state press Voi. 70 No. 4t e Copyright, State Press, 1987 A riz o n a Stkte U n iv e rs ity ’s M o rn in g D a ily Wednesday, October 21, 1987 T e m p e , A r iz o n a ASU aerospace program seeks reaccreditation B y S T E V E N O LEN State P ress ASU’s unaccredited aerospace engineering program w ill lay out the welcom e m at today for a consultant to evaluate the department’s chances for reaccreditation next year. Barnes W.. McCormick, a representative of the Am erican Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics accreditation board, w ill tour labs and classrooms and m eet with students, faculty and administrators today, said D avid Laananen, assistant chair of the m echanical and aeronautical engineering program. “ I want him to know the program ,” Laananen said. ‘ I want him to know student view s of teaching, facilities, everything — before w e have the officia l visit next year.” Laananen said the program is sporting two new undergraduate wind-tunnel labs, fiv e new faculty members and a m ore optom istic outlook as a result o f its accreditation denial last year. The A IA A report that led to the denial said: “ Lack of a cohesive, .identifiable faculty and the lack of aerospace engineering breadth within the current full-tim e faculty in the department, result in a program with an apparent lack of focus and direction, and appear to be a cause of low m orale among key aerospace engineering faculty.” The accrediting board also found die program deficient in laboratory facilities and the number of design classes offered, Laananen added. Before the A A IA audit, individual professors taught Mqpgfg and advised students, in both the mechanical and aeronautical engineering areas, he said. “ That was not acceptable,” Laananen-Said. But follow ing the board’s report, he said “ w e made significant changes in the program ” in fa ll 1986. Those changes included : •D esign atin g p rofesso rs as eith er aeron au tical or mechanical engineering faculty exclusively. •Constructing a $48,000 sub-sonic wind tunnel. •Purchasing $7,000 worth of equipment and instrumentation to equip a laboratory fo r testing stresses and strains on wing structures. 3 m n L . M ohr/State P re ss P atrick Flynn, M ichael De Jon g and C h ip H um esconduct test a m iniature a ir foil- in the wind tunnel in the P h ysical S cien ces bu ildin g. T he trio are upper division aerospace engineering m ajors at A S U . •M aking $21,000 w orth o f safety and instrumention improvements to an existing super-sonic wind tunnel donated to ASU by the National Aeronautic and Astronautics Association. •Hiring fiv e additional aeronautical-engineering tenuretrack faculty. •Adding new classes in aeroquatical structures design. “ (The loss o f accreditation) helps in the long run, because where the faculty is concerned, the easiest approach is to keep teaching the sam e things,” said aeronautical engineering professor E arl Logan. The department has been forced to evaluate its programs and revam p its advising procedures for undergraduates, he added. “ W e’ve hired new faculty and brought focus on aerospace engineering within (the engineering departm ent),” Logan said. Laananen said the accreditation loss created apprehension about the future among some students, but its effect on their ability to find jobs was minimal. W all Street's R oller-C oaster Ride He Said companies such as Boeing Co., a manuafac turer of large com m ercial and m ilitary aircraft, w ill not interview ASU aeronautical engineering students or students of any unaccredited school. But he said the Boeing rejection is nothing new because ASU’s program never was accredited as an aeronautical engineering program . ., Aerospace students M ichael De Jong, Chip Humes and Patrick Flynn said although they would not be able to interview with large airplane m anufacturers, they w ere confident there would find jobs. “ I ’m going to work,” said De Jong, a senior. “ I don’t think it is going to affect us.” “ M ore and m ore it’s not what you know, but who you know,“ said Humes, also a senior. A fter McCormick’s visit, he w ill make a report on the program ’s prospects fo r accreditation, Laananen said. “ I ’m looking forward to him getting here,” he said. “ I ’ve been counting the days. I feel the program is a good one.” W al IStreet rises erratically; Reagan co n sid e rs tax hike By b e n Mc C o n n e l l S tate P ress S ta v* Talkow skl/State P raaa The stock market took a w ild roller coaster ride Tuesday that brought the b ig g e s t p o in t ris e e v e r and onceu n im agin ab le ta x concessions from President Reagan. The Dow Jones industrial average bounced back 102 points at the closing bell but not before a stomach-churning ride that went from a high o f 200 points, to a loss of 25 points, up to 86, then down, up and down. Tuesday’s closing gain erased only onefifth o f Monday’s Depression-sized market crash. Both the Tokyo and London stock exchanges posted their biggest losses ever Tuesday. Worldwide, stocks lost w ell over $1 trillion in a 24-hour period. And Reagan, after meeting with Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan and Treasury Secretary James Baker III, said he w ill soften his opposition to both a tax increase and to a “ budget summit” with congressional Democrats. ; “ I am w illing to participate in anything that w ill bring us together,” Reagan said. Ironically, Baker said last weekend that the Dem ocrats’ work on a tax increase package was responsible for a then-sluggish market. W hile the W hite House and some analysts tried to assure w orried Am ericans that “ there is nothing to w orry about,” an ASU professor who once worked fo r the Federal Reserve Bank said the country clearly is headed for recession. John Cochran, an economics professor who was a monetary economist in the F ed eral R eserve in the 1950s under’ Corbin: GOP could self-destruct in 3-way governor race ’8 y VICTO R B A R A JA S State P ress Attorney General Bob Corbin predicted Tuesday that Carolyn W arner would win a two-way race against Gov. Evan Mecham if a recall w ere successful, but he said the Republican party c» But when Allen Fehr, who runs an engineering consultant firm in Freeport, 111., got such a letter, he didn’t so much as bat an eye. Despite the ominous threat, he didn’t run to a law yer, call an accountant or stick his head in the kitchen oven and turn on the gas. He sat down and w rote a letter to the IRS saying, in effect: Go right ahead, seize my property — and make public idiots of yourselves. Then he added one m ore notation to a diary he’s beat keeping fo r the past 20 months o f the contacts he’s had with bureaucrats at the IRS. The final threat brought the number of contacts — by phone or m ail — to 25, And they a ll had the same purpose: To persuade Fehr to pay the IR S money he has already paid them. Plus interest and penalties. It began in 1985 when the IRS audited a real estate partnership that Fehr was involved in and ruled that the partnership owed back taxes. The IRS decided that Fehr still owed $17,632 in taxes fo r a four-year span. So he signed the proper document, wrote the check and sent it back to them. The IRS received the money and the canceled check came back with his next bank statement. About three months later, he got a letter from the IRS telling him that he owed them $17,632 and asking him when he would pay. He phoned someone at the IRS and told him that the check had been sent and cashed. The tax man said he would look into it. “ But I got another letter from him a month later, saying that the tax was still due and the interest was accumulating. “ I phoned him and told him the same thing, and again he said he’d follow. HOURS Papa Jay’s Pizza M o n .- T h u r s . 4-12 F rid a y 4-1 S aturday 12-1 S u n d a y 12-12 *1 I I I I I I I I I I through. “ He told me that he’d need a copy o f the canceled check and the consent form s I had signed showing that the IRS and I had agreed on that amount. “ So I sent copies of the canceled check and the consent form s.” “ He called nm back. There was some problem on his end locating the check and the original consent form s because the check was now in Kansas City and he was in Chicago. “ I told him that was his problem, since I had sent them. He said he wanted m e to make out new forms. “ I told him that there was no w ay I was going to do that. I had already given them the original form s. So he got huffy. Here I ’ve paid them what they wanted, followed theninstractions, and they’re getting huffy. An it went on and on. Back would come another letter saying that the check couldn’t be found and asking him to so ld another one. He would send a copy o f the check. Then he’d get a letter demanding payment and telling him what the interest was. B y the beginning of this year, he not only owed the $17,632 that he had already paid, but he owed interest of $9,105. And most recently cam e the warning that the IR S was going to seize everything he owned. So he wrote what he says is his final letter to the “ c h ie f’ o f the Taxpayer Assistance Section o f the IRS, in Kansas City. A fter begining the letter “ D ear Chief,” be review ed the bureaucratic madness in great detail, then ended it by saying: “ W e are proud, loyal, law-abiding Am ericans . . . However, w e are quite frankly very tired o f spending tim e and money in an effort to prove that you received and cashed our check. “ A fter thoughtful deliberation, w e have concluded that it is now up to you to prove that you did not receive and cash our check. “ We now w ill not quit until a com plete apology is issued from somebody other than a computer and w e are compensated fo r our very frustrating tim e.” So now it is up to the IRS. W ill the computer attack again? W ill the computer send agents to seize home, car and everything else Fehr owns and leave him and his w ife huddling in the cold? Or w ill a human finally intercede? W e’ll w ait and see. N O W . ♦ . F a j it a P r im a D E L I V E R S ! FAST FREE DELIVERY (Lim ited Free D elivery Area) 5 4 .95 M inim um Food O rd e r 804 South Ash, Tem pe (2 block* West of M ill Avenue, south o f University) I I I ! I 966-1003 or 966-4292 I SAVE! 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W E A LS O O FFE R •CALZO N ES .S U B S • S A LA D S «PASTA •S O U P S « B E ER & W IN E • LU N C H SP EC IA LS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK A m W 1 1 N ow T h ro u g h S u n d a y 7 p .m .-9 :3 0 p.rri. • L o w e r L e v e l MU Presen ted b y M U A B -1987 Expanded Entertainment • $ 1 .0 0 A d m is s io n Page 6 ................ - I f f * * * 111» » » Wednesday^ O ctober 21f 1987 Grant to improve international education programs By TERRI S EA B ER T State P ress In an effort to beef up international education programs at ASU and other colleges, the U:S. Department of Education has awarded two V alley professors a $55,000 grant fo r a three-year program that w ill add an international fla ir to classes. “ What w ill happen as a result o f this project is that w e w ill have m ore and better courses designed to g ive the student a more realistic feel in the world environment,” said W illiam D avey, associate director of international studies at ASU and one o f the recipients o f the award. Sharing the award with D avey w ill be Alberto Sanchez, an international studies professor at Glendale Community College. The two professors w ill help develop international lessons for existing general studies courses such as English 101, English 102 and Some communication classes. They also want to make it easier for stu d en ts to t r a n s fe r 'c r e d it s fro m community colleges to ASU. “ It (the program ) involves a joint effort between M aricopa Community College D istrict and ASU,” Sanchez said. “ This is very unusual because it involves two institutions at different levels.” S an ch ez added th a t in te rn a tio n a l education involves finding out about the world, and the program he and Davey are creating w ill “ create an awareness of Other world perspectives.” “ Most students have to take English 101 and 102; therefore, at least they w ill be exposed to one course throughout their college careers that has an international fla ir,” he said. The two professors are designing three new classes as part o f the program : World Issues and Problem s, W orld Technology and W orld Language and Culture. The grant also w ill support the training of the faculty from both ASU and the community colleges. D avey said he wrote a grant proposal for the program to try to make a change in ASU’s international studies program. “ When you start looking at global interdependence and you start looking at problems like acid rain, w orld food hunger and refugee m igration, w e didn’t really have courses that focused on those global issues that cut across the various academ ic departments and disciplines,” D avey said. Students w ill become m ore aw are that the United States is not necessarily the center of economic activity» he added. Classes with the international lessons w ill be offered beginning in the fa ll sem ester of 1988, and die newer courses w ill be available in the spring o f 1989, D avey said. Students encouraged to participate in exchange programs B y M ARISjSA H A LL A R E State P ress Studying abroad is easier than most students think. “ If you can make a program that’s not financially punitive and within the financial range of students, alm ost everyone would like to study abroad,” said Richard Olson, director o f international programs at ASU. “ You don’t want to have to pay fees so high that only wealthy students can attend. It’s unfair.” A student can study in a foreign country as an exchange student, where one university trades students with another university, or can attend as a regular self-financing student. Being an exchange student is less expensive. * ' M ore than 2,000 international students attend ASU, but only 200 to 300 ASU students participate in exchange or study abroad programs, Olson said. “ Our goal is to have 500 to 600 students a year stutfying overseas,” he added. Foreign study and exchange programs currently are offered in England, Germany, France, China and Japan. Olson said the international programs department is working with the College o f Liberal Arts and the foreign languages department to review universities abroad. “ W e want to make sure students get resident credit for their courses once they’re abroad,” he said. Olson said students interested in studying abroad should plan ahead and speak with an adviser '• “ W e don’t want students trying to get into a program too late in their career due to specific course requirements that they need to fu lfill,” he said. “ That’s why w e advise counseling and planning at least a year Ahead.” Currently, the department is negotiating a fee structure within the student’s reach so m ore students can afford to study abroad* said Olson. ■ w illiam D avey, associate director o f international programs, said that to succeed at any university an international program must attract incoming students, especially freshmen. “ W e want to prepare students fo r an overseas living experience in their early years in collège,” he said, adding that students who study abroad must learn a second language. DaVey returned last week from a two-week visit to Europe where he inspected campuses in Germany, England and France. •' ?j g g “ W e’re negotiating reciprocal agreem ents,” D avey sàid. “ It is important that students are exposed to different cultures and value systems,” Bob's Bicycle Barn Cruiser Headquarters Cruiser $99 a n d up Best p rice s in tow n. C h eck us out, new a n d used. A ll types, rep airs an d service. Major credit car trades welcome. 1908 E. Apache, Tempe 2 b lo c k s e a st o f M c C lin to c k 894-6852 Computers for Rent Now at The Arches 1212 E. University Com e and visit us 921-0980 BU Y « SELL « TR AD E Y o u r b o o ks at C h a n g in g H and s. F o r q u a lity c lo th and p a p erb a ck s (no textb o o ks, p lease) w e p a y 30% o f o u r < re -sa le p ric e in ca sh o r 50% in trad ein cre d it w h ich m ay b e used to p u r­ ch a se anything in the sto re. (S o rry , n o tra d e-in s o n Sat. o r Sun.) 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Departs ASU ^ CC‘ ^ ^*149" l - ________________- ■ _______________________ . 1 PH O B8X GREYHOUND BkRK First race 7:30 pm, Tbesday thru Sunday, East Washington & 40th Street S t a f Fret» Page 7 Wednesday, O ctober 21,1987 W orkshops focus on date rape, drinking on job By K E LLY P E A R C E State P ress ' Facts and figures about alcohol in the . workplace and in the bedroom abounded Tuesday in two workshops during Alcohol Awareness Week at ASU. One workshop concerned alcoholics in the job environment. It was offered to ASU staff. The other was about date rape and was presented to fem ale students. Both w ere parts of a weeklong series of events to educate the ASU community about alcohol and its effects. Georgia RoskeUey, alcoholism program director for the Center fo r ^Behavioral Health Inc. of Tem po, presented a lecture, “ Indicators of Alcohol and Substance Abuse in the W orkplace.” She said alcohol and other chemical substances are. the leading causes o f death. There are 10 m illion to 15 m illion people in the United States suffering from alcoholism, which the Am erican M edical Society recognized as a disease in 1956, RoskeUey said. “ F or a long tim e, people just would not aecept alcoholism as a disease,” she added. “ It has been an uphUl struggle ever since.” She said the disease is incurable and. devastating. “ There is not an organ in the body that is not affected im m ediately by alcohol,” RoskeUey said. Georgiq RoskeUey Ruth Fassinger Included in RoskeUey’s presentation was a videotape o f D avid Ohlms, medical director o f Hyland Center of St. Anthony’s M edical Center in St. Louis, Hyland Center treats alcoholics. In his presentation, he said it takes 10 to 15 years before an alcohoUc w ill go for help. Alcoholism has been broken down into three stages: early m iddle and late, and job perform ance begins to suffer during the m iddle stage, he said. S y m p to m s in c lu d e ta rd in e s s , a b sen teeism , tired n ess, ch anges in attitudes, apathy and mood swings, Ohlms said. He said 75 to 80 percent of alcohoUc em ployees who go through company help programs gain total recovery. People have tremendous chances of becoming alcoholics if their parents or re la tiv e s drink, R o sk elley said. An individual has a 50 percent chance of becoming an alcohoUc if one parent drinks and 80 percent chance if both parents drink, sheadded. Alcohol also is Unked to date rape, which w as ' the topic o f another w orkshop c o n d u c te d by w om en s tu d ie s representatives, date rape specialists and ASU police. L^nna Nieboer-Erickson, adm inistrative assistant in Student L ife and chair of ASU’s date rape committee, said, “ People feel much more inclined to talk about VC(date rape) today than they w ere in the past.” Nieboer-Erickson said the age group most vulnerable to date rape is 18 to 22, and 90 percent of women sexuaUy assaulted are raped by someone they know. Prevention includes getting to know a date, avoiding or m inimizing the use of alcohol, being assertive and u tilizin g communication, she added. Ruth Fassinger, a psychologist from counseling and consultation, said a lot of myths have been proven wrong in the field of date rape. “ For a long tim e, w e didn’t think these type of things happened often and if they did, they only happened to the ‘bad girls,’ ” she said. T u rn to W O R K S H O P , p a g e 12. 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L , WATCH FOR THE GRAND OPENING OF OUR TENTH PHOENIX AREA LOCATION AT ALIA MESA PLAZA! “ yaway'excnan9®- |g > C ^ | P M H UM ITED TIM E SPECIALS AVAILAELE WHILE QUANTITIES LAST. I ^ I c S Stet« Preti Wednesday, October 91,1987 E 2 S Ì* Deputies locete missing student's truck B y MIKE BU R G ESS State P ress Sheriff’s deputies in Payson have found the truck belonging to Jon Johnson, an ASU student who vanished without a trace more than two months ago. But the whereabouts of the 32-year-old electrical engineering m ajor who was last seen Aug. 4 remain a mystery, “ W e’ve been out on horseback and in planes searching for him, but w e’ve found absolutely nothing,” said Vern Harden, a Gila County sheriff’s deputy. “ We’re at a deadend.” police report Johnson’s 1969 Ford pickup was found along the Burnhardt Trail, which leads into 300 m iles o f tra ils in the M atazal Wilderness, Harden said. Johnson’s mother, Cathy Potter, said deputies found Johnson’s w allet, a portable telephone and his dog Supai’s leash inside the. truck. W hen Johnson, ah e x p e rt h ik e r, disappeared it was believed he had headed out on a hiking expedition. But his fam ily found his hiking gear and other personal possessions inside his Tem pe apartment. The graduate assistant’s bills went unpaid and his paychecks from the U niversity were unclaimed. “ I ’m sure there was foul play; there’s no doubt about it,” Potter said! “ He would have notified m e if he was going aw ay.” But she added: “ I ’m not givin g up hbpe. I have to know what happened to him .” Although she. and her husband Larry are hopeful, Potter said they are preparing for the worst. “ Tw o weeks ago w e closed up his apartment, put his things in storage and paid a ll o f his bills,” she said. “ We felt w e had to do it.” In another incident: •A Tem pe man allegedly lucked in a gate and stole three barbells from a health club early Tuesday, p olice said. Robert W. Cimino o f the 1100 block of East D el Rio was arrested at the Grecian Spa at 3401S. M ill Ave. about 3:47 a.m. after police received a call about a possible indecent exposure. 2 for the price of 1 Any of 12 Combination Dinners (D in e -in O n ly ) E v e ry W e d n e s d a y & S u n d a y 4 p .m .- l 1 p.m . A L L NEW M ENU BRING IN THIS AD FOR YOUR 2 FOR 1 DINNER. Introduce yourself to O n e d isco u n t p er rental. 'N o t v a lid in co n ju n ctio n w ith an y o th a r d isco u n t, sp e cia l REIMT A C A R rate, p ro m o tio n al o ffe r o r as p art o f a n y to u r p ackag e. C a r m ust b e returned to o rig in a l and save an extra re n tin g lo ca tio n . P resen t th is co u p o n at tim é o f rental. O ffe r e x p ire s 12-31-87. P R O F E SSIO N A L C E N T E R S F R E E L S A T S E M IN A R “ How To Got Into The Law School Of Your Choice” and improve your LSAT score by 10 points Wednesday, Oct. 28,1987 • 6 p.m. Pinal North Memorial Union $100 discount to a ll w ho enroll a t sem inar: For L S A T classes beginning Nov. 9,1987 For reservations call Valerie at 969-8953. 829-1523 915 E. A P A C H E Holiday Inn « Tem pe (In T h e L o b b y) D O L LA R RENTACAR W e fe a tu re fin e G M c a r s lik e th is O ld s m o b ile C u t la s s C ie r a . Twogreat ways to cruise throughthe semester. The hand on the left is poised on what could be.the most essential part of your education. A Macintosh’“ computer. And the hand on the right is gripping pure, simple, unadulter­ ated fun. A Honda Scooter. One we’re giving away. Ml you have to do for a chance to drive it away is visit your campus computer center and fill out an entry form. While you’re there, take a Macintosh for a test drive. Because Macintosh can help you write terifi papers, categorize elements of the periodic table, plot the rise and fall of pork-bellv . prices, compile computer code, and talk to other computers. And the first 250 people on campus who get behind a mouse, so to speak, will receive a free Apple® memo board. So head over to your campus computer center today. Andask about our Student Financing Program. Who knows? You may soon find yourself cruising a little farther than you expected. . . ^ % H & A. TestdriveaMacintosh. Youmayride awayon aHondaScooter. ***33*" Enter through October 30 ASU B O O K STO R E For purchase information C O M P A S S TRAILER 3 -P A L M W ALK Certain restrictions applv; visit your campus computer center for complete promotional details. O ne free Honda Elite™ 50Scooter w ill be awarded per participating school; only registered students and faculty are eligible to win. Odds o f winning vary depending on size o f school and number o f contest entrants. No purchase necessary. © 198? Apple Computer, Inc. Apple and the Apple logo are registered trademarks Of Apple Computer, Inc. Macintosh is a trademark o f Apple Computer, Inc Elite is a trade mark o f H onda Page 10 S ta te P re « W e dn esda y, O c t o b e r 8 1 ,1 9 8 7 SID'S WAREHOUSE DELI & PUB "GOOD FOOD AND D R IN K " Live Entertainment T - Nightly - (No Cover, No Mm.) 'r ^ Try one o f our Luncheon Specials O ur 3 specials today are Meatball Sandwich and Fries 130 E. U niversity Dr. (at Forest] each are (In The Arches) Floagie and Fries 1/2 Veggie Freak and Soup or Salad *2.35 plus tax Specials Served Mon.-Fri. 10:30 a.m.-2 p.m. 966-7788 • Tem pe, AZ Your Hosts 'The Family" - Estab. 1975 - rz s x 2 5 BUFFALO NICKEL m WINGS EA. O U R GREAT SPICY WINGS ANY D AY FR O M NO O N TO 10 P.M . •SEVEN SCREENS •SATELLITE GAMES »LIVE UP-TO-THE-MINUTE SPORTSWIRE YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD SPORTS BAR SPORTS ro rC LOUIUGE TEMPE/ASU R U R A L A T A PA C H E 96Ç-3451 B0REV WITH BURGERS? STICK TO SH/SH “The Newest and Most Unique Inexpensive. . . Surprisingly Good. East Indian Food.. To break the monotony of burgers, 9 Spice may be just the ticket." -New Times •Up to $6,000 Discount •Homes from the Mid-$40’s Richm ond Am erican is closing-out tw o o f its finest com m unities—W yodcreek and W oodglen Square II. W ith dis­ counts up to $6,000 and hom es start­ in g in the m id- $40’s, ow n in g a hom e y y / iwMv* ^4 t CLAY-OVEN (TANDOORI) COOKING » in on e o f these fin e com m unities is easier than ever. Don’t w ait though, w ith specials like these w e’ll b e closed before you.know it! s q u a r e d BEST KABOBS B a lc o n y (Lamb, Chicken & Beef) m THE VALLEY! K a lo o io St.M. 1/2 b lo c k s o u th o f B a s e lin e a t 2 i i i S. 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Stale Press Page 11 Wednesday, October g 1 ,1987 Smoking V ice M ayor Frank Plencner, who is responsible fo r Tem pe’s original smoking ordinance adopted in 1985, said (he laws do not have to be enforced to be effective because “ people do com ply on their own voluntarily.” Campbell said smoking ordinances set a minimum standard fo r em ployers, but Tem pe laws are not tough enough. “ The advantage o f ordinances . . . is that they have some bottom-line guidelines,” she said. “ Their bottom line over in Tem pe is below everybody else. They are setting a bare minimum but they have some key things left out o f their ordinance.” Mesa and Chandler ordinances dictate that “ the preferences o f non-smoking employees shall prevail,” but Tem pe would be the on ly V a lle y c ity to requ ire restau ran ts to p ro vid e non-sm oking sections. Continued from page 3. According to the U.S. Public Health Services Center fo r Disease Control, the number o f smokers has dropped from 36 percent in 1976 to 26 percent in 1986. Roth said smoking ordinances may be contributing to the decline o f U S. smokers. "T h ey tend to reduce the" frequency of smoking in a smoker,” he said. “ But the most important aspeict of smoking policies is they protect the non-smoker’s right to breath clean a ir.” But B renton cou n tered: "S m ok in g ordinances provide no workable solutions and inflexible regulations under the guise of protecting the public’s health. They are unenforcable and selectively enforced.” to GRACE C O M M U N IT Y C H U R C H Rebound.__ C o n tin u e d from p ag e 1, On Southern Between Rural & McClintock, Tempe Apprehension about the stability o f the economy m ay drive down purchases such as cars, houses and big-ticket appliances thereby triggerin g a recession before interest rates rise, said Richard Curtin, an economist at the U niversity of M ichigan’s Survey Research Center. “ You don’t have to own stock to be concerned about what happened in die stock m arket,” he said. “ There’s no question that the kind of drastic and abrupt drop the stock m a rk et too k w ill a f f e c t con su m er sentiment.” Phoenix-m etropolitan banks reported “ business as usual” because most people are w ell-inform ed o f Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation guarantees o f insuring savings up to 1100,000, according to a V alley National Bankexecutive. “ We expected customers to come in concerned, especially the retirem ent faction — many of whom rem em ber the crash of 1929,” said W ally Musegades, a senior vicepresident of retail banking. “ But most o f the concerns have been expressed over the phone.” President Eisenhower, said Am ericans w ill have to tighten their financial belts because " it took us years to get into this mess, and it’s going to take us years to get out o f it.” “ W e’v e had our party, and w e’re going to have to deal with our hangover now,” Cochran said. “ We can’t borrow our way into prosperity anymore. “ B y mid-1968 I expect w e could have a recession. It could last a year and be Very serious. W e’ve had a mountain o f debt under Ronald Reagan, and w e’ve had a trade deficit that continues to go up.” Prim e interest rates, which analysts say largely determine the possibility of a recession, w ere lowered Tuesday by several m ajor banks. But Cochran said the rollbacks w ere likely the result o f White H ou se m a n u e v e rin g to s e t up " a smokescreen and m irrors.” “ Someone’s pulling strings,” he said. “ It ’s a ll a soothing syrup” to qualm fears o f a recession. ■“ Interest rates are going to go u p . . . and keep going up. ” t o . .. Sundays 11 a. m. Tuesdays 7-8 p.m . Rm. 0-203 In the Vineyard Information: 894-2201 D ave M ich e lso n , C ollege P a sto r ________ STU FF powerful, clear and professional C O O K IE S VOTED BEST HOMEMADE COOKIES IN PHOENIX SINCE 1982 FRO M H O M E Hours: Mon. - Sat. 9-9 Sunday, Too! 12-6 Visit our Victorian parlor at 418 South M ill Ave., Tempe BUY Va lb. GET Va lb. FREE w eddings, parties, d ances Q 0 Q - 0 0 Q Q LIM IT ED T O O N E P E R P E R S O N . G O O D A T S T O R E L O C A T IO N O N LY . El SAVE $ 2 .0 0 $ 1. N EXT C A R W ASH S P E C IA L W A SH N O T V A L IP WITH A N Y OTHER C O U P O N Oct. 28, 1987 M ™ dr ► Positively N o Exceptions— lim it O n e Per C o r W o t h BROOM flY OIRWflSH d»‘ o s 1A Telephone 968-8730 1016 & Broadway (M attoni) Tampa, Arizona C a r e e r ! ___ __ With M a c y * s ■ ^ ^ Fan kx * t h e A r t FRAMED POSTERS o f $49.99 •We have N ag els B M » euftto 2021E. Apache Bivd. SPECIAL COLLECTION between M cClintocki Price. Tempe 4 829-7101 Hrs:M-Fi(M>; Sat 10-5. “A S P E C I A L C O L L E C T I O N ” * s 0 0 0 G ra d u a te s ^ coco, , 4 2 8 ^ ^ 0 h( “ g K W B S B & sS sgS f/K affly In their Pur.fP?J?ìr a strale ¡s s s a s s s s . _______ Page 12 Da« Press Wednesday, October 21,1987 W o rksh o p .............. conflraMdfrom pag* 7. “ V ery seldom are rapes done by the bogeyman in the bushes.” Ode ih three women w ill be raped in their lifetim e, and 50 to 80 percent o f college students have experienced some sort o f sexual aggression, she said. Most victim s do not want to adm it they w ere raped, F assin ger said, adding, “ N o b o d y r e a l l y w a n ts to i d e n t i f y themselves as rape victim s because o f the shame and gu ilt.” , , One in 12 m ales has been a rapist and 35 percent o f m ales would engage in forced sex if they knew no one would find out, she said, Most date rapes occur on casual dates and. 80 percent o f it happens o ff campus on the m ale’s turf, Fassinger said. RADICAL DETAIL Professional D e ta ilin g C om pletely M o b ile State Press Classifieds Call Now 2 6 2 -0 6 3 6 S T A T E P R E S S C LA S S IFIE D S 45,000 Readers Daily • 965-6731 JOHN’S SHOEI LUGGAGEREPAIR B u rg e r K in g • R e s o lin g T e n n i s S h o e s • O r t h o p e d ic W o rk ' • C o m p le t e L in e o f S h o e C a r e P ro d u c ts • B ir k e n s t o c k R e p a ir 718 S. M ill Avenue Tempe • 967-9101 If The Shoe Pits, R epair It A t J o h n ’s! Hours: M -F9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. • Closed Sunday 10% Off With This Ad Irr A r iz a r r a , e y e g la s s e s a r e fra rrr, — \ F a st tim e s at ASU JO IN THE SU N DEVIL SPIRIT! Recreation/lntramural Sports P A R IS O P T IQ U E Co-rec Schedule Flag Football Tourney Team Superstars Volleyball Dbls Tourney Turkey Trot (2 mile walk/run) Racquetball Oct. 22 Oct. 29 Nov. 12 Nov. 19 Nov. 19 5 1 W e s t 3 rd S t., H ay d e n S q u a re Oct. 31-Nov. 1 Nov. 14-15 Nov. 30-Dec. 3 Nov. 24 Dec. 5-6 Women’s Schedule Flag Football Tourney Cross Country Run Powerlifting Meet Oct. 22 Oct . 29 Nov. 12 Oct. 22 Oct. 29 Nov. 12 Nov. 19 CALVIN KLEIN CARTIER PORSCHE POLO ESPRIT CAZAL PAYSAN S MORE M T T Nov. 4-8 Nov. 10 Növ. 18 Men’s Schedule Flag Football Tourney Cross Country Powerlifting Wrestling T e m p e , A r iz o n a 8 5 2 8 1 P h on e [6 0 2 ] 8 9 4 -8 3 8 2 I’D R A T H E R B E EA TIN G A T y U M S All You Can Eat Oct. 4-8 Nov. 10 Nov, 18 Nov. 23-24 Chinese Japanese Mandarin, 'Entries taken only at the Manager’s Meeting. Team Superstars Turkey Trot This type o f team Olympics includes a combination of six different events: Volleyball, Tug-of-W ar, Bowling, 880-yd. Swimming Relay, 440-yd. Track Relay, and an O bstacle Course. Lots o f great prizes and the opportunity to becom e a superstar! This is a tw o mile run/walk. Each team consists o f one man and on e woman. Each person walks a half mile and runs the last half mile. First p lace is a turkey, secon d p la ce is a chicken, third place is a cornish hen, and fourth p lace is a d ozen e g g s . W hat a great w ay to win a Thanksgiving turkey. Claes A & B ^ —~ Most M en ’s Intramural Sports are broken down into tw o skill levels: Class A & B . T h ose individuals w ho are highly skilled are encouraged to join C lass A. T h o se w ho desire just as much competition but at a slightly lower skill should enter C lass B. For m ore Inform ation call 965-5638 or com e by our office located at P .E . W est Lobby. I Oftor«ipiiBSin.'J««7, c m v A w s ’o o t W P ly t O t e t ^ t d n J s is i ■ Y um s ORIENTAL BUFFET S.EConiarBassiiM&McCItitock We’reopenall day! 11a.m.-9c30p.m. 345-9867 ! entertainment State Press ^W ^igday^O ctoberM ^lW T^ Page 13 IM te S cu lly Clockw ise from loft, Steve Lyon prepares for a dive at A S U ’s A quatic Center last fall; “ Cam pus Man” stunt doubles S co tt Anthony and Ron Plem ont; Lyon , Joh n Dye and T V ’s M organ Fairchild shoot s scen e at the Em bassy S uites Hotel In Phoenix; above, Dye shoots the film ’d first sce n e a year ago Tuesday. - I year later, 'Campus Man ’ still won’t drown By G R EG O R Y R O B ER T KR ZO S o f a bad thing m ay have just gotten worse. It’s been one year since Hollywood landed on ASU’s doorstep to film “ Campus Man,” the glossy-yet-ill-fated tale o f form er alumnus and calendar king Todd Headlee. By Christmastime, though, the nation w ill get a second look at the ASU fa iry tale when “ Campus Man” is released on video cassette. One year ago this week, the cast and crew of “ Campus Man” began film ing the story about an ASU olympic-bound diver-turned- KMM’s C o r n e r KRZOS ★ MILLER * MALHAM Hits, hoots and hollers from the folks at KMM’s Conor. Ghost Town Revistad; •Looks like our sister city of Tucson has Invited Hollywood calendar-hunk. .A fte r tw o months, o f shooting here, “ Campus Man” generated a great deal of hype with students and staff, and although the excitem ent was intact during post-production, the University was in store for a big let down. When “ Campus Man” hit theaters in April, it looked m ore like the “ ASU A fter School Special” than anything else. Plotless and in need of cosmetic surgery from Producers Jon Landau and P eggy Fow ler, “ Campus Man” sank to the bottom of Hollywood’s m ovie pool. Even soap witch Morgan Fairchild’s presence didn’t help lift the diving film up over for a picnic. F ilm crews down south are currently working on “ Once Upon a Texas Train” in Old Tucson and M e s c a l . N o w o r d o u t y e t on w h a t t h e comedy/drama/Western is about really, other than a starring vehicle fo r a few out-of-work actors — W illie Nelson, A n gie D ickinson, Chuck Connors, Jack E lam (o f “ Cannonball Run” fam e) , Stu Whitman and defunct “ Hardy Boy” Shaun Cassidy. Perhaps Cassidy w ill revive “ Da Do Run Run” on the train train train in this cactus caper. M ore la ter. . . Riding the A Train: •Duke Ellington’s “ Sophisticated Ladies” parades into town fo r a lim ited run, Nov. 12 through 14 at the Celebrity Theater, 440 N. 32nd St. — that’s the problem. The Celebrity Th eater— a theater in the round— lacks what it takes to stage a popular Broadway show. Last W inter’s “ Chorus Line” toured through, but was criticized fo r its lack o f oomph on C eleb rity’s aw kw ard stage. But hey, The Men of Chippendales arrive on the same stage Nov. 16 and nobody’s complaining. Call 244-0404 for m ore info. Eight is Still too Much: •NBC’s broadcast o f “ The Eight is Enough Reunion” Sunday proved to be stupid after all. Dick Van Patten and the show’s original cast returned (except B etty Buckley) fo r a soap' opera-type excursion that would have made Alan Thicke break out into plaid — again. Adam Rich, still sporting a Chewbacca-do, has not shed his baby fat. Van Patten, also on from its cinem atic grave. But even before its distribution, “ Campus Man” had problems. In January, Headlee — the film ’s creator and whose real life story was the the prem ise o f the m ovie — filed a $5 m illion lawsuit against RKO Pictures claim ing he did not receive proper credit on the film . Ironically, Headlee’s name did appear on the credits. Starring Jon Dye, M iles O’ K eefe, Steve Lyon and Fairchild, “ Campus Man,” rated PG, w ill be diving into a video store near you by Christmastime. Here’s to speedos. the chubby side, still has not learned how to act. But most importantly — and we mean this — w e’re sick o f reunion shows, particularly this one. Be afraid, be very afraid. How Now, Mr. Wizard? •Actor Don H erbert, better known to children ■and astrophysicians around the globe as “ M r. W izard,” believes science is on the upswing. In a speech at the National Science Teacher’s Convention — a three-day event in Miam i — . Herbert said he believes the attention to his show reflects a renaissance in science education. He com pared his “ booming” audience to the sim ilar enthusiasm shown when the Soviet Union launched Sputnik. H ere at KM M ’s Corner, w e’d like to see his dissertation on Non-gravitational Sex. It is possible, isn’t it? Governor E v, I presume: •Car-Dealer-Turned-Governor E v Mecham was put through the '“ 60 Minutes” Cuisinart Sunday evening when T V chef M orley Safer lambasted Arizona’s very own. “ Is this an inquisition?” E v asked to the speech-impeded M orley. “ L et’s get on to positive things,” the governor added. “ 60 Minutes,” however, m erely tried to report the facts in their usual “ yellow journalistic” manner. Though it doesn’t quite take a slanted news m agazine to make our Pontiac car care expert look bad, they still managed to concentrate on non-essentials. Geraldo R ivera would have been proud. State Pies» W edn esday, O c t o b e r 9 1 ,1 9 8 7 Page 14 Sold Dennehy, Woods explore intriguing world in ‘Best Seller’ B y TO D M cCO Y State P ress “ Best Seller” has a ll the fundamental parts of a best seller — one part action, one part intrigue, one part good cop, one part bad guy — and a twist o f crim e to sour the flavor: The bad guy wants to be a hero. Brian Dennehy ( “ F irst Blood,” “ Cocoon” ) is Dennis MeechUm, a veteran cop who wrote a best-selling novel based on his own traum atic experience — he was wounded by a gang of crim in als who rdbbed a federal depository. “ Best Seller” ★ ★ ★ (out o f four) O rio n P ictu re s p re s e n ts a H e m d a le Film re le a se , star­ rin g Jam es W oods and B ria n D e n n e h y . P ro d u c e d b y C a rte r D e H a v e n . W ritten b y L a rry C o h e n a n d d irected b y J o h n Flyn n . Rated R Fifteen years later, he is approached by a mysterious man who wants a story w ritten based on his “ career” as a corporate hit man, alTin exchange fo r a little glory and to show the world that killers are human, too. The self-pronounced killer, Cleve (John Woods) claim s to have proof that he has killed countless numbers o f people for “ the corporation,” elim inating liabilities and building up a few assets, as he puts it. Now he wants to tell his story to the whole world, but in an im m ortalized way. He wants Dennehy to w rite a best seller. His intention is to bring down the “ company” who hired him and k ill the man who Bred turn. How’s that fo r getting back at your boss? What Meechum doesn’t know, but soon finds out, is Cleve is actually the same thug who nearly killed him 15 years earlier. The ensuing plot revolves around Meechum’s desire to collect enough evidence fo r the book, and eventually to nail Cleve to the w all. But why would a hit man com e out and tell a cop his entire James Woods and Brian Dennehy crim inal career? For the glory, o f course. Cleve wants to be rem em bered beyond his years as the hit man o f hit men. Now Meechum, who has been dry on words fo r several years since the death o f his w ife, must choose between his duty as a police o fficer and his devotion as a writer. “ Best S eller” has two tilings going for it: the personal charm C leve’s character exudes and the numerous twists in the plot o f the story. Woods breathes s&much c h a r m into the persona of Cleve that at times it becomes im possible to believe that a hit man could be so likable, l i fact, how could someone M il so many people without so much as a guilty trem or running through their bottom lip? But it works. And a ll too w ell. “ Best S eller” is a gem o f a'inovie. Rated R , the film shows at Mann Sun D evil Six Theaters. spreads h is w in g s a l . -i D IS C O U N T IN FO R M A TIO N A S U stud ents m ay p u rch a se O N E o r TW O tick e ts fo r H A L F -P R IC E w ith valid ated I.O . A S U F A C U L T Y and S T A F F re ce iv e > $2 per ticket d isco u n t upon p resentation o f A S U I.D. GAMMAGE HALF PRICE SK/PENT PISC0UNI3 TO THE BEST SHOWS IN TOWN...AT QAMMMGlE/' N and CO M PANY I'M GONNA RON-N O T WALK.' JUSTIMAGINE- • b * T h e D r e w , P ip e s » D ea eers e l T h e O o rg e e i j M » n ie r s Wednesday, Oct. 28 • 8 pm S aturday, O ct. 24 • 8 pm S unday, O ct. 25 * 2 & 7 pm T icke ts: $20, $18 Tickets: $12, $10 Y iA n n *3" CHRIS-TÛWN © r SUN DEUIL o ’ m m im x æ æ m . ■ * — ■ ■ ^ 249-2843 S707 n q ■ ~ tV ■ ■ w th a v e. J MIT (MH (PS) 12:15.2:45,5:15,7:45,1ft00 SUIKKKt (PC) 1215,2:30,500,7:15,9:30 FATALATTMCHN(I) 1:45,4:45,7:30,10:15 in m cn m cd i 1230,3:00.5:30, am 10:30 mut mm (I) 1:30,3:30,5:30,8fl0i IMO FRIDAYONLY SOMEONETBWATCI OVERME(S) 1230.300,5:30,1230 IK NMHI (I) 8:00 «r Saturday Sunday ahoumysVirst show only me ram m (Rii) 200730 MCIKffl 12:45,5:15,9:45 KTsua m 12302455157:451000 ■1KMM(PCI!) 12002304:457:15215 KHNM« 12452005309001215 Poneva(I)1200445930 RUMOR 2307:15 HUUTTNCmpt) 11:452305007301215 SATURDAYONLY K l KUBM12302455151900 IOMBUN(t)200 V m W ¿V ED A ® ^ v e d a Products for Hair, Skin & Make-up R O l-lU fU MAIN ST. S DOBSON RO , INMESA M Einnm 7:45 IK mOOCMMES(I) 1230,5:15,10D0 MOSMCE (PC] 3.-00,7:30 SNPHNN4(PC) IDO 530 9:45 U K mmmts mi 230 730 SWO «M K (Ntl) 1230 5:15,1000 AOKNINKSIIMISTIM (PC1JI 1245,5:00 015 MCIOMIMN) 300 7:15 BELL TOWER ^ 843-4593 SNEME TOMINI Iffl « (I) 12002305007:451915 12453005007:15930 m s rcua K i (pou) 100 9155157:15915 HAIM Fie (I) 1:454000009001000 MSMT(PCÌ3) 130930530730930 tm 1:15 330 530 730,945 FATAL.ITTMCM (I) 1200 230 500 7:451030 KST SUB (I) 1230 430 830 WICKS IF EASTHCN(N) 2159151915 TRI-CITY DOLLAR THEATRES S1.00 ALLSEATS-All SHOWS KtTKUHH) 1230245,5.007209:40 fatal A im e r » (i) 1200 225 4% 72510:00 KlUtt«* (0)3:35,7:30 U MUM(N) 125,5:15 915 STAKEBUT(I) 11:45,2154:457:15945 3 W K n « R lia « p Q 1215245,5157:451915 SATURDAYONLY •fSI SEllfl (I) 1230 245 500 HtllM«* (I) NOTSHOWING U U K (PC) NOTSHOWING IIW 1245M0 5157309 « N im m (PC) 1230245500 7:15930 MUMM(PC) 1« 2155307:451900 m 1245200 515 730 945 FRIDAYONLY M M enei m 12443015:15.9:« KMnmcflo IN D IA N SCHOOL P H O E N IX 840 4140 J■ p a State P r ê t Page 15 W edn esday, October 21,1987 'In the Mood’ works its way toward warm feelings By JE S S IE SIMON State P ress Dustin Hoffman, eat your heart out — Patrick Dempsey is “ In The Mood” to take your place in the capacity of king womanizer. “ In the M ood” ★ if (out o f four) Kings Road Entertainment and Lorimar Productions present a Phil Alden Robinson film, star­ ring Patrick Dempsey, Talia Bal­ sam and Beverly D’Angelo. Pro­ duced by Gary Adelson and Karen Mack. Screenplay by Phil Alden Robinyon. Rated PG-13 But things start to change for the innocent young man when his older buddies drag him to a party. From that point, Sonny is destined for love, run-ins with a judge, relatives who are m ore bizarre than Gov. E v Mecham, an over-active press and girls m elting at the mention of his new name: The Woo Woo Kid. Y e s, young P a tric k Dempsey of “ Can’t Buy Me L o v e ” fa m e portrays a 15-year-old who can’t seem to fa ll in love with the right woman. In fact, it’s almost always the wrong woman. “ In The Mood” is the reflection of a 58-year-old man fin ally getting to tell about his adventures in 1944 — an illustrious year for Elsworth “ Sonny” W isecarver (D em psey). “ You know what w e’re really doing? W e’re having an adventure.” W isecarver’s goal at first is to make school more interesting by finding new ways to get out of class. And quite the adventure it becomes, as Sonny’s life — like the m ovie itself — goes from a slow pace to excitem ent and experiences beyond the visions of the average post-pubescent teen. The main problem is the women falling at his feet are m arried. This is known to cause problems almost anywhere, and California during wartim e is no different. Oooh, aaah. Fun and adventure. And it is fun, for the most part. W isecarver is an optimist who feels that “ sensible is boring,” with a capital B. A fter the somewhat slow introduction, when w e are told: “ This is the story of how one young man fin ally m et a nice g irl his own a ge,” the story is fu ll of very funny bits and brilliant lines. The concept of “ In The Mood” is fa irly original and lends itself to humor. H ie funniest bits are scenes o f Sonny in court and ja il but they aren’t the only ones. M eeting his second love also generates some pretty funny stuff. Unfortunately, “ Mood” suffers from the dreaded and necessarily common cliche disease. Somehow, it was difficult to believe that “ L ife ’s a bitch, and then you die” was a popular saying during WW II. And there was some m ore all-too-common dialogue, detracting from the “ Brighton Beach M em oirs” feeling, which had been obtained through vintage clothing, occasional comments directed to the audience and a m ostly objective camera. But Eugene wasn’t the only m ovie character emulated. “ In The Mood” had a “ Ferris Bueller” tone to it as w ell. But Sonny didn’t have the same luck as Ferris, who escaped unscathed from his follies. What made “ Mood” funny was watching the adolescent fight for his rights and his loves. That, along with the fact that he went to Yuma to get married. “ In The Mood,” rated PG-13, is playing at the Sun D evil Six Theaters, located at U niversity and Rural roads. Keaton takes on the Yuppies — and pampers — in latest movie B y D A V E M ILLER Start« Press Diane Keaton serves form ula i>>. lunch. It’s not something she does by choice, mind you. She’d probably much rather have a double m artini and a side salad, thanks, but she really has no alternative. She’s the first executive on her Meek to ba ve a b a b y!And she’s not too excited about it. Urn audience is, however. United Artists’ “ Baby Boom,” the story o f a Manhattan executive who inherits a baby, even though she doesn’t deserve uut, has a ll the potential of becoming an “ E ight is Enough” me^cs ‘"The Secret o f m y Success” sitcom set-up fest, with Adam Rich in diapers and drag thrown in fo r disgust. N o audience deserves this. No audience deserv i anything to do with Adam Rich. But fortunately he’s n o t.] “ Baby Boom.” And, fortunately, Diane Keaton is, and giving what is probably the finest perform ance of her career — in a cpm pletely entertaining film . ’ ' j It’s a perform ance that could put an Oscar on her mantle, next to the one she won fo r nervous anxiety in “ Annie H all.” I f she does get one, it w ill be fo r her outstanding perform ance as J.C. W yatt, a yuppie without boundaries. She eats, sleeps, drinks and visits the bathroom to the tune of her executive position: She’s an immense yupster, much worse than anyone on “ Newhart,” and so is her “ boyfriend,” played with w all-crawling excitem ent by Harold Ramis ( “ Ghostbusters’ ’). He provides her with that much-needed four-and-a-half minutes of sex a night (including foreplay). Harold fits her life like a glove. What doesn’t fit, however, is baby Elizabeth, dumped on •J.C. by dead relatives. T hanks a lot. That’s how J.C. fed s, anyway. She’s only got tim e for fourand-a-half minutes o f sex. How’s she going to fit a baby in there? W ell, the first thing you know J.C.’s a m illionaire (actually she already was one) and her kinfolk say “ J.C. m ove away from there.” They said “ California is the place you oughta be,” so she loads up the BMW ami moves t o . . . Vermont. Vermont, where she can give the rat race the boot and find herself. Where she Can find out just what goes into raising a baybee, and starting a gourm et baby food company . Where she can m eet the vet of her dreams. Really. When the romantic prospects w ear thin, J.C. happens upon friendly veterinarian Sam Shepard ( “ Crimes of the Heart” ). Initial disgust blooms into perishable delight and the tw o get set to get horizontal. “ B aby B oom ” Except that her “ Country Baby” food is a hit, and they want her back in New York. (out o f four) United Artists presents Diane What’s a woman to do? Catch this film and find out. It might not com pletely curb any fem inist instincts, but it does show that it’s still OK fo r a woman to be a m other. And, if sh e’ s careful, she can have it all. Keaton in a Nancy Meyers/ Charles Shyer production, star­ ring Harold Ramis, Sam Wanamaker and Sam Shepard. Music by Bill Conti. Written by Meyers and Shyer. Directed by Charles Shyer. Rated PG And, once in a while, so can a film audience. Come to the 1987 HOM ECOM ING B A L L Featuring: IM AGES IN M O TIO N Live Entertainment by M ind Over Matter 18 p.m. October 22-24 2 p.m. matinee [October 24 and the Crowning o f the KING and QUEEN Friday, November 6 9 p.m. Tempe Mission Palms Hotel $10/couple • $5/slngle Dance Studio Theatre t A SU Physical Education f Building East Tickets on sale at | Gammage Box Office [and all Dillards outlets i $5.00 General Admission For more information call 965-5029. $3 Students & Senior Citizens AMERICAN SOCIETY OF WOMEN ACCOUNTANTS Student Chapter in v it e s y o u to a tte n d T hursday, O ct. 22, 1987 General Meeting with G u e st S p e aker 4 p.m. Y a va p a i Room (M U219) Ronald V. Reed, Becker C P A Review C a s u a l d re s s . Rip C h air Tickets may be purchased at our table by the fountain,r or call.the Student Alumni office àt 9 6 5 -5 2 7 6 . Sponsored by the Alumni Association and ASASU. $3 O pens in to Tw in size bed o th e r Specials! *4 drawer chest * Bed sale Twin set Rill set Queen set Bean Bags IN TO FU LL B E D $ 28 $ 69 $ 79 $119 $ 28 FUBNUUKE ^PLUS^ 5 Piece Oak Finish Bedroom Set Sofa & Love Seat $ 1 6 8 SJ58 Clearance Center 9 6 6 * 6 2 5 2 In Tempre t 2077 E. University U~Ji Uy mSim University ASU I W tó n «d a y ^ O c to b «r9 V 1 W 7 P ageT Ö theater Theater department opens comical ‘Landscape’ * Hints, délectables and other tangy tidbits from the cluttered tiles o f the entertainment desk. H a llo w een H e e b ie G e e b ie s : •It’s tim e for the groovy ghoulies to m ake their annual Halloween appearance. T o help prom ote this yea r’s festive tricky holi­ day, the City o f T em pe, Hayden Square and the T em p e Cham ber o f C om m erce a re sponsoring the Mill A v e n u e M asqu erad e A d ven tu re. Participants will b e able to parade and party through the new streets o f T em p e and enter competition for over $5000 in prizes and cash. For m ore infor­ mation, call 967-4877. t S ta te Fair H ighlights: •T h e Arizona State Fair kicks off Friday at the Fair Grounds, located at 1826 W. M cDowell in Phoenix. Am ong fo e many festive activities taking place, this year’s fair is promoting a great d eal o f musical talents. Up first on the line 4ip is J o e W alsh, w ho’ll take Coliseum sta ge at 7:30 Friday Night. Fair tickets are $4. For more information, call 268-FAIR./ By SCO TT C . SECKEL State P ress A m elange o f murder opens tonight at 8 in the Lyceum Theater. John Guare’s “ Landscape o f the Body,” directed by ASU theater Professor David Vining, is the story o f Betty (played by Rose M eade), accused erf decapitating her son. The tale, told through flashbacks, is sort o f a d a r t cross between Henrik Ibsen and a series o f character portraits o f the people behind the seam y scenes of New York. B etty travels to New York, looking fo r her dead sister Rosalie (Amanda Jobe), who has m et death through an unusual twist o f destiny. She takes Rosalie’s job at a scam m in g honeym oon a gen cy w h ile making pornographic film s on the Side. H er son Bert (Joe C. Lauderdale) makes a career o f com ing on tp homosexuals down in Greenwich V illage and then robbing them with his buddies. H ie strange mother-son relationship of Betty and B ert is explored in detail through the flashbacks. The play is narrated and tied together by the dead Rosalie in a sort o f em cee style. “ It’s a play that’s difficu lt to describe because o f John Guare’s unrealistic style. It’s suspense, black com edy, drama — it’s . hard to describe,” Vining said. “ He (G uare) loves to surprise the audience. He loves to confuse the audience.” The unusual suspense dram a also stars Lionel Estrada J r., Laura Dickey, R ic ' •: LyteBattman From left to right, Am anda Jo b e, Jo a Lauderdale and Rome M eade take the stage in “ Lan dscape o f the B ody” tonight at 8 In the Lyceum Theater. Brunner, Joe Paris, Steve Hart and M ary S ta rrs.. Starrs is the prem iere recipient of the first annual Sarah Jane M iller award; presented to a junior fem ale acting student. ASU is entering “ Landscape of the Body” in the Am erican College Theater Festival in Decem ber a t NAU in Flagstaff. “ Landscape” opens tonight and plays at 8 p.m. weekdays (except M ondays) and 2 ' p.m. Sundays. The Show w ill through Nov. 1. Tickets are $4 for students and $6 otherwise. F or m ore information, call 965-3434. State Prass Happy H ourl 1/2 O F F Classified Ada N . B asem ent M atthew s C a n ta r N a u tilu s FITNESS SYSTEMS by CYBEK JO IN THE WINNING TEAM! The Valley’s #1 Aerobics Program (Beauvais’ has all certified aerobics instructors) I d o it b ecau se I know that it sa ves lives. •That’s why 1donate plasma. Millions o f p eop le all over Am erica rely on plasm a products to stay healthy— or to stay alive! th a t’s a g o o d enough reason for m e. But I sure can use the extra cash, too. 12 BONUS! On your first visit with this ad. W EEK 1 2 1st v isit in a calendar week •10 •10 2nd v isit in a calendar week •20 •20 Donor Referral •3 •3 Wlsekly Totals •33 »33 Evangile amount you can naan in nach oplandar month 4 3 •10 •10 •20 •20 •3 •3 •33 *33 lo a f Up to $132 a month! F IT N E S S & A E R O B IC C E N T E R P h o e n ix : 4 8 4 3 N. 8 th P la c e 2 3 0 -0 0 5 5 N e x t to A S U 1301 E . U n i v e r s i t y 9 2 1 -9 5 5 1 That’s how much you can earn donating plasm a in safe, ea sy visits to University Plasm a Center. Call to ­ day to find out just how ea sy it is, and to set up an appointment. A ssociated B loscience of Tempe, Inc. 1015 S ou th Rural Rd. Tem pe, A Z 85281 P h o n e 968-6139 Tem pe: 11 0 2 W . S o u t h e r n A v e 8 2 9 -6 8 6 9 A sso cia ted B lo scien ce, Inc. wm m m m Page 17 Wednesday, October 21,1987 preview s Arizona State Fair — down home fun at its very best By DAVE MILLER State Press Everybody remem bers a fair. Grandpa loads you on his shoulders and stoops and buys you gummy worms a ll night or, when you get older, you take your prim e baby out and get gooey ta ffy all over her blouse. It’s always a lot o f fun. And now, just when you thought it was safe to eat g u m m y worms again, it’s back. It’s the Arizona State F air. A lert Barney, alert Betty. Get the Petries out o f bed. Get your socks on and roll on over to 19th Avenue and M cDowell Road in Phoenix fo r this year’s version o f what is usually a happenin’ event. This year it happens Thursday, Oct. 22 through Sunday, Nov. 8. Ticket price is $4 per evening, and the usual rides w ill be on display, i.e. the Zipper, the Roundup and the Haunted House. Just rem em ber to intelligently coordinate that food intake with the right amount o f riding. As Dick Van Dyke might say, preventing accidents depends on you. Many guests and entertainers are slated to headline the activity. Perform ers appearing in Veteran’s Mem orial Coliseum (a t the site) include: •Singer, satirist and form er-Eagle guitarist Joe Walsh, 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 23. •Bruce Hornsby and the Range, 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 24. •Comedian Red Skelton, 4 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 25. •Mainstream heavy m etalers Night Ranger, 7 p.m. Monday, Oct. 26. •Country queens/bodacious duo The Judds, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 27. •Fellow country hit-maker Anne Murray, 7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 28 and Thursday Oct. 29. •Fellow country crooner Dwight Yoakum, 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 30. •Professional boxers Tony Fulilangi vs. Charles “ Poncho” Carter in a title bout Saturday, Oct. 31 (tim e to be announced). •Singer/Rhinestone Cowboy Glen •Saturday, Oct. 31. Campbell, 7 p.m. •The Temptations, 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 1. •WWF W restling, Monday, Nov. 2. f •Hit band REO Speedwagon, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 3. •Fellow hit band The Oak Ridge Boys, 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 4. In addition, many special events w ill be presented. H ie A ll Indian Rodeo is scheduled fo r Oct. 28, 29 and 30 at the fa ir Grandstand. The rodeo benefits the A ffiliation of Arizona Indian Centers, Inc., and is open to a ll Indians with verification of at least 1/4 Indian blood. Also, this year’s F a ir competition is expected to have 25,000 to 30,000 entries. Some entry categories include agriculture, beekeeping, pigeons, poultry, rabbits, sheep, swine and young engineers and scientists. General and entry information m ay be obtained by calling 252-6771. Islanders plight docnmented by NaTI Geographic NEW YO R K (A P ) - The docu m entary “ N u clear E xiles” opens with scenes of crystal clear P a cific waters and sparkling beaches. Who could w on d er w h y the natives of Bikini A toll long to return even after 40 years in exile? The United States moved the Bikinians o ff their island in 1946 to use the atoll for a s e rie s o f atom ic test bombings. The island and atoll, part of the Marshall Islands in Micronesia, are still too contaminated by r a d ia t io n to be s a f e l y -inhabited. The plight of the Bikinians is poignantly portrayed in N a tio n a l G e o g r a p h ic ’ s “ Nuclear E xiles,” airing on WTBS this Sunday. The documentary describes a peaceful and benevolent people who spent their days fishing the atoll’s rich lagoon, and who left w illingly when asked by the U .S. g o vern m en t. T h ey believed, as the Am ericans had told them, that they were helping mankind. Since then, they have lived on K ili, an island 500 m iles away in another part o f the M arshall Islands. In the 1970s, some of the Bikinians moved back to the atoU to begin rehabitation. But tests sh ow ed th e s o il s t ill c o n t a in e d to o m uch radiation, and Bikini Island had to be vacated again. So what difference does it make, one tiny P a cific island to another? It makes a lot,of difference to the Bikinians. K ili has no p rotected lagoon. Even motorboats are difficu lt to propel through the rough water, much less the outriggers the Bikinians u s e d to m a n e u v e r so expertly. On Bikini, they thrived on lobsters, crab, fish and birds. On K ili, the Bikinians are wards o f the United States. The cameras show them wading out to m eet a U .S . t r a n s p o r t b o a t unloading crates o f Pepsi­ Cola and Spam, some o f the Am erican goods they now d ep en d on, a lon g with televisions and automobiles. The cam eras also follow some o f the elders on a rare visit to Bikini for an update on th e c o n t a m i n a t i o n studies. As the sound of native singing rises in the background, the cameras capture the joy of the old men as they step onto the home soil some have not seen in 40 years. C O u L E G E P A i 1R 1r y 1L I H 1 € 1 LF I T 1 1*00 o p r cover W IT H C O L L E G E L D WEDNESDA S 1 .E G É O T T L E S Í LADIES "PENNY DRINK" NITE! THURSDAY! FR ID A Y ! ALL NtGHTIl --------¡ f ¡ P m m DRINKS POR GUYS & U P M H A PPY HODR B U FFE T 5 -0 .2 5 D R IN K S 0 -1 W .25 DRINKS 8-101! SATURDAY! 9 1 9 E. A P A C H E BLVD. 921- 977S Wednesday, October 21,1987 18 EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES JAPAN Bl-llngual? Interested In learning about career opportunities InJapan? Shushoku Jobo, the employment journal of Japan, provides Infor­ mation on opportunities with presti­ giousJapanese and foreign capital companies operating in Japan. To receive the latest news in career i free i (800)325-9759outsideCalifornia. A service of Recruit U.S.A., Inc. “We Communicate Opportunity" N e e d h e lp in m a k in g c a lls o u t s id e y o u r M o u n t a in B e ll c a llin g area? D ia l “ 0 ” p lu s th e n u m b e r y o u w a n t t o re a c h , o r c a ll y o u r lo n g d is ta n c e c o m ­ p a n y f o r a d d i t i o n a l d ia lin g in s tru c tio n s . S o rem em b er, th e n e x t tim e y o u d ial “ 0,” y o u ’ll n o t o n ly g e t answers. Y o u ’ll also g e t th e frie n d ly s e rv ic e y o u ’v e c o m e to a p ­ Ù preciate fro m M ou n tain Bell. Plenty, w e ’re g la d to say. B ecau se M ou n tain B ell O p e r­ a to r S e r v ic e is b a c k . B a c k w it h th e s a m e p e rs o n a l a tte n tio n y o u r e c e iv e d b e fo r e th e “ b rea k -u p ." N e e d a s sista n ce in p la c in g lo c a l o r lo n g d ista n ce calls w ith ­ in y o u r M o u n ta in B e ll c a llin g area? Just d ia l “ 0.” O u r o p e r ­ a to rs a re th e r e w it h a fr ie n d ly * v o ic e a n d fr ie n d ly h e lp t o m a k e a ll y o u r c a lls easier. (J Mountain B el A U S W ES T COM PANY -Answers: N IGH TCLU B SOUTHWEST'S M OST UNIQUE NIGHTCLUB s e n i © 1987 Mountain Bell o r DONT GET BLOWN AWAY BY UfE AFTER COLLEGE!!!! NOW . . . WE A R E SE RVIN G A N E X C R I S I T E I T A L I A N E RIEFET COME TO SENIOR SEMINAR, AND FIND OUT ABOUT LIFE IN THE “REAL” WORLD!! FREE ADMISSION!!! ALL STUDENTS WITH AN ASU I.D. ARE WELCOME!! M O N D A Y N IG H T F O O T B A L L 931 .O O d o m e s t ic b e e r w it h s h o lfa s p e c is t ls w h e n y o u r te a m S>1. 5 0 m a r g a r i t a s a ll nicÉ|p|h08P*í>- T R O P IC A L T O jU D A Y H a p p y H o u r a ll n '9É|¡llPn SJ $ 2 . 0 0 lo n g i s l a n c U M j H H M H B H H H M M W E D N E S D A Y C O L L E G E K A 0S S S j w ith th e h o t t e s t a lte rn a tiv e nfltffife 0 J B la ir C h a m b e r s ■ 7 5 $ k o m m is , $ 1 .Q Q C u e r v o s h o t s $ 1 .O O b e e r s , b a llo o n d r o é w it h P S H O c a s h p r iz e s PRESENTATIONS TO INCLUDE: r EDI D A YJjiie! •ESTABLISHING CREDIT, TAKING OUT A LOAN, AND LEARNING HOWTO SAVE. Presented by: TheArizona Bank ' •FINDING THE RIGHT KIND OPINSURANCE FOR GRADUATES. Presented by: McCleve, Johnson &Associates, Inc. •INVESTMENTS. AND BUILDING A PORTFOLIO. Presented by: Waters, Tan&Company •SECRETS OF MOTIVATION AND SUCCESS ON YOUR FIRSTJOB. Presented by: Mr. BillSuedmeyer WHERE: •TEMPE HOLIDAY INN, Apache Room Comer of Apache and Rural Roads SATCD D A Y WHEN: lI D A ^ a n ig h t o n w ith t h e h o t t e ^ v n | e í # Í R m u s ic D J . 8I1 S 1 .00 o f f w e l ^ P i e ' a n d d o m e * S p m -1 O M Ä •5:00 p.m.-5:30 p.m.: Registration and Reception Complimentary Food and Beverages •5:40 p.m.-9:30 p.m.: Presentations By Speakers CALL: •The STUDENT ALUMNI ASSOCIATION at 965-5276 for more information or to RSVP!! --------- happy b e l l i 5 - 8 p.m .— 2 fo r 1 all c o c k ta ils . . . a n d l£ M O N D A Y th ro u g h F R I D A Y 921- » s e c • 41C $. M IL L A V E N « « w e d , o c t .2 1 State Pres» P a g e 19 Wednesday, O ctober 21,1987 Avant garde art world explored in A S U ’s ‘Images in Motion’ By TERRI KENYO N State P ress i The ASU dance department, is once again leaping its way out o f the physical education department and onto the stage at the Dance Studio Theatre. Their newest performance is a rare treat indeed fo r dance lovers, as it is an insight into the avant garde world of the art. “ Im ages in Motion” is a collage o f choreography by ASU’s faculty and various visiting artists. It w ill be presented at 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday in the Physical Education Building Fast. One o f the guest artists to headline the concert is Rem ee Wadleigh. She w ill perform her own Work, a humorous piece called “ The Mean Husband.” The story is based on W adleigh’s experiences with a VW van when she was in Manhatten. Through punctured tires, oil leaks, breakdowns and other mishaps, the van takes on a character o f its own. A t one point the narrator, played by Sybil Huskey, quotes, “ This van was getting to be like a mean husband.” Huskey is the associate professor of dance and assistant dean of the College of Fine-Arts. ' * Though Huskey narrates “ The Mean Husband,” there is no reason to think that her role-in this presentation ends there. Her choreography is represented by “ Tarot Trum p,” which is based on two works by German artist Max Beckmann. Though ambiguous and expressionistic in a macabre way, the sélection explores the concepts o f power and dominance. The characters in this everjt are also of m ajor importance. Dance Department Chairwoman Beth Lessard also contributes to the perform ance.. She puts forw ard a project she is. currently working on, titled “ The Self You Share.” It hinges on the concept that women have several selves : a higher self which which knows a ll and the other selves, which can be detrimental to one’s goals by expressing doubt and fear: The piece is perform ed in silence. On a less abstract scale, Dance Professor Ann Ludwig offers a political satire based on a radio conversation between W illiam F . Buckley and Phyllis Schlafly. Buckley said that he had never met a woman who wanted to be a plumber. The result o f this is titled, “ H ave You E va* M et A Woman Who Wanted to Be Pope?” And, lastly, from the fa r-o ff SU N Y Binghamton, Trudy Cobb Dennard brings two works. Dennard says, “ In these I GRAND OPENING ¡ I 390/lb. Wash & Fold - Reg. 60$/lb. i FR E E DRY WITH W ASH WITH TH IS C O U P O N N o w th ru O c t. 31, .1987 82 7 S . R u ra l • T e m p e *9 6 8 -1 4 3 5 Jm tim es of sophisticated w arfare and weapons that could destroy the world, we should concentrate on waging peace.” Thus, her first pièce is entitled ‘'W age Peace,” and it opposes Reagan’s Star Wars program. Its impact on geopolitics is still undecided. , Dennard’s second work is called “ Pass the Hat, Sistahs,” a SUSIES WIGS 535 E. Southern Ave., Mesa 15%DISCOUNTW/THISAO•968-9262 C o wBn/lina g a E nta ip rt w A T T E N light jazz piece characterizing our relaxed society. Tickets fo r the event are available at Gammage. Parking is available in ASU lots 41 and 42 at M cAllister Avenue between Orange and Lemon. Ticket prices are $5 fo r general admission, and $3 for students and senior citizens. F or m ore ticket information, call 965-3434. T I O N I FIRST TIM E BUYERS | 1987 Y U G O G .V . W IG SPECIAL im D ancers Heidi Clem m ens and Elizabeth Rae take part in “ Images in M otion” at 8 p.m . Thursday in the A S U D ance Studio. B'RECUNING SEATS ^ELECTRIC COOLING FAN iriuu. carpeting ■fOUARTZ HALOGEN UGHI! S'REAR WINDOW DEFROSTER WANTVSWAY BAR IT ¡TER BELTED TIRES B 74 WHEEL NEW SUZUKI SAMURAI'S 4x4 ☆ ☆ INDEPENDENT SUSPENSION UPFRONT DISC BRAKES IT BODY SIDE MOUDINGS VERRONT DISC BRAKES WRACK A PINION STEERING #77554 PRE-O W N ED SUZU KI'S4x 4 1 V f i Jfiv o i SALE PRICE Y U G O V f i. 1«â O 5 0 IN STOCK in 85 PER MONTH NO PAYMENTS H U 1988 • RADIAL TIRES • CUSTOM WHEELS • 4x4 TRANSAXEL • 16 FT. TURNING RADIUS • 13 LITER S.O.H.C. 4 CYL • 8.1 INCH CLEARANCE S U G G E S T E D RETAIL PRICE 14525 SAVES 3 3 5 54190 NO MONEY DOWN AT THIS l v PRICE FROM i '5 9 9 5 'FAMILY TRADITION' Jim, Tax A Hal Earnhardt 5 M IN U T E S F R O M A.S.U . NO BULL ALL UNITS PIUS TAX & LIC WITH APPROVED CREDIT & TERMS YUGO $750 DOW N 115% APR 60 MONTHS SINCE 1951 | \ > | F O R D J T U ^ ^ U Z U K lJ O N BASELINE BETWEEN MILL & RURAL, TEMPE comics Page 20 D o o n e s b u ry MRS. P, I KNOWYOU PM WBR5A 8TTRBUKr ¿uRB TAKTTOGOOUTWITH uBWILL i M zarroHcevou m je x I Geno KNOWMB, - rMsuReweu.MT State Press W e dn esda y, O c t o b e r 2 1 ,1 9 8 7 BY GARRY TRUDEAU I MEAN, I KNOW THATI MARCH TDAPiFFemrr Kerne offish .* ... BUTAREtfT ...ANP ITS TRUB I SOMEUMBSPONTHAVeBOTH SAILS mTHe«meR,THAT THOSBJUSr vReecucHes* I P O N T ALW AYS PLAT WITH / FAR MDB By G A R Y L A R S O N wjyy NEARLY, oem A FULLHouse OFCARPS... / by Berke Breathed BLOOM COUNTY s o m m e clams wem attishsrman 's Be r n wharfs iN eep TRSATSP CONSTANCY IN MY PtSRSSPSCT- UNS, MILO/ ANP FULLY... IM SORRY,BVT .7 LABOR STRIPS ALWAYS \\GWSSMe ~ A RASH. y ' ■-■ WJZP m mms! m fO O R ” £ A ttn STA M P, J 0 V IS 6 6 OPUS*rlHMCÓh I' - , I ¡J I Feb. 22,1946: Botanists create the first artificial flower. Shoe by Jeff MaçNelly by Steve Talkowski JUST KCMJ&IOO P R A W A 0 ÍA M K J&ESÑT MÊAKl YOU èUOUL-P CnoMHtxiiL untaCOZnUlßock LyL’th L % 0 f l& ite A M K « M A V t... by Mike Ritter Ivory Towers JU S T TAKE BEUAM ON NOMO!NO! ONE GATE.1I L L W FÖ RIT, THIS IS EXTÖR MICUAEL, PAL... AS A FRlENP, DONA AS AN B m o Y E B I l KATE, TO© A MATTER OF LIFE OR HUMILIATION... MIKE, 1 I THINK WITHOUT BEUAH OUR TEAM THIS WHOLE HASN'T 60T A P0JÆR/ALL TlllNeiSSICK! SHE WANTS IS ASIMHECKIEi WHERESM3URPW0EW WHERE’S M3ÜR UAAUXtt. \ fOCJTBftM--' THANK W f S R THAT MORAL CLARIFICATION.- Ä H iiM .P T vh .V 5 at o j a W aU v j .uhptv¿ y HahaR é - au., .ANb V