State press V o i 71 N o . 6 •C opyright, State P raia. 1988 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily M onday, A ugust 2 9 , 1988 Tam pa, Arizona Research dominating education, report says By SHERI JOHNSON Stats P ress inadequately prepared students and the conditions of em ployment fo r tem porary faculty. Although the report commends the three universities fo r strengthening admission reqiarem ents to im prove undergraduate education, it points out that steps can be taken to further enhance undergraduate education at ASU and UofA. The report says that the m erit system gives greater rewards to research and u p p e r -d iv is io n and g r a d u a te -le v e l instructors than to teachers and advisors of freshman and sophomore students. Student Regent Patrick McWhortor said undergraduate education at ASU has suffered, but the U niveristy is working to im prove it. “ I know there are a lot of people g r a d u a tin g fr o m A S U w h o a r e n ’ t prepared,” McWhortor said Sunday. “ (But) I think it’s important to recognize that both ASU and U ofA haven’t been blind to the A long-awaited final report from an Arizona Board o f Regents task force blames ASU’S' and U afA’s change in mission statements, which put m ore emphasis on research, public service program s and graduate education, fo r a decline in undergraduate education. “ W e r e m a in u n c o n v in c e d th a t u ndergradu ate education retain s the priority it once held at ASU and U A ,” tbs report from the regents’ Task Force on Excellence, E fficien cy and Competitiveness states. A t N A U * “ q u a lity u n d ergra d u a te e d u c a tio n h as b een th e fo r e m o s t comm itm ent,” according to the report, titled ‘ ‘No Challenge Too Large, No Step Too Sm all.” : v . The task force’s 15-month study sought to identify areas in the state university system / that need improvement. The report w ill be submitted to the regents at a special Sept. 22 situation, “ I applaud the U niversity fo r paying meeting. attention to undergraduate education and “ E ven though th eir m issions h ave realizing how im portant it is to the health of changed over the past three decades . . . the institutiop.” U ofA and ASU must respond affirm atively McWhortor pointed to ASU’s creation of to the public’s demand that undergraduate an honors college, which w ill replace the education receive greater attention and U niversity’s honors program , as a “ step in support,” the report says. . the right direction.” However, it praises the universities’ The U niversity has created an> Academ ic research program s and recommends their Advisem ent Center in Matthews Center and continued support. also has targeted the assessm ent of “ They (research program s) contribute to university program s as steps necessary to the transfer and promotion o f knowledge in im p rove the q u a lity o f undgraduate the classroom , Hie discovery o f new education, McW hortor said. knowledge in the laboratory and the “ Anything that gets m easured gets exploration of new avenues o f aesthetic im proved,” be said. “ Assessment is really expression in the studio and workshop,” important. You have to assess what’s going according to the report. on (in order to make any changes).” The report lists four m ajor obstacles to In addition, the report says freshman and q u ality undergraduate education that sophomore courses with large enrollments include the faculty m erit reward system, show that tiie universities “ have not focused in s u ffic ie n t re so u rce co m m itm en ts. su fficien t resou rces on teach ing the courses.” The report also recommends gradually raising freshman admission standards for in-state residents to match those o f non­ residents. “ Our universities annually adm it a substantial number of students who have, at best, a modest chance fo r success because o f their inadequate preparation fo r the. rigors o f university course work,” the report states. Currently, non-residents must have a G PA of 3.0 or higher for admission, while residents’ G PA must be 2.5 or higher. H ow ever, the rep ort cautions that implementing raised standards without providing program s that aid m inority students would not be “ in the best interest of the state.” Patrick McWhorter Susan Schum an/State Press Daryl McCullick, president o f the A SU Devils Juggling Club, sh ow s o ff one o f the many m aneuvers he h as m astered after eight years o f practice. Students have been able to watch the chib practice on Friday afternoons outside the Language and Literature building. C loset artists form club, bring ta len t to d aylig h t By KAIIILLE NIXON Contributing writer “ You cam e here to throw up. So, throw up!” So then, ASU computational math m ajor D aryl M cCullick ra llies his cohorts and grabs a diabolo to chop an uphill clim b with a behind-the-back. He fe e d s h is p a r t n e r , w h o s n a g s determ inedly, and switches to a shower of doubles and triples with an under-theleg. N o t a g r i s l y s c e n e fr o m a slaughterhouse nor the opening scene of the new “ Nightm are on Elm Street” m ovie, the stage is the lawn in front of the Language and Literature Building Friday afternoons; and McCullick is exhorting his colleagues to juggle. There, members of the ASU D evil’s Juggling Club manipulate diabolos —hourglass-like spinning tops which balance on a string held taut between two sticks. They flin g clubs — lightweight bowling pin-like objects. A lto g e th e r th ey fo rm g ra c e fu l, entrancing arcs and furious, shooting g a lle r y fir in g pattern s to am use th em selves and fa scin a te curious passers-by. McCullick, the club’s president, said he form ed the organization a year ago when he m et co-founder Brian Cim aglia, a senior liberal arts majors practicing on campus and decided to congregate closet jugglers of a ll levels. Turn to JuggHng, page 7 . Tem pe mayor says ticket controversy damaging to city By KRISTI ELLIS State Prase The distribution o f Phoenix Cardinals season tickets to members o f the Temp© City council in exchange fo r the team ’s use o f a parking lot was wrong and has damaged the integrity o f tile city, M ayor H arry M itchell has conceded. “ I apologize on behalf o f the city and the City Council for any actions which m ay have led to the perception that city officials have acted im properly,” M itchell said Friday during a news conference in his office. is The council becam e em broiled in controversy last week when it was revealed that the council traded the use o f a parking lot it leases near Sun D evil Stadium fo r 20 season tickets to Cardinals games. The lot was to be used by members o f the Cardinals and the press. The council’s action was further called into question when it was reported that the c ify ’s lease with Southern P a cific Transportation Co., the owner o f the parking lot, prohibited subleasing. M itchell said the city has sent Southern P a cific a letter that T u m to T lckats, paga 8 . J#- " T > ’ FEES FORUM; WEATHER T * rM J / asks the company to perm it subleasing. The council has received numerous letters from citizens expressing concern over the council using public funds fo r private purposes, M itchell said. “ There has been a m isinterpretation because the tickets w ere distributed to individual councilmen. It looked like the only reason was fo r personal gain,” he said. Despite what M itchell said was an appearance o f im propriety in the method o f distribution, he said the council has not broken the law. Some shower activity is possible with high temperatures reaching around 103. Lows should continue to be In the low 80s. ' Associated Students has invited state legislative candidates to come on campus and discuss student issues. The political forum will be held Thursday in the MU Pima Room. Page 6. Classified......................... Comics............................ Entertainment................. Opinion.................... ....... Sports............................ Today............. .......... . ........... . . . . . . . . 2 1 ........... ...16 ......... ......1 1 ................. 4 ..................17 ......:........ , 3 w orld/nation in b rief Jets collide at air show; 31 killed, 100 injured RAM STEIN, W est Germany (A P ) — Three Italian fighter jets collided at an a ir show at a U.S. m ilitary base Sunday, and (me crashed into a crowd o f spectators and exploded. O fficials said 31 people w ere killed and at least 100 injured, many of them children. H ie ZDF television network showed a giant ball o f fire pngnlfing the spectators, who ran in panic with their clothes burning and their hair singed. It showed cars and trucks in flam es at the Ram stein A ir Base 60 m iles southwest of Frankfurt. Some people stood in shock as a thick cloud of smoke enveloped them, and others ran toward the scene to try to give first aid. The network also showed the plane as it veered toward the horrified crowd out of control before bursting into a ball of flam es that appeared to be at least 100 fe e t high. The network said the other two planes crashed away from the crowd o f several hundred people. The three jets w ere part o f a 10-plane Italian A ir Force demonstration team , “ Frecce Tricolori,” that was flyin g 65 yards above the ground, ZD F said. “ The Germans have announced . . . that 31 people died,” Ramstein A ir Base spokesman Doug M oore told The Associated Press by telephone. He said the dead included the three pilots, and “ those dead on the ground are a m ix of civilian and m ilitary.” O fficials said at least 100 people w ere injured, many of them seriously. “ A large number has serious burns,” said p o lic e sp o k esm a n W illi H o lla e n d e r in n ea rb y Kaiserslautern. Ira q i counterpart Tariq Aziz, U.N. officials said. “ It is not a deadlock and it is moving, F r®“ c®^ Giuliani, spokesman fo r Perez de Cuellar, told reporters. “ The secretary-general would like the talks to move faster but there is no sense o f frustration, dism ay o despondency.” . .. Iran ’s officia l Islam ic Republic News Agency said Perez de Cuellar suggested setting up an im partial committee to identify the aggressor in the Iran-Iraq war and to release its findings by the end o f November. ' , . The report, monitored in Nicosia, was confirmed by W estern diplomats. Iran has insisted that Iraq be branded the aggressor. Iraq invaded Iran in September 1980 after border skirm ishes. _■ , , . IR N A said the three-man committee would be headed Dy a m em ber of the International Court of Justice in the Hague, the Netherlands. Iran and Iraq each would send a liason officer, it said. Prison escapee kills self after 12-hour standoff PO RTLAN D , Ore. (A P ) — A federal prison escapee who held his estranged w ife's boyfriend in a closet for more than two days and later took the woman hostage killed himsAif early Sunday after a 12-hour standoff, officials Iran accuses Iraq of stalling peace talks in 8-year w ar G EN EVA (A P ) — Iran accused Ira q Sunday of stalling peace talks and said the negotiations to end their eightyear w ar “ could drag on fo r years.” The two countries resumed talks after a one-day break “ fo r reflection,” but both sides remained fa r apart o ver the disputed Shatt-al-Arab w aterw ay and other key points. Ira q accused Iran o f blocking the peace process by “ m a k in g groundless accusations” against Baghdad. Sunday’s talks began with separate consultations between U.N. Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar and Iranian Foreign M inister A li Akbar Velayati and his Ï said. Both hostages escaped without injury shortly after electricity and gas to the house were shut off, the Multnomah County S h eriffs Department said. Later, Herbert Lam ar Weeks, 47, was found dead in the garage of the house, an apparent victim of carbon monoxide poisoning, according to a news release from the department. Weeks had kept police at bay since Saturday afternoon when Weeks’ w ife, M arilyn, 40, telephoned a friend, who believed something was wrong and notified the sh eriffs department, sh eriffs spokesman Bart Whalen said. Deputy U.S. Marshal Shaun Means said Weeks had tied M rs. Weeks’ boyfriend, identified by sheriff’s deputies as Roddy Bergsma, 47, and placed him in a closet Thursday. Mrs. Weeks apparently camé home Saturday afternoon and also was held against her w ill, Means said. Sheriff’s spokesman Jim Davis said a divorce had been pending between Weeks and his w ife. W hile a deputy was sent to the Weeks’ residence, a sh eriff’s dispatcher telephoned the house and Weeks told her he was heavily arm ed and had a bomb. E M D IS -O fe te n f- STUDENT DISCOUNTS SCHWINN B ia n c h i TRH C' 0 ISHER /\OUNTAINB iKES 10 SPEEDS From $125°° ALL OAKLEY EYEGLASSES 15% OFF Calm w eather slows fires in Yellowstone National Park YELLOW STONE N A TIO N A L P A R K , W yo. CAP) — a second day of calm weather Sunday in Yellowstone National Park put firefigh ters ahead in their w ar against forest fires and temperatures alm ost down to freezing slowed flames in Montana. “ Basically, things are pretty calm because the weather is giving us a break,” fire inform ation o fficer Sue Consolo in Montana, said Fires also continued burning in forests and grassland in Idaho, Oregon, Washington and Utah. Yellowstone officials said the fires that had charred about 450,000 acres o f the park had grown little from Saturday. Park officials decided to close the elegant Lake Hotel nearly a month early because o f a dram atic drop in the number o f tourists visiting Yellowstone. Sdme other hotels remained open. The W olf Lake blaze, about fiv e m iles west of the worldfamous Old Faithful geyser, rem ained stable overnight, said park spokeswoman Marsha K arle. That fire is the northeastern end o f the 85,400-acre North Fork fire. Polish leader says strikes may bring governm ent firings WARSAW, Poland (A P ) — Polish leader Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski on Sunday called fo r national reconciliation and said top government officials m ay be fired fo r failing to doai with the strongest w ave o f strikes since 1981. Solidarity leader Lech W alesa was slightly injured in a scuffle with police. Troops blocked about 400 protesters trying to march on the strikebound Lenin shipyard in Gdansk, where W alesa founded the independent union federation iH 1980. T alks ended a stubborn mine strike in the south, but 10 strikes continued at ports, shipyards, factories and one mine. There w ere no reports of police attempts to dislodge workers in occupation strikes. Solidarity estim ated about 8,500 people still were occupying workplaces, striking f o r . higher pay and legalization of Solidarity, which was crushed with the imposition of m artial law in 1981 and outlawed in 1982. Jaruzelski, the communist party leader, severely criticized the party’s hand-picked governm ent fo r failing to deal with building economic and political tensions before they got out of control in the strikes, which began Aug. 16. A re you a hard w orking, sales i oriented people , uavm uoroan, The S tale Press Is the only newspaper exclusively pubWWi“ «s p o r t r R p p n n T tp c r on „ lo r and circulated on Ih e ASU cam pus. The nswe fn o v»»™ in S p h iL ' ^PORTERS. Gary Jackson, Dean Gyorgy, Christ- published In this newspaper are riot necessarily those of the me rin tey . ASU adm inistration, faculty, staff o r student body. S tata P i t t » _________ Monda&Augustjgtjggg___________________ __________________________________ ‘Cap. Bush’ botches first command decision Finally. He fe lt righteous. Clear the decks, stand tall and sic the dogs on a ll who had mocked him. Especially the women, g n d a m n it, for some reason they w ere voting against him, or trying t o .. . . L et m e tell you how it worked, in those years. To get into thè National Guard, you either had to be a top draft choice in the N F L or a C student with a rich grandfather. Yeah, that was Quayle. He had a rich grandfather and was a number two draft choice, He went one w ay and I went the other, except that I failed m y draft physical. A month or so later, on opening day against the Dolphins, I was a string w ide receiver in the National Football L ea gu e. . . We had two other hot-rod draft choices that year. They w ere both starters and they w ere both members o f the National Guard. H ell, it w as norm al! E very team in the league owned two or three slots in the Guard, so they could protect their top draft choices from going to Vietnam. And nobody went, rem em ber? Except maybe a few guys from the taxi squad and some free agents. How many professional football players charged up Hamburger H ill? How many rich kids? How many senators’ sm s? Not many. Hunter S. Thompson North American Syndicate Even Patrick Buchanan rolls his eyes back in his head at the thought of a Dan Quayle presidency. That is a profoundly disturbing thought at any price. Like betting 800 to one that insects w ill not inhabit the world in your life tim e .. . It was one o f those options nobody wanted to talk about. R oger Ailes, the man credited with the concept o f the New Nixon, called it silly, and Bush refused to comment. He had m ade his choice privately, he said; and i f it looked like the work of a pim ply teen-age boy on his first g ig with a computer dating service, so what. He was, after all, The Captain. And the captain’s word is law on the open ocean. F o r the first tim e in his life George Bush had real power: it was tangible, it was leverage, it was the currency o f em p ire. . . and it went to his head. He got so high mi it that not even James Baker could reach him. And some o f the people around him complained he was just like a 94-year-old woman who had just smoked her first pipeful of marijuana. He was a w arrior, by God, he had crushed them — a ll those bastards who had called him a wim p and laughed at him, a ll o f them w ere gone now: Dole, Kemp, Robertson, Big A1 and crazy Patrick, Richard Nixon and Ed M eese___ The list was long. That rich punk DuPont made fun of him about taxes and D ole called him a liar. Even B arry Goldwater said he was phony. D avid Stockman was gone too, that treacherous little creep, along with Donald Regan and the swinish Larry Speakes. They had a ll crossed him in those years after m agic was gone, and they had a ll passed from the scene. W /NW TAÛflt (HlU>...WAT$ TOURNAWï, uwf& ia ? NATIONAL6üARD, PRauooFir. S»R. the whole Bush-Quayle machine can’t handle the sim plest question. Reagan would have la u gb ed ttoff by now. Just a shrug and a sm irk on his walk to the heli-pad. What would these two dilettante hacks do with a real problem? . the whole Bush-Quayle m achine can ’t handle the simplest question. Reagan would have laughed it off by now. Just a shrug an d a smirk \*n his w alk to the heli-pad. ’ But that was not the point it the squabble over little Danny Quayle, sometimes known as Bush Lite. No. The issue hare is competence. Just like Dukakis and Bush keep saying. Why beat on the National Guard when w e are talking about two m ajor-party candidates fo r the presidency o f the United States, at a critical tim e in our history, and the pair o f them can’t even cope with a standard-brand cheap-shot political accustatien that one o f them once joined the National Guard? Who cares Which one it was? Or why ? The real problem is that the combined talents of According to Newsweek and CNN, the Bu h-Quayle show wowed so many women that 10 M illion o f them changed their minds overnight and became Republicans again. The alleged “ gender-gap” closed so fast after the debacle in the Superdome that the “ women’s vote” is no longer a factor in the presidential election. George picked up 17 points when he put that newt cm the ticket. M y friend Charlie Pace in the French Quarter is so depressed by it that he swore he was going to castrate him self. “ They acted like le m m in g s ,” he said. “ It was like those old black-and-white film s o f the first Frank Sinatra concerts, where they ripped o ff flieir clothes and went totally crazy in public.” Maybe so. I have never believed these numbers anyway. They are no m ore reliable than the tip sheets they hand out under the gandstand at the cock fights. I f the “ women’s vote” turned to je lly at the sight of Danny Quayle, w e are a ll in fo r a long w inter and the future is full o f bad craziness . . . F or now, I would like to hear from anyone who would like to give m e Dukakis and nine points. I can cover alm ost any numbers that come in, at those numbers ; and Jack Nicholson says he w ill cover anything I can’t “ Women are crazy,” he said. “ But they’re not dumb. Quayle looks like one o f those blow-dried hustlers you see parking cars at the Whiskey a-Go-Go.” M y own quick fix on Novem ber is that George w ill lose and it w ill be Danny that drags him down. H ie women w ill get a grip on them selves and Jesse w ill deliver California. George w ill whimper and Whine a ll the w ay to Pism o Beach and by Groundhog Day his w ife w ill be working as a part-tim e cashier at the O’F a rrell Theater in San Francisco. iä b u r B a s b ' P r o b le m : E le m e n ts o f E c o n o m e t r ic s ; M&Ï81S CISCiîïTS 8»#SM The The, BASIC language /ie c h a n îc s from Texas Instruments, and statistics cartridges are two o f five optional application sqftware available. COLLEGE PHYSICS Advanced Engineering MÁlfeérnirties The TT74 BASICALC™ is a BASIC calculator that’s alert an advanced scientific calculator. In efiect, it's two calculators in one. In its B ASIC mode, you have direct, two-keystroke access to 41 B ASIC commands, as well as 10 user-definable keyswhich can make doing your coutsework a basic snap. Switch to its calculator mode and you’re armed with 70 scientific functions to help you easily solve those tough technical problems. And tire large, color-coded keys, QWERTY keyboard and separate numeric keypad make it easier to use than any other programmable calculator. Your BAS1CALC specs:. *8K RAM expandable to 16K R A M .. • 113BASIC keyword set. • Optional software cartridges for chemical engineering, math, statistics and finance • Optional PASCAL language cartridge. • Optional printer and cassette interface. Stop by your bookstore and see both sides o f the TI-74 BAS1CALC for yourself. Either way, itTl blow you away. Texa s^ In s t r u m e n t s ™ Trademark o f Tocaslnstrum ents Incorporated © 198 8T I. Stete ftw« 1988 Political forum will bring state legislative candidates to ASU By KELLY PEARCE Suite Press In an effort to send a m essage to state legislators that students really do vote, Associated Students w ill sponsor a political forum Thursday that w ill allow legislative candidates to explain their platform s on issues that affect ASU. “ We need to said a clear m essage that we do care,” said ASASU President John Fees, who is helping to organize the event. “ Traditionally, (state legislators) haven’t been as aware of student issues as they should be. They cannot afford to ignore us. “ This is a great opportunity fo r students to become aware o f the candidates.” The forum w ill begin at 11 a.m . Thursday in the MU Pim a Room. It is a part o f a new ASASU P olitical Forum program titled, “ Students A re Voting Everyw here in 1988,” which encourages students to vote this year. During the forum, in which 25 senate and house candidates from M aricopa County districts are expected, candidates w ill be a llo tte d th ree m inutes to speak on university equity funding, giving voting powers to the student who sits on the Arizona Board o f Regents, and the role of financial aid. House candidates w ill speak from 11 a.m. to noon, and senate candidates w ill speak from noon to 1 p.m. A fter presentation o f platform s, students are invited to question the candidates. A booth w ill be set up fo r unregistered voters to register fo r the Sept. 13 prim ary. The general election is Nov. 8. ASASU Activities Vice President Todd Martensen said he is excited about the forum. >' “ P o litic a l aw areness is im portant, especially for students. This forum w ill give people the opportunity to listen and learn, he said. Jennifer Martin, director of the ASASU Political Union, said the event w ill be educational. “ We want students to realize that these candidates have a direct affect on ASU,” she said. “ We want to get students involved, and I feel they should take the tim e to com e.” Martin and Martensen said they hope to hold a sim ilar event before the general election in November. Todd M artensen Dukakis welcomed at Bernstein concert, greets Shultz LENO X, M ass' (A P ) — M ichael Dukakis received an enthusiastic welcom e Sunday at a concert to celebrate composer Leonard Bernstein’s 70th birthday and spoke b riefly to Secretary of State George Shultz, who also attended the event. The Dem ocratic presidential nominee was spending the weekend at his father-in-law’s cottage in nearby Tyringham in advance of a two-day gubernatorial visit to western Massachusetts. He arrived at Tanglewood, a favorite concert location, for the Bernstein celebration after attending a barbecue at the home of fam ily friends. He was accompanied to both events by his w ife, Kitty. Dukakis was cheered as he walked through the crowd to his box and patiently signed autographs as hundreds swarmed around the seats to catch a glim pse of the governor. Dukakis rose from his seat and walked to a nearby aisle to greet Shultz and his w ife, who own a summer home here in tiie Berkshire Hills. Shultz and Dukakis shook hands and spoke briefly before the secretary proceeded to his nearby box. One woman who fought her w ay through the crowd to get Dukakis’ autograph rah up to Shultz and got his on the same piece o f paper. The curious spectators quickly took their seats as the concert by the Boston Symphony Orchestra began. It was part of a four-day celebration m arking Bernstein’s birthday. Dukakis was to tour several western Massachusetts communities Monday and Tuesday as part o f his annual summer visit to the region. He also planned to use the area, which is rebounding econom ically, fo r two national economic speeches. He was returning to Boston Tuesday night and departing for a campaign swing through western states Wednesday. He flew to western Massachusetts on Saturday after the March on Washington marking the 25th a n n iv e r s a r y of a civil rights march led by Martin Luther King Jr. a tte n d in g DWBDCVEK B£ O LD TOW N I t H L f enjoy the small town charm of these fine Old Town Tempo businesses FREE PAIR OF SUNGLASSES C H A N G IN G HANDS BOOKSTORE we have watches N EW & U SED BO O KS 5=5 B w ith any purchase that tell time we have watches that don’t tell time 'ch oose from special selection we have watches you guess at the time! 4 1 4 M ilL ,T e m p e Aritona85281 9664)203 501 S . 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A self-proclaim ed juggling exhibitionist, McCullick said he displays his talents, honed over eight years of practice, in the annual “ Best of Phoenix” festivals and in fairs around the Valley. McCullick is notorious for an incident last year. He lost control o f a torch during his act in the MU and ignited a m ovie screen, scaring the audience and administration so much that jugglers now are prohibited from juggling fire on campus. “ It’s really not dangerous because we use a cold fire which ignites from fastcombustible fuels,” he said. And M cCullick’s clubmembers think highly o f him. “ D aryl is an inherent show-off,” joked Darin Kraetsch, a junior justice studies m ajor. “ Just think what this’ll look like on m y resume, especially if I can become an o fficer.” What does Kraetsch, who acts like In .a corner Out of the juggling danger zone, graduate zoology student and club vice president Ruth Stanford was cooling o ff a fter an extended routine o f cascading clubs. Juggling torches o f tire is Stanford’s biggest thrill because “ it makes a lot of noise. It’s bright, and it’s very scary.” Tiffan y Stewart, a freshman tine arts m ajor, said she practices juggling so she can someday prove to her grandparents that she can ju ggle their go lf balls, which she used to ju ggle quite unsuccessfully when she was a little girl. B ill Hansen, a junior business m ajor, said that, no m atter what he happens to be juggling, he is “ startin’ to o.d. on this stuff.” The attraction to danger and m ystery has kept ju ggling alive fo r centuries. A c c o r d in g to th e W o r ld B o o k E n c y c lo p e d ia , p a in tin g s o f a n cien t Egyptian jugglers grace tomb walls, and evidence shows that court jesters of the Middle Ages amused royal subjects with their am azing feats. “ It (ju gglin g) is relaxing because i t takes concentration but not a whole lot of thought,” she said. Not one to be outdone, comedian W.C. Fields churned juggling as one of his diversified talents. comedian B ill M urray, like to ju ggle most? “ W omen and checkbooks,” he said playfully. Kraetsch said he sees juggling as a clever w ay to m eet “ chicks.” K ra e ts c h has d ev o ted h im s e lf to maintaining what he describes as a “ fam ily tradition” and practices the craft with his mother in her kitchen. “ M y mom loves it except when I do raw eggs. That scares her.” Suddenly McCullick yells, “ Ready? Up, dow n!” and yet another shower o f orange­ sized juggling bulls streams through space, connecting partners with colorful arrows. A common question o f would-be jugglers is, “ W ell, how can I learn to ju ggle?” Although W.C. F ield s is no longer available fo r comment, circus legend Jack W iley offers some tips in his book, “ Basic Circus Skills.” According to W iley’s book, the juggling student must practice at least 15 minutes per day, and concentrate on releasing the objects at waist level and catching them at chest level while never watching his hands. Juggling equipment can range from a set of three clubs, which costs from $20 to $60, and a kit o f devil sticks — a pair of thin plastic sticks held parallel at waist level used to propel a thicker rubber wand into end-over-end patterns. Cost is about $20. McCullick and his cohorts, who use the latest in juggling apparatus, are somewhat secretive about the club’s activities. “ You have to be a crim inal to be in the juggling club,” he said, laughing. PRESS C lassified A dvertising It’s only a phone call away! 965-6735 or 965-6731 Judy or Peggy It’s old home week on Mill Avenue! G ee, it’s th a t tim e of y e a r a g a in .,.w h e n sch o o l starts and everyo n e is s c ra m b lin g to get o rg a n ize d fo r a n o th e r fu n ye a r in acad em ia. W e ’d like to o ffe r you a s im p le so lu tio n to scram b lin g : downtown Tem pe. It’s ju s t a fe w blocks n o rth w est o f b u ild in g s give d o w n to w n th e "O ld T o w n " T e m p e q u a lity . •Sort o f a h o m ey fe e lin g ...s o m e th in g y o u d o n ’t g e t at a m att a sho ppin g c e n te r. A fte r a fe w visits d o w n to w n , y o u ’ll p ro b a b ly g e t to kn o w a fe w o f th e sho p o w n ers... w h a t a g re a t w ay to m eet n ew people! cam p u s...a ten m in u te w a lk o r five m in utes b y bike. W ith over th ree h u n d red retail businesses to serve you , y o u ’ll find e v e ryth in g y o u n eed to g et re a d y fo r s c h o o L .fro m fre s h b a k e d c o o k ie s to p e rs o n a l c o m p u te rs ...a n d everything in betw een. B ack to th e p art a b o u t e n te rta in m e n t. T h e re ’s a lo t of it. E s p ecially ja zz. T h e re a re als o a fe w w a te rin g holes and n ite clu b s. Y o u c a n even d o h a p p y h o u r o n a p atio . Just kee p y o u r e y e s a n d e a rs o p e n to w h a t’s h a p p e n in g d o w n to w n ...a n d en jo y it. You p ro b a b ly w a n t to d e c o ra te y o u r n ew a b o d e . D o it w ith style and im a g in a tio n ...d o it d o w n to w n . S tart w ith a fe w posters an d fin is h 'it u p w ith a n e w d e s k ...o r even a n ew bed! W h e n th e o ld tu m m y is s c re a m in g fo r so m e n o u ris h ­ m ent; h ea d n o rth . D o w n to w n o ffe rs a fa b u lo u s v a rie ty o f g o o d fo o d ...fro m a J u m b o J a c k to a fre sh d eli san d w ich to fre sh s e a fo o d ... a n d a lo t in b etw een . T ry lunch d o w n to w n to d a y a n d g e t acq u ain te d w ith y o u r neighbors. W h at ab o u t y o u r n ew fall w a rd ro b e ? From shoes to sandals; fro m shorts to fo rm a l; fro m T -s h irts to b a th in g suits to th e latest fashions; fro m sun g lasses to je w e lry ; fro m p rivate lab els to d e s ig n e r g e a r...a n d beat o f all, a g re a t selectio n . Just try it o n c e ...d o w n to w n w ill b ec o m e a habit, v Y o u ’re w o n d e rin g a b o u t e n te rta in m e n t. T h e fre e e n te rta in m e n t lies in th e b e a u ty o f d o w n to w n . Period. It’s, n e w ly b ric k e d stre e ts , fa c e lifte d e x te rio rs a n d n e w A n d d o n ’t fo rg e t th e service retailers...ban ks, c o p y c en ters , travel ag e n ts , law yers, salons, etc. T h e y ’re w a itin g to serve you . T h e M ill A v e n u e M e rc h a n ts A ssociation w o u ld like to in vite y o u to visit c o n v e n ie n t d o w n to w n T e m p e an d m eet som e frie n d ly faces. ^ ^ e e ^ fla i so o n ! Full Selection F u ll tim e A s ti s tu d e n ts Footprint Sandals S ize s and preferred colors for m en, w om en, children. C om plete repair service. 2 0 % OFF A L L SERVICES w ith p a rticip a tin g s ty lis ts A ls o o ffe rin g : Manicures & Pedicures 829-1267 414 S. Mill Ste. 214 Expires 9-3-88 © Birfcanatock 1968 /ARIZONA SHORTS •& 1 «SPORTS "Y o u r s o re fe e t s o lu tio n " F o o tw o r k s P lu s 398 S. M ill, Ste. 100 966-3139 n ia ij n/rchase !**- . s/i v id u a / event hefiefs a t F R E E " S p a r k y " k e y c h a in w ith *2 0 °° p u r c h a s e E xp. 10/1/88 (B rin g C o u p o n ) h a lf p r i c e . pA M H A ô ê * K t « r - T v r T h *e A y t s Stete PfEM ^ n daw ;A igu st2^988 Page 8 Police looking for D e n im man suspected of kidnapping fiancee By MIKE BURGESS State Press Tem pe police are looking for a Denver man who detectives believe kidnapped his ex-fiancee from a Tem pe home Saturday. S askia U rd a n ivia , 22, w as a p p a ren tly d ra g ged “ scream ing, fighting, kicking and claw ing,!’ by two men from a home at 2611E. Geneva D rive at about 9:12 a.m ., said Tem pe police Sgt. M ike Palm er. He said the men, who w ere unarmed, went to the home and dragged her into a rented blue 1988 Chevrolet. Urdanivia and the vehicle have not been found, Palm er said. P olice are searching for Jose Benavente, 26, of Denver, who flew with his father to Phoenix Saturday and are believed to have tried to get Urdanivia to return to Denver with them, Palm er said. Guillerm o Benavente, 54, was arrested at Sky Harbor A irport about 10:30 a.m . Saturday in connection with the kidnapping, Palm er said. He apparently was trying to purchase a ticket to Denver, Palm er added. Palm er said U rdanivia had lived in Denver where she was engaged to the younger Benavente but changed her mind on the engagement and moved to Tem pe, where she was staying with a friend. Ih other incidents: •Two men w ere injured critically Saturday and four others suffered minor injuries in a two-car collision at Terry Lane and Baseline Road. Fidel Ramos Arm ejo, 26, 1032 W. Yale D rive, Tempe, is listed in critical condition at Maricopa County Medical Center, said Tem pe police Sgt. Vem Hull. Three passengers in Arm ejo’s car also were injured. Silvia Arm ejo, 2.4, Alex Arm ejo, 3, and Christopher Arm ejo, 2 weeks, are listed in good condition at Maricopa County Medical Center. Jose Francisco Rodriguez, 35, 1632 E. Chambers St., Phoenix, was airlifted to Maricopa County M edical Center where he is listed in critical condition. Nabor Rivera Enemas, 21, 511 E . Roeser Road, Phoenix, the driver of the vehicle Rodriguez was riding in, suffered minor injuries and was taken to Tem pe St. Luke’s Hospital where he was treated and released. Encinas was later arrested and charged with aggravated assault and driving under the influence of alcohol, Hull said. Hull said the accident occurred at about 1:47 p.m. when Encinas’s car crossed over a center line and crashed head-on into Arm ejo’s car. •Three people w ere arrested Saturday in connection with the theft of (250 of food from a supermarket, police said. The trio entered the Safeway store at 926 E . Broadway at about 6:40 p.m. and allegedly stole some meat, liquor and police report other goods before one o f the suspects pointed a black power drill at an em ployee who follow ed them out o f the store, said Tempe police Sgt. Vem Hull. Hull said Robert N ealy and Louis N ealy, both 43, and Denise Nealy, 24, a ll o f 615 S. Hardy D rive, w ere arrested in connection with the incident minutes later at 1750 E. University D rive. AD w ere charged with arm ed robbery. •A white Ford Escort was stolen early Sunday from a parking lot behind Hayden Hall, ASU police said. The vehicle, worth $7,130, was le ft in the parking lot with its engine running. D E P A R T M E N T O F IN T E R C O L L E G IA T E A T H L E T IC S s tu d €KTSi ond n s iS iS S S t - o w H in n t ii □ USHERS □ □ T-SHIRT SECURITY f > OVER 300 POSITIONS AVAILABLE FOR ALL ASU ATHLETIC EVENTS and PHOENIX CARDINAL GAMES Pick up job referral form at Student Em ploym ent, 2nd Floor, Student Services Building. Ask for job referral # 2 1 1H for Ushers and #21 OH for T-Shirt Security. firfw s h m« « “ <“ b e s e " ed GET G REAT LO O K S! " W E ’RE A Z’S #1 VO LU M E SCOOTER DEÂLER!” ESTABLISHED OVER 2 5 YEARS from 1 1 0 ,1 2 6 ,35m m o r O ise C o lor P rint Film (C -41). E-6 35m m S lid es. Coupon m ust accom pany order. N ot good w ith any other coupon/otter/discount. T H E G E R O N IM O 8 0 4 E . U n iv e rs ity ..... ................6 2 2 -0 5 2 1 T h e E l C on M a ll. ........... 326-1669 515 E . G ra n t R d . ..6 2 2 -0 7 4 0 I Coupon Good Thru 12/31/88 r r Just imagine a restaurant where fresh ingredients and fast service can be had at great prices... Fajita Prima FEA TU RIN G G REAT FAJITAS Beef or Chicken Y ou ’ll experience a taste above all rest Cornerstone M all ^ ' $699. •G reat on Gas •Low Insurance •Easy Maintenance •Easy Parking •B ring in your ASU I.D. fo r Discounts "B ring us your best deal & we’ll beat it” SAME DAY FINANCE Com er of Rural and University M o n .-F ri.................... . 8 - 9 Sat .................. 8 - 6 Sun...... ..1 Q -6 W e serve beer & wine coolers! “A S U ’s Closest Dealer" Take Out Available 921-1230 Fajita Prima w estern Honda of S cottsdale "ONLY ■“ 6 7 1 7 E. McDowell Rd. 9 9 4 -8 4 0 0 5 MIN. AWAYr MCDOWELL / State Press Page 9 Monday, Augutt 29,1988 Zoning change to allow Cards training home in Tempe By KRISTI ELLIS State Press The Tem pe City Council has unanimously approved a zoning change that w ill allow the Phoenix Cardinals’ training facility to be built in south Tempe, despite strong opposition from some residents upset with the council’s dealings with the team. The facility, to be located on 14 acres o f city-owned land at northeast corner of Warner Road and Hardy D rive, got an initial OK when the council changed the zoning of the fa cility’s future home from an agricultural district to an industrial district. Discussion of thé ordinancè change was overshadowed by complaints from the public that the city should abstain from approving development until controversy surrounding the Cardinals and the council is resolved. “ I would ask that you abstain from any further costs, development or zoning until the suit is resolved,” said Tickets________ Continued from pege 1 . “ I feel very strongly that the original intent for obtaining the tickets and the method for accomplishing this were both legal and ethical,” he said. M itchell said the tickets w ere to be used as a tool to promote the economic development of the city. Asked if the council should give the tickets back and demand cash from the Cardinals fo r use o f the lot, Mitchell said there was nothing wrong with accepting the tickets and using them for dignitaries and economic development. He added that stadiums owned by municipalities and counties generally hold seats for cities. The Arizona Board of Regents is the ultim ate authority of Sun D evil Stadium. The attorney general’s office is conducting an inquiry to determine if the council violated the state’s open meeting law. ' “ I am confident that the attorney general w ill find no violation. Thé decision was not made behind closed doors,” Mitchell said. A t the next council meeting, M itchell w ill make a proposal calling for Tempe to hand over the 20 Cardinals tickets to the Tem pe Community Council. The community council is an independent, non-profit agency which acts as the city’s inform ation/referral center. It is governed by a 30-member board o f directors representing a cross-section of Tempe residents. The community council w ill be asked to develop guidelines for the distribution and use of the tickets, M itchell said. The city w ill ask the community council for tickets on an “ asneeded” basis, and tickets w ill be given to the city only for officia l city activities, he added. Tickets not used by the city w ill be distributed to human service agencies such as Valley B ig Brothers and Sisters, the Boys and Girls clubs, the handicapped and low-income senior citizens. A press release with the names o f those receiving tickets would be sent out each week, Mitchell said, adding that he hopes the proposal “ w ill restore the public’s confidence in its elected officials,” • developer Gerald Anderson, who has filed a suit against the council that contends the city’s plan to use public money to build the $6.5 m illion fa cility is illegal. Anderson also said that the council faces a possible conflict of interests because the city accepted “ gifts” in the form of 20 season tickets from the Cardinals in exchange for use o f a parking lot west o f Sun D evil Stadium. Tem pe M ayor H arry M itchell apologized Friday for the ticket plan a id said the tickets w ill be distributed through a non-profit organization. The attorney general’s office is investigating the ticket deal. “ I don’t think you’re in a position to objectively make a decision in something like this,” Anderson said. The council members declined to comment on Anderson’s remarks. Other residents expressed concern about the city continuing the fa cility’s development in the midst of controversy. T don’t think in any way, shape or form , you should be doing anything because you are being subjected to a lawsuit that might negate anything you do here anyway,” resident Ken VanDoren said. He charged that the city changed the zoning to benefit a private interest with public money. “ I think it is wrong fo r you to participate at this level with any private business. It’s wrong to ask taxpayers to subsidize any business,” VanDoren said. Tem pe resident David Dickermann criticized the council, saying a trade arrangement like the tickets scandal should be conducted in a public m eeting and that the council should ask the city for permission to make the arrangement. “ Tem pe is a prem ier, model city and I ’d like to see it stay that way. The way it can stay that w ay is to keep everything above the table and not underneath,” he said. The complex the city plans to build includes three practice fields, a two-story office ami a weight room. Welcome Back ASU Tcmpe’s Biggest and Best Selection of Liquor, Wine and Beer. LIQUOR BARN N A .• 9 3 0 E. B roadw ay (Broadway & Rural) 8 9 4 -1 0 6 7 SA FE W A Y U Q U 0 6 6 MM» M O A DW ATBO AD SO U TH ERN RESUM ES Grand Opening *JlZ6t W ok •SAME DAY SERVICE •WRITING & CONSULTING •CLOSEST TO ASU •LAYOUT & DESIGN •LASER PRINTING RESTAURANT M a *d o m ALA CARTE FOOD TO GO U niversity "CORPORATE RESUME" K O LLS WELLS BUSINESS C O M PLE X N .E . C O R N E R U N IV E R S IT Y & 4 8 t h S T . S U IT E 1 0 8 , B U IL D IN G 4 5 5 T E L : 966-0709 20% OFF BUFFET I D ifferent V arieties D aily I B U FFE T: Lunch $ 3 .9 5 I D inner $ 4 .7 5 | TO GO O RDERS 'e y 1 expires 10-31-881 829-1222! GET THE EDGE ON THE COMPETITION Bring in this coupon and ASU I.D. and receive $50 o ff Tuition American Bartenders School and a good resum e VAUEYWIDEJOB PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE NATIONW IDE ASSEEN Vbu’re w a k in g hard for your college degree But at graduation, you may be one o f many people ccm « ■ P p etin gfcr the lew really good openings. 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B asem ent O PEN 7 D AYS M o n -F ri 11 a .m .-9 :3 0 p . m . | | *AII you can eat, one . I person buffet only r ' & A TEACHING BARTENDERS SINCE 1933 STATE PRESS Production Departm ent Typesetting, paste-up, cam era-work & S ^ e d u m C u b im DRAFT PITCHERS 4 -C L O S E N O C O VER N EW GAM E ROOM ! POOL TABLES, VIDEO GAMES, BIG SCREEN T.V. 1120 E. A P A C H E • 967-1129 j Page 10 S t o tt f t * « Monday, H u n d red s protest extradition of co n victed IR A g u errilla BELFAST, Northern Ireland (A P ) — Gangs of youths threw bombs and hijacked trucks in west Belfast fo r a second night Sunday a fter a convicted IR A guerrilla was extradited from the Irish Republic. At least 16 people w ere wounded in the rash o f shootings, bombings and other attacks that police blamed on the Irish Republican Arm y. Police said there w ere no serious injuries. Violence was reported throughout Northern Ireland after Robert Russell, a convicted IR A guerrilla, was extradited to Northern Ireland to com plete a prison term fo r attempted murder and to face new charges o f prison escape. In the neighboring Irish Republic, three police officers w ere hurt Saturday during a clash as a convoy crossed into Northern Ireland. Since Saturday, there w ere 193 attacks on police units, 23 shooting incidents, 17 bombings and 56 hijackings of cars, vans and buses, police said. Some vehicles were set afire, blown up or left with bombs that w ere defused by security forces. They said 11.police officers, one soldier and four civilians w ere wounded in the two days o f violence. Bombings were reported in Belfast, New ry and Londonderry. On Sunday, a bomb was thrown at a police station in m ainly Catholic west Belfast, several vehicles w ere hijacked and many gasoline bombs were thrown at police, said a spokesman fo r the Royal Ulster Constabulary, the province’s police force. However, he said no injuries w ere reported in those incidents. E arlier Sunday, a ca lf grazing on a m ilitary shooting range was killed when it set o ff a bomb apparently meant for locally recruited soldiers who train there. Police said the ca lf probably triggered the bomb by stepping YOGURT SHOP OKS ¿ET1 12-6 ' | L .^1 RaF S iH M U H f e æepe e eesews A l MM 5 5 S ÏÜ ÏS 5 . 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IN T E M P E C E N T E R 9 6 7 -2 08 3 BIRTHDAYS ARE MORE FUN W IIH HAI1M ARK! Trophies C e le b ra te b y g iv in g : •a balloon bou qu et one birthday mylar and 4 colorful balloons •A H allm ark birthday card o f you r c h o ic e ($1.50 valu e) LAQUES i OFF S PRICE ONLY $5.00 ($ 6 .0 0 v a lu e ) with this coupon expires 9-14-88 H U R R Y IN O pen M on-Sat DEANN’S HALLMARK exp.9-30-88 r a r e B U Y IN G S E L L IN G T R A D IN G U n iversity : ititi n I A fin e sele ctio n o f. q u a lity used c lo th in g , a n tiq u es, c o lle c tib le s & je w e lry Mon-Sat RARE DEALS AT ROARING GOOD PRICES l io 10 am - 6 pm 968-6074I 966-3062 State Press Monda^Sugust2^988 % **,/// M E S A N IS S A IN I * Your Nissan and Datsun Service SPORTS PUB Daily: Lunch & Dinner specials Specialists are o fferin g Sunday: Spaghetti with •N is s a n -tra in e d te c h n ic ia n s •G e n u in e N issan p arts •Q u a lity m a in te n a n c e an d re p a ir w o rk •R e a s o n a b le p ric e s 1 0 % SM ITH MESA NISSAN PARTS & SERVICE HOURS 8 30 a m -12:30 p *To be presented a t Expires Dec. 31, 1988 $2.50 Drafts Pitchers ooronass Any Time / Any Day M — -.............. . 1701W. Breadway, Mesa S ervice 8 3 4 -3 3 6 6 FREE 750 i t t S O O I I I l l o f t aH s e r v ic e w o r k tiJV * °L purcJlasf ' m‘ $2.95 B uy 1 g e t 2n d ?nd c o u n te r parts to all A S U student. & staff A S U L 0 . card . Tues.dFrl77^ aa ^ '85? iPp'm. PARTS OPEN SAT. Salad & Garlic Bread Parts 8 3 4 -0 25 5 ------------*— : U n iv e r s ity COMPUTUS SYSTEMS CPU UNIT MONITOR •360K Drive •2S6K Ram Memory •8 Expansion Slots •P arallel Port -H igh Resolution Monochrome 'H ercules Compatible Graphics Card •A llocated Space fo r Hard Drive #A TS tyle ^ s KEYBOARD •1 YEAR WARRANTY • 20 MG HD $299 Parts & Labor • 30 MG HD $329 FREE SOFTW ARE iti u 921-1129 10 0 0 E . A p ache, S u ite 106 T em p e • Ju st east of R ural I Hours 9 -5 M on.-S at. - B L U E H A W A IIA N S • W H m i R U S S IA N S •L O N G IS t A N in t fc TE A S • P O N Y P IT C H E R S • M IL L E R / M IL L E R L IT E Vfc y o u r o rd e r o f C H IC K E N W IN G S every SUNDAY and $ 1.50 Happy H our 7 Days/Week C o v e r MONDAY j j I g f f F ^ 9 6 8 -0 2 4 3 T V s R u ra l & A pache }0 15 w ings - Z.95 7 2 0 30 w ings - 5.25 i; 9 0 45 w ings - 7.35 46 60 w ings - 9 .4 5 ^ ^ T \jf O Q P S H a a ^ v wv & & / / ^ V 1’ W elcom e Back, A S U 831-wdib S 25 Initiation Fee, only $25 a month • NO CO N TR A CTS!f“• W OODSHED j K N D ob son 4 U n iversity f \ 844-SH ED A - '■■■ •15 ,00 0 Square Feet •Air Conditioned •World Gym Pro Shop •Wolffe Tanning Beds »1 3 «« 6 5 Aerobic Ctasseè Weekly! H a irc u ts 5 Minutes from ASU! 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I Expires S e p te m b e r ^ , 1988 State P ro » Page 15 M onday, August 8 9 ,1 9 8 8 Coyote Cafe presents southwestern dishes with style By MATTHEW UNDENBURG is served lavosh, a M iddle Eastern cracker and honey butter. The u n fa ilin g l y p o p u la r bean cakes and Moe Vacha’s The room is sparse, spacious. The w alls are mostly famous chili are always included on the menu. The dishes are unadorned oak and m irror, the flow s are sim ply tiled. otherwise chosen with a careful concern fo r freshness .of a Concoctions o f dried corn tortillas and red chilis dangle from particular m eat, fru it or vegetable. There is a common southwestern theme in each o f the the ceilin g — which is no ceiling at all, only a set o f interconnecting wooden slats. Behind the bar stands a weekly menus. Green chili is often used in situations that copper-laden refrigerator. would ordinarily seem inappropriate. An Alaskan salmon steak, fo r instance, hardly seems at These handsome aspects of the southwest infuse the Coyote home swimm ing in green chili sauce. The sauce, though, is Cafe, 7373 Scottsdale M all, with a sim ple elegance. rem arkably delicate and beautifully compliments the fish. And the restaurant’ s fooid, like its decor, is simple. Dishes Chicken spring rolls would likew ise appear out o f place are not suffocated in heavy sauces or ground-up and pressed aside chilis, but again the peppers' do not overpower, they together — their constituent parts are easily observed. enhance. A piece of fish, for instance, is served with a fan o f bright The hot and sour shrimp soup, Saturday’s soup du jour, is green snow pea pods and two red garnished tomato slices. hot and sour in precisely the correct increments. The soup The owners and operators o f the restaraunt, Laurie and does contain shrimp — whole shrimp, not tiny chunks of Moe Vacha, seem to practice a handy rule o f thumb: less is unfortunate crustacean. m ore. The service is brisk, polite, knowledgeable and patient enough to explain each o f the dishes on the week’s menu. in s te a d , the Coyote Cafe has more selection — the menu The Coyote Cafe is southwestern in the diminutive. There changes every. Tuesday and item s range from pork are no raucous cowboys here scream ing for steak and refried tenderloins and cumquats to jalapeno onion rings. There are, however, some item s that are regularly beans. There is, instead, a quiet and handsome restaurant featured at the restaraunt. A fter being seated, every patron serving excellent and creative food. State P ress Susan Schum an/State Press P a tro n s o f th e C o y o te C a fe in d in e s im p le an d e le g a n t s u rro u n d in gs. Graduate Student Association GRADUATE STUDENTS UT3 1 V E R B A L •T R A VEL N eed m oney fo r research? Let Our Travel Volume Work For You! Better Than Student Fares Lowest Student Fares $38.00 $157.50 Los Angeles Chicago 98.00 187.20 San Francisco Minneapolis 38.00 218.00 San Diego Dallas 148.00 142.20 Denver S t Louis 198.00 178.20 Salt Lake New York 228.00 223.20 Seattle Cleveland 138.00 205.20 Reno ••Boston G rad u ate students are en cou raged to subm it proposals fo r am ounts betw een $200 and $2,000 fo r re s e a rc h s tu d y . F all sem ester ap p licatio n s are availab le th rough S eptem b er 26, 1988 in th e G rad u ate S tu d en t A ssociation o ffic e, A S A S U , M em orial U nion 2 0 8 -J. For additional inform ation, call 965-1263. Restrictions Apply - Book Early Monterey Jazz Festival H otel • A irfa re • Reserved Tickets 9/16-9/18/88 $435/per person (Limited Availability) ASU VS. UofA GAME $7939 Round T rip M otorcoach N O V . 26 P r o p o s a l- w r it in g r e f e r e n c e m a t e r ia l a ls o a v a ila b le . A N D T ick et fo r the gam e (based on Dbl.Occ.l té ■ First in Tempe since 1968 Universal Travel 5th & Mill 967-1673 TUBING DOWN THE SALT RIVER Ride a Tube Down the Salt River TUBE RENTAL AND SHUTTLE BUS SERVICE ALL-DAY RATES $6.00 per day per person group rates available Or Shuttle Bus ticket only $3 all day •4,000 tubes tor rent •open 7 days a week, 9 am-7 pm Located 9 miles north of MESA at the junction of Bush and Usery Highways. For more Information, phone (602) 984-3305 or write lo r your free brochure and river map. Authorized by U.S. Foreat Sendee. ANOREXIA ■ M riw ik t In m i tm m MM ;■ p ! ' f a g li i É « | l i ‘’••'ix'. p M ' ¡¡¡ ¡ I » m •... ¡B ring this ad with you tor | $100 n F F i f r W ■ r TUBE RENTAL SP L__ _ _ Monday thru Friday ■ mm l H o W j T & B T F to fll W OGHtt TO T h e re are tim es w hen a p ea looks like a fu ll m eal. W e know so m e anorexics w ho w ould und erstand why. Fortunately, b efore their self-im posed starvation cau sed p erm an en t d am ag e, they regained co n tro l w ith o u r help. W e're A rizona s only facility d ed icated exclusively to th e diagnosis and tre a tm e n t o f eatin g disorders. T alk to us free ab o u t ano rexia, b u lim ia o r com pulsive overeating. C a ll 9 4 1 -8 0 0 2 today. Ask fo r D o n n a. CALL941-8002 P.O. Box 6568 Mesa, AZ 85216 Ö . The In stitu te fo r Eating D iaordare B aptist M edfoal C a n to r-S c o ttw M e 8435 East McDowell Road • Scottsdale. AZ 85257 comics IM H P a g e J ^ B L O O M W en va s e e b y C O U N T Y 7 c c a B e rk e r tu r . V B re a th e d t h e f a r s id e MSMee rV C S S By G A R Y LA R SO N X fA U “Did you d etect som ething a little om inous in the w ay they said, ‘See you later'?” D o o n e sb u ry BY GARRY TRUDEAU T H E F A R S ID E T H E RETURN VOYAGE OF THE *TRUMP PRINCESS"FROM NEW ORLEANS WAS UNEVENTFUL. . MORE CAVIAR AYE, TOPSIDES ! / jjg SIR ! ... UNTIL THE FATEFUL MORNING WHEN THE PURSER SPOTTEDA FAM ILIAR FIGURE LEANÌNG AGAINST THE RADIO MAST. UTTER,THE N im M AID CONFIRMED THE SIGHTING. SIR? ELVIS IS O N \ BOARD M Y GOD! IT CANT BE! I ° By G A R Y iA R S O N OH, YEAH? BOOKHIM FOR TO­ NIGHT. S '. H RV1Ì M elonhead by Garth h eck el HERMAN Shoe by J e ff M acNelly [ H ou M com I w c m r w m . " Y o u r co usin E rn ie fa ile d his skyd ivin g co u rse*" P h o e n ix C a r d in a ls p r e v ie w , p a g e 2 0 sports S trttN n Page 17 M onday, August 29/1988 Marmie shows optimism; Devils conduct scrimmage By DEAN GYORGY State Press Saturday was a full day for the ASU football program. Head coach Larry M arm ie spoke with Pac-10 football w riters at breakfast, and then watched the D evils in the their first m ajor scrim m age of the year. «•»*■ The consensus among w riters and pollsters is that the Sun D evils w ill finish the season in the lower echelon of the conference, but Marm ie held the optimism neccesary of a head coach. 7 feel our team has a chance to win (the Pac-10 championship) every year, due to the tradition and strength of the program. ’ — Larry Marmie a n n M uiM ugW S W P w A SU backup quarterback Paul Justin launches a pass during a scrim m age at Cam p Tontozona. In Saturday’s scrim m age at Sun Devil Stadium , Justin w as 7 -oM 4 for 102 yards with two touchdowns and one interception. Marm ie told the Skywriters, a group o f journalists touring each of the Pac-10 schools, during Saturday’s breakfast at the U niversity A ctivity Center that he believes the Sun D evils have a legitim ate shot at a January Rose Bowl appearance. “ I feel our team has a chance to win (the Pac-10 championship) every year, due to the tradition and strength o f the program ,’ ’ M arm ie said. “ A lot o f things have to be right for us to win it this year, but I ’m a believer they can be right.” M arm ie mentioned a num b«’ o f areas for concern, including the offensive and defensive lines. He is trying to fill Turn to D EVILS, pago 21. Nebraska win over Texas A&M kicks off college football season EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (A P ) There’s no substitute for experience, as Nebraska proved to Texas A&M in the sixth annual K ick off Classic. “ They have a senior quarterback and we have a sophomore quarterback,” Texas A&M coach Jackie Sherrill said. Second-ranked Nebraska got the college football season underway Saturday night with a 23-14 victory over the No. 10 Aggies. Sherrill now is 1-6 in opening games at Texas A&M. ASU w ill play the Cornhuskers in the Sun D evils’ third gam e o f the season, Sept. 24 at Lincoln, Neb. Nebraska beat file Sun D evils last season, 35-28, at Sun D evil Stadium. Nebraska quarterback Steve Taylor was voted the gam e’s outstanding player after directing a second-half comeback from a 7-8 halftim e deficit. Taylor completed 11 o f 22 passes for 125 yards and added 34 yards on is carries, including a number of key scrambles, to become file top rushing quarterback in Nebraska history with 1,333 yards, 16 m ore than Turner Gil). But it was Ms 20-yard touchdown pass to tight end Todd M illikan at 1:37 of the final period that put the gam e out o f reach at 20-7. M eanw hile, Texas A& M sophom ore Bucky Richardson, under constant pressure from a charging Nebraska defense, led by outside linebacker Broderick Thomas, managed only fiv e completions — one in the second h alf — in 17 attempts for 42 yards. He was intercepted twice, including free safety Tim Jackson’s llhyard return to the A&M 24 that set up the go-ahead touchdown. “ A t halftim e, I told our guys to do m e a favor and get going because-1 couldn’t go back home to (Houston) Texas after losing to those guys,” Thomas said. T u rn to KICK O FF, page 21. 2L Nebraska quarterback S ieve Taylor struggles to get away from A SU ’s Steve Patterson in last year’s gam e at Sun Devil Stadium. Taylor w a s named the gam e’s outstanding player Saturday as g ib Cornhuskers beat Texas A&M at the Kickoff Classic. MADD members threaten to destroy ‘second chance’ for athletes Jeff Shain Asst. Sports Editor Mothers Against Drunk D riving obviously does not believe in mistakes. The group doesn’t seem to believe that a person can feel sorry fo r his actions either. On the beds o f its “ silent protest” against the participation of Bruce Kim ball at the U,S. Olympic diving trials in Indianapolis, MADD now has taken it upon itself to determine U.S Olym pic Committee policy on athletes who may have been in treilble with the law at one tim e or another. M AD D 'recently took put a full-page newspaper ad in the form o f an open letter to USOC president Robert Helmick, urging the com m ittee to bar from the Olympic team any athlete charged with or convicted o f a violent crim e. Now that Qie group has rid itself of Kim ball, it wants to see who else they can go after. ... Helm ick and the USOC have enough problems without having to deal with an overzealous group that .showed less compassion fo r Kim ball than Kim ball did for the victim s of an Aug. 1 auto accident in Brandon, Fla. The Kim haii tragedy is a sad story a ll the way around. He is charged with billing two teenagers and seriously injuring three others when his car struck them on a dark, dead-end street w hile allegedly driving drunk. He faces fiv e felony counts o f drunken driving aiid is free on $10,000 bail. The loss o f the two teenagers is certainly tragic. But so is Kim ball’s side. H e was nearly killed him self in an auto accident several years ago, making a comeback after breaking every bone in his face and undergoing extensive surgery. Having gone through that, it’s not unrealistic that he could feel the pain the others w ere going through. MADD didn’t think so. So they dogged him throughout the next three Weeks, calling bn Mm to drop out of the diving trials and then holding their silent protest during the competition. N ever mind that Kim ball was untried and unconvicted. MADD chose to be judge and ju ry in this case. And never mind that diving was one o f the few things that Kim ball could bold on to. The anguished soul needs a release, or the body is likely to have a nervous breakdown. Everybody has a release. When I get upset, I w rite. Kim ball dives. The effect is the same — a w ay o f cleansing the mind to face reality. MADD probably would rather have seen Kim ball have the nervous breakdown. Call it emotional vigilante justice. Now M ADD wants to take it one step further and ban from the Olym pic movement any afiilete charged with p r convicted o f a violent crim e. Note the first pari o f that request — any afiilete charged with a crim e. What if an athlete is later acquitted and set free, only to have missed the Olympic trials or the Olympics themselves? A person trains from 10 to 20 years fo r their one shot at Olym pic glory, usually just one day in the spotlight. F or an innocent person to have a lifetim e o f training washed aw ay because o f an iH-timed accusation, that also would be tragic. . N Plus, what if a person has a crim inal record, but rehabilitates him self through sport into an honest, clean citizen? That person also deserves a shot at Olympic glory. , But MADD doesn’t believe in rehabilitation. It’s too bad. They only have to look back four years to see an example. Paul Gonzalez grew up m a barrio o f Los Angeles called Boyle Heights. It’s a poverty-stricken area, a place where you keep your doors locked and your windows up while chiving through and hope for the best. Gonzalez was involved in street gangs as a youth, a common activity in the area. He got in Ms share o f street fights and scuffles with police and wound up with a crim inal record. • .004 Later, he turned to boxing as an outlet for his aggressions. And he becam e rather proficient at it, good enough to make the U.S. Olympic boxing team. A t the Los Angeles Games, he won the gold medal despite suffering from a painful hand injury and was instantly the toast of the entire city and a hero to many in Boyle Heights. Other parents could point to him and show their children a success story o f somebody who had turned his life around. Gonzalez became a role model to many. Under MADD’s plan, Paul Gonzalez would never have had that chance. Same way; with heavyweight champion Mike Tyson, who was on a one-way path to destruction on the streets o f New York before' Cus D’Amato turned Mm to boxing. Tyson missed an Olym pic berth but never would even have had the chance under M ADD’s proposal. That’s because MADD doesn’t believe in second chances. I suggest the form ation o f an opposing group. Call it D ivers Against MADD’s Non-feeling (D A M N ). Run a background check on every member of MADD, looking fo r those charged with or convicted o f a crim e. I f any are found, brand them as hypocrites and demand they im m ediately be tossed out of the organization. Hold silent protests at MADD meetings if necessary. F or after all, only he who is without sin should cast file first stone. A* «aí State Press Monday, Au gust 29,1988 Page 18 U .S sw im m er disqualified from O lym pics for drug use LOS ANG ELES (A P ) Angel M yers o f Georgia, who won three events at U.S. trials and may have had a shot at fiv e Olym pic medals, was disqualified from the Seoul Games next month fo r use o f a banned drug, the U .S . S w im T ea m s a id Sunday . The team refused to disclose the drug. Richard Quick, Olym pic coach, said J ill Sterkel and Janelle Jorgensen w ere both named to replace her. “ W e h ave the utm ost sympathy and concern for Angel M yers during this very difficult tim e,” R ay B. Essick, executive director of U.S. Swimming, said in a prepared statement. “ It is a shame that this has happened to our sport and to Olym pic sports,” Quick said, “ but it speaks w ell for the necessity and integrity of substance testing. E very consideration was given to Angel during this process.” In a S tatem en t, U .S. Swimming, governing body for the sport in Am erica, said initial tests of M yers, who is from Americus, Ga., w ere confirmed by a second urinalysis “ in accordance w ith s tr ic tly c o n tro lled procedures outlined in the USOC-USS agreem ent on drug testing.” But at Americus, Martha Fenn essey, an assistan t coach with the Blue Tide Seoul <8P 1988 Swim Club, M yers’ local s w im te a m , s a id th e swim m er had not taken any banned substances. “ W e a re goin g to do everything we can to prove that the drug they are calling a banned s&bstance was not, th a t it w as so m eth in g sim ilar,” Fennessey said in a telephone interview . “ We are exploring our avenues o f appeal,” she said, adding that the fam ily expected to make a further statement Monday. M yers was en route to her G eorgia hom e w ith her fath er sh ortly a fte r the decision was announced, and she was not im m ediately a v a ila b le fo r com m ent. Fennessey declined to reveal th e b a n n ed s u b s ta n c e involved or the non-banned drug she believed M yers was taking. “ It is a prescription drug that is not on the banned substances list,” Fennessey said: asu briefs • F O O T B A L L S T U D E N T SEASO N T IC K E T P IC K -U P — Students w ho ord ered fo o tb a ll tick ets w ith the firs t le tte r o f th eir la s t nam e Rip Chair IT ’S A C H A IR IT ’S A S O FA Other Specials! * 4 d ra w e r chest *B e d Sale $ 28 S o fa & Love S e a t 5 R ece B edroom S e t ^ $168 $158 A lso s e ts a t $ 2 9 9 , $ 3 9 9 , $ 4 9 9 O ak E n te rta in m e n t C e n te r FU R N IT U R E ^ PLU S Oak W a ll U nit Y o u r Choice $168 C learance C e n te r In Tem pe U niversity 2 0 7 7 E. U niversity MM ! ..9MMNH$ . ¿¿I don’t want alotof hype. I just want something I can count on.95 beginning w ith an I through P m ay (rick up th eir tick ets tod ay a t the Sun D e v il T ick et O ffice. T o c la im tick ets, students m ust p resen t the re ce ip t th ey re ce iv ed this sum m er and a v a lid a ted ASU ID . sports briefs • A R IZ O N A S T A R W IN S U .S . A M A T E U R — E ric M eeks, a tw o-tim e A ll-P a c 10 selection a t A rizon a, w on the fir s t fou r holes and, using an overw h elm in g d isp lay o f a ccu ra cy, closed ou t D anny Y a te s on the 12th hole of the fin a l round to w in th e 88th U .S. A m ateu r Cham pionship a t H ot S prings, V a ., Sunday. M eeks, 23, bu ilt a 10-up ad van tage b efo re con secu tive bogeys d ela yed w h at qu ick ly becam e an even tu a lity. H e w on 7-and-6. • G R A F W IN S STH C O N S E C U TIV E T O U R N A M E N T — S te ffi G ra f, th e w orld ’s top-ranked p la y e r, w on h er fifth con secu tive tournam ent and w en t o ve r $1 m illio n in earn in gs fo r th e second y e a r in a row b y d efea tin g N a th a lie T au ziat 6-0,6-1 in the fin a ls Sunday o f th e $200,000 U n ited J ersey Bank C lassic a t M ahw ah, N .J . G ra f, w ho th is w eek w ill tr y to w in th e final le g o f th e G rand Slam b y captu rin g th e U .S. Open, needed ju st 41 m in u tes to b ea t th e unseeded T au ziat. • L O P E Z , JO N E S S H A R E L E A D A T L P G A T O U R N E Y — H a ll o f F a m er N an cy L op ez overca m e a five-sh ot d e fic it to ga in a share o f the lea d w ith R osie Jones h alfw a y through th e fin a l round o f the $265,000 L P G A W orld Cham pionship Sunday. m ajor league1)asebaH AMERICAN LEAGUE SU N D A Y’S RESULTS L a n G a n n Not Included Cleveland 5, Chicago 4, T1 innings Kansas City 12, Minnesota 3 Milwaukee 12, D etroit IQ CaMomia 13, New York 2 Baltim ore 2, Oakland 1 ,1 1 innings Boston 7, Seattle 2 Toronto at Texas, (n) M ONDAY’S SCHEDULE ' D etroit (Tanana 14-8) a t Chicago (Long 5-9), 5:30 p.m . Cleveland (Yett 8 4 ) a t Kansas C ity (Saberhagen 12-13), 5:35 p.m . Toronto (Clancy 7- 13) a t Milwaukee (Filer 57)> 5:35 p.m . Minnesota (Toliver s i) e l Texes (R ussel 10-5), 5:35 p.m. New York (N ielsen 1 *i) at Seattle (Langston 9-10), 7:05 p.m. Baltim ore (Ballard 7-10) a t C alifornia Some long distance companies promise you the moon, but what you really want is dependable, high-quality service. That’s just wnat you’ll get when you choose AT&T Long Distance Service, at a cost that’s a lot less than you think. You can expea low longdistance rates, 24-hour operator assistance, dear connections and immediate credit for wrong numbers. And the assurance that virtually all of your calls will go through the first time. That’s the genius of the AI&TVibiidwide Intelligent Network. When it’s time to choose, fotget the gimmicks and make the intelligent dhoiee-AEScT. Ifvoud like to know more about our products or services, like International Calling and the AT&TCard, call us at 1800 222-0300. (M.W itt 10-12), 7:35 p.m . 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Hacienda Dr., #107 • Tempe CORNER OF LEMON & RURAL • 9 6 7 -1 1 1 4 CALL 967-7282 Hours: M ao.-Fri., 7:30 *jn .-5;30 p.m. • Tues. & Thürs, t il 8 • Sat., 91 (Tues. * Thure. by Appointment Only) Attorney at Law Arizona's le t and Only Brew Pub: - BMMBSMMICH 5th St. & F o rest 966-4438 mams Est. 1988 C all im m ediately fo r fre e telep hone evaluation General Meeting A ll students interested in joining ASU’s New Music Source meet in Tower Center 106 Monday, Aug. 29, 3:00 p.m. Evening, weekend & home consultations available. 350 S. MILL #202 • HAYDEN SQUARE • TEMPE , . • •..¿-i Page 20 _________ a ^ S B M S Ü É Monday, August 29,1988 New city doesn’t change preseason view of Cards PH O EN IX (A P ) Th e P h o e n i x Cardinals m ay have moved to a new city, but m ost N F L prognosticators still believe they’ll wind up where their St. Louis predecessors usually did — at the bottom of the NFC East. Alm ost every preseason poll projects the Cardinals to finish last or next-to-last in the five-team division this year. But try tellin g that to third-year Phoenix coach Gene Stallings. “ I think w e’re a playoff contender. I said that at the very first press conference I had here (in M arch) and I still believe it,” Stallings said. “ I feel w e’re going to be com petitive every week. W e’ve got a chance to win every Sunday.” Sports Illustrated predicts the Cardinals w ill wind up 4-12. Although Stallings said he doesn’t have tim e to read any magazine or newspaper article about his team, he reacts to the news with disdain. “ I ’d rather be picked first than last. But the gam e is settled in the arena, not in Sports Illustrated or the newspapers,” he said. “ Us being last, that’s not a consensus of opinion. “ W e’re in a tough division. We play Washington tw ice and the New York Giants tw ice. That’s the last two w orld champions right there. Dallas is going to be better this year and the (Philadelphia) Eagles are on the upswing. I think w e,are, too.” The Cardinals, who haven’t had a winning season since 1984 and haven’t qualified for the playoffs since 1982, w ere 7-8 last year. They just missed making the playoffs by losing 21-16 to the Cowboys in the regularseason finale. “ What kept us out? Washington beat us twice. W e split with the other teams in the division. I f we had split with Washington, we would have been in the playoffs,” said Stallings. '“ The key for any team is to split with the people in your division and beat the teams you’re supposed to beat outside your division.” T tv S T , According to the N F L experts, Phoenix isn’t supposed to beat anybody this season. That doesn’t sit w ell with the players. “ F irs t o f a ll, preseason polls are ridiculous. They’re a ll guesstimates,” Pro Bowl special teams player Eon W olfley, said. “ A new year is a new year. It doesn’t bother me. It’s one man’s opinion. That’s something w e’v e had to fight a ll our life .” -‘ It’s good to be an undefdog,” veteran w ide receiver J.T. Smith, said. “ But I ’d like to be picked a little higher than that.” “ What it m ay do is take some pressure o ff us,” P ro Bowl kick returner V ai Sikahema said. “ I think when w e wind up in the p la y o ffs , p eo p le wiH not put much Lom ax, who was 22-of-56 for 258 yards with no touchdowns and three interceptions in the first three preseason losses, was 12-of-15 for 92 yards and one touchdown in the Chiefs game. “ This was a real confidence booster for m e personally because I had a terrible preseason overall,” Lom ax said. “ Thank God the preseason gam es don’t count.” A two-time P ro Bowler, Lom ax threw for a league-high 3,387 yards in 1987 as the Cardinals had the N F L ’s sixth-best total offense and passing offense with 355,1 total yards and 230.2 passing yards per game. Stallings said Lom ax, an eight-year pro, w ill start Sunday’s regular-season opener at Cincinati with 10-year veteran C liff Stoudt as the backup. credibility in the magazine.” “ They don’t have respect fo r us. I could care less. To me, it’s just a big hype,” veteran linebacker E.J. Junior, said. “ It doesn’t m atter until who goes to the Super Bowl and who comes out on top. W e’re going to be better than 4-12. Go ahead and underestimate us.” “ I think w e can be 10-6 this year,” said veteran offensive tackle Luis Sharpe, another P ro Bowler. “ I think w e have the talent.” The Cardinals ranked 25th in the 28-team league in total defense and pass defense last season, giving up 358.9 yards total offense and 225.5 passing yards per game. They gave up 30 touchdowns through the a ir and intercepted just 14 passes — nine by the defensive backs. “ We have to im prove on the turnover ratio,” Stallings said. “ We didn’t get much production out o f the secondary last year.” In the ^preseason, Phoenix went 1-3 for their eighth losing exhibition record since 1961. But Stallings said a 41-21 win last Thursday night at Kansas City in the finale m ay have snapped his club out o f the doldrums. Veteran quarterback N eil Lom ax finally looking sharp and second-year defensive back Tim McDonald intercepting two passes and returned them a combined 61 yards, to set up touchdowns. 1988 PHOENIX CARDINALS SCHEDULE O ct. 23 O ct. 30 Nov. 6 Nov. 13 Nov. 20 Nov. 27 Dec. 4 Dec. 10 Dec. 18 LIQUORS & MKT. Now Location XXXII at Dallas SAN FRANCISCO NEW YORK G IANTS at Houston at Philadelphia at New York G iants PHILADELPHIA G REEN BAY Ä complete personal computer package (from software to printer) for $995. RUNDLE’S $ 1 9 5 at Cincinnati DALLAS at Tam pa Bay W ASHINGTON at Los Angeles Rams PITTSBURGH at W ashington CLEVELAND Sept. 4 Sept. 12 Sept. 18 S e p t 25 O ct. 2 Oct. 9 O ct. 16 1324 W. University LEADING EDGE MODEL D Volska Vodka, 750m l......... $4.98 •D ual Floppy Disk Drive •N ear Letter Q uality Printer •H igh Resolution Monochrome Monitor •W ord Processing Software w ith SpeN MeisterBnui, 6 pk...............1.88 RC-Crush, 2 ttr.......................99 .Uaed Playboy Magazines...... 94 Check, D O S, Basic, Data Base and Spread Sheet •2 0 Month National W arranty (just east of Priest) SLOPPY JOES W/CHIPS STA R TIN G A T 7 PM COMPUTER MULTI SYSTEMS Haagen Oazs Natural Ice Cream, Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice, Wines, over 40 imported Beers. 997-9079 Just W est ó t Buffalo Exchange W 225 W . U n iversity, Tem ps M S -IS M Open: 9-6 W eekdays • 9:30-3:00 Saturday taum v a t R u r a l & A p a c h e V H A rT o By Choice. . . Not By Chance FOOD • S P IR IT S • ENTERTAINM ENT •Abortion Services •Free pap smear with birth control exam •Birth control exam includes free package o f pills •Free pregnancy testing and early detection pregnancy test fo r $12 •Affordably gyn, S T D and infection treatment rfi ' l „, TUESDAY NIGHT DRINK NIQHT 7 p.m . t o ll a.m . E xcluding Shots & D rinks o f 3 liquors o r m o re ___________ *5°° C o v e r C h arg e FAMILY PLANNING INSTITUTE Phx. 9 9 7 -7 4 9 3 9100 N. 2nd St. - j Tempe 9 6 8 -7 4 7 1 424 W . Broadway K U ttîS M ïp É FPod a -S f n eCials îs f læ i ? f9Ular & Me ronic Music Nigt •O/dies y W ELC O M E BACK A S U STUDENTS 'Top l p s School K ic k -o ff S pecials 1 visit $ 4 5 visits $ 1 8 1 0 visits $ 3 3 e o re B'lhards ~Darts 3 -M o n th Unlimited $85 Dancing Musio Videos K [with ASU I.O- only 41 O ffer expires 9 /4 /8 8 } OPEN 7 DAYS A W EEK t îiîljîit îi.' WOLFF ÄA G A LL 9 6 6 - 2 1 5 0 'sun tan cen ter 5 5 EAST B R O A D W A Y [a t Mill] TE M P E Î:|ïlifî« n i Lake Country Village Shopping Center State Preti» Yanks’ Mattingly says criticism may have sparked trade rumors ANAH EIM , Calif. (A P ) — Don Mattingly acknowledged Sunday that his criticism of N ew Y o rk Y a n k e e s ow n er G eo rg e Steinbrenner m ay have sparked the trade rumors that began surfacing this weekend. “ I guess I brought this upon m yself, but I don’t rea lly know what’s going on,” Mattingly said before the Yankees played the California Angels Sunday. Two teams contacted the Yankees about acquiring the All-Star first baseman and Toronto general m anager P a t G illick predicted New York w ill trade him. “ I think he’s gone, from the tone of the conversations I ’v e had with the Yankees,” Gillick was quoted as saying in Sunday’s editions of the Toronto Sun. G illick said M attin gly had cleared waivers and that Steinbrenner was behind the move. “ I think he’ll try to get an auction going and send him to the highest bidder,” Gillick said. The Blue Jays general m anager said that the tim ing of a M attingly trade depended on the current state o f the Yankees, fading from the Am erican League East race. ' G illick said M attingly could be traded by the Wednesday deadline for postseason rosters "depending on how far they’re out of it by’ then. They m ay w ait until November and just get an auction going, you know, just see what they can get fo r him ,” G illick said. Bob Q uinn, th e Y a n k ees g e n era l manager, denied the reports. “ It’s true a couple o f d id », including Toronto, called me wondering whether we Page 21 M onday, August 2 9 ,1 9 8 8 \ classifieds A LL NEW 0 is Pool Tables Pinball / might be looking to trade him now, blit we are not,” Quinn said Sunday through H arvey Greene, the Yankees director of media relations. “ If G illick wants to run his mouth off, let him run his mouth o ff,” Quinn told the H artford Courant earlier. “ That’s his prerogative. It ’s absolutely ridiculous. There is no truth to any of this.” HAPPY HOUR * -z daily $3.00 Pitchers «te-xrzx •J E ™ , , 0° Long"“ *“ » . « W ell k « ***** oW M attingly, who w ill earn $2.2 m illion in 1989 and $2.5 m illion in 1990, the final season of his three-year contract, said he wants to remain with the Yankees. “ I didn’t ask to be traded,” he said Sunday. “ I don’t want to be traded, but if it happens I guess there’s nothing I can do about it.” Quinn said two teams contacted the Yankees about M attingly’s availability but would not name them to the Courant. “ We did receive a couple of inquiries for M attingly’s services,” Quinn said. “ I f that’s to be construed as meaning that w e’re looking to trade him, then fine. But that’s obviously a lot different than what G illick is saying.” . M attingly had complained, about the constant pressure on the players in New York. _ KWoSWinHimN Mill UCAM AT ASU- United Campuses to Prevent Nuclear W ar w ill m eet Tuesday at 1 p.m . in the M U, room 2 1 2 * (Cochise). Guest speaker- Pat Day of the Arizona C enter to Reverse the Arms Race. W A N TED . M ALE m odels for flattop haircutting workshops Mondays. Phoenix H a ir C o m p an y. C o n ta c t R ic a rd o , 258-1906. Arizona’s 1st and Only Brow Pub: 5th S i A Forest 966-4438 “ You come here and you play and you get no respect,” M attingly said. “ You get money and that’s it. That’s as far as it goes. They think money’s respect. Money’s not respect.” “ It’s hard to come to the ballpark if you’re not happy playing.” Est. 1988 Devils ____ C ontinu ed fro n tp a g e t f . the spots left vacant by the graduation of some o f last year’s top perform ers. Later in the morning, senior quarterback Daniel Ford com pleted 8 of 15 passes for 97 yards and one touchdown w ith one interception in a controlled scrimm age at Sun D evil Stadium. Sophomore backup Paul Justin was 7-for-14 fo r 102 yards with two touchdowns and an interception. Junior tailback Bruce Perkins led all rushers with 60 yards on nine carries while sophomore V ictor Gaboon had 41 yards on eight carries and freshman fullback Kelvin Fisher got 45 yards on eight carries. Junior place-kicker Alan Zendejas kicked five of six Held goals, the longest from 47 yards out. Kickoff C o n tlh u « f (ra m page 17. Thomas thought the second-half kickoff which Nebraska* linebacker LeR oy Etienne sent Rod Harris, A&M’s top receiver and return specialist, to the sidelines with a dislocated shoulder, was the turning point. “ Everyone was riding high at the start of the second h alf,” Thomas said, “ and when Etienne knocked H arris out on the kickoff, that really got us fly in g .” And the Cornhuskers didn’t come down for a while. They scored on their first three second-half possessions — the second of a record-tying three field goals by substitute kicker G regg Barrios, tailback Ken Clark’s l-yard run, and the Taylor-to-Millikan pass. Claris; was making his first collegiate start in place o f the injured Tyreese Knox. Barrios also kicked field goals of 44 yards in the second period and 48 yards, the longest in K ickoff Classic history, in the final period. The three field goals tied the K ickoff Classic record. THE FROGG IS COMING SEPT. 7TH SEPT. 7TH BIKINIS AT T I L L Y ’S SEPT. 8TH U.S. MALE T I L L Y ’S Yount popped out to second in the first inning. A fter Young lined out to shortstop in the second, Anderson brought the lineup error to the attention of home plate umpire Mike Reilly. A M tiotf J * £ T 0 S I T SlCtW CV * r , Oft. m s 1 * 0 K t A L L 'j S C ftS w e o 0 7 7 T H U S lItH T ir iC M U u T I f t S c H ilt s TEST HAS A LL THE AUSW EIS No ruling was made until the Brewers took the field for the top of the third. A fter a 21-minute discussion, the umpiring crew told Yount to lea ve th e gam e and Treblehorn was ejected fo r disputing the ruling. Milwaukee then protested the game. Young was allowed to continue as the designated hitter. Yount was replaced as the No. 3 batter by Jim Adduci, who played right field with Rob D eer moving to center. announcements PHO ENIX GAY Youth Group, a support and social group for guys and gals under 23. Inform ation. 897-8969. Youn} involved in lineup mix-up M ILW AU KEE (A P ) — Most managers would want to put Robin Yount in their lineup. Milwaukee Brewers manager Tom Treblehorn apparently likes Yount so much he listed Yount tw ice Sunday, batting third and batting fifth. A fter Tigers m anager Sparky Anderson brought this to the attention o f the umpires, Yount was rem oved from the gam e between the Tigers and the Indians. Yount, who began Sunday batting .303, tied for fifth in the Am erican League in hits, was listed in the No. 3 position as the center fielder. He also was listed in the No. 5. spot as the designated hitter, who was supposed to be M ike Young. start here s a s e r iN S s «* * A h sll042125 H O W SCREW ED UP ARE YOU? $ 1988 M a tt G reening Find out th e answ er to this question at C a rd s * U betcha. Life In H e ll Cards, Mugs Books and Calendars UUMIRRSk. Defensively, freshman cornerback Kevin Minniefield blocked a punt that resulted in a touchdown. S en ior fr e e s a fe ty J e ff Mahlstede had two interceptions and freshman cornerback Adam Brass had one. Marm ie was not overly pleased with the team’s performance, saying there w ore too many mistakes in the scrimm age, including five holding penalties and two fumbles. “ The coach in m e says, ‘No, w e’re not where we want to be,’ ” M arm ie said. “ You’d like to think you’ll look sharp and crisp like you w ere ready to play a gam e. It’s not that way, but we also have two m ore weeks.” A-State opens the season Sept. 10 at Sun D evil Stadium against Illinois. The Associated Press contributed to this report. 725 S. Rural (at the Cornerstone) 829-9399 YOUR “ Texas A&M has great speed and a great defense and they cam e right after us,” Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said. “ We played a pretty good football gam e in the second half. I hope people rem em ber we both came out and played a gam e w e didn’t have to play ” Try S tate Press C lassified A dvertising... before you reach th e end o f yo u r rope. Nebraska became the first team to appear 12 m i twice in the K ickoff Classic. Unfortunately for the Cornhuskers, who routed Penn State . I Ptenguin’s frozen yogurt 44-6 in Kickoff C lassic!, they aren’t eligible tastes just like ice cream. again until 1993. But it has less than 14the “ I think they (Texas A&M ) got tired in the second half,” Thomas said. “ We thought it might get easier in the second half, and it did. We showed what we could do, ami what our linebackers could do. “ 1 think our whole team is just going to get better and better every game. It was a fun game to p l a y . . . and it was fun playing it in New York.” calories. So visit Penguin’s soon. And use this coupon ■ for any small, medium or ■ large cup of yogurt Not Valid with Any Other Coupon Toppings Extra Expires 9-9-88 965-6731 or 9 6 5 -6 7 3 5 3rd & Mill <4' Page 22 State Ptm » M onday, Au gust 2 9 ,1 9 8 8 announcem ents Arizona State University STUDENTS NEED YOUR FIRST VISA OR MASTERCARD? Need a plan that will help insure a brighter financial future?? NO APPLICATION FEES NO SECURITY DEPOSITS!!! FOR DETAILS CALL!!! J.E.N. MARKETING TODAY!!! 224-3050 m otorcycles fo r sale tickets fo r sale 1982 YAMAHA. 6500 m iles, bought new 1965, one owner. $450. Doug, 966-1339. AEROSMTTH/ G UNS -N - Roses tickets. M ake otter. Some Sinatra available. 921-9044. 1984 KAWASAKI 550 LTD . New front tire and brakes, new clutch. $700 or best offer. 497-5207. 1986 HONDA 150 E lite scooter, red, custom e seatco ver, m int condition, 894-1341 days or 892-6317. $1095/0ffer. 1966 YAMAHA R iva scooter with 2 bell helm ets. Low m ileage, $850. M ust sell. 784-0506. 86 YAMAHA R iva 125 scooter. Great condition, $850. 585-4033. ELITE 80 scooter, 1986. Excellent condi­ tion. $800 or best offer. 829-013T. M O T O R C Y C L E FO R S a le . H o nda CB 380T w ith parking sticker and accesso­ ries, $350. C all 784-0408. bicycles fo r sale LA ND 'S CYCLERY. Good selection of new and used bikes. autos lo r sale 1982 VO LKSW AG EN Rabbit Diesel. 4-speed, 4-door, 78,000 m iles. $1400 negotiable. Tracey, 497-8849. 1984 FO RD M ustang. Power steering, power brakes, AM /FM radio. Going over­ sea s, m ust s e ll! $ 3 5 0 0 /o ffe r. C a ll 921-0740. 1984 JETTA LE. A ir, sunroof, Sony stereo system , 44,000 m iles, excellent condition, $8500/offer. 947-3704, 921-7363. 1985 STANZA G L 4-door. Ivory, one owner, 20,000 m iles, air-conditioning, power, AM /FM cassette. $78 00,837-2545. 1986 TO YO TA C o ro la. 5-door, Hftback, silver, fabric interior, air, AM /FM cassette, luggage rack. 835-1434. 72 CH EVY Im pala. Air, A M /FM cassette, runs good, good interior, $800. M ike, 829-7384. 85 RED Fiero. Perfect condition. Loaded, tinted windows. $4990 or best offer. M ichelle. 759-9215, work, 233-1921 motorcycles fo r sale R A LE IG H R A C IN G b ik e , m ade in England. Look pedals, M anic and Shknano parts. Chris, 829-1336. SC HW INN W O RLD Sport. 21 inch, black, excellent condition. DBG 1002. CLASSIFIEDS WORK. Use one today!! fornitura fo r sale A FU RN ITU RE sale; 7 piece bedroom set $189, twin sets $48 , full sets $68, queen sets $88, 5 draw er chests $39.96, sofa sets from $189, plus much m ore. 3332 Furniture. 3332 W . McDowell Road, 233-2236 o r 137 W . M ain, 896-1456. BRASS BED, lovely queen size HB-FB. N ever used m att and foundation factory wrapped. $225. 8 29 8984. DAYBED, GORGEO US w hite with brass cam elback design. Never used. Includes trundle and 2 m atte. $170. 829-8984. DINETTE SET, solid natural oak top and base, four chairs, never used. 829-8984. KING SIZE W ATERBED. $75, great shape, just too big for my room. C all 968-7724. MOTORCYCLE/ SCOOTER SERVICE A PARTS, INSURANCE ESTIMATES, FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS, PICK-UP & DELIVERY. S O F A B E D , $ 1 3 0 ; 4 8 ” d ia m e te r conference/gam e table with 4 swivel arm chairs, $300; Desk chair, $35. 991-9364. SOFAS FROM Scottsdale luxury hom e­ builder’s models. Contemporary styles and fabrics. Three to choose from . $250, retail $700. M atching loveseal $200. 829-8984 TW O DORM room carpets. W ill cover entire room. O ffer. Andy, 829-7364. W AREHOUSE SALE. Desks from $49; chairs from $15; bookshelves from $19; end tables, typing tables, com puter tables, dining tables, file cabinets, plus lots m ore. Arizona O ffice Liquidatiors, 4010 S. 43rd Place, between 40th Street and 48th Street, North of Broadway. 437-2224. RISING SUN CYCLE 1900 N. Hayden Road 945-6912 furniture fo r sale FUTONS FACTORY OUTLET 789-9747/NW PHX 254-5943/DWNTWN FO R SALE, $75. O ne way ticket to Denver. You pick the day and tim e. It must be after 9124/88. Call Lisa a t work, 9 6 5 4 4 2 9 or hom e, 897-9137. O NE PH O ENIX/Denver roundtrip ticket. Leave Friday, 9 /2 , return M onday, 9/5. W as $149, now $100. I am available on Monday 8 /2 6 ,0 2 9 8 0 7 0 ,0 6 5 -7 2 3 0 . O NE PHOENIX/Boaton roundtrip ticket. Leave Friday, 6 /2 , return M onday, 0/5. W as $240, now $150. Contact 021-0110 or 0 6 8 9190. PRIM E SEATS, CanSnate, ASU . George M ichael, Crosby Stole and Nash, George Benson, Areoem lth, Tem ptations, Dionne W arwick, Sinatra, Davis, M innelli. A ll area c o n c e r t a . N a t i o n w i d e con certa, sporting even ts. Theater: London, New York, Los Angelas. The Ticket Exchange. 829 0106. SA N FRANCISCO round trip ticket for Labor Day weekend. Leave Friday after­ noon, return Monday evenings. United airlines, $75. C ell 9 68 5353. m iscellaneous fo n a le BRAND HEW Apartm ents, new tower rates, special sem ester leases available. 2 and 1 bedroom, Use cable, pool, ooverad parking, tots m ore. Just a tow block» THE GREEN’S YOURS WHEN YOU SELL IT IN THE CLASSIFIEDS real estate fo r sale $6 5 ,5 0 0 ,1 9 0 5 E . University. Bank foreclo­ sure, condo, 2 bedroom, 2 bath. 10046 financing tor owner occupant Terrific term s. Dyana Edmunds, M e rrii Lynch, 00153001/945-7251. - A C Q U IR E D F O R E C L O S U R E a n d repooaesrod homes and condos tor aatoto Tam pa area. C a l certified public accoun­ tant and a realtor. C a l R ick at Tradewlnds, 3 0 2 5500. HO USE FO R sals by Owner. 1500 square feet, 3 bedroom , 2 to ! baths. 2046 8 . C ollege. $70,900, John, 021-2060. CO M PLETE ARCHITECTURAL supplies. C e * Jim at 784-0635. M OBILE HO M E on cam pus. M ust sell. Furnished. 63600. 2 bedrooms. 12x56. M att, 9 6 6 5 2 0 6 o r 8 9 6 5065. FO R SALE- lOOto IB M com patible XT turbo. From $406, at turbo from $ 1 0 0 5 .1 8 month w arranty. 637-1641. H P-28C FO R safe. Like new, com plete m anuale, $75. Before 6 ,7 5 2 5 1 5 0 , alter 6, 991-3326. M O VIE PO STERS- Cocktail, Young Guns, Tucker, Roger Rabbit, Elm Street movies, Blob, Pee W ee, and more. 704-8670. NEON BAR Sign, Michelob on tap, $50. IB M electric typew riter, $25. Rowing m achine, $75. G as barbeque grill, $30. 962-3056. N ISH IK I 10-SPEED, $35; Fuzzbuater. $50; Teak stereo case, $35; Business desk, $50. Can 021-0740. O AKLEY'S- ALL makes (blades, razor blades, etc.) a t great prices. Call 962-5665 tor m ore inform ation. PIANO- BLONDE finish with bench, great starter piano. $700/best offer. 965-2348, home 967-2817. P R O F E S S IO N A L P H O TO Darkroom com plete, $300. Panasonic cam corder extras, $850. Days, 2 5 2 4141, Doug, 820-7003. _ SING LE SIZE w aterbed, $125. Dark wood, head board with m inor, good condition. 966-3707. STEREO SYSTEM tor sale. M CS model; 16 month warranty. WM sell tor $800 or best offer. C all Lisa, 730 5377. PAP AG O PARK only $100 down. Save $15 ,000 on 2 bedroom w ith beautiful spiral staircase in very attractive com plex with red tie roofs. W hy rent this sem ester? G reg, Realty Executives, 4 2 3 5605. QUESDA VIDA only $100 down. Save $12,000 on large 2 bedroom, 2 bath with fireplace, refrigerator and waahar/dryar. W hy rent? G reg, R ealty Executives, 4 23 5605. •M o n o c h ro m e M o n ito r •M o n o /G ra p h ic s Bd •1 5 0 W P o w er S u p p ly •P a ra lle l P rtr P o rt , •1 2 M on th W a rra n ty TEM PE, 820 8 . Farm er. W aat of M M , off University. 2 bedroom, 2 bath duplex. $47S/m ondl. 968-4000_________________ TEM PE EXTRA targe 2 and 3 bedrooms, air-conditioning and heat paid, near ASU. The VNtaa, 1718 8 . JentMy, MondaySaturday 10-7, Sunday 1 0 5 .0 6 8 5 0 4 6 . townhom es/ condos fo r rent 2 B E D R O O M tow nhouee, $ 5 4 ,0 0 0 . Assum able loan, skylights, near ASU. G reat student area. M ertM Lynch Realty, P at, 4 51 5200. 2 BEDROO M , 11* bath, w asher/dryer, no pato, near Thomas and Scottsdale Rd, 2 BEDROOM condo. Close to ASU. $ 400/m onth- Days, 8 6 2 5 2 1 3 , evenings, 581-0026. 2 BEDROOM apartm ent (duplex), 1 mito from A B U . P refer g rad /staff/tacu tty. $336/m onth. 2 65 5066. 2 BEDROOM condo tor sale o r rent. 4714 E . Portland, does to ASU. Owner, 967-4068. 2 S T O R Y Los Prados Townhouse. 2 bedroom , 21* both, 14 m ile from ASU. W asher/dryer, pool, tennis. $700/bw nth plus utilities. Wsfndy, 784-2472. CO NDO FO R Rent. 3 bedroom , 3 bath­ room , ell am m entties. 3800/m onth, in Q uests Vida. Can Cheryl a t 968-4076. NO QUALIFYING FU LLY FU RN ISH ED , dishes, etc., 2 bedroom , Papayo Park H. M ature fem ales only. No pets. $750. Joanie (X - Realty Executtvae, 996-0676. 1 , 2 , 3 b e d ro o m c o n d o s & townhouses. Papago Park Village from $58,000-8102.000, Bob Bullock R ealty Executives 988 -29 92 in sm all to A SU. W A LK TO ASU! Only V2 block from cam­ pus. Beautifully furnished, huge 1 bedroom, 1 bath; 2 bedroom, 2 bath apart­ ments. All bills paid. Cable TV, heated pool, and spacious laundry facilities. Friendly, courteous management! Stop by today! A p a rtm e n ts NOW ONLY $519 RANCHO LAS Palm aa Apartm ents, 1 bedroom apartm ents - available. N ice studen t com m unity. C a ll D avid at 8 29 5607. . WALK TO ASU. 1 bedroom condo. Pool, a l appliances. $34,000. C a l Leona, 2 6 6 5 1 1 0 or 966-8959. Blank Disks Available 9 5 0 S. T e rra c e apartm ents fo r rent people only pisa n . 9 67 5620. recreation cantor. $69,750. R E M A X 100 Realtors. John, 820 9500. T e rra c e R oad miscellaneous fo r sale Q U IET ADULT Com plex has 1 bedrooms available, unfurnished, $305, furnished, $420. AH utilities included. 3 Mocks to ASU, hear Broadway and Rural: Q uiet COM M ONS O N Lemon tor leas. Poolside tocatton. $2S6/m onth tor your own room or 8200/m onth sharing a room. C a ll Joe, 8845871. Q UESTA VIDA . Fully furnished setup tor 4 students. Fireplace, 2 patios, 2 pools, 1 B E D R O O M apartm ents com plex w ith pool. W alk ,$295/m onth. 897-0099. also EL DIABLO Apartm ents. O ne and two bedroom s available. C elt Debora at 921-0800. $ 4 8 0 .8 3 0 5 2 6 3 . N IC E 3 bedroom , 2 bath townhouse with fireplace. W asher/dryer and refrigerator stay. MM and Broadway area, $56,500. ERA Am erican, ask tor M aggie, 830 4050 or 487-1031. apartm ents fo r ren t Sofw are fo r Sale behind O ld Town Tam pa. 9 2 1 5036. BEAUTIFUL 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo with CO LO R TE LEVISIO N , portable, $80: console, $100, works perfect. C all Ray at 254-1412. ¿ 59.95 .....99.95 ....119.95 ....149.95 ....129.95 ....300.00 ....369.95 •MC/Visa •Layaway •Valleywide Delivery CALL CHUCK AT 602/834-1194 TIE D Y E bed sheets and banners. All colors at your selection. Cad 9 8 6 5 0 3 7 tor details. BUY R IG H T. Q uests Vide, 1% m iles from cam pus. 2 m aster bedrooms, fireplace, lowest price in conipleix. RE/M AX 100 Realtors. John, 8 2 0 0 6 0 0 . R E N T A L EXPERTS •-8 0 8 8 /1 0 M H Z •1 F lo p p y D riv e •2 5 6 K R A M • 8 E xp. S lo ts •S ta n d a rd K eyb o ard 967-1316. ALUM NIST NEEDS lo sell 4x2 toot refrigerator. Good condition, $60 . Bath, 438-1631. Call 971-2106 EP T U R B O X T S Y STE M C O M P L E T E S Y S T E M W IT H : desks, chests, sofabeds, etc. 090-3364. M aggie, 8 3 9 4 8 6 0 or 487-1031. 1870 E. Apache, Tempe 829-1212 m iscellaneous fo r sale SAVE M ORE T h rill Store, 1915 N . Scotts­ dale Road (2 blacks North of McDowell). Q uality dom ing and hom e furnishings, ALL NEW . 2 bedroom apartm ent In luxury hom e. Lots of extras. Air-conditioning, cable, new kitchen appliances, celling fans, deck, storage area, near ASU . Must see. 6800/m onth, Including utilities. Dan, fire p la c e . W asher/dryer. refrigerator, microwave stay. U nhw m ty and M c d n tock area. $89,200. ERA Am erican, ask tor FURNITUR E SALES/RENTAL Desks............... Bed Sets...Twin...... Full....... Queen.... Dinettes................ Couch/Loveseat..... Sectionals.............. •90 Day Same as Cash •Rent to Own apartm ents fo r re n t m iscellaneous fo r sale 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 NEED A N APARTMENT? FREE APARTMENT RENTAL SERVICE CALL 945-6000 ACTION NO COST TO YOU! 100s o f Apartm ents With O ne Catll ACTION APT. RENTAL SERVICE 1460 N. Scottsdale R d., Tem p* rental sharing CO NDO , U N IVER SITY and M cClintock. M ale, nonsm oker, $ 200/m orrth, $100 deposit. 877-2048. m ate. Have own bedroom /bethroom. 1 m ile to cam pus. Fireplace, balcony, pod . Available Septem ber 1st. Chris, 8 04 5433, leave m assage. M ALE/FEM A LE nonsmoker room m ate needed. G reat location lees than a m ile from University. Fully furnished, $295 phis utilities. La M irage Apartm ents. Leave m essage, 9 6 6 5028. M ALE/FEM A LE. 2 bedroom, tolly furn­ ished. new apartm ent, to mHe to ASU. $225. 965.1664, Phillips. M ALE ROOMM ATE needed: Rancho Las Palm as, dose to ASU, 2 bedroom , 2 bath. $180 plus 1* utilities a month. Call 9 6 0 5 0 6 4 attar 8 p .m . NEED 2 M ale/fem ale nonsmoking room­ m ates to share beautiful cul-de-sac home. Pool, a# am enities. Southem /Hardy. $225 plus to utilities. Daniz or PhHartne, 9694601. NEED TW O nonsmoking fem ales to share large m aster bedroom loft w ith private bath and large wattiJn ctoeet. Condo is beautilufiy furnished. Fireplace, washer, dryer, pool, and Jacuzzi. $200 par parson plus V* utilities. C t l JuHs at w orit between 10 and 5 ,8 2 9 9 3 0 9 . RESPONSIBLE NON-SM OKER to share peaceful house near Southern and M cCtkltock. Large room, quiet room­ m ates. $250, utilities Included. Robert, 8315596. ROOMM ATES NEEDED to share. Futty fu rn ish ed . Inclu din g lin en s, dishes, washer, dryer, microwave, much m ore. Two blocks Horn cam pus. $22S/m onth plus to utilities. Regal Professionals, Inc. 437-4877. ROOMM ATES W ANTED. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 21 * mites fro n cam pus. P ool w asher/dryer, $185 plus utilities. Cett Joe, 8 2 7 5038. SHARE BEAUTIFUL home in Dobson Ranch. $245 plus to utilities. 8 2 0 5963, Boh. W ANTED: FEMALE roommate to sham a bedroom in a two bedroom, two bath condo. Overlooks volleyball court, cable, m icrowave. Please cell 921-3651, Lies. business opportunities Ife N W . W ith you r ow n fu ll o r p a rt-tim e business. Distributor fo r fantastic new p ro d u ct, u nlim ited p o ten tial. For details send self-addressed stam ped envelope to: SG A M arketing 2354 W . U niversity #2163 M esa. A Z 65201_________ : PETS OK. 3 bedroom, 2 both townhouee. Refrigerator, washer/dryer. Southern and Hardy, 8 9 7 5090. M A K E YO UR FO R TU N E W rite fo r fre e details on 101 enor­ m ously p rofitable yet am azingly easy businesses anyone can s ta rt O ne w ill be p erfect fo r you! W rite to: A m erican Busin ess En terprises P .O .B o x 1365 B ryn M aw r, PA 16010 W ALK TO ASU. 1 bedroom. Pool, all appliances. $360. C all Leona, 2 8 6 5 1 1 0 or 990 5950. homes fo r re n t ACROSS FROM ASU. Huge studio with private entrance. Fireplace, w aft-in dosai, kitchen, both. $246. 067-4248. t t M ILE to ASU. Spacious 3 bedroom , 2 bath plus study room . $805/m onth, 067-4248. MATURE PERSON, light cooking only for Fan 88. Furnished, very private environ­ m ent. Traitor, 15 m inute w alk ASU* w asher/dryer. M ust feed 3 outdoor cats and w ater plants. $200. 660-1609 after 6 p.m . rental sharing $200 PER M onth, utilities included. Mato/ fem ale nonsmoker. V i m ile from ASU, 2 bedroom apartm ent, your own bedroom. 921-9060. after 0 p.m . $200 PER Month plus V* utilities. Furn­ ished bedroom and bath In townhome t * mito from cam pus. Has backyard for laying out. 8 0 4 5374, FEMALE ROOMMATE to share beautiful luxury home In Tam pa Lakes. 4 bedroom , 3 batti with pod . FuBy furnished w ith att the extras. $325/m ontti plus 1* utilities. C all Lisa or Eric, 831-2501. FEMALE ROOMM ATES wanted to share two bedroom, two bath at W orthington Place. $22S/m onth 1 * electricity, futty furnished, extras. Shannon. 821-7919. Available now!! FEMALE ROOMMATE: share 2 bedroom, 2 bath. $270.50 plus 1* utilities. W asher, dryer, microwave. 4 miles horn ASU. Sheila. 836-0220. LARGE BEDROOM available im m ediately In house. Watte to cam pus. Unfurnished. Full house privileges. $275 including utilities. 821-2000. _________ - LUXURY APARTM ENT needs m ale room­ h elp w anted --------- « K k U l l t . . ~ j START i im m e d ia t e l y ; ! ; m c i TE LEC O M j j M U N IC A TIO N S } IS H IR IN G j HOURS: j 7:30 a.m .-4 p.m. • & 4:30-0 p.m . { M on.-Frl. } S e ll lo n g d is ta n c e ! { p h o n e services fo r a { • F o rtu n e 5 00 com pan y, i ! $5 per hour guaranteed. | } R a is e s & b o n u s e s , i | Looks g re a t on y o u r j S resum e. O th e r o p p o r-1 | tu n itie s a v a ila b le in { * I o th e r d e p a r tm e n ts { S a fte r 3 0 d ays. C e n tra l i | P h o en ix lo c a tio n . } A sk fo r J ilt o r B arb 224-5625 ADDTEM PS J N o F ee EOE i state Prca Monday, August 9 9 , il988 h e lp w a n te d ACCOUNTING- LEAD setters. iS /h o u r plus bonus- P H I w eekly. 9 6 8 8 8 8 0 APPLICATIONS BEING accepted for a part-time bartender, must be able to work from 4-10 p.m . N eed friendly and outgoing person. Apply at QuaM y Inn, M O and Elliot Rd. ■ ■ ASU IS Calling on you... to become a member of the ASU Telehind team l On-campus location, can «m ilt 8-16 hours per w eek, Sunday-Thursday evenings 5:30-9: 30. Earn $4.10/hour plus bonus plus commission, great nightly Incentives, gain valuable telem arketing experience speaking with alum ni nationwide. H you have sales ability, caR 985-6754 (last training on Thursday)._________________ ATTENDANT (FEM ALE) headed to assist disabled student. Various hours available. No experience necessary. Ideal tor oncampus residents. $5/hour. Can Barb, 784-8502. • , ATTENTION SW IM M ERS; Swim shop hiring sales personnel. Typing and office skills desireable. C all 264-7774, Monday- help wanted BREAKFAST/LUNCH cafe needs parttime/fuH-time waitresses and kitchen help. Apply at Kevin's Comer Cato, 1728 W . University, Suita 1, Tam pa. DISABLED STUDENT needs help parttim e. Approximately 10-12 hours/week. 15/hour. No experience necessary, will tra in . R eferen ces req u ired . L iltin g required (100 pounds). 82 9 0 9 27 CHILDCARE ATTENDANT needed tor 3 working mothers in our Tam pa m edical office- Flexible day tim e schedule. $3.35/hour. C all Cindy at 8298741 days and 820-2280 evenings and weekends. PART-TIM E CHILD care position. Help mom care tor 3 young children. Near Paradise V alley M all. Transportation necessary. 892-2846. CORAL BAY hiring staff and bartender. Apply Tueaday-Frtday, 2-4:30, 8380 Via D a Ventura. CORK N Cleaver now accepting applica­ tions for lunch waitresses end hostesses. Short shifts, convenient hours, fun atmosphere. Also accepting applications tor evening hostesses and evening cocktail w aitress. Apply in person Monday-Friday 2-5 p.m . or by appointm ent. 5101 N . 44th S treet, Phoenix, 44th Street and Camelback, 962-0685. Friday, 10-8 p,m . CREATIVE ART major wanted part-tim e. Flexible hours, $5/hour. C all between 10 and. 2 , Monday, W ednesday, Friday, 988-5002. DAY PERSON needed at Los Arcos Cinem a, 1383 N . Scottsdale Road. Apply in parson. Find it In the Classifieds! ATTENTION CH EM ISTY student. Parttime lab technician needod for Chandler Solvent company. Experience with Gas Chromatography interpretations and lab distillations. Knowledge of PH m eter and Karl Fischer Titrations. Flexible hours. $6.75/hour. Call Uniforce, 921-0888. DISABLED FEMALE- PV East, needs fem ale attendant, morning and evening, bouts flexible, good pay,-no experience or lifting necessary. 7848078. DISABLED MALE needs weekend help. Easy work, good $$$. 784-8271. EARN S1000/SALE, video greetings booth. M ale/fem ale Part-tim e. 283-1036. AVAILABLE IM M EDIATELY. Tem pe m ark­ eting research firm needs telephone inter­ EARN EXTRA money as piano accompan­ ist tor Gethsemane Lutheran adult choir, Tuesday night, 7 8 :3 0 , starting September 13. C all Paula MuaHer, 431-0091. viewers. Call today- w ill hire first 6 quali­ fied applicants. Flexible evening/weekend hours. Start at $4/hour. Rapid raises for good people. O 'N eil Associates- Susan, 967-4441. EARN MONEY at home! Assemble jewel­ ry, toys, electronics, others. Full-tim e and part-tim e work available. Call (refundable) 1-407-7448000 ext. S203, 24 hours. BABYSITTERS AN D nannys wanted for live-in or out positions. Paradise Valley, Scottsdale, Tem pe, M esa. C an work w ell with school schedule. Must have transpor­ tation. 277-5909. BABYSITTER/HOUSE M anager. Profes­ sors home close to cam pus. $3.35/hour. 965-2348, home 967-2817. 30 hours. BARTENDER/GRKJL cook needed for fun neighborhood sports bar; Flexible sche­ dule. $8-$12 per hour. Apply W oodshed I, Mill and Basatine. E X P E R IE N C E D LIG H TIN G operator w anted. Part-tim e, $4/hour: Must have taken THP345. Call between 10 and 10, Monday/W ednesday/Friday, 968-5002. EXTRA MONEY is nice, but you can help people too. Earn $120 plus a month. Safer, taster plasm a donation only at ABI Centers due to automated procedure. $5 bonus to new donore on first donation with this ad. Ask about additional bonuses. (M onday-Saturday) University Plasm a Canter, Associated Bioscience, Inc. 1015 S. Rural Rd, Tam pa, 9688139. FULL OR PART-TIM E, 19 yesrs or older, enthusiastic, energetic, dedicated employ­ ees for growing fast food enterprize. Apply in person at AZ Sub DevN Restaurant, M ill M id University, Tem po Canter. GOVERNM ENT JOBSI Now hiring in your area, both skilled and unskiNsd. For a list o f jo b s a n d a p p lic a t io n c a ll 1 8 1 5 8 8 3 8 8 2 7 , ext. J321._____________ HELP W ANTEO: Drivers, cooks, and counter help. Good pay and flexible hours. C all 829 0084 or 921 8446, ask tor M ika, John, or M r. Simpson. HEY YOU! I'm a full-tim e ASU student and I make Over $400 every w eek working part-tim e in an air-conditioned office. Sound good? C a l Jon, 906 8786. MALE MODELS: Versatile m ale models needed by photographer who w ill be In Phoenix in October. Those »elected will earn top dollar. Send recent photos, etc, to J.G ., 5509 Croaacreek Lana, Suite 1075, Fort W orth, TX 78109. MALE STUDENT nurse tor morning hours, 8 8 a.m . Monday-Friday, $10/hour tor 19 year old m ale with Cerebral Palsy. Would consider student from special ad program or social work or someone with m edical knowledge, p.m . hours also South Scottsdale, 994-4690. needed. MARKETING INTERN. Looking tor sellmotivator w ilin g to take responsibility. Must have creative m arketing sense, good verbal and w ritten communtcatione skifis. Computer literacy and abttity to work with M ac plus required. Flexible, 20-30 hours/ week. Serious Inquiries only. Contact . DenniSi-8358971. HEY YO U » Y ea, the w ild, crazy one! Become a part-tim e DJ tor private parties and get paid tor being a ham! Call 957-1967.____________________________ NURSING STUDENT, grad or undergrad, help cam tor tomato ALS patient on respirator. Lifting required. Flexible hours, evenihgs/w aeksnds, possible Ihm -in. Tem ps vicinity, RuraVBaseNns, 839 8084. PART-TM IE EVENING help needed tor quadriplegic college student. 3 evenings par w eek, Scottsdale area. 949 8 8 0 3 or 9408075. _________________ ' P A R T -T IM E M O R N IN G S . D e liv e ry / counter positions, $ 4 5 0 plus. Can Pastry Courier, 2308200. PA R T-TIM E HELP tor lawn service com pany. No experience necessary. $5/ltour to atari. CaN tor appointm ent, (MULfMOQ UUU ACDV. PART-TIM E SECRETARY. Light typing plus PC . Close to A 8U . Apply in person. 3702 E . Roeser Rd, Suite 19, 10 a.m .-4 PRE-SCHOOL CH ILD Supervisor, prefer over .21. Must levs kids. Part-tim e morn­ ings Country Club and Brawn, 890-1684, M ichele. PSYCHO LO G Y O R Education m ajor needed to fiva-ki as a big sister to teenager. Soma housework in exchange tor room and board. Ranee, 259-2845. R E S T A U R A N T D E L IV E R Y D riv e rs wanted, part-tim e and lull-tim a, lunch/ dinner shift. Advancem ent available. South Scottsdale. Call after 11 a m ., 4 23 8095. _________ . - ^ ¿ 3 ; , , , '- ROYAL PALMS Inn now hiring buaboys, w aiters. 520 0 C am elback, Phoenix. 849 8610. TE A C H ER A ID E S . Preschool W est. 8948338. PART-TIME HOURS/ D R IV E - IN FULL-TIME PAY now hiring Complete training pro­ gram. Our customers call us. Beginners earning $300 per week. Young, c a s u a l a tm o s p h e re . S e c re ta ria l positions open. Established na­ tional company. C all Now 921-9971 D ia la m e ric a M a rk e tin g , th e nation's finest telem arketing firm , is now accepting applications for the follow ing shifts: 1-6 p.m., B-9 p.m. Weekends Also Available O ur salespeople w ork in a m odem , com fortable business environm ent contacting established custom ers on long distance lines. G u aranteed salary or com m ission, w hichever is greater, and averages $S -$7 an hour. O ur Tem po office is located approxim ately 5 m inutes from cam pus. P lease c a ll Dialamerica Marketing for details. 829-1140 947-0142 C ITY OF SCOTTSDALE RECREATION DIVISION WANTED: Qlrls VOLLEYBALL COACHES & OFFICIALS APPROX. $ 2 1 0 /SEASON For appileatlon Inform ation oontaot th e Student Em ploym ent O ffic e o r c ell 9 9 4 -2 4 8 2 . 1301 E. University 968-6666 A pp lication s w ill t o accep ted until M onday, Septem ber 19. A LL P O S IT IO N S AVAILABLE Energetic peopLe needed fo r hot new pizza parlor opening in Tempe. Cooks, cashiers, pizza makers and delivery persons. $ Great way to earn a lot of money if you can read, and have a pleasant but ag­ gressive personality. •Top commissions paid •Nicest office in town •Flexible hours available •Guaranteed salary TUTO R IN quick basic programming can w ork by p h o n e, a le . Im m ed iately. 7 3 9 8 4 0 6 dally or after 8 p.m . $8/hour. TY P IS T NEEDED to assist disabled student in a Tuesday and Thursday m orning class. $7/hour. C all Barb, 7 8 4 8602. W AITRESSES W AN TB> tor fun neighbor­ hood sports lounga/reetauranL Flexible schedule, good $. Apply Woodshed li, Dobson and University, attar 5 p.m . W ANTED: C H ILD care part-tim e. 9 1 2 hours a w eek. 2 boys age 6 and 1. Salary negotiable, 969-2437. W ANTED IM M EDIATELY. Disabled male student needs help mornings, dinner, evenings, and/or weekends. Commons on Lemon, 9 89 8460. W ANTED: VO LU N TE B tS for the Arizona S tale Hospital. If you are interested, please contact Susan, 220 8014. $ JIM . W ELCOME back Please call m s. Shallay. from London. UCAM AT ASU- m ealing 1 p.m . Tuesday in M U room 212x (Cochise). Pat Day w ill present a survey o f our nuclear policy, or “ How W a G ot to W here If. Looks Like W e’re G oing.'’ D on't mtoa Kl transportation ALL STATES Driveaway- Cars available21 or okter. 992-5200. ty p in g / w ortf processing 20% O FF Ml resumes and word process­ ing. Sam e day service. Laser printing. Professional Im age, ¿ 1 -1 1 2 9 . A A K U R IT T Y P IN G - sh o rt p a p e rs , overnight/ long papers, prompt service/ transcribe tapes/ good rate«/ Linda 831-0349. ■ ACCENTS IN Typing. Typing service near ASU. Q uick turnaround. O m 30 years secretarial experience. 0 4 8 0082. ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. CaN an y tim e.. Prices com petitive, negotiable. 968-2186. C ER E U S W O RD Processing. Q uick, experienced, quality guaranteed. Term papers, theses, form letters, resum es, Dictaphone. 947-7798. FLYIN G FING ER S now has a M ac H and laser printer) n eeumos, reports, etc. Susan, 948-1800. _________ _________ I i hi l e e i r l l n a i in s tru c tio n A E RO BIC IN STRUC TO R C ertification workshop by National Aerobics Training Association a t Phoenix Cantor tor Sports M edicine. W eekend of Septem ber 30th. C all 0 03 8415. ARABIC LANGUAGE. Professional teach­ er. M assage, 8 9 4 8126. CLASSTCAL G UITAR instruction- develop any style at play- first lesson 'h price- call 988 8821. PIANO INSTRUC TIO N . Accepting new students now, adults and children. Nation­ ally certified teacher and pianist. Ask about special offers. 1st lesson tree. 898-1404. FORM ER ASU staffers: W ord Perfect, X e ro x M e m o ry w rite rs , M c In to s h com puter/laser graphics. Artist available for charts, diagram s, and desktop publish­ ing. Experienced with APA, MLA, gradu­ ate school, etc. G radutate students and faculty work welcome. CaN Donna or Joan, 945-8302.__________ LOOK NO Further)! WIN type anything, including tape transcriptions. Reasonable ra te s ) E x p e rie n c e d . 921-1432, Cami. R e fe re n c e s . Q UALITY, Q UICK typing. Papers, reports, resum es. Pick-up/deHvery available. One day service availebie. Ginny, 956-5163. TH E PAPERW ORKS- Thesis, report, and resum e typing. IBM com patible word processing. N ear ASU. 921-9575. w anted \ M AT 118 Algsbra tutor needed. Top dollar. C a l 981-8226, leave message. kenpo TU TO R IN quick basic programming can c h in e s e a k a ra te 2 F O R 1 S P E C IA L Bring a Friend! (Expires Sept. 1). 1 w ork by phono, a te . im m ed iately. 738 8 4 0 8 dafly or after 6 p.m . $8/hour. m iscellaneous NAGEL COMMEMORATIVE number 14o r 15 only $98, fram ed $175. Others avail­ able, custom fram ing. 839 8743. (3. minutes from ASU) W Jewelry CASH FOR gold Sind diamonds. MiH Avenue Jew elers, 414 S . MW, Suite 101, Tem pe. 968-5967. services ANOREXIA, BULIMIA, com pulsive over­ eating. Private and confidential counsel­ ing. Girtnto G rant Monroe, ACSW , recov­ ering bulim ic, 437842a 4 6 8 8 8 5 0 . Health insurance welcome. EXPERIENCED LOVING mother wants to CUSTO M , Q O LD SM ITHING , silversm ithing end Jewelry repairs. MiH Avenue JBWBIBia, QAQ.CQC7 VOO-OtfOr . babysit in her home- any day, any tim e. Dobaon and W arner area (Chandler). S I-5 8 per hour. C a l Sine. 786 8668. free lo s^fo u n d HIV o r DRUG SCREEN (Alcohol, TC P , TH C .etc.) TAKE A BREAK FROM THE BOOKS AND EARN $7-10/HR PART-TIME With our flexible hours you’ll still have plenty o f tim e to study. •G uaranteed wage plus commission and incentives FO UN D 8/23/88. W oman’s gold bracelet in Tyler M e l near science library. Must deacribo to claim . 80S 4463, evenings. 909 apouoi personals A -PH I U S A P .- G el better laat because our form al to approaching and the haficoptor is w orth tt. M any potonllato. but the blondes are winning (I think). Lori. services •P aid vacations $29 each 3 5 + BLOOD CHEMISTRIES with 10 study URINALYSIS (including exptoxtefipn of test) •P aid training Know your unique profile. Early warning of infections, dietary prob­ lems, enzymes, heart rtok factors, chotoeterof, HOC, LDL, trigtycaridee. Confidentia l testing a t a lab n ea r you. EARLY*HEALTH ALERT 9 9 6 -7 6 0 0 •R egular pay increases • 4 to 9 p.m. shift with some flexibility •Convenient to ASU campus •N O COLD CALLING At Till, our friendly, supportive management staff will help you m eet your earnings potential. This is telem arketing the way it’s supposed to bel Call today. Mesa 926-0516 TH E BORDER’S Edge to now accepting applications tor several positions to be filled im m ediately. Ocrasn printer, campus sales rap, district sales rap, artist. Resumes are being accepted at 618 S. C ollege, Tem pe, AZ. Portfolio» »re required for artist position. CHRISTY: I’VE had a good 2 weeks (It always could be batter). I hope your 21st was as good as it should be. Lai's have a good year! I love youi L.A. Bound. 1 7 3 3 Ë . M c K e llip s B o ys S u n n y ’s Pizza & P ub ' TEACHER A SSISTA NTS needed for Tam pa Child Cam Cantor. 6 months experience desired, but w ill train. Please Ca« 894-9370. C A L L 9 45 -1 73 3 FLAG FOOTBALL Fill out application at PHONE SALES STUDENTS: PART-TIM E work, full-tim e pay. G reat opportunity tor those who qualify. For personal interview can CBS Supply, Inc. between 9 a.m .-4 p.m . M onday-Friday, 921-2897. 1 855 S. Rural AFTERNOON EXPANSION t& 50 per hour guaranteed $ personals p jn . , D I C K ’S Supervisors, cashiers, cooks, maintenance, & prep positions. We offer free meals, competitive wages, flexible hours. New ma n a g e me n t team-. New attitude. im p vwncQ KARISMA AFTER CLASS HOURS $ help wanted help w anted For personal interview call Tom Stevens at 967-0066 * . Ä S 4 fl “ I If; FALL SPECIAL SHAMPOO, CONDITIONING Cut & Blow Dry STYLE Reg. f2 5 NOW «10 P H O E N IX HA IR C O M P A N Y 7 4 8 E. M cD ow ell By Appt. only with Ricardo 2 5 8 -1 9 0 6 NEW CLIENTS ONLY M o n d n ^ M S SWe Press ^ l^ M is s e d p u tt lets R eid w in W o rld S eries of G o lf AKRO N, Ohio (A P ) — Tom Watson missed a 30-inch parsaving putt and let M ike Reid escape with a playoff victory Sunday in the W orld Series o f Golf. Watson, seeking his first victory o f the season and second in four years, three-putted the first playoff hole and Reid becam e a winner with a routine par. The lapse by Watson, who has been troubled by inconsistent short putting fo r the four years of his slump, cost him a chance to. go past Jack Nicklaus and take the all-tim e money-winning lead on the PG A Tour. And it m ay have cost him a chance to defend his title in the $3 m illion Nabisco Championships o f G olf in Novem ber. Only the top 30 money-winners w ill be eligible for that tournament. A t the moment, he ranks 28th. Watson and Reid each finished the regulation 72 holes at 275, 5-under-par on rain-sodden Firestone Country Club course. Watson, a five-tim e British Open champion and once go lf’s greatest player, had a closing 68. Reid, a soft-spoken man who spent 11 seasons on the Tour before scoring his first victory last year in Tucson, had a 69. Watson, winner o f 32 Tour titles and recently named to the G olf W orld H all o f Fam e, had the lead alone when he was standing on the 18th tee. But Reid, playing behind him, birdied the 17th from short range to regain a share of the top spot. When both Reid and Watson played the 18th in regulation, the playoff was on, beginning on the 10th hole. Both reached the green in regulation, R eid some 30 feet from the cup and Watson about 18-20 feet away. R eid’s first putt slid about 30 inches beyond and Watson had a chance to win it. ' But he missed, too. And he, too, went less than three feet away. ' Watson missed the comeback putt to the right and when Reid tapped in, he had the victory and the $162,000 first prize. Th ere are over 40,000 reasons to advertise typing and w ord processing services in the S T A T E PRESS. TH E ’ NOW 2 LOCATIONS Tam p. [ ( ü m lg l $5 OFF w ith th is coupon (P articip atin g Stylists O nly) R e g u la r P ric e 8 04 S . Ash 2 B locks W est o f M ill, 1 B lock S ou th o f U n iv e rs ity 1840 W . S ou thern 1 B lock East o f D obson A cross fro m M .C .C . .966-1003 or 966-4292 464-1668 or 464-1669 A1 v y v P A P A J A Y 'S P T7 7 A y y y Y 968-5946 709 S. Forest A ve. Y N o rth of U n iv e rs ity A v e . Mon-Fri 9-9 SERVING THE PHOENIX AREA SINCE 1972 FA S T FR EE D E L IV E R Y , W E O P E N D A IL Y A T 11 A M . & C L O S E LA TE KARATE-MART J V Supply Center y V Most Competitive Prices in Town ! y M en $ 14 • W om en $16 Open Evenings: V A 1 4 f > A1 4 f Y A1 -f A Y 831 S. RURAL RD. Y sccornu of mms Y UMVCRSflYNCXTTOBOB'S •UNIFORMS KARATE & JUDO •WEAPONS •TRAINING & PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT •NINJA EQUIPMENT •BOOKS & MAGAZINES •VIDEOS HOURS: q q s MON.-SAT. 1 0 a . m .-6 p .m 894-6778 y > y y y y y si f 4 Ï Y I I REGISTER BY PHONE THROUGH SEPT. 9 - 223-4001 CLASS LOCATIONS CLOSE TO ASU CLOSED OUT? GET IN AT RIO SA LA D 0 & TRANSFER CREDITS TO YOUR ASU PROGRAM RIO SALADO COMMUNITY COLLEGE ENG 101 Freshman English 1118 D obson H igh 1903W bstwood 1503Tem pe H igh M ARICOPA Co m m u n i ry COLLEGES T 6:30-9:20 R 3:00-6:00 R 6:10-9*0 T 6:30-9:20 W 6:30-9:30 M G 102 Freshman English 1119 D obson H igh 1904\Afestwood 1504 Tem pe H igh T 6:30-9:20 MAT 223 Calc/Anayl Qeom I W 6:30-9:30 1509Tem pe H igh R 6:30-9:30 MW 7:00-905 MAT 224 Calc/Anayl Geom II MAT 055 Arithmetic Rev 1516 TBmpe H igh TR 7:00*8:55 1371 W bsfw ood. W MAT 077 Intro Algebra Classes o ffe re d b y television, a u d io ca sse tte , m odem , 6:30-9:30 co n fe re n ce c a ll a n d correspond ence. The classes 6:00-900 a re EQUIVALENT to o n -c a m p u s classes in c o n te n t, assignm ents a n d cre d its earned. CALL 223-4206 to register o r to request in fo rm a tio n TR 6:30-9:05 o n these o r o th e r classes ENG 071 R evelin g FUnd ENG 101 Freshman English R 6:30-9:30 ENG 102 Freshman English MAT154 CoHege Algebra 1372\Afestwood 1505Tem pe H igh MAT 124 Inter Algebra/Rev 1162 D obson H igh 1130 D obson H igh m 6:30-9:30 1131 D obson H igh 1506Tem pe H igh 1507Tem pe H igh 6:30-9:30 6:30-9:30 MAI 210 Brief Calculus 6:30-9:20 1132 D obson H igh 1508Tem pe H igh 1367W bstwood MAT 129 Inter Algebra CLASS SCHEDULE FALL 1988 MAT 154 College Algebra ENG 071 Rev of Eng Fund 6:00-9:00 ALTERNATIVE DELIVERY M M TUition an d fees: $22.50 per credit hour for county residents C all 981-1700 for further inform ation Refunds for drops d ie not automatic. A written request must be made through the negtetratton office, 640 N. 1st Ayr , Phoenix, AZ 85003, whether a student attends class or not. There will b e NO RBUNDt attar the rotund period. All tuition 4 foot a ie subject to change. Payment may bo made by chock, cash. MastMCard, or Visa or students may be billed and paymentls due ten ( 10) day* after registration.