Hate press V o l. 71 N o . 10 •Copyright, Stato Preis, 1968 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily F rid a y, S e p te m b e r 2 ,1 9 8 8 Tempe, Arizona Committee approves $207 million in plans B y SH ERI JO H N SO N State P ress llil T h e A rizon a B oard o f R egen ts’ resour ces com m ittee approved a five-yea r capi ta l im provem ent plan Thursday that calls fo r ASU to spend, about $207 m illion begin ning in 1990fo r new buildings and building im provem ents. T h e plan, com piled by U n iversity and regents sta ff m em bers, w ill be presented to the board a t its Septem ber m eeting next w eek in F la g sta ff. T h e plan also allocates spending about $84 m illion at ASU W est, $280 m illion a t the U ofA and $76 m illion at U o fA ’s am ount is much h igh er than A SU ’ s because the Tucson u niversity is expectin g g rea ter funding through g ifts and grants, said R ob ert B. W illiam s, the regen ts’ associate d irector fo r capital de velopm ent and human resources. Committee O Ks dorm, page 11 E ig h t A S U p ro je c ts ta rg e te d in the report fo r 1990 h ave received conceptual approval from the regen ts, W illiam s said. Sandy M endez, preaidant of the H ispanic B usiness Students A ssociation, M offord a kiss on the Cheek after M offord spoke to the association in the MO. given h e re watch. Mofford praises group's efforts to further Hispanics’ education By DO N EM P IE Contributing Writer C itin g education as the m ost im por tant fa cet o f A m erican life , G ov. R ose M offord com m ended the w ork o f the Hispanic Business Students Association during rem arks at a reception fo r the organization Thursday. “ Th ese groups a re v e ry im portant to ed u ca tin g e v e ry o n e ,” M o ffo rd told about 60 people in the M U ’s Gold Room . “ Education is an um brella, and a ll o f our w ork is done from under it.” M offord , w ho has w orked in A rizona state governm ent fo r 48 years, said she lam ents one thing in her life. T u rn «0 M «Wo rJ . P »0 « 7 Th e ASU projects, which w ill cost about $60 m illio n , in clu de a M u sic B u ild in g exp an sion , th e G o ld w a ter C en ter fo r Science and E n gineering, asbestos abate m ent, resid en ce h all fir e alarm s, fir e alarm system s, parking structures and U n iversity Club renovations. W illiam s said the m oney allocated fo r the other fou r years w ill com e from funds the U n iversity expects to re ceive in the future. “ T h ere’ s no m oney at this tim e,” he said. Th e plan designates about $94 m illion fo r 1991, $16 m illion fo r 1992, $21 m illion fo r 1993 and $15 m illion fo r 1994. T h e 1991 projects include an A pplied Science Center, a L ib era l A rts Building, classroom renovations, an In form ation Resources M anagem ent Building, a Uni v e rs ity G olf Clubhouse, a C ollege o f Law L ib r a r y B u ild in g, .a P h y s ic a l S cien ce Com plex, residence life expansion, Uni v ersity key secu rity system and continued Hayden L ib ra ry expansion. 'UofA’s amount is m uch higher than A S il’s because the Tucson university is expecting greater funding through gifts and grants.’ Four projects are planned betw een 1992 and 1994. Th ey include laboratory anim al ca re and autom atic fir e sprinklers, a Fin e A rts Com plex and a new Academ ic S ervi ces Building. M onies fo r funding the five-yea r plan w ill com e from fiv e sources. Tw enty-three m illion dollars w ill com e from the general fund authority, $123 m illion from academ ic bond authority, $25 m illion from auxi la ry bond authority, $25 m illion from fed e ra l funds and $11 m illion from g ifts and grants. The gen eral fund is appropriated b y the legislatu re, w hile academ ic bond author ity is paid b y tuition and fees. Th e a u xilia ry bond authority is paid by fees from sources such as residence life hails and parking, and fed eral funds com e from governm ent grants. G ifts and grants com e from p rivate con tributions o r state funds. The legislatu re must approve a ll Uni versity funding. “ N ot only does th e legislatu re approve gen eral funding m oney, but it also holds the strin g in authorizing the regents to sell bonds,” he said. Legislative candidates address student issues at forum By K ELLY P E A R C E State P ress ? Tw enty-tw o A rizon a le g is la tiv e candidates had a chance Thursday to h ave th eir say at ASU , and a ll but fou r o f them they supported votin g pow er fo r the student represen ta tive to the A rizona B oard o f R egents. In a p o litica l forum sponsored by Associated Students P o litic a l Union, the 13 candidates fo r House seats and nine Senate candidates had three minutes each to te ll about 150 onlookers th eir view s on the student regen t, u n iversity equ ity funding and the A rizona F in an cial A id Tru st pro gram (A F A T ). Th e candidates w ill fa ce voters in a Sept. 13 p rim ary. The forum w as split into tw o sessions, one fo r House candidates and the other fo r Senate candidates. When ASASU E xecu tive Presid en t John F ees asked the House candidates to ra ise th eir hands if they would support a b ill g iv in g the student regen t votin g pow er, a ll but three lifted th eir arm s. Th e three w ere M arilyn H aw ker, R -D istrict 21; incum bent B ev Harm on, R -D istrict 27, whose district includes ASU ; and incum bent Don Strauch, R -D lstrict 29. Th e govern or appoints a student regen t each y e a r from one o f the three state universities. This y e a r’ s regen t is ASU student P a trick M cW horter, which m eans the Uni v ersity w ill not h ave another student regen t on the board m m a J— n Mumnah/S>»>» Prw A rizona Senate candidates (from left) Jim Cunningham , Bev Hermon, Jalm a Hunslnger, Jenny Norton, G ary R ichardson, Lo la Steffey and DOn Strauch answ er queatlons about atudent issues Thursday at an A S A S U political forum held In the M U. until 1991. Herm on said she had reservations about g iv in g the student regen t votin g p rivileges because once e v e ry three years the regent is b o m U ofA . “ Th e board o f regents is a lread y h eavily w eighted w ith U ofA regents,” she said. ASU WEATHER CHANGING HANDS: Mostly sunny today with a h ig h near 106. The low should drop to 83. A Tem pe bookstore oriented toward local literature lovers draws its name, Changing Hands, from community support. Page 13.. When the Senate candidates took the stage, B ill V alen tic, R -D istrict 27, said he could not support a student regen t vote. “ T h eir (th e student regent’ s ) term is very short, and I ’ m not sure he can be e ffe c tiv e ,” V alen tic said. iwsteNwSkasaaM C la ss ifie d . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 C o m ic s ................... 16 Opinion ...... ....... ............... ............ . •4 Entertainm ent.......... 13 S p o rts . . . . . . Y Y .Y ............ 17 T o d a y . . . . . . Y . . . . ........... ........................2 Page g Friday, September 8 ,1988 -- ----- -- , | IM > W « a world/nation in brief About 2,000 onlookers chanted, "Thank you, thank you! ’’ and “ Th ere is no freedom without Solidarity! ” Strikers and the crowd outside joined in singing the national anthem just before file shipyard gates swung open. Shipyard, steel workers end strikes in Poland GDANSK, Poland (A P ) — Shipyard and steel workers ended strikes Thursday, and Lech W alesa urged others to halt Poland’s worst labor turm oil In seven years now that the governm ent has agreed to discuss Solidarity’s future. A Solidarity spokesman said the walkout at die July Mani festo mine, w here the nationwide strike w ave began m ore than two weeks ago, appeared to be nearing an end, But by Thursday night, W alesa failed to convince striking bus and dock workers in the Baltic port o f Szczecin to end their strike, and d ie strike com m ittee decided to press fo r settle ment o f their local issues, said the spokesman, Arkadiusz Rybickl. W alesa m et with ranking officials W ednesday fo r the first tim e in six years and the governm ent agreed to discuss the outlawed union and other issues. R estoring Solidarity’s legal status was the m ain demand o f the strikers. W orkers at the Stalowa W ola steel m ill in southern Poland began leavin g the plant at 7 p.m. a fter receivin g a telephone appeal from W alesa and a m essage from the Rom an Catholic episcopate, a strike com m ittee spokeswoman said. A t least 3,000 strikers w ere in the Lenin shipyard, where W alesa works as an electrician, including workers from other yards in this B altic p o rt They hoisted Solidarity banners as members o f their strike com m ittee led them ou t Hotel in South Africa rocked by bomb; 2 people killed W IND H O EK, South-West A frica (A P ) - A bomb exploded Thursday evening in a downtown hotel patronized by blacks and set it ablaze, killin g two people and wounding 15, police reported, A m ine exploded 90 minutes later on a railroad line about a m ile from the three-story hotel, slightly wounding two m ore people, said officials at the Windhoek State Hospital. The explosions occurred on the day the South-West A frica People’s Organization said it would begin a voluntary cease fire. SW APO has fought a long guerrilla w ar against South A frican control o f the territory, also known as Namibia. South A frica ’s government-run broadcasting network said an anonymous telephone caller claim ed responsibility fo r the hotel bombing on behalf o f SW APO. The guerrilla group nor m ally attacks m ilitary targets or white residential or shop ping areas. Louis Pienaar, the territorial administrator appointed by South A frica, blam ed SW APO and accused it o f violating the pledge o f a truce. He did not explain w hy the gu errillas would bomb a hotel patronized by blacks. Helicopter crash in California leaves 6 crew members dead BARSTOW , C alif. (A P ) — A C aliforn ia A ir N ational Guard helicopter crashed in a M o ja ve D esert mountain range Thursday, killin g a ll six people aboard, authorities said. .v The crew o f the H-3 h elicopter w as m ade up o f four Guardsmen and two A ir F o rce personnel from G eorge A ir F orce Base, said Sgt. 1st Class C gro lyii H am ilton, spokes woman at National Guard headquarters in Sacram ento. The helicopter w as from the 129th A ir R escu e and R ec o very Group based at M o ffett N a va l A ir Station a t Moun tain V iew . It w as participatin g In a train in g exercise at G eorge when it w ent down at 10:55 a.m ., H am ilton said. The bodies w ere discovered b y a rescu e team , said Capt. Kent K night o f the C aliforn ia H igh w ay P a tro l, which dis patched a helicopter to the scene. The crash occurred about 18 m iles southeast o f Barstow in the Cinder Cone region o f the Rodm an M ountains, said San Bernardino County s h e riffs spokesm an Jim B ryant. C alifornia H ighw ay P a tro l F lig h t O ffic e r K en D avis, one o f those who fle w to the scene, said the h elicopter struck a rid ge in the mountain range. today T h e T o d a y s e c tio n Is a d a ily c a le n d a r o f e v e n ts h a p p e n in g a t A S U th a t Is p re s e n te d a s a s e rv ic e to th e U n iv e rs ity c o m m u n ity . A n y c a m p u s d u b o r o rg a n iz a tio n c a n su b m it e n trie s fo r p u b lic a tio n to th e S ta te P re s s , lo c a te d in th e b a se m e n t o f M a tth e w s C e n te r, B o o m 15. E n trie s m u st b e le g ib le , a re s u b je c t to e d itin g fo r c o n te n t, s p a c e a n d c la r ity , a n d w ill n o t b e ta k e n o v e r th e p h o n e . D u e to s p a c e re s tric tio n s , th e S ta te P re s s c a n n o t g u a ra n te e p u b lic a tio n . D e a d lin e fo r th e e n trie s Is 1 p .m . th e p re v io u s b u s in e s s day. Meetings • A S U ’s W re stlin g T e a m needs assistants, scoregirts, tow el girls and tim ers fo r this year’s m eets. A m eeting fo r those interested w ill take p la ce Sept. 2 at 5:30 p.m. in the Univer sity A ctivity C enter, Room 35. • T h s F a rc e S id e C o m e d y H o u r w iil have its inaugural com ed y sh ow o f the sem ester in the MU Cinem a at 12:30 p.m. • T h e B a p tis t S tu d e n t U n io n will host a Student Survival R ally on Sept. 2 at ? p.m. at the BSU center, 1322 S. Mill Ave. Th e top ic w ill b e “Academ ic Survival.” • D e v ils ’ J u g g lin g C lu b will b e in front o f the Language and Literature Building at 2:40 p.m. today.to reveal secrets on “ H ow to ’steel.’" • T h e A S U S o c c e r C lu b w ill hold a team practice to day at 4:30 p.m. on Sahuaro Field. New m em bers are welcom e. • D e lta S ig m a PI w ill have a Professional Dress recruitment event at 8 p.m. at the Rancho las Palmas Clubhouse, 1249 E. Spence. • T h e W h ite fie ld S o c ie ty will m eet at 12:40 p.m. to discuss "Church history up to 1500 A.D.” • A m e ric a n S o c ie ty fo r P e rs o n n e l A d m in istra tio n will have a rush party at Pizza Hut, 1030 E. Apache, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. N ew members are w elcom e. • D E X In te rn a tio n a l w ill hold a DEX T rop ical Bash on Sat urday night at 9 at the Palm T ree C lubhouse. • A m e rica n s w ith D is a b ilitie s w ill h old a march and rally on Monday, Sept. 5 at the Neumann Church on University and C ollege. • A S U S tu d e n t C h a p te r o f th e N ational A rt Education Association will hold its first m eeting o f the year on Tuesday. Sept. 6, at 4 p.m. in the A rt Building room 226. •W om en In C o m m u n ic a tio n s w ill m eet on Tuesday, Sept. 6 in the MU Santa Cruz Room . T eresa C orary-D avia will address public relations topics. • T h e A S U C h a p te r o f th e N A A C P w ill have an open house m eeting in the MU Pim a Room on Tu esday, S ept. 6 at 7:30 p.m. • A lp h a E ta R h o A v ia tio n F ra te rn ity w ill have its first m eet ing o f the sem ester on Tuesday, S ept. 6 at 7 p.m. 933 E. University, lam pe ■ Hot FA ST FREE DELIVERY- 69* 3 2 O z. DRINKS 12” MEDIUM ggg PIZZA & with one topping $4.9 5 ONE EXTRA LARGE (16” ) PIZZA 1 with one topping 1 $6.9 5 2 MEDIUM 12 PIZZA S W ITH TW O TO PPIN G S!! E x p ires 2 JON BOY PIZZAS « WITH TW O 9-6-68 plus tax plus tax / Page 3 Frida^September^1988 A S U plans 2 new parking structures campus briefs San Antonio mayor, columnist coming to campus next week San Antonio m ayor and newspaper colum nist H enry Cisneros w ill apeak to ASU students, fa cu lty and sta ff Sept. 9 about education. Cisneros’ s lectu re is titled: “ Education: Th e Com pet itiv e E d ge and S trategic Plan nin g.” It starts at 1 p.m . in the M U ’s A rizona Room . T h e visit w ill be his second to ASU . In D ecem ber 1985 he received an honorary doctorate from the U n iversity fo r his w ork as m ayor and fo r contributions to A m erican cities and politics. T h e lectu re is sponsored by A ssociated Students and the Presid en t’ s Council, a group o f cam pus student organizations. B y KRISTI E LLIS But he said that the U n iversity is "ta k in g a step in the State Press righ t direction ” in building the tw o structures. ASU ’ s shortage o f n early 2,500 parking spaces should be “ T h e new structures w ill trem endously help us and enaa llevia ted b y this tim e next ye a r when tw o m ore parking b le us to handle the future as w e ll,” said R ich ard Landreth, assistant d irector fo r ASU ’ s P ark in g and T ran sit services. structures should be com pleted. P a rk in g lots rou tinely a re over-sold due to a high student C u rren tly, 13,680 p ark in g spaces accom odate 27,000 turn-over rate, Landreth said. decal holders. H ow ever, he said U n iversity o ffic ia ls m ay h ave to Th e new parkin g structures, one to be located at the rethink the strategy because instructors are beginning to corn er o f Lem on S treet and R u ral Road and the other, count d a ily attendance as part o f students’ grades. south o f Sun D evil Stadium Just north o f P a lo V erde M ain Th e three-story ga ra ge along R u ral Road, to be called residence hall, w ill p rovid e an additional 2,274 spaces. Construction is scheduled to begin in January w ith com P ark in g Structure No. 4, w ill have 2,520 parking spaces fo r a net gain o f 1,540 spaces. pletion slated fo r August. Structure No. 5 south o f the stadium w ill h ave 1,120 spa A student represen tative, h ow ever, said he is w a ry o f the ces fo r a net gain o f 734 spaces. U n iversity’s plan to build a ga ra ge near a dorm itory. T h e tw o structures, which w ill be built concurrently, are “ I ’ m le e ry about structure fiv e behind P a lo V erd e M ain because people w ill h ave to m ove fo r Cardinal and Sun expected to cost a total o f about $11 m illion. Th e U n iveristy w ill issue $15 m illion in bonds fo r the p roject. The rem ain D e v il footb a ll gam es, and that’s a problem ,” said N ick in g $4 m illion w ill be spread o ver other projects. Spino, director o f the Tenants and Com m uters Association. “ T h ey 're goinjg up lik e tinker toys,” Landreth said. ASU climatologists discover heat cure Balling named ae director off Climatology Laboratory R obert B allin g, an assistant professor o f geography, has been nam ed d irector o f ASU ’ s L a b ora tory o f C lim atology. B allin g replaces Anthony B razel, a professor o f geo graphy, w ho has directed the lab’ s w eather-related a ctivities fo r the last eigh t years. “ Because o f the laboratory's Increased research load, record-keeping and public responsibilities, I fe lt it was w ise to pass alon g m y duties to another d irector,” B razel said. T h e lab, w hich is in A S U ’s Com m unity S ervices Cen ter B u ilding at Curry R oad and M ill Avenue, is a d iv ision o f thè U n iversities departm ent o f geography. Th e lab conducts clim actic research w h ile w orking w ith graduate and undergraduate w ork. It also w orks w ith the N ational W eather S ervice and publishes "A rizo n a C lim ate Sum m ary,” a 20-page m onthly n ew sletter that charts the state’s w eather ¿patterns.* * ^ B y LY N N K A L E C T A C A State P ress T w o ASU clim atologists have found a w ay fo r desert cities to reduce tem peratures o ver tim e. M ore g o lf courses. P a lm Springs, a desert town in C aliforn ia, has done just that and has been stea d ily coolin g o ff since the mid-1970s, said R obert B allin g, d irector o f the ASU Laboratory of C lim atology in the geography departm ent. “ Ph oenix is goin g in the opposite d irection ,” he added. “ It ’ s gettin g hotter and h otter.” A study b y B a llin g and co-researcher Nina Lolk has shown that tem peratu re changes in P a lm Springs h ave to do w ith land use, sp ecifica lly, the construction o f m ore and m ore g o lf courses. “ T h e sun can do one o f tw o things, ’ ’ B a llin g said. “ It can heat up the ground o r evap orate w ater ’ ’ and cause cooling. B efore the 1970s, P a lm Springs w as surrounded by desert and tem peratures gradu ally increased, B allin g said. But as g o lf courses w ere built, tem peratures de creased because o f increased irrigation w ater on them . On the oth er band, Phoenix has replaced its agricu ltu ral land w ith buildings and concrete. G a rth H e c k e l/S ta te T u rn to W s s th s r, p a g e 7 5---- ----- IR V IN E P A R K 8521 E. M cDow ell Rd. • A L L u tilitie s in clu d e d • S ta rtin g at $320 • Ju st a bike ride aw ay from A S U ; • S e p ara te A D U L T living • B iljia rd ta b le s & w eight ro o m fa c ilitie s One & two bedroom apartments, l roommate situation, pool, tennis, washer/dryer hookup. CALL FOR MOVE-IN SPECIAL week 3730 S. M ill Ave. * 894-2261 F R IN IT E ☆ 946-5315 H O S T & HOSTESS 2:30 Wednesdays ☆ ENTERTAINM ENT 1:30 Mondays MARK NORTHYEY PLA Y S GUITAR ☆ To Be Announced ☆ SAT. HITELIVE! ☆ C O M E D Y (The Farce Side) 11:30 Mondays & Wednesdays ☆ C U LT U R E & ARTS 2:30 Mondays ☆ SPECIAL EVENTS 1:30 Wednesdays ☆ P R O M O T IO N S 2:00 Mondays M ARCO N IAS PLAYS GUITAR ☆ NO COVER! Arizona’s 1st and O nly Brow Pub: BANKRSNATCH 5th S t. S F o re st E s t. 1988 G ALLERY 2:00 Wednesdays NO COVER! 966-4438 H LM ÜÜ D o you want to get involved in a variety of activities on campus? The Memorial Union Activities Board (MUAB) plans and imple ments a continuing program of diverse educational cultural and social recreational activities for the campus community. M U A B offers the opportunity to develop your leadership skills while enabling you to gain professional experience in public relations, programming and budget management. Welcome Back ASU Tempe’s Biggest and Best Selection of Liquor, Wine and Beer. N A SAFEWAYLIQUOR BARN • LIQUORRARN 3 930 E. Broadway (Broadway & Rural) 8 9 4 -1 0 6 7 i BROADWAYHOAD SOUTHERN- Prass o p in io n g .S eptember 2.1968 i i H e ro e s a n d V ill| iM i Candidate reaction bodes well for student regent vote Darrin Hostetler Columnist W hat do you get when you put 22 politicians, a ll o f them In fra n tic heat fo r public o ffic e , In a room fo r tw o hours to speak to a group o f concerned citizens? F e rtilize r, o f course. But if you attended the forum w ith A rizon a leg isla tive hopefuls in the M U Thursday, you go t a little m ore than the norm al cam paign rh etoric. You also got som ething that is d ifficu lt to obtain from p oliticians in any environm ent o r context — com m itm ent on issues o f student concern. And you got a look at the heroes and villa in s on the Sept. 13 prim ary slate. The m ost encouraging thing to com e out o f the forum was the overw helm ing support expressed fo r the concept o f g ra n tin g the student re p resen ta tive to the B oard o f R egen ts fu ll votin g p rivileges. Th e student regen t vote Is one o f the three b ig student issues being advanced by “ Stu dents A re Voting E veryw h ere in 1988 (S A V E ’88),” the voter-registration and inform ation program backed by A ssociated Students, and it ’s startin g to look lik e a good bet to m ake it through the legislatu re next spring. E igh t o f the nine Senate candidates and 10 o f the 13 House o f R ep resen tative candidates present said they would vote fo r a b ill to enfranchise the student regen t, w ith D istrict 27 (T em p e) incum bent represen tative Jenny Norton o fferin g to sponsor the b ill and “ shepherd it alon g.” And when the House candidates w ere asked to ra ise th eir hands i f th ey would vo te fo r the bin, the candidates who did so com m itted them selves to pursuing the all-im portant m easu re— which would fin a lly g iv e students an actual say in v ita l Issues such as tution increases. T h e m om ent the shutter snapped on the pictu re o f candi dates w ith th eir hands In the a ir, S AV E ’88 had ach ieved a p rim a ry goal. B y com m ittin g them selves to the Issue, the candidates g a ve student leaders a load o f levera ge fo r the spring when they can go to the new legislators and say: "Y o u prom ised this during the election, now it's tim e to d eliv er.” AH o f which is contingent, o f course, on the legislators who support student issues w inning the election which In turn depends on how m any o f you m ake it to the polls and vote fo r those candidates. And c lea rly , th ere a re a few candidates who didn’t give students much reason to check their names on election day. B ev H erm on, also a D istrict 27 incumbent representa tiv e , cam e up w ith th e best idea o f the m orning — to have state legisla tors and students m eet in a forum once a sem ester — but fum bled when she declined to support the student regen t vote issue. H erm on reasoned that since the board o f regen ts is alread y loaded w ith U ofA patrons, plac in g a U ofA student vo te on the board eve ry three years would fu rther tip the balance in fa vo r o f the W ildcats. H erm on fa iled to note that the student regent is m ore a represen tative o f the STU D E N TS than o f his or her respec tiv e school. C arefu l selection o f the student by gubernator ia l appointm ent and leg isla tive confirm ation ensures that the student regen t is not som eone who w ill u nfairly place the interests o f his school above a ll else. Besides, the posi tion rotates e v e ry year, and a ll three schools w ill have an opportunity to equal things out. B ill V alen tic, D istrict 27 Senate candidate, attacked the student regen t vote too, claim in g the student representa tiv e doesn’t h ave enough tim e (a y e a r) on the board to get acclam ated and cast in telligen t, responsible votes. F ollow in g that argum ent to its conclusion, V alen tic (in the u nlikely even t he should be elected to the Senate), should be prohibited from votin g fo r at least a yea r w hile he learn s the system and procedures o f the legislatu re. Com e to think o f it, that m igh t not be a bad idea. M arilyn H aw ker, D istrict 21 House hopeful, and D istrict 29 House candidate Don Strauch also refused to support the student regen t vote. A few notes on the forum : M ost popular com m ent o f the day goes to D istrict 23 Senate candidate Ben M iranda, w ho in referen ce to a financial aid program that would requ ire Hie legislatu re to put up m atching funds to student-generated dollars, said: “ I f w e can spend countless d ollars and tim e to attract a professional football team to the V a lley, then w e certain ly can com e up w ith m atching funds fo r fin an cial aid.” . D istrict 21 incumbent Rep. L eslie W hiting Johnson m issed the forum and m ay have to sit out som e o f the ^ rn p a ig n because o f a broken elbow , sustained last week in her ga rage a fte r the housew ife-turned-legislator from M esa slipped on som e oil. Johnson, who is infam ous fo r su ggesting the-death penalty fo r child m olesters, “ even if .we k ill a few Innocent people,” end fo r her anti-U n iversity stance in a district containing thousands o f ASU students, fa ces a tough four w ay Republican prim ary Sept. 13. Johnson’ s in ju ry m ay spell success fo r ch allen ger H aw ker, who unfortunately seem s as uninterested in the im portance o f ASU as the w-unded incumbent. . V alentic dodged a question concerning a comm ent the candidate supposedly m ade to ASU V ice Presiden t for U n iversity R elations B reht Brown re c e n tly — w ords to the e ffe c t that ‘ ‘ASU is doing a fin e Job, but it's goin g to have to do it w ith less m oney,” Brown could not be reached fo r com m ent, and V alentic sim ply replied that the “ u n iversities need to be tied to the econom ic clim ate o f the a rea .” Translated: IfV a len ticiselected ,h ew o u ld vo te tofreeze or reduce u niversity budgets, a la E van M echam . W hat V alen tic, M echam and like-thinkers don’t realize is that state u niversities can’ t be linked to e v e ry up and down o f a rollar-coaster econom y o r treated llk e any other state agency. Education Is a com m itm ent m ade by the state, and when students a re adm itted to ASU they have a righ t to expect that th eU n iversity w ill h ave enough money to keep enough class sections open, equipm ent in working order and Individual classes sm all enough to be man ageable. ~ *.■ H igh er education is an investm ent in A rizon a’s future — socially and econom ically. Shortchange it now and short change the state later. letters Olympian’s detractors have right to be MADD E ditor: T h e fo rg iv e and fo rg et m essage that J e ff Shaln conveys in his “ Second Chance” a rticle (A u g. 29) is counter-productive. M others A gain st Drunk D rivin g has the d esire to ban a crim in al elem en t from the O lym pics, a m ove which Is both forth righ t and adm irable. C rim e should be deem ed so cia lly unacceptable and should be re le gated to the toilet w here it belongs. Our Olympians a re role m odels, idols to be looked up to, not street braw lers o r gang m em bers. Those who fe e l that an O lym pic hopeful can overcom e an involvem ent in crim e which can la ter be “ Ironed out” are those who sim ply adm ire prow ess rath er than ch aracter. David G . Auerbach Senior, Education Lot 59: the trams of hell Editor. It ’ s 8:15 a.m . I ’v e Just driven from m y a p a rtm en t fiv e m in u tes away. Sixth Street and Rural. I le ft a t 8:00 a .m . I sa t through three tra ffic lights to m ake m y required le ft turn. I approach L ot 59. I find a parking space, R ow A10 ( I know, I was lu ck y ). I trek to the tram stop n ear A3, join in g an a l rea d y la rg e crow d . One must go to this stop because tram s n ever get past it in the m orning. F iv e minutes. T h e tram is sighted, the m ob stirs. It a p p roa ch es. P e o p le a re jum ping on the tram — it’ s s t ill m o vin g ! I am le ft standing w ith a few fr a il old er wom en. I reckon w e a re the on ly ones not en ro lled In “ Stuntman 101: T h e Q u est fo r T ra m B oarding.” P a tien tly I a w ait the next boarding. O nly eigh t m in utes today ( I know, I w as lu ck y). I ’ m in fron t o f the group, the tram slow s. I eye; a seat. A s I approach the seat, som eone from behind pushes m e out o f the w ay. Flash back! Oh no! Is this a subway in N ew Y ork ? I do g e t a spot on the tram . I ’ m w edged between tw o gu ys who could stand to lo se 25 pounds each , ( I know, I w as lu cky.) F in a lly, 8:34 a.m ., I am freed from m y ca p tivity. I pause, breath e deeply, re l ish the m om ent and head o ff to m y class. I am not c ryin g fo r m ore parking (daces, as I can a l w ays fin d a spot. I am not cryin g that a llN e w Y ork ers a re pushy. I ’m not even suggesting that a ll fa t peo ple should lose 25 pounds. I am suggesting an alterna tiv e tra m -b oa rd in g p ro cedure. Som e sort o f line w ith a p ecific order. L ik e Disneyland. Space Mount ain. Im agine: A tram pulls up to a designated spot. Stu dents, w aitin g patien tly in painted lines corresponding w ith each tram row , board peacefu lly. Those w aiting the lon gest fin d a spot. Oth ers now advance in line. Sim ple, safe, e ffe c tiv e and cheap. D avid T . White Sophomore, journalism Childcare crusade Editor: In the m idst o f tryin g to cope and su rvive the h orrible death o f her child. It is so lik e C arol Buffone (A SU engineering m a jo r) to look out fo r the W elfare o f other children by pleading and crusading fo r b etter child ca re at A rizon a S tate U n iversity. I pray h er vo leé is heard. Heather A . Horn Junior, aeronautical technology STATE PRESS M W n C SAUERZQPF JOAN McKENNA eatt0f Managing Editor ..... ......................... *•’........ BENMcOQNNELL .... ....... ....... .............— ....... -teKE RITTER PHOTOGRAPHERS: Irwin Daugherty. Sundl Kfenetad, SMphan Mounteer, James Mumeugn- A ^ E d t o T Z ~ " '. r Z S ,r " A»et. Art* Editor........ ........... ...„ MATT LINDENBURG Sport» Editor...................... ........ ......... ...DAVE HOOGE8 A i m . Sports Editor— ........ ..............................JEFF SHAIN C O P y « " T O " 8 - Tr* M nt Seol man. ARTIST: Garth I leclcel. PRODUCTION: Leiahayn Oman, d a n k » HM, Steve Krlcun. N* ncy Rees, Lynn Senzsk, Edward W eM e. .................. ....... SHAWN DAHL ........ SUSAN SCHUMAN ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Leads Dillon. Made Guerrero, Charles Kytar. Paul Lea, Carey O'Batmon, HeW Sehnejderman, Ray ZlcIcsl: ACCT. MGR. DOWNTOWN TEMPE: Pa t« Schmautz; ACCT. MGR. TEMPE CENTER: Don Cardona; CREATIVE CONSULTANT: Rich Totaman. p™*0 Bdnor........ ................ REPORTERS: Michelle Allman, Victor Baraias. Mike Bureau KrMi Ellis, Sheri Johnaon, Roble Kakonge, Lynn Kalecteca Teresa Owen, K elly Pearce, Kern W alsh' The State Press Is published Monday thru Friday during W 8 R ^ O R T E R S : J , Herhrruwon, H o * * , j . Malham Jr.. Ariiona 85287. Newsroom: (802) 966-2292. Advertising and COLUMNISTS; Carolyn Hofig, Darrin Hostetler, Davldjordan, SPORTS REPORTERS: Gary Jackson, Dean Gyorgy, Christ* . ASU edminittration, faculty, staff or student body. Page5 Friday, September 2 , 1988 letters Movie protesters lack knowledge of film E ditor: F rid a y afternoon 1 w ent and saw “ The L a st Tem ptation o f C hrist.’ ’ T o putit very sim ply and v e ry plainly, I had to laugh at a ll the fo ols who are so outraged about this m ovie, from the h oly-rollers scream ing outside the Tow n and Country cinem as to the people who w rite in to this paper. I say I had to laugh, but deep inside it m akes m y angry that people, lik e m y frien d w ith the 100 signatures supporting a boycott o f this m ovie, haven’t even seen it. P eo p le have absolutely no righ t to Judge things they know nothing about, nor do they h ave any righ t to try to keep people . lik e m e from seeing w hatever I w ant. Who appointed these people, crusaders fo r our m oral w ell-being? I certain ly did not, and I doubt v e ry much that God had any hand in it eith er. I ’ m qu ite sure that if there is a God, he has m ore im portant things to w o rry about than •a two-hour-and-45minute p iece o f Celluloid. A ll o f that aside, I saw nothing that shocked m e in the m ovie, I saw sim ply w h at the life o f Jesus could have been like. T h e key w ord here i s ‘could’ . I f they cut out the two-m inute sex scene (in which Jésus w as not even in volved except as an ob server; sex w as not his last tem p tation ), you could see this m ovie in Sunday school. It w as lust a B ib le story. In closin g, 1 would ju st lik e to say this: Know w hat you condem n before you con dem n it and don’ t try to te ll m e that by seeing a in ovie, I ’m choosing between heaven and h ell. D on't you dare. D erla D . M adia Senior, psychology Sunday ASU's CANCER RESEARCH "INNOVATION!“ C olleg e of (monkey) Business? E ditor: I cannot b elieve the U ni v e r s ity ’ s a ffilia tio n w ith Jessica Hahn W ednesday, Aug. 31! Does the Business C ollege Council re a lly con sider Hahn’s celeb rity sta tus w orth y enough to be used as a “ recru itin g” tool? Th en to ' h a ve th e “ S tate P ress” pu blicize the event w ith “ J ess ica Hahn, and other Y-95 m em bers broad castin g liv e from the ‘deans patio’ ” as part o f recru it m ent w eek fo r the C ollege o f Business! I fin d it insulting and em b a rra ssin g fo r the w hole U n iversity. Is she re a lly the on ly person th e Business C ollege could g e t to draw th e stu d en ts’ a tten tio n ? H ere is a person, fam ous only fo r her involvem ent in a sex scandal and further exploitation as a nude cen terfold , which the Business C ollege Council has proudly chosen to help prom ote re cruitm ent fo r them . I just don’ t get the connection! A re w e supposed to say, “ Oh, the u ltim ate capitalis tic venture — S E L L Y O U R S E L F ! W ay to go, C ollege o f Business! ” Who in the adm inistration w as responsible fo r fo r ap p rovin g this prom otional even tfo r academ ic grow th? Do ASU students need that kind o f sensationalism to g e t Ite m in terested in a ca reer in business? I can’t w ait to see the follow -up to get them to go to classes. R ich ard H u xtable, presi dent o f the Business C ollege Council, expresses his sat isfaction w ith the selection b y saying, “ I t ’ s m y w ay o f en co u ra gin g students to com e o ver h ere.” D id he e v e r ask h im self w hat kind o f students he w ants to attract? I suppose the po ten tial fem a le business stu dent can re a lly id en tify with Jessica Hahn, ju dgin g from the BCC’ s perspective. “ Oh, boÿ! Jessica Hahn is suc cessfu l and is h elpin g the C ollege o f Business. I want to be successful too. Should I sleep around and pose nude B E F O R E o r A F T E R I becom e a business m ajor? M aybe I should just ask m y w ise old a d viso r Jim m y B akker.” T h e re a lly sad question is , how m a n y q u a lifie d b r o a d c a s t, jo u r n a lis m and/or com m unication pro fession a ls (gra d u a tes o f A S U ) w ere looked o v e r by Y-95 fo r the sake o f sensa tionalism (J essica H ah n )? Jessica Hahn Donna R iggs Graduate Student “Temptation of Christ” without foundation E d itor: ’¿ A V i la ana rtic le titled “ Th e G ospel A ccord in g to Scorsese” (A u g. 22), M atthew Lindenburg used the w ording in his a rticle in such a w ay as to shed a bad ligh t upon those protesting the contents o f the m ovie “ Th e L a st Tem ptation o f C h rist." I would lik e to address the statem ent he m ade concerning the conduct o f those pro testin g the m ovie: “ Dem onstrations are peacefu l — probably because o f the police departm ent’ s overcaution — m arked only b y a few harshly thrown words and angry g la res from protesters to the m ovie goers.” I p articip ated in the protest, and I , too, heard the harsh w ords from som e protes ters to m ovie-goers. The m ore responsible protesters took the one I heard aside and asked him to becalm and to keep the pro test peaceable —■not because the Phoenix p olice w ere there, but because w e w ere th e r e to represent Jesus Christ o f the B ible as distinguished from the Christ whom Scorsese represents in his film . I ?i«n w as present when a m ovie-goer verb a lly assaulted one o f the eld erly ladies protestin g the m ovie. H e too used harsh w ords and an gry glares. I w as present when a m ovie-goer w alked up to the pro test line and began throw ing pages Of the N ew Testam ent Into the trash canister seeking to provoke the protesters to anger. T h ere a re o tte r such occurances that can be m entioned but are not necessary. I ’ m su re there w ill continue to be som e harsh w ords and angry glares from both rid e * o f the protest line. E ven though an ger is som ething w e a ll experience, it is w ritten in the scriptu res in P sa lm 4:4* “ Be an gry and do pot sin.” In Other w ords, do not allow you r an ger to turn into an action o r a thought that threatens o r intim idates. In P salm 4:2, it is w ritten , “ H ow lon g, O you sons o f m e, wlU you turn m y g lo ry to sham e? H ow long w ill you lo v e w orthless ness and seek falsehood?” I ask those w ho a re goin g to see the m ovie: O f w hat p ro fit o r w orth is it to see a m ovie that turns the g lo ry o f Christ o f the B ib le into a sham e by p ortrayin g Christ as a wim pish, confused, crazy, lustful m an? H ie standard question l am asked is: “ D id you see the m o vie?” And to that I tru thfully answ er, “ N o .” Does a Judge have to witness a crim e to determ ine that a crim e has been com m itted? I h ave enough evid en ce to know that this m ovie has done dam age to Use Gospel. ASU 's Dr. G . R o b e rt P e ttit ASU Chemistry Professor Dr. G. Robert Pettit appears In this week's episode of INNOVATION on Channel 8. His work w ith th e ASU C ancer Research Institute is fe a tu re d as p art o f The H ealing Sea"—a report on scientists w ho are plum bing the o cea n depths in search o f cures for cancer, AIDS and other baffling diseases. Dr. Pettit's research has led to the testing o f a drug th a t com es from an ugly b lack undersea creature - a definite treasure from th e deep! INNOVATION Sunday 5:30 pm In 1 P e te r 2:21 through 23, it is w ritten. Christ also su ffered fo r us, lea vin g us an exam ple, that you should follow H is steps: who knew no sin, nor w as d eceit found in H is mouth, who when H e w as re viled did not re v ile In re tu rn ...” H is g lo ry w as shown to us b y hls n ever subm itting to sin, am i when tem ptation cam e, H e im m ediately dea lt a rebuke to it. H e n ever entertained it such as the Christ in Scorsese’ s film did in the dream s e quence. A s fo r the m ovie, “ L a st Tem pta tion” is a bad dream h avin g no basis in rea lity . W D G erts L arry M arcus Messianic Fellowship at ASU KAET 1988 EXHIBITION ( «Hne and Cheese Party F rid a y , S e p te m b e r 2 featuring I n t e r n a t io n a lly Shabbat Services, 7:30 p.m. D iscussion: fa m o u s "Warming up and Turning on to a New Year" Pocket Billiard & Trick Shot Artist F rid a y , S e p te m b e r 9 Shabbat Services, 7:30 p.m. "Learning High Holiday M elodies" will be appearing at the M.U. Recreation Center September 5-9 Sept. 5 & 6 Sept. 7-9 Sept. 9 W ith C antor Lin da B a rzila i F rid a y , S e p te m b e r 16 Billiard C lin ic for Men & Women Tournament Trick Shot Exhibition A p p eared on N um erous TV S h ow s Shabbat Services, 7:30 p.m. "Turning It Around: . Teshuvahorhow to make Yom Klppur work for you " Featu red in Top M a g azin e s at H lllel, 1012 S. M ill Ave., 967-7563 M . U . R e c r e a t i o n C e n t e r 9 6 5 -3 6 4 2 IF Y O U D R IV E A B O G r d i£ 5 T H E M IN D . G R A T I F I E S T H E S E N S E S HONDA T h e doctor has a prescription EVEFm JePNESDM SEPT-14® r e g is t r a t io n 9 FEE Dear Honda Owner, If you have any problems with your Honda, I want you to feel confident in the fact that you can bring your Honda into the Honda Doctor, where certified Honda technicians w ill service your car at the lowest prices in the Valley.' W EEK LEAGUES $70 A R ick H a ll Owner r SPRING A C T IO N P.S. W e’ll even commute you back to campus! T H IS , - s h i r t s for A LL ENTREES t TH E HONDA D O CTO R memi |717 S. H acien da D r., #107 • Tem pe C A L L 967-7282 Hours:- M on .-Fri., 7:30 SPONSERST com a"in' 715 SOUTH HAYDEN ROAD, TEMPE, A £ 85281• 966-1911 State Press Friday, September g, 1988 Weather Lost your wallet? Found a jacket? C oM feN M d Ira n p a g . 3 "P a lm Springs has grow n d ifferen tly than any other c ity ,” B allin g said. “ Th at’ s w hy w e (B a llin g and L o lk ) chose P alm Springs fo r the study. “ Th e tem perature there has dropped tw o to three degrees o ver a 15-year period. But I don’t think the human discom fort has gone down fo r P a lm Springs residents.” B allin g and Lolk said that even though tem peratures are low erin g In P a lm Springs, hum idify m ay be increasing because o f the increased w aterin g o f g o lf courses. P a lm Springs residents m ight not b elieve that tem pera- The S T A T E P R E S S has a FR E E Lost &. Found section in our C la ss ifie d s . C om e down to Matthews Center Basement or c a ll 965-6731 to place a free Lost & Found ad. h ires a re actu ally dropping because o f the h igher humid ity , said L olk, a clim atology student from Denm ark. “ In fa ct, P a lm Springs’ residents m a y be m ore uncom forta b le,” she said. P a m Erdm an, public a ffa irs m anager fo r the city o f P a lm Springs, said Thursday: “ Th e tem peratures are in the hundreds down here. Th e w eather to m e hasn’ t been any m ore com fortable o ver the years.” Th e m ayor o f P a lm Springs, Sonny Bono, was unavaila ble fo r com m ent. JpofforcL M H f l H Continued from pag* 1 “ M y only regret is that I couldn’ t go to college. A fter high school, the w ar w as on. M y fa m ily w as poor and couldn’t a fford it,” she said. M offord also congratu la te d A SU P re s id e n t J. R u ssell N elson ’ s 21-point plan fo r m in ority recru it m e n t, n a m ed “ A c tio n N ow .” She called Nelson "A S U ’ S m ost aggressive president in a d d ressin g m in o rity issues.” Nelson has com e under fir e in recent months fo r la gg in g m in ority recru it m ent and retention percen tages. H e announced two weeks ago he w ill step down from his position next year bu t s a id c o n tr o v e rs ie s related to m inorités w as not a factor in his decision. Nelson has com e under fir e in recen t months fo r la g g in g m in ority recru it m ent and retention percen tages. H e announced tw o w eeks ago he w ill step down from his position next y ea r but said controversies re lated to m inorités was not a fa ctor in his decision. M offord expressed hope that N elson’s successor w ill. be Just as aggressive. Frank Sackton, a profes sor o f pu blic a ffa irs and Interim d irector o f ASU ’s A ffirm a tiv e A ction o ffic e who w as at the m eeting, agreed w ith M offord on the association’s effectiven ess. “ Th é prim ary goa l o f this association is to encourage H ispanic students to enter co llege and to graduate,’ ’ S ackton said. "T h is is a noble goal because w e need d ive rsify in our classes.” Thursday’ s m eeting was the opening reception fo r the HBSA. It also was a recru iting session, accord in g to S a n d y M e n d e z , HBSA’s president. “ Our prim ary goal this y e a r is to in c re a s e ou r m em bership. W e want to h a ve a lot o f m em bers, not ju st so w e h ave a lo t o f peo p le in the association but to provid e support to as m any H ispanic students as w e can,” she said. M endez said the dropout ra te fo r students who a re m em bers o f the association is n ear zero. M offord ga ve M endez a “ R o se M offord ” watch fo r her w ork w ith the HBSA. M endez returned the fa vo r w ith an HBSA t-shirt that said on th e back, “ W e’v e got a new attitu de.” Men dez told M offord the slogan helps “ get our brothers and sisters through college.” Dan C ortez, the group’ s recruitm ent chairm an, said support is one o f the keys o f the association. “ T w o main them es o f the association are networking and support. The, students in the HBSA c a n lo o k to th e o th e r m em bers fo r help and en cou ragem en t” H a lle lu ia h 3 p m -8 pm $2.98 Pitchers of Beer & Long Island Iced le as 50C Square Deal lA lb. Burger I 25C Chili Rellenos,Tacos, C o rn d o g s S P izza Slices Sh ow your 9 3 ^ 0 ^ Red Card 3 p m -4 pm and get ~ FR EE P IZ Z A SLIC E S Over* Under Fridays After Hours ===9pm -12*30am ‘ Dancing for 18 & older Alcohol served to 21 & older !=12:30 am - 3*30 am= Dancing for 18 & older I F R E E T R O L L E Y R ID E to the S u n D evil H ouse running every 15 min. for those 18 & older Pick-up at P V M ain 9*30pm -3»30am Don't forget SATURDAY COUNTDOWN startin g at 8pm f P V T s u n D e v il •\V # / H o u se A S U vs. New M e xico State Saturday, Septem ber 3, 7:30 p,m. P.E. East G ym FREE ADMISSION WITH STU D EN T I.D Sponsored by: SPECIALTY ¿HOPS PIZZA & PUB “Right Here At ASU" Four ■free jSj drinks... ^ -~r;\ DINE IN OR FREE DELIVERY TO ASU AREA S S S S iH ~ 1 Wm k H M I 1301 E. University ! Temp#, Aiteona ! (next to Beauvais) c a p i i ® FREE DELIVERY A S U A R E A '9 6 6 -6 6 6 6 FREE DELIVERY A S U AREA— 9 6 B -6 6 6 6 H O U R S : S U N -T H U R . 11:00 A M -1 A M F R I-S A T 11:00 A M -2 A M > Rural w ith a n y p iz z a o. University 35 ITEM G A R D E N F R E S H S A L A D B A R Page 9 Friday, September 9 , 1988 Keep in step with the comings and goings $195 in town with the STA TE PRESS Classifieds. A SU ’s one-step marketplace! BBQ BEEF W /CHIPS x m fI I S T A R T IN G A T 7PM I I I I I $ 1 ,0 0 ta w p r » • BOYSENBERRY KAMAKAZIS •SEX-ON-THE-BEAGH at R u ra l & A p a c h e I I In t r c d u c t c r y c ffe r I S 1 C .C C Wash A CutStyle Eeu. 115-117 K ith Ccupcn Per ycur next appe intment call 9 6 6 -1 3 9 1 ■ at $2.50 M o n .-F ri. B u ck et o f H appy H our C o ro n a s 4-7, E v e ry d a y $ 1 .0 0 W in e , W e ll a n d D r a ft A ll th e tim e I N a n cy , fo rm e rly of I Talking H eads salon, | has Joined the staff of I Flam ingo Haircutters. 1 --- —i —i—r—i ~r—l—r—ir—|— r .-:r i 1 t-=t.~ Join U xfay! For a lim ited lim e you can enjoy our S T U D E N T M E M B E R S H IP D IS C O U N T b f the award-winning W estern Reserve Club. M ention this ad to receive a membership o f fun and fitness at 30% O F F the current initiation fee phis tw o m onths FREE dues. A great student m em bership opportu nity at great savings! 8294)790 SATURDAY LIVE E N T E R T A IN M E N T 9 f . I e m i n - h t t i m e ( li e r i t s FITNESS & FUN FOR STUDENTS 'TEMPE S NEWEST SECRET' F R ID A Y H e ii- S d t . - K C ff Pural Behind Circle T PARTY ALL NITE WITH w ith LU KE SKO O D SU N D A Y LATE NITE HAPPY HOUR •*1 Wheel Shots -^l75Premium •n25Wine, Well Draft -^ Pitchers 9 6 8 -9 2 3 1 9 PM-1 AM 1 2 for j w a sa R R ssM I W ith Coupon ! L im it one per customer. I D ine in only. N o t good 5 w ith any other o ffer. | Expires 9-15-88. Buy ùóè lunch o r Sundaybnm dtandrecdvè th è secon d o f equal o r lesser value FR EE. HILLEL INVITES YOU TO ROSH HASHANA SERVICE free student admission cards must be obtained in person at the HILLEL office or on the Mall Erev Rosh Hashana Dinner Sunday, September 11 5 p.m. at Hillel Students $4, Chevra $7 Sunday, September 11 8 p.m., Arizona Room, MU Kkfdush & “ Birthday of the World” Party to follow at Hillel Monday, September 12 9:30 a.m ., Arizona Room, MU Tuesday, September 13 9:30 a.m., at HILLEL JEWISH STUDENT CENTER Hillel Union of Jewish Students 1012 S. Mill • 967-7563 @ — 1 •roadw ay Southern Superstition Fw* © f0 s Ê 1 In O p en 7 D ays a W eek Spend your free tim e toning up in the w eight room or burning calories in A erobic Exercise classes. D on't w ait! C a ll o r visit b efo re Septem ber 30,1988 Excellent Food & Entertainm ent in a Casual A tm osphere COUPON*” " Every Day From l l AM-4 PM • Free W eights • Lifecycles • Steam/Sauna • Co-ed Spa • Suntan Beds • Locker Room s • Aerobics Rural Tennis Racquetball/Wallyball Basketball O lym pic Swim m ing P ool Sand V olleyball Indoor V olleyball Nautilus/CAM II D a n c e t o t h e V a lle y ’s H O T T E S T R e g g a e S o u n d s ! and you can save m ore than $120. 1290N. Scottsdale Rd. I T em p o ( 1 b lock n orth o f C u rry) 1 W ESTER N R ESER VE CLU B A W A P D -W IN N IN G S P O R T S BY D A V E B R O W N M cKcU ips Schooners a Burger K ing W eb er H. II Curry C E N T E R I I I I Broadway West of Price •Tempe, AZ • 968-9231 Page 10 F o ru m _ Continued from paga 1 Relations w ere cordial be tw een V alentic and Todd, who have alread y traded a few barbs during the cam paign . Todd has ch arged V alen tic fo r being backed b y fo r m e r G o v . E v a n M ech a m , an a lle g a tio n V alen tic denies. D istrict House candidates w ho atten d ed th e foru m from D istrict 21 included D em ocrat Bob G uzley, R e publicans Bob Broughton, Stan Barnes and H aw ker. D istrict 26 candidates in clu d ed R ep u b lica n s Ann H erzer and incum bent Jim M ille r. D is tric t 27 can di dates w ere D em ocrats Jim C u nningham and J a lm a H u n sin ger, R ep u b lica n s Herm on, incumbent Jenny Norton and G ary R ich ard son. D istrict 29 candidates w e re in cu m ben t R ep u b lic a n s L e la S te ffe y and Strauch. Senate candidates at the forum from D istrict 21 in c lu d e d D e m o c r a t B ill H egarty and Republican in cu m bent C a rl Ku nasek. D istrict 23 candidates w ere D em ocrat Ben M iranda and in d e p e n d e n t C a r o ly n Low ery. D istrict 26 candi dates included Republicans P eter K a y Tom Patterson and incumbent D em ocrat Deborah Lin zer. D istrict 27 candidates w ere incumbent Republican Doug Todd and Valentic. O th e r c a n d id a te s e x pressed strong support fo r the student regen t vote. Senate candidates at the forum from D istrict 21 in c lu d e d D e m o c r a t B ill H egarty and Republican in cumbent C arl Kuhasek. D is tric t 23 candidates w ere D em ocrat Ben M iranda and in d e p e n d e n t C a r o ly n Low ery. D istrict 26 candi dates included Republicans P e te r K a y Tom Patterson and incum bent D em ocrat Deborah L in zer. D istrict 27 candidates w ere incumbent Republican Doug Todd and Valentic. Other candidates express ed strong support fo r the student regen t vote. R ich ardson said: " I t ’ s cruel to have him on the com m ittee without a v o te ." P a tte rs o n s a id h e is strongly in fa vo r o f the m ea sure. “ They have been som e o f the most valu able m em bers on the b o a rd ," he said. Kunaseksaid: “ Astudent regen t w ith a vote would be a breath o f fresh a ir ." Broughton said the vote is im portant because students are le ft out in the cold when itcomes to the statelegislature. " W e a r e n o t g iv in g enough support to you (th e stu den t)," he said. Both House and Senate candidates said that the equity issue needs to be ad dressed. The U ofA has been allotted m ore m oney than ASU in the past, and the Tucson u n iversity dom in ates the board o f regents. “ T h ere a re m ore than 2,000 students at ASU than there are at U ofA. W e h ave to do som ething about es tablishing funding eq u ity," H erzer said., K a y said: "T h e re must be fairn ess am ong the un iv e rs itie s ." H ow ever, Todd said the legislatu re has m ade "g ia n t led p s" in term s o f equity funding. " (B u t ) w e h ave to k ick a fe w shins, gou ge a few ey e b a lls ," he said. nationwide vi/ion center e y e g la s s e s /c o n ta c ts (Y o u r C h o ic e ) a W ’ ACUVUE' v Disposable Contact Leas “ N o C le a n in g ” Mil CM W4tm o n ly $8 per pair {H old m 0 pair sets) Extended Wear * F R E E additional pair with contact tens exam 81 purchase* “ N E W ” M A K E YO U R B R O W N E Y E S • B LU E I ’V E n i A S S R ! ............ .................. Tw o Pair *20.00 Single Vision Only, Plastic Lenses BIFOCALS_______ ...-------- ........ ..............Two Pair $79.99 Plastic Leases (F T 28) DAILY WEAR CONTACTS & GLASSES______ __ ________ ............Both Pair $39.99 EXTENDED WEAR CONTACTS Roth Pair 54000 A S S F S ................................... r v r r v iiL i. . . ^ _______ ... «77.00 Cantaci tosa «am. Suing aad Mow apcase addMsnal Outside Eyeglass IY fcrip fio ss Welcome OPTIONS AVAILABLE Y O U R C H O IC E # G R E E N AQUA $159.99* One Pair H AZEL PLUS Om Pair of Ck«r CMUctt or Eycthon FR E E * Or. Mark A. Hechunan • Or. Neal A. Weinstein A Assoc. Licensed Doctors o f Optometry 100% refundon contact lenses if not completely satisfied within 30 days* • Specially lenses not included , Open Mooday-Saturday • ’ SOME RESTRICTIONS APPLY „.Two Pair $39.99 DAILY W E A R ~~_ Softnute B, CQ4 „Two Pair $59.99 EXTENDED WEAR«. Softaate M , Softcoa EW DAILY WEAR COLORED SOFT DAILY SOFT CONTACTS FOR ASTIGMATISM (TORIC)___ COLORED SOFT EXTENDED WEAR CONTACTS^. „Two Pair $99.99 t a r ife contact Mac pm rHnrtpa* mricaae a tti canari I OTHER BRANDS AVAILABLE PHOENIX 2050 N. A in u School 5130 N. 19th fee. p /.w . co m e r o f A lm a S cbool/W am er One block north 7 0 0 -1 0 7 4 ..$199.99 O m colored, oae char S E V E N C O N V E N IE N T V A L L E Y LO C A T IO N S o u m im -Two Pair $79.99 One cabrsd. one dear ofCam etbnckM 1 4 2 -5 3 9 2 •USA 4 )7 S. Gilbert ltd. Mutatwre tuiHftahHM 8 4 4 -7 0 9 4 Page 11 Friday. September g. 1988 Tempe Safeway supermarket plagued by recent shopliftings By M IKE BU R G ESS State Prw a A suspect was arrested Wednesday after 26 ca rtels of cigarettes w ere stolen from a Tem pe supermarket, police said. It is the third shoplifting arrest at the store In a week. A lex Ellington, 42, address unknown, w as arrested as he left the Safeway store at 926 E. Broadway Road. He was charged with theft and booked Into Tem pe C ity Jail. Three people w ere arrested Saturday In connection with the theft o f $250 o f food at the sam e store. A husband and w ife w ere arrested last Wednesday after they allegedly took 11 cartons o f cigarettes. “ W e have no Idea why they are hltting that store,” Tem pe police spokesman Sgt. A1 Taylor said. “ I don’t know if It Is a hot spot or if it's a place where w e’re able to catch people.” Taylor said most suspects who shoplift a lot o f merchandise usually pick item s they can sell easily at places such as flea police report markets. In other Incidents: • Tem pe police are looking fo r a woman who reportedly used a hotel key to charge $900worth o f services at the Westcourt in the Buttes. P o lice said the suspect charged the services at the hotel at 2000 W . W estcourt W ay som etim e between Aug. 19 and Aug. 20. The suspect is described as Caucasian, In her 20s, 5 feet 6 inches tall, 115 to 120 pounds with blond hair and green eyes. • An ASU tram parked in Lot 40 was cited Tuesday after a student crashed her car into It, police said. Committee approves dorm Th e A rizona Board o f R egen ts’ resour ces com m ittee approved ASU ’ s $10 m illion residence life p roject Thursday and w ill present it to the regents a t th eir Septem ber m eeting next w eek in F la gsta ff. Th e regents a re expected to approve the p ro jec t, w hich inclu des f about 118,000 square fe e t o f dorm room s fo r about 400 students. T h e p roject also includes a social a ctiv ity center, a cen tral plant building, a sw im m ing pool and 130 parking spaces. It w ill be located east o f Sahuaro H all, along Apache B oulevard and R u ral Road. I f the regents O K the project, it should be com pleted b y A p ril 1990. , P relim in a ry draw ings fo r the p roject should be com pleted in tim e fo r the F la g staff m eeting, said L a r BJorum, ASU ’ s design p roject m anager. A SU ’ s 12 residen ce halls cu rren tly house about 5,000 students. -* SH ERI JO H N S O N P olice said the tram was cited fo r obstructing a drivew ay. The student was uninjured and her veh icle sustained $250in damages, police said. Th e tram was not damaged. • A 19-year-old ASU student suffered a leg Injury Tuesday when his m otorcycle collided with a pickup in Lot 59, police said. . " . P olice said F rederick K . Nader, a sophomore liberal arts m ajor, was treated at Tem pe St. Luke’s Hospital and re leased. • A U niversity truck sustained $1,000 in dam ages Tuesday after the driver crashed it into a light pole, police said. • An AM /FM cassette equalizer was stolen som etim e be tween Sunday and Monday from a car parked In Lot 51, police said. Loss is $150. • Someone stole a Toshiba m icrowave oven from the staff lounge In the Student Services Building som etim e between Monday and Tuesday, police said. Loss Is $150. Enjoy BRUN CH A T H ILLEL... Take advantage of these opportunities to enjoy good food and discussion. Cost: Students $3 per brunch. A t Hiltel, 10:30 a.m . For Reservations call 967-7563. S chedule T o p ic Sunday, September 4 How to H ave M ore Fun on the H igh H o lid ays Future T o p ic s (Dates to be announced. All brunches start at 10:30 a.m.) •101 Ways to Avoid Getting Bent Out of Shape When Dealing With Your Parents Traveling’s easier w ith S T A T E P R ESS Classifieds! • ‘‘A Shoulder to Cry On” - How to be a Helpful Friend Without Getting Dumped On. • “ Rating Ypur Dating” -Tips on How to Get Satisfaction Out of Going Out. SendaPersonal Adtosomeone SDOClal. StatePress*. Basement Matthews Canter e s t P r ic e e st W ash CHECK US OUT V# ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ ✓ Fresh Soft Water High Pressure Soap/Rinse Pre-soak Bubble Brush H ot Wax Tire/Engine Cleaner 25' Power Vacs Spot Free RinSe iooop » TERRACE & APACHE (1 blockeastof Rural) E k r a n c f l D ISCO VERIN G JU D A ISM An introductory course in Judaism, its thought and practice. Hours & Location— Thursdays 5:30 pm— 7:30 pm at Hillel Jewish Student Center 1012 5. M ill Ave., Tem pe The final half hour of each class will be devoted to Hebrew instruction C ost—Beth Shalom, Chevra/Hillel, Emanual members— $20 per ' person ■' * Uhaffiliated— $6Q per person Starting September 8th. For more information call the Hillel Jewish Student Center 967-756S * Have you seen the ASU Student Hendbook and Calendar? It’s a handy pocketsize book, filled with I everything you ever wanted | (o r didn’t want to ) know about 1 college life. It’s even go t a daily reference calendar! 91 The really neat thing about 1|| the Handbook is that it's produced by ASU students. That’s right. Students gather the information, w rite and edit the copy; shoot the photos; design the ’ ■ cover and inside pages and last, but certainly m but not least, they |p design and seH the advertising that • supports this annual , ' e v e n t Students spend long hours ¿W- _ with creativity flowing, ideas exchanging and the fulfillment of producing their H M H H ft very-own handbook. g S H H a .•rMm H B i fx x M H E flH l * iS H H i W e ’d like to o ffer you the chance t o join this tea m and gain invaluable | experience I while you’re in M O S O O V ; I college. W e " need several M H g p P P * "* advertising sales representatives to create, design end sell advertising to local retail businesses. If you have a strong commitment to excellence and pride in a job well done, we'd like to speak with you. You must be self-m otivated punctual, a good time manager, own a car and be a people person. Please call today and join a team o f dedicated A SU students who are com m itted to making the 1 9 8 9 -9 0 A SU iStudent Hendbook and Calendar the b e s t Call Dan Ellstrom 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 TODAY! P.S. If you're wondering what in the heck a Student Handbook is, stop by Student Publications in M atthew s C enter and g e t a FREE copy) Rida/, Septembers. 1968 L O W E S T P R IC E S !! TUESDAY SEPT. 6-12 FR EE A$U T-SH IRT IBM CO M PATIBLES ( OMPLETE SYSTEM S XT-turbo AT-TURBO w ith purchase o f any other shirt s1 1 4 9 $4 9 9 ^ Broadway! Tem pe M o d em 1200 B a n d $49 I T E M P E JA Z Z E R C IS E C E N T E R 4930 S. Ash (Baseline Business Park) O pen 7 days a w eek (in clu d in g Labor D ay) U p gra d es: 29 Cleeeee Per WeekI Baseline AIESEC-Arizona State " C o l o r ST99 For Class Times Call: Cathy, 839-4312 Vicki, 839-1595 — ~ * E G A i449 CO M PLW O RLD only $ 1 p e r class !” 3116 N. Scottsdale Rd . Scottsdale •ana n etr*t, The Internation . . A ssociation of earn g r e e c e yugo* • _ * tunisiamalt*r Students in AW »U ivory r Economics and Business M anagem ent united states 1». ffaustria german^ Invites you to the Fall Orientation Meeting When: Friday, September 2nd 4:30 p.m. Where: Memorial Union Mohave Room Featuring: Andrew Ling, President Arizona W orld Trade Association NOW 2 LO CATIO N S Tamp* 804 S. Ash 2 Blocks W est o f Mill, 1 Block South o f University 966-1009 or 9S6-4292 1840 W. Southern 1 Block East o f Dobson Across from M.C.C. 464-1588 or 464-1566 PAPA jA V S PI77 À FEATURING: " T h e Inflation F ig h te rs ISLAND SUNDAYS D ance to the R eggae 3 P M -7 P M C L IP N S A V E m As W ell As. J Enjoy the Jazz & Blues GROOVE MERCHANTS DAILY Large Cheese Pizzas With one topping. C L IP N S A V E SPECIAL S LIC E S 156 for additional toppings. C U P N SAVE S E R V I N G T H E P H O E N I X A R E A S I N C E 1972 FAST FREE DELIVERY. WE OPEN D AILY A T 11 A.M. & CLOSE LATE OPEN LABOR DAY! 1320 E. B R O A D W A Y T E M P E , A R IZ O N A Mc C l in t o c k (a t B r o a d w a y & D o r s e y ) 8 9 4 -0 6 3 6 DORSEY * RURAL State Page 13 Frtda^ S^ tCTtberSjJ^ M T e m p e b oo ksto re su p p o rts literary talent in sa le s and poetry re a d in g s By S C O T T C .S E C K E L State P ress / c k < V v • E s c a p e fro m th e V a lle y : For those with the means to “escape” the Valley this Labor Day weekend, a trip up to the Je ro m e M u s ic F e stiv a l should provide a cool musical excur sion from the heat. The Festival will take place all day Sunday in the Open Pit Mine in the revived mountain village o f Jerome. Blitz C re e k , winners o f the 1985 TeHuride Bluegrass Festival, will headline the festival along with\ blues soloist H a n s O ls o n , th e R o c k e t 8 8 s a n d T u c so n ’s D e se rt R o se C a n y o n . B a n d . Tickets are $7. You can bring your own chairs and blankets, but leave coolers behind — refreshments will be available. For m ore information call 1-634-3354. • N ew e x c ite m e n t fo r c o u c h p o ta to e s: A s if Jerry Lew is wasn’t enough — or for those w ho think he may be too much, Monday afternoon KAET-TV, Channel 8 will air H16 D a y s o f G lo ry ,” a five hour documentary'featuring high lights o f the 1984 O lym pic Games in Los Angeles. Th e film, which will begin at 1 p.m., was put together by sports filmmaker Bud Greenspan and honors American medalists Edwin Moses, Mary Lou Ret- W hen C h a n g in g H ands b o o k s to re finished th eir second expansion in A p ril o f 1983 to Include a cella r space fo r used books, a lin e o f em ployees and com m unity m em bers form ed to pass stock down from the second floor. “ When w e finished w ith that, w e had a human chain, a snake dance, a ll around the store singing A frican chants,’ ’ said Bobby Som m er, a longtim e m em ber o f the enterprise. Th e eclectic establishm ent at 414 S. M ill A ve. is som ewhat o f a Tem pe landm arkin-the-m aking and an oasis for, literatu re lovers o f a ll strains. Th e la tter is evident w ith a quick glan ce over the stacks; books on Eastern m ysti cism and Jack Nicholson reading “ H ow the Cam el G ot H is Humps’ ' on tape sit pla cid ly am idst Bukowski, H em ingw ay and Tolstoy. Com m unity p oetry read ln gsa re held on the firs t F rid a y night o f e v e ry month a f t « closing tim e at nine. Th e in form al readings are open to any one who wants to read th eir own w ork o r sim p ly w ants to listen . A cco rd in g to Som m er, the read in gs u su ally a ttra ct between 10 and 25 people. C riticism is given if requested and dis cussion follow s. Authors such as Edw ard A bbey have-joined the group from tim e to tim e. T h e rea l ch aracteristic that separates Changing Hands from m ost “ convent ional’ ’ bookstores, and one that Som m er stresses, Is its orientation tow ard area residents. Books a re selected ca refu lly w ith an ey e focused on qu ality. *‘F irst o f a ll, w e have fiv e d ifferen t buyera with d ifferen t tastes. Second, w e try to be rea l responsive to the needs o f the cus tom ers.'’ said Som m er. H e told a story In which the m other o f an em ployee called and asked the store to stock “ Adult Children o f A lcoholics.’ ’ D esp ite th e ir re serv a tio n s — “ W e thought it was ju st goin g to sit on shelf,*’ Som m er said — fiv e copies w ere o rd e re d . A nd th e y s o ld b e fo r e a rrived . ‘Raclng Thoughts” by Jasper Joh n s Iso n dis play at Phoenix A rt M useum , 1625 N orth-Cen tral Ave., as part of the exhibit titled "Twentieth Century Am erican Art: H ighlights of the Per manent C ollection of the W hitney Museum o l American A r t” ton, G reg Louganis, Carl Lewis as well as other national and international athletes. * G u e s s w hat’s p la y in g a t a th e a te r n ea r y o u ... Yes, folks, it’s no longer stuck in the 50s — or is it? “T h e B lo b ” is back. Thirty years after its slimy screen debut, that infamous creature has re turned to torture Kévin Dillon and Shawnee Smith. Will it suck you in too? Th e MU cinema gives those o f you whomissed-it-the-first-time-and-can’trent-it-on-video a chance to see “T h e W itch e s o f E a s tw ic k ” for only a buck. The moyie, starring Jack Nicholson, M ichelle R e iffe r, Cher and Susan Sarandon, ill run at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. through Septem ber 4. * Enchanted New Beginnings:” An Ice-cream social, art shows, sporting events and live entertainment will mark the reopening o f Phoenix's Encantp Park. Th e O pening's theme is “ Enchanted New Beginnings” and it wHI take place all day Monday. Admission and festivi ties are free and fo od and drinks will be on sale. For m ore information call ■161-8443._________ __________________ — Dm A s w ere fiv e m ore and fiv e m ore and even a hundred. Som m er said, “ N ow w e k ee p it perm an en tly stocked, along w ith a w hole ran ge o f books on alcoholiam and drug addiction; it ’s one o f the m ost popular sections here. Changing Hands w ill keep books on the shelves that aren’ t sellin g, unlike the chains. B estsellers on racks In m arkets don’t m ake it h ere until o ff those racks, Som m er said, A S U ’ s c r e a tiv e w r ite r s a r e w e llrepresented by A lb erto R ios, A l, Ron C arl son, M ark H a rris, N orm an P u b ie and Jeannine Savard. Th e store has a sm all reading room stocked w ith a w ater cooler, herbal tea and benches and th ree floors o f books. A lto geth er there is 3,000 square feet o f space. Th is Is quite a switch from the e a rly years at 9 E . F ifth St., w here Anna’s C afe now lies. T h e store w as iro n ica lly founded on A p ril F o o l’ sD ay in 1974b y Tom Brodersen and G ayle Shanks; Som m er served,as a consultant. “ W e had h alf the space Anna's has now — and Anna’ s Is p retty sm all,” said Som mer. “ W e used our bathroom as a storage space, w ith shelves up to the ceilin g u sed s o m e b o d y e ls e ’ s b a th ro o i Som m er recalled w ith a sm ile. When the store m oved to Its present location on a steam y August night in 1978, the books,w ere passed across M ill Avenue and up the street b y friends. H ence the nam e sym bolizing both com m unity bonds as w e ll as the huge collection o f q u ality used tom es that g o from owner to owner.. . i; , Friendly m onsters amt an « d ecile atm osphere déterm ina the m ood and spirit o f shoppers at Changing H ands. mmi Friday. September 2,1988 Billboard m agazine charts Am erica’s top 20 album s 13. “ L e t I t L o o s e ” G lo ria E stefa n ft M ia m i Sound 5. “ H e’ s the D J, I ’ m the R apper” D .J. Jazzy J e ff & The M achine (E p ic ) — Platin u m F resh P rin ce ( J iv e ) —>Platinum 14. “ H ea vy N o va ” R ob ert P a lm er (E M I-M anh attan ) — 6. “ F aith ” G eorge M ich ael (C olu m bia) — Platinum Gold (M o re than 500,000 units sold .) 7. “ OU812” Van H alen (W arn er B ros.) — Platinum 15. “ K ick ” IN X S (A tla n tic) — Platinu m 8. “ R ich ard M a rx ” R ich ard M arx (E M I-M anhattan) 16. “ C ocktall’ Soundtrack” (E lek tra ) 1. “ H y s te ria ” D e f L ep p ard (M e rc u ry ) - , Platin u m Platinum M ore than 1 m illion units sold.) 17. “ L a p o f Luxury” Cheap T ric k (E p ic ) — G old 9. “ Opeh U p and Say Ahh” Poison (E n igm a) — Platinum 2. “ A ppetite fo r D estruction” Guns & Roses (G effen ) 18. “ R e g Strikes Back” Elton John (M C A ) — G old 10. “ Lon g Cold W inter” C inderella (M ercu ry) 19. “ H eart B reak” N ew E dition (M C A ) — G old Platinum 3. “ T ra c y Chapm an” T ra c y Chapm an (E le k tr a ) — U .“ Sm all W orld” H uey L ew is & Th e N ew s (C h rysalis) 20. “ In E ffe c t M ode” A l B. S u re! (W a rn e r B ro s .) Platinum Platinum 4. “ R o ll W ith It ” Steve W inwood (V irg in ) — Platinum12.“ D irty D ancing’ Soundtrack” (R C A ) — Platinum ( A P ) — Thè follow in g are the top record album s as they ippear in next w eek’ s issue o f B illboard m agazin e. Copy right 1988, B illboard Publications, In c. R eprinted With >ermisslon. Guthrie: folk m usic’s spiritual co n scie n ce N E W Y O R K (A P ) — H e w as the spiritu al fath er o f, Am erican folk m usic, an artist w ith a social conciousness vho captured the hopes, dream s, joys and sorrow s o f a lation in such p olitical anthems and protest songs as "T h is „and Is Y ou r Land.” H is nam e w as W oody Guthrie, and he inspired generaions o f singers and com posers, including P ete S eeger, Bob I Dylan and his son, A rlo Guthrie. But if G uthrie was the spiritu al daddy o f folk m usic, then ,ead b elly (H uddle Led b etter) w as its granddaddy. The tw o heroes who carved a m usic fo r the com m on people are celebrated on a new album , “ F olkw ays: A Vision Shared,” subtitled “ A T rib u te to W oody G uthrie and | ,ea d b elly.” Th e album , the brainchild o f Bob D ylan, fea tu re* perorm ances o f G uthrie and L ea d b elly’ s w ork b y such artists is D ylan, S eeger, B ruce Springsteen, A rlo G uthrie, U2, jt t le R ich ard, John Cougar M ellencam p, W illie Nelson, iweet Honey in the Rock, Em m ylou H arris and T a j M ahal. R oyalties from the L P w ill be donated to the Sm ithsonian i nstitution which bought Folkw ays R ecords la st y e a r from he estate o f its founder, M oses Asch. Folkw ays w as a la b e l. hat cham pioned folk m usic and its stars and is perhaps the nost com plete lib ra ry o f fo lk m usic in existence. Asch, son o f n ovelist Sholem Asch, founded the Folkw ays a b el in 1947 w ith record in gs o f L e a d b e lly and such :ountry-blues musicians as Jack Dupree, B ig BUI Broonzy, ionny T e rry and Brown M cG hee. Asch produced m ore than 2,100 records during his 50-1 rear ca reer and tried to keep them a ll a va ila b le fo r sa le to| the general public and as a referen ce resource fo r scholarsSpringsteen sings “ I A in ’t Got N o H om e” and “ V igila n te! Man,” both w ritten b y G uthrie. B rian W ilson sings Lead* I b elly’s “ Goodnight Iren e.” D ylan sings G uthrie’ s “ P re tty ! Boy F loyd .” D ylan w as fascinated b y G uthrie from the firs t tim e he I ever heard one o f his records grow in g up in M innesota. H e I visited Guthrie in the hospital du rin g his last days and! cheered the com poser b y sin gin g his songs to him . G uthrie I lie d at Creedm oor S tate H ospital in N ew Y o rk in 1967 at the I age o f 55 follow in g a 13-year battle w ith Huntington’s Chorea. - music D ylan w rote a G uthrie-style talkin g blues fo r h is firs t | record album . When the Sm ithsonian bought F olkw ays, which included recordings by G uthrie (1912-1967) and! Lead b elly (1885-1949), plus the W oody G u thrie A rch ives, it l was suggested to D ylan that he g iv e â b en efit con cert to I help pay fo r it. H e suggested m ore m ight b y raised b y a| recording. Joe M cE w en, artists and rep ertory d irector a t Colum bia I Records and one o f fou r execu tive producers o f " A V ision I Shared,” recen tly talked about the sign ifican ce o f th e j record. “ I think the fa ct that these songs can s till b e translated I Into the 1980s shows that this m usic, its passions and expe-1 riences, a re u niversal,” he said. M cE w en couldn’ t p red ict how the L P , released Aug. 23, would sell. Th e execu tive producers m ade a lis t o f som e 40 per-1 Formers — g iv in g no p referen ce to those signed to C olun)-j bla Records — to be in vited to perform . “ D ylan had done his song. Th at g a ve the p roject som e I cred ib ility,” M cEw en said. E xecu tive producers m ade! sure pérform ers didn’ t duplicate and som etim es suggested ] tunes. , * •*‘Th is Land Is You r Land’ w as obviously designated fo r I P ete S eeger from the beginning. And 'R o ck Islan d L in e’ f seem ed to m ake a lo t o f sense fo r L ittle R lc h a rd .lt sounded I like his kind o f song.” Doc W atson ¡days gu ita r w ith S eeger, who som etim es ! perform ed on the sam e M il w ith G uthrie and L ea d b elly in his youth and, a t 69, continues to sin g songs b y both o f them . T h e L o s A n geles rock group, Fishbone, perform s ] w ith L ittle R ich ard. “ W e w anted a re a l cross-section o f d ifferen t styles o f ] music. I tMwk w e ach ieved that,” M cE w en said. SUN KVE 9 m YIABMW RMttevs Coler, Basemeni • M M M I Rent it through S T Ä T E PRESS Classified Advertising! A house is not a hom e u n til it’s occupied! G RFASY TONY'S DON'T LET THE N A M E S C A R E Y O U - W E’RE NOT G R EASY WE'RE ABSOLUTELY FANTASTIC!! Pizza Night - Tuesday 20" round $7.0C) m i rnm m w 1 j Äsi i msÆÈÈmi&Æmimàim SAUSAGE O N TORPEDO ROLL H O A G IES AM subs c o m a w ith M tu e * . to m ato , onions, o t. vin eg ar a n d s p e c ia l Italian seasonings WHOLE HALF N O C H A B G E FOR EXTRA GREASE ITW 1. B O LO G N A • AM ER ICAN CHEESE • SPICED H A M — — — -------— Z C O O K E D SALAMI - AM ER ICAN CHEESE - SPICED H A M ,------ •• J BOILED H A M - AM E R ICAN CHEESE - C O O K E D S A L A M I-------4 C A P A C O L A - SWISS CHEESE - BOILED H AM .....------ , — ------ 4 PEPPERONI - ITALIAN C H EE SE — ............---------- 9-------4 ITALIAN SALAM I - ITALIAN CHEESE - C A P A C O L A .....-----7. ROAST BEEP , , , . ------ , — ----- ^ — — — ........................ a TURKEY BREAST -------------- — ^ — - — — -----------9. CH ICKEN— ------ 1------------------- — — -------,----- .--------- -------------ia ALL A M E R IC A N C H EE SE---------— ---------— ----------~~— ¡ W 1 1. AU . SWISS O R P R O V O LO N E ------*— «, --------------------12. TUNA -----------— , — — ----- ~ ----A I a PASTRAMI ----- -----------»---------- w e r H * “ * ------------**---- ~ 1 4 C O R N BEEr....... , ............... ......... ......... •........------------------- ---------15. GREASY TONY'S SPECIAL SUB: ITALIAN SALAMI - PEPPERONI ITALIAN CHEESE - B O LO G N A • SPICED H A M — ------- * -----------------14 -ROAST BEEF • TURKEY - SWISS CHEESE .------- -— 17. PASTRAMI • TURKEY • SWISS CH EE SE------- , ---- , — .......... ...... .......... 1& BOILED H AM - TURKEY - SWISS CHEESE...-------- — , --------- --------- -----19T TURKEY - PEPPERONI - PROVOLONE CHEESE..— — ......... ................... 20. GREASY TONY'S SUPER ITALIAN SUB: ITALIAN SALAMI • PEPPERONI H A M - C A P A C O L A • PRO VO LO NE CHEESE— ------— »••• 21. ROAST BEEP - PASTRAMI - C O R N BEEF • SWISS CHEESE , 2 2 SPICEO H A M * B O LO G N A - C O O K E D SALAMI - AM E R ICAN CHEESE 23. VEGETARIAN SUB: PRO VO LO NE - SWISS - AM E R ICAN CHEESE......... 2 4 WEIGHT LITERS SUB: TURKEY - H A M - PEPPERONI - B O LO G N A C O O K E D SALAMI - ROAST BEEF - CH ICKEN • PRO VO LO NE CHEESE ..4 35 ..4 25 ..4 7 5 ..4 75 ..4 75 ..4 75 ,r47S ..4 75 ..4 7 5 ,.4 2 5 ,.4 7 5 ..5 25 ,.4 7 5 , 4 75 STEAK S O N T O R P E D O ROLL TONY’ S STEAK SPECIAL WITH CHEESE • TOM ATO - O N IO N S — — ...---------2 5 0 CHEESE STEAK WITH O NIO NS -------------------------------- ----------------------- * ....... 2 2 5 TOM ATO STEAK WITH O N IO N S .u,.— — , — — --------------sA-*— .......... ....... 2 2 5 STEAK WITH O N IO N S ---- t------------- — ---------------— ----------- --------------- ~ ~ ------ 2 !° PEPPER STEAK WITH O N IO N S -------- , , , — — i ------- -----------------------------------2 2 6 CHEESE STEAK WITH PEPPERS 5 O N IO N S --------------- ------- -------- ----------------2 5 0 PEPPER STEAK SPECIAL CHEESE — TOMATOES — O N IO N S 4 LETTUCE — , — 276 CHEESE STEAK WITH M USHRO OM S 5 O N IO N S — ------— — ------ — — 2 7 5 PIZZA STEAK WITH CHEESE SAUCE 5 O N IO N S -------~ — ...— — ----------- -- 2 5 0 REGULAR TRASH C A N STEAK TOMATOES - LETTUCE • CHEESE • MUSHRO O M S • PEPPERS - PICKLES 4 O NIO NS .... ---------------------------------------3.25 .00 CHEESE STEAK WITH B A C O N 5 ONIONS . , i . „ .¿ ¿ » — — . ^ . . , . ^ , , , * — 2 7 5 LARGE CLUB STEAKS O N BIG SUB ROLL .000 H AN G O VE R STOPPER STEAK SAUSAGE • CHEESE - TOM ATO - ONIONS • PEPPERS • M USHROOM S - SPICED H A M • POTATOES 1/2 S U f ROLL — ------------4.99 3 5 HALE CLUB 2 STEAKS CHEESE • TOM ATO 5 O N IO N .;----------------- -------------------- 2 7 5 34 HOAGIC STEAK 3 STEAKS O N A BIG RO LL WITH O N IO N S — ----- — — , — 5.50 37. TRIPLE 3 STEAKS WITH CHEESE - TOMATO 5 O N IO N S .— .— — ............................. 4 2 5 40. 275. 275 275 275 275 250 275 295 276 275 47. 45 49. SQ 51. DELICIOUS JTAllA N MEATBALLS HALF 75 .50 .35 25 24 27. 25 29. 35 51. 32 35 34 LARGE CLUB 4 STEAKS WITH CHEESE * TOMATO - O N IO N S 4 BIG R O U , MEDIUM TRASH C A N 2 STEAKS TOMATOES - LETTUCE - CHEESE PICKELS - MUSHRO O M S 4 PEPPERS LARGE TRASH C A N 4.STEAKS TOMATOES • LETTUCE • CHEESE • M USHRO OM S -PEPPERS -PICK LES4 O N IO N S , ii. — — — ^ — ------ - 250 250 275 275 52 53. 54 M C A T I A U ________.4 ,.. ..2 2 5 ....... ..... 3.25 MEATBALL........ MEATBALL...............................5.50 55 54 67. 55 59. 60. 61. STEAK BURGER WITH O N IO N S ---------- --------j---------- — ---- -----CHEESE BURGER WITH O N IO N S — ----------- ------ — ----- ---------------- — — B A C O N CHEESE BURGER WITH O N IO N S -----------------.••— ------- --------------M U SH R O O M BURGER WITH CHEESE 4 O N IO N S -------— —— CA U FO R N IA BURGER CHEESE • LETTUCE * TOM ATO 4 O N IO N S DOUBLE BURGER 2 BURGERS WITH CHEESE O N R O U -----------— — HALF CLUB BURGER 2 BURGERS CHEESE • LETTUCE • TOM ATO 4 O N IO N S O N HALF SUB R O U ____, . — — — — — — — „ -------- ----LARGE CLUB BURGER 4 BURGERS O N A LARGE SUB R O U ------- ------- — -------- P A B M ES A N .— PARM ESAN ¡. PARM ESAN.. VARIETY 9f BVR9.ER3 EXTRAS O N H O AG IE S:.. MEATS. MUSHROOM S. S A C O N (PER ITEM) — -------— -------— — .......•*•••: r SWISS O R PROVOLONE CHEESE ----------- --------------- ;------— ........... AM E R ICAN CHEESE, PEPPERS. TOMATOES, LETTUCE. O N IO N S O R PICKLES 35 39. SAU SAG E SPECIAL CHEESE - TOMATO 5 O N IO N S ---------- ---------5 ---------------CHEESE SAUSAGE WITH O N I O N S ------- — ------ --------SAUSAGE WITH PEPPERS 4 O NIONS — -fv PEPPER SAUSAGE SPECIAL CHEESE - TOM ATO 4 O N IO N S --------- SAUSAGE W ltH O N IO N S -------------------------------------------— ---------- REGULAR TRASH B A G SAUSAGE PEPPERS - TOMATO • CHEESE - M U SH R O O M PICKLES-LETTUCE 5 O N IO N S --------- , ------ *----------- --— .— -------- --------HALF CLUB 2 SAUSAGES CHEESE - TOMATO 4 O N IO N S ------------ -- --------— HOAGIE SAUSAGE 3 SAUSAGES WITH O N IO N S------ ------ — ................ ........v *m LARGE CLUB SAUSAGE 4 SAUSAGES CHEESE - TOMATO 5 O N IO N — — , MEDIUM TRASH B A G 2 SAUSAGES M USHRO OM S • LETTUCE • TOMATO • PEPPER - PICKEIS • CHEESE* 4 O N IO N 1 -------- — — -------LARGE TRASH B A G 4 SAUSAGES CHEESE - TOMATOES • PEPPERS - PICKLES * MUSHRO OM S • LETTUCE 4 ONI ONS*. , — — .....— — — ------ ... 41. 42 45 44 45 44 carl 62 SMALL PIZZA MEDIUM PIZZA LARGE PIZZA EXTRA LARGE SUCES HEWJERSEYSTYIEPIZZA 426 425 450 17.95 U S 12* 1618-2QT 29" WITH WORKS 495 WITH WORKS ■ ICL95 WITH W ORKS 1595 LOW CALORIE WHITE PIH A . MO BAUCE • SAME PRICfcAS MOULAK PIZZA The GOOM BA Pizza 10 Items •SMALL 9.25 M ED 1 2 7 6 LARGE 17.20* ^ SICILIAN PIZZA SMALL PIZZA LARGE PIZZA SUCES OF SICILIAN PIZZA PIZZA ITEMS INCLUDE: CAL2qN ES i fn 550 EXTRAS O N S M A U PIZZA 1290 EXTRAS O N LA R G E PIZZA '•* 1.50 EXTRA ITEMS - -4, v SAUSAGE. PEPPERONI. M U SHR O O M , H A M . O N IO N . OLIVES. C A P A C O L A . PEPPERS, TOMATOES A N D B A C O N CHEESE 4 SAUCE 270 3IT E M S 4 7 5 ,4 7 5 ,7,75 AM E R ICAN CHEESE. PEPPERS, TOMATOES. LtTTUCE. O N IO N S O R P IC K L E l M U SH R O O M O R B A C O N »EVEBASES APPETIZERS ,4 5 0 n o m o m i t * « ! on A U lA < H A H P W IC H »; L .60 1,25 FRENCH FRIES O N IO N RINGS ZUCCHINI MOZZARELLA STICKS FRIED CAULIFLOWER .95 1.10 200 250 1.76 LARGE LARGE LARGE LARGE LARGS 4 PEPSI .56 DIET PEPSI SLICE MOUNTAIN DEW O R A N G E SLICE 1.80 200 476 450 425 FOR DELIVERY C A LL 894-8868 SPAGHETTI 4 MEATBALLS PENCIL POINTS 4 MEATBALLS RIGATONI 4 M SAT1AU S L A SA G N A ITALIAN HOT D O G S. PEPPERS. O NIONS A N O POTATOES ITALIAN SPECIALTY A N D BREAKFAST ITEMS ONLY AT UNIVERSITY TOWERS LOCATION SUN-THURS: T0AM - 2 A M FRI & SAT: 1 0 A M - 3 A M M .75 LEM ON AD E IC R ÌT E A SPECIALTY S A U B S ITALIAN SPECIALTY DISHiS 921 E. University Tem pe, AZ 85281 894-8868 111 ' EXTRAS O N SM ALL PIZZA EXTRAS O N M EDIUM PIZZA EXTRAS O N LARGE PIZZA - . EXTRAS O N X -LA R G E PIZZA EXTRA ITEMS 475 C H t F 'J S A U O 475 475 u t j .75 » » L»ttg«*-)>ni9tó-Onion-Hain-rnvolO>w -Ciiiiuoiolntnl 7*pr—ofll.Hoc* Q *v , '■ IU N A 5 A L A D Î 2 * . igy«* ol laHuea.2ma.1oinat6.Ioo. 2 netMMea 3 .E A C H O R P f AR HALVES 250 5aMOenlaHucaw/eonoo*CM*w University Towers 525 $. Forest Suite 101 921-3611 Tues.- Flakey Jake’s, E N California Cooler Party 8 p.m. 5-,:.'v f';. ]%. 5' 'iSr ‘ • V /•: ..-¿i Wed.- Sigma Nu Auction 6 p.m. Thurs. - Sigma Nu Volleyball Tournament 1 p.m. with Sat. - 2 j JN Relays Tempe UNIVERSITY AND RURAL AT TH E CO R N ER STO N E 715 S . R u ra l VISA MASTERCARD ACCEPTED c o m ic s By GARY LARSON BLOOM C O U N T Y Lessee... oN e-H ACf b u s h e l CORN. TWO POUNDS CHEMICALLY w n e iie p w m a t e r s : y „ ONe YAM. _ j------ a ft er s a le s , I S N M P ow e # 3 7 * * M ILLION ^ W M M v e & iH t r . PfSlWCJlY /INBKICAN Doonesbury BY G AR R Y TR UD EAU PONNY, I WOULDN'T B£ HERE IF IP IP N T B E THANK LIEVE IN YOUA S A YOU. QUALITY PROMOTER.. EVERYTHING ABOUT YOU SCREAM S _____ .Q U ALITY. /¿ S i HWMP AND PRESLEY! W E'RE TALKING COMEBACK M A & C A T THE HOTTESTCASINO VENUE m TUB-WORLD! WHAT DO YOU I BACKING* BUT ITS GOING TO TAKB M ORS THAN*Z M ILLION A W EEK, M AN . I'V E y ^ G O r A LOT O F R B -ft X s p o N s m m e s .fy N AM E I M EAN, 1 GOT 1,200 u e e n w A iB CHILDRENS) SUPPORT. I we've SAY AILBEBN NO THERE, MORE. K m . I WHAT I^^AGBS? / your pace, KING! WRITE \ YOUR OWN \jKKET! Mclonhead b y G a rth H e c k e ! NOTfEEUNBTO Goo# hu? 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A P A C H E • 9 6 7 -1 1 2 9 fc ä s S C _______ -r - 'M ROAD BIKES W ORLD C Y C L E Starting at 1660 Southern #A1 iiO P (across from MCC) 461-1875 M ountain B lk a s W A S SALE' U.S. Express *325 *195 Montreal Express *425 *275 Òrfani Express *525 *395 Canyon Express *595 *590 S A LE Good through Sept. 30th sp o rts State Press Page 17 Friday,September«, 1988 F rid ric h b e c o m e s s t a r t in g By D EA N G Y O R G Y State P ress W ith the ASU vo lleyb a ll team ’s season opener ju st a day aw ay, the m atter o f find ing a startin g setter is settled — fo r the m om ent at least. A ctin g head coach Steve Schlick w ill start N o elle F rid rich as the Sun D evils take the flooir Saturday, playin g host to N ew M exico S tate at 7:30 p.m . In the P .E . E ast building. T h ey w ill fo llow that w ith a road m atch a t Grand Canyon on M onday. Th e setter position was vacated last year w ith the departure o f tw o-tim e all- ‘The key to our success is consistency o f play. I feel we’r e th é type o f team that, the longer the rally goes, the better our chances are. ’ — Steve Schlick A m erica R egin a Stahl. N ew candidates fo r the spot a re ju niors F rid rich and Bobbl Bloom. Both h ave been playin g w ell, and the com petition has been good-spirited but fierce. . -V.. “ W e’v e been pushing each other eve ry day,” F rid rich said. “ W e’ve been encou ragin g to each other, but it’s been a fig h t.” This w eekend, at least, coaches Schlick and Sue W oodstra have decided F ridrich w ill be the firs t on the floor. “ W e s till h ave not m ade a seasonal deci sion,” Schlick said. “ W e’re s till real up In the a ir. W e ju st fe lt w e needed to m ake a decision fo r the next gam e o r tw o.” Th e b attle d efin itely is hot over, but eventu ally the coaching s ta ff wants to s e tte r fo r v o lle y b a ll o p e n e r have one fu ll-tim er, fo r continuity’s sake. “ Sooner or la ter, hopefully one w ill em erge o ver the oth er,” Schlick said. “ Each person has a little bit d ifferen t d elivery In their sets, although it’ s not a m ajor differen ce, just the little things can change the h itter’ s tim ing. It ’ s better to have one In there so the hitters a re Used to the sam e type sets a il the tim e.” Th e com petition betw een F rid rich and Bloom has been good, Schlick said, as they push each other to succeed. Th at kind o f frien d ly com petition can be found through out the team . “ I think they a re trem endously suppor tiv e o f each other,” Schlick said. E lsew h ere on the court, the D evils have four returning starters from last ye a r’s IS IS team . Senior C hristy N ore is one o f the Pac-10 Conference’ s top outside hitters. L ast sea son she le d the team In kills w ith 345 and digs w ith 318. She w ill be joined on the le ft side by eith er D ebbie Lynch o r K e lly Plalsted. Th e m iddle w ill again be junior Sue N ord, who led tl yea r with a .331 hitting percentage, other m iddle blocking position w ill see eith er senior Dawn M eldlnger o r sopho m ore Tin a B erg. M eldlnger, in her firs t fu ll season last year, w as tops on the team In block a verage a t .980. Southpaw T r a d e K lsro w ill be h itting aw ay from the righ t side. “ Th e key to our success is consistency o f p lay,” Schlick said. “ I fe e l w e’ re the type o f team that, the lon ger the ra lly goes, the better our chances are. W e’re goin g to keep the b a ll in play, and sooner o r la ter the other team Is goin g to m ake an erro r. “ T h ey a re defin itely read y to p lay.” Irwin Oaughwly/Stat* l»n m N oelle Fridrich (left) and B obbl Bloom (right) participate In a setting drill. Fridrich beat out B lo om fo r a starling position In Saturday’s season-opener with New M exico State, but Bloom Is also expected to see action. Sinn to put history behind her as she shoots for another title By CH R ISTIN E PIR K EY State P ress In what she c a lls the last true am ateur sport, A SU sen ior P e a rl Sinn has accom p lished w hat no am ateu r g o lfe r — man or woman — has e v e r done before. She has won the U .S. A m atu er Open and Th e U.S. Pu blic L in k » in the sam e year. Sinn Is now heading to Sweden to repres ent the U nited States in the W orld Am ateur Championship, Sept. 8 through 11. There, she and tw o oth er team m ates w ill com pete w ith go lfers from 27 d ifferen t countries fo r the w orld am ateur title. A l though Sinn has caught the attention o f the g o lf w orld w ith her fea t, Sinn h erself Is v e ry laid back about the even t m any peo ple a re s till talking a b o u t.. “ I don’t think about.lt that w a y,” Sinn' said. “ It ju st happened that I won those tw o tournam ents.” Sinn’ s v ic to ry Is Ironiq In the fa ct that she has n ever won a co llegia te g o lf tour nam ent. She has placed second tw ice, been am ong the top-10 finishers seven tim es, Is a three-tim e all-C onference g o lfe r and a first-team all-A m erica but s till has not yet won a t the co llegia te level. A s a returnee, Sinn w ill undoubtedly add depth to the Pac-10 runner-up Sun D evils. Sinn said she is looking forw ard to this sea son, which, fo r m any o f the golfers, Is a year-round com m ittm ent. Th e only draw back she sees righ t now is not having enough tim e to b e w ith the team . ‘ T re a lly don’t know any o f the freshm en v e ry w ell,” Sinn said. “ T h ey’v e a ll been goin g through sem inars and things, but I ’v e been so busy gettin g read y fo r this Turn Is Stan, paga *1 Septem ber in Shelf League month of hope, frustration JcffS h a in Asst. Sports It ’s that tim e o f ye a r again, when the anticipation becom es «lm o st unbearable and the nights a re sleepless. The respite o f m orning seem s like it w ill never com e. N o, I ’ m not talking about the beginning o f the new sem ester or, the upcom ing start o f Sun D evil football sea son. T h ey m ean nothing to m e. Septem ber m eans on ly one th in g— the baseball pennant races. A n d I ’ m not talking about the D odgers, T ig ers and R ed Sox eith er. Those races don’t com pare to the battle fo r the annual L ln d y Chappoten M em orial T ra velin g Trophy, sym bolic o f excellen ce (o r incredible lu ck) In the Shelf League. G ive us this day our m orning box scores. A s ow ner, gen eral m anager and ch ief venom -spewer o f the Shain G ang, I fin d the club in second place en terin g the stretch d rive, one point behind the hated B.M .W . Sports. (In the S h elf Leagu e, team s ahead o f you in the standings are hated, those less than fiv e points behind are dangerous and the rest a re laughlngstocks.) How I go t into this position, I ’ ll n ever know. M aybe it s one o f those “ In credible luck” years. One thing’ s fo r sure — this season hasn’t gone anywhere close to the plan. B ack in A p ril, I thought I had solved the team ’s annua l pow er shortage b y loading the roster w ith fiv e players capable o f h itting 20 hom e runs in a season. Instead, only M ike M arshall has com e even close to that potential. In fa ct, his 18 din gers m akes him the on ly G ang m em ber to ta lly double-digits in that category. In the Punch-and-Judy w orld o f hitting, I drafted a bunch o f Judys. Who would h ave thought that K eith M oreland, who h it 27 hom ers la st yea r, would w ind up w ith the sam e amount o f round-trippers as V in ce Colem an (3 )? O r that Ped ro Guer rero and R a fa el P a lm eiro each would h ave few er hom ers (6 ) than R oberto A lom ar (7 )t H ere’s how screw y the season has been fo r the Gang: the team has m ore pitch ing victo ries (85) than hom ers (71). M aybe that’ s the secret — put together the best pitching s ta ff in baseball and let it c a rry the load. Sparky Anderson, eat your h eart out. T h e G ang has th ree leg itim a te candidates fo r the S L ’s annual Outstanding P itch er aw ard. O rel H ersfalser had 17 victo ries and a 2.88 earned-run a vera g e a t the beginning o f the w eek, T im L e a ry had won 14 gam es and has a 2.36 E R A , and John F ran co had a 1.28 E R A and leagu e-leading 27 saves. But that m ay not be enough to overta k e the Sports, who In the last y e a r h ave used the n intl^place G erry’ s K ids as a fa rm team . Since the end o f la st season, the K ids h ave sent Bobby B on illa, W illie M cG ee, B ob W alk, Joe M agran e and Danny Jackson to the Sports in trades. T h ere has been talk o f placin g a m oratorium on Klds-Sports deals, although nothing w ill e ve r com e o f It. So it’ s no surprise w hy no tears w ere shed fo r the Sports when S teve B edroslan cam e down w ith w alkin g pneumo nia. O r when Tom m y H err w as traded out o f the leagu e. O r when Leon Durham entered drug rehab (tw ic e ). Ip fa ct, there’s h ardly e v e r any lo v e lost betw een any o f the Shelf Leagu e m em bers. It ’s been said that the p rim s reason the SL is In existence is so the league m em bers have an excuse to hurl Insults at each oth er six months out o f the year. But the G ang is now com ing down w ith its own set o f w iggling problem s. I ’v e had to send out an A P B fo r Casey Candaele’s battin g stroke, which w as le ft som ew here In M ontreal la st season. Sam e fo r pitch er M ike Dunne’s control. Those w ith In for m ation as to their whereabouts a re asked to c a ll the team ’ s fron t o ffice, which is offerin g tw o tickets to any G ang hom e gam e as a rew ard. P itch er R andy Johnson, at 6-foot-lO the ta llest p la yer on an S L roster, w as read y fo r call-up from M on treal’s (and the G ang’ s ) fa rm system but go t rocked in his la st m inorleagu e outing and punched a w all a fter being lifted . Broken hand, out fo r the season. And m ost ga llin g, the Prison stripers lost anything but a rem ote chance at a hom e run when M arshall went down last w eek w ith a pulled ham string. This has happened b efore fo r the injury-prone M arshall. U p until this yea r, he would sit out fo r anything from back spasms to a long hangnail. Som etim es, M ike, you’v e got to ask you rself If you re a lly want It. So a ll I can do Is sit and hope. H ope that the h itters turn Into 14 M ick ey M antles fo r the next month. H ope that Dunne figu res out that the p late is that little five-sided slab sunk into the ground. H ope that M arshall doesn’t cut him s e lf shaving and m iss fiv e gam es. State Press Friday. September 2.1988 w e e k e n d A S U s p o rts F O O T B A L L — T h e Sun D e v il foo tb a ll team in vites fans to attend ASU team photo/fan d ay a t 10 a.m . Saturday a t Sun D e vil Stadium . Fans w ill FRIDAY SÄ URDAY -H A R D KN h ave the opportunity to take pictu res and talk to th e foo tb a ll p layers ISDAY SU N D AY If BAND Ige Night adm ission biiege Í.D. k specials II night All Night p rio r to a scrim m age. Adm ission is free . V O L L E Y B A L L — Th e Sun D evils open th eir season at 7:30 p.m . Starts at 6 p.m. S aturday a t P .E . E ast again st N ew M exico State. Adm ission is fre e T H E R EIG N w ith a va lid a ted ASU ID . T h e team also tra v els to P h oen ix to p la y riv a l w/Special Guest G rand Canyon C o lle ge a t 7:30 p.m . M onday a t G CC, 35th A venu e and C am elback R oad. sports briefs B E C K E R , M cE N R O E E L IM IN A T E D A T U .S. O P E N - TH U RSD AY SDAY T w o unhe ra ld ed p layers fro m Down U nder put B oris B eck er and John M cE n roe V IC T O R Y G A R D E N dow n and out a t th e U .S. Open Thu rsday. B eck er, h obbling on p ain fu lly sore fe e t, w as booted fro m the tournam ent b y A u stralian D arren C ah ill 6-3, 6-3, 6-2 In a second-round m atch a t the N ation al Tennis Center. OTHER M cE n roe, a fou r-tim e Open w inner, w as elim in ated b y A u ssie M ark W ood forde 7-5,4-6,6-7 (3 -7), 6-3,6-1 in a night m atch th at took n ea rly fou r hours. L Y N N D E C L A R E D IN E L IG IB L E F O E PO STSE A SO N - O u tfield er F red Lynn, obtained b y the T ig e rs fro m B altim ore fo r D etro it’ s pen FRIDAY I SATURDAY nant d rive , Is In eligib le fo r postseason p lay because he reported ID m inutes a fte r th e m idnight A u g. 31 deadline. T u c so n Recordirv N A U ’ S C O L L IN S C H A R G E D W IT H F E L O N Y A G G R A V A T E D « S ID E W IN D E R A S S A U LT — N orth ern A rizon a U n iversity sen ior tigh t end Shawn Col lin s has been ch arged w ith one count o f felo n y aggra va ted assault in Tempo's Best connection w ith th e a lleged b eatin g o f his g irlfrie n d at a lo ca l nightclub, G IN B L O S S O M F la g s ta ff p olice said Thu rsday. C ollin s, 21, w as arrested M onday but relea sed on his own recogn izan ce pending a fu tu re cou rt appearance, p olice said. N H L TO P L A Y E X H IB IT IO N G A M E IN P H O E N IX - T h e N ew Y o rk R an gers p la y th e V an cou ver Canucks In th e firs t-e v e r N H L exh ibition ga m e to b e p layed in P h oen ix on Sept. 22, orga n izers announced Thurs d ay. T h e gam e w ill h e staged at the A rizon a V eteran s M em oria l C oli seum , the fo rm er hom e o f the Phoen ix Roadrunners o f the defunct 968-5802 1001 E. 8th Street University 8th Street W orld H ockey Association and old W estern H ockey Leagu e. S O U TH E R N C A L W H IP S BC, 34-7 — R odn ey P e e te ’ s passing set up tw o touchdowns b y A aron E m anuel and a p a ir o f fie ld goals b y Quin R od ri gu ez Thu rsday n igh t as eighth-ranked Southern C al whipped Boston C o llege 34-7 in a 1988 foo tb a ll opener. P e e te , a fifth -y ea r sen ior who led USC to the Pac-lO cham pionship last ye a r, picked ap art B C 's secondary w h ile com pletin g 21 o f 33 passes fo r 271 ya rd s and one touchdown. Leaf asu briefs PAC-10 STANDINGS Southern Cal Arizona State Arizona California Oregon Oregon State Stanford UCLA Washington W a s h in g t o n S t . PAC-10 GAMES w L T Pçt. Pts.Opp. 0 0 0 .000 Q 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 QQ0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 A L L GAMES L T Pet. Pts. 0 1.000 34 1 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 .000 0 Ò 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 *0 .000 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 w Opp. 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 THUR SDAY'S R ESU LTS SOUTHERN CAL 34, BOSTON COLLEGE ’ SATURDAY’S SCH ED U LE SAN DIEGO STATE at UCLA A RIZO NA at O REGON STATE W ASHINGTON STATE at ILLINOIS pro scoreboard AMERICAN LEAGUE THURSDAY’S RESULTS Late Game Not Included Milwaukee 6. Detroit 2 . Toronto 5, Texes 1 Kansas City 5. Minnesota 2 Boston at California, (h) Only games scheduled FRIDAY'S SCHEDULE Chicago (Reuse 10-8) at Cleveland (Nichols 0-4), 4:36 p.m. Milwaukee (W egman 10-11) at Detroit (Tenana 14-8), 4:35 p.m. Texas (Guzman 11-10) at Toronto (Stieb 12-8). 4:35 p.m. Kansas City (Bannister 9-11) at Minnesota (AAnderSon 12-8), 5:05 p.m. Baltimore (Peraza 5-7) at Seattle (Moore 7-14), 7:05 p.m. Boston (Hurst 16-4) at California (Finley 8-12). 7:35 p.m. New York (John 8-6) at Oakland (C.Young 8-7). 7:35 p.m. N o w C a r l’s Jr h a s a d e lic io u s w a y t o s ta rt e a tin g h e a lth ie r N e w E n tre e . NATIONAL LEAGUE THURSDAY'S RESULTS No Game® Scheduled. i ''' S a la d s -T o -G o :" C h o o s e fr o m o u r C h a r b r o ile r C h ic k e n S a la d . T a c o S a la d , o r ‘ ' C h e f S a la d . T h e y 'r e a lw a y s m a d e fr e s h a n d t o p p e d w it h th è fin e s t in g r e d ie n ts . FRIDAY'S SCHEDULE Cincinnati (Browning 13-5) at Chicago (Pico 5-6), 1:05 p.m. San Francisco (Hammaker 7-6) at Montreal (B.Smlth 9-8), 4:35 p.m. Los Angeles (Leary 15-8) at New York (Darling 13-9), 4:35 pun. San Diego (JJonaa 8-12) at Philadelphia (Carman 9-9). 435 pun. Pittsburgh (Walk 11 -10) at Atlanta (Glavine 5-15), 4:40 pun. St Louis (Magrane 2-8) at Houston (Darwin 6-11 or Scott 13-4). 5:35 p.m. NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE SUNDAY'S SCHEDULE Atlanta at Detroit 10 a.m. Dallas at Pittsburgh, 10 a.m. Los Angelas Rama at Green Bay. 10 a.m. Miami at Chicago. 10 aun. Minnesota at Buffalo, 10 am. Philadelphia at Tampa Bay. 10 am. Phoenix at Cincinnati, 10 am. San Francisco at New Orleans, 10 am. New York Jets at New England. 1 p.m. Houston at Indianapolis. 1 p.m. San OiaBO at Los Angalaa Raiders, 1 pm. Seattle at Denver, 1 p.m. Cleveland at Kansas City. 1 p.m. MONDAY’S SCHEDULE Washington at Naw York Glsrrts. 5 pm. A n d t h e y ’r e o n ly a t C a rl's Jr. T h e C h o ic e Is Y o u rs. NewEntree Salads-To-Go. Carl’sJr. p i Famous Star Hamburger Only 99* Offer valid through September 14, IMS at participating C arl> f r * Restaurants. O n e coupon p er custom er, p er visit. O n e discount per coupon. N ot v a lid w ith any other o ffe r o r discount. T a x hot included. Cheese extra. I Save $1 On Any Entree I Salad-To-Go I Present this coupon and save $1 on your choice ■ o f Shrim p, C hef, T aco or C h arb ro iler Chicken I Entree Salad-To-G o. Salads served 1 la th - 10pm . I Offer valid through September 14,19SS I at participating Carl's Jr.* Restaurants. I O ne coupon p er custom er, p er visit. O n e rllo o n n n » m e n n u iv m N o ! v a lid w ith a n v O th e r o ffe r o r discount. Does n ot inclu de G arden Salad o r Salad Bar. Carls& ©Carl Karcher Enterprises. Inc 1988- T a x n ot included. © C a rl K archer E n te rp rise s. In c. 1988. _ ^ i «tate Press Page 19 Friday, September 8.1988 L Forest S I M E S A N I5 S A N College Your Nissan and Datsun Service Specialists are offering Daily: Lunch & Dinner specials Sunday: Spaghetti with Salad & Garlic Bread • N iss a n -tra in e d te c h n ic ia n s • G e n u in e N is s a n parts • Q u a lity m a in te n a n c e a n d re p a ir w ork • R e a s o n a b le p ric e s Buy 1 75
ffer. 1908 N INJA 800.13,500 miles. New Met zlers. Very clean , very fa s t Include* , cover, lock, helmet. $2250/offer. 2 7 9 0877. 1868HONO A Spree. Excellent condition, o n ly700milcc. 8875. Celt John.887-8072. A FURNITURE sale; 7 piece bedroom set $189, twin sets $48. full sets $56. queen sets $66.5 drawer chests $39.96, sofa sets from $169, plus much mors. 3332 Furni ture. 3332 W. McDowell Road. 233-2236 o r 137 W. Main. 896-1456. QUEENSIZE box spring mattress and frame. Brand new, upgraded, sacrifice $170.220-4430. SINGLE BED, 3 months old. Must sell, moving. $90/offer. CaO BUI. 829-8680. SOFAS FROM Scottsdale luxury home builder’s models. Contsmporary styles and fabrics. Three to choose from. $250, retail $700. Matching lo vesea t $200. 8298964 BUY ITI SE LLITI Find It In the STUDENTS! Large sofa for extra room o r party room. Good, condition, $30. 7x12 w ool area rug, $40. Dan, 481-0785, even ings and weekends. USED FURNITURE, targe selection, af fo r d a b le . Furniture Consignment Ware house. 3401 W. Whitton Ave. Betw een Indian School and Thomas. East o f 35th Avenue. 352-0041. WAREHOUSE SALE. Desks from $49; chairs from $15; bookshelves from $19; en d tables, typin g tables, com pu ter tables, dining tables, file cabinets, plus lots more. Arizona O ffice Liquidators, 4010 S. 43rd Place, between 40th Sheet and 46th Street, North o f Broadway. 437-2224. FUTONS FACTO R Y O U TLET 789-9747/NW PHX 254-5943/DWNTWN F U R N IT U R E S A L E S /R E N T A L Desks „„ , ......— $ 59.95 BedSets...Twm............______________ 99.95 Full............... . ............... 119.95 Queen.............. ...............149.95 Dinettes......................... ................129.95 Couch/Loveseat............... ............... 300,80 Sectionals...................... ...............369.95 •90 Day Same as Cash «MC/Visa «Layaway •Rent to Own «Valleywide Delivery R EN TA L EXPER TS 1870 E. Apache, Tempe _______________ 829-1212_______________ miscellaneous for sale miscellaneous fo ria te EP TURBO XT SYSTEM CO M PLETE SYSTEM WITH: •-8088/10MHZ •1 Floppy Drive •25 6K R A M •8 Exp. Slots . •Standard Keyboard Cards._____ MATCHING COUCH and love seat, beige, brow n , a n d rust. G o o d c o n d itio n , $200/offer. Evenings, 943-3815. WICKER SOFA (Popason) with futon and pillows. $9Q/offer. Must sell, moving. Call BUI, 829-6680. 0740. 1965 PO N TIA C Fiero. 5-speed, tended, must sell. Beet offer. Call Kevin at 9941958 o r 635-1683. State Press Herm an F ra zie r, associate d irector o f athletics, said the return o f heptathlete Gea Johnson w ill be b en eficial to the ASU track team . “ I think it ’ s an asset any tim e you can have a loca l product on the team , espe cia lly one who is a g rea t student and a great athlete,” F ra zie r said. Johnson, a Junior, le ft the team in M ay claim ing the fu tu re o f Hie program was uncertain fo llow in g Hie firin g o f Coach Clyde Duncan in M arch. Johnson had considered tran sfering to the U n iversity o f T exas, but a fte r a m eet ing w ith F ra zie r and Coach Tom Jones she announced she w ould return to ASU. Johnson, a 4.0 student, set a school hep tathlon record w ith 5,115 points in 1987. She was nam ed the nation’ s top fem ale scholarathlete as a sen ior in 1986 at W ashington High School in Phoenix. S ally Johnson, G ea’s m other, spoke on the phone w ith F ra z ie r fo r 45 minutes and met w ith him in person fo r tw o hours. “ Herm an F ra zie r w as re a lly grea t dur ing this tim e,” M rs. Johnson said. “ W e w ere re a lly pleased w ith H erm an and Coach Jones.” F ra zie r said it w as a m atter o f discusing some unsetUed issues. “ It w as a long overdu e conversation,” F ra zier said. “ I think there w ere a lo t o f things flo a tin g in the a ir that w eren’t re a l ity. I think som e things had to be clea red .” classifieds NOW ONLY $519 •M onochrom e Monitor •M ono/Graphics Bd •150W Power Supply •Parallel Prtr Port •12 Month Warranty C A L L C O M PU -SO U R C E A T 602/834-1194 ConHnMd Irani 20 ' “ I think he’ s a good football coach,” Stallings said o f W yche. “ I Just think he’ s under som e bad luck.” A ny discussion o f Cincinnati begins with, quarterback B oom er Esiason, who was1 second behind Ph oenix’ s N e il Lom ax in passing ya rd a ge in 1987. H ow ever, he fin ished the season w ith the third-lowest passing raring am ong A F C starters, be hind Dan Fou ts and M ark M alone. Fouts has retired and w ill b e broadcasting the Phoenix-Clnclnnatl gam e fo r CBS, w hile M alone w as traded from Pittsburgh to San D iego and is the backup there. { 4 “ H e’ s strong, he’s go t excellen t tech nique,” sta llin g s said. " I Just know that when he’ s in the gam e, there’s a d ifferen t chem istry,” Esiason w ill h ave a good set o f w ide receivers to throw to ln C ris Collinsworth, E dd ie Brown, T im M cG ee and running back Jam es Brooks. Collinsworth has been troubled w ith a le g in ju ry and Brooks is fighting shoulder problem s, but both áre expected to p la y against Phoenix. The defense is led by A ll-P ro linebacker R eg gie W illiam s and strong sa fety D ávld Fulcher, an ASU product. Th e B engals closed th eir exhibition sea son w ith a 4-1 record, th eir best preseason m ark in 11 years. H ow ever, W yche said the record m eant nothing. “ We’re 0-0,” W yche said. “ Fou r and one w as la st season, because this season is now. Preseason doesn't count anym ore. autos for sate T ry State Press C la ssifie d Advertising,., before you reach the end of yo u r rope. 965-6731 Bargain Brakes tk Mufflers -*c GUARANIS QVAim AT BARGAIN n u ts ' M AN AG ERS ¿S y J BILL A JOE «' . ■ •Brakes •Mufflers Campus Discount »Exhaust •Air-Conditioning I.D. required for discount FREE car wash with service 521-1 E. Thomas or 965-6735 autos for sale MM to. minutes from a su Phoenix Paar« Friday, September g, 1988 miscellaneous for sale real estate for sale BEAUTIFUL 2 bedroom, 2 bath condo with fl replaça. Waaher/dryer, refrigera townhomes/ condos for rant ROOMM ATE W ANTED to share 4 bed room house 1.5 mUes from campus. Pre C O LO R TELE V ISIO N, portable, $80; console. $100, works perfect Call Ray at 254-1412. tor, microwave stay. University and Mc Clintock area. $69,200. ERA American, ask for Maggie, 839-4930 or 497-1031. A SU AREA. Newer 2 plus 2% townhouse lo a d e d w ith ex tra s, b y p o o l, $650. 981-1946. fer graduate student faculty, or older undergrad. $280 plus utilities. Call Pat, 861-7426, days or 968-6956 after 7. C O M PAQ PORT-II model-2 640-KB hard disk, floppy MS mouse. Mint condition. Software included. $2300/offer. Robert, LIKE NEW- 3 bedroom, 21* bath town home. Low down, no qualifying. Trade winds, 820-3333, Bill or Grace. W ALK T O ASU. 1 bedroom. Pool, all appliances. $360. Call Leona, 266-6110or STUDENTS NEEDED to share. Fully fur nished, including linens, dishes, washer, dryer, microwave, much more. Tw o blocks from campus. $225/month plus % utili ties. Regal Professionals, Inc. 437-4877. 996-8959. 896-3135. FOR SALE- 100% IBM compatible XT turbo. From $499, at turbo from $1095.18 month warranty. 837-1641. FOR SALE- Cannon Typestar 5 elec t r o n ic ty p e w r ite r. M int c o n d itio n , $90/offer. Smith Corona electric typewri ter, basic typewri ter, excellent condition, $50/offer. Call 967-5036. FOR SALE, cheapl Mexican style dark stain dining table, glass top dining table, slate end table, womans bike, single-size Futon and frame. 941-4866. FOR SALE: HP-11C Scientific calculator with manual, $40. Call Cindy at 784-0911. KENMORE WASHER and dryer set. Good MOBILE HOME. 12'x6S' 3 bedroom. 1 bath. Many extras, 1Vi mile ASU. Excel lent low cost living. $8990/otter. 829-8143. homes for font MOBILE HOME on campus. Must sell. Furnished. $3800. 2 bedrooms, 12x56. Matt, 966-5209 or 898-3065. 1 BLO C K to ASU. Clean and comfortable 4 bedroom, 2 bath home. $695/month, 967-4248. NICE 3 bedroom , 2 bath tow nhouse with fireplace. Washer/dryer and re frigerator stay. Mill and Broadway area. $59,500. ERA American, ask for Maggie, 839-4950 or 497-1031. W ALK T O ASU. 1 bedroom condo. Pool, all appliances. $34,000. Call Leona, 266S110 or 996-8959. apartments for rent condition, $150. Call Ray at 831-1193. LOUIS VUITTON and Gucci bags. Start your semester in style. Vinnie, 966-2053. MUST SELL- will take best offer. 1978 14x52 mobile home. 1 bedroom, 1 bath in Tem pe family park. Full awnings, fenced back yard, auto sprinkler system. New c o o le r, a il e ie c tric . Dan, 8871-0204, 437-2153. 962-3856. NISHIKI 10-SPEED, $35; Fuzzbuster, $50; Teak stereo case. $35; Business desk, $50. Call 921-0740. OAKLEY’S- ALL makes (blades, razor blades, etc.) at great prices. Call 9625865 for more information. STEREO SYSTEM for sale. MCS model; 16 month warranty. Will sell for $800 or best offer. Call Lisa, 730-5377. 1 0 R 2 roommates needed for mostly fur nished apartment. Own room for $200/ month plus Vkutilities. D o s e to shopping/campus. Call Kara, 921-1764, leave mes sage. CLOSE TO ASU. Beautiful Southbank Apartments. Private balcony and patio. Lovely pool. 2 bedroom apartments. Call 894-1041. EL DIABLO Apartments. One and two b ed ro om s available. Call D ebora at 921-0699. FOR RENT: Tw o bedroom apartment close to ASU. Whole month September Freed Call Gina. 894-9259. TEMPE. 829 S. Farmer. West o f Mill, off University. 2 bedroom, 2 bath duplex. $475/month. 968-4000. SPECIAL OFFER M arianna A p ts. 1214 E . O ran g e 966-8597 W ALK TO ASU ! $40 RO U N O TRIP ticket to Son D iego September 8th-Sep tember 12th. Contect Tracy Jem en, 784-9323. real estate fo r sale $65,500,1905 E. University. Bank foreclo sure, condo, 2 bedroom, 2 bath. 100% financing for owner occupant. Terrific terms. Dyana Edmunds, Merrill Lynch, 991-3300/948-7251. HOUSE FOR sale by owner. 1500 square feet, 3 bedroom, 2 full baths. 2046 S. Col lege. $79,900. John. 921-2080. NO QUALIFYING 1, 2, 3 b e d r o o m c o n d o s & townhouses. Papago Park Village O n ly Vi b lo c k fro m c a m p u s . B e a u tifu lly fu rn is h e d , h u g e 1 b e d ro o m , 1 bath; 2 b e d ro o m ; 2 b a th a p a rt m e n ts. A ll b ills p a id . C a b le T V , h e a t e d p o o l, a n d s p a c io u s la u n d ry fa c ilitie s . Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t. S to p by to d a y ! T e rra c e R oad A p a rtm e n ts 950 S . T e rra ce 966-8540 townhomes/ condos for font from$58,000-6102.000. Bob Bullock Realty Executives 996-2992 2 BEDROOM townhouse, $53,000. As sumable loan, skylights, near ASU. Great student area. Merrill Lynch Realty. Pat. 461-5200. 2 BEDROOM. Ittb a th . washer/dryer. no pete, near Thomas and Scottsdale Rd, $480. 8394293. 2 BEDROOM apartment (duplex), 1 mile from A SU . P re fe r grad/staff/faculty. $335/month. 265-2066. 2 BEDROOM townhouse. 2 story, nicely decorated, laundry hook-ups, fen ced patio, close to Fiesta Main. $47S/month, 890-0880. TH IS BEAUTIFUL, huge house has every luxury known to man. Broadway/Rural area. $230/month. 829-0224. TW O ROOMS for rent In condo close to campus. $225 a month plus utilities and WANTED: 2 fem ale roommates to share a 3 bedroom , 2 bath townhom e. Alma S c h o o l a n d U n iv e rs ity . 464-2414, Madeleine. business opportunities MAKE YOUR FORTUNE Write for free details oh 101 enor mously profitable yet amazingly easy businesses anyone can start. One will be perfect for you! Write to: American Business Enterprises P.O. Box 1388 Bryn Mawr, P A 19010 $225 PER Month plus utilities. Three bed room, fully furnished condo with all amen ities. Call Dan, 921-0098. 22 YEAR Old male quad looking for expe rienced aide for weekends and travel ing. Gobd pay. Call to m , 840-3857. 967-4056. A A A A A TELEPHONE interviewers fO£v Tem pe marketing research firm, absolute ly no salbs. Flexible evening/weekend hours. Start at $4/hour. Rapid raises for good people. O'Neil Associates, Susan, 967-4441. ACC O U N TIN G 212 tutor needed! Oneon one instruction necessary and fee is negotiable. Call Jennifer at 784-9143 as A RESPONSIBLE person With experienca Haydan. 941-4325. applicable education Is needed to moni tor the operation o f s Tem pe group home plus teach self-help and Independent liv ing skills to mentally/physlcslly handi capped Individuals. Monday-Frlday, split shift, 6-6 a m. and 2-* p.m. $5/hour plus benefits. Teri/Kevin 894-2355 or apply at 1822 W. 3rd Street, Tempe. A R IZ O N A RpSE is now hiring rose girls fo r part-time help to sell roses in night clubs. Please call for Interviews, 990-7611 ATTENTION SWIMMERS; Swim shop hir ing sales personnel. Typing and office skills deslreable. Call 264-7774, Monday Mill and Baseline. BREAKFAST/LUNCH cafe needs parttlma/full-time waitresses and kitchen help. Apply at Kevin's Corner Cafe, 1725 W. University, Suite 1, Tempe. CORK N Cleaver now accepting applica lions for lunch waitresses arid hostesses. Short shifts, convenient hours, fun atmo sphere. Also accepting applications for evening hostesses and evening cocktail waitress. Apply in person Monday-Frlday 2-5 p.m. or by appointment, 5101N. 44th Street, Phoenix, 44th Street and Camel back. 952-0585. COUNTER HELP, Dry cleaners, full-time. Thomas and Hayden, Scottsdale; South ern and Mill, Tempo. 947-7530, Afforda ble Dry Cleaners. DEPENDABLE PERSON to stay with 6th grader in my South Tem pe home (Warner Rural area) from .3-8 p.m. Monday Thurs day. Call 730-9623, evenings. A ROOMMATE needed to share room. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. Condo close to ASU. Pool. Rent negotiable. Jason, 966-8989. soon as possible, please! AMBITIOUS PEOPLE needed for produc tion company telemarketing. Part-time DISABLED FEMALE- PV East, needs fe male attendant, morning and evening, hours flexible, good pay, no experience or lifting hecessary. 784-8078. AVAILABLE NOWI Roommate wanted. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, furnished. $250/month plus utilities. Male/female. nonsmoker. South Central Tempe. 730-0305. (flexible) hours. Good hourly'rate plus commission. For information call 8409335, ask for Debbie. DISHWASHER PREP part-time evenings. Tony’s New Yorker. Apply In person, 107 CHRISTIAN HOME, furnished, utilities included, $250. Richard, 829-7551. FEMALE/MALE NONSMOKER. Share 4 bedroom home. $200 plus utilities. Dob son and Warner. Paul, 821-1097/8937758. FEMALE ROOMMATE to share beautiful luxury home in Tem pe Lakes. 4 bedroom, 3 bath with pool. Fully furnished with ell the extrps. $325/month plus % utilities. Call Lisa or Eric. 831-2501. FEMALE ROOMMATES wanted to share tw o bedroom, tw o bath at Worthington Place. $225/month electricity, fully fur n ish ed, extras. Shannon, 921-7919. Available nowll FEMALE ROOMMATE Wanted. 3 bed room. 2’4 bath, fully furnished, pool. $300/month plus utilities. Grad students preferred. Jennifer, 9-5,667-7335. FEMALE ROOMM ATE needed. Own bedroom/bath. C loee to ASU. Has all ameni ties, bea u tifu lly fu rnished. 2 podia. Jacuzzies. 6250 pluaWuUilUsa. Papago Park H. Jolaine. 967-5248, F E M A L E RO O M M ATE. $200/month plus u tilitie s. O w n ro o m . O u sa ta V id a . 968-1463. HAVE YOUR own bedroom and bathroom in a ,2 bedroom , 2 bathroom apartment minutes from ASU. Pool, cable, covered parking, laundry, plus more. $235 plus utilities. C all John, 968-0181 o r call 967-6568. L A R G E BE D RO O M a va ila b le Immediately In house. Walk to campus. Unfur nished. Full house privileges. $275 in cluding utilities. 921-2080. MALE/FEMALE: 2 bedroom, 2 bath near A SU at Worthington Place. Fully turn iahad. P o o l. Jacuzzi, v o lleyb a ll. Im mediate availability. Own room, $250/ month. Share, $ 180/month plus utilities. Lisa, 921-3651. Chuck, 894-5516. MALE ROOMMATE needed. 2 bedroom. 2 bath condo. Washer/dryer, pool, Ja cuzzi. $175/month, >* utilities. 882-2778. RESPONSIBLE NON-SM OKER to share peaceful house near Southern and Mc Clintock. Largo room, quiet room metes. $250, utilities Included. Robert, 831-5585. ROOMMATEWANTEO.Houee, NorthTemps. 1* miles ASU. $290/month. Call 990-9545. E. Broadway. A PPLICATIO N S BEING accepted for a part-time bartender, must be able to work from 4-10 p.m. Need friendly and outgo ing person. Apply at Quality Inn, M Oand A sk fo r T o n y at 829-1717 after 12 n o o n o r at hom e, 924-0499 betw een 10 a.m.12 noon. Autom ated Plasm apheresis Center MCI TELEC O M MUNICATIONS IS HIRING HOURS: 7:30 a. m.-4 p.m. & 4:30-9 p.m. Mon.-Frl. S e ll lo n g d is t a n c e phone services for a Fortune 500 company. $5 per hour guaranteed. R a is e s & b o n u s e s . Looks great on your resume. Other oppor tun ities available in i o th e r d e p a rtm e n ts H after 30 days, Central Phoenix location. Phlebotomist & Front Office r a tree copy! S U P ER S IT T ER S W ANTEDFOR ' PART-TIME WORK, t Babysitters registry now being com piled. $10 membership fee per sem ester. For details ft application serid SASE to: S U P ER S IT T ER S C/O JOHNSON 10211 S. 43RÖ PLACE PHOENIX, AZ 85044 COURTYARD i f MARRIOTT HOTEL .•servers , .. jfe. •housekeepers tc o o k s •dishwashers J A p p ly in person only. 2621 S ‘ 47th St. 966-4300 EOE M/F/V Diatemartca M arketing, the nation’s finest telemarketing firm, is now accepting applications for the following shifts: 1 - 8 p .m „ 6 -9 p.m . Weekends A lso Available Our salespeople work in a modem, comfortable business environment contacting established customers on long distance lines. Guaranteed salary or commission, whichever is greater, and averages $5-$7 an hour. Our Tampa office is located approximately 5 minutes from campus. Please call DiaJamerica Marketing for details. 829-1140 $ PHONE S A L E S $ 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 Call today, Mesa ADDTEM PS | like to offer you the chance to jo in this team and gain Invaluable experience while you’re in college. W e need several adver Using sales representatives to Create, design and sell advertising to local retail businesses. If you have a strong commit! ment to excellence and pride in a Job well done, w e'd Ilka to speak with you. You must be self-motivated, punctual, a good time manager, own a ear and be a people person. Please call today and join steam o f dedicated ASU students w hoars com mitted to making the 1988-59 ASU Stu dent Handbook and Calendar the bast. Call Dan Ellstrom a t965-5555 today! P.S. If you are wondering what in the heck a Student Handbook la, stop by Student Publications In Matthews Center and get AFTER C LA SS HOURS 224-5625 , that supports this annual event. Students spend long hours with creativity f lowing, Ideas exchanging and the fulfillment o f producing their very own handbook. We’d AFTERNOON EXPANSION t&M pH hqif auaranleed Ask for Jill or Barb {jt o F e ^ calendar!, The really neat thing about the Handbook la that It’s produced by ASU students. That’s right. Students gather the information, write and adit the copy; shoot the photos; design the cover and inside pagee and last, but certainty not least, tboy design and toll tbs advertising •desk clerks University Ptisma Center, Associated Bioscience of Tempe, 1015S. Rural Rd., is accepting applications for the fo llo w in g part-tim e positions: _______ -vkNXaXXSL START IMMEDIATELY wanted (o r didn’t want to) know about c o llege life. it'seven gotadaH y reference how accepting applications C O O K S WANTED J o n a th o n ’s P iz z a HAVE YO U aaan tbs ASU Student Hand book and Calendar? It’s a handy pocket size book, filled with everything you ever fo r Elliot Rd. D ay or N ig h t Earn C o m m issio n up to $10/hr. years and 18 months. Flexible hours, part-time, $5/hour. Vicki, 947-1044. DOUBLE YOU R Pleasure/fun. Babysit ters needed svenings/weekends tar se tivs twin boys. Scottsdale, McDowell/- PART-TIME CHILD care position. Help mom care for 3 young children. Near Par adise Valley Mall. Transportation neces sary. 992-2646. help wanted BUSY STAY at home mom seeks raepon si M e person sensitive to needs o f tod dlers to help ca refor 2 young boys ages 3 946-4461. BARTENDER/GRILL cook needed for fun neighborhood sports bar. Flexible ache dule. $8-$12 per hour. Apply Woodshed,!, $10-$660 weekly/up mailing circulars! Rush self-addressed, stamped envelope: D ep t AN-7CC-G, 9300 Wllshire, Suite 470, Beverly Hills. C A 90212. '2 ROOMMATES. Share 4 bedroom town house. $20Q/month, $200 deposit. Mill and Baseline area. Call Rich or Val at A R B V S - 4412 N. Miller. Days and even Inga available. Start $3.50. For interviews, ask for Maureen, Gerald, Karen, Shawn, Friday, 10-6 p.m. $200/MONTH plus utilities. Nonsmok er, new house, Brown and Power. 981-3149 after 8:30 p.m., 963-6673, 1-6, McndayFriday. 2 FEMALE roommates needed- Fully.fur nished condo. 1 bedroom, own bath, $230.1 bedroom, share bath, $200. Phis utilities. 968-7796. A A A A N eed person fo r light yard work (mowing, trimming, etc). $4-$6/hour, de pending on experience. 967-4441. phone. Call Jack at 829-7241. 967-0641. CLOSE T O ASU. Newly redecorated 1 bedroom apartments. Quiet, secluded area. Lots o f amenities. Call Hidden Glen C lo se to A S U Studios & 1-bed rooms, utilities included. $295 & up. tickets for sale $ 1 25 MONTHLY! Male roommate wanted to share large bedroom in 2 bedroom, 2 bath. 2 blocks from campus. Price in cludes paid air-conditioning, furniture. 1 FEMALE roommate needed to share master bedroom, own bath in 2 bedroom Tem pe condo. 2 miles from ASU. Washer dryer, full amenities. $23Q/month, utili ties. Call after 2 p.m. 894-0735. QUEEN SIZE futon, $75. Twin futon and QUIET AD U LT Complex has 1 bedrooms frame, $150. Olivetti portable typewriter, available, unfurnished, $395, furnished, $125. Sharp home entertainment system: $420. All utilities included. 3 blocks to 19 inch color TV with remote, VCR with ASU, near Broadway and Rural. Quiet rem ote, tuner, dual cassette, graphic people only please. 967-6620. eq u a lizer, turn table, 2 speakers, 2 cabinets, $800. Will separate TV and VCR. R A N C H O LA S Palmas Apartments, 1 All new, must go. Make o ffer. Carl, bedroom apartments available. N ice stu 967-2567. dent community. Call David at 829-9607/ SAVE MORE Thrift Store. 1915 N. Scotts dale Road (2 blocks North o f McDowell). Quality clothing and hom e furnishings, desks, chests, sofabeds, etc. 990-3364. rental sharing BRAND NEW Apartments, new lower rates, special semester leases available. 2 and 1 bedroom, free cable, pool, covered park ing, lots more. Just a few blocks behind Old Town Tempe. 921-3036. Apartments. 968-8183. NEON BAR Sign, Michelob on tap. $50. IBM electric typewriter, $25. R o w i n g « machine, $75. Gas barbeque grill, $30. 1 BLOCK to ASU. Spacious 5 bedroom, 2 bath home, fire place, plush carpet. 845/month, 967-4248. help wanted help wanted rental sharing EOE { $ 926-0516 $ DISABLED STUDENT need* help part time. Approximately 10-12 hours/week $5/hour. No experience necessary, will train. References required. Lifting re quired (100 pounds). 820-0827. EARN MONET at home! Assemble Jewel ry, toys, electronics, others. Fiill-tlme and part-time work available. Call (refunda ble) 1-407-744-3000 e x t S203, 24 hours. f i n a n c i a l SERVICES company expand Ing locally. Looking for mature adults who want to supplement their income. Call Mr. Charles Nelson, 838-1108, Mon day through Friday, 2-5 p.m. for interview. GROUP HOMES need energetic, hard working people to help teach physically mentally handicapped individuals Iride pendence: Full-time,. 3rd shift (should like to cook); full-time llva-tn (Includes roam end board); part-time weekends (lots of recreational activities). Teri/Kevin. 804-2355 or apply at 1822 W. 3rd Street, Tempe. HELP W ANTED: Drivers, cook s, and counter help. Good pay and flexible hours. Call 829-0064 or 921-8448, ask fo r Mike, John, or Mr. Slmpaon. HEY YOU!! Yea, d ie «did, crazy o n e !' Become a part-time DJ for private parties and get paid fo r b e in g a ham l Call 957-1967. LEARN SMALL Business from the ground up. Local car rental com pan y needs counter representative for full o r parttime. 833-0995. LIVE-IN, LIVE-OUT nannies. Weekend, day, evening babysitters «ranted. Own transportation. C all Friends Forever Child care, 438-1099. LOCAL RAOIO Statlon has a part-time opening for a telephone market research position; no salting involved, clo se to campus. Great opportunity for a sophmore or lunior. Call Mike Maloney after t 81956-5236. MALE MODELS: Versatile mala m odels needed by photographer w ho'«rill be in Phoenix in October. Those selected will earn top dollar. Send reoent photos, ate, to J.G., 5509 CroSacraek la n e , Suite 1075, Fort Worth, T X 78108 MATURE BABYSITTER needed fdr baby and pre-teens, afternoons and evenings. Dobson and Broadway area. 962-7486. MALE STUDENT nurse for morning hours, 8-8 a.m. Monday-Friday. $10/hour for 19 year old mala with Cerebral Palsy. Would consider student from special ed pro gram or social work or someone with medical kno«rtedge, p.m. hours also needed. South Scottsdale, 994-4590. MESA FAMILY YM CA prime time, after school child development program Is hir ing site directors and counselors. Hours are 2-8 p.m., Monday-Friday. Apply at 207 N. Mesa Dr., Mesa. N o phone calls please. N A TIO NA L FIRM now accepting applica tions from ASU. $9.25 starting rate. Train ing provided. Management, branch office, and personnel opportunities. Call the Better Business Bureau, then call us. Vector Marketing Corporation, 827-8535, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Felons need not apply. NURSING STUDENT, grad or undergrad, help care for female ALS patient on respi rator. Lifting required. Flexible hours, evenings/weekends, possible live-in. Tempe vicinity, Rural/BSsellne, 839-3084. RESPONSIBLE. PART-TIME babyaltter needed for 10 month old in our home. Contact Pam, 264-9718. C A S H FOR g o ld and diamonds. Mill Avenus Jewelers, 414 8. Mill, Suite 101. Tempe. 968-5967. RESTAURANT DELIVERY Drivers wan ted, part-time and full-time, lunch dinner shift. Advancement available. South Scottsdale. Call after 11 a.m., 423-0095. C U S TO M G O LD SM ITH tNG , silversmi thing and jewelry repairs. Mill Avenue Jewelers, 968-5967. SENIOR LAW student wanted to assist in preparation and research for California State Appeal. $5/hour, negotiable. 9489867. Call after July 29. STOCKYARDS RESTAURANT hiringkmch waitresses and bus boys. Apply 1:30-5, Monday-Friday, 5001 E. Washington. STUDENTS: PART-TIME work, full-time pay. Great opportunity for those who qualify. For personal interview call CBS Supply, Inc. betw een 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday-Friday, 921-2897. STUDENTS EARN $5.85/hour for part time work weekends and some mornings, Scottsdale area. Call the Arizona Repub lie, 271-8687, between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. CLASSIFIEDS WORK. personals AD PI are psyched to be teamed with the A-Phis for Sig Nu relays. AD PI PLEDGES. You ail are great! Your actives love you! LORA: W HAT sun protection are you tak ing to Club Med? i can’t decide! Nonethat is what I thought. See you there! MARK CHAREST: Have an incredible Birthday!!! Jules. MARK CHAREST: What did I ever do to deserve a brother like you. Love, Mike. MARTHA: WE had A C C 212 first summer session with Jones. W e formally met the last day. I'd like to see you again. RIP Eric. RHODES A ND DeMarte: I’ m missing those good old JB days and Red Red wine nights. Randol. RICH DUGAN! Let’s make this weekend greet! I love you! Sue. SUBJECTS NEEDED, food and nutrition lab feeding study. Nonsmoking men, 3055 years old. Subjects receive free food, free lab work, free blood pressure moni toring, medically supervised, free nutri tioncounseling. Parking available. Maura Carney, 965-2110 o r Sue Murphy RD, 965-6450. SANDY: HAPPY 21st Birthday! You fi nally made it! Can’t wait to celebrate! Love ya’, Jenn. A G O HEATHER Hastings:. Get ready for an awesom e weekend! We’re goin g to have a great time. Love, your mom. SIGMA P I Little Sisters: Get psyched! First meeting Tuesday, September 6th, 9:30 p.m. at MU. A LPH A GAM Stephanie Mafurano: I’m so psyched to be your mom. I can’t wait to “see you” Sunday. Love, Mom. Find K In the Classified*! WAITRESSES WANTED fo r fun neighbor hood sports lounge/restaurant. Flexible schedule, good $. Apply Woodshed II, Dobson and University, after 5 p.m. SUSAN GEORGE: I’m so psyched you pledged Alpha Phi!! Have an incredible time at Rocky Point this weekend! Pll be thinking o f you. See you Monday. Laura. ALPH A PHI’S- Get ready for a blast in Rocky Point this weekend. PART-TIME WORK. Tennis d u b atten dent, nights and weekends. Call Bonnie, 948-5800, for appointment. WANTED PART-TIM E Light office du ties, $4/hour. Late afternoon hours. Call 967-6424, Lee. PART-TIME MORNINGS. Delivery coun ter positions, $4.50 plus. Call Pastry Courier, 230-0200. WANTED: VOLUNTEERS for the Arizona State Hospital. If yo u a re interested, please contact Susan, 220-6014. PS YC H O LO G Y O R Education major needed to live-in as a big sister to teenager. Some housework in exchange for room and board. Renee, 258-2845. WAREHOUSE/COUNTERMan, part-time, flexible. 2220 W. 14th Street, Tempe, 85283. PAINTERS AND Clean-up people needed for rental property. Call Ray at 831-1193. NEED MOTIVATED fun-loving people to work pool-side at valley resort catering to tourist* and selling Panama Jack. Benef its and great working conditions. Must have car. Apply in person at Hera’s the Beach, 7807 E. McDowell Road, Suite 105v South corner o f Miller and McDo well, between 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 941-2751. Part-time subscription sales, Cardinal Report. 20 plus % com m ission on sal*. Gam ing potential excellen t CaH JIN. 820-3020. Sunny’s Pizza & Pub 1301 E. University" 968-6666 A LL POSITIONS AVAILABLE Energetic pe opl e needed for hot new pizza parlor o p e n in g in Tempe. C ook s, cashiers, pizza makers and delivery persons. -. . PART-TIME HOURS/ FULL-TIME PAY Complete training pro gram. Our customers call us. Beginners earning $300 per week. Young, ca su a l a tm o s p h e re . S e c re ta r ia l p o s itio n s open. Established na tional company. KARISMA 947-0142 Instruction WANTED: Association at Phoonlx Center torSporta Medicina. Weekend o f September 30lh. Call 963-9415. CLA S SIC A L G U IT A R instruction- de velop any style o f play- Brat lesson V, VO LLEYB AU *. COACHES & OFFICIALS APPROX. S210/SEASON Fo r e p p H e e tlM Inform ation co n ta ct th e Student Em ploym ent O ffic e o r caU 9 9 4 -2 4 8 2 . A LPH A PHI and Delta Sig!!! Watch gu t Rocky Point! ANG : HI Baby!! Happy B-Oayf Glad I’m here to share it. Love, J.B.E A-PHI’S JEAN, Monique, Marilyn, Robyn, and Krista: You’d better b e reedy fo r an insane Rocky Point weekend. Your Delta Sig Chauffeur, Markham. DELTA SIG Pledges: W e know that we go t the 33 host this fall. G ood luck! The Actives. DELTA SIG Gussell: Let’s rock n’ foil down In RockhM d this weekendl Morti mer Sprinklatsin. DID I hear somebody say Club Med? Its where it’s at! That is where w e will be, and you!!! Another Lora and Jules Production. G O IN G B A C K to California, driving to Beveriy Hills, Los Angeles on 9/8. back on 9/13. N e ed company. Celt 844-3685. F or m ore info, call (ask for Tina) SUNDAY CONURE (Parrot)- Mala, hand fed , 2 years. Loveable! Talks! Needs immediate good home! Cage. $250/offer. 894-2519. $1.25 A ND up. Professional word proces sor and former English teacher. Laser printer. Bob/Claudla, 964-8012. AAKU RIT TVPING- short papers, over night/ long papers, prompt service trans cribe tapes/ good rates/ Linda 831-0349 ACCENTS IN Typing. Typing service near ASU. Quick turnaround. Over 30 years secretarial experience. 948-9982. ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. Call anytime. Pri ces competitive, negotiable. 966-2186. CEREUS WORD Processing. Quick,'ex perienced, quality guaranteed. Term papers, theses, form letters, resumes, Dictaphone. 947-7796. FAST RETURN. Experienced typist. W ill edit spelling, punctuation, grammar. Accu racy guaranteed. Joan, 839-0772. FLYING FINGERS now has a Mac II and laser printed Resumes, reports, etc. Su san. 945-1500. FORMER ASU staffers: Word Perfect. Xerox Memorywriters, McIntosh computer/laser graphics. Artist available for charts, diagrams, and desktop publish ing. Experienced with APA, MLA, gradu ate school, etc. Gradutate students and faculty work welcome. Cali Donna or Joan. 945-6302. LETTER PE R FE C T word processing. Ruth jobs no problem. Dissertations, term papers, resumes, theses. Quality! 820-7778. QU ALITY, QUICK typing. Papers, re ports, resumes. Pick-up/deiivery availa ble. One day service available. Ginny, 958-5169. services ANOREXIA, BULIMIA, compulsive over eating. Private and confidential counsel ing. Ginnle Grant Monroe, ACSW, recov ering bulimic, 437-9420,488-3850. Health Insurance welcome. EXPERIENCED MATH tutor available for Weat-ride students. MAT077through Calc 3. Reasonable rates. Tom, 979-7915. PERSONAL WEIGHT Training- Private gym - Set your own hours- One on one sessions. Call 897-2975. transportation RIDE- NEEDED anytime by 8 a.m. to A S U . Southern/Priest, Tem pe. Dally. Back after 5:30,829-1129. HÉY JULES!! The Caud Caudron- My Alphe Phi kid- S ee you at C h ip Mod for Labor Day, fiestas in S o n o ri Bay. THE PAPERWORKS- Thesis, report, end resume typing. IBM compatible word pro cessing. Near ASU. 921-9575. adoptions RR E G AN T- ADOPTION, We o ffer confi dential counseling, legal advice and assis tanca with housing and medical arrange menta at no cost to you. In adoption, be sure you are dealing with competent pro fessionals. Remember, the adoption laws, if not property understood and applied, may create serious legal compii cations in your adoption. Our families wish to provid es loving, caring homo Jora child. Call Southwest Adoption Center—a li censed adoption a g e n c y - it’s confidan tial. 234-BABY. miscellaneous K A P P A DELTA Sorority invites you to be apart o f the ultimate sorority experience. For more information caU 784-0159 o r 984-9337. K APPAS- SOUNDED hot on Tuesday n igh t Congrats on a great Fall 88 Pledge class. AEPi. T H E M O R O C C A N R ES T A U R A N T New Times "Beat o f Phoenix” 1967 2 F O R 1 DINNER SPECIAL Buy t dinner entree A receive the 2nd for FREE (equal or lesser value) Sun.-Thurs. with this ad. N o t v a lid w ith o th e r co u p o n s. E x p ire s 9/30/88. Dinner 5-10:30 p.«». • Cocktails • Belly Dancing 422 8 N . S c o t t s d a le R d „ S c o tts d a le (1 block north o f Indian School) |Catering ¿P arties 947-8590 Open 7 d a y s e v KD BECKY- Hey babe! Your Diamond Duo think* you’re the greatest! Have a great. ysMkend! KD U f M a i i M . PERSONAL W EIG H T trainar. Ready «p help. One-on-one o r group training. Call Tom. 968-0299. KD CANDANCE: You are the beat pledge in townltt Your Diamond Duo loves you! ' PIAN O INSTRUCTION, Accepting new studenti now, adulte and children. Nation ally certified teacher and pianist, Ask aboutspadai oilers. 1atl*aaonljaa;99S-14IM, K D RACHEL: Keep up the great work! Y ou r suitle thinks you ’ra marvelous! Almost in AOTI.Lisa. Right Now, KKG BETSY M.- Happy Birthday! Hope your day Is a fu n ono! Love, your KKG big com m unity non-profit organizations need special types of managers... personals ¿acque. 7 ri»/-: V PHOTO EDITOR The S U N D E V IL S P A R K yearbook is lo o kin g fo r an experienced, resp on sib le in d ivid u a l to serve as the 19881989 p hoto editor. A p p lica tio n s w ill be accepted through S e p t 9,1988. P ic k up a p p li cation s lo w er level M atthew s Center. pets typing/ word processing price-call 988-8621. A p p lica tio n * w ill 9* a cce p te d until M on day, Septem ber 19. A LPH A PHI Julie Getson: Have an awe som e weekend! Love, your Ivy Linker. TRi SIGM A pledge Kristi: I’m so glad that you are my dot! Have a wonderful w ee kend! Love, Mom. A LL STATES Oriveaway- Cars availabte21 or older. 992-5200. JE N N Y C A LLO W A Y: Y ou r Alpha Chi Buddy is watching you. Michelle. AERO BIC IN STRU CTO R CartHlcáHon workahop by National Aarobica Training B oy* í “w S fc S w ® ■ ONI* ' A LPH A PHPS- The men o f Delta Sigma Phi are set to party in Rocky P o in t G UY: STOKED tor this we e kend. Luv ya, Michaile. CITY O F S C O TTS D A LE RECREATION DIVISION 968*8881 LISA S.- Sorority sisters we’re not, but friends w e ll always be. LR. AEPT TODD: Thanks fo r the wonderful anniversary celebration, W ooley man! I know it’s goin g to be the first o f many! I love you! Lisa. Fill o ü t app lication at FLA G FO O TB A LL RE PLIC A W ATCHES. Highest quality available. Rolex, Gucci, Piaget, Perpetual movement, and Louis Vuitton purses. $60-$125. 376-9662. KITTEN, H APPY Anniversary! I love you! Puppy. American H um anl ca /AS U hma that aoluUdh. You know th eta agen cies...; Th ey’v t been around fo r years providing much need ed youth 4 human services...now they need motivated, educated professionals to «rork in their ranks. The AH degree program at ASU serves to attract, prepare end place students into non-profit agency, «rork. C areer opportunities fo r graduate* ham never been bettor Wo will bo on the Dean's patio between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. for sign-ups. Com e and visit our table for more information. AMERICAN RED CROSS BIG BROTHER8/BIG SISTERS BOYS CLUBS BOY SCOUTS CAM PFIR E 4-N GIRLS CLUBS GIRL SCOUTS JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT UNITED W AY YM CA ^ YW CA MAKING A CAREER A ACADEMIC CHOICE? CONSIDER AMERICAN HUMANICS/ASU For further Information about thl* degree program and the American Humanlcs Student Association, call 965-7291. 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