A rizo n a State U n iversity’s H a w | ?rm » Vol. 70 No. 34 * C opyright, State Press, 1W 7 Monday, OctObOT 12, 1987 T e m p o , A riz o n a $10 million ASU housing project planned By SCO TT LUCK State Preaa To hdp m eet student demand for campus housing, ASU officials are finalizing general plans for.a $10 m illion project to build new residence halls and renovate old ones on south campus. The south campus project is in the first of several phases to m eet a University goal of adding 2,000 new student housing spaces by the year 2000, according to ASU officials. Sbuth campus is comprised of the area between M cAllister Avenue, Rural Road, Apache Boulevard and the railroad tracks, It includes Saguaro, Ocotillo and Mariposa residence halls and five fraternity houses. Jim K nothe, a sso c ia te d irector of Planning and Construction, said the first expansion phase should supply about 400 new bed sp a c e s, w ith C onstruction beginning in January 1989. The A rizona Board of R egents in September approved the use of existing bond authority to fund the project, and Knothe said his department is conducting a study to determ ine “which lands (near south cam pus) should be acquired to fill out that whole area.” “There’s open land plus som e other possible acquisitions,” he said. As part of the land acquisition proposal, the University is seeking regent approval of a $600,000 purchase of two apartment com plexes near south campus — Palm Vista, 1339 S, Sunset Drive, and Sunset apartm ents, 1342 S. Sunset Drive. The regents are expected to make a decision during its m eeting at NAU Thursday and Friday. Residence Life Director Cliff Osborne said, “We traditionally have had an excess demand for the space nn campus amt will h» in that condition until we are able to build those 400 bed spaces.” ASU officials project student enrollment to reach 60,000 within the next 10 to 12 years. Enrollment this sem ester is 42,968. The U niversity’s goal is to provide housing for 15 percent of enrolled students, w h ich th e p r o je c t sh o u ld a c h ie v e , accounting for excess demand and future Tum to project , page s. Core-campus halls may be converted to academic space By SCO TT LUCK State Proas The convenience of inner-campus residence halls w ill becom e a thing of the past, ASU officials say, as they consider plans to oust student residents and input more academ ic space. Jim K nothe, a sso cia te director of Planning and Construction, said McCIintock, Irish, Hayden and Best Residence H alls, which house about 800 students in the core of cam pus, m ust be “phased out” and converted to academ ic facilities to accom odate campus growth. “The goal is to eventually build enough housing on the periphery of the campus such that w e can replace the housing that’s in the core of the cam pus,” Knothe said. He said the halls have been targeted by the P lanning and . Construction department’s “ Campus Central Corridor Study,” which seeks to identify campus buildings that can “eventually be phased out.” The purpose of the study is to find room for the expected academ ic grow th needed to accom m odate student enrollment that U niversity officials project w ill reach 60,000 in the next io to 12 years. Todd Grem/StataPms “After we catch up on (cam pus periphery) housing, those sites w ill be available for redevelopment in the campus core,” Knothe said. But Residence L ife, Director Clifford Osborne said any Morel Bregante, of the Walt Richardson and the Morning Star Band, plays the chim es, wood blocks, timbales and roto-toms at Friday’s reggae concert at Minder-Binders, 715 S . Hayden Road In Tem ps. Story page TO. relocation of inner-campus housing residents is not possible in the forseeable future. “Residence Life has no ability, nor is there land available for such a relocation to occur,” he said. Knothe said inner-campus housing w ill not be destroyed until proposed new housing projects are com plete, but he could not give an approximate tim e fram e because all plans By TRACY SCO TT many tim es in m any years. I want to see som e more a r e p relim inary State Press com m itm ent.” Osborne said other buildings that could be axed in the City Councilman B ill Ream , who has proposed that Tempe ASASU President Karrin Kunasek said she believes people nam e of campus expansion include Mariposa and Saguaro officials rem ove the “A” from the butte near Sun D evil w in quit the vow el vandalism once they are informed of the halls, both on Apache Boulevard south of cam pus, and five Stadium, said the Associated Students’ plan to stop problems it is causing. She said students have rallied to show fraternity houses on Adelphi Drive. defacem ent of the emblem lacks commitment and puts too their support for the U niversity sym bol, and “now the ball’s The University now is beginning a m ulti-m illion dollar much responsibility on Tempe. in .(Ream’s) court to m ake som e concessions.” project to construct 2,000 new bed spaces on south campus by “We’re right back to square one,” Ream said of the Ream also said said he Wants the U niversity, rather than the year 2000 to m eet an excess demand for cam pus housing. proposal, which calls for city warning signs, stepped-up Tempe officials, to take action against offenders. “To make South campus is composed of the area between Rural police enforcement and hightened student awareness of laws (is (the city) prosecute for vandalism and guard the “A” on Road, Mill Avenue, Apache Boulevard and the railroad against defacing public property. “All I see is that m ost of the b u tte .. . does not m ake sense financially or m orally,” he tracks. the burden is placed back on the city .” said. Osborne said,, although the south campus plan is not Ream suggested at a council m eeting last month that the official, certain buildings m ay be destroyed to accom m odate The butte and the “A” belong to Tempe, but on campus it is city staff draft plans to rem ove the alm ost 50-year-old the responsibility of the Student Athletic Board to keep it the project. sym bol if students continue their creative paint jobs on it. gold. He said Mariposa Hall, once a m otel, probably w ill be In response, ASASU members drew up the proposal for Although no one has ¡woven who prim arily is responsible razed, although renovation is possible. monitoring the “A ,” which asks the city to post signs near the for defacing the “A ,” Ream said he wants a pledge against The five fraternity houses also w ill be renovated or em blem to warn students of the sentence — up to a $750 fine defacem ent from the Inter-Fraternity Council. destroyed because they “occupy a large amount of space for and/or four months in ja il— for defacing public property. “I would like the IFC to sign a pledge,” he said, “Iw antto a very few people,” Osborne said. The proposal also suggests leaders of the Student see a concerted effort on the part of the students that they Programming Advisery Network inform students of existing won't do this;” ; Fraternity presidents on Adelphi Drive w ere either ordinances against defacem ent at the beginning of each ■Ream suggested probation or suspension far any fraternity Unavailable Sunday or did not wish to comment on the sem ester, and that ASASU establish a liaison with the caught defacing the “A”. j renovation prospects. Tempe P olice Department to ensure violations are enforced But Kunasek said it is not only the fraternities or After the inner-campus housing space is elim inated to “ the lim its of die law .” U niversity students painting the “A” without proper Knothe said former residents could b e moved to the proposed But Ream said Friday the ASASU proposal lacked authority. “Too many people juinp to the conclusion that it’s south-campus hall space or other potential building sites. commitment and a definitive plan of action. the Greeks,” she said. - * “I think we need m ore assurances from those people If classroom facilities were constructed on the camp»« Ream, who is seeking student support for the em blem , was involved that they are going to take positive m easures — not scheduled to m eet with Kunasek and SPAN members last outskirts, he said students would need longer breaks between just educate and inform ,” he said. “They’ve been informed Wednesday, but he w as in' Mexico for the day. classes to allow them enough passing tim e. . . and the beat goes on Ream: ‘A’ plan lacks ASU commitment ASU WEATHER Mostly cloudy and breezy today with a 40 percent chance of show ers or thunderstorms. BORK BATTLE Likely rejection of U.S. Suprem e Court nom inee marks low point in R eagan’s presidency. Page 3. C lassified............. .....1 8 C om ics................. ..... 14 Entertainment..... ....... 9 Opinion................. ..... 4 Sports................. .....15 world/nation in brief Thousands of gay activists march against discrim ination WASHINGTON (A P) - Thousands of homosexual activists, led by AIDS victim s in wheelchairs and bearing signs carrying m essages like, “Thank God I’m Gay,’’ marched Sunday to demand protection from discrimination and m ore federal money for AIDS research and treatment. U.S. Park Police estim ated that 200,000 people participated in the march past the White House and rally near the Capitol. The crowd, carrying balloons and banners and wearing buttons and T-shirts, heard from speakers including Dem ocratic presidential candidate Jesse Jackson and former National Organization for Women President Eleanor SmeaL “Let’s find a common ground of humanity,’’ Jackson, who announced his candidacy Saturday, told the rally late in the afternoon. “We share the desire for life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness, equal protection under the law. Let’s not dwell on distinctions.” He brought the crowd to its feet when he called for an rad to the AIDS crisis. “We can fight AIDS and every form of death. Let’s give life a chance,” he said. A ft«- his speech, Jackson spoke to a number of AIDS victim s in wheelchairs near the stage. He shook their hands and said, “God B less You.” The rally stretched along the m all for more than a dozen blocks. “Here w e are from California, Alabama, Florida, Arizona, Alaska, Seattle and Delaware — east, w est, north and south — in numbers too large to ever be denied again,” said E leanor Sm eal, form er president of the N ational Organization for Women. She also said, “We have stopped Bork,” referring to federal Judge Robert Bork, whose nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court appears headed for certain defeat in the Senate. Marchers chanted anti-Bork slogans. Iraqi aerial blitz continues; supertanker severely damaged MANAMA, Ba h ra in (AP) — Iraq resumed its aerial blitz of Iranian oil targets Sunday, severely damaging a Liberianflagged supertanker. Two crewmen w ere reported killed and four others m issing in the attack. An Iranian surface-to-surface m issile exploded in Baghdad, the Iraqi capital, as Iran retaliated for the attack on tankers. Two Exocet m issiles from Iraqi jets crashed into the engine room of the 239,435-ton Rova, setting the ship ablaze, according to gulf-based shipping sources. It w as one of three raids announced by Iraq against tankers along the Iranian coast since Saturday morning. Shipping sources identified one of the three targets as the Merlin, a 215,925-ton Cypriot-flag tanker under charter to Iran. An Exocet m issile crashed into the ship but did not explode and d am ag e was minor, they said. The unexploded m issile was still aboard. Burma plane crash kills 49, including 14 Am ericans RANGOON, Burma (AP) — A Burma Airways plane caught fire and crashed about 20 m iles short of a popular tourist town in central Burma Sunday, killing all 49 people aboard, including 14 Americans, the government said. The official News Agency of Burma said 36 foreigners, nine Burmese passengers and four crewmen were aboard. It Was the airline’s second disaster in less than four months. . . The agency said twin-turboprop Fokker Friendship 27 “caught fire in midair” and crashed southeast of its 0f Pagan, a town whose ancient Buddhist temples attract many foreign tourists. The brief announcement did not give the cause of the crash. The agency said besides the Am ericans, seven Swiss citizens, five Britons, four Australians, three West Germans, two French citizens and one Thai died. U.S. com petitiveness threatened by immigrants, econom ist says WASHINGTON (AP) — Despite the nearly ftdl absorption of baby boomers and women into the nation’s labor force, im m ig r a n t s — both legal and illegal — have ftaeled at least one-third of the “great American jobs m achine” of the past five years, a Cornell University econom ist contends. Unless stemmed; that continuing tide of non-native and unskilled new entrants in the job m arket now threatens to overwhelm efforts to strengthen U.S. com petitiveness and rekindle a rising living standard, econom ist Vernon M. Briggs Jr. said. “We sim p ly can’t let sentim ent and reverence for the Statue of Liberty guide our im m igration policies in the 1990s as they did in the 1890s,” Briggs said. “It’s not a m atter of rinsing our borders; it’s that our policies should serve some economic « id s.” Briggs, who has made a career of m easuring the impact of im m igratio n on the changes in the labor force, contends that the United States is the only country in the world that does not at least screen its im m igrants according to the job skills they have. today •The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU. Any campus club or organization can submit entries to the calendar for publication to the State P re ss, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries will not be taken over the phone. Deadline for the entries will be 1 p.m. the previous business day. ' Entries may be edited due to content or space. welcom e to com e help plan for future events. selection applications ca n be picked up at M U Room 208R . Application deadline is 5 p.m . O ct. 16. Meetings Announcements •Women’s Studies Advisory Committee •Attention Mecham Recall Committee at ASU: Three weeks left for the recall; get •A sem inar on “ Raising Money for a New Existing Business” will be held Thursday at 6:30 p.m . at M esa Community College, 1833 W . Southern A ve., M esa. will be holding a meeting today a t 9:30 a.m . in S ocial S cien ces Room 103. •Arizona Outing Club m eets today at 7:30 p.m . in the M U Pim a Room . Everyone (N ic e L e g s ) W e ve g u file shorts to fit them! ARIZONA! SHORTS those petitions notarized and sent in. Call 968-3447 for more information. •1987 Homecoming King and Queen or Registration fee is $10; ca ll 964-4846 for m ore information. SAVE...0I1music fbraUears. &SPORTS L a rg e st le c t io n . B e s t p r ic e s in to w n . CASSeTTES M AJOR LABELS - TOP ARTISTS A Sound Investment Save Big Bucks Pop^Roek, Folk, Jazz and C lasskal um ited Time. Com e Early for Best Selection. BO O KSTO RE Store hours } M-Th 8:00—6:00 PM Fri. 8:00— 5:00 PM t ; State Prc»» Monday, O ctober 18,1987 Pa3e 3 M echam , officials arrive in T o k yo ; governor losing support at hom e Staff and wira reports Gov. Evan Mecham arrived in Tokyo Sunday to promote relations between the state and Japan, while his own relations with a few political influentials in Arizona appeared to be waning. Mecham traveled to Japan with 20 state officials to promote interests in exporting Arizona products to Japan and also to find Japanese firm s interested in doing business in the state. Mecham and the delegation flew into Tokyo after a fourday visit to Taiwan, where the governor opened an Arizona trade office in Taipei last Friday. But during speeches in Taiwan, Mecham sparked controversy back home when he was critical of Mexico and criticized its inability to “grasp free enterprise/’ Democrat Carolyn Warner signed a recall petition Saturday afternoon after reading the comments attributed to Mecham in The Arizona Republic. “I guess this morning I read the newspaper, and our governor made an unwarranted, unnecessary slap at our neighbors in Mexico to the south, and I think that’s it,” said Warner, a possible Mecham opponent in a recall election. Meanwhile, former Sen. Barry Goldwater reaffirm ed his call for Mecham to resign, saying the governor could save the state a lot of money by averting the need for a recall election. Goldwater first offered his advice for the embattled governor while talking to a group of students at ASU last week. “You can take so much,” Goldwater said Friday. “I figured, what the hell, w e’re going to have a recall election. We’ll probably have som e Republicans and som e Democrats running in the race. (Mecham’s resignation) would save the state a hell of a lot of m oney.” But the state Republican Party on Saturday rejected Goldwater’s advice and cam e out in continued support of the governor after a m eeting of the party’s executive com m ittee. GOP Chairman Burt Kruglick said, “It’s obvious that the executive com m ittee is not happy with som e of the things that have been happening. But you’ve got to go out and support the governor.” Kruglick said the party w ill reassess its stance after the recall orgranizers file their petitions. Ed Buck, founder of the Mecham Recall Committee, said he was pleased with Warner’s move and Goldwater’s comments and said the Republicans are committing political suicide in deciding to support the governor. “It’s OK to shoot yourself in the foot, boys, but don’t point the gun at your head when you pull the trigger,” he said. Mecham w ill return to the state Wednesday afternoon, Gov. Evan Mecham after his weeklong visit abroad. In Japan, he w ill m eet with officials of the sem i-govem m ental Japan External Trade Organization and Japanese businessmen in Tokyo and Osaka, western Japan. B o rk c o n t r o v e r s y a d d in g to R e a g a n ’s 'w o r s t ’ y e a r vote no, filibuster, stall, delay. It’s a no-win policy.” T heyear has yielded a string of losses for the administration, growing ever more visible. The year began badly when Reagan vetoed two major spending m easures, the d e a n w a te r b ill an d a h ig h w a y authorization a ct. Both vetoes w ere overridden. Later, Reagan sought to make budget reform a top dom estic policy priority. But w h ile c a m p a ig n in g fo r r e fo r m , congressional Republicans complained, the president was sitting out the real budget fight going on in Congress. The result was that Reagan was forced to WASHINGTON (A P) — The lik ely rejection of Robert Bork as President Reagan’s nominee for the Suprem e Court marks the low ebb in Reagan’s worst year yet on Capitol Hill, and lawmakers say the president has ' responded to defeats by growing even more confrontational. The W hite H ouse a p p aren tly h as concluded that, having lost control of the Senate in the 1986 elections, it is better to make a stand on principles and go down in martyrdom than to seek compromise from a weakened position. “They are following a scorched-earth policy,” said Senate M ajority Leader Robert Byrd, D-W.Va. “Veto, threaten veto, sign a renewal of the Gramm-Rudman deficit-reduction law last month in which he had little say. Added to those failures has been the IranContra hearings, disputes over more aid to the Contras and the sale of Maverick m issiles to Saudi Arabia, and the Bork nomination, which som e Republicans said wasn’t pushed hard enough. “I don’t think they used the tools of the trade in a way to be successful,” said Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa. “If they had done half as much as the left did, he would have been approved.” But more than a White House failure, the For more information on how you can meet with Melinda Larson, Director of Admissions, contact Lynne Bensted in Social Science, Room 107, phone 965-2365. Call today. “There is a desire to defeat the president on everything up here,” he said. “I think they (at the White House) are being conciliatory with Congress. But there are som e tilings you just have to stand up and fight on.” Other Republicans, however, say Reagan has consciously chosen not to cooperate, which may backfire on those who, unlike the president, have to run for re-election next year. Reacquaint yourself with an old friend Pacific U n iv ersity wm have a representative on campus Monday, October 19 to meet with students interested in Pacific's professional programs in Optometry, Physical Therapy, and Occupational Therapy. Bork vote illustrates a new partisanship on a Capitol Hill where both houses are under Dem ocratic control, said Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah. JUSTICE STUDIES Student Association GRAND OPENING is reaffiliating with the American Criminal Justice Association Lamda Alpha Epsilon. Come join an exciting new adventure! Next Meeting: Tues., Oct 13 at 1:30 PM MUPima Rm. 218 a 390/lb. W ash & F o ld - R eg . 60$/lb. F R E E D R Y W ITH W A S H W ITH T H IS C O U P O N N o w th ru O c t. 3 1 ,1 9 8 7 827 S . 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K elly & Turner Architects. o p in io n State Press , October 12.1987 Be Afraid proof candidates present frightening choice •Robertson has claim ed to have been a graduate student at the U niversity of London. In fact, he took one introductory course on British art offered to visiting American students, for which he received no graduate credit. R ev. J esse Jackson and R ev. P at R obertson are p resently the leading c o n te n d e r s fo r , r e s p e c t iv e ly , th e Dem ocratic and Republican presidential nominations. That scares m e. It should scare you, too. Now, I’m w ell aware that the conventional wisdom holds that extrem ist candidates are always washed out during the presidential prim aries. But the conventional wisdom did not prevent George McGovern from being nominated by the Dem ocrats in 1972, Or Barry Goldwater by the Republicans in 1964. The conventional wisdom couldn’t even keep Ev Mecham out of the governor’s office. It is the purpose of this column to suggest a scenario in which both Jackson and Robertson could m aintain their leads through the prim aries and em erge as winners during next sum m er’s conventions. Consider the question of “character” that has alrea d y forced tw o D em ocratic candidates — Gary Hart and Joe Biden — out of the race. Consider this question in the light of several false claim s Pat Robertson has made for him self (as reported in the Washington P ost W eekly E dition, Sept. 28): •Robertson claim s to be a member of the board of directors of the “multibilliondollar” United Virginia Bank. In fact, he is one of 400 people asked to serve on a local advisory board that has no authority over bank management. proof.’ him as “a Yale- educated tax law yer.” Biden and Hart, by contrast, were In fact, he did graduate from Yale Law aceo com peting for a traditionally liberal School. But Robertson has never practice^ vjfd r ’> © |rnocratic constituency which neither tax law or any other form of law, hav cM ld claim as his personal property, in a failed his bar exam . crowded field, Dem ocratic voters had no m f e r e p r S L ^ n S K jS B id L ii Rev. Jesse Jackson •Robertson claim s the finances of his Christian Broadcasting Network “have been com pletely open and on the record.” In fact, CBN has been more secretive than other large m inistries, and has never joined the E vangelical Council for Financial A ccountability, w hich se ts voluntary standards for financial disclosure. •Robertson’s official biography describes of the race? Hów is it that Robertson steam s ahead so serenely, impervious to the “character” issue? The answer is sim ple. Robértson has built up his constituency over his years as a télévision evangelist. He has a dedicated cadre of starry-eyed supporters for whom he can do no wrong. He is “character m otive to extend any personal loyalty to a candidate who stum bles and falls. There are too many others to choose from. With the exception of Jesse Jackson, the other Dem ocratic contenders are equally vulnerable. But why is Jackson different? Well . . . suppose that, say, Sen. Paul Simon were to journey to Tunisia, and there publicly em brace Y assir Arafat. Chances are he’d be ridden out of the Democratic race overnight, branded a man of dangerous views and abysm al judgment. Yet Jackson can em brace and even play kissy-face with Arafat — or Fidel Castro, or Syria’s Hafaz Assad — and come out sm elling like a rose. Like Robertson, Jackson over the years has built up his own loyal constituency for whom he can do no wrong. Like Robertson, Jesse Jackson is character-proof. Now, what’s going to happen as the “character issue” picks off the Democrats, one by one? None of them are perfect, after all, and perfection o f character seem s to be what is demanded of candidates these days. And what’s going to happen when the “character issue,” as it inevitably must, jumps party lines and starts taking out otherwise qualified Republican candidates? Well, it could be that the only survivors w ill be the two candidates who are immune from questions of character. If that is the case, Jesse Jackson w ill be the Democratic candidate in-1988. And P at Robertson will be the Republican nominee. And then you w ill have to m ake a decision, m y fellow average voter. What w ill you do? What w ill you do? letters 1 Feminist furor Heiler shames all ■ -A - \ v* Ye olde State Press Editor: Once a gain, m edieval thoughts abound on the opinion page of the S tate P ress. Bob Heiler has managed to complain about his textbooks only to reveal him self as capable of wasting a printed page m i drivel (Oct. 8 ) . Just exactly what were you saying, Bob? “Hey, it’s (HC to be a fem inist, but don’t oppose patriarchy? Honey, just sit back, look cute and peep ‘Equality’ once in a while?” Though som e of the selected quotations in that book (“The Fem inist Dictionary” ) seem a a bit extrem ist, have you ever thought about why women are demanding their fair share and trying to change traditional views? Just take a look at (Mike) Ritter’s accompanying cartoon: There is the big, bad-ass, butch Dyke and the wimpy little cowering fem ale. Is this how you view women? It’s how women have been viewed for centuries past. Women w ere subservient wenches whose sole purpose was to be w ife and mother. Any fem ale deviating from this prime directive w as ostracized, looked , down upon and/or burned as a heretic witch. In today’s world the fight to be equal is very hard. We are still told by the ruling patriarchy what we are supposed to do and be. For exam ple, both Reagan and the pope are opposed to abortions (and thus a woman’s right to control her own body). They are saying if you are pregnant you stay that way until birth. The pope won’t even le t women use birth control, just abstinence. Do I hear laughter in the back? Then there is the other pressure to be m arried, to settle down, create a home. If you have a job, don’t compromise the traditional role, just add the 40-hour work week to the rest. Be a Superwoman! The demands on women are tough, and we are blocked by patriarchal thinking in every direction. If a woman doesn’t marry and decides on a career and rem aining single, she is considered unnatural, and whispers run amok — “Is she, can we say this on prim e-tim e ¡Hint, you know, a lesbian?” Why is it that lesbians are stereotyped and feared (tike their m ale counterparts)? Why is it people seem to think they are all manhaters, Ugly, bulky and so totally “butch?” If women seem a bit angry, hostile and frustrated, could it be because they are tired of fighting the stereotyping, of being pushed around and told what to do, of being “barefoot and pregnant,” of watching men control and dictate and royally screw things up (this planet isn’t in the shape it’s in due to fem ale guidance, you know)? It’s tim e for new definitions, though perhaps not the ones from “The Fem inist D ictionary.” We need m ore women like Corazon Aquino, Mother Theresa and Indira Ghandi. The tim e for m edieval minds like Reagan’s, John Paul’s and even our dear ol' E v’s is coming to an end. Bob, you w ere right when you said: “The only way to fight deception is with truth.” Well, the truth is that women are fighting for equality, and if they stand up with other women who m ay be outspoken and loud, don't you deceive youself by calling them a quasi-fem inist. Who made you .the authority on fem inists, anyway? She who rocks the cradle, can also guide the world. Stephanie T. Enriquez Senior, Anthropology j Editor: In a recent opinion column (Oct. 8), Bob H eiler used the book “ A F em in ist. Dictionary,” which he claimed is required for an ASU class, as a take-off point for a diatribe against feminism. The quality of Mr. Heiler’s research is perhaps best demonstrated by printing out that this book in tfact is not required or even optional r e p in g in any ASU class. Although you would never know it from Heifer’s description, the dictionary is not in te n d e d to p ro v id e a u th o r ita tiv e definitions. Rather, it is more a book of quotations, like “Bartlett’s .” For some entries it sim ply provides witty a phorism » while for others it provides a variety of competing definitions. One of the main points the book teaches, in faqt, is the diversity of fem inist views. Reflecting this fact, the compilers of the dictionary (scholars who have spent many years studying fem inism ) state that there is no one “correct” feminism. I malm the sam e point in the class I teach on feminist and anti-fem inist theory; the sam e textbook w e use is an anthology that provides sharply ¡divergent fem inist viewpoints on a variety of Subjects. Mr. Heifer’s “research” has led him to a different conclusion, however. To suit his own purposes, he has chosen to quote only som e of the m ost radical statem ents that appear in the book and to describe those statem ents as characteristic of “real” fem inists (his term ). He dism isses any women who believe in gender equality but do not hold such view s as m erely the dupes of these “real” fem inists. I find his attitude exceedingly patronizing. I have defined m yself as a fem inist since 1970. However, few of the statem ents Heiler quotes — som e of which are indeed quite radical — reflect m y view s. Y et I believe there is great value in studying radical ideas. For this reason, I have both radical fem inists and m embers of the E agle Forum speak in m y class. For those of us unafraid of new ideas, exposure to radical view s can help us to see the world in new and different ways, forcing us to think about our own unchallenged assum ptions. Sometimes we change our views in response. Other tim es, exposure to new ideas allows us to clarify and strengthen our original position. Surely the point of a university education is to expand our ideas and knowledge. Mr. Heiler sham es all of us who teach here by using his “knowledge” sim ply as a tool to ridicule and dism iss. Rose Weitz A ssociate Professor of Sociology quotable “Heaven has no rage like love to hatred turned, Nor hell a fury like a woman sco rn ed .” — William Congreve. State Press Monday, O ctober 12,1987 Page 5 Project C o n tin u e d fro m p a g e i . growth, Osborne said. He said about 550 students were turned away from full residence halls this year, and another 300 housing applicants were not accepted by the University in tim e to be accommodated. t ■ Knothe said the exact project details w ill face regent approval in January, then the University w ill select an architect and construction manager. Construction usually begins approximately one year after regent approval, he said. Knothe said the University w ill construct new housing before renovation of existing residence halls, “so we don’t have to displace anybody until we get to about the third phase.” Process Oriented Design should com plete its general south campus project proposal within the next couple of weeks, Osborne said. The company was hired to determine the m ost efficient use of south campus land. Osborne said the new south campus housing w ill offer an “alternative lifestyle” to students’ current living conditions. ° He said he wants to group students more comfortably by offering suite-style and kitchenette accommodations, along with adequate leisure and recreation space. ASSOCIATED STUDENTS Lecture Series p re se n ts “We cannot m ake that area so dense that we lose any aesthetic value or recreational value,” Osborne said. Knothe said the south campus project is part of a long-range plan to relocate innercampus student housing to the campus perim eter. T o d d G reen/S tateP rees A s part of the land acquisition proposal, ASU Is aaaldng regent approval of a $600,000 purchase of two apartment complexes near south cam pus-Palm Vista, 1339 S . Sunset Drive, and Sunset apartments, 1342 S. Sunset Drive. F A T B O Y S L I P -S Y N C & W IPE O U T BIKINI C O N T E S T ! M ark R usse S y n d ic a te d C o lu m n is t a n d P o litic a l H u m o r is t W llp IF w FAT BOVS W ill J u d g e T h e F in a ls O C T. 12TH a t U T O P I A N ig h t - C lu b $1.00 Drinks for Guys till 11 Mondays — 25
ad T o d d G reen/StetePrese Jammon’ it up The Valley’s favorite reggae man, Walt Richardson, above, performs to a full house at Tempo’s Minderbinders bar and grill Saturday night. Left, drummer Mere! Bregante rocks the night away. S P : How about our own governor Mecham? ’ MR: “I w as the first person to do a Mecham joke before a national audience. It w as way last summer, and I do my PBS shows from Buffalo, (which are) shown nationwide. And, it was a gam ble. I was so faraw ay from Arizona when I said it, and I w as talking about the candidates, and about Babbitt, and how I wish he were still governor because he was replaced by a real piece of work named Evan Mecham. “ I said how Meeham’s birthday w as a n a t i o n a l holiday in South Africa. “Be a few weeks later I w as in Arizona, talking to a friend of mine, and he said what was really scary about that, is that everyone laughed at that joke. “But I think he’s good for you, because he’s the m ost famous governor you’ve ever had. And so this keeps Arizona from getting m ixed up with NewjMexico. “ TVw i’ t worry aitmut it. Governors are supposed to be funny. As w e’ve seen in recent history, it prepares som e of them for the presidency. “Don’t be too hasty ¿bout (the recall), you’re better off with him . At least people know who you are, or they’ll go to Albuquerque by m istake. “You can put a sign out on the highway, ‘W elcome to Arizona, the laughs are on us.’ m O F E M Sm itû HSU 1 Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m,-10 p.m. 1 Sun. Noon-6 p.m. M E S A N IS S A N •Nissan-trained technicians •Genuine Nissan parts •Quality maintenance and repair work •Reasonable prices G o o d through D e c . 31,1937. ch a se anything In th e sto re. (S orry, n o tra d e-in s o n S a t. o r S u n .) B row se through o u r three flo o rs of: •New & U sed B oo ks 122 E. University Com e and visit us •A rt P rin ts & P osters • C a le n d a rs & C a rd s •H and bound Jo u rn a ls M -F 10-0 921-0980 SAT 100 C h a n g in g 414 M R Assnus S U N 12-5 H ands 144 | » | O ld To w n T a u p e P A R I S O P T I Q U * • E 51 W e s t 3 rd S t ., Hayden Square Tempe, Arizona 8 5 2 8 1 Phone [602] 8 9 4 - 8 3 8 2 •early detection 5 days before a m issed period. •immediate results P H O E N IX TEM PE 910 0 N . 2 n d S t 424 B roadw ay 997-7493 968-7471 Hertz Equipment Rental Corporation w ill be on campus interviewing for entry level sales management positions on Tuesday, October 13, 1987 A ll m a jo r s w elc o m e ! 10% diS C Q U n t on all service SMITH MESA NISSAN P e ^ t o «1^ A8U i p m s a service hours ■ B M W H B H W ® « * * « --------PARTS ft SERVICE HOURS M o n d a y 7:30 a.m .-8:30 p.m . *To be présent ât 1701W. Broadway, Mesa T u e s.-Fri. 7:30 a.m .-5:30 p.m time of purchase. Service Parts PARTS OPEN SAT. 834-3368 834-0255 8:30 a.m .-1£ 30 p.m. N o w at T h e A rc h e s FAMILY PLANNING INSTITUTE sg. V1 ’, Your N issan and Datsun S ervice S p é c ia lis a i are offering _ re -sa le p ric e In ca sh o r 50% In trad ein c re d it w hich m ay b e u se d to p ur Affordable Expires 10-18-87 Chicago snrtf , ( VIENNAUIF DOGS q u a lity c lo th and p a p a rb a cks (no textbo o ks, p lease) w* pay 30% o f o u r •Abortion, Birth control and complete gyn care. •Evening appointments any Sandw iches C innam on T ree C en ter Y o u r book* a t C h a n g in g H a n d s. F o r • FREE w m W e fe a tu re BUY • S ELL •TR AD E Com puters for Rent Pregnancy testing Ready For a Change of Pace? 9 0 3 S. R u ral N. Basement Matthews Center COME TRUE— m m YOU ARE READY. R O T D O G H E A V E N m 7 a.m.-9 a.m. daily * Students who wish to interview with Hertz on Oct 13 must attend the group pre-session meeting on H ertz I Oct. 12 in the Coconino Page 12 M onday. O ctober 18,1987 S t a t e P jg M V am p s, s c a m p s and tra m p s c lo u d DEG’s ‘ N e a r D a rk ’ B y JE S S IE SIM O N state Press * in For bonus points, nam e the m issing com ponent— Great Acting. Fine Directing. Electrifying Special E ffects, and ( . • • >. The correct answer is plot. For those who guessed correctly, the score is now, Audience — l, DEG’s latest, “Near Dark” — 0. Not that “Near Dark” is a bad film , it is just sort of a “nowhere” one, which makes little if any conclusions. Actually, the film lies in its own pool of blood — stabbing itself with its own double-edged sword. Within the first several minutes of the film , w e’re introduced to Caleb (Adrian Pasdar of “Made in U.S.A.”), a seem ingly normal guy who picks up on a very unusual woman. After they begin making out, he discovers she is a vam pire. By this tim e, he has already been “turned” and m ust learn the ropes of the vam pire world. In the past, this task seem ed easy enough to accom plish cm film , but in “Near Dark,” it is the focal point. In fact, Caleb finds he isn’t cut out for the cutthroat lifestyle at all and decides to rectify his situation. His new love, the vam piress Mae (Jennny Wright of “Out of Bounds”), tries to teach him the ropes of bloodsucking as M ae’s late-night crowd voices disapproval of the new member. A great deal of the film is spent in this vein, with a side plot slowly seeping its way to the forefront —- one which centers on Caleb’s father (Tim Thomerson) and little sister (9-yearold M arcie Leeds) driving across the country trying to locate Caleb. Father and sister go on a trek to find the m issing devil-of-ason, and end up, by som e strange occurrence, in the sam e hotel as Caleb and his new crowd. Lo and behold, the night marauders stum ble across the innocents and a scuffle ensues. What results is a fast escape and the transformation of Caleb from vam pire back to human. Eluding the band of vulgar vam pires does not go over well, and they seek revenge. Well, m ost of them anyway. A m ovie without a love interest just won’t flow, so Mae com es back to Caleb. Touching? Well, not really. This does nothing to improve the mood of the vam pire’s, and one more escape scene follows. Unfortunately for the vam pires, nature has a way of righting the world, and when the dawn breaks, a picturesque view of burning bodies is provided. Y oung cow boy-turned“ N ear D a rk ” bloodsucking-ghoul sa v es the girl, transforms her into ★ V2 a y o u n g -b lo o d su c k in g (out Of foul) human, and they live and die F/M Entertainm ent presents happily-ever-after. a Feldm an/M eeker Produc tion, starring A drian Pasdar, Jenny W right and Lan ce H e h rikse ru P rod cu ed by Steven-C harles Ja ffa. W rit ten by E ric R ed and K athiyn B ig e lo w . P ro d u c e d n y Edw ard S. Feldm an, C har le s M eeker and E ric Red. Sigh. A fte r 95 m in u te s o f introduction, though, the film never seem ed to get a n y w h e r e . It w a s interesting, had a fe w funny lines and would be worth the m atinee price. “Near Dark,” rated R, is p la y in g a t Sun D e v il Theaters in Tempe. Rated R I J G YR O S O N LY 5 ¡¡ ¡§ 9 9 | 0 A M E R IC A 10 % OFF A N Y S E R V IC E FO R T H E Y E A R s_______ W ITH A S U I.P . WE OFFER: •PRECISION LONG A SHORT CUTS •PERMS «HEItW S •MGHUQHTS & FROSTING FRAMES! COLORING «HAIR C M C CBN PROFESSIONAL FORMULA TUESDAY 9:307:00 • WED. & THURS. NOONS:00 FRI. 9:30-7:00 • SAT. BM & 00 w ith this AD (up to d sandwiches) OFFER GOOD THROUGH OCT. 17,1987. Hours: Mon.-Frt. 10-9 • sat. 10-6 B0JÖ829s.Rural Rd. 966-5543 MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL! YOUR ORDER F R E E ! Why B uy . . . When You Can Lease ! And get eo much more. A com plete form al w ear leas in g service fo r lad ies, from fora to Jewelry an d from sh o es to handbags, a ll at o n e location. By le a s in g yo u r form al w ear an d a cce sso rie s from 9Sie < 3 %omul XiWings -15 Wings $2.50 -30 Wings $4.75 45 Wings 56J5 JKfWings- 60Wings $8.9$ y°u can have a d ynam ic lo o k for each o c c a s io n O u r selectio n o f the latest fash ions is from th e n a t io n 's m o s t e x c lu s iv e designers. (Offer good Sundays too) ^ h e fo rm e d & ^ fo /ood sh et /o o d s E e jf ooasn ec A t th e "A -fram e" 4 2 2 5 C. Indian S ch o o l R d W e'll w ork w ith you to create the com plete lo o k to fit you r sp e cia l ev en t w hether It b e a charily b a ll a w edding. cocktaB party, prom , beauty pageant o r h om eoom ln g Phoenix, AZ 85018 (602) 381-0026 Appointm ent Suggested MU AB presents B e s t P ic t u r e Northeast com er o f Dobson & University Southwest 844-SHED 8: FREESEMINAS ONLAWSCHOOLADMISSIONS “How you can get into the Law School of your choice.“ Guest Speaker: WINNER BRIAN MURPHY (D ire c to r o f A d m is s io n s , A S U Law S c h o o l) The fir»t fa m ily afw rto»— rs Lower Level Memorial Union 7 p.m. and 9:30 $1.00 A d m issio n Monday through Sunaa> October 13.1987 6:oo pm Armstrong Han nm. 155 ¿KAPLAN STANLEYH.KARAN EDUCATIONALGNTÍR UD. F o r m ore in fo rm a tio n c a ll 9 6 7 -2 9 6 7 State Press Page 13 Monday. O ctober 18,1987 Princess CondntMd from pag* 9. audience and through the boy’s eyes. W estley (Cary Elw es) loves Buttercup (Robin Wright), but has to get som e money so they can be married. He leaves, goes overseas and is reported to have been killed by pirates. Buttercup is heartbroken and the pompous Prince Humperdinck (Chris Sarandon) plans to take her as his bride. In a tw ist of fate, she is kidnapped by three fortune hunters (Andre the Giant, Mandy Patinkin and W allace Shawn) and the action begins. The twist to this fairy tale is that every so often the story is interrupted by the boy bemoaning an impending death or, even worse, a kiss. H ie tale switches, people get saved and the m orality of sm all boys intercedes, to the chagrin of kissing fans everywhere. The humor in this flick is a bit too sophisticated for kids, but suits adults just fine. If the film m akers had gone a step further trying to satisfy either age group, the clarity of directing in “H ie Princess Bride” would have been resolved. There are som e very w itty scenes with sharp dialogue here. When these are juxtaposed with som e overly sim plistic events, the result tends to clash and the viewer wonders how to interpret this m ovie. The subject m atter is treated with care and fortunately there, is no humor a la Mel Brooks. ARIZONA STA TE UNIVERSITY PUBLIC SEALED BID #2-88 A rizo n a State U n iv e rsity S u rp lu s W arehouse F irst Street & P rice Road, Tem po, A Z 85287-0508 V E H IC L E S , O F F IC E E Q U IP M E N T & M IS C . IT EM S • • • • TR U C K S VEH ICLES O TH ER M ISC. VEH ICLES O FFICE M ACHINES • • • • O FFICE FURNITURE VICTO R CO M PU TER (PC) C O M P U TER PARTS M ISC. ELEC TR O N IC ITEM S T M U niversity reeervei the rig h t to «coopt o r reject any or ah bids. Th« U niversity hareby reserves the rig h t to postpone o r con tinue the sal« fo r any reason. Sales are to the highest bid . N o ro fu n d sp r adjustm ents w ill be m ade. N o w arranty o r guarantees are Im plied and a lt Item s sodf Ma s Is and w here la ". Property may be Inspected and b id on w eekdays d u rin g the hours of 1 2 0 a m through 4:00 p.m . beginning O ctober 10, 1007 through O cto b er23,1987,8:00 am t. through 2:00 p.m . Saturday, O ctober 24, and 8:00 a.m . to 12&0 noon M onday, O ctober 28,1987. B id s wIN be opened at 8 2 0 a.m. Tuesday, O ctober 27,1987. S u rp lu s P ro p e rty • (602) 965-7639 The scenery; is top-notch. Because of the film m aker’s special attention to detail, one would predict a lot of enthusiasm w as involved in all parts of creating “The Princess Bride.” The acting is as good as it should be; the characters are two-dimensional stereotypes and are necessarily everything, but real in this genre film . The cam eos by Peter Falk and Billy Crystal (playing an old M iracle Man) are great. Falk is sharp as a laconic grandfather who knows what’s what. Crystal cuts deals and gives exceptional bargains on m iracles, even though he’s retired — “Don’t go in the w ater fo r two hours, w ell one, after you take this (m ira c le p ill).” Author William Goldman, with the help of Director Rob Reiner, has made a nice transition from the pages of his novel to the big screen. Here the story remains intact and strong, and it is this quality which carries the picture instead of overused, pedestrian special effects. Adrian Biddle’s photography — shot on location in England and Ireland — is above average. Biddle takes advantage of m isty green meadows and shadowy torture chambers — which make for good fairy tales. “The Princess Bride,” rated PG, is playing at AMC Lakes Theaters, located at Rural and Baseline roads in Tempe. D IA L IN G 4 MEN From top to bottom, Wallace Shawn, Mandy Patlnldh and Andre the Giant are dastardly vllllans In “ The Princess Bride.” J V n g u e l’S JVIusic Center IN THE LITTLE ARCHES SHOPPING CENTER TEMPE Recorded G ay IntroducUona SALES • RENTALS • REPAIRS GUITAR LESSO N S IN FO LK S CLASSICAL B Y MIGUEL BAND INSTRUMENTS & ACCESSORIES IN T E R -A C T IV E DIALING! E LE C T R O N IC S •AMPS "PHASE SHIFTERS •RHYTHM BOXES «POLYPHASE .DISTORTION BOXES «ELECTRONIC •MINI MIXERS METRONOMES D R U M S * R E C O R D E R S « B A N JO S S H E E T M U S IC E T C . AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR: Browife by TouchTone or leave your own m essage. A L V A R E Z — G U ILD — K H O N O " Y A M A H A — O VA TIO N B Y R O LA N D JB A N E Z & E LEC TR O H A R M O N IX 4 O T H E R S M ARTIN G U ITA R S SP A N ISH C L A S S IC A L G U ITA R S 1- 976- 4MEN 1-976-4MEN F irst M in. 55C/Each A d d ’l. M in. 45$ 122 E. UNIVERSITY DR., TEMPE Com er o f Forest and University •R A M IR EZ « C O N TR ER A S •BA R N A BE « CESAR V E R A O P E N 10 A .M .-T O 6 P .M . SIX D A Y S 968-2310 • S A N T O S H E R N A N D EZ 15% O FF RESUM ES •S A M E D A Y S E R V IC E •W R ITIN G & C O N S U L T IN G “ C o m e listen to u p p ercla ssm en share th e ir p o rt fo lio s, a d v ic e a n d insight. Brief to u r o f stu d io s in clu d e d . • L A Y O U T & D E S IG N •LA S E R P R IN T IN G Watch for November's Design Contest O ct. 13 — Architecture, 5:30 PM Oct. 20 — Interiors/Planning/L.A., 5:30 PM Room 13, Lower level, College o f AfChKecture DRY C LE A N IN G FO R S T U D E N T S •C LO SEST TO ASU W IT H A S U I.D . _ ¿University McKellips and Scottsdale in the ABCO Shopping Center "CORPORATE RESUME" K O L L S W E L L S B U S IN E S S C O M P L E X N.E. CORNER UNIVERSITY & 48th ST. SUITE 108, BUILDING 455 TEL: 9 6 6 -0 4 5 1 D ID Y O U K N O W ? YOURASU INSURANCE COVERS CHIROPRACTIC CARE!!! Passport Photos 2 tor $6.49 Film Processing ►Whiplash ►Neck Pain ►Headaches ►Back Pain ►Shoulder Pain ►Accidental Injuries We will accept yo u r insurance, p ro vid e a stu den t discount, with little or no out-of-pocket expense to you. 2 fo r 1 or FREE FILM TEMPE SCOTTSDALE ILFORD 9 6 6 -1 6 3 5 9 4 1 -2 9 0 9 Dr. Donald Nelson 3 9 1 0 S. R u ral R d. # E Dr. Stephen Nielson 7 3 3 3 E . T h o m a s Ffd. Mcnday & Wednesday on Develop A Printorders Photo Paper 25 — 8x10 $ 1 0 .4 7 0 0 — 8 x1 0 $ 3 8 .4 7 SUNSET CAM ERA Tempe Center — Milt &Univ. 829-0424 Whiplash! Stiff N e c k & Back! comics M o n d ay, Page 14 State Press O ctob er 12,1987 Doonesbury BY GARRY TRUDEAU WELL, FOR STARTERS, HA!I TOUR’ T-T-TALKJN' THOUGHT ABOUTM Y GENERA- YOUMIGHT nON" SLOGAN IS STOOP TO J-}-JU M P IN 'J O B REALLY P !S APPOMTEPME, KNOW THAT?WHY IS EVERVONEGETTING TFJPPEP J UPENOC-CHARACTER? I HAVE 1 ABSOLUTELY NO TROUBLE- STAY* m m CHARACTER! By GARY LARSON F A R S ID E IH M B HERB THE LAW SCHOOLTT-TRANSCRIPTS O F A LL POUR. LAO S... “No doubt about it, boys.... See these markings on the bottom? This is an Apache pie pan!” by B erke Breathed BLOOM COUNTY m A 'NO UVEAUVULCAN' A N P IM TAKING OVER THE GWP. W ERE NOW ON A FIVE-YEAR M O W N FOR CHEAP PLEA6VRE6 SACRILEGE! sp o c K m vourte '/ fŒ H H Œ P / WHATTA WE PO ? T H E F A R S ID E > By GARY LARSON HUMOR HIM X U SENP OUT A PISCRE1E PtSTRESS C O P E ... ' L 5P9CK# 2 HA360NE urn 'WLCAN HORMONAL IMBALANCE'/HE'S scremino fora sum .. K v N / i l l ju s t s e r THE O L' PHASER ON "EMASCULATE': HARSM OF SUPPtf PASSION P fflP S / ' He's L 0 B K -, \S e P K ! w “Now!... That should clear up a few things around here!” Shoe by Jeff MacNelly t e QUIPS by Sieve Talkowski ï sports State Press Page 15 Monday, O ctober 12,1987 Devils lose conference opener to Huskies Husky defense, crowd lead to 27-14 pounding By STEVE BRENNAN State Press SEATTLE — For University of Washington fans, Saturday was a perfect day: rare October sunshine, a new stadium addition and a chance to watch the Arizona State Sun Devils get fed to the Dawgs. The fired-up Huskies, fueled by 73,883 scream ing fans, held the Sun D evils (3-2, 0-1 in the Pac-10) to just 10 yards total offense in the first half and survived a third quarter comeback to defeat ASU, 27-14, in the D evils’ Pac-10 opener. “The crowd was definitely a factor,” ASU coach John Cooper said. “The gam e is played from the eyebrows-up. “They played like w e did (against Washington) the last couple of years (ASU defeated Washington in Tempe in 1985, 36-7, and 1986, 34-21),” he said. On the first possession of the gam e, ASU quarterback Paul Justin, who had been selected to start after the Sun D evils’ win last week over Texas-El Paso, was intercepted by Husky linebacker Bo Y ates, who returned the ball 25 yards for the first score with 14:17 left in the quarter. This turn of events set the tempo of the gam e as the Sun Devil offense was unable to produce a first down until early in the third quarter, even after Justin was benched in favor of Daniel Ford. “Paid Justin didn’t play very w ell,” Cooper said. “He was very nervous. We didn’t have any success calling audibles, and we had a lot of motion because of the noise. “They played an excellent gam e,” he said. “They were prepared.” Washington coach Don Jam es was elated by his team ’s effort. “That statistic (ASU’s first-half total offense) is mind boggling,” Jam es said. “I’ve never seen 10 yards at the half against a great team . “I can’t say enough about the 12th man (crow d),” he said. “I asked for their help and they responded.” ASU flanker Chris Garrett said the crowd was an important obstacle to moving the ball in the first half, but poor field position made it worse: “It was a hostile environm ent,” Garrett said, “It was too noisy and guys w ere hearing false calls. I’ve seen how the crowd can be a factor. We’re not used to it. “It is also hard to start back so far toward the end zone,” he said. It looked as though it would not be a day for quarterbacks as Washington’s Chris Chandler also threw an interception on the Huskies’ first possession. ASU defensive end Pat Taylor blocked a Chandler pass intended for spht end Darryl Franklin, grabbed the ball in the air and returned it 12 yards to the 50-yard line. But the Sun D evils were unable to move the ball on their second possession, and were forced to punt. ASU punter Mike Schuh, who had eight punts for 333 yards on the day, then placed the ball out of bounds at the Washington 10-yard line. But the Husky offensive machine, which would eventually gain 372 total yards on the day, m ethodically drove the ball 90 yards on 12 plays to score again. ASU quarterback Daniel Ford, No. 7, tries to escape the grasp of Washington’s Travis Richardson, No. 58, during Saturday’s game In Seattle. The Huskies used a record-breaking crowd and a tough defense to defeat the Sun Devils, 27-14. Washington tailback Vince Weathersby took the ball on a pitchout from the ASU 16-yard line and scampered around the right side for a touchdown, making the score 14-0 with 5:16 remaining in the first quarter. ASU defensive end Trace Armstrong said despite personnel changes in the Husky offensive line, the Sun D evils were not surprised; they were sim ply outplayed. “There wasn’t anything different,” Armstrong said. “There were no surprises except that they knocked us off the ball. “They would hit us on our weakest defenses,” he said. “They are a good football team and a good offensive line.” Cooper said the Washington offensive line was the key to success against the Sun D evils. “Their offensive line did a good job,” he said. “They had a good gam e plan and executed to perfection. We didn’t stop them on third down.” Ford was placed at quarterback for the ensuing ASU possession, but the Sun D evils were still unable to m ove the ball. Tailback Darryl Harris carried the ball tw ice for four yards and Ford was sacked for the first tim e (the Huskies would get to Ford seven tim es during the gam e), forcing Schuh to punt for the second tim e. Washington (4-2, 1-1) again sustained a drive, this time beginning at its own 46-yard line. The Huskies drove to the ASU 6-yard line, alternating between running plays and short passes, but were forced to kick a field goal after ASU defensive tackle Shawn Patterson stopped Washington tailback Tony Covington for no gain on third down. Washington kicker Brandy Brownlee converted the field goal, boosting the Husky lead to 17-0. Both defenses tightened for the remainder of the second period. , Brownlee punted for the first tim e and a fake punt was intercepted by ASU comerback Eric Allen in the end zone to T u rn to F O O T B A L L , page 17. S p ik e r s b e a t W a s h in g to n , 3 -2, in g ru e lin g m a tch By JOAN McKENNA State Press ASU volleyball players Kelly Plalsted and Tracey Baiberle move to aig a oau ounng ™ Devils’ win over Washington. sun The ASU volleyball team ’s 3-2 victory over Washington Saturday w as one people sat back and savored. It was sw eet — oh, so sweet. Anything but a win after three hours of grueling play could have shattered the team ’s spirit, not to mention those of coaches and fans. No one seem ed in a hurry to leave. Middle blocker Sue Nord served the last two balls before a crowd of 805, spurred on by a section of ASU’s band and cheering squad. It would be tough to say who worked harder — the players or the spectators. Nord said it was a moment of reckoning for her. “I knew I had to get those serves in,” she said. “I said to m yself, ‘I’m getting this serve in .. .nothing tough, just in.’ ” Nord took over the ball with the score tied at 15, 45 minutes into gam e five. ASU had fought back from a deficit of 7-2 to go ahead 9-8, but fell behind again 13-9 before tying the game at 13 with the Huskies (14-6,2-5 in the Pac-10). Hitter Christy Nore said winning the match was more than just luck. “I just think it was meant to be,” she said. “Our tim e had com e.” Nore said the Sun D evils cam e into the match 100 percent ready to fight. “It was an incredible effort by everybody,” she said. “We played out of our heads.” Driving the Sun Devils throughout the test of stam ina was setter Regina Stahl, who never got a rest. Stahl set 168 balls for 90 assists (setting a new ASU record for assists in one m atch) and a .536 setting percentage. She also dug 15 balls, killed nine and the 5-7 Sun Devil blocked four for good measure. Head coach Debbie Brown said her team gave everything it had. She stared in amazement at the gam e statistics, in which eight of 11 of her players broke or equaled at least one personal career record. “We went into the match knowing this was the most important match w e’ve played this season,” Brown said. “And we knew Washington had great defense. “We expected the ball would keep coming back over the net, and that happened a lot.” The Huskies dug 86 balls. The previous high by an opponent this season was 66 by Indiana. Brown said the ability for the team to last three hours should be credited to the substitutes, who kept supplying fresh energy to the team . “The subs did a great job,” she said. “We couldn’t have done it without them .” Nord agreed and said hitter Debbie Lynch coming off the bench in gam es four and five was a key factor. Lynch scored eight points on kills, including the final kill to clinch gam e four, 15-11. Lynch was speechless after the match. Turn to VOLLEYBALL, pago 1C. Page 16 State Press Monday, O ctober 12,1987 Volleyball-__ C o n tin u e d from p ag e 15. After a while, she said “Ahhh.” Later she said, “When Debbie (Brown) put m e in, I had to go for. it all. Everybody, was going for everything. “It’s kind of hard to explain.” Lynch said the cheerleaders, band and fans really helped. “When we w ere struggling really hard, they kept the momentum going,” she said. “When Washington sided out, we w ere still psyched. We knew w e were going to get it back.” Lynch said it was the kind of m atch that could turn around the rest of the season for the D evils (7-6, 3-4). Nord said knowing they can pull together and fight should carry over to other m atches. “I think w e have the confidence now,” she said. “We can win. Against UofA w e were in the sam e situation, but w e let it go. “But w e’ve got that confidence now.” Brown said com ing from behind has got to be a confidence booster and hopes the players w ill stop doubting their ability. “Hopefully they’ve learned to never give up, to keep fighting.” B row n r e p e a te d ly h a s e x p r e sse d confidence in her team ’s talent. A major strain on Sun D evil endurance w as deflecting bullets from Husky hitterblocker Laurie Wetzel. Washington set the ball to Wetzel 92 tim es and she sew ed on 41 of them. She m ade only five errors. But team hitting collectively was even, .284 for Washington compared to ASU’s .286. The scoring w as 13-15, 15-8, 13-15, 15-11, 17-15. Stars for ASU included freshman Kelly Plaisted, who had a chance to show the home fans her arrow-straight serve and record three aces. Hitter Tracey Barberie scored 20 kills, tying her personal best. Nore had 30 kills, a new career high that placed her in a thirdplace tie for ASU’s record. Dawn Meidinger scored a new best of 12 kills, and Nord also compiled a personalhigh 24. The victory resulted in a weekend sweep as the Sun D evils defeated Washington State Friday, 15-10,15-6,15-13. ASU held it together while the Cougars (10-10, 1-5) made a lot of m istakes. All Brown said w as, “It’s a w in.” Hitter T rade Kisro turned in an excellent performance with a career-high eight kills against the team from her home state. Kisro’s grandparents drove down from the Northwest to watch the gam e. One of the Huskies, Laurie D avis, w as a former high school team m ate of Kisro in Spokane. She said those things affected her. “I think the competition is greater when you’re playing your home state team ,” she said. But Kisro said her gam e has improved just from more experience. Kisro is the Jim m y Connors of the team . Since she swings left-handed, opponents are caught off guard. “Being left-handed is definitely an advantage. Most team s don’t get to practice defense against it.” Kisro said it is a nice feeling for the team to be winning. ASU plays Grand Canyon Tuesday night in the UAC before heading out of town for conference m atches with Stanford Friday and Cal-Berkeley Saturday. Hitter Mindy Gowell’s status is still on hold, but trainer Joanne Dunnock said she would reassess the situation Monday. “I can’t let her go back until 1 test her on the cybex m achine Monday,” she said. “But she’s working really hard. We’re pushing for next weekend.” T H O R B E C K É ’S G Y M Spacial Low Rala* weddings, parties, dances . . . anything 998-6689 If you were disabled, could you navigate our "under construction" campus by yourself? Probably not. We need your support to help keep the A SU carts for the disabled running. We've had several donations, but need to raise at least $50,000 to continue this invaluable service to ASU. Please help us keep these carts running by making a donation today. Mail or bring in your check made payable to DISABLED STUDENTS RESOURCES to: STATE PRESS, Tempe, Az. 85287-1502 15 Matthews Center, ASU Thank you for making someone's day. mm* h i ■ felts 9 6 6 -6 6 2 1 Quality Auto Grooming & Tinting Complete Custom Detail: •E x te rio r • In te rio r •Engine ,12°° per month ‘plus tSO one-time membership fee WINDOW TINTING O n ly o n e m ile on the bike path o ff S cottsdale Bridge. • Custom D esign Logos • 5 Y r. W arranty! TH O R B ECK E'S GYM On the south side of Curry Road between M iller & Hayden 969-9013 ASU STUDENT DISCOUNT! 63 E. McKellips (Mesa) B A R G A IN P R IC E -.MOWSBIfORI 6PM MOk >Pi if KCfPt HOl K>»>s SATuWQAv SUH0*v A HQuOPYS MUST SHOW 0*1 > CHRIS-TÛW N 0 < 2 4 9 2 8 4 3 s '» ? n o istm *vt ^ 843-4593 ondaaÍKIWD > Filli ATTRACTION(I) 1:45, 4:45, 7:30,1215 THREEI'CLOCKHKN(PG13) IDO, 200, 5:00, 7:15, 9:15 SIMEMETl WATCHMENME(t) 1200, 230, 5.-00, 7:45, 10:15 SOMEONETOWATCHOVERME(R) 12-30, 3:00, 5:30, BOO, 10:30 BESTSEHER(R) 1230, 245, 5:15, 7:45, 10D0 KSTSUH(I) 1:45, 4D0, 6D0, ODO, 10DO BUTBOOM(PG) IDO, 3:15, 530, 7:45, «MO MMIF FUE(I) 1245, 200, 5:15, 7:30, 9:45 SURRENDER(PC) 1245, 200, 5:00, 7:15,930 SURRENDER (PG) EU DIRK(I) 1245, 3D0, 5:30, ODO, 10:15 THREEO’CLOCKHI6H(PG13) 1D0, 215, 5:15, 7:15, 9:15 mCMl (1) 1200, 4:45, 9:30 REUNAIS»(1) 230, 7:15 MINOFFIRE 1:45, 4D0. 6D0. 8D0, 10D0 FATAIITTRACTIOfl (R) 11:45, 230, 5DQ, 7:30, 1(115 M SNOT(PCI3) 1D0, 230, 5:307:30, 9:30 1200, 230, 5:00, 7:15,930 KFMdim ill 1:30, 3:30, 5.30, 8D0, 10D0 TRI-CITY W SU PER ST IT IO N 0 DOLLAR THEATRES 834 5 7 6 7 " S1.00AU. SEATS-ALL SHOWS 461-1070 MAWSL M S S0,lro' SUMMER S CHOOL eMeeewe^w MTT DANCING(PG13) 1:15, 230, 530, 7:30, 9:45 FATAIATTRACTION(R) 1200,2305D0, 7:45,1030 BESTSUU(R) 1230, 245, 5D0, 720, 9:40 w w iiä ii 1230, 5:15, 10D0 IHN BATUMIS23d 7:30 ADVENTURESMBUVSITTM 1245, 5D0, 9:15 SMCEUUS 3:00, 7:15 SNPEIMMH 1.-00, 530, 9:45 IMERSPICE3:00, 7:30 TEN Etti 3D0, 7:45 THEUNTOUCHABLES 1230, 515. 10D0 • FITEITTMCTM(IQ 1200, 225, 4:50, 725, 10D0 HEURAISR(R) 3:35, 7:30 UBIMI (PS) 125, 5:15, 9:15 STAKEBUT(I) 11:45, 215, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45 SWEDETB«RICHWEIM E(I) 1215, 245, 515, 7:45, 10:15 ^ 8 3 5 0404 M st s th u h ^h n HAMBURGEREU (R) 1245,200, 5:15,720 9:45 ■MTYBAMCM(P6U) 1230 245,5D0 7:15,920 BUTBOOM(PG) 1D0 215,520, 7:45, 10D0 SEMEME! (PG) 1245,200, 5:15, 720, 9:45 > State Pr*» Monday, O ctober 12,1987 Page 17 . Foo tb all Continuad from pag* IS. end drives for Washington. Ford was sacked three more tim es by the Husky defense during the Sun D evils’ next two possessions, leaving the score at the half 17-0. The third quarter resem bled more of the Hash between Pac-10 powers that had been expected before the gam e, as the Sun D evils cam e out of the locker room tnnnni with a rejuvenated offense. ASU produced its first and second first downs of the gama after its defense forced the Huskies to punt on their first possession. After being sacked for the fifth tim e, Ford com p iled a 25-yard pass play to Garrett, moving the ball to the Husky 47. Harris then ran for 12 yards over left tackle for the Sun D evils’ second first down, but the drive stalled after Ford received his sixth sack for a 13-yard loss. But the Sun D evils took advantage of a Washington fumble, forced mid recovered by noseguard Mark Duckens, to score their first touchdown after three plays. Ford found Garrett in the end zone on a third down play and completed a 9-yard pass to m ake the score 17-7. “In the second half w e had good field position,” Cooper said. Ford said the key was establishing a running gam e. “In the third quarter we cam e out and w ere able to establish the run, so we could pass the ball,” he said. Washington was again fenced to punt as the ASU defense tightened even more. Ford then found a wide-open Aaron Cox running down the sideline on first down and, despite a tremendous hit as he threw the ball, connected on a 47-yard pass play to the Washington 12-yard line. After three more plays, Garrett managed to break free over the middle and caught a Ford pass for the Sun D evils’ second touchdown, making the score 17-14. ASU was unable to m ove the ball for the rem ainder of the gam e, as Ford could com plete only one more pass and was intercepted for the second tim e by Y ates with 2:09 left. But the Huskies w ere able to drive one more tim e, and added a second field goal by Brownlee, making the final score 27-14. Cooper said there was a positive side to the loss; the Sun D evils’ know who they are and what must be done the rest of the season. “We’ll find out how good a football team w e are now,” he said. “We know what we have to do now.” Armstrong said the team must rebound from the loss. “We’ve got to start living up to our reputation,” he said. But Washington responded with a 73-yard, 11-play drive which led to a one-yard run by Covington to put the Huskies ahead, 24-14. “We’ve got to com e out every week and start flying in practice.” “When it is 17-14 somebody’s got to make a big play for you,” Cooper said. “But nobody did for us today.” The D evils w ill play host to Washington State at 7;30 p.m. Saturday at Sun .Devil Stadium. . THE $ 11.00 Hair Cuts R e g . $15 In c lu d e s s h a m p o o , c o n d itio n e r & c u t. 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APACHE BLVD. • ONE BLOCK WEST OF RURAL Page 18 State Press Monday, O ctob er 12,1987 ASU Scoreboard \SL FO O T B A LL ASU V O LL F Y B A L L WASHINGTON 27 ARIZONA STATE 14 ARIZONA STA TE 3 WASHINGTON STATE A rizon a State 0 0 14 0 - 14 W ashington State 10 6 13 - W ashington 14 3 10 o - 27 A rizona State 15 15 15 - classifieds W A S H — Yates 25 Interception return (Brow nlee kick) W ASH — W eathersby 16 GAME STATISTICS run (Brow nlee kick) W ASH — F G Brow nlee 23 A S U — G arrett 9 p a ss from Ford (Zendejas kick) A S U — G arrett 8 p a ss from Ford (Zendejas kick) W ASH — Covington 1 run (Brow nlee kick) W A S H — F G Brow nlee 36 Attendance — 73,883 GAME STATISTICS ASU First downs 7 R ushes-yards Passing Kilts 42 44 E rro rs 22 14 Total Attem pts 139 134 Percentage .144 .224 S e rvice A ce s 5 6 S e rvice Errors 7 5 D ig s 38 2314 5 32 2 5 117 147 33 63 Com p-att-int 3132 1324-2 Punts 341 4-39 30 2-1 Penalties-yards 325 325 Tim e o f possession 18:34 41:26 INDIVIDUAL STATS ARIZONA STA TE 3 WASHINGTON 2 W ashington 15 8 15 11 15 A rizon a State 13 15 13 15 17 P assing — A rizon a State: Fo rd 8-14-1 — 117 yards, Justin 0-2-1 — 0 . W ashington: C hand ler 16-22-1 — 147 yards, S t. Jo n es 0-1-0 — 0 , Brow nlee 0-1-1 — 0. K ickoff returns — A rizona State: P arker 1-19, W insley 1-12. W ashington: S t. Jo n es 2-44. A rizona State: Parker 2-21. W ashington: PAC-10 STANDINGS P AC-10 G A M E S A LL G AM ES W L T P c t. Arizona State P ts O p p W L T P el. P ts O pp 83 24 4 1 0 .800 180 80 2 1 0 0.667 106 62 3 2 0 .600 142 106 2 0 0 1.000 63 48 4 1 0 .800 112 100 0 1 0 0.000 14 27 3 2 0 .600 129 97 W ashington S L 0 1 0 0.000 7 W ashington 2 1 0 0.667 80 Arizona 0 1 1 0.000 47 O regon State 0 1 0 0.000 C alifornia 0 1 1 0.000 14 48 2 3 0 .400 115 210 37 54 1 4 1 .200 139 151 Stanford 1 2 0 0.333 65 U Ô LA 2 0 0 1.000 USC O regon 44 2 3 0 .400 126 166 64 4 2 0 .667 151 106 57 2 2 1 .500 126 88 87 1 4 0 .200 W ASH ASU 92 111 16 29 Total Attem pts 268 287 Percentage .284 .286 4 14 Service A ce s S e rvice Errors 99 142 OTHER PAC-10 GAMES AR IZO N A 23, CA LIFO R N IA 23 O R E G O N 34, S O U T H E R N C A L 27 O R E G O N S T A T E 42, A K R O N 26 S T A N FO R D 44, W ASH IN G TO N S T A T E 7 9 D igs ~ STA TE PRESS Matthews Center Basement N ew sroom .........965-2292 D isp la y A d v...... 965-7572 C la ssifie d Adv....965-6731 Lin er A d Rates: 15 w ords or le ss $2.75/day, 1-4 days $2.50/day, 5-9 days $2.40/day, 10 or m ore days 15* each additional word Deadline: Noon, one day prior to publication Cash-Check Visa-Mastercard (Sorry, no billing) State P ress em ploym ent w ill ad s not accept based on race, religion or se x unless such qualifying factors are essential to a given After two m ore-Sun D evil possessions, Ford was given the quarterback duties. “That’s a tough-luck thing,” Ford said of Justin’s interception. “I feel for him. You don’t ever want someone to go through th a t” ed it def. Oregon Stanford def. Oregon State Arizona def. Washington State UCLA def. Loyola Marymount USC def. Cai-Santa Barbara ' Saturday California def. Oregon State Stanford def. Oregon Arizona def. Washington State Brigham Young def. UCLA Pacific def. USC UCLA def. USC 1312 1313 4-15 315 135 12-15 136 137 1310 136 1313 137 139 133 4*15 1310 445 ■ 1313 134 136 1316 315 136 138 1310 19-17 1314 17-15 137 1314 138 reject any ad deem ed The 1987 Sun D evil Volleyball Weekend tournament concluded Saturday evening with a showdown between California and Arizona. This tim e, the Zonies won. Phoenix residents Doug Redshaw and S h elley H uffm an won the inaugural tournament at ASU’s University Activity Center before Saturday’s ASU/Washington volleyball m atch, 15-11. They defeated Tim Muret and Lisa N U C A R Corporation- A N U concept In H A LLO W EEN buying a N U car or truck. Any m ake or Costum e d esig ner having sa le! P irates, m odel. Sa ve up to $1500. Caff 947-4910. T V , portable, $65. C olored CO STU M ES1 C heap! m edieval kuda/ladies, funky stuff! B ooks, TV stand, d ish es and m ore. O ctober 17-18, com er o f 9th and A sh (A cross from motorcycles for sale C a sey M oore's). 8 6 6 6 2 1 7 .' * 1985 H O N D A A ero 50, 1900 m iles, new M O VIN G S A L E - P ortable electric type tags, red and black, $ 46 0 .8 3 8 6 8 7 4 , Rob. w riter, $50; C ouch, $30; Lam ps, $8; or best offer. Caff 820-7789. 1986 R E D H onda S p ree. G ood condition, N EO N Juat tuned. $35Q/offSr. Laura, 921-9881. LIG H T S , various shap es and colors. $ 1 0 6 0 ea ch . Transform ers extra. Leave m essage, 9666740. 1 R E D hot, scooter. 1988 E lite 80, with N O W A V A ILA B LE ! GDI T-shirts at a rc u s 784-9161. C M M n g and G ifts, C om er o f 5th Street R E D A E R O 125 Scooter- excellent condi- . and Miff. B e an independent... G DI. ' Don. $750 or best offer. 967-3578, M ike. O LY M P U S O M -10 cam era with O lym pus flash (T-20). B rand new condition. $150 or best offer. C a li. Se rg e at 9666211. C h eck your ad! The State P ress will 137 10 $10,200. 921-1244 days; 835-9333 nights. Bicycles for sale appears. Th e State P ress disclaim s a ll respon sib ility for quality and p rice s of goods e q u a l- it ex ceed s any $250,000 m ansion, new, used bikes, clothing, parts, accesso 1975. Indudes heavily beam ed fam ily ries. R entals. Student discounts. C lo se to a n d d is p la y advertisers. room with trem endous firep lace, huge A S U . 330 W . U niversity. 965-6896. State a cce p ts a d v e rtisin g by its Hudson, a mixed-doubles pro-beach ¿team recruited from San D iego by I D ig Sportswear for the competition. V Muret and Hudson had advanced to the finals from Minder-Binders’ 23 entries. Redshaw and Huffman qualified from What’s Your B e e fs U-team field. Redshaw said Huffman called him a week am) a half ago and they decided to sign up for the tournament. ) “This was a fun tournament,” he said. “We had a good tim e and m et a lot of people.” He said free beer was a nice bonus. “ story book” m aster bedroom and bath, very cleve r sew ing P ress 18’x34’ never know ingly d ecep tive or State Pres« Happy Hour m isleading advertising. Any offer requiring an Ford, who was chased, trampled and sacked virtually every tim e he touched the football, praised the Washington defense. “They did their job,” he said. “They were doing sm art things. We didn’t expect them to com e out like that. “We couldn’t get a first down,” he said. “They just covered our people. ” Despite the defense, Ford said he felt the Sun D evils could com e back in the third quarter. “1 believed we were gonna com e back,” he said. “We established the run and pass. But they threw off our tim ing in the fourth quarter.” ASU head coach John Cooper said he was m ostly pleased with Ford’s performance. -‘Dan did som e good things,” he said. “But he is still holding the ball too long. “You have to give him credit, though. He took a pounding,” Cooper said. Ford said the crowd noise, which affected the Sun D evils as a team , did not bother him. “They have great fans here,” he said. “It bothers the rest of the offense because they can’t hear the signals, but because I’m the cine yelling them, it doesn’t really affect me. I don’t think the noise m akes a difference.” According to Cooper, Ford has reclaim ed the starting quarterback position for next Saturday’s gam e against Washington State. “Daniel Ford is our quarterback,” he said. “I’m not going to go through a situation like that again.” yet only $190,000!! H ouse size doubled in and se rv ices offered in both classified Th e Pet. .813 .778 .643 .571 .706 .500 538 .700 .476 .077 B ob BuHock, Trencor R ealty, 951-5800, G O R G E O U S D R E A M house: D oes not T E M P E B IC Y C L E Shop. Largest selection should be thoroughly 7 a .m .-9 a .m . investigated. If you have a com plaint L 3 4 5 6 5 8 6 6 11 12 V illag e. Ow n a condo fo r le ss than rent. 860-4060. before noon the first day your ad investm ent Pet .857 .833 .750 .667 571 571 .429 .286 .143 .000 real estate fo r sale $00 D O W N , 6WM) 30-year, P apago Park 1988 W H ITE Toyota 4x4. 15,000 m iles. insertion. E rro rs m is t be reported 1313 1311 139 1312 1314 1317 132 136 ALL GAMES GB W 13 0.5 14 0.5 9 8 15 2 12 2 8 3 7 - 4 14 5 65 1 1985 S 1 0 B lazer 4x4. Excellent. $10,995. 730-8107. only be responsible for one incorrect PAC-10 VO LLEYBALL STANDINGS Through Saturday’s games PAC-10 GAMES W L Stanford 6 1 UCLA 5 1 Oregon 6 2 USC 4 2 Arizona 4 3 California 4 3 Arizona Stato 3 4 Washington 2 5 Washington S t 1 6 OregonState 0 8 or objectionable. Valley duo wins volleyball tourney , By JOAN McKENNA Sun* Press C O LO R E D console, 25” , $100. Caff B ob at 254-1412. Th e State P ress reserves the right to O T H E R P A C -10 S C O R E S reported in w riting to: Th e Better 1/2 OFF B u sin ess B ureau, 4428 N . 12th-St., Phoonix, A Z 85014. Classified. A d s N . Basem ent Matthews Center H O U S E S I T T E R A V A IL A B L E ! W riter, form er professor, take ca re of house or M ature, reliable. 965-3781, T H E M EM O R IA L U nion has expanded its reservations se rvices due to an increase in the university com m unity that all regis tered university d u b s and organizations m ay,’ at th is tim e, sch e d u le reservations/arrangem ents room fo r ea sily refrigerated converted. Ju st over 3000 square feet o f so lid, luxurious com fort w ith 4 bedroom s and 3 baths. R ecent $25,000 kitchen rem odeling with finest of ap p liances, so lid oak used brick with heavy shake sh in g les over lifetim e a sb esto s on 94*x120’ com er in “ silk stocking” d istrict at 320 E . Broadm or D riv e - short w alks to sch o o ls and A S U . announcements apartm ent. room , garage/shop cabinets, flooring, etc. H ighly appealing regarding a particular ad, it should be building usage and w ould like to rem ind Justin, who felt the onslaught of a f ired-up Washington team and a record-breaking a tten d a n ce in H usky sta d iu m , w as intercepted by Washington linebacker Bb Yates on the second play from scrim m age, who returned the ball for a touchdown. New pow er top, pow er window s, O ld s 350, air. Flexible, 9676842/831-1382, Jeff. trucks for sale Ford comes through in relief SEATTLE —■ ASU quarterback Daniel Ford found redemption Saturday, but it cam e painfully. After a poor performance and benching’ against Texas-El Paso the previous week, Ford w as given the chance to salvage the Sun D evils’ hopes againsLWashington after his replacem ent, redshirt freshman Paul Justin, threw a crucial interception. Ford responded to the call by completing eight of 14 passes for 117 yards and two touchdowns, despite being sacked seven tim es and harassed even more by the Washington defense. But his effort fell short of saving the Sun D evils, as they lost to Washington, 27-14. “You don’t know what’s going to happen,” Ford said of his being put in the gam e so early. “We shouldn’t have been in the situation we were in.” C O M V ER TIB LE , 1971 C u tla ss Suprem e. position. 77 days. By STEVE BRENNAN Slate Press miscellaneous for sale autos for sale helm et and cover. $890. Steve, 784-9624, The 21 86 R eceiving — A rizona State: C ox 3 6 4 , G arrett 3-42, H arris 211. W ashington: Slater 3 6 2 , Jen k in s 3-25, St. Jo n es 3-14, Friday Franklin 2-20, Am es 2-13, W eathersby 1 6 , S c . Jo n es 1-9, C ov California ington 1 6 . Punting — A rizona State: Schuh 8-41.6 yards. W ashington: Brow nlee 4-39.8 yards. - GAM E STATISTICS Errors R ushing — A rizona State: H a n ls 10-42, W illiam s 7-16, Justin 1- 3, Ford 8-(m inus-47). W ashington: W eathersby 14-78, Jen k in s 13-62, Covington 9-33, Com pton 8-25, C hand ler 4-13, S t. Jo n es 9-8, Franklin 1-6, Lew is 1-4. Punt returns — R iley 6 6 7 . 32 22 KHis /» ASU W ASH Return yards Fum bles-lost wsu Sp rin g (Some restrictions apply) furniture for Mie big pool, alarm system , fan s throughout, etc. P lea se, show n by appointm ent only to qualified buyers. A rizona Lot and Land K ing, 8634446. apartment, torrent F U L L SIZE bed. Still in factory package. $99. C an deliver. Phone o rd ers accepted. 2 B ED R O O M , A S U 1 m ile, 2 excellent locations, $395. C overed parking. $200 off with ad. 967-8431, 966-2750. 272*8286. N EW Ju st loaded with dsHghtfui extras including Q U EEN size O rtho box and m attress. Stored, never used. $149. C an deliver. Phone orders accepted. 272-8286. E L D IA BLO Apartm ents has sp acio u s one bedroom clo se to cam pus. V isit at 1201 S . M cC lintock, o r ca ll Sharon, 921-0699. Sem ester 1988. A ll arrangem ents m ay be secured by com pleting a request form with the M U R eservation O ffice. tickets for sale L A R G E O N E bedroom . W e like students. P ool, laundry, barbecue, $310. ask for sp e cia l. 2106 R ural, 966-4818. W AK E-U P S E R V IC E : Studied a ll night? Partied hardy? M ake it on tim e anyway! Student sp e cia l, 924-1151. T IC K E T S A V A ILA B LE for a ll hom e football gam es, starting at $10. C a ll D avid at 968-3233 or Scott at 957-4400. W A N TED : autos for sale se a s o n ASU or per adult football tickets, gam e. D e sp e ra te !! 4230892. 1969 VW stu d e n t V an, new paint job. G ood tra n sp o rta tio n . $1200/offer. 893-1558 nights. 1 97 6 CO R VETTE L -4 8 . F in a n c ia l miscellaneous for sale SP A C IO U S 2 bedroom , 2 bath apart m ents. $450 m onth, a ll utilities Included. W alk to A S U , pool, laundry. 910 E . Lem on. Caff today, 9 666704. STU D IO , C L O S E to cam pus, $335 month. Ta ke over lease. Caff M am i, 8404363. W A LK T O A S U , junior one bedroom , $285; tw o bedroom , $400. A dults, no pets. 1031 E. Lem on. B e! A ir Apartm ents, 908-2679, 9334364. em ergency forces sa le of this super sharp ca r. A ll options plus! $6200. 921-3325. 1978 P LY M O U TH wood panels- $1500. C a ll Horizon, white with G ood condition, 9 4 3 -6 4 T 5 P C +P LU S TU R BO X T d ea n , A S U A C R O S S street. 1 or 2 bedroom e v e n in g s , w eedends. hom e. Large fenced yard, lots of greenery, r *V $365. Katy, 921-1773. 1982 P LY M O U TH Cham p, red, 4-speed, cloth interior, h a tch b a ck . 43 Runs m iles and n o m e s to t re n t p er g allon, lo o k s g re a t. rental sharing $1595/offer. 949-7421, 946-5205. $210 P L U S VS utilities. Fem ale nonsm oker w anted to have own room and share bath. 1984 R E D M ustang, standard, air, AM -FM cassette, new P e rfe c t battery, c o n d itio n . low m ileage. $ 66 5 0. M o nd ay, A vailab le Novem ber 1 o r sp ring sem ester. C lo se to ca m p u s. Leave m essage, 9676874: W ednesday. Frid ay, 990-8188; M onday50 F E E T to A S U . Private roam , all am eni Thureday evenings, 998-7605. 1987 H O N D A C R X , 5-speed, 2600 m iles, new condition. $6995. 584-1220 after 1 p.m . and w eekends. 2 drives, 640k, Hi-Res monitor, A T style keyboard, printer port 20M B hard d isk .....,,.,.^ ..,.. $239 Panasonic Printer........... . $199 CITATIO N , $225. Katy, 921-1773. m ove In later. New 3 bedroom , 2 bath Sprite. New interior and paint. 1275cc CH EVY A S U - W m ile: C lea n and com fortable, F E M A L E N O N -S M O K ER : sign le ase now, A C LA S S IC ! 1960 Austin H ealey bug-eye Com puter System s & Solutions 6800 E . Thom as • 990-947C engine. $3500. 892-3039. ties, $195. Katy, 921-1773. condom inium . AH m ajor a p p liances includ ing w asher and dryer. A ll com m on areas furnished. $290. p lus 1/3 utilities tor own 1982, air, AM -FM room . $250 p lu s 1/6 utilities to share 8terjeo, 53,000 m iles, only $2300. C o n ta d G O L F C LU B S , Paini Sp ring s Irons, 3 to M a n o j- m aster bedroom and bath. H alf m ile from w sdgs. Excellent condition. B est offer. ASU. C a ll 7846649. Teriann, 9 216476. d a ys, 971-6379. 992 -2 78 1 ; e v e n in g s, Lighted parking tot, pool. Caff STA TE PRESS Classifieds By Phone • 965-6731 Visa • M asterCard • Sorry, no b illin g State Presi Page 19 M o n d a y , O c t o b e r 1 2 ,1 9 8 7 rents! sharing help wanted free iost/found help wanted services pcisonals r*l FE M A LE. N O N SM O K E R , w anted to share condo with PAR T-TIM E S A L E S rep wanted to c a lf bin W A N TED , washer, dryer, p ool, a fl com m on areas florists and gift shops. Transportation required. 288-4028, project Pice, 2 bedroom , 2 furnished. bath 1220/month and % utilities, for own room and bath. If interested contact Z ina at 892-0846.____________________ FEM A LE N O N SM O K E R needed to sign that you're m y big bro. D oes this m ean I Stephen ca n borrow your clothes? Love yal Y our HI m ent or related available. areas fum lehed. $250 p lu s utilities fo r own master bedroom and bath. V i m ile from JO w ork with flexible hours. AH positions open. 1-3, years LO S T II Jewelry TH E D EV IL H ouse is available. Personalized order. 8986102. now accepting applicationa tor bartenders, bar backs, FO R gold and diam onds. M ill Avenue Jew elers, 414 S . M ill, Su ite 104, Tem pe. 9686967! C U STO M D ESIG N and re-m ounting. MHI Avenue Jew elers, 414 S . M ill, Suite 104, through Frid ay at 430 N . Scottsdale R d ., Tem pe. Tem pe. 9686987. U V E A T U niversity Tow ers by subleasing m essage, female nonsm oker to sh a re a room . Can Dana at 9684034 fo r m ore Into. NONSM OKING F E M A L E need ed to share 2 bedroom , 1 bath apartment $2S0fm onth plus V i utilities. C lo se h r A S U . C a ll C aro l, 967-1432. bath. W A I T R E S S E S N E E D E D p a rt-tim e . D esperado's, Tem pe. 8946423, Laura. 8225/month p lu s VS utilities. Lots W A LK E R R E S E A R C H : Im mediate open research. National telephone Interviewing. N o selling. Part-tim e open ings. Evening shift 3 :3 8 9 p.m . Minim um shift p er w eek.. Apply In person M onday R O O M M A TE W A N TED : Tw o bedroom house near U nivetsH y. C a ll V e m after 4 p.m .,j)68-7964. ___________ through Frid ay, 8:30 a.m .-4:30 personnel office, 4657 S . Lakeshore Drive, Tem pe. 831-2971. M atoffem ale. Equal W EE K E N D H E LP : W om an wanted to help w heelchair patient. 945-0362. 24 S T U D E N T S to be' accep ted with nation al retaH com pany. $9.25 starting rate. M ay 'w ork part-time around sch o o l sched ule free fosÿfhund jan, 966-1913. end full-tim e during sum m er. Scholar Hayden library. It found, ca ll M ike at 968-3857. 2-year resident. C ochise E ast, M em orial U nio n, M onday A S U IS calling on you! O n-cam pus loca tion, S4/hour p lu s bonus p lu s com m ission, great incentives. G ain valu able telem ar ksting experience. H you h ave sa les abUity, call the A S U TalefU nd at 9688754 after 1 p.m . B AB YSITTER N EED ED : 1 toddler, 1 infant. $2.25/hour. W eekends. 44th Street LO S T : O N E se t of keys on a red cord. 9482473 anytim e. Laura, 9663406 or 921-2564. Reward) Th e Tem pe Norm al S tu d en t D ecem b e r 14,1906: “A bright person discov ered that he can get out o f the rain by Jumping In the river. Aren’t the rest of u s slow ?" organizations, and d u b s: N eed to p lace a d isplay ad In the Sta ts Pres s ? Y our inswucoon CaR 9687572 8 a m . to 5 p .m . daily. A E R C S iO IN S TR U C TO R S Certification p c iso n a ls EN G IN EERIN G TEC H N IC IA N (M echani cal), 2nd or 3rd year m echanical engineer of 20 hours between 8 6 . $5 and up. 966-7283. Sato and exciting. AIR LIN E forw ard to giving you my sp ecial present. I to $350 ea ch . 800-25S-4060. love you. Jam ie. AIRLINE TIC K ET- Phoenix to P h ilad el T R ID E L T 1091110, liv e days and counting, phia; D ecem ber 21, $100. CaH Shelley, he ohoe hoat W atch out tor Sam m y and 829-3648. A co e. Rem em ber-, stay under doorjam bs O N E W AY ticket: Phoenix to Detroit or L e t's just g o together Boot-1 d kh i’i want a B uffalo. O ctober 28th, $75. CaH Lynn rash anyway)I Y ’att are aw esom e-1 can’t evenings, 967-9266. TR I-SIGM A P L E D G E S : W s hope you had R O U N D TR IP Ticket: Phoenix- W ashing ton D .C . Leave 12/15, return 1/14. CaH U sa after 5 at 838-1627. $135. 10-21. T ri S ig lov?, Shannone. Y V O N N E - N O T m ad, just In love. C hris. sum m er and earn academ ic cred it. Five ing W ednesday in 8^ 217 at 1:40. O r contact Am anda Jo in er in B A 3 67 B at trip options available. Inform ational meet P h o e n ix A IR T R A F F I C C O N T R O L L E R S Inter-Active Phone Introductions T h e F A A w ill be hiring nearly 3,000 Controller Trainees the next 12 m onths. Average Controller g ross salary (42,000 P a r Year! N o experience or ooOaga education required. M ust be 18-30 yre. ok) at tim e of appointm ent. Th a FA A hires only those who sco re 90-100 on the A ir Traffic Controllers exam .By attending .The A ir Traffic Controllers Exam Workshop, you can sco re 85-100. Laam test strategy and how to apply tor tha exam . W orkshops w ill be held M onday, O ct. 19, 7-9 p .m ., and Tuesday, O ct. 2 0 ,7 -9 p .m ., at the Sheraton P la za Hotel, 4400 S . R ural R d ., Tam pa. Y our $30 fe e Includes a guidance m anual and practice exam s. Fo r a W orkshop reservation c a l, toll free, 1-300-S41-0$00. Ph ase stale which session you w ish to attsnd. Arrive 20 m inutes early for registration. M BL C A R E E R S INC. help wanted AFTER CLASS HOURS D lalam erica M arketing, the nation’s finest telemarketing firm, is now accepting applications for the following shifts: 1-5 p.m . 5-9:30 p.m . 6-9:30 p .lii. W eekends A lso A vailable Our salespeople work in a modern, comfortable business environment contacting' established custom ers on long distance lines. Guaranteed salary or com m ission, whichever is greater, and averages $5-$7 an hour. Our Tem pe office is located approximately 5 minutes from cam pus. Please call D lalam erica M arketing for details. 829-1140 C A R R IE C O LE M A N , how com e you are so typing/ word processing $1.25 D O U B LE sp aced page. A-1 letter quality word processing. 32 years exper ie n ce . M arian, 839-4269. $1.50 P E R page. A n y Typ e W ord P rocess 1-976-4000 cute? Looks and brains together are just too m uch for any one guy to handle, but I’d ing. 961-1495. A A A W O R D P rocessing Service. Q uick, p rofessional services. G rap h ics available. services R on, 833-5532, or m essage. Tig er._________ ___________ •_________ C A L L M E for fast, accurate, quality service HAPPY HOUR luck in playoffs. the com er. W atch out! sionally blue. Som ebody in D U S T E R D .- Sorry, but Sunday w as no good. It’s m andatory that you m eet m e on Tuesd ay the 13th at 6:30 in room 212 at the M .U . Thanks. IF Y O U are struggling with hom osexuality We understand your A nonym ous, pain. C a ll 271-X G A Y R ead 49* per minute R A M S E Y : A K A ‘Kook’ll- D ash Inn quarters cham p. B ear? P ink oxford? C alifornia needed by photographer w ho w ill be In babe? N ice table m anners! U niverse? San Phoenix In Novem ber. T h o se selected will Fran ? Love, R unning Scared. vital statistics, s ic .: J .G ., 5509 C rosscreek 1075, Fort W orth, Texas Processing. Rental Network E n glish , punctuation or gram m ar? W hat about research, writing, editing and proofread ing? A P A 829-1966 and M LA m em ber. B .A . in M .B .A . from ASU. Com plete com puter analysis of your work available. Fin a l copy: La ser typeset and bound. 438-9202. P R O FE S S IO N A L TYPIN G - Spelling and ered bulim ic, 437-9420, 468-3650. Health insurance welcom e. 1 to 5 years old during sem ester only. 963-9097. CaH after 6 p.m ., 9943302. SAVE T IM E , p ro c e s s in g - consultation, located at D esert c a ll me th e s e s , firs t. W ord d is s e r ta tio n s , tarial. 844-1876. SH O RT O F s o n a b le . H A V E U N W AN TED facial or body hair Sharon gram m ar check available. $1 per page. resum es. P rofessional typist. M esa Secre B AB YSITTIN G M O N D A Y through Friday, in Tem pe. Electrolysis C a ll Center, 829-7829. TIM E? I can P ro fe s s io n a l. Experienced in help. R ea G u a ra n te e d . academ ic. CaH Je ssie 945-5744. T H E P A P ER W O R K S- T h e sis, report and resum e typing. IBM com patible word processing. N ear A S U . 921-9575. R O N B O : H A P P Y six month anniversary. I accurate, p rofessional results, w ake-up love and m iss you very m uch. Love, ca lls, bilingual interpreters, 437-4801. W ORD P R O C E S S IN G , resum es, and typing. CaH U ni-Print, 967-1651. SIG M A CHI R uss: G la d to have you a s my M ARKETIN G f ir m seeking highly moti big bra- W e’re going to have a great vated Individuals. Potential earnings of W ORD sem ester!kLqive, your IH sis. $750 per m onth. W ork own hours. C a ll P R O C E S S IN G . D issertation s, m anuscripts, resum es, term papers. W ill Beam ox, 8287660. SK3M A CHI M ike Stroh: I’m g lad we adopted each other! W s’H have font You M O TIVATED S A L E 8 person w anted. Flex rem em ber w ho I am i don’t you? Love, your ible hours. E xcellent com m ission. M ust d o graphs, charts. Stored on d isk for fast retrieval. Pick-up/dedvery available. CaH * BANK THE SAVINGS B A R B 759-0636. IH ala. ta v e reliable transportation, C a ll R oyce W O R D P R O C E S S IN G : $1.50 per page. PhotofOtaphlc Supply, 894-9646. CaH anytim e, 839-9070. * N EED ED - H O S T E S S , M onday through PfW sy, 11-2; W aitress, nights and som e w**ksnda. G uad alup e and R ural area. John, 6388100. N E E D M O TIVA TED persons to work pooisldo at area resorts se llin g suncere and «un w e a r,941-2751. shifts. Flexib le hours. Burger K ing, 740 E . Apache. yea r ’round. Europe, South Am erica, Australia, A sia. AH field s. 8800-2000 m onthly. Sight 52-AZ3, C orona D e l M ar. C A 92625. W ord M ichelle. 78109. seeing. Free into, w rits D C , P O Q U A LITY V IS TA G R A N D E Secretarial S e rvice, fast, earn $100 p er hour. Send recent photos, Su m m er, W ord $$N O O B JE C T ? N eed help with spelling, rem oved perm anently by electrolysis. Free M A LE M O D E LS : Versatile m ale m odels LETTER W est V alley students. 486-0183. ing. G innie G rant M onroe, A C S W , recov 1-976-HUNK com pletion. Free M em bership Free Reservation Great Selection eating. Private and confidential counsel C hicago GrUf in M esa w ants to m eet you. to R eports, term papers, resum es. C ater to w hat the cat dragged in .” B ad Influences. pub food In A rizona, H arry and Steve’s guided ate students and faculty work welcom e. A N O R EX IA , BULIM IA, com pulsive over IF Y O U want to cook the best burgers and inform ation sp ecialist. 945-6302, D onna and Joan. K E N , O R is it B rian? “ O h m y G od look New Ads Continually Updated Daily Inter-Active Program PHD A P A , M LA , graduate school, etc.- gradu VHS Movie Rentals D ianetics Foundation, 1-800-367-8788. DIAL-A-HUNK R eco rd ed G ay A ds! to A S U . Xerox m em ory w riters. Experienced with 2 FO R 1 D ianetics. C a ll Hubbard bonus on first C lo se F O R M E R A S U staffers- W ord Perfect and M O V IE S M anzy is thinking prices. processing, 256-2830. D O U G SIM ON: R oses are red, Violets are about yoult Love, an A G D . com petitive 966-2186. Faculty, advanced student projects profes 4:00-6:00 D E L T A S IG S , S ailors B ail is just around at D EG R EED M O N .-W E D . D E LT A S iG S V olleyb all A 's and B ’s , good further notice. O V E R S E A S , J O B S .,. gram m ar corrected. bring the cocktails and w hatnot?! rd gence? C all 844-8446 tor an appointm ent. and CAVEM/SNI T U E S D A Y , 7:30 p.m .: You H om osexuals until Spetiing Som e graphics available. CaH D ebbie, First m inute 554 E ach additional m inute 454 give It a shot. Y our Sigm a C h i. (271-9429). sam e 965-5031. A d s sele ctab le by touchtone. New ad s updated d ally. o r know som ebody w ho is, there is a way ciated B iceclence Inc., 1015 S . R ural R d „ NOW HIRING M U nited ation, 1-800367-8788. donation. U niversity P lasm a C enter A sso Effective w anted: T R A V E L E U R O P E this C hristm as o r next calendar w eek $20 (M onday-Saturday). 9686139. CO U PO N S B onus tickets; W estern Extra; others. U p D ianetics. CaH Hubbard D ianetics Found people toot D onate plasm a fo r up to $120 $2 A rth u r, 897-7121. per ,month. First donation In a calendar New donors receive w o rldw ide. by your s k is to help m ake it slid e I IS IT po ssible to increase your intelli in sa v in g s B O D Y , M IND, spirit. W hich are you? R ead E X TR A M O N E Y Is nice, but you can help donation coup o ns, Lessons aH day, only $75. W lndaports, out. week $10, secon d buying TIM , H A P P Y 22nd Birthday. I’m looking a great w eekend. Love, the pledges of 7 p.m ., 9666949, Lane, Suite s o ilin g , T K E ._______________________________ ■ E V E R Y B O D Y D R IN KS w ater. People earning $10,000/m onth, H ist m onth. After AZ. S U P E R SIG M A pledge Val: I w eek is here, hayride sound? Answ er by paper before of Tem pe. AW ARDS but you’ve nothing to fear, G ram s w ill be keep guessing. B y the way, how does a H A N G GLID E) G ently slopping hM Just travel A IR LIN E ciation. CaH 9636415 o r 899-9289. 956-8200. Tem po, Drive-aw ay, 982-5200. B ILL (P V W est): S till w ondering? WeH, ing or technology. Som e related experi ence desired. M ust be available minimum 277-9979. C A R S A V A IL A B L E -2 1 o r older. A ll States A S U by N ational Aerobics Training A sso A F T E R N O O N E X P A N S IO N $5.50 per hour guaranteed 504-641-8003 ext. A-7838. Love alw ays, Snuggle bear. w ait. Love 103 (dateless thanks to Y-K-W ). W otkahop, w eekend of Novem ber 7th at points. Y o u r pop John. products at hom e. C a ll tor inform ation, ca re to all m ajor S T E V E STA R LIN G - Th ese last six m onths during tom adoea! H ave fun with C the cat. 6 enthusiastic colleg e students to w ork 4-9 E A S Y W O R K ! Excellent pay! Assem ble FR EE citie s. 21 o r older. CaH A A A Drhreaway. m iles, bum p tickets. T o p p rice s. A lso D E LT A SIG C h ris Spaw n, congrats on top 9680775 tor interview. bantportraon A TTEN TIO N : m onths ahead -1 love you, U sa . C O L L E G E S T U D E N T , part-tim e. W e need w e e k e n d s , e v e n in g s . E x p e r ie n c e preferred, but w ill train. C a ll E a rl at nationw ide. CaH 832-3434. w ay that you da. H e re 's to m any m ore dining room tablet Love you bunches, D ASH INN needs part-tim e cHsh-out cook, C and ee and V icki. Singles help wanted Access to 4000 p lus so u rce s o f aid Leigb-Anne, and I thank you tor caring about m e the on-campus provide the dinner and we’ll provide the hour plus bonus. CaR M r. R o d , 921-2897. K risti, tables In M em orial U nion R e c C enter. CaH learner and good with p eo p le. A pply at p jn . shift, M onday through Frid ay. $5 per P his S .R .- T O D A Y ’S the day to be looking. LO S T : W HITE cardigan sw eater by pool tim e graveyard position. M ust be quick Kinko’s C op ies, 933 E . U niversity. Alpha N eeded very badly. If found p lease caR and Indian Sch o o l. N onsm oksr. 952-2062. BRIG H T S E L F -S T A R T E R needed tor part- reasonable rates. ing and m ore... How did we get so lucky? **JOBS** Applications taken In p erso n , room 212, (12th) 10-2, Tu esd ay (13lh) 9-12 only. O ctober 16th. Llm os, cham pagne, danc cam pus representative is Ja ck ie Eldridge. ships, advancem ents , prom otions avail able. M ust have ca r, b e countdow n has begun! C a n 't watt to rage 483-3660, leave m essage. Lo st between LO S T: B LA C K w allet, Tu esd ay flight at ' A TTEN TIO N U N IV ER SITY departm ents, South instruction tor San d y at 964-7815. Thorough and N E E D M O N E Y undergrads and g rads? SIG M A PI G ary, E ric, W illy, BIH: The earring. If found, p lease can N oefle at p.m ., opportunity em ployer. h e fp la n te d ' am eth yst ing s for part-tim e positions in consum er requirem ent: 3 w eekdays and 1 weekend mote. Can C h ris a r8 9 5 2 2 1 2 . re c ta n g u la r On-Campus 1906 FO U N D : C A LC U LA T O R . Farouq Aidilai- opinion R O O M M A TE W A N TED : Ow n bedroom , ONE kitchen help, and doorm en. N o experience nece ssary . M ust be at least 21 years of le ave sis , Hoi. have been the m ost sp ecial o nes in m y life ap e. A pply In person from 1 1 6 , M onday C a ll, Rew ard I'L L C L E A N your apartm ent, house. Ask H appy Anniversary to m y snuggle bear. 844-1935. undergraduate. 967-1132. A rt B uilding and M urdock. Am erican coins; antique Jewelry. Layaw ay CASH Terlann, 821-3476. In M esa, $120 p lu s VS utilities. Prefer plus B Y AP P O IN TM EN T only. S e ll, trade, buy: PIZZA H U T needsJpart-tlm e people w illing FEM A LE T O sh are 2 bedroom apartm ent field Jo h n so n , Love, mom, $210 p lu s utilities to share large C all SIG M A CHI Troy Kerm inger: I'm so glad $20, ID 's are very im portant. P lea se can N ear 24th Street and Southern. 288-4028. C a ll 838-9455, Aaron's Carw ash. P oo l. Applicant m anagem ent. Can David I., 926-341?. P E R F E C T S T U D E N T Job, flexible hours. lot. Arizona. L O S T B R O W N leather w allet. K eep the should have degree in fisheries, m anage experience in aquaculture o r hatchery Including w asher and dryer. AH com m on parking Hydèr, aquaculture PAR T-TIM E M A N FACTU R IN G assistant. 2 bath condom inium . AH m ajor appliances Lighted In for $3.50fhour. H ours flexible, 15 per week. lease now, m ove in later. New 3 bedroom , ASU. M A N A G ER Box SUN DEVIL S P A R K Y E A R B O O K PORTRAITS N o w th ro u g h N o v . 6 9-5 Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday 12-8 Thursday Lower Level Memorial Union Walk-ins always accepted! S eniors c a ll 965-6881 fo r an appointm ent. G raduafes and undergraduates welcom e. Desperately seeking THE COMMON. I need you in my life! Y o u r fu ll s e n io » p rin te r 215 E. 7thSt. (Next to B arb's Darkroom) C A S H IM M ED IATELY! *•* Nam e brands, 968-0799 1035 E . Lemon 967-1651 wanted current (st tom es) styles, career ctothlng, dreaeaa. sportswear, and better accessories. Plus fabulous fin d s tor your wardrobe. It's V like trading doaato with a friend. Clothes 1605 W . University P e d d le r, 829-1834 9652300 1128 N. S c o ttsd a le R d ., D ES PER A TEM I need E C N 112 tutoring. P E R S O N A L C O M P U T E R tutoring In Lotus C M 968-9667, leave m essage. 1,2,3, D -bsse III, s ic . R esum e w riting a ssistance. R easonable D iane, 871-0536. student rates. H E L P !!! N E E D tutor tor A S T 321, ASAPH C M Fe tid a , 784-0234, 4 •f Page 20 j^ ¡¡j¡2 i® 2 2 S £ líL 2 2 2 L Thehandon dieleft ispoisedoirwhat couldbe themostessential part of youreducation AMadniosh™computer. Andthehandon therightisgrippingpure, simple, unadulteratedfun. AHondaScooter. Onewe’regivir^away Allyouhavetodo fixa chanceto driveitawayisvisityourcampus* computer center andfill out anentryform.Whileyou’re there, takea Macintoshfora test drive. BecauseMacintoshcanhelpyouwritetermpapas, categorize elements oftheperiodic table, plot therise andfall ofpork-bellyprices,1 compilecomputer code, and talktoother computers. Andthefirst250people on canpis whoget behinda mouse, sotd speak, will receiveafreeApple"memoboard M .... .. ^ ... Ip H . I our Student Enandi^ Program. Whoknows?\bu maysoonfindyourselfcruisingaMe farther than youexpected • . Test drive a Macintosh. Youmayride awayon a Honda Scooter. E n te r th ro u g h O c t o b e r 30 ASU BOOKSTORE F o r p u r c h a s e in fo r m a tio n C O M P A S S T R A IL E R 3 PALM W ALK Certain restrictions apply; visit your campus computer center for cotnpietejaomotional details. One free Honda Elite" 50 Scooter will be awarded per partidpatiig school; only registered students and faculty are eligible to win. Odds o f winning vary depending on size of school and number pf contest entrants. No purchase necessary. C1987Apple Computet; to t Appie and the Apple logo ate registered trademarks ofApple Computer, toe. Macintosh is a trademark ofApple Computet; Inc Elite is atrademaik of Honda