAREFIELD LINDIBRIDGES DEANNA CATES KIMD0RS0 LILLIANHAHNE JULIE HUELSTER JEAN JANES LAURA KAYE JENNIFER McCLURE EVA MONSEY MARY OWNNELL JENNIFER RINGGENBERG AMBER SERWAT THERESA SOTTEK ANNE TODD KELLI WALSH TRICHELLE WHITE LORI ZWEIG 1 Page 26 JW edn«da^S2*OTberS^9e7 SALE DATES SEPfm -11 nfü OKSTORE C A LC U LA TO R S! TYPEWRITERS! DISKETTES! AND.. MUCH M ORE AT Co-sponsored by American Marketing Association of ASU MON.-THURS. 8am-6pm. FRI. 8am -5pm sports State Pré«» Wednesday September 9,1987 Page 27 Strong backfield, returning starters pow er U C L A P R E V IE W r PACIFIC I ll I l f ^CONFERENCE^ m m h un Today: UCLA (1986 8-3-1) Editor’s dote: This is the sixth in a nine-part series previewing each football team in the Pac-10 Conference. By CHRIS DORSEY State Press Only one school in the nation can brag about winning five consecutive bowl gam es — UCLA. Following a 47-14 win over San Diego State Saturday, the Bruins are now ranked third in the nation, behind Big Eight powerhouses Oklahoma and Nebraska. UCLA is in the fam iliar position of being ranked in an early-season Top 10, but in past seasons the Bruins have squandered early success and ended up in the Second 10. But this year m ay be different. The Bruins are heavily favored to win the Pac-10 with 56 returning letterm en and 12 starters. The backfield appears to be the strength of Coach Terry Donahue’s offense, that returns five starters. “If we rem ain healthy, I expect this area to be one of the strengths of our football,” Donahue said. “In Gaston (Green), we have perhaps die most talented running back in the country and a legitim ate Heisman Trophy candidate, but he is not our only back. “Eric (B all) looked his old self during the spring practice. If Mel (Farr) and Jam es (Prim us) are both recovered from their injuries, w e w ill be w ell stocked at the fullback position, as w ell.” Green w ill be the core of the Bruin offense. He led the Pac-10 in rushing last year, averaging 113.9 yards a gam e. In the 31-10 victory over Brigham Young in the Freedom Bowl, Green was unstoppable, rambling for 266 yards and three touchdowns. Green returned in fine fashion for the Bruins against San Diego State in UCLA’s season-opener Saturday. The senior carried die ball 19 tim es for 135 yards, including an eight- Calm State P ieas photo UCLA tight end Charles Arbuckte (61) is tackled by ASU roverback Robby Boyd (26) last season. The Bruins have, been to five bowl games in a row, and are favored to win the Pac-10 this season. yard touchdown scamper. But Green w ill not be UCLA’s only terror. Ball, a junior, was hampered by injuries during the 1986 campaign, and will be a threat to UCLA opponents this season. In the 1985 season finale against Iowa in the Rose Bowl, Ball ran like a proven veteran, rushing for 227 yards and four touchdowns. To top it off he was named Player of the Game. The fullback position is also highly touted as Fan* and Primus are expected to be co-starters. Primus moves from tailback to fullback after being the Bruins’ second leading rusher last season when replacing Green and Ball. Entering his third season as a starter in the fullback position is Farr. The senior is known for his blocking for the tailback. He suffered a back injury in the late stages of the season and could hamper him in the early going. Going into fall practice, Donahue’s quarterback problems were not resolved. Juniors Troy Aikman and Brendan McCracken were battling for the starting nod. “We went into the Spring hoping to name a starting quarterback, but weren’t able to do it,” Donahue said. Aikman redshirted in 1986 after transferring from Oklahoma. McCracken is the most experienced in running UCLA’s system . McCracken is an option quarterback, whereas Aikman is a strong-armed drop back passer. In the season opener, the Bruins played both quarterbacks. Aikman completed eight of 10 passes for 166 yards while McCracken was 2 of 5 for 14 yards. One of the top receivers on the West Coast this season is Turn to U C LA , page 31. : It’r l ASU athletic director strives for ‘by the rules’ progress By CAROL BOOS State Press Who is Charles Harris anyway? Last week, the director of athleties found him self in the hot seat. He w as accused of squandering football tickets that should have gone to students, of being an avid Sim Angel supporter and a devotee of profit. " , Harris has agreed that this year’s ticket distribution w as -a m ess, and he promised that next year w ill be different. Still, Harris w ill have to listen to the criticism from the press and irate students. Charles Harrte “It goes with the job,” he said in a smooth baritone voice. “This is a management job and a management job requires responsible d e c is io n m a k in g . I f a n y o n e f e e ls , disenfranchized by the decision, then people have the freedom to speak out, and I’m all for freedom of speed). What it does is create overtures for discussions.” Few people ever w ill see the manicured Harris in anything besides a suit, tie , a tailored shirt and suspenders. He is calm , co d and collected Idee any successful executive, even after he has received his second parking ticket for parking in his reserved parking spot in front of the Activity Center, a spot for which he pays $400 to $500 a year. “This is the second one this week,” he said as he tossed the yellow ticket and its white envelope in a pile of papers on his desk. “I don’t ¿tow where they want m e to park.” His office, Which is not much bigger than most dorm rooms, is sim ple; an oak desk, two chairs, two sm all couches, two pictures from the 1987 Rose Bowl on the wall and a bookcase that has more trophies than books on it. There is also a framed collage of photographs of his wife, Lenora. H anis, who makes $84,753 a year at ASU, is the first black athletic director at a major university. S in c e ta k in g o v e r , h e h a s been instrumental in promoting funding for a new 100,000-square-foot, six-story intercollegiate athletic office that will be constructed at the south end of Sun D evil Stadium, and in expediting the new golf course which w ill be built on land adjacent to Packard Stadium. He has also been given credit for bringing stability to the athletic department. “Before Charles cam e to ASU, there was about an 80 percent turnover on the staff,” Associate Director of Athletics Herman Frazier said. “The past year there has been about a 15 percent turnover.” Frazier has worked in the athletic department since 1979, and for four other athletic directors. “Not to say the other people weren’t good,” Frazier added. “It’s just he has been more of a total commander over the department. “There’s no question in my mind stability has com e into the program. ” In the past two academ ic years, the number of student athletes earning a 3.0-or- above-grade-point-average m ore than tripled (from 39 to 180). Dave Price, assistant com m issioner at the Pacific-10 Conference, said Harris has had a positive im pact regarding how ASU is perceived in the conference. “I think he has shown you can a have a winning program and a clean program at the sam e tim e.” In addition, there have been only three head coaching changes since Harris took over as athletic director (Steve Patterson replaced Bob Weinhauer as head basketball coach, Steve Loy replaced George Boutell in men’s golf and Maura McHugh replaced Juliennne Simpson in women’s basekthall). Last year, ASU had winning seasons in all but three sports and the Sun D evils saw their first Rose Bowl victory. H a r r is is w illin g to ta lk a b o u t accom plishm ents in his department. “I think it was essential to have stability in the program and in the coaching staff, and even though it is easy for us to forget it, I think overall w e’ve achieved it,” he said. Before coming to ASU, Harris was the athletic director at the U niversity of Pennsylvania, where W einhauer, who coached basketball at ASU for two years, led the Quakers to the Final Four of the NCAA basketball playoffs in 1979. In six years as director at Pennsylvania, Harris adopted the school’s first official athletic policy in three decades. Also during his tenure, the Quakers captured their first Ivy League football championship in 23 years and set a school record for Ivy League championships won in a single season (8). He also balanced a budget that was m ore than $700,000 in debt. “We reconstructed the entire program,” Turn to HARRIS, page 28. State F r e u W ednesday, S e p te m b e r? , 1987 H arris______ % Continued from page 27. Harris said. “We started going out, beating the drum and raised a lot of money and at the sam e tim e we got lucky with som e of the coaches w e brought in.” A Penn official said the university still is feeling the effects of Harris. “I think we are definitely feeling the benefits from his leadership and that has allowed us to focus our efforts on other sports (besides football), fundraising and o v era ll program d evelop m en t,” said Carolyn Schlie, senior associate athletic director at Penn. Curtis Blake, athletic director at Drake U niversity,, echoed Schlie’s sentim ents about Harris. “The communication w as excellent when I worked under him ,” said Blake, who worked as an assistant director under_ Harris at Penn. “He produced opportunities to take on responsibility. He’s one person that h as been a great help to m e professionally.’’ Harris is used to being in the spotlight. He was a member of the honor society and lettered in both varsity football and baseball as an undergraduate at Hampton Institute in Hampton, Va. He (hen worked at Newsweek m agazine ,in New York before going to the University of Michigan where he earned a m aster’s degree in journalism. “When I went to graduate school, I needed a job — like any graduate student,” Harris said. “I had a chauffeur’s license, so I applied to the university transit to drive a bus. But the university saw his resum e, decided to use his trade and hired him to work in its sports information office. The next sem ester Harris was offered a job as assistant to the director of athletics. Harris said for 40 to 45 weeks a year, he averages 60 to 75 hours of work each week, w hich in clu d es ad m in istrative work, m eetings, presentations, school activities and travel. “Because of the com m itm ents, of tim e to be involved in m eetin gs and m ake presentations, I don’t have the chance to be around the athletes nearly as much as I would like to,” Harris said. Assistant Athletic Director Vic Cegles said, “He’s concerned with athletes; you can’t say his door is never open. You don’t go to the Rose Bowl just because your football team is good. It’s his qualities that have taken this program to new heights.” ASU assistant basketball coach Lionel Hollins knows where Harris’ door is. The exSun D evil wanted to coach after he retired from a 10-year career in the NBA, but needed a degree to coach at the college level. Hollins then spoke to Harris, and was eventually hired as an assistant coach at ASU. “He put m e in touch with people in a d m issio n s and w ith people in th e. department (liberal a rts),” the former Portland Trailblazer said. “If it wasn’t for him I would probably be in Portland working for Smith-Barney and being bored. Not that I wouldn’t be making money, hut I wouldn’t be doing what I wanted to do. I wouldn’t have been on the streets but he encouraged m e and supported m e when things didn’t work out as far as coaching basketball. “He also helped m e get in contact with other universities. It wasn’t because I was going to com e back to ASU and help ASU. He helped m e as an individual.” * Harris said he has no plans to leave ASU. He said he turned down a job offer with North Carolina and a 30 percent salary increase last year because he still wants to accom plish m ore at ASU. So m uch com puter, so little money. The Enhanced IBM PC Convertible The IBM Personal System/2™ Model 30 • Enhanced Display • Two drives/256 KB Memory • Monochrome Display • Two drives/640 KB Memory *848««* ’ 1070 °°' The ASU COMPASS Open House presents IBM Wfeek. The IBM Personal System/2 family of high perform ance, advance design com puters, pular IBM Enhanced PC Convertible are now available through the IBM Education P roduct Coordinator on the ASU campus. Now, students, faculty and staff lain boy IBM quality at a truly affordable price. Septem ber 15th through the 18th T he COMPASS (Computing Assiststnce Center) Located in Trailer #2 on Palm Walk Arizona State University “My goal at the end of a three-to-five-year period is that we have established ourselves as not only a continual model for other institutions, but that our record on and off the field is such that it is indeed one that other schools aspire to achieve,” Harris said. “Charles has made a very good im pact,” P rice said. “He cam e in a t tim e when the institution was suffering from infractions and has made it very clear that ASU w ill abide by the rules and there w ill be no tolerance for those who don’t.” * Offer limited to qualified ASU students, faculty and staff. Prices do not include state and local taxes. Prices subject-to change. Personal System/2 is a trademark of IBM Corp. "’•CLIVE BARKER PROVES H i HORROR KING OF MOVTEMMI -Bill Harris, A t The-M ovies COUNTRY l f iT M M m m ij j R A M O NETW ORKS "THE BEST SLAM BANG, NO-HOLDS-BARREI). 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ANDREWROBINSON CLARE HIGGINS a w wnuoujc ASHLEY LAURENCE war i t CHRISTOPHER YOUNG u b t t t v t nunoxs DAVIDSAUNDERS CHRISTOPHER WEBSTER a w MARK ARMSTRONG tv m w JI m o m CHRISTOPHER FIGC w trrroi A W tw B T tD tr CUVE BARKER a n*w wcwiurm twMs aoc^«r j s s /ssss ccmoisc m ------------------- - OPENS NATIONWIDE SEPTEMBER 18th F R E E S N E A K PREVIEW M U C in e m a Low er Level M U Thursday, September 10 • 1 p.m. Saturday, September 12 • 4 p.m. Prizes to be given away Sponsored by: MUAB Film Alpha Epsilon Pi BA D A N IM A L S T O U R 19 8 7 ASU ACTIVITY CENTER S E P T E M B E R 9 • 8 PM • A L L S EA T S $16.00* R E S E R V E D SEA T TIC K ETS ON S A L E NOW AT ALL DILLARD’S LOCATIONS. ASU BOX OFFICE AND HAPPY TRAILS DEPARTMENT STORES •SUBJECT TO SERVICE CHARGE ASASU/ASU PUBLIC EVENTS State P ro » Wednesday September 9,1987 Page 29 Experience Spikers m anage 2-2 record in tough excursion to M idw est By JOAN McKENNA State Press The ASU volleyball team found last,weekend’s road trip to Illinois and Indiana to be a “good learning experience” as the Sun D evils com piled a 2-2 record against stiff competition. The Sun D evils lost to sixth-ranked Illinois, 3-1, Friday and fourth-ranked Brigham Young, 3-0, Saturday morning, before bouncing back to defeat Texas A & M, 3-2, Saturday evening at th em in i Classic in Champaign, 111. ASU carried that momentum into Sunday, defeating Indiana, 3-2, in Bloomington, Ind. Head coach Debbie Brown said that while 13th-ranked ASU lost the early m atches, they gained a lot in terms of selfanalysis. Debbi» Brown “We played w ell, and sure, we would have liked to have won,” she said. “But both BYU and Illinois are expected to be in the final four. We were very com petitive.” The Sun Devil coaching staff plans to use those'matches as an instructive tool. “Playing against the tougher team s showed us what we need to work on,” Brown said. “Everyone got to play at some point. It was a good learning experience.” Videotapes of the tournament w ill help in studying the problems, as w ill an accommodating schedule, which Brown called perfect. The Sun D evils have a week off before playing Grand Canyon Sept. 15 in Phoenix. “We’re hot an experienced, older team ,” Brown said. “We have room to improve before w e’re at the, top of our game. We’re going to study the videos, especially a couple of the rotations which were weak. We have tim e to strengthen them .” The statistics reflect some of those weaknesses. While the Sun D evils defensively surpassed the Fighting Illini, they lost the match 15-6,15-12,1-15,15-6 on offense. ASU totaled 40 kills, 13 by middle blocker Sue Nord, to Illinois’ 56, and had a .150 team attack percentage to Illinois’ .356, ASU showed their defense was parallel to the niihi, collecting 58 digs, 14 by outside hitter Christy Nore, to Illinois’ 49. ASU blocked the ball 19 tim es to the opposition’s 18. Both team s had seven service aces, four for ASU by outside hitter Tracey Barberie. ASU made a strong attempt to come back after losing the first two gam es by winning the third, holding Illinois to just one point. The BYU match proved to be a lesson in frustration as ASU scored 13 points in each gam e only to lose each 15-13,15-13, 15-13. Offensively, Nore cam e alive with a team-high 15 kills and 11 digs. Freshman Mindy Gowell took advantage of her plhying tim e with 10 kills. The Sun Devil defense again was im pressive with 17 blocks Sand a Personal Adte someone Spadai. State Press« to the Cougars’ 13. Middle blocker Dawn Meidinger accounted for six. Brown said the team blocked more than she anticipated, a welcome bonus. Brigham Young played Illinois in their final match on Saturday with the Cougars taking it in four gam es to win the tournament. ASU’s victory over Texas A & M in its last match of the tournament was its first of the season. Despite the win, Brown said the team had less energy. “We let down m entally for the rest of the trip. We were not as good, not as intense.” Part of the problem may have been playing conditions. “It was a long road trip in humid clim ate and the gym was not air conditioned,” Brown said. The Texas A & M match was a five-gam e struggle with ASU posting im pressive numbers against the non-ranked team . Setter Regina Stahl made 52 assists for a .452 assist percentage, Nore and Gowell tallied 20 and 19 kills, respectively and setter Noelle Fridrich reached a new career-high 12 digs. The Sun D evils had to come from behind after dropping the first two gam es 10-15,2-15. They won the third 15-10, shut out the Lady Aggies in the fourth and won the deciding gam e, 15-8. One of the highlights of the Classic was Nore’s selection to the all-tournament team. “Christy Nore started off slow, but she got more confident as we went along,” Brown said. “She finished strong.” Brown also said she was pleased with freshmen Gowell and Tina Berg, saying both did better every tim e off the bench. Sunday’s victory over Indiana confirmed this with Nore and Gowell collecting 43 kills between them, out of the team ’s 77. Indiana actually had a higher attacking percentage of .279 to ASU’s .262, but the Sun D evils atoned for it with 15 service aces, seven by Stahl, to Indiana ’s nine. The match again went to five gam es, stretched over two hours and 40 minutes. The Sun D evils’ match against the Antelopes Tuesday will be the last warmup before their Pac-10 opener against Oregon on Sept. 18 in the Activity Center. D on't let it rain on yo u r parade. It sells in State Press Classifieds. . Basement. Matthows Center 965-6731 DLL PRANKSTER’S 1024 E A S T B R O A D W A Y 967-8875 —orders to go- BEST HOOD è FEVERAQ E IN TEM PE! -orders to gor WHEN: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10 ALL DA Y AND ALL NIGHT!!! A* A O' $ Prankster’s will be open at 6 a.m. Thursday, September 10 until 1 a.m. for its 5th year Anniversary Party. From 6 a.m. until 11 a.m. B R E A K FA S T with eggs, waffles, sausage, bacon, rolls and fruit salad for only $1 .50. Also 50$ on all Draft Beer and 50$ Schnapps. Starting at 11 a.m. is B lo w the Border Thursday with $1.75 Coronas, $2.10 Margaritas and our Taco Special. Also Thursday night will be the start of our drawing for a 4 day/3 night vacation in MazatlanH! W e’re excited about our five great years of business and we want you to celebrate it with us. We’ll be giving away great prizes all day and night including 2 Grand Prizes, Hats and Prankster’s Anniversary Shirts!!! PRIZES, PRIZES AND 1st GRAND PRIZE Weekend for two in Las V egas1 3 days/2 nights/airfare/hotel/$50 spending money! 2nd GRAND PRIZE Weekend for two at The Pointe* 3 days/2 nights/free happy hour/free breakfast/$25 spending money! *M ust be present to win, m ust be 21 ye a rs or older to win. Page 3 0 yv> Wednesday, September 9,1987 Sooners, H uskers own top spots in football poll (AP) — Oklahoma, Nebraska and UCLA remained the top three team s in The Associated P ress’ second college football poll of the year — and first during the season —while Auburn moved into the fourth spot after its 31-3 victory over Texas. The Sooners, who started off their season with a 69-14 drubbing of North Texas State, were named No. 1 on 54 of 58 ballots cast by a nationwide panel of sportswriters and broadcasters and released Tuesday. Oklahoma received 1,154 points to 1,054 for Nebraska, which got three first-place votes after a 56-12 victory over Utah State. The other first-place vote went to No. 3 UCLA, a 47-14 victor over San Diego State in its opener, which had 947 points. Those three team s occupied the sam e spots in the AP’s Chandler, Lake, Jones named players of week S e llin g in the cla ssifie d s. A P iece o f Cake State Press 965-6731 L A Z Y L IQ U O R S 1336 E. 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M a n y m o r e s p e c ia ls p l u s a o f im p o r t e d b e e r & v a r ie t y w in e N M lillim illH IIIIIIIIH IItllM UtlHIlllkffll W O RK FO R Y O U R SELF A s ■ cam pus representative you’ll be reeponsble for placing advertising materials on bulletin boards and working on marketing program s for clients such as Am erican Express, Boston University, Eurall, and yarious m ovie com panies, among others. Part-time work, choose your own hours. No scries. M any of our reps stay with us long after graduation. If you are self-motivated, hard­ working, and a bit of an entrepreneur, call or write for more Information to: AMERICAN PASSAGE NETWORK 6211 W . HOW ARD S TR EET CHICAGO, IL 60648 1(800) 221-5S42 or (312) 647-8880 CH ICAG O DALLAS LO S A N G ELES NEW YO RK S EA TTLE CARPET REMNANT OB*- The Second 10 consisted of Penn State, Washington, Arkansas, Tennessee, Arizona State, Notre Dame, Michigan State, Pittsburgh, Alabama and Georgia. Last P eek ’s Second 10 was Penn State, Arkansas, Texas A & M fell out after a 17-3 loss to LSU, and Forida lost 31-4 to Miami, F la. Iowa was idle last week, but the Hawkeyes lost their kickoff classic opener to Tennessee, 23-22, the week before. WALNUT CREEK, Calif. (AP) — The Pacific-10 conference on Tuesday named Washington quarterback Chris Chandler, UCLA linebacker Cam ell Lake and California punt returner Dwayne Jones as its players of the week. Chandler, a senior from Everett, Wash., led the Huskies to a 31-21 conference victory over Stanford, passing for a career-high 314 yards and com pleting 18 or 31 passes, including a 45-yard touchdown completion. Lake, a junior from Inglewood, Calif., was credited with nine tackles — six unassisted, three sacks and one interception as the Bruins beat San D iego State 47-14. • Jones won the special team s player of the week honors by returning four punts for 80 yards as California shut out P acific 42-0. The returns by the Redlands, Calif., sophomore included a 40-yard sprint, the longest return by a Golden Bear since 1983. v - o f 40 perform ances a m onth, there’s also the opportunity for travel— not only across America, but possibly abroad. Most im portant, you can expect a first-rate pro­ fessional environm ent from your instructors, facilities and fellow musicians. T he Army has educational program s that can help you k pay for offduty'instruc­ tion, and if you qual, even d p you repay your federally-insured student loans. If you cansight- read music, perform ing in the Army could be your big break. Write: Chief, Arm y Bands Office, Port Benjamin Harrison, IN 46216-5005. O r call toll free 1-800-U S A-ARMY. ARMY BAND. BEALLYOUCANBE. YOUR ASU INSURANCE COVERS CHIROPRACTIC CARE!!! •W hiplash •N eck Pain •H eadaches •B ack Pain •Shoulder Pain •A ccidental Injuries MESA 269-3261 The rest of the Top 10 was: Louisiana State, 821; Miami, F la., 792; Florida State, 744; Michigan, 723 and Clemson, 674. Last week, it was LSU, Michigan, Florida State, Clemson and Miami, Fla. DID YOU KNOW? K S E ItN W q A! Mm/kA K-wrt sri M b CM t im i M m Washington, Arizona State, Texas A & M, Iowa, Tennessee, Notre Dame, Southern Cal and a tie between Florida and Georgia for 20th. Michigan State, P itt and Alabama w ere the newcomers to the poll, while Texas A & M, Iowa, Southern Cal and Florida fell out. Michigan State moved into 17th with a 27-13 victory over Southern Cal. Pitt beat Brigham Young 27-17, and Alabama defeated Southern M ississippi 38-6. T he hardest thing about break ing into professional music is—well, break­ ing into professional music. So if you ’re looking for an oppor­ tunity to tu rn your musical talent into a full-tim e perform ing career, take a good look at the Army. It’s not all parades and John Philip Sousa. Army bands rock, waltz arid boogie as well as m arch, and they perform before concert au­ diences as well as spectators. W ith an average C a rp e t sta rtin g at 880-1152 WESTSIDE .»til. St Am. The only movement in the Top F ive cam e when Auburn and Ohio State flip-flopped. Auburn moved up one spot to fourth with 937 points, while Ohio State, which has not opened its season yet, fell one spot with 857. G O FRO M COLLEGE TO THE A R M Y WITHOUT MISSING A BEAT a** $2.99 s/y preseason poll. We will accept your insurance, provide a student discount, with little or no out-of-pocket expense to you. TEMPE 9 6 6 -16 3 5 SCOTTSDALE 9 4 1-2 9 0 9 Dr. D onald Nelson Dr. Stephen N ielson 3910 S. Rural Rd. #E Whiplash! 7333 E. Thomas Rd. Stiff Neck & Back! statene** Don’t miss the boat U se State Press C la ssifie d s 965-6731 UTILITIES INCLUDED! • Furnished l Bdrms & Studios ' Large Roman Shaped Pool ‘ Lighted Tennis Courts ' Lighted Volleyball Court ‘ Basketball Court ' Large Bicycle Compound Patios on Some Floorplans ’ Gas Barbecues ’ Central Laundry Facilities ' 3 Blks from ASU campus G randes Gorfes 1150 W . U niversity Continued from page 27. Willie Anderson. UCLA’s “big play” performer averaged 18.R yards on his team-leading 36 receptions. At the flanker position, Paco Craig is the top-runner. The top reserve last season, Craig snagged 17 passes for a 16.9 yard average. Gone from last year’s receiving core is Karl Dorrell, who is currently tied for the No. 2 spot on the all-tim e receiving list. Another target for the Bruin quarterback will be tight end Joe Pickert (6-5,235). He hauled in three passes for 57 yards Saturday. Only one starter returns to the offensive line: senior tackle John Kidder (6-6, 270). The key to the Bruins’ success this season w ill be their defense. UCLA returns seven starters and could be»a threat to opposing offenses. Terry Turney (6-1, 230) w ill enter his third season as the starting noseguard, recording 7 sacks last season. He is flanked by senior Jim Wähler (6-5,258) who tallied 75 tackles. “In Terry and Jim , we have two very talented and experienced players,’’ Donahue said. “Terry combines fine quickness and strength to make him a premier nose guard n 10% OFF A N Y ITEM O VER $2.00 W EDNESDAY 7 P .M .-C L O S E (ONE PER CUSTOMER) at TiTTrfMlc 100 MEDITERRANEAN KITCHEN FEATURING MIDDLE EASTERN & GREEK SANDWICH/PLATES - ALSO A VARIETY OF VEGETABLE DISHES 30 1 E. 7th St 1 o1 3 pad?) ■ Med. Xatehan 1V \te Shepherds Rural & Apache ■S « “This area figures to be the strength of our defensive unit,” Donahue said. “We have experience, talent and depth at all four linebacking spots.” The biggest concern of Donahue is the depth in the secondary, although his first unit looks solid. Darryl Henley will return at a cornerback slot. He started 10 gam es and was UCLA’s top return man. At the other cornerback slot will be Dennis Price, a starter most of his career who was bothered by injuries last season. Senior Jam es Washington is back for his fourth season as starting free safety, and senior Alan Dial is slated as the starter at strong saftey. On Saturday, the Bruins will face second-ranked Nebraska in Lincoln. 1 7 'Experience O ur M editerranean Delicacies Univ. Ave and Jim has shown the ability to be a dominant player at tackle.” The linebacker position w ill be the foundation of the Bruin defense this year as three of four starters return. Leading UCLA in tackles (106) in 1986 was second-team All-Conference choice Ken Norton. The outside linebacker position is set with starters, including Eric Smith and Carnell Lake. - , (B etw een Hardy & B eck) WITH A S U I.D . UCLA Well Drinks, Wine, Bottled Domestic Beer & Mr. Boston Schnapps Tempe, AZ 85281 (602) 9 6 6 -2 3 2 6 ie = 9 SCREWDRIVERS fuzzy navels SEABREAZE cape cod BLOODY MARY tequila sunrise tequila WATERMELONS PEPPERMINT peach SPEARMINT apple ROOT BEER cinnamon SLOE SCREWS êéé Most Call Drinks, Cocktails, Imports & Shooters! JACK DANIELS wild turkey BACARDI tanqueray SEAGRAMS 7 seagrams VO . JOSE CUERVO II» .. ■y MYERS Jim beam MALIBU southern comfort CANADIAN CLUB absolut RUMPE MINZ STOLIS smimoff CAPTAIN MORGAN j& b CHIVAS johnny walker DEWARS STRAWBERRY MARGS strawberry daqs MIDORI DAQS melonballs HARVEY WALLBANGER pina coiada BACARDI COCKTAILS mal táisHEINEKEN corona BARTLES &Y JAYMES 852*9 brains RUSSIAN QUAALUDE harbor lights SNAKEBITES THE LIST GOES ON & ONI! Expanded Game Room • Never, ever, ever, ever a cover 2 F o r 1 M e m b e rs h ip T w o P e o p le Jo in for the P rice of O ne! B ring a friend and save $50. N ew m em b ers only. G o o d through S ep te m b e r 13,1987. °oW (Lim ited O ffe r— Save $50) 1 0 0^* 1 * $25 INITIATION FEE»ONLV $25 A MONTH* NO CONTRACTS AM AEROBICS OF SCOTTSDALE I do it because I know that it saves lives. That’s why I donate plasm a. M illio n s of people a ll over Am erica rely on plasm a products to stay healthy— or to stay alive! That’s a good enough reason for me. But I sure can use the extra cash, too. Up to $132 a month! That’s how nriuCh you can earn donating plasm a In safe, easy v isits to U niversity Plasm a Center. C a ll to­ day to find out ju st how easy it is, and to set up an appointm ent. ¥ 42BONUS! •15,000 sq. feet •W olffe tanning beds •Pro shop •The W orld C afe Ju ice Yogurt bar ■'rlm \ jQ »Brand new spacious facilities »H ourly aerobics »A ir-conditioned »Trainers Available V i On your first v isit with th is ad. WEEK 1st visit in a calendar week 2nd visit in a calendar week Donor Referral Weekly Totals 1 2 3 4 *10 •10 »10 •10 »20 *20 »20 •20 *3 *3 »3 *3 »33 *33 *33 •33 Example amount you can earn in each calendar month »132 University Plasm a Center íif c iW Q B L J A ssociated B loscience of Tempe, Inc. 1015 Sou th R ural Rd. Tempe, A Z 85281 Phone 968-6139 1465 N. H ayden 945-6060 (S .E . C o m o ro !H a yd e n & M cD o w e ll) Associated Bioscience, Inc. 5 m inutes from A S U OTHERLOCATIONS THROUGHOUT THE UNITED STATES, CANADA & EUROPE Page 32 J ü j* j2 S S t 2 S Ê 2 !£ £ ^ 2 2 L Su kova wins; others hatted NEW YORK (AP) - It took nine hours to play one m atch at the U.S. Open Tuesday. Rain played havoc with the schedule all day, and. eventually forced tournament officials to postpone the m atches at 8 p.m. EDT. The only match com pleted before the postponement w as Helena Sukova’s 6-1, 6-3 quarterfinal victory over Claudia KohdeKilsch. They played only 53 m inutes of tennis, but two rain delays extended the match for 5 hours, 22 m inutes. A fourth-round m en’s m atch between second-seeded Stefan Edberg and unseeded Jonas Svensson also was stopped, with Edberg leading 3-2 in the first set. The rain had stopped and play was about to resum e when another downpour struck shortly before 3 p.m . The forecast called for r a in th rou gh ou t th e day and in to Wednesday. In addition to the Sukova-Kohde-Kilsch match, second-seeded Martina Navratilova was scheduled to play No. 8 Gabriela Saba tini in a women’s quarterfinal Tuesday night. Four fourth-round m en’s m atches were also scheduled to be played. Besides Edberg-Svensson, m atches were slated between No. 3 Mats Wilander and unseeded Ken Flach, No. 5 M iloslav Mecir and unseeded Mark Woodforde, and long-shots Andrei Chesnokov and Ramesh Krishnan. On Monday, No. 4 seeds Boris Becker and Hana Mandlikova were ousted from the tournament. American Brad Gilbert rallied from a two-set deficit to beat Becker, while KohdeKilsch defeated Mandlikova in a m atch that featured a gam e penalty against the loser for- slam m ing her racket again st a scoreboard. Gilbert, the No. 13 seed, was inspired by a flag-w aving crowd that included his parents, his brother and many of his friends. ENCHILADA HOUSE "Home of the Famous Enchiladas" 6 2 0 South C o lleg e (Just North o f the Student Book Çaniter) 967-7959 BREAKFAST, LUNCH OR DINNER Buy any lunch or dinner entree and receiv e th e secon d on e of eq u al or lesser valu e at 50% o ff. •CARS & TRUCKS PRICED FROM $500 TO $5,000 •BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE •DRIVE TRAIN WARRANTIES ON ALL VEHICLES W ■ A OIVISION OF OCCAM ENTERPniSES^INC VOTED BEST HOMEMADE COOKIES IN PHOENIX SINCE 1982 Hours: Mon. - S a t . 9-9 Sunday, Too! 12-6 BUY 'A lb. GET 'A lb. FREE LIMITED TO ONE PER PERSON. GOOD AT STÖRE LOCATION ONLY. ¿ M illç & v e . T ’ S ly r t C o CUSTOM SCREEN PRINTING brazier SINGLE BURGER FULL M EAL DEAL Look wtiat you get! An all-beef burger, a regular order of crispy, golden fries, your favorite medium soft drink and to top it off, a cool and creamy 5-oz. DAIRY Q U EEN soft serve sundae. Head for your participating DAIRY Q U EEN brazier store to get the Burger Futt Meal Deal — the best bargain in town. W E TR EA T YOU RIGHT. • H t m r s «HANKS eS W ÎA ÎS •S B W M JN ItTTCRS «SHOW S 71 5th St «» ONLY AT: *1.89 1389 E. A P A C H E (Between Rural & McClintock) M ia a n C O U P O N iM M M 15% FRAMED • th e A rt of POSTERS O FF $49.99 D R Y C L E A N IN G FO R S T U D E N T S ‘ W . h a v e Nagels I M .tS W I T H A S U I.D. V L MON.-FRI. 8:30-8:00 SAT. 8:30-6:00 SUN. 11:00-4:00 r> a su FROM HOME V is it o u r Victorian parlor at 418 S ou th M ill Ave., Tempe Gilbert, a 26-year-old Californian, w ill face four-time Open winner Jim m y Connors in the quarterfinals. Connors has a 4-1 record against Gilbert, including a victory in their only m eeting this year at Orlando, Fla. With this coupon. Expires 11-8-87. OPEN AT 7A .M . COOKIES “The crowd was going w ild,” he said. “It was the greatest feeling. I’ve never had that feeling in m y life.” 50 %? AGUirs STUFF McKellips and Scottsdale in the A6C0 Shopping Center Students welcome Á.s re ci à Ce© l i, e cT i o rç t (100 yds. W. o f Alm a School) fuunle» . 2021 E. Apache Blvd. j 1244 W. BROADWAY • 1 6 « , «2 35202 • 1602) MI-J700 Ü T T E IE cuitan between M cClintock & Price, Tempe 829-7101 -‘ HïS:HT 1(W>:Sat 10-5 “A SPECIAL COLLECTION” TAKE R STUDY BREAK! Y our C am pus H air C are Center 709 S. F o re st A v e ., Tem pe N o rth o f U niversity • B ehind th e C huck Box • In O x fo rd S q u are 968-5946 W ith T h is Ad M 00 O F F With Participating Stylists REGULAR PRICES •Sham poo • P re cis io n C u t •C o n d itio n . » B lo w D r y M EN $13 • W OM EN $15 OPEN M ONDAY TH RO U G H SATURDAY. T U E S . , W E D . & T H U R S . T I L L 9 P .M . AT THE MEMORIAL UNION LANES •Wednesday 6:30 p.m. Sore Thumbs (coed 4’s) starts 9/16 •Thursday 6:00 p.m. Pinheads (coed 4’s) starts 9/17 Groups wishing to reserve lanes or form special leagues, please call 965-3642 and we will gladly accommodate you. VVVVVS.S.VS s s . \ \ \ \ s \ \ s \ \ \ \ S W \ \ W " s V \ \ \ \ V S to teP rm DETAILING KEEP YOUR CAR CLEAN & COOL WITH CUSTOM AUTO GROOMING: •BUFF & WAX EXTERIOR •INTERIOR SHAMPOO •STEAM CLEAN ENGINE REG. $119.95 TINTING classifieds AUTO • HOME • BUSINESS STOP: HEAT & INTERIOR FADING • GLARE 5 YR. LABOR & MATERIAL WARRANTY announcements SALE $8995 SPECIAL SERVICES PREM IUM SERVICE FEATURING "LIQUID GLASS" FOR ULTIMATE PAINT PROTECTION & HIGH GLOSS SHINES. 3 COATS; LIFETIME WARRANTY INTRODUCTORY OTTER: $ 1 4 9 9 CO LLEG E M ONEY available. C .C .S . Scholarship Locator Service qen help you finance your college education. We specialize in locating scholarships, grants, 5 WINDOW TINT INSERTS: fSUN DEVIL LOGOS •GREEK LETTERING •CUSTOM DESIGNS QUALITY AUTO GROOMING 63 E. McKdlips Rd. • 969-9013 (Center & McKellips) Mesa NOW OPENl and loans. Money-back guarantee. Free brochure. Call Tucson, 2960965 or write C .C .S ., P.O . Box 17150,. Tucson, AZ 85731. FRIENDS- (QUAKER) Meeting- Silent Worship- Sundays, 10-11 a.m. Danforth Chapel Fellowship, 968-3986. OUR SPECIALIST HAND MAKES EACH LOGO FROM WINDOW FILM TO YOUR SPECIFIC QUALIFICATIONS. NOTICE Due to the Pope’s visit, the STATE PRESS classified adver­ tising deadline for Tuesday, September 15 will be this Friday, September 11, at noon. $ 11.00 Hair Cuts Reg. $15 Includes shampoo, conditioner & cut. (form erly Primo's) O p e n 1 1 a .m .-? M o n .-S a t. 75* CORONAS THURS. 8 P.M.-1 A.M. 735 E. UNIVERSITY • 921-4064 T h e Actives o f Delta Sigma Phi w ould like to congratulate our fa ll pledge class. 965-6731 Matthews Center Liner Ad Rates: 15 words or less, $2.75/day, 1-4 days $2.50/day, 5-9 days $2.40/day, 10 or more days 15* each additional word Deadline: Noon, one day prior to publication Caah-Check Visa «Mastercard (Sony, no billing) The State Prase wifi not accept employment ads based on race, religion or sex unless such qualifying tactora are essential to a given position. $5.00 O ff Perm Check your adl The State Press wMI only be responsible for one incorrect R e g .$40 Includes shampoo, conditioner., insertion. Errors must be reported before noon the first day your ad With coupon. Expires 9-30-87 Cellophane $22.00 Highlight $30.00 Includes conditioner. With coupon. Expires 9-30-87 HAPPY HOUR 4-8 P.M . M ON.-FRI. $2 PITCHERS FRESH SEAFOOD & HOM EM ADE M EX IC A N FO O D — Ask about our TACO PLATE SPECIAL S T A T E PR ESS CLASSIFIEDS The State Press reserves the right to edit or reject any ad deem ed objectionable. With coupon. Expires 9-30-87 CHARBROILED SEAFOOD AND FINE MEXICAN FOOD announcem ents S ilv e r S olariu m H igh T e c h T a n n in g S in g le . . . . . . . $4.50 5 s e s s io n . . . . $19.00 1$ s e s s io n . . . $40.00 Mets ¿'tenere. Mar 9 y*ng M on.-Sat. 9:30-8:30 Sun. 11:30-4:00 FREE TM NK SESSION w /p u rc h a s e o f a n y ta n n in g s e s s io n package With coupon. Expires 9-30-87 966-6111 Call For Appointment 933 E. University The State Press disclaim s all raaponsibility tor quality and prices of good and services offered in both classified and display advertising by He advertisers. TH E NATIONAL College Calendar Search (NCOS 1867) committee has chosen ASU as the Number 1 location to find student calendar models. See you September 18th. -- ytr au to s fo r sa le 1968 M ERCEDES Benz 250S, blue, 4-door, tinted electric windows, new tires, stereo. $3000. Steve, 821-4283,963-1812. 1977 MGB. "Mint condition* New paint roof, and electrical. Pioneer deck' and speakers. 53,000 miles. A must see. 345-8480. 1977 VOLKSW AGON Camper Van, airconditioned, stereo. $2500, 955-7897, after 6 p.m. S E Corner Rural & University 1977 VOLKSW AGON Dasher station wagon, excellent condition. You should seell $1500, 967-3662, Aiaru. 1960 DODGE 024 2-door hatchback. Clean, 60,000 m iles. $1200. Mike, 921-3712. COLLEGE IS MORE 1980 MAZDA G LC. 5-speed, 4-door hatch­ back. W ell maintained. Runs good. Dependable transportation. 244-9641 evenings, 840-7897. 1981 DATSUN 200SX, excellent condi­ tion, air conditioning, casette, new tires. SaSOQtoffer, 967-3682, Ateni. 1982 CH EVETTE, excellent condition, automatic, power steering, tilt, air, AM-FM cassette, low miles, $1995. C a l Lori 994-1531. Steven Bivers Eric Paparoster M att Broad Mike Pappas W es B ush Mark Paydur To d d C ropp Steve Phipps Brian D eLugo Daniel Piagadio M ark D aggett Dan Robinson Scott Fitchett Chris Sargent B ill Flam es Gary Sargent D on King Brent Siekm an Nyle M arm on Chris Spahn Ed M cC ullough Patten Traver 1982 HONDA Accord LX »door, dean, looks sharp. AM-FM cassette, power steering, power brakes, new Urea, automa­ tic transmission, air. 59,200 miles, mutt sell, $4500. Days, 840-2405, evenings, 971-4675. 1985 Z28 Camera, loaded. AM-FM deluxe stereo cassette, excellent condition, toW miles. $11,500. 835-0021. THAN A TOSS OF A COIN. M AHELP will cake the guesswork out of your future. If you’re a student, or the parent of a student, MAHELP has the financial answets for your college needs. MAHELP offers: • GSL (Guaranteed Student Loans) • SLS (Supplemental Loans For Students) • PLUS (Parents' Loans to Under­ graduate Students) • Collegeaire® These loans are all desigied to help with the overburdening cost of higher education. mkhomenu hig h e r e d u ca tio n lo a n pro gram M ike O lsen Mike W illiam s Alan Palm er Jam es Y asas Call or write today for mote information. 1-800-824-3185 P.O. Box 820 Longmont, CO 80501 Cat got your tongue? Say it in a PersonaI Ad. State Press 965-6731 Page 34 Wednesday, September 9.1987 tic k e ts fo r t a lc CO N VER TIB LE TO Y O TA Callea G T Sunchaser. B lack, autom atic, great atareo, radiala, maga, loadad. Immacu­ late, need money. $4495. 481-9680. Ticket Connection DATSUN 210, 1979, recently painted, excellent interior, aecond owner. 40 mHes/ | gallon. 74,000 milea. $2400. After 7:30 p.m ., 991-8417. T O Y O T A C O R O N A , 1978, 4-door, 5-speed, air conditioning, mechanically s o u n d , r e lia b le fo r SlOOOtoffer. 968-1549. co m m u tin g . b ic y d c s fo r sale HEART TONIGHT! Best Seats & Prices Other Shows Available 998-3773 JACK’S TICKET AGENCY SCHWINN SU PER SPO R T, 22” . Excellent for touring. Very low mileage, Shlmano 800 components, cateye odometer, $250. 9568281, evenings or message. • C o n certs • S p o rts E ven ts • Theatre 560 S. College Suite 102, Tempe B s H 968-3939 968-3976 I960 YAMAHA 400 Special. Runs ws«, very dependable. Must sell, $500. Call John to 894-1590. 1981 KAWASAKI 750 LTD. 4500 mHes, just tuned with new battery, excellent condition. Days, 377-0685 or 431-0830 evenings, and weekends, 835-0078. $1800. 1962 HONDA Ascot, Kerker, low miles, excellent condition, $550 or best offer. Can Dave, 9663006. 1985 HONDA EHta 150 deluxe. Excellent condition, never wrecked. 8950/offer. 9667310, Tent. 1986 HONDA Rebel 250cc, excellent condition, low mHes, helmet included, $995 or best offer. 8960212. 1966 HONDA 150 Deluxe Scooter. Excel­ lent condition, Ice blue, 1968 registered, $1500. Kelly, 834-4531. 1966 HONDA Interceptor 500. A great bike, half the price of a new one. $2100/offer. Jeff, 8267249 evenings. COM M ODORE 84,1541 with llaah, printer interface, Pascal compiler aaaembler, advance basic, games, and books. 8295, 928-1041. DORM SIZE refrigerator, used 1 semester, excellent condition, $60, 921-2696. LO O K IN G F O R that sp e cia l gift? Computerized astro charts. One month forecast. Send $9.96 check or money order with full birth information including time and place, If known. Ceieetria Helpers, 8485 E . McDonald Dr., Suite 344, Scottsdale 85253. MACKINTOSH 512K, Imagewriter, exter­ nal drive, carry case. $1200. 9566281, evenings or leave message. 10-SPEED R ED Free S pirit 2 years old. Cost $180, WHI se« for *55. Can Loti, 994-1531. S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T S w elcom el Largest pro shop in valley. Expert service on all makes and models. FuH selection of ctofhing, bicycles, parts, and accessories. Financing and layaway available. Domenic’s Cycling, 1004 South MM, 967-7700. m isce lla n eo u s fo r sa le ll|flf MICHELOB ON Tap neon, $150; IBM electric typewriter, $50; Peugeot lO epead bike, $75. Jim , 9623866. PAPAL VISIT keepsakes. Cherish this once-ln-a-lifetim e event forever with specially designed Hmitsd edition commé­ moratives: sculptured hand-painted windbeds, porcelain coHeclor's plates, gold and silver pen and pencil sets and more. CaH for free catalog. Your purchaae will benefit St. Joseph's Hospital Children’s Health Canter. Parish group purchases welcome. Quality Promotions, 602-274-4135. (AZCAN) STUD EN T FO OTBALL tickets to Nebras­ ka. 921-0694, ask for Tom. 19" CO LO R television, *80; 25” color console, $100. Good condition. CaH 254-1412. 7-PIECE Tam a drum kit, ZHdijan, Paiate, Camber, cymbots Titan hardware. $675. Leave message. 9668252. Buy 3 Get 1 Free Run your classified liner ad for 3 or more days, and we’d put it in an extra day free! Some restrictions apply, so call us for details. State Press Classifieds 965-6731 T ired o f schoolw ork already ??? * 9 M e sa C o m p u te r M a r t is a dealer for A pple Com puter Higher Education Purchase Program, i t Authorized Dealer Item 6 £ # 6 Xim rPritt Macintosh Plus w/keyboard Macintosh S E w/keyboard Macintosh II C P U w/keyboard Appio* M ac II Monochrome M onitor T S 3 $ 1349.00 $ 1786.00 $ 2391.00 $ 289.00 For prices on these and many move go to die Compass Center on plant w alk. O r call Todd at 833-115S m o to rcy cle s fo r sa le m o to rcycle s fo r sa le HONDA IN CHANDLER B A C K TO SCHO OL SPECIALS WHY BUY FROM US?? 1. B est p rices in town! 2. F irst service FR E E! 3. 15% D isco u n t on a cce sso rie s at tim e of purchase. 4. Free maintenance clin ic— learn the pro­ per ca re and feed­ ing of yo u r new scooter. 5. T o p d o lla r fo r yo u r trade in! Scooters from only $299°o 7 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM NEW Q U EEN alza Ortho box and mattreaa. Stored, novar used. $149. Can deliver. Phone order* accepted. 272-8286. W AREHOUSE SALE: Desks from $44, chairs from $4, bookshelvas from $19, end tablas, typing tablas, computer labios, file cabinet*, storage cabinets, dining tables, plus lote more. Arizona Office Liquidators, 4010 S . 43rd Placa, between 40th Street and 48ttt Street, north of Broadway. 437-2224. MESA FURNITURE and Trading Post NEW AN D U SED F U R N IT U R E Jewelry, Glassware, Antiques S ofa S e ts...... from $129 D inettes...........from $99 107 W. Broadway, Mesa 969-5994 BIG FURNITURE SALE M A TTR ESS SETS Twin Sets. ...... $49.96 FuH Sots........ ..................... $69.95 Queen S ets.......... ............. $79.95 Sofa S Love Seats../........ from $169 Sleeper Sofa............ from $249 3 pc. Cocktail Sols..............from $89 Bunk Beds..... .................. from $139' 7 p c. Bedroom S a te............:..,... $195 7 pc. Living Room S ols.... . $264 Large 5-drawer Chests___ L. $39.95 PLUS MUCH MORE ELITE 80 ONLY 9 O.A.C. total payments $1556.44,19% / $355.08 total down payment. 36 mónti EU T E 150 ONLY O A C . total payments $2336.56,19% t $403.11 total down payment, 36 montti TOWN & COUNTRY HONDA 1701N. Arizona Avenue Chandler - E . Valley #899-9088 3 miles off Superstition on Country Club — Phoenix #275-3001 S M O N .-F R I.9 -6 Ä S A T . 9-5 137 W. MAIN ST.r MESA 896-1456 3332FURNITURE 3332 w . Mc Do w e l l rd. PHOENIX e 233-2336 real estate fo r sale 20 AC R ES. Trees and views. Remote and lovely. Good access. $5000. Top of the World Real Estate, Inc., PO Box 336, Quemado, NM 87829.506773-4663. (AZCAN) 2, 3, 4 bedroom houses, condos, townhouses, near ASU for sale and rent. CaH Alumnus Robert Bullock, Trencor Really, 951-5800, 660-0460. ASSUM ABLE SH ARP 2 bedroom condo. Great location for ASU, M CC, Scottsdale. CaH Evelyn, 831-1152, ERA Karetottor Realty. ONLY AT: apartments fo r pent 1 BEDROOM apartment with pool, $305. BuHdJns, quiet, air-conditioning, close to campus. 954-8115. FU LL SIZE bad. Still In factory package. $99. Can deliver. Phone ordere accepted. 272-8286. MAINSTREETFURNITURE AER O 50 Scooter, less than 1 year old, black, mint condition. Win show anytime, asking $850. Jennifer, 991-1219, please leave message. HONDA 150 Elite, 1986.200 mHes, only 4 weeks old. $2300, light blue. Michael, 966-0158. 2 FLIP chain , $20 each. Lova sato, $125toffar. Robyn, 9666663 or 962-4033. We B u y A n d S ell SKATE CH EAP: Tennis shoe skates, sizes 13 , $5 a pair. Tem ps. 987-5636. m isce lla n e o u s fo r sa le forniture fo r sals AUCTION: (BANKRUPTCY)- E l Rancho Hotel, Gailup, New Mexico. Real Estate, memorbilia, hotel, restaurant and bar fumishinge. Friday, September 18, 9 a.m. Lockhart Auction and Realty Company, PO Box 37287, Denver, CO 80237. Brochure, 306771-4111 or Arizona Commercial Realty, 602-263-5567. (AZCAN) BIKE TO ASU- Model sharp single level townhome, 3 bedroom, 1te bath, fire­ place, vaulted ceilings, refrigerator, washer, dryer. Melinda, 8367428, Trade Winds, 820-3333. CA LL HOMEI Condo for sale 1.1 miles from campus. Beautiful complex next to Papago Park. AH appliances including washer and dryer. Low cash to mortgage, $61,900. Bonnie w Bill, 8938477; Hanna Properties, 893-6800. 2 BEDROOM , ASU 1 mile, 2 excellent locations, $385. Covered parking. $200 off with ad. 967-3431, 9662760, 3 TW O bedroom, bno bath apartments in West Mesa. Furnished and unfurnished rental sharing M ALE, FEM ALE to shore quiet Chandler 3 bedroom, 2 bath with fireplace, large yerd, microwave, dishwasher. $275 plus Vk utilities. Stew , 821-4283, $63-1812. M ALE ROOM MATE- (nonamoker) needed to share a room in 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Price- *185 a month plus to utfiities. Condo is at Worthington Place. CadM ike at 921-9426, available. CaH 944-6298. 9650/MONTH. Townhouse to mile from ASU, Urriverslty/Hardy. 3 bedroom, 2to bath, garage, fireplace, backyard. Open Immediately. 9669625 w 968-3340. BEAUTIFUL NEW large two bedrooms, walk to ASU , pod, laundry, one block south of University on 8th Street and Gary. N EED O N E or two roommates to share two bedroom, two bath condo. New, hilly furnished. C lo se to cam pus. Julio Lewenaztain, 921-3726 o r ‘894-1400 ext. 3010, leave message. NONSMOKING FEM ALE to share home at the Points South Mountain. Own room and M ODEL CONDO, great complex. Three bath, den, laundry facfiftles, and more. FOr mors Information please cafi 4368682 evenings, or 2568538 Tuesday and Thursday. bedroom, two bath, two miles campus. $650, Jerry, 7361441. QUIET M ALE roommate wanted. New 2 Ask about move-in specials. 968-5238. from NEW APARTM ENTS, walk to ASU , 9 month lease. Roommates ideal. 1123 E. Apache Bivd. 968-6383. O NE LEFT! W s have one beautiful 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment near pod. AH utilities paid. Fully furnished, to block from campus. Frienriy, courteous manage­ ment! Terrace Road Apartments, 950 S. Terrace Rd., 956-8540. TE M P E / A S U condo, near new , 1 bedroom, podelde, tot appliances Includ­ ing washer, dryer. $375. 3969877, 935-6539. W ALK TO ASU, junior one bedroom, $305; two bedroom, $425. Adults, no pets. 1031 E. Lemon. B d Air Apartments, 9662679, 933-4364. H E R E ’S S T U D E N T L IV IN G A T IT S BEST! Now you can Rve within walking distance of campus, have 24-hour security, vkfoo surveillance, a pod and Jacuzzi, weight area, private balcony, covered parking, garage, iaunchy facilities, free utilities and toed phone, monthly activities, contemporary decor, roommate selection process, and tils comfort d having Ivtfr) resident aMsorsI A«’ of these luxuries a s s part d living at UNIVERSITY TOWERS 525 S. Forest, Tempe Stop by or call today, 894-2300, while space is still available . . . . end enjoy living at Its bast. Hom es fo r ran t 2 BEDROOM , 2 bath luxurious condo for lease, less than Vz mile ASU , Hermosa Place, 510 W. University. $575/month, option to buy. Call for information, 967-7828, 968-7173. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath large duplex on Weber, 1% mile to ASU . A ir conditioned, well insulated, yard, $395 per month. Call 967-7282 Or 968-7173. FO R RENT: 2 bedroom, 2 bath town-, house, unfurnished, on U niversity between P rice and D obson. S ue, 992-7368. rental sharing bedroom near ASU . Furnished, free utili­ ties, own room, deposit-free. $275. 921-2715. R ESP O N SIB LE NONSM OKING male roommate needed to share new luxury patio home. Own room, bath, garage space. Private pool, tennis, jacuzzl. 10 minutes to ASU . $295 plus utilities. Dave, 821-2173. ROOM $133 plus to utilities one mHS from A S U . N ice coup le occupy second b edroom . T rie h , 946-7232; work, 957-1283. TW O FEM ALES needed, new 3 bedroom, . 2 bath townhousa. Washer, dryer, microwave, cable television. $275 plus to utilities. 4 miles from ASU . CaH Denise, 9663911. YOUR OWN room end bath in our home. . Fem ale. 944-3874. b u sta ie» o p p o rtu n itie s 1000 SUN BEDS, toning tables. SunaL Wolff tanning beds, StenderQuest passive exercisers. Call for free color catalogue. Save to 50%. 1-800-228-6292. (AZ-CAN) .. EARN $500*1000 per week. Drive a new car every year. Start your own new car broker business partifulMime. Mr. Bland, 602-774-5731. (AZ-CAN) SPAR E TIME/money. Lease an ice cream van. Work your own hours. $160 per week plus deposit. Minimum age 20 945-3428. . STUD EN TS, W OULD you like to earn an additional $28 to $56 per week minimum to offset your expenses? If so, call Randolph at 269-9332, ’message. READERS The STATE PR ESS never knowingly accepts deceptive or misleading advertising. Any offer requiring an investment should be thoroughly investigated. If you have a complaint regarding a particular ad, It should be reported in writing to: The Better Business Bureau, 4428 N. 12th St., Phoenix, A Z 85014 h e lp w anted ACCEPTIN G APPLICATIONS for the prestlgous Sammy B’s Pizza Restaurant. D ay and evening shifts available, 9453850. A G R EAT part-time Job. Please cali Fit! AVAILABLE NOW: Male, female, respon­ sible roommate. Convenient area. Rent negotiable. 8903936. FEM ALE, NONSMOKER, one block from campus; need sublet at Commons on Apache. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, washer, dryer, refrigerator, dishwasher, microwave, furnished, to utilities. 921-3802. Personal training studio, Tempe. Fun, non-macho environment. 7303721. ARIZONA R O SE and Etc. is hiring attrae­ te*, energetic girls for a part-time position. CaH 8963548. ASSEM BLE PRO DUCTS at home. (You’ll love It.) Excellent pay. For information call 5043413003 ex t E-7836. FEM ALE ROOMMATE- very clean, quiet, responsible. Own room in a three bedroom home. $175 per month plus to utilities and $75 deposit. C a ll Kristine or . Jeff, 8261347. A T T E N T IO N S T U D E N T 8 : La rg est company of Its kind In Southwest now hiring. Public relations, no selling. Contact Mr. Houston, 220-9540. CUSTOM BUILT block home, 1660’ living area, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, double carport, 4 mHes to ASU, Tri-CHy Mall area. 969-5795 fw appointment. FEM ALE ROOM MATE needed for 2 bedroom, 2 bath at Quadrangle Apart­ ments. Poolside view. CaH 967-9223. BABYSITTER INDIAN BEND Gardens townhomes, low 70*8, 2 and 3 bedrooms, double garages, next to beautiful perk, Miller and McKellips. Delis* Realty, 990-9501. FEM ALE W ANTED to share deluxe furn­ ished condo. Own bedroom/btoh. Microwave. w asher, dryer, pool, tennis. 921-1476. LAKE MEAD. Perfect weekend w retire­ ment getaway actually Inside Lake Meed' National Recreation Area. Spectacular, views, trophy fishing, minutes from Lake Mead and Grand Canyon. Residential kite, $8996 (from $360 down, $35 month, 10 year 12* APR.) Homes w mobiles , paved streets, utilities, In rapidly growing c o m m u n it y .. M e a d v ie w C o ., 1-300-2266926. (AZ-CAN) FR EE ROOM and board In exchange for chHd cere, ages 11,6. Prefer nonsmoking female. Free hours 6 3 , Monday-Friday. Most weekends off. Ideal schedule for school hours. 20 minutes from campus. Private room, telephone, p o d , spa. Must have own car, references. CaH 951-2366 for interview. CLO SE TO campus. Cute 2 bedroom, 2 bath townhousa. $71,000, owner wHI carry. Bray, Merrill Lynch, 997-7471. NEAR A SU , two bedroom townhousa, now carpet, refrigerator, w asher, dryer, $34,900. CaH Glen, 840-431Q, 861-2400. Q U ESTS VIDA 2 bedroom with private bath, fireplace, fully upgraded. W. Mooemann Realty Executives, 9960676. TH E OAKS Townhousa. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, five minutes to campus. Security. Two pools in complex. Very nice. Priced to sail. Call realtor. 831-0002 or owner after 6 p.m., 7560674. LUXURY M ODEL condo- Pepego Park 1, near ASU . Pool, private sun deck. Want: 1-2 mate roommate*. $150 each to share or 9300/one. Want serious grad student. 584-6480. MALE/FEMALE Graduate student, Are you Interested in large 2 bedroom apart­ ment overlooking Scottsdale golf course? I’m 36, hard working, writer, who would like to altera. Looking for someone to cook a lew dinners a weak In return lor low rent, *l25/month, all included. I’m quiet, not a party animal, looking for a nice, honest. atraighL male/female. CaH Matt, 9960860. N EEDED in my home M onday, W ednesday, Frid a y, 2-4. Apachs/Rural. Good money for good care. 9673032. | BICYCLE SA LE S, parM HM or fulMime distributor of bicycles. Looking for aggres­ sive sales person with good phone manners. Close to ASU . 3702 Rosser, suite 19. Apply 10-3. CASHIER W ANTED, aH shifts. Apply anytime s i 2225 E . Buckeye. CHILD C A R E helper for 2 smaH children in Scottsdale ire * . U vefri or 16-20 hpura/ weak. 992-2846 CREATIVE INDIVIDUALS Interested in teaching after school end evening classes. C o u rse area* in clu de: com puters, academ ics, foreign languages (Japanese, French, Spanish), aerobics, line art, and p h o to g ra p h y . G ra d u a te stu d en ts preferred. CaH 2367030. CU STO M ER SERVICE reps. Scholarships avaHablt. 27 openings. 99.25/start Train­ ing provided. C a ll 10 a;m .-2 p.m . 8263754. DICK'S HAM BURGERS now hiring all hours, aH positions available. Apply in person, 855 S . Rural. h elp w anted h e lp w anted help wanted GOVERNM ENT JOBSI Now hiring In your area, both skilled and unskilled. For list of jobs and application call 615-38312627 ext J519. (AZ-CAN) P a r t- tim e F u ll-tim e work available. Flexible hours. Apply at Store 145 Rurat& Lemon beween 2-4 p.m. Monday-Thursday DISABLED FEM ALE student living In Palo Vente East looking for attendant Will train. Responsibility, flexibility a must. Interested? Call 784-8065. DISCOVER AN excellent way to make additional spending money. Participate in pharmaceutical evaluations. You can receive from $100-8400 for completing evaluations. Qualifications would be: male, 19-55 years old, In good health. Free physical exam If you qualify. Call 437-0116 between 8:30 a.m .-4 p.m ., Monday through Friday. Harris Laboratories, Inc. (Providing medical research since 1933.) DRIVERS W ANTED: Earn $S$8 per hour as a delivery person with Domino’s Pizza. We are number one in delivery nationwide with over 3500 stores. Drivers earn excel­ lent hourly wage plus tips and mileage. Full or part-time, flexible day or evening hours. A fun and rewarding job. Many delivery people advance to our manage­ ment training program. Must be 18 or older, with a good driving record, car, and insurance. We want dependable, deancut people willing to hustle. Applications will be accepted at 903 S . Rural Road, Tempe, 968-5555. And other valley loca­ tions after 11 a.m. daily. Equal opportunity employer. $8/hour NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY Walk to ASU S ell Industrial tools and supplies for national firm . W e w ill train. S alary plus com m ission p lu s bene­ fits. R apid advancem ent opportunity. C a ll BILL. DAVIS. 254-TOOL ENGINEERING TECHNICIAN (mechani­ cal), second or third year mechanical engineering or technology, some related experience desired. Must be available minimum of 20 hours per week. $5 and up. 956-8200. EVERYBODY DRINKS water in some form. Now earn $ off of pure water. People earning $10,00Q/month, first month in business. 838-7774 during the day. EXTRA M ONEY Is nice, but you can help people tool Donate plasma for up to $120 per month. First donation in a calendar week $10, second donation in same calendar week $20 (Monday-Saturday). New donors receive $2 bonus on first G U YS AND gals interested in a new style', poesibly color and/or perm, we need to see your hair on September 12th between 8-7 p.m . at Haircutting Com pany, northwest com er of Baseline and Rural, next to the Pizza Hut. You are needed for a hair show on September 13th. You will receive a gift of hair products. H ELP WANTED: Delivery person and counter help needed. The Smart Cookie, 921-9988. LO CAL RADIO station has part-time open­ ing for telephone market research posi­ tion, no selling involved. Close to campus. Cali Mike Maloney after 1:30 p.m., 9668236. M AKE $5-7 an hour or more. Tempe company seeking highly motivated Indivi­ duals for our firm. Work your own hours. Call 820-7660 for more information. NEW MCDONALD'S now hiring friendly, enthusiastic people. Flexible hours to fit school schedules. No experience needed. Uniform provided. Meal policy. Also hiring experienced McDonald’s swing mana­ g e rs.' Maintenance position available. Apply at McDonald’s, lower level of the Mem orial Union. Equal opportunity employer. TELEMARKETING Representatives $ 607 per hour after training Mon.-Thurs. 5-9 p.m. and weekend hours available New Tempe office seeks eight bright, enthusiastic p e rso n s. Paid training, salary plus bonuses and rapid advance opportunity. For interview Cali Mr. Bill, 829-3016 NOW HIRING telephone order clerks, Tempe area. For more information contact BiH at 966-0098. OPTICAL DISPENSING trainees wanted part-time. Must have own transportation. East V alley. Contact Mike Sarver, 966-4991. KITCHEN HELP needed, will train. Parttime, will accommodate school hours. Call Pizzafarro's Inc., 952-9188. L lV E -fN BA BYSITTER /housekeeper wanted. Hours 1-6 p.m. weekdays, some evenings. Private room with bath. $250 per month including room and board. Two blocks south of ASU. Must have refer­ ences and experience. Call for interview after August 26. 967-5682. PART-TIM E W ORK. Flexible hours, housewares and sporting goods, student manager training. $10.25 per hour, East Valley location. Call 820-7803 noon to 4 p.m. West Valley, 8-12, 279-6630. PART-TIME OR full-time office help needed. Close to ASU. Apply 10-3, B. Roeser, suite 19. PA R T-TIM E, flex-tim e. Perfect for students, homemakers, or moonlighters. Excellent income potential. Includes a two tiered bonus plan. Call 945-8098 for more information. PART-TIME DATA processing positions available. Work near ASU . Typing plus 10-key skills required. Start $4 per hour. Contact Becky at Reality Simulations, 967-6424. PIANO TEACH ER for 5% and 8 year old girls, (taught separately). Call 963-8926, p.m. PRESCH O OL STAFF and director posi­ tions available. Looking for energetic, enthusiastic personalities. Part or full­ time. Kids Are People Too, 949-8750. REAL ESTATE majors: Hostess needed for Scottsdale new home subdivision. Call 949-8891 for interview. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT now hiring lunch hostess, lunch waitress, dinner hostess and dinned waiters. Apply in p e rso n M on day th ro u g h F rid a y , 10:30-11:30 a.m. or 2:30-5:30 p.m. 5001 E . Washington. SUN CITY, Arizona- The University of Arizona is seeking a full-time assistant coordinator for the Arizona Health study and the Cancer Prevention Project in Sun City. This person will manage one office located in Sun City and direct clinical and field research activities of volunteers, phlebotomy, patient interviewing and management of the office’s clinical and administrative functions. The ideal candi­ date will have training and experience in nursing or phlebotomy, and program organization. Minimum qualifications include a bachelor’s degree and two years work experience. Starting salary is $21,336. Send resumes by September 14 to: Mary Klein Buller, M.A., Project Coordi­ nator, Arizona Cancer Center, 1515 N. Campbell Avenue, Tucson, A Z 85724. The University of Arizona is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. AFTER CLASS HOURS AFTERNOON EXPANSION $5.50 per hour guaranteed Dtalamerlca Marketing, the nation's finest telemarketing firm, is now accepting applications for the following shifts: 1-8 p.m. 5-9:30 p.m. 6-9:30 p.m. Weekends Also Available Our salespeople work in a modem, comfortable business environment contacting established customers on long distance lines. Guaranteed salary or commission, whichever is greater, and averages $5-$7 an hour. Our Tempe office is located approximately 5 minutes from campus. Please call Dlalamerlca Marketing for details. 829-1140 donation. University Plasma Center Asso­ ciated Biosclence Inc, 1015 S . Rural R d , Tetppe, A2. 9688130. Effective until further notice. h e lp w anted R EAL PEO PLE needed for thesis project. Need average and large size male and female photographic models. 963-2739, 9658936, Traci. No model types, please! R E S E A R C H A S S IS T A N T : To d a y’s Research Army needs you to do phone work, no selling Involved. Join up now, it is not just an adventure, if s a job. Evenings, weekends, call 967-4441. S A LES, PARK and Swap, Greyhound Park, Saturday and Sunday. BHIrigual, must be aggressive, dependable, and outgoing. Good pay. Call Bud, 942-2859. SANDWICH MAKER, part-time, lunch hours, Monday through Friday or flexible. 437-9237. Call weekdays before 3:30 p.m. SPAR E TIME income: Electronics. No experience. Others. For more information, dial 504841-0091, ext. 1060. Open 7 days. PART-TIMEWORK AVAILABLE Set-up and display of electrical maintenance equipment. Must have neat appearance and be a hard worker. $700/m onth fo r th o se w ho q iia lify . Call Mr. Pearce for interview. 433-1452 CDC TH E DEVIL House is now accepting applications for bar backs. Must be 21 years of age. Apply in person, 11-5, Monday through Friday at 430 N. Scotts­ dale Rd., Tempe. UNIVERSITY TH EATR ES now hiring 1 concession super, 1 concession atten­ dant, 1 cashier, 2 doormen, and 1 janitor. Please apply, 1025 E. Broadway, Tempe, after 1 p.m. VO TED TH E best opportunity for this season. Team players wanted to join National Clothing Manufacturer in their newly opened Western headquarters. Must be energetic with outgoing personal­ ity and cheerful telephone manners. Flexi­ ble schedules available. Please call Kathy P. for interview: 437-3800. W ANTED: EXPERIENCED auto detaHer. Must have car. Earn top dollar. Call 968-9323. Instruction m iscella n eo u s HAPPILY MARRIED, financially secure couple wishes to adopt a newborn and give it a lifetime of love, happiness, and security. Birth expenses paid by us. Strictly legal and confidential. Let us make this difficult time easier for you. Call Barbara collect, 968-8196. LOVING CALIFORNIA couple wishes to adopt newborn. Pregnancy related expenses paid. Call collect, 818-441-3204. W E W ANT to adopt. A happily married Caucasian couple have lots of love to give a newborn. Please call our attorney collect, 24 hours, 406-288-7100, A81. (AZ-CAN) DEADLINE MOVED UP Due to the Pope's visit, the STATE PR ESS classified advertising dead­ line for next Tu esday's paper (September 15) will be this Friday, September 11, at noon. on-cam pus On-Campus 1891 Thfe Normal Echo, January 17,1891: ’’Some one asks, should we let students come of evenings to recite only one or two classes? We believe it is right they should be given an opportunity to gain knowledge and improve their minds.”______ ATO LITTLE sisters: Mandatory meeting Thursday, 9-10, 7 p.m. in dayroom. Pledges be there!! CAM PUS ORGANIZATIONS: Be a part of the 87-88 Sun Devil Spark Yearbook! If your organization is interested in being represented in the book, contact Elizabeth Larson, organizations editor, this week at 965-6881 or 784-9717 for information. HBSA MEETING today at 3:30 in BA253. AH new members welcome. See you there! LADIES: G E T ready for Delta Chi Little Sister Rush. Coming September 17th and 18th! ATTENTION UNIVERSITY departments, organizations, and dubs: Need to place a display ad in the State Press? Your campus representative is Jackie Eldridge. Call 965-7572 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. p e rso n als ADPI PLEDGES- We are so glad ybju’re here. All 54 of you are awesome! Love, the Actives. ALL CO LLEG E career singles: Write/ phone confidentially. Exciting! Different! GRE-GM AT-LSAT COACHING Contact: A .C .C .S ., 1006 E . Baseline, Suite 967, Tempe, AZ 85283-1314. Crack The System ATO BIG bro Jon L : Like when are we gonna compare notes on our great world knowledge. Shall we dine on our past experiences? Beijos, Sheri. The Princeton Review 952-8850 AEROBIC INSTRUCTORS Certification Workshop, Weekend of September 12th at ASU by National Aerobics Training Asso­ ciation. Call 963-9415 or 899-9289. FREN CH LESSO N S. Teaching or tutoring available. $5-107hour. C a ll Martine, 962-6332. Jew elry CASH FOR gold and diamonds. Mill Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. Mill, Suite 104, Tempe. 968-5967. CUSTOM DESIGN and re-mounting. Mill Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. Min, Suite 104, Tempe. 968-5967. ATO DAN Ringler: Good luck to an obnoxiously cool little brother. Congratula­ tions on your office. ATO U L bro Brian: I rent, I drive, will it be Caddyshack Two?! You better watch out tor the sandtraps! Luv ya, Sheri. ATO LITTLE sisters: Congratulations! Looking forward to a grat semester. Let’s make it work. Thursday, 7 p.m. AXO PLEDG E Stephanie-Higgins: Good luck this semester! Love, your Lyre Buddy. GIRLS, W ATCH for SA E little sister rush. It’s coming soon! HILL- HOW was Mex? The crick was great. Let’s watch some more TV. FAST PHOTO Processor operator. Experi­ ence required, fun or part-time, near ASU. Call Gordon, 831-0575. KATY, CONGRATULATIONS! You finally picked the right school. It’s going to be a great semester. Luv ya, ^IN. GENERAL LABO R ER S, no experience necessary, need energetic and depend­ LINDI BRIDGES, where are you? Your big sis would love to see your smiling Delta face! Who am I? Come to the chapter room and find out! Love, your big sis. able people to work days. Please call for appointment. Never a fee. 839-2825, Vafley Temporary Services. STUDENTS ParMime/Full-time Earn excellent money working out of an air condi­ tioned office helping us set up distributorships across the USA by phone. s. Our best people am eam- >ng $35 an h o u r Call Mr. Young 6 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday 921-9977 HELP W ANTED with M ac S e computer •fxl Jazz software. Name your own price and lime. Contact Shawn at 9908133. INTERNATIONAL MODELING Agency “ oWn9 h r female models to tour Korea, Takfan, and Singapore on an advertising campalgn. Call Rex. 4878186. Diamond Engagement Sets Lead Persons Counter Personnel Assistant Managers If you’re looking for a great job and an easy way to earn extra money, then you owe it to yourself to take a closer look At the advantages Carl's Jr. has to offer • Flexible hours to sw ot • A convenient location; we’re just around the your demanding com er from you! schedule! . r.— I S iils i --nges! • A fun place to work! „ for a lew smiling faces to fill FULL and PART-TIME openings on ALL SHIFTS. If this kind of opportunity appeals to you, then stop by anyday, at anytime for an on-the-spot interview! G AR I/S JR. 960 E . U n iversity Tamp«, OVUJU, OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F/H Mb win beat any pricel Over SO styles to choose /tarn. AH diamonds loose tor grsdlng snd your Inspection. C a ll for hours: 835-9449 The DiamondConsortium 20 E. M ain, No. 608 M esa fre e lo st/fo u n d SUSIE: TR Y this again! Happy belated birthday! Hope you had a good one. Consuek>'8 roommate. TODD: SO you took a hike, huh? services EXPR ESS AU TO Service. Wa com a to you. Oil changa, air condition charge, radiator service, from $12.95. AH services dona. In our no-mase self-contained vans. LOST: WHITE/brown snakeskin wallet. Very important, was a gift. Lost at ATO house week ago Tu esday. S hari, 840-5045. Strippers Belly Dancers m iscella n eo u s Singers ADOPTION: GIVE a baby a chance to be adopted Into a secure, loving family. All expenses paid. Call coiled after 7 p.m. or weekends. 212-724-1241. (AZ-CAN) ADOPTION: LE T us help because we care about the love and security you and your unborn child need. Can Lynda and Mitch­ ell, 718898-3357. Expenses paid. (AZCAN) Comedians Female Impersonators Since 1981 fantasy Qrams 267-0695 services FLIGHT INSTRUCTION: Private through com m ercial. $10/hour. C all Chuck, 345-6417. FO RM ER ASU staffers- word perfect and xerox memory writers experienced with APA, MLA, graduate school, etc.- gradu­ ate students and faculty work welcome. 945-6302, Donna and Joan. HAVE UNWANTED facial or body hair removed permanently by electrolysis. Free consultation, located in Tempe. Call Sharon at Desert Electrolysis Center, 829-7829. IBM CORRECTING Setectric, recondi­ tioned, guaranteed, $375; Regular Selectric, $135. Repairs, $35 including ■parts. W ill pickup and deliver. 266-8248. M ONEY N EEDED for your education? 4000 sources of aid available! Call The Class Act, 832-3434. JOHNNY B’s DISC JOCKEY Largest DJ com pany in the state. O ver 20,000 songs. Entertaining DJs. C ontest gam es and prizes! R eserve your date now. 9 6 8 -9 8 9 8 N EED M ONEY for school? Information on scholarships, grants, loans available. Results are guaranteed. Call now! 894-9665. National Scholarship Resource Institute, 1000 E . Apache Blvd., Suite 115-116, Tempe. REAL CHEAP! Clothing alterations (all types). Three blocks from ASU. Call 968-4272. transportation ATTENTION: FR EE cars to all major cities. 21 or older. Call AAA Driveaway, 277-9979. CAR S AVAILABLE - 21 or older. All States Drive-away, 992-5200. travel AIRLINE AW ARDS buying coupons, miles, bump tickets. Top pricesr Also selling, savings worldwide. Arthur, 968-7283. AIRLINE CO UPON S wanted: United Bonus tickets; Western Extra; others. Up to $350 each. 800-255-4060. AIRLINE TICKETS: Free delivery, all destinations, all airlines, lowest prices possible, no service charges, licensed agency, Visa/M astercard, Am erican Express. Call Eric, 9664)729 or Scott, 894-9607. CARIBBEAN VACATION: Round-trip air fare and hotel accommodations for 2 adults only $149. Call Tim for more information, 274-9626. ROUND TRIP ticket to Chicago. Leave 9/11, return 9/14. $175, M ichael, 9664)158. typin g/ w ord p ro cessin g $1.25 DOUBLE spaced page. A-1 letter quality word processing. 32 years exper­ ience. Marian, 839-4269. CA LL M E for fast, accurate, quality service at competitive prices. Close to ASU. 966-2188. COM PUTER WORD processing. Papers, theses, reports, resumes, done accurately and quickly. Quality guaranteed. Call Julie, 820-4663 after 5 p.m. S A V E TIM E, ca ll me first. W ord p ro ce ssin g - th eses, d isse rta tio n s, resumes. Professional typist. Mesa Secre­ tarial. 844-1876. SH ORT O F TIME? I can help. Rea­ sonable. Professional. G uaranteed. Experienced in academic. Call Jessie 94545744. w anted ASU/NEBRASKA tickets. Paying top dollar. Also purchasing fscutty/stsff tickels. Call 968-3939, Jack's Ticket Agency, 560 S. Collage. HAIRCUT M ODELS wanted for workshop every Thursday at 10:15 a.m. and every Friday at 5 p.m. $5 charge, no regular clients or cafls. Mane Attraction, 315$ E. Camelback Rd. N EED ASU season tickets. Desperate, price is no issue. 8290196. TH R EE ASU-UOP tickets desperately needed. Please c a l Lynn at 921-4063. W ANTED ASU - Nebraska tickets. $ not a problem, 994-9601. Page 36 J ) ^ d rœ d o ^ S e p te m b e r^ J 9 8 7 m * P ie tà 'Bearnox saves me moneu everu dau. It'll uiorh for you, too." DASH INN PRANKSTER'S TIsVIRRNOX CAflp ppfll poy ior itself. . . TODAY! 40% OFF ENTIRE BILL 3PM-7PM HAPPY HOUR ONLY — EVERYDAY 11 CO M PLIM EN TA R Y S O FT D RINK W ITH P U R C H A S E O F A N Y M E A L D U RIN G LU N C H H O U R S 11AM -2PM MONDAY • SATURDAY 2 FOR 1 LUNCHES AND DINNERS BUY ONE MEAL GET ONE OF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE FREE SPo r UJiQ PRICED gOOUS MERCHANDISE w jm IfcOO (NOON) lunch ot Pranksters uiith a friend 1:40 CLASS 3:30 Stop by University Sporting Goods to purchase o pair Nike tennis shoes, o tee-shirt and o pair of shorts. Regular bill BEARNOX bill Meet your friends ot The Dosh Inn for happy hour. Regular bill BEARNOX bill r e p a ir s FREE ADMISSION WITH BEARNOX CARD FREE REGULAR SOFT DRINK WITH ANY PURCHASE 5:00-7:00 Regular bill $15.00 BEARNOX bM $10.00 VOU SAVE $5.00 $75.00 $60.00 VOU SAVE $15.00 $45 $27 VOU SAVE $18.00 TOTRl SRVCD TODAY $38 limited Time Introductory O ffer CALL 820-7660 OR MAN. IN THIS APPLICATION U/ITHPRYiMENT PLEASE PRINT DATE- NAME________ -PHONE. UARN3M ADDRESS. $ 2 C 0 0 SflfiP B I A N N U A L FEE Act now and start saving todoyll BEAANOX CARP onnuol fee b regutorly $454» C IT Y ____ .STATE. DATE OF BIRTH. "THE CARD THA T 'SAVES YOU M O NEY" ZIP. P.O. Bax 86933 Tempe. Arizona 85283 - (602)820-7660 MARRIED, PLEASE ISSUE 2 CARDS SPOUSE’S n a m f ____________ _ Please matt payment “üüfth your application