A rizona State University’s M orning Daily state press Voi. 71 No. 11 •Copyright, State Presa, 1968 Tempe. Arizona W e d n e sd a y, S ep te m b e r 7 ,1 9 8 8 Council’s ticket swap ruled violation of law By KRISTI ELLIS State P ress The Tem pe C ity Council violated the A rizo n a Open M eetin gs L a w when it traded the use of a parking lot fo r 20 Pho­ enix Cardinals season tickets, the Arizona a tto rn e y g e n e r a l’ s o ffic e r e v e a le d Tuesday. The attorney gen era l’ s o ffic e told the council of the m eeting’ s ille g a lity in a let­ ter d elivered Tuesday to Assistant City A ttorney Kent Foree. ‘ T suspect w e’ ll disagree, but w e’ll try to see their bottom lin e,” F oreé said. The attorney gen era l’ s o ffic e did not provide copies o f its letter to the public, but a spokeswom an said copies w ill be re­ leased today. The council is expected to address the decision Thursday at its regu lar m eeting. C ontroversy about the trade began in August, when the council traded the use of a parking lot the city leases near Sun D evil Stadium in exchange fo r the council’ s use of $9,600 w orth o f season tickets. During a closed, execu tive session, some m em bers o f the council and C ity M anager J erry G eiger discussed and approved the deal. But a fter the attorney gen eral launched an in vestigation of the deal late in August and councilm en received scores o f c ritic a l telephone calls, the council decided to g iv e the tickets to the non-profit Tem pe Com­ m unity Council fo r distribution. The attorney general deem ed the closed m eeting an “ inadvertent viola tion ,” and the council w ill not be prosecuted. But the council must declare the deal void and approve a new trade during a regu lar council m eeting, the attorney gen eral’s letter states. The attorney general offered to provide future assistance if the council requ ired it. C ity o fficia ls and councilm en had little to say about the decision. Randy Gross, an assistant to M ayor H arry M itch ell, declined com m ent. M it­ chell, who during a news conferen ce last Turn to Council, page 7 Football gam e to be played on ‘sch o o l night;’ no b o oze By KRISTI ELLIS State P ress A t pregam e and postgam e ta ilga te par­ ties during the football season, barbecues and beer are com m on. But fo r tailgatin g fans at the Phoenix Cardinals’ firs t home gam e M onday there w ill be a catch: no booze. A SU ’ s D epartm ent o f Pu blic S afety and U n iversity adm in istrators have d esig­ nated the C ardinals’ hom e debut, M onday, Septem ber 12, a “ school night.” Alcohol w ill be prohibited at a ll pregam e and post­ gam e parties in U n iversity parking lots. So, fans hoping to be in a spirituous mood fo r the gam e, which w ill be aired na­ tion ally on "M on day N ight F ootb all,” take note — you’ll have to party som ewhere other than on campus property. The U n iversity is banning shots In the parking slots because it doesn’ t want to send out “ m ixed signals” , said C. Russell Duncan, d irector o f ASU ’s D epartm ent o f Pu blic Safety. “ This is a positive thing. “ W e a re com m itted at this institution to be consistent In our signals. W e a re saying don’t consum e o r abuse substances.” The p olicy puts the U n iversity in an unusual position because there has n ever been a M onday night footb all gam e at Sun D evil Stadium, Duncan said. Ten extra o fficers w ill be on duty to hand out notices in the lots. “ An inform ed public is a coop erative public,” Duncan said. A -maze-ing m Stow Mounteer/State Prats Students and faculty wind their way through a m aze of stairs and halls In the Student Services Building Tuesday afternoon. Low pay, few prom otions top list of A S U em ployee gripes By b e n M c C o S tate P ress n n ell M ore than h alf o f ASU ’s em ployees are unhappy with th eir salaries and n early as m any are discouraged by little ch a n ce fo r p ro m o tio n , a c c o rd in g to fin d in g s o f a University-conducted study. In addition, the study, which surveyed h alf o f ASU ’ s 3,215 classified and adm in istrative sta ff as a representative sam ple o f U n iversity em ployees, reported that 15 percent o f ASU sta ffers fe e l they have been discrim inated against at one tim e. The “ ASU E m ployee A ttitu de Study” was conducted by the D epartm ent o f S ociology’s Survey R esearch Labora­ tory last sem ester. It sent the 75-question su rvey to 1,608 sta ffers and reported a 92 percent response rate. The Uni­ versity released a sum m ary report o f the study Tuesday. When em ployees w ere asked to com pare th eir pay to the salaries o f others w ith sim ilar jobs outside ASU , 85 percent said they w ere paid less. Fem ales w ere the unhappiest w ith pay w h ile m em bers o f the secreta ria l and clerica l sta ff reported the highest incidence o f salary dissat­ isfaction. O verall, 55 percent reported they w ere dissatisfied w ith th eir salaries, w h ile 26 percent reported satisfaction. Nine- teen percent w ere neutral. M ore than h a lf said they h ave considered lea vin g ASU to find better-paying w ork. Although a m a jo rity o f ASU em ployees seem to be unhappy w ith th eir pay, they lik e their lobs. Seventy-tw o percent o f the respondents said they w ere satisfied w ith th eir jobs w h ile 12 percent said they w ere dissatisfied. Sixteen percent w ere neutral. M ore wom en than m en said they w ere happy w orking fo r the nation’ s sixth-largest university. N ea rly h alf o f ASU ’ s service m aintenance sta ff reported Tum to Study, pogo IS Professor scoffs super collider stories By VIC TO R B A R A JA S State P ress Sunny and hot today with high temperatures expected to reach around 105. The overnight low should drop to 80. C la s s ifie d ........................................ 99 C o m ic s ............................................. 24 E n te rta in m e n t.................................. 19 O p in io n .......................................... 4 S p o rts ....................................... ...2 5 T o d a y ............................................. 2 Coordinators o f A rizon a’s bid to land the $4.4 billion superconducting super collid er on Tuesday blasted a U.S. N ew s & W orld R eport story that says Texas and Illin ois are the top contenders fo r the gian t atom sm asher. In its “ W ashington W hispers” section Monday, the m agazine quoted anonymous sources as saying that A rizona and four other states In contention fo r the lu crative project w ere la ggin g in consideration. Other states In the running are Colorado, M ichigan, North Carolina and Tennessee. The m agazine quoted “ savvy bettors” as its sources. “ I ’ m not givin g that (a rtic le ) any credl- b llity ,” said Joseph C om fort, an ASU physics professor who is associate project m anager fo r A rizon a’s bid. “ Person ally, I ’ m not taking It seriously at alL T o m e, I think it ’s patently absurd. E ven If the a rticle w as correct, I couldn’t fe e l confident that it w as correct. It just doesn’ t fit the facts as I see them .” Ia n M acph erson , th e coord in ator o f A rizon a’s bid, joked that the section in which the a rticle w as published could be described as “ W ashington Rum ors.” “ W e are b asically regardin g the a rticle as another one o f those a rticles that shows up now and then, suggesting that the com ­ p etitio n is o v e r and A rizo n a is ou t,” M cpherson said. “ W e sim ply don’ t buy it. P eop le need to understand that these kinds o f rum ors w ill com e up tim e and tim e again .” R ich ard Jacob, the chairm an o f A SU ’s physics departm ent and deputy chairm an o f the A rizona super co llid er Task F o rce Techn ical C om m ittee, agreed that the m agazine report w as another rum or. “ T h ere is no foundation fo r it at a ll,” Jacob said. “ Th ere a re no short lists. I t ’ s unfortunate that a news story lik e this cuts into our a b ilities to lu re the p roject into our state.” W hile A rizona o fficia ls concede that the T exas proposal is strong, th ey say A rizona is the best p lace fo r scien tific and eco­ nom ic plumb. The D epartm ent o f E n ergy is expected Turn to Super coNdor, page I t S to e P r e u world/nation in brief Fires force evacuation of towns near Yellowstone COOKE C IT Y , M ont. (A P ) — W ind threatened to d rive a w a ll o f fla m e through tw o sm all canyon com m unities bor­ derin g Yellow stone N ational P a rk , prom pting authorities Tuesday to order a ll residents to lea ve town. “ W e’ re goin g to m ake e v e ry e ffo rt w e can to sa ve eve ry structure and e v e ry hom e In these com m unities,” said M ike W arren, branch com m ander o f the firefigh tin g effort. F a cin g sustained w inds o v e r 20 mph and Increasing, fir e o fficia ls w ere pessim istic about holding back the unpredic­ ta b le 61,300-acre S torm C reek fire , only tw o m iles w est o f S ilver G ate, the firs t town In the fir e ’s path. “ W e h ave about a 25 percen t chance o f h olding the fire out o f these tw o com m unities,” said D avid Llebersbach, incident com m ander a t S ilver G ate. G ov. T ed Schwinden and fed era l authorities Tuesday Im posed a ban on a ll outdoor recreation outside M ontana’s cities and towns. Schwinden said the ban w ill rem ain in e ffe c t until w eather eases the fir e danger. “ W e could fa ce a v e ry , v e ry dangerous day o r day and a h a lf,” Schwinden told reporters “ When you count up the score, M other N atu re Is w ay ahead.” Th irteen m ajor fires have burned roughly 1 m illion acres in Yellow stone and the surrounding national forests in W yom ing, M ontana and Idaho. W holly inside the 2.2 m illion -acre park, 633,725 acres a re charred. 2 cosmonauts forced to abort return to Earth MOSCOW (A P ) — Tw o cosmonauts w ere forced to abort th eir return to E arth and hurtled through an orbit 200m iles In space W ednesday, their tim e, food and oxygen running out as they prepared fo r a last-ditch descent. S oviet news reports said 29-year-old Abdul Ahad Mohmand, the firs t Afghan In space, and Soviet cosmonaut V la d im ir Lyakhov, 47, w ere in no Im m ediate danger, but the situation could becom e C ritical soon. ' ‘A cciden t! T h e engine worked 60seconds and shut o ff, A violation o f the stabilization regim e,” Lyakhov told m is­ sion control in an exchange reported by the governm ent newspaper Izvestia, Lyakh ov is a m ilita ry pilot who has flow n in space tw ice b efore, and Mohmand is an Afghan a ir fo rce pilot. They w ere to try again e a rly W ednesday to bring their Soyuz TM -5 space capsule to a soft landing on the steppes of U zbekistan in S oviet Central A sia, a S oviet space o fficia l told H ie Associated Press. But by 5 a.m . M oscow tim e W ednesday (9 p.mi, ED T Tu esday), there w as no w ord on w hether the spacecraft had attem pted to descend. S oviet T V w as o ff the a ir and neither the o ffic ia l news agen cy Tass o r S oviet radio had carried any news. Telephone ca lls to sev era l S oviet space of ficials w ere eith er unanswered o r the o ffic ia ls said they had no Inform ation. Anti-abortion demonstrators disrupt speech by Dukakis N ILE S , 111. (A P ) — A nti-abortion dem onstrators dis­ rupted a speech Tuesday b y D em ocrat M ich ael Dukakis to Polish-Am erican supporters, som e o f whom physically ejected a few o f the protesters in a m elee o f pushing and shoving. Some punches w ore thrown, but p o lice said there w ere no arrests In the incident, the m ost serious In a series Of anti­ abortion protests at appearances b y the D em ocratic pre­ sidential nom inee in recen t w eeks. Dukakis, a fter the interruption at th e sta rt o f his speech at a banquet h all in this Chicago suburb, delivered his prepared rem arks in which he em phasized econom ic themes and said his Republican riv a ls “ lo ve to blam e Am erican w orkers firs t.” , ' ^ i to d a y Meetings • N ative A m e rica n S tu d e n ts A s s o c ia tio n w ill have a new­ sletter com m ittee m eeting today at 5 p.m. in the M ulticultural Lounge of th e Student S ervices Building, e T h e M U C h e e s C h ib w ill have its w eekly m eeting tonight at 6:30 in the M U Yum a Room. e A S U P re -M e d S o c ie ty w ill hold Its first m eeting of the sem ester at 7 p.m. in the S o cia l S cie n ce Building Room 303. A ll pre-m eds and interested students welcom e, e S o c ie ty o f W om en E n g in e e rs w ill have a “ get acquainted" continental breakfast th is m orning from 7:30 to 10:30 in the M U C o ch ise Room E a s t The breakfast is sponsored by Intel, e T h e A m e ric a n C rim in a l J u s tic e A s s o c ia tio n w ill hold its first m eeting of the fall sem ester in the M U Yavapai Room at 7:30 p m a H is p a n ic B u sin e ss S tu d e n ts A sso c ia tio n w ill hold its first general m eeting at 3:30 p.m. in B A 413. A il new and old m em bers w elcom a a T h e T e x tile C lu b w ill hold an inform ational meeting at 2:30 p.m. in the Hom e Econom ics Building, Room 124. M U A B S p e cia l Events w ill have a recruitm ent reception from 1:30 to 2:30 in the M U Alum ni Lounge, e T h e M o c k T ria l C lu b w ill hold an organizational meeting in the M U North P in a l Room from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. A ll students interested in a legal career or learning b asic courtroom sk ills are invited. e C h ristia n S tu d e n ts F e llo w sh ip w ill meet in the MU Yuma Room from 12:40 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. for worship and fellowship, o La m d a S ig m a T a il, th e C o e d “ P hratem H y’’ w ill hold an open h ouse tonight in the M U G old Room from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. e S o c ie ty o f H is p a n ic P ro fe ssio n a l E n g in e e rs w ill meet at 5 p.m. in the P h ysica l S cien ce Building, Room A-102. New m em bers welcom e, e AH S a in ts C a th o d e N ew m an C e n te r w ill have Bible study on the G ospel of M ark at 12:40 p.m. in the M U Navajo Room. e M o d e l U n ite d N a tio n s w ill hold a general m eeting at 4 p.m. in the M U G ila Room. e S o cie ty fo r C re a tiv e A n a ch ro n ism w ill have a dem onstra­ tion of m edieval fighting from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in front of Matthews Center. e Com m uter D evH s w ill hold its first m eeting at 5:30 p.m. in MU Room 209. e A S U S o c c e r C lu b w ill p ractice a f .4:45 p.m. at Sahuaro Field. New players are welcom e, o N ational A sso c ia tio n o f A c co u n ta n ts w ill m eet at 4:30 in the M U (check MU bulletin board for room number), Claude Olney w ill speak. e A H S A w ill hold its first cam paign m eeting at 5:30 p.m. in the MU South Pinal Room. Film w ill be show ing “Raiders of the Lost Ark’*at 7 p.m. and “ Indiana Jo n e s and the Tem ple of Doom" at 9:30 p.m. in the M U Cinem a. e T h e M U A B FHm C o m m ittee Get TWO toppings f o r t iie of T IR E S A N D A U T O S E R V IC E INCLUDES: •Up to 5 qts. oil •Chassis lube •Oil filter. •30 weight oil •Labor ▲ V . A m S B a^m Q § w i ( S ADO *2 FOR tSMOOH. MOST CARS AND UQHT TRUCKS Call for appt. Expires 12-31-88. Computerized Spin Balance & Rotation •Com puterized spin balance a ll four wheels •Rotate four tires •check air pressure for proper inflation •Free safety check i f l l l m S ks MOST CARS AND LIGHT TRUCKS Call for appt. Expires 12-31-88. 5 -P oin t C o m p le te B rake In sp ection OurSfciltodMechanicsWill: •Puil aH4wheelsandinspect •nlfrsbrakesystem —---- a. cVJ - _____ •Check master cylinder end brake lines nppoM ione •Check front wheel bearings end eeele a A a •Check brake drume P H M •Add brake fluid and adjust brakes A l^ | i| 8 necessary j 9H |^ ^ ^ PjppP ™ •I* brake repairs era needed the $5 00 charge w il be applied to repair charges •Most domestic end foreign cere A light trucks Call for appt. Expires 12-31-88, W cdnciday, September 7,1998 'Hostile environment’ on campus Minorities perceive bias throughout ASU system B y SH ERI JO H N S O N State Praaa Som e h igh sch ool gu idan ce cou nselors discou ra ge m in ority students from attending ASU because o f a per­ ceived “ h ostile environm ent fo r m inority students,” a recen tly released Survey states. In addition, another su rvey reports that com m ents such as, “ Y ou r kind doesn’t do w e ll in m y class” and “ You re a lly should get the ’black’ out o f you r vo ice,” h ave been heard by n ea rly h a lf o f the 66 m in ority students surveyed. T h e study also reports that la ck o f fin an cial aid is a m in ority student’ s biggest b a rrier to en rollin g a t ASU . T h e su rveys form ed the basis fo r a study released F r i­ day b y A SU ’s M orrison Institu te fo r P u blic P o licy. Th e study, com m issioned b y ASU ’ s M in ority A ffa irs A d visory Council, sought to determ ine the strengths and weaknesses o f the U n iversity’ s m in ority recru itm ent and retention effo rts and lis t recom m endations fo r im prove­ m ent, Th e council w as fram ed about three years ago by ASU Presiden t J. Russell Nelson. “ W hat I ’v e indicated is that in gen eral w e’r e im plem ent­ in g the recom m endations,” Nelson said Tuesday. N elson has been criticized fo r w hat m in ority leaders claim is poor m in ority recruitm ent and retention p erfo r­ m ance. But this sum m er N elson u n veiled a 21-point “ A ction N ow ” program aim ed at strengthening ASU ’s m in ority recruitm ent and retention. Th e A rizon a L egisla tu re in M ay appropriated o ver $1 m illion fo r m in ority student scholarships at ASU. Th e results o f each su rvey a re listed ü ttw o reports titled, “ ASU M in ority Student Recruitm ent Program s: Inven­ to ry and Assessm ent” and “ An Assessm ent o f Selected M in o r it y R e te n tio n P r o g r a m s a t A r iz o n a S ta te U n iversity.” A s fo r the disparagin g com m ents m ade by ASU instruc­ tors to m in ority students, the study concludes, “ E ven if these a re isolated incidents, they m ay have had an irrep ­ a rab le e ffe c t on a student’s attitu de and a re lik e ly to be shared w ith m any other students.” || H ow ever, the rep ort em phasizes that the m inorities sur­ veyed “ do not represent a random sam pling,” and cau­ tions against form in g generalizations. T h e study, which questioned black, H ispanic and N a tive A m erican students, shows that although they w ere satis­ fie d w ith the retention program in which they w ere en­ rolled , the m in ority students w ere not as satisfied w ith the U n iversity’s o vera ll retention efforts. N a tive A m erican and black students " fe lt m ost neg­ lected by the system ,” the report states. The students said they fe lt a cu ltu ral void because o f the “ sca rcity o f N a tive A m ericans and blacks am ong stu den ts,facu lty and s ta ff.” M in ority students also reported problem s w ith academ ic advisem en t. N in e o f the 66 students su rveyed said they w ere advised to take 300- and 400-level courses as freshm an. M ore than h alf o f the students said th ey did not fe e l that ASU fa cu lty knew how to rela te to them , w h ile som e said they w ere “ happy w ith th eir in tellectu al developm ent and would recom m end ASU to th eir frien d s.” Som e counselors steer m in ority students aw ay from the U n iversity because “ ASU does not do an adequate Job o f retain in g m in ority students once th ey a re adm itted. Th erefore, m any o f the cou n selors... encourage m inority students to attend a co llege o r u n iversity oth er than ASU . This w as p a rticu la rly tru e fo r N a tiv e A m erican students. ’ ’ Forty-on e A rizon a high school guidance counselors re­ sponded to the su rvey. E ach w as asked to ra te ASU ’s m in ority recru itm ent and retention efforts. T h e counselors rated the U n iversity’s recru itin g efforts as good but said fa cto rs Including cost, size o r lack o f m in ority services keep som e q u alified m inorities aw ay from ASU. On a four-point ratin g scale, the counselors rated ASU above a verage, a t 2.9. C om paring the U n iversity with other institutions’ recru itm ent efforts, the counselors ga ve ASU a 3.2. T w o o f the U n iversity’s recru itm ent techniques received high m arks from the counselors. Person al and frequent contact w ith high school m in ority students received a ra t­ ing o f 3.2, and A SU ’ s cam pus tour w as rated a t 3.6. T h e rep ort recom m ends e a rly and frequ ent contact with m in orities Just en terin g high school, m ore cam pus tours, an ethnically-m atched ro le m odel and television hook-ups to broadcast m in ority recruitm ent to high schools. Do you know what happens when you don’t use State Press Classified Advertising? Nothing. ragfc-3 health briefs Health Center plane weight-loss program ASU ’s Student H ealth C enter w ill hold a five-w eek w eigh t m anagem ent workshop beginning Sept. 15. Th is w eight-loss program w ill be led for a Student H ealth Center nutritionist, and w ill m eet from 4:30 p.m . to 6 p.m . Thursdays. F o r m ore inform ation o r to register, ca ll the H ealth Education Resource Center o f the Stu­ dent H ealth Center at 965-4721. In addition, the Student H ealth C enter’s Counseling and Consultation division is sponsoring an “ E atin g Issues Group” beginning Thursday , Sept. 15. The group w ill m eet e v e ry Thursday this sem ester from 3 p.m . to 5 p.m . F o r m ore inform ation, contact M a ry Lou Frank at 965-6146. Number of AIDS patients reaches more than 55,000 A ID S update: Th e Center fo r D isease Control reports that as o f A p ril 1968, there w ere a total o f 55,315 adult A m ericans w ith AIDS.* M ales accounted fo r m ost A ID S patients (92.4 p ercen t), and the m edian age o f people w ith the disease w as 35. Workshop scheduled on caring (or AIDS patients Th e M aricopa County H ealth D epartm ent and the U n iversity o f Phoenix w ill sponsor an A ID S workshop fo r hospital w orkers and others who provid e ca re fo r A ID S patients. T h e workshop, titled “ A ID S : Challenge fo r C a regivers,” is F rid a y, Sept. 30 at G race Inn in Ahw atukee. F o r m ore inform ation, contact Sharon Luksch a t 966-9577. Procedure now available to donate bone marrow F o r years, the donation o f blood, organs and tissue follow in g death has been com m onplace. N ow it is possi­ b le to donate bone m arrow fo r victim s o f blood cancer, im m unodeficiency diseases o r genetic problem s. The program is run b y a coalition o f blood bank organ iza­ tions, Including the A m erican R ed Cross. F o r m ore inform ation, ca ll the N ational Bone M arrow Donor R eg­ istry at 1-800-654-1247. CompQed-by State P ress s ta ffer M ich elle Allm an. S T U D E N T M e m o rial u n io n a c t iv it ie s ☆ H O S T & H O STES S 2:30 W ednesdays ☆ E N T E R T A IN M E N T 1:30 M ondays ☆ FILM ' T o Be Announced ☆ G A LLE R Y 2:00 W ednesdays ☆ C O M E D Y A C T IV IT IE S Boaro ^ ' ^ ^ ■ ¡ 1 / (The Farce Side) | 11:30 M ondays & Wednesdays ☆ C U L T U R E & 2:30 M ondays ☆ SP EC IA L E V E N T S 1:30 W ednesdays ☆ P R O M O T IO N S . ...,2:0Q Mondays ☆ A R TS . ,r' *. J m t i Do 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 AB offers the opportunity to develop your leadership skills while enabling you to gain, professional experience in public relations, programming and budget management. opinion S irte P r黫 . September 7, 1988 £ 2 *1 B » W p p E ;^ " ' '-i W R M . Supreme Court ruling supports Mass, governor’s veto upw ard.” O bjections that the salute was “ too much like H itle r’s ” w ere raised by the P T A and the Boy Scouts, am ong oth ers.) Th e W est V irgin ia law provided that students who did not re cite the p led ge w ere to be expelled from school, but their subsequent absence w as nevertheless deemed “ unlawful” and thereby subjected the students and their parents to leg a l punishment under the state’s truancy laws. A ll o f this posed a problem fo r the Jehovah’ s Witnesses, L e t’s g e t som e facts straight on the p ledge issue. G eorge Bush has im pugned the patriotism o f M ichael Dukakis because in 1977, as govern or o f Massachusetts, Dukakis vetoed a b ill that would have requ ired B ay State teachers to lead the P le d g e o f A llegian ce, o r fa ce crim in al penalties. A t the tim e Dukakis consulted w ith the state Suprem e Court and w ith his attorn ey gen eral; both advised him that the b ill w as unconstitutional. Dukakis proceeded to do what any com petent govern or would have done under the circum stances: he vetoed the b ill. T o the delight, in 1988, o f M r. Bush. Bush has used the issue to suggest the M r. Dukakis is som ehow less patriotic than h im self — even to the point o f concluding his acceptance speech in N ew O rleans w ith the pledge. In responding to the problem o f the constitu tionality o f the M assachusetts pled ge b ill, Bush dem onstrated eith er surprising Ignorance or sham eless dem agogy. BuSh said that if he had been govern or at the tim e, he would h ave signed the b ill into law — and le t the Suprem e Court ru le on the m atter. Th e only problem h ere is that the Suprem e Court already has ruled bn the m atter: in 1942, in W est V irgin ia v. Barnette. P rio r to ’42, W est V irgin ia requ ired a ll public school children to recite the pledge d aily. (In terestin gly, the pledge w as recited w h ile “ extending the righ t arm , palm Pat O liphant/U niversal Praas Syndicate who consider the pledge to be an act o f idolatry based on a litera l reading o f Exodus 20, verses 4 and 5: “ Thou shalt not m ake unto m e any graven im a g e ... thou shalt not bow down th yself to them nor serve them .” Th e Jehovah’s W itnesses took th eir case a ll the w ay to the Suprem e Court and won. W hat the court had to say in 1942 has much relevan ce fo r Cam paign ’88: “ That they (th e public schools) are educating the young fo r citizenship is reason fo r scrupulous protection of Con stitutional freedom s o f the in dividu al, if w e m e not to stran gle the fr e e m lpd a t its sou rce and teach youth to discount im portant p rin ciples o f our governm ent as mere platitu d es.... “ Th ere is no m ysticism in the A m erica n concept of the State o r o f the nature o r o rigin o f its authority. W e set up governm ent b y consent o f the govern ed, and the B ill of Rights denies those in pow er an y le g a l opportunity to coerce that consent. A u th ority h ere is to b e controlled by public opinion, not public opinion b y a u th o rity.... ■‘i f there is any fix ed sta r in our constitutional constella­ tion, it is that no o ffic ia l, high o r p etty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, n ationalism , religion , or other m atters o f opinion, or fo rce citizen s to confess by word gr act their faith therein. I f th ere a re any circumstances which perm it an exception, th ey do not now occur to us.” “ No o ffic ia l, high o r p etty” — including G eorge Bush, who is both high and petty. Although the M assachusetts b ill rig h tly vetoed by Gov. Dukakis referred to teach ers, 'w h ile W est V irginia v. B arqette referred to students, neverth eless the principles involved are identical. I f Presiden t G eorge Bush w ere to h ave his w ay, Jehov­ ah’s W itnesses — am ong m any oth er groups and individu­ als — would be au tom atically barred from teaching in public schools. A religiou s test w ill then be established for those seeking public o ffic e o r em ploym ent — something this nation has found abh orren t sin ce the Am erican Revolution. A re w e now w atching the em ergen ce o f the “ Bush P attern ?” 1 Jjscs„ In m aking the com pulsory P le d g e a cam paign issue— as in his role in the Iran-contra a ffa ir, and in his choice o f Dan Quayle as a running m ate — G eorge Bush m ade another m ajor decision that is ill-considered, if not downright stupid. letters Hostetler’s ‘ethnocentric’ attitude harmful to ASU E ditor: I am responding to D arrin H ostetler’s colum ns o f June 23 and Aug. 26 and 29 d ea l­ in g w ith m in ority recruitm ent, retention and a ffirm a tiv e action. H ostetler would have us b elieve that ASU w ill have a fa ir representation o f m in ority students, facu lty and sta ff as soon as enough o f us w ere “ q u alified” to be here. A ccordin g to him this w ill take som e tim e, and w e, as m inorities, should focus our effo rts on p rim a ry and secondary schools and fo rg et the U n iversity (A S U ) in the m eantim e. H ostetler says that to in crease represen­ tation o f Hispanics and other m inorities ASU would h ave to lo w er its standards and thus low er the qu ality o f education here. Does he fo rg et that severa l colleges, in­ cluding the business and broadcast jou r­ nalism colleges, h ave recen tly been in serious danger o f losing th eir accredita­ tion? Cultural and ethnic d iversity could only help this school. H ostetler also m entions som e statistics to p rove that H ispanics don’ t re a lly want to attend ASU. H e has tw ice cited the fa ct that only 358 H ispanics took the S A T but fa iled to m ention that m any Hispanics choose to take the A C T instead o f the SAT. H is to ric a lly , cou n selors h ave steered m inorities aw ay from taking the A C T or S A T . A ddition ally, the num ber o f persons taking those tests is not a true indicator o f the num ber o f students planning to enroll in colleges or universities since residents can be adm itted into A SU by one o f three w ays: scorin g su fficien tly high on the A C T o r SAT, graduating from high school with a 2.5 G P A o r graduating from high school in the top 50 percent o f the class. A lso, H ispanics m ake up lO to 12 percent o f the ju nior co llege population in M a ric­ opa County. F ew o f these students a re re c­ ru ited into ASU ; m any a re steered into vo ca tio n a l and non-academ ic courses. Th ese students h ave a lrea d y dem onstrat­ ed a com m itm em t to pursuing a higher education, th ey should be a ctively re ­ cruited. T h e responsibility fo r providing the op­ portu nity fo r h igh er education to m in ori­ ties belong to a ll o f us, from Presiden t J. R u ssell N elson to his v ic e presidents, deans, co lleg e counselors, p rim ary and secondary schools, parents and the stu­ dents them selves. T h e problem o f m in ority under-representation is not a new one, and, con trary to what H ostetler would h ave us b elieve, the quotable “No man is justified in doing evil for the sake o f expediency." issue was presented to Nelson from the v e ry beginning o f his tenure. Hispanics a re frustrated because ASU adm inistra­ tors have been aw are o f the problem fo r yeArs and have fa iled to act. H ostetler also suggests that som e politicians and civic leaders just cam e in o ff the street and took up these issues out o f the blue. H e is wrong. These leaders a fé not “ self-appointed.” Th ey are elected o fficia ls and com m unity leaders and som e o f us see them as role m odels. Th ey represent m any o f our in ter­ ests and they share our concerns fo r the future o f Hispanics and o f ASU. They do not purport to represent a ll Hispanics, nor can they o r anyone do so, but they care, and I appreciate that. As to H ostetler’s contention that ASU cannot be expected to have an equitable ra cia l makeup until im provem ents are m ade in A rizona’ s low er schools, thom H ispan ic lea d ers and oth er m in ority groups a re w orking w ith the legislatu re and the prim ary and secondary schools to im p rove the problem s m inority students fa c e there. In addition, there are still high school, junior high and adult education students who can and must be recruited. W e need to start providing role models fo r the new generations. In the m iddle o f this, let us not lose sight 1hE\iC£-£WvPE^CR Dû ê î T ô O . m . e rn e s o f those o f us Who h ave m ade it into ASU. Some o f us a re stru gglin g, but m any of us are doing g rea t and m aking contributions to ASU and toou r com m unities. W e also do our own recru itin g b y a ctively encourag­ ing frien ds, re la tive s mid colleagues to join us. A ffirm a tiv e action h irin g procedures have lon g been overdu e at ASU. The Col­ leg e o f E n gin eerin g as w ell as other col­ leges h ave a serious la ck o f m inorities. A ll o f these jobs have a jo b description with m inim um q u aliflation s that tilu st be met before the person can be considered fo r the position. T h ere a re m any m inorities who have w orked hard to overcom e barriers to becom e q u alified fo r these positions. ASU needs to re a ffirm its com m itm ent to hiring and keeping these m in orities. B y the y e a r 2000 the m in ority w ill be­ com e the m a jo rity. T h erefore this prob­ lem o f under-representation o f m inorities at a ll leve ls o f A SU is everyon e’ s problem. ASU cannot continue to educate only half o f this state’ s population o r it cannot re­ m ain com petitive. I f H ostetler’s ethno­ cen tric attitudes re fle c t those o f this Uni­ versity, then w e w ill a ll indeed be burned. M arcos A . Escobedo Junior, p olitical science Even So x ÿ0U AND1 ^ * running -mate both: not — Th eodore Roosevelt llllP S ll S ta te P re s s pair sets) E x te n d e d W e a r * FREE additional pair with co nta ct Tens exam 81 purchase* Ü i mm* FYFGI A S S E »..i ,......,......................... Two Pair $39.99 SingleVisionOnly.PlasticLenses « f j n r i i s ........ —i . .......- .......—Two Pair $79.99 PlasticLeases (FT 2«) l» A Z Y V DAILY WEAR CONTACTS >-aa.aa...a.«a..a.y.e.a_____ Both Pair $39.99 EXTENDED WEAR CONTACTS & GLASSES.-...-......... —............ —_____ Both Pair $59.99 EVE EXAM .. $22.00 Contactleasexam,6tttegandfollownpcareadditional Outside Eyeglass Prescriptions Welcome “ NEW” MAKE YOUR BROWN EYES • BLUE YOUR CHOICE * $159,99* Oik Pair PLUS A .S .U . T H IS S T O R E IS F O R Y O U II L o w e s t P r ic e s o n liq u o r , b e e r e n d w in e Many in-store specials! 894-5312 1336 E. Apache (1 block west of McCUnfock, 1 block east of Rural) OPTIONS AVAILABLE AT ADDITIONAL CHARGE • H AAbL Oat Pair of Clear Caatacta or Eyethsaea FREE* St GLASSES— jq u o r s * jg g * Dr. MarkA. Hcchtmsn• Dr. Neal À. Weinsteinft Assoc. LicensedDoctorsofOptometry 100%refundoncontactlensesif notcompletely satisfiedwithin30days*•Specialtylensesnotincluded OpenMonday-Saturday• ‘SOMERESTRICTIONSAPPLY n * „ v w vaa .......... Two Pair $39.99 ' SoftauteB,CQ4 Two Pair.$59.99 EXTENDED W E A R . ^ rrT„ . SofcnateM, SeftconEW DAILY WEAR COLORED S O FT-_____ „.Two Pair $79.99 Onecolored, onedear DAILY SOFT CONTACTS -$199.99 FOR ASTIGMATISM (TORIQ___ COLORED SOFT EXTENDED WEAR CONTACTS.____________ -______ Two Pair $99.99 Oaccatane,mkcitar Outsidecornaci Itaaycicriailaaa welcomewithcantal metaanaeari (KReadiap) fflTH FR BRANDS A V j SEVEN CONVENIENT VALLEY LOCATIONS PHX/SCOTTSDALE 3620 E. Thomas Id. icrmfrm* Tmpt "mSttnsbtnr¡quart 9362012 TEMPE PHOENIX 933 E. University Amu fromCommtoneMail mw4SI in Temp*harmPUbm 5130N. 19thAve. MESA 437 S Gilbert Id. V GLENDALE 5030W Peoria »103 of CamtUnKkHd Bnuduwy&GtUHrtM f)7-1047 9M-499E 2 4 2 -1 2 9 2 Q*tNerimonk SouHemtcomerof Ont btocèrmtef SIX Stete Pi««» .■ » .— - ■■ _________ Wedncidsy, September 7,1968 Language barrier noted as local voting probiem By fa t e li THE' Tim A ssociated Prase T-hfe fed era l governm ent again has becom e in volved in elections in N a va jo and Apache counties, this tim e o ver a m atter o f language. The Ju stice D epartm ent has targeted the counties fo r fa ilin g to provid e enough election -related inform ation inIndian languages before the Sept. 13 p rim ary election. About 40 percent o f the population o f N a va jo County is N avajo, H op! o r Apache Indians. Justice D epartm ent spokesman M ark W eaver said there a re no plans to enjoin the Sept. 13 prim ary in eith er county, but ad eclsion has y e t tb be m ade on the N ovem ber gen eral election, N a va jo County w as enjoined by the Justice D epartm ent fou r years ago from having supervisors election s because there w as only one Indian district out o f fiv e in the county. Th e Ju stice D epartm ent la ter accepted a plan fo r tw o Indian districts, but election s fo r supervisors w ere s till not held fo r six years because o f the controversy. Sanctions and law suits w ere threatened a fter the coun­ ties w ere n otified in July 1987 that they w ere in violation o f the fed era l V otin g R ights A ct. Th e fin a n cia lly strapped counties and the state have since pleaded in digen cy and lack o f direction by the fed era l governm ent. Th e Ju stice D epartm ent, has ordered that the counties p rovid e b ilin gu a l v o te r re g istra rs a t N a va jo ch apter houses to provid e votin g inform ation. T h ey have also been requested to produce oral translations by N avajo-language specialists o f referendum s, absentee balloting, candidate requ irem ents and other election procedures on audio tape and videotapé fo r distribution on the reservation. The Ju stice D epartm ent also has ordered the counties to provide a ll radio stations that broadcast into the Indian portions o f the counties w ith election tapes in the Indian languages, A N a va jo trib a l o ffic ia l, who spoke on condition that his nam e not be used, described the Justice D epartm ent plan as the w ork o f "n a iv e E asterners who don’ t know the cul­ ture, area o r distances in volved.” R ussell Burdick, ch ief deputy A pache County attorney, estim ates that the Justice D epartm ent plan w ould cost the county $600,000annually. Cost estim ates in N a va jo County have been about $500,000 a year. " I f the fed era l governm ent doesn’ t w atch it, it ’s goin g to h ave e v e ry ra ce dem anding total accom m odation,” H opi T rib a l Chairm an Ivan Sidney said. P e rc y D eal, a N a va jo County su pervisor and m em ber o f the N a va jo T rib e, said his county has gone "m o re than the extra step” to try to satisfy the Justice D epartm ent. "IV e’ v e already got a system w here I fe e l w e are w alking a thin lin e w ith people's p riva cy rights, and the Justice D epartm ent wants m ore,” D eal said. D eal also said the Justice D epartm ent plan m ay m ake Indians lose in terest in elections because o f an inform ation gb it. « 4 P >'* ’ The la test proposals subm itted by the tw o counties w ere rejected by the Justice D epartm ent last month, N a va jo County A ttorn ey D ale Patton said. The counties wanted to have chapter-house o fficia ls, em ployed by the N a va jo T rib e, serve as bilingu al regis­ trars, “ but the rub 11, Justice wants us to put th eir jo b s in w ritin g, and w e can’t do that because they are not on our p a yroll,” Patton said. Th e counties also w anted to use a "tran slation board” o f current bilingu al county em ployees to translate a ll elec­ tion m aterials. T h e translations would bave then been checked by the four N a va jo supervisors In N a va jo and Apache counties fo r accuracy, Patton said. •‘But the Justice D epartm ent wants tw o experts in N a va jo culture to do the translations, and that m eans w e’ ll b e out a lot o f m oney in professional fees,” he said. y The Travel Network, In c.^ I : Students Make Your Holiday Plans I[ Now! Oryoumightnot be homefor Christmas Call Atow-While you can still got reservations and lowadvance fares. lim VITA E U R O P A ili CONDITIONING PAK T OZ. $5 OFF w ith th is coupon ( P a rtic ip a tin g S ty lis ts O n ly ) R e g u la r P r ic e ENERGIZING M e n $14 • W o m e n $16 CONDITIONING PAK 968-5946 709 S. Forest Ave. UNITED BEAUTY SUPPLY N o rth o f U n iv e rs ity A v e . Open Evenings: Mon-Fri 9-9 Sat 9-5 Enjoy Another I s la n d S u n d a y with W e st M a u i B each B a n d 3 pnr— 7 pm W e d .— S at: SMOKEY w/special guest 9 pm—l i V&W % ^; W ED: 75* Coors Draft $1.00 Coors, Coors Light & Coors Extra Gold 7 pm—11 pm TH URS: If! LADIES NIGHT 10* well, wine or draft 7 pm—12 j Tickets and Boarding Passes Delivered to Your Door MeCUNTOCK 351E. Brown Rd. rMesa, Arizona 85201 OpenM-F 8:30 am-5:30 pm Is E__833-1800J \m^DORSEY « RURAL Page 12 StatePrete Wednesday, September 7,1988 By Choice. . . Not By Chance $195 •Abortion Services •Free pap smear with birth control exam •Birth control exam includes free package o f pills •Free pregnancy testing and early detection pregnancy testfo r $12 •Affordably gyn, STD and infection treatment SOUP &SANDWICH STARTING AT 7 PM FAMILY PLANNINGINSTITUTE P h x. 9 9 7 -7 4 9 3 |— ~ i T em p e 9 6 8 -7 4 7 1 9 1 0 0 N. 2n d St. ■<¡■■ 4 2 4 W . Broadw ay at 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 Kiddush & “ 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 H O N D A S C O O T E R SALE s backed by the ULS.Treasury. Don’t miss the Honda Scooter Sav­ ings Spectacular—your best chance ever to ride the fabulous Honda H d ix f Thke a free demonstration ride. Ifou must be at least 18 years of age and have an AZ * license. Then, when you buy the H elix, w ell give you a $200 United States Savings bond! Or, if you buy a Honda Elite” 25Q or E lite" 150D, w e ll give you a S100U.S. Savings bond! # *' • T h e Honda Scooter Savings1Spec­ tacular—now through September 30th. Com e in today! C o m e r id e w it h u s . P rice s Fro m $ 4 9 9 0 0 Elite'250 -demo rides free discounts, save *100s ■all models on sale radios, *99 installed free financing available Be careful ant there. One thing everybody agrees on: scooters are fun. The best way to maximize yourfun and minimize your risks Is ride your scooter safely and responsibly. P a st 13 Wednesday. Septembe r 7.1988 THl COUFORTABll. PRACTICAL VERSATHCALL WOOD FUTON SOLVING YOUR PROBLEM OF SPACE A t 4 f V * 1 4 4 > * 1 4 f V HI 4 * v K A R A T E -M A R T £ > Supply Center y V Most Competitive Prices In Town ! V > V Tpcsdtti side Press Frittemi BtparnMii RMliewsColer, basemen• 965-2097 V V Converts from couch to bed quickly and easily CALL OR WRITE T O D A Y FORA FREE CO LO R BR O C H U R E OPERATORS AVAILABLE 24 HOURS A DAY (6 1 3 )5 4 1 -6 2 2 2 a llw o o d M a n u f a c t u r in g . in c . 401S Ch.rry S tm t , Cincinnati, Ohio 45223 ALK > V V > y St C0m[R Of RURAL S U M K U Y NOT TOBOUTS A 1 -ff y UNIFORMS KARATE & JUDO «WEAPONS •TRAINING & PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT •NINJA EQUIPMENT •BOOKS & MAGAZINES •VIDEOS HOURS: o n . MON -SAT. 894-6778 1©a .m .-s p .m . At 4fY% t 4 f y A 1 O U T . six feet r r s OUTRAGEOUS AND ITS TONIGHT! B A B Y D O LL P A JA M A CO N TEST! ROUND Wednesday’s Only 50C Drinks $2.00 Blue ' M argaritas ’$1.50 S h o o te rs Night After Hours!. All T O R E G IS T ER C A L L FO R DETAILS R O U N D 3- S E P T . 14TH R O U N D 4- S E P T . 21 S T $50 N IG H T LY C A S H W INNER!! THOUSANDS OF m P R IZ E » ; A L S O — T H E A S U T R A D IT IO N C O N T IN U E S 1 : 0 0 a m tin, 3 : 0 0 a m (1 8 & O l d e r ) : I 919 E. Apache Blvd. Tfempe921-9775 (Next to Holiday Inn) L A D IE S iig M LADIES-n o CO VER 1« W INE, W E L L & D R A FT 7:30-8:30 69* D R IN KS TIL C L O S E G U Y S - N O C O V E R 7:308:30 95* B O T T LED B E E R $1.25 IM PO R TED B E E R % MILE EAST OF RURAL 1216 E. A P A C H E TEM PE 968-2446 y y y y y y y Paggi 14 Wednesday, September 7 «1988 Club formed to keep commuters in touch with ASU By K E L L Y P E A R C E State Pres« On a cam pus w here 88 p ercen t o f the students liv e som ew here else and must com m ute to class, a new club has been established to help com m uters find out what is happening a t ASU. Th e Com m uter D evils, a club origin at­ in g out o f the A ssociated Students Tenants and Com m uter Students Association, w ill m eet fo r the firs t tim e at 5 :30p.m. today in the M U Y a va p a i Room . W ayne Lokensky, associate d irector o f com m uters and founder o f the club, said he is ecstatic about the organization that he hopes w ill becom e “ the introduction club to oth er clubs.’ ’ “ The club is fo r freshm en or anyone who w ants to learn m ore about cam pus and get in volved ,’’ said Lokensky, a sophom ore politica l science m ajor. So fa r 30 students have said they are in te re s te d ^ the club, he said , adding that students from Phoenix and M esa a re ta r­ geted as the club’ s prim e m em bers. Possible events fo r com m uters to get in volved w ith include vo lleyb a ll tourna­ m ents, a ctivities w ith the G reek system , p h ila n th ro p ic e v e n ts and a tte n d in g speeches. “ So m any tim es com m uters only know th eir classes but don’t know a ll o f the things a va ila b le to them ,’ ’ Lokensky said. “ It took m e a sem ester to find things out. I re a lly w anted to g e t in volved.” ASASU Campus A ffa irs V ice Presiden t V i n c e M ic o n e s h a r e s L o k e n s k y ’ s enthusiasm. “ It is a club w here students can g et the sam e feelin g about ASU that they would get if they lived in a residence h all,” he said. A t the firs t m eeting, ASASU A ctivities V ic e P resid en t Todd M arten sen w ill speak, and fre e food and drinks w ill be available. T o illu s tr a te th e c lu b ’ s p u rp ose, Lokensky said a logo fo r the organization m ight be Sparky decked-out in sunglasses and d rivin g a.cpnvertible. “ It m ay be a w h ile b efore the club catches on, but I think it w ill.” iÜ VföC 1 -H O U R F O T O . w 110,126,35mm o r O ise C o lo r P rin t F ilm (C-41). E-6 35mm S lid e s. Coupon m ust Accom pany order. Not good w ith any other coupon/offer/discount. T H E G ER O N IM O 804 E . U n iv e rs ity .................. ...622-0521 T h e E l C o n M a ll. ..326-1669 *DOTRn5 5 0 SCHNAPPS SH O T WITH D ftA FT! 8 -C L O S E N EW G A M E R O O M ! P O O L T A B L E S , V ID EO G A M E S , BIG S C R E E N T.V. 515 E . G ra n t R d . ..622-0740 ! Coupon Good Thru 12/31/M 1120 E. A P A C H E • 967-1129 , S T U D E N T S .. .Don’t miss our 20-20 offer! \\W ' A\\v h W IN a =nr’ Fiesta Bow l ^ S ch olarsh ip ^ Art, architecture, engineering & design students: Shop for your art supplies from The Valley's most complete selection by SEPTEMBER 20, and save a big 20%. Shop any other time and you'll receive our standard 10% STUDENT DISCOUNT. for a college-eligible Arizona Resident* 1st Prize -$3,000 Scholarship 2nd Prize -$2,000 Scholarship 3rd Prize -$1,000 Scholarship Fine arts materials Canvas, paints, stretcher bars, brushes, frames, paper, etc. Drafting supplies Parallel rules, triangles, templates, leads, drawing boards, technical pens (all brands) and more. also , ^ _ . t . ;V i N Airbrush equipment & supplies, graphic arts materials and books. Each week throughout the 1988 football season, winners will be drawn tor two tickets to the next home game at each of Arizona’s 3 universities - Enter w eekly contest o f sch ool o f you r choice. MAIL EN TR Y TO: /JE S T A BOWL SCHOLARSHIP SW EEPSTAKES” at one of the following post office boxes. U Of A NAU ASU - P.O. Box 470, Tempe, AZ 85281 NAU - P.O. Box 1390, Tempe, AZ 85281 U of A - P.O. Box 1440, Tempe, AZ85281 W inners of w eekiy draw ings w ill a lso receive s p a ir o f c h o ic e q3 • Æ j e flerson FLAX l A « E W L ,F o o ,b rtl P a ip e New Y ea r’s D ay w h eie 3 o f the 33 fin a lists w ill win sch o la rsh ip s. (no Purchase necessary). One entry per envelope. Each entry must include the name o f an elidible scholarship recipient' and the nutrition inform ation panel (or & f-. H f t S L i K L J i l i y S : C O M P LETE AD D R ESS, AN D m TH P ,E C E 0 F P A P E R A N D IN C LU D E WITH NUTRITION INFORM ATION P A N E L. F L A X C O ., IN C . M aricopa Freew ay 10th Street 8c Jeffereoft • 254-0840 • Lots of free parking Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 Sat. 9-5 nui?t J * 80 Arizona resident eligible for 1989 V ®nrolled at anV Arizona College or University. ™ n b ers of Arizona milkjSSducers are not eligible.) E n tries m ust be received b y N ovem ber 22,1988. BMNMì State Prest In s t y le Casual, but not ‘bag lady’ look commands fashion attention B y R O B IE K A K O N G E State P ress F o r at least the la st two decades, variation s ot the “ cas­ ual lo o k " have com m anded ASU students’ attention and m oney, according to a long-tim e U n iversity-officia l and fashion affician ado. And fo r this fa ll, she says the casual “ bag la d y jook” IS out. “ Students seem to go fo r the m ore casual lifes ty le look, but ju st because it ’s casual, this doesn’ t m ean that it’ s less expen sive,” said K athleen P eters, an assistant professor o f fa m ily resources and human developm ent who teaches tex tile and clothing classes. Although m ost students seek a casual look, the m ore fashion-conscious students separate them selves from oth­ ers w ith designer and sportswear. “ R igh t now the hottest casual and m ost expensive Item on cam pus Is the tennis shoe, and you can te ll that the person w earin g a pair o f Reeboks is m ore fashion con­ scious than one who is w earin g a pair o f M ervyn ’s tennis shoes,” she said. '... today you can tail who is a conform ist... by ju s t looking at their hair style.’ fÉÉi Kathleen Peters — “ I think the U ltim ate insulting and hum bling thing fo r m en Is when they hj^we th eir h air c u to ff when they enter the service.” ’’’ P eters said fashionable students should avoid im itation designer handbags., “ Stay aw ay from G ucci replicas. T h ey h ave tru ly been stretched out through the fashion m arket,” she said, r ‘ ’Anne K lein and L iz C laiborne have anum ber o f fashiona­ b le handbags that 'ai^fe m ore you thfu l and h a ve nice shapes.” P eters said that when it com es to accessories, “ this is the yea r to have lots o f scarves and w id er b elts to em phasize the w aist. ” In the je w e lry departm ent, “ gold, lik e alw ays, is a w ise choice fo r the season because it blends w ell w ith m ost skin tones and fo r som e reason it is alw ays equated w ith w isdom .” W hile the inexpensive and anarchic “ bag lady look” Is out, P eters suggests buying clothes that fit w ell and, most Im portantly, are com fortable. É “ When shopping you should buy som ething that you lik e and fe e l com fortable in. Although som e design er item s lik e Ralph Lauren m ight be m ore expensive, th ey last longer and a re o f better qu ality,” she said. P eters suggests “ high w aists and low hem s.” Pants, Sondi IQhmM/SM* Sim * shorts and dresses should h ave a high w aist lin e, and the H igh w aist lin ce a ra “In’’ this year, as ttw casual look has m ads a 'm ini-skirt, as som e wom en sigh in re lie f, is d efin itely o u t rstum to the fashion scans. a»« ; Sundi KJw w tad/Stat. Frost W hile tastes in Jewelry m ay vary, gold seem s to be the “In” choice, because It b lends wlth the skin and is taken a s a sign o f wisdom . Th is season’s no-no’s on P eters’ list: stone washed jeans, silve r shoes, neon colors and fab rics w ith la rg e prints. “ B ig shoulder pads a re out and so a re belts that hang around the w aist and skin tigh t pants are out. Pan ts with w ider leg s are com ing back,” site said. Another hot fashion item fo r wom en is fla t shoes. “ F la ts that rem ind m e o f the 50s a re com ing back, but the fla ts in fashion this ye a r look m ore expen sive because they a re m ade out o f rep tile skins, liza rd o r snake skin,” she said. P eters, w earin g a half-casual, half-business brigh t pink and red dress and sporting a closely-cropped hair style, said h air has m ade the b iggest change in fashion at ASU. “ O ver the years, hah: styles h ave been w onderfu l to look at, and today you can te ll who is a conform ist and who is not by just looking at th eir h air Style,” she said, adding that h air bows a re d efin itely “ in .” “ Shorter h air Is s till ‘in’ fo r both men and wom en. And fo r those m en who a re grow in g th eir h air long and w earin g It back In a ponytail, it’ s OK. “ It seem s lik e a fun fashion experim en t to see how long h air fe e ls and looks ju st as lon g as they keep it on campus and aw ay from things lik e jo b in terview s. There are over 40,000 reasons to advertise typing and word processing services in the STATE PRESS. Ufc r LefoMe GetRight To The Point.. STUDIOS TO 3 BEDROOMS . 3 MILES FROM ASU ^ 'U t _ %- ílíÉ É w BOTH CORAL POINT AND LACUNA OFFER: T l I I / l l l 425. S. Mill Avenue •Old tbwn Tempe Tw oTnore reasons you’ ll] want to get into bur shorts... OFF COUPON!! preluding sale Hems) c * U O K A j|| / j^ e s 9 m / 8 8 _____ O » * * * ’ ’ l 111 Sand Volleyball Court Private Patios / Balconies • SRP Service e Mountain BeN Telephone Service 1 APIkCHE BLVD./MAIN STREET ' ' z o 0QQ CORAL POINT O LAGUNA POINT O (Mention this ad for Additional Savings) Student Discounts 2343 West Main Street, Mesa • Club Rooms • Tennis Courts • Indoor raquetball E xercise F a cilitie s Ram adas & B arbequ e areas • Covered Parking • Public Transit to ASU • • 150 $. Roosevelt, Mesa MAKE ITA POINT TO SEE THEM BOTH! On» tnuptm W customer i Jacuzzi K o 0 ■■ fe z < s ë ASU K PRICE L Shorts of all Sorts,Year-round Furnished & Unfurnished Units Cable T.V. Available Custom Mini Blind* Throughout Washer*/ Dryersin select units Woodbuming Fireplaces in select units f ip t i " " Large Sparkling Heated Pools And Rich with Amenities and Activities Laguna & Coral Point offer ______ X T ! Page 16 StatePress Wednesday, September 7,1988 GOING TO A PARTY? LE A S E A SPECIAL DRESS! A C C O U N TIN G M A JO R S g o to '& ke You are invited to a presentation on the escom iai A ll Y o u C a n Eat Ô Touche Ross with this ASU Student Discount C h in e se sá n e se / M an d arin Human Resource Initiatives 69 90 E. Shea S c o tts d a le 13-2713 Learn about new programs, in com parable to those o f any o th e r B ig E ig h t a cco u n tin g firm , to improve benefits, compensation, career development, and life-style. * I 1/2 PRICE * LUNCH OR DINNER Buy O ne Buffet at Regular Price end G e l Seco nd fo r % P rice. Otter expires Sept. 21.1988. OHer does not apply to tak»-out o rten I I I I I I I I I WHY BUY WHEN YOU GAN LEASE! ASU Student VIP Discount Coupon Exclusive 10% discount toward your dress lease for ASU students only. Present this coupon for all your formal wear needs (including accessories). Refreshm ents follow ing the presentation. I ORIENTAL BUFFET P L E A S E R S V P fD e b C all, 234-5112 1 I Tempe: B ase lin e & M c C lin to c k 345-9867 Central: I5th Ave. & T h om as 277-9867 I Métro: 19th Ave- & P eo ria 944-9867 Touche Ross will conduct campus interviews for career posifions in accounting, tax, and management consulting: September 29 and 30, ASU Career Services. I Signature ~ | Expires December 31,1988 | P jb ^ J I a.m.-9:30 p.m. We’re open all day! ■¡RMGot The R at PV M A IN on M acin to sh P lu s ■ from 7-9 p.m. M any A S U P rofessors m m an Avantage. G e to n t for lése ! 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Dec. 16 23 30 7 GENESIS - God’s Original Thought for Man EXODUS - God’s Corporate Purpose LEVITICUS - Worship and Fellowship NUMBERS - How God Deals with Failure DEUTERONOMY - Qod’s Faithfulness Toward His People JOSHUA -The Life of Faith JUDGES & RUTH - The Results o f Going Our . Own Way 1 & 2 SAMUEL - A Man After God’s Own Heart 1 & 2 KINGS - Unity and Division 1 & 2 CHRONICLES - The Zeal for God’s House EZRA & NEHEMIAH - The Recovery of God’s House. ESTHER - God's Providential Cere JOB - God’s Dealings with the Self PSALMS & PROVERBS - Worship and Wisdom S B M m Christian Students Fellow ship 1315 South College « Tempe, A Z 85282 F o r Information, call (602)948-4488 m b B Lo ad e d w ith features, th is p rin te r can even do 128'difforent font combinations! We won't be undersold! 1 First Choice 3 I K S ■ I I 1 Dot Matrix Printer^ -Word Processing (b ê -Database " 2 -Spreadsheet ^ -Communications m -Graphics r? HMay $PQ B e A ll 057 You N eed! 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COMPUTER SYST Avantage X T SEPTEMBERS Fall Semester - Genesis to Song of Solomon M E°^ BICYCLE REGISTRATION FO R UM This fa ll sem ester the Christian Students Fellow ship (CSF) is having a book by book survey Of the O ld Testam ent every W ednesday in the Yuma Room (211) o f the M em orial Union Building from 12:40-1:30 p.m . B ill Freem an, from “M inistry o f the W ord" radio broadcast, w ill be sharing. A ll are w elcom e! The subjects are a s follow s: _ Wednesday, September 7 ,1988 possible for cancer patients Young rejected as “ specious” the argum ent that pres­ crib in g m arijuana cigarettes as a m edicine “ w ill ‘ send a signal* that m arijuana is O K gen era lly fo r recreation al use.” ‘ ‘The tea r o f sending such a signal cannot be perm itted to o verrid e the legitim a te need, am ply dem onstrated in this record, o f countless su fferers fo r the re lie f m arijuana can provid e when prescribed by a physician in a legitim a te case.” Young cited testim ony by doctors and patients during 11 days o f hearings that m arijuana w as an accepted and e ffe c tiv e treatm ent fo r nausea am ong Cancer patients and fo r m u ltiple sclerosis, a d eb ilitatin g and crip p lin g neuro­ lo gica l disease. The hearings w ere ordered in 1980 by the U.S. Circuit Court o f Appeals, which chastised D E A fo r ign orin g its statutory obligation to consider evid en ce that m arijuana m ight h ave som e m edical benefit. Questions CARDINAL’S ARRIVED! PIZZA TOPPINGS • H a m b u rg • Mushrooms • Onions • Green Peppers about the • • • • • • Black (Hives Tomatoes B roccoli Pineapple Ham Bacon LET THE RED BIRD CHOICE OF WHOLE WHEAT OB ORIGINAL CRUST D O THE RUNNING FOR YOU! HOURS: Sunday-Thursday 11:00 a.m .-2:00 a.m. Friday - Saturday 11:00 a.m. - 2:30 a.m. STASE PRESS 99 PLEASE USE YO U R COUPONS W HILE PLACING YO U R ORDER. T W O 12” CARDINAL’S O N E IT E M PEZ Z A (T W O F R E E CO KES) CHEESE SUPREME Only $9.99 Any 16” Pizza With As [any Items As You Want. Take a closer look at The appellate court had tw ice previou sly overru led D E A 's rejection o f petitions, firs t file d in 1972, by the N ational O rganization fo r the R eform o f M ariju ana Law s (N O R M L ). Th e group’ s attorney, K evin B. Zeese, vow ed to take the case back to the court i f Law n o r his su ccessor re je c ts Young’s recom m endation. D E A has h istorica lly opposed m ovin g m arijuana from the lis t o f Schedule I drugs, w hich includes heroin, P C P and LSD, to Schedule n , D E A spokesm an Cornelius D ougherty said Law n “ w on’t have any com m ent until he has had a chance to look a t” You ng's 68-page opinion, D ougherty said Law n could opt to hold fu rth er hearings before m aking a fin a l decision. Zeese h ailed Young’ s decision, sayin g it m arks “ the firs t tim e there has e v e r been an unbiased h earin g on w hether o r not m ariju an a-is safe fo r use under m edical super­ vision .” i 12” ONLY *5.99 16” ONLY *7.99 Receive Two Free ' i STATE . P R ESS ¡0 unent Classified I t \ Advertising.. it may have just what you’re looking for! Matthews Center, Basement. Mon-Friy- B am-5 pm. .* " • , Collating & Binding FAX Service Resumes ,|: Office Supplies Specialty Papere | | 1 | Instant Passport Photos Laser Typesetting FdlYIILY HAIR (UTTERS A Perfect Cut Every Time N o ap p oin tm en t n e c e ss a ry ever! B rin g the w hole fam ily Designer Perm k h k o fs die copy center 715 S. Fotest/894-9$M* 933 E. University/894-1797* University & Hardy/921-0168 1840 W. Southem/969-3326 r FdmiLT H4IR CUTTERS University & Rural Rd. CORNERSTONE SHOPPING CENTER 968-8008 H o u rs: M o n .-F ri. 9-9 • S at. 9-7 ♦ S u n . 12-5 Includes: .Shampoo and Designer Perm •Perfect Cut •Styling Long hair slightly higher 1981 NoAppointmentsFamilyHewCutters I Wednesday, September 7 , 1988 Page 18 S tu d y Continued from page 1 they w ere dissatisfied w ith th eir jobs. The respondents w ere asked to ra te their job satisfaction during the last year. Sixtysix percent said they w ere satisfied a ll o r m ost o f the tim e. N e a rly 2 percent said they w ere n ever satisfied. A rizon a’ s benefits package adds grea tly to job satisfaction, the su rvey reported. Seventy-eight percent said benefits con­ tributed to job satisfaction. ASU em ployees apparently also en joy com raderie as 78 percent reported “ rela ­ tions with co-w orkers’ ’ contributed to their happiness at the U n iversity. ASU Presiden t J. R ussell Nelson said he w as pleased w ith the study’s fin din g that 72 percent o f U n iversity em ployees are happy w ith their jobs. “ I b elieve that is a v e ry high ra te of satisfaction in an y kind o f w orking situa­ tion ,” he said. “ It is esp ecia lly g ra tify in g that the m ain reason given fo r being satis­ fied include relations w ith co-w orkers and supervisors and the w ork its e lf.” The study reported that 65 percent o f the em ployees said th ey w ere satisfied w ith the recognition received fo r w ork done. O verall, how satisfied are you w ith your job here at ASU? . But {getting prom oted apparently is an­ oth er problem . F orty-fou r percent said th ey w ere d iss a tisfied w ith prom otion opportunities. “ W e w ill look into the cause fo r dissatis­ faction in Oils a rea ,” said Susan M alaga, A SU ’ s d irector o f personnel. “ T h ere could be a num ber o f reasons fo r dissatisfaction. It m ight be as sim ple as needing better com m unications o r a concerted e ffo rt to p re p a re p eo p le fo r p o ssib le a d va n ce­ m ent.” M alaga said ASU em ployees’ perception they are paid less than th eir counterparts in the p riva te sector is a fa c t confirm ed by U n iversity studies. “ W e m ay not be able to pay the sam e as som e p riva te em ployers, but w e do need to be com petitive in ord er to attract and retain qu alified s ta ff,” shesaid. “ W e have been tryin g to develop solutions fo r that problem fo r severa l y ea rs.” I Satisfied I Neutral I Dissatisfied 30% 20% 10% -- A ll respondents Fem ales M ales M inority N on-m inorfy Souroe: 1888 ASU Employ«« Attitude Survey; Question 1 S u p e r c o llid e r Continued troni pago 1 versity o ffic ia ls h ave said. Th e SSC would, hurl protons into each, to select a p referred site in N ovem ber.*^ Presiden t R eagan w ill m ake a fin a l d ec H , oth er at ligh tn in g speed, allow in g physi­ cists to.'study-sub-atom ic p a rtici«?. Th e sion before lea vin g o ffic e in January. The DOE did not return repeated p h oqf^ - laboratory would be a scien tific research ; ^ .’ V .'.’ •■ m essages at its W ashington, D.jp. offices.-* * "park." /; ‘ ■ * Should the DOE recom m end fia t the S&£|* Texas and Illin o is both had unique prop­ osals in an effo rt to attra ct the SSC: Texas m ile underground SSC bè b u ilt in M aricopa Mountains w est o f Ptjoenix, th è * o ffered the D O E S lbU lion tohplpw m hcóiK struction and e lec tricity b ills, and Illin ois Im pact on ASU w ould be enorm ous, Uni- ¿Nautilus * Raise your S P O R T S M E D IC A L IN D U S T R IE S . INC GMAT or SAT CYBEX E n ergy is goin g to continue doing w hat it needs to do in ord er to ensure that the SSC goes to the best site, and not n ecessarily the site that can outbid the other state, or at a site w here it’ s questionable that a fa c ility that’s alread y there Is appropri­ a tely integrated into the fa c ility its e lf.” But M acpherson adm its that he “ m ay be g iv in g a d ifferen t story” if the a rticle claim ed A rizona w as a leadin g contender. IISTACT0Ü M A T E S FITNESS-SYSTEMS by CYBEX COMPUTERIZED BICYCLES Your First Visit Is Free NO c o n t r a c t s ; The LSAT, GRE and GMAT can be tough, but we can mate them a whole lot easier. The Princeton Review has helped thousands of students dramatically raise their scores. Small classes (8 to 12 students) geared to your strengths and weaknesses and a detailed computer analysis throughout the program make us the most effective, efficient and enjoyable way to dramatically improve your scores. You11score more when you know how. ' And we''ll teach THE you how. PRINCETON REVIEW 952-8850 o ffered use o f the F erm ila b atom sm asher to co in ^ fje w ith the SSC. . But M acph erson dow n p layed th ose states’ o ffers, sayin g Texas has not yet col­ lected enough bonds fo r $1 billion o ffe r and addink’th at Illin o is should not even o ffe r its Feri& lab.becau se its a D O E 'facility. ‘ ‘Th e E$rm ilab m ay not even be able to do the teafenecessary,” Macpherson said. “ I firm ly b elieve that the D epartm ent o f AD L 2 7 8-2000 ræm NO SALESMEN! F it n e s s B e a u v a is ’ * y AcRobics / •Free W eight» 10 Tons of Free W eights! 'W eight M achines SCA O ver 100 M aehines Com plete Training C ircu its for Beginners We Score More. •Cardhnm acular * Each Club: Nautilus C ircu it Eagle C ircu it 4 Stairm aster4000’s 12 W indracer Com puter B ikes 2 W indracer Com puter Rowers 12 Heartm ate Com puter Bikes The Valley’s #f A erobics Program ! 16 C la sse s Per D ay—A L L Levels! INSTANT GIFTS by POLAROID Have your picture taken in an instant; featuring Foto F ram eup cards by BfMj U U H IB T E H k 725 S. Rural (at the Cornerstone) 829-9399 i P h o e n ix : 4 8 4 3 N . 8 th P la c e B e a u v a is G y m — N e x t to A S U 1 3 0 1 E . U n iv e r s it y Tem pe: 1 1 0 2 W. S o u t h e r n A v e . 2 3 0 -0 0 5 5 9 2 1 -9 5 5 1 8 2 9 -6 9 6 9 arts & entertainment M usic’s past and future L.A. punk band is back in the c irc u it and out on vinyl By M A TTH EW LIN D EN BU R G State P ress M ike N ess has taken his life to the edge and com e back. H e has tra velle d in and through the dark social circles of L .A .’ s rock underground and returned rem arkably un­ scathed. Ness’ s band, S ocial D istortion, has dug its e lf out from the depths o f the unknown to a h earty follow in g in C alifor­ nia and a ltern a tive m usic fans throughout the country. W ith tw o album s under the band’s co llective b elt and a single that’s been topping new m usic charts, Social D istor­ tion’s popu larity is ra p id ly grow ing. , B lit th ere’s nothing overn igh t about this band’s success — Ness and his m en h ave paid their dues. When S ocial D istortion (S.D . to th eir abbreviating fan s) firs t form ed at the turn o f the decade, punk w as the hippest thing since bell-bottom s on the Am erican coasts and in England, Bands lik e the Clash and G eneration X w ere fu ll o f en ergy and nervous fervo r; S.D. w as fu ll o f that en ergy and, though th eir sound was less m atured and refined» this Fu llerton band soon becam e known as one o f the leaders o f the hard-core party sound. But it w as d ifficu lt to get a foot in the door o f Hie m usic Industry. “ F o r so lon g w e w ere Just an Underground band — no vin yl,’ ’ lead er M ike N ess said. Ness and his grou p w ere featu red in a 1982 indepedent f i l m about th e u ndergrou nd ro ck m ovem en t c a lle d “ Another State o f M ind’’ often referred to as the best punk rockum entary ever. One y e a r la ter “ M om m y’s L ittle M onster,” the band’ s firs t album , w as released and enjoyed m oderate success. In contrasting proportion to the band’s grow in g follow in g, though, N ess’ personal problem s becam e greater. Ness g o t started in the w rong direction ea rly. “ B y the tim e I w as 17,1 w as a (B E G IN B O LD ) h eavy, (E N D B O LD ) drinker,, gettin g into figh ts and gettin g into a ll kinds o f trouble. ‘ ‘B y the tim e I w as 20,” Ness said, “ alcohol wasn’ t w ork­ in g anym ore. It w as taking too lon g to g e t the e ffect I wanted, it w as too much e ffo r t." Ness needed som ething m ore heavy-duty. ‘ 1 tried heroin. I w as inspired b y friends and other m usicians to get started. A t that point th ere w as no turning back. M y heroin addiction took m e through (b ein g) alm ost hom eless, lyin g and cheating.” H e w as strung-out and, s tru g g lin g '!» Support a $150-aday-habit, turned to petty theft and bu rglary. “ I was dying,” N ess said undram atically. “ I was overdosing, I was goin g to ja il and w alking the streets.” Ness and S.D. w ere on the ropes and m any critics and fans w ere certain there w as no figh t le ft in them. But N ess, discardin g a ll o f the drug-related ideals o f a rebel/ou tlaw rocker, didn’t g iv e up. , “ I cam e across a program that had clean addicts,” Ness said. “ I ’d n ever seen clean addicts before,'* A fte r som e determ ination, w ill-pow er and effo rt, Ness h im self is now clean no booze, no drugs — and he’ s happier fo r it. H e’ s found a new p ersp ective on life . “ ^ “ E veryth in g I ’v e learned, I ’v e learned a fter I got clean ,” Ness said, alm ost ca refu l not to sound lik e a clich e, “ Out there it w as just sex and drugs and rock ’n’ ro ll. You can’t rea lly learn much when you’re caught up in that. “ I ’ m doing life on life ’ s term s,” he said. Ness doesn’t underestim ate the im pact o f drugs and consequencial events on his life . H e accep tsa ca lm and n early m etaphys­ ica l view o f the past. “ P u t it this w ay: it Whs a ll necessary to get to w here I am today.” N ess’ experiences certain ly seem ed to h ave provided m a terial fo r Social D istortion’ s latest relea se,“ Prison Bound.” Songs lik e “ It ’s the L a w ,” “ L ik e an O utlaw (fo r Y o u ),” “ Law less,” and “ Lost Child” and the album ’ s title cut a re a ll, in som e form , about what N ess ca lls a “ w a y­ w ard youth.” “ Indulgence” seem s to straigh tforw ardly describe the kind o f indulgence that led NesS to his problem s w ith alco­ hol and heroin. I f Ness has grow n down these bum py roads, occasionally losing b agga ge o f excesses, he and the band have certain ly m aintained th eir specialized punk and blues sound. N ess is tryin g, though, to return to som e o f rock’ s origin s to pro­ vid e som e freshness. “ L e t’s fa c e it,” Ness said, “ the shock valu e o f punk rock has been dead fo r a long tim e now. W hat w e want to do is bring back traditional rock ’n’ ro ll.” M eanw hile, Ness and fello w m em bers John M aurer, Christopher R eece and Dennis D anell a re en joyin g success in the m ainstream . And respect. “ P eo p le see from our liv e shows and from the record that w e’r e ... not just a goof-off band-anymore. Th e band w ill be p la yin g this Saturday at V F W P ost #720 (4853 E . Thom as in P h o en ix ). Adm ission is $10 per person and the doors open a t 7 p.m . Bring on the 60s: C, S & N provide musicai Deja Vu By LA U R IE B. SM ITH State Proas Crosby, S tills and Nash w ill d rift peace­ fu lly into the ASU A c tiv ity Center tom or­ row evenin g to dem onstrate that, beyond drug busts and tie-dyedsh irts, the 60s have an etern al life through music. The con cert, Which w ill begin at 7:30 p.m ., should b e both a re v iv a l o f the spirit th eir m usic reflected throughout the 60s as w ell as a prom ise o f progress into the future. W ith th erelea se o f th eir new album with N e il You ng scheduled fo r this fa ll, Crosby, S tills and Nash show few signs o f dis­ appearing. "W e ’ v e taken grea t ca re,” said Graham Nash, “ that w e’v e m ade m usic only when w e can stand each other. “ E ach album has been a labor o f love and the„end result o f a lot o f spilled blood. But each has added to the universe instead o f taking a w ay from it. “ The co re o f our m usic hasn’t changed much. T h ey’ re songs that have a reason fo r existin g and a ren 't Just flippant- W e’ve alw ays W ritten songs that a re im portant to us. ^ A‘ . A ■ “ You can sin gson gs and p layd rooves to m ake people dance and think. You don’ t have to have one o r the other. "W e ’re not in terested in fillin g up the w orld w ith b.s. Th at’s w hy the albums have been so few and fa r betw een.” But the sca rcity o f th eir releases is dw arfed b y the m agnitude o f each album ’ s success. D avid Crosby attributes that consistent success to the band’ s w illingness to exp er­ im ent with harm onies and new approaches to music. They even took a new attitude tow ard the concept o f a band. T h ey h ave not lim ited them selves togrou p perform ances and the title o f "m u sical group” has n ever kept any o f the m em bers from branching out. Th e w ork Crosby, S tills and Nash h ave com pleted as individuals only adds to their success as a group and has given them a reputation fo r consistent crea tiv ity and harm ony — m usical as. w ell as spiritual. Because no m usician w as forced to con­ form to thè dem ands o f the other, they w ere able to w ork together w ithout hos­ tility. “ In fa c t/ ’ Crosby said, “ w e n ever in­ tended exclu sivity when.C,S& N w as born; ■"W e said when w e started, ‘W e’r e gonna ’ Tura to C, * * N, P*9* 22 C ro sb y, Stili» and N ash w ill perform Thursday night In A SU 'sAeU vIty Cantor at 7:30. T ickets are $18.50. In ■ , Page g o Wednesday, September 7,1968 Lennon revisited Biographer Goldman examines star’s life and death By LA U R IE B . SM ITH State P w ____ h “ P e te !" John breathed, in an awed whisper. '*1 TH IN K I'M JESUS C H R IS T !" Pete had not been John Lennon’s comrade a ll Ms Hie for nothing. Almost matter-of-factly he replied: “ What are you gonna do about It?” Without a moment’s hesitation, John declared: “I ’ve got to tell everyone! I ’ve got to let the world know who la m ! " Pete protested: “They’l l ... ldll you; they won’t accept that, John!” John w as not to be dissuaded. “ That can’t be helped,” he retorted. Then pausing to take thought, he asked: “How old w as Jesus when they killed him ?" Pete w as stuck for an answer. Finally, he estimated (Just one year short): “I reckon he was 52.” John started counting laboriously on his Angers. Then he exclaimed: “H ell! That gives me about four y e a rs !" John Lennon m ay not h ave been Jesus Christ, but the tw o o f them d id h a ve a t le a s t on e th in g in com m on — controversy. And that is ex a ctly what m akes A lb ert Goldm an’ s latest biography, “ The L iv e s o f John Lennon” a stim u lating addition to the Lennon fan ’ s lib rary. into Lennon’ s m ind. D raw in g conclusions about Lennon’s thoughts from the events in his life is one thing — but at tim es the w rite r presum es too much. Th at, o f course, is w here the discretion o f the read er is im portant. I f you can get beyond Goldm an’s tendency to w rite in an om niscient vo ice, then “ L iv e s ” w ill prove rew arding. Goldm an portrays John Lennon as a com plex man, com posed o f violen ce and bitterness on one side and an alm ost stran glin g d esire fo r inner peace on the other. M any tim es he prophesied his own im pending violen t death but refused to com prom ise his w a y o f life . (O ne) evening John Lennon w as talking on the phone to Jesse Ed D avis. “I Just fired my bodyguard,” Lennon reported. “W hy?" demanded Davis. “It’s my rationale," replied John, “that if they’re gonna get ya, they’re gonna get yon anyway. First they kill the bodyguard." And that, ladies and gentlem en, is John Lennon — according to Goldm an. Goldm an, previou sly noted fo r his best-selling b iogra­ phies, “ Lad ies and G entlem en — Lenny B r u c e !!!” and “ E lv is ,” w rites w ith com passion and know ledge about one o f the m ost con troversial public figu res o f our tim e. H e takes read ers through e v e ry step o f Lennon’ s life , from his distu rbing and haunting childhood through the grow th o f the B eatles and his con flicts w ith P a u l M cC art­ ney to his tem pestuous relationship w ith Y ok e Ono. A t this point, you m ay w onder i f this is Just another trashy biography about a superstar, o r is it w orth the tim e? “ Th e L iv e s o f John Lennon” is d efin itely w orth its 704 pages — w hether you a re a die-hard Lennon fo llo w er o r just som eone who would lik e to read about an in credibly in teresting man. Goldm an spent six years research in g his subject and conducted o ver 1,200 in terview s around the w orld to com ­ plete the p roject. Th e result is a biography that is jam m ed w ith strong factu al inform ation and w ritten w ith clea r insight to his subject. T h e only com plaint one m ight fin d w ith G oldm an’s w ork is that too often he appears as having a G od-given insight SB âlSË S aiS lP “ 1 SAW H E R S T A N D IN G T H E R E ” : Y ok o as she appeared when John first saw h er at the In dica G allery in N ovem b er ' 1966. (Ia in M a cm illa n )________ Buy One, Get the Next One of Looser o r Equal Value FR EE! Every day, l i d . Expiree 9-14-88. (Not good with other specials) P R A N K S T E R ’S (S ü A R ä B IM L L 1024 E . Broadw ay • 967-8875 BEST BOOD & FEVER AG E IN TEM PE! r: ; Over 77 Fötal Items H A P P Y H O U R M o n .-F rt. 4 - 7 p .m . F R E E P Ö O P f R E V E R S E H A P P Y H O U R M o n ., T u b s ., & T h u d s . 1 0 :3 0 p .m .- l a .m 10 FT. BK3 SCREEN COLOR T.V. W ED N ESD AY TH U R S D A Y Chicken W ings 12* Each • All Day-All Nigl Hot, BBQ, M ixed o r Plain , D ip’em Yourself! 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MILL AT 1Mh 999-1294 FR E E D ELIV ER Y 894-1234 Page 81 Wcdncsclay.Septeiiriber 7.1988 Songwriter Bob Dylan receives critical praise for American Tour (A P ) B e verly H ills — " I don’t w rite about things,” he says. “ I w rite from inside o f som ething, and 1sing and p lay the sam e w ay. It ’s n ever about that ‘ some­ thing,’ hoping to touch I t It ’ s rather from the inside o f it reaching out.” D ylan said he does h ave fiv e or six songs fo r a new album . And he’s part o f an incog­ nito groups Th e W lllburys, that Includes G eorge H arrison, R oy Orblson and Tom P etty and has an album com ing out la ter this year. In the past fe w y e a rs , he’s concentrated on touring — w ith the G ratefu l Dead, Tom P etty and the ifeartb rea k ers, now with this pared-down band that has D ylan alone out fron t m ost o f the tim e, perform in g selections from the vast catalog o f an alm ost 30-year ca re er. N obody would blam e him fo r Just putting his fe e t up fo r a w hile. “ I re a lly don’ t h ave anyplace to put m y fee t up,” h e laughs. ‘ ‘W ell, w e want to play ’cause w e w ant to p la y... W hy tour? It ’ s just that you g e t accustom ed to it o ver the years. T h e people them selves w ill te ll you when to stop tou ring.” This tour has brought D ylan the critic a l praise that seem s tougher fo r him to com e by than it is fo r other artists. H e seem s to be heldu p to a h igher standard because o f his own bigger-th an -life im age, and that irritates him. “ It ’ s irrita tin g. It ’s re a l irrita tin g,” he says. “ It ’ s not that som ebody can’ t com e and not lik e w hat you’ re doing, that’s QK. But I ’v e done tours b efo re w here people got re a l personal w ith th eir review s in a real e a rly tim e when w e w ere on the road, and fo r som e reason a ll the towns that w e w ere about to play, they’d lik e to pick these things up. So it w as lik e intentionally te ll­ ing people to sta y aw ay. “ I don’ t know. I go through a lo t o f that, and then even when you’r e not doing what they say you’ re doing, people expect to see that, It ’s lik e when w e w ere p layin g a fter being booed in N ew port o r som ething (in 1965 he brought an elec tric band to the folk fe s tiv a l). I m ean, fo r the next six months, people want to see that sam e show that go t booed, and they want to boo, too.” H e Is interrupted: Does he have a re ­ quest fo r the restaurant’ s violin ist? Sure, he says, “ L o ve M e or L ea ve M e.” D ylan’s unexpected tastes and perspec­ tives often perplex his public, though he insists he is not, as frequ en tly described, “ en igm atic.” “ I don’ t know what that w ord m eans,” he protests. “ I would lik e to think that I couldn’ t be categorized. W how an tstob ecategorized? Th at happens because o f a ll the stu ff I do, not because o f who I am o r anything. And I don’t even know i f that’s a tru e fa c t be­ cause that’s nothing much to concern m e. YOu can’t m ake it too lon g on bein g an enigm a.” I f his critics can’t categorize him , they certain ly can’t accuse h im o f playin g it safe. H e seem s to depend on litera ry and spiritual referen ces that keep him con­ stantly searching fo r new influences. H e stunned the public in 1979 when he cam e out with the em otional, gospel L P “ Slow T rain Com ing.” Th e lead song, “ G otta S erve Som ebody,” won him his only G ram m y, an honor he considers “ an accident.” The album w as one o f D ylan’s strongest e v e r and w ent platinum (1 m il­ lion copies sold ). ' “ G ospel m usic Is about the lo ve o f God. And com m ercial m usic is about the lo ve o f sex,” D ylan says'. A fte r follow in g up w ith “ Saved” and “ Shot o f L o v e ,” D ylan , who w as born Jew ­ ish, seem ed to d rift aw ay from the Chris­ tian m essage, though them es o f redem p­ tion tinged “ in fid els” and “ E m pire Bur­ lesque.” H is current religious leanings a re the Turn to Dylan, paga 23 Hours: Mon-Sat 10-9 Sun 12-6 £S TABi.lSHtD 19## '(put myface.in Cool Tank SPECIAL (D esign a n d nam e a c re a tiv e m ascot a n d (p/pro fo r the J U S fl L ib ra ry A sso cia te s (S L S Z L U l) a n d vH n a H u n d red tru cks cash, p lu s a fre tS iS U L S L iM em b ersh ip . Or, zoin $50.00fo r second place, $25.00fo r th ird place. 'E n ter as manu tim es as you ttrish! L ib ra ry A ssn ria tK it the supporting arm o f the u n ive rsitu lib ra rie s. (fo r inform ation about the m ascot contest, membership a n d membership benefits, c a d L ib ra ry (Development a t965-5374. LARGEST SELECTIO N O F A SU TANKS IN O fficial A S 1 1L A M a sco t C o n te st Entry Form A ffix this form to the bade o f your entry. The size o f you r entry should be approxim ately 11” X 14". NAM E § ¡1 1 1 J U PH O N E O F F HOURS A V A ILA B LE ADDRESS A N Y T A N K IN S T O C K m CLASS S TA N D IN G — —— - 1; M AJOR Return all entries to the circulation desk at H ayden lib ra ry. VOID ON SALE ITEMS AN D OTHER COUPONS 8-15-88 DEADLINE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1988 Wednesday, Septe mber 7,1988 ss CATERING TO Y O IM MUSIC NEEDS C, S & N m L C.ni.r UCjuet w ork In d ifferen t com binations; w e’re gonna w ork in eve ry com bination that’s poten tially here, y o u ’ll see album s by two o f us or by one o f us. You ’ ll see album s w ith us and other people.’ “ W e told everyb od y up fron t w e w ere gonna do this. So, o f course, they ignored it, and e v e ry tim e w e did anything else, they said, ‘Oh, they broke up.’ touring w ith the H ollies, to com e by and v is it w hile they w orked on a new song. A pparently, Nash joined in and the re­ sulting sound drew him aw ay from the H ol­ lies and m arked the beginning o f an unex­ pected ca reer fo r a ll o f them. “ When w e heard Nash put on that third harm ony,” Crosby said, *4J thought m y heart was gonna jum p righ t through m y mouth. It was atou t the ligh test thing I eve r heard.’ * Th ey released th eir firs t album, sim ply titled “ Crosby, S tills & Nash,” in 1969. It Included Nash’s “ M arrakesh E xpress,” S tills’ "S u ite: Judy Blue E yes” and Cros­ b y’s “ G u ineverre.” Los Angeles-bred D avid Crosby firs t entered the m usic scene through the in­ n ovative, sem inal rock group, Th e Byrds. Stephen S tills had started out as co­ founder and lead gu itarist fo r B u ffalo S prin gfield (N e ll Young also started w ith this grou p ). And the B ritish G raham Nash earned his fam e through the pop group, The H ollies. Th e album raced to the top position on the m usic charts and the group qu ickly gained the description o f ‘ ‘m usical vo ice of an en tire generation.” That these men found com m on ground on which to crea te one o f the m ost influen­ tia l bands o f the 60s is alm ost as im pres­ sive as th eir continued success. But, 20 years ago this sum m er, Crosby and Stills broke aw ay from their respec­ tiv e bands and asked Nash, who was s till El TEM PE LI 225 W. University (N e x t t o B uffalo E xch a n ge) A' 921-3535 L. LI WAREHOUSE 3 1 0 H 77P Í Ü B Ü “ It ’ s not that our m usic is ‘tim eless.’ Th at’s a w ord reserved fo r people lik e Bee­ thoven. But it does h ave a life span longer than 16 seconds.” Savings WITHSPECIAL GUEST ||i • PO L U N IO KLE1 ML I I PO L A Y • R A LPH LAU R E N • H E AD • PE R R Y A* - 2 “ I fin d that the older I g e t the m ore I en joy playin g liv e m u sic,” Nash said. “ I don’ t wind down, I w ind up. A fte r th e last tour, I sat around three rtonths and m issed it. W e’re s till m aking good m usic and I ’d lik e to do m ore. • œ / J S T Ï ffiB R W lt F fflB P Freight Claims & slightly damaged merchandise ^ 122 E. U niversity D r., T em p e* Open 6 days 10 am -6pm l Nineteen years la ter, they a re s till mak­ in g m usic and entertaining. 5 0 % -9 0 % LI 9 Matthews Center N . B ase m e n t FAMOUS NAME DESIGNER FASHIONS! ERI _ ^ tm U tm iectric Guitars • Amps F J . E C T R O J W H B E l-ypistortion Boxes • Electronic pSp' Metronomes • Etc. S e ll In the C la s s ifie d s E R R Y E L L IS • L IZ C L A IB O R N E • A N N E K L E IN • C A L V IN K L E IN • C A R O L L I LE • H E N R Y G R E T H E L * J O H N A S H F O R D • B U G L E B O Y * G U E SS • P O L I • U N IO M ERON k N N E K LE ! AY • C A R O L LK ERRY SSS • P O L LE • H E N ;i • u n i ó M ERON A N N E K LE J AY* OL II E R R Y EI.I.1S • M ERO N A REl GUITAR LESSONS SALES RENTALS B a llo o n Y o u r S a v in g s " I t w as a tru ly m agical m om ent,” said Nash. “ H alfw ay through the song, w e burst out laughing.” “ And e v e y tim e w e'd com e back to­ geth er, they said, ‘Oh, they reform ed .’ The truth is w e’r e goin g to w ork in w hatever com binations that please us.’ ’ • Com ing together Looking at the h igh ly d iversified indi­ vidu al backgrounds o f Crosby, S tills and Nash, it seem s alm ost im possible that they e v e r form ed a band, much less a success­ fu l one. IG C E N T E R IN T H E A R C H E S S H flF I fR N E J O H N AS: T U E S D A Y - S E P T 13 - 7 P M E S A A M P H ITH EA TR E so SE D O • BK A D * PERRY «N E * ANNE JO H N ASH P SE D O « B IL L A D * PERRY Is DAN REED N ETW O RK le CAROL LI G U ESS • P O L G U C C I • U N IO K IJa R N E • A N N E K L E IN JO H N ASH FO RD • N o fc rH A M E R I C A TO U ß. («té# n *OL 3 tl(/ 10 *0 SE D O • B IL L B L A S S • 917 E Broadway, T e m p e 829-7171. A D • P E R R Y E L U S Al O p e n 9 - 9 » (SE c o m e r B roadway tit L U IRNE El Rural next to Super X ) y o d flU * * * ^ ! lESS • P O I JO H N LI G U C C I • U N IC M E R O N A • C H AU S • SPEED O • BH C L A IB O R N E • A N N E K LE I A Y • R A LPH LAU R E N • H E AD • P E R R Y ) C A iv iN K L E IN * C A R O L I ! E R R y E L L IS * 1.1/ C L A IB O R N E * A N N E I Visit ou r gigantic warehouse sale at: â ¡5 i WITH S PEC IA L G U EST J W LI’L QUEENIE ^ THURSDAY - SEPT 15 - 7:30 PM 1 MESA AMPHITHEATRE ■ I « ■ Q Road B ikes M on aco..... ............ M arse ille................ Triathlon................. W as $¡250 $325 $695 SALE $189 $239 $495 Mountain B ikes starting at $199 W ORLD CYC LE SPO KE SHOP W ORLD CYCLE 903 S . Rural, #108 937 E . Broadw ay 1660 Southern #A1 (n ext to D ick’s ) (n ex t to W herehouse) (a cross from M C C ) 894-8644 921-3466 461-1878 WITH S P E C IA L G U E ST WALT R IC H AR D SO N ¡8 AMD THE M O R N IN G S T A R B A N D M O N D A Y - S E P T 19 • 7 P M M E S A A M P H IT H E A T R E Tickets available at Mesa Community Center Box office and alt Dillard’s. Directions - Superstition Freeway exit at Country Club end go north to University and goto Center St. Turn right onCenter St. and the Amphitheatre ieonthe southeast domer. BiumvvpptsrMis State Press Pasé 23 Wednesday, September 7,1988 D ylan ConUmNdlNNiipaasai object o f speculation. “ R eligion has no­ thing to do w ith fa ith ,” is a ll he’ll say pub­ lic ly on the subject. But another o f his gos­ pel songs, “ D eath Is N ot the End,” turned up on “ Down in the G roove.” So did the T in Pan A lle y tune ‘ ’When Did You L ea ve H eaven/’ ” And at a recent con­ cert he deligh ted the crow d by bursting into “ I ’ m in the M ood fo r L o ve.” Last yea r, he appeared on a PBS tribute to G eorge Gershwin. H e w as surprised when the producers invited him to p artici­ pate. “ I said, ‘A re you sure? You sure there m ight not be another Bob D ylan?” ’ D ylan has alw ays been intrigued by Gershwin’ s m usic, he says, “ ’cause it sounds lik e sophisticated c ity stu ff, but there’s a country, backwood, a lley cat elem ent to it that fo r som e reason he was able to capture. “ T h ere a re sm ells and tastes In those songs fo r som e reason. And I was used to hearing N in a Sim one sing a lot o f G eorge Gershwin songs a few years back, and they w ere v e ry close to the folk songs that I was singing.” Folk songs have an honored place in D ylan’s Current repertoire, a purposeful hom age to his roots. H e plays the stand­ ards “ B arbara A llen ” and “ G olden V ani­ ties” on stage, and Included his own a r­ rangem ent o f “ Shenandoah” on “ Down in the G roove.” E a rlie r this yea r, he w as inducted Into the Rock ’ h’ R o ll H all o f Fam e and played “ L ik e a R ollin g Stone,” the anthem o f the rock generation, a t the cerem ony. But folk m usic is In his heart. H e contributed a cut to the recen t L P honoring L ea d b elly and W oody Guthrie. “ H ave you eve r seen a Shakespeare play? I mean, it’ s lik e the E nglish lan­ guage a t its peak w here one lin e w ill com e out lik e a stick o f dynam ite, and y o u 'll be so what-was-that! But then the oth er stu ff is ro llin g on so fast you can’ t even think, and then you have to stru ggle to catch up to w here you are In the present. And folk songs are p retty much lik e the sam e w ay. “ O f course, nobody w rites lik e Shakes­ peare eith er,” he said. “ But, you know, it don’t m atter. Those things can s till be per­ form ed. T h ey don’ t have to be w ritten — Just like folk songs.” r r Just imagine a restaurant where fresh ingredients and fast service can be had at great prices... Fajita Prima FEATURING GREAT FAJITAS Beef or Chicken You’ll experience a taste above all rest Cornerstone Mall Com er of Rural and University W e serve beer & w in e coolers! Take Out Available 921-1230 Fajita Prima where fast and fresh make the difference! *13 0 0 TH E KA PLAN CXFRRICUUJM FO R C A R EER CU M BERS- LSE £ GNLN'MCKT, GRE, DOT, Advanced MedicalBoards, TOEFL, Nursing Boards, NTE, CER., Intro, to Law, Speed Reading, AND MORE. 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You've got an armchair back here!' sports Stale Preis Wednesday, September 7. 1988 Page 25 Spikers open season with 2 wins; play NAU today at Activity Center By JO A N M cK EN N A State P ress A hand-m ade sign hanging on the w all of the ASU vo lleyb a ll team 's training gym reads, “ It's our attitude at the beginning o f a task w hich w ill a ffect its successful outcom e," The outcom e w as a ll success over the Labor D ay w eekend, with the Sun D evils posting 3 4 w ins o ver N ew M exico State Saturday a t hom e and Grand Canyon C ol­ lege across town Monday. And no one seem s to doubt that the team ’s attitu de w as the catalyst, espe­ cia lly A SU head coach D ebbie Brown, who was a b le to attendSaturday’ s m atch dur­ ing a break from assisting the U.S. O lym ­ pic w om en's team . “ This w as probably the best opening m atch w e 'v e eve r had,’ ’ Brown said. “ It was grea t. U su ally they (th e Sun D evils) are Jittery, but tonight they played with a lot o f confidence. D efense was outstand­ in g ." Opposing coaches concurred. “ W e couldn’ t stop th eir backside a ll n igh t," N ew M exico State coach M yles G abel said. And despite ASU playin g a m ixed lineup o f starters and reserves fo r the Ladylope matchup, Grand Canyon coach Jeneane P en ce said she saw a better-prep ared team than in 1987. “ I thought they cam e out much m ore read y to p la y this y e a r ," Pen ce said o f ASU. “ T h ey had th eir gam e faces on.” ASU started la st season w ith a d ifficu lt road tournam ent and lost the firs t two m atches. The 1968 team w ill have a chance to stretch its opening w inning streak to three today when ASU plays host to Northern Arizona at 7 p.m . in the A ctivity Center. A ctin g head coach Steve Schlick said he plans to continue sh u fflin g the lineup before answering the question o f who w ill replace fou r-year standout R egina Stahl as the regu lar setter. V yin g fo r the position a re juniors N oelle F ridrich and Bobbi Bloom , a tran sfer from N AU . Both are expected to see playin g tim e tonight. A ssistan t coach Sue W oodstra said M onday night that using both players could be the key in the long run. “ N oelle set w ell Saturday. Bobbi set w ell tonight. I t m ay be that w e’ll be able to use them both according to their strengths,” W oodstra said. “ The only thing about it is the tim in g of th eir sets is a little d ifferen t, and it m ay m ess up the h itters. But it hasn't seem ed to y e t.” ASU took com m and e a rly against N ew M exico State, goin g up 8-0 before allow ing NM S to score. Th e Sun D evils hit fo r a .386 a verage, com pared to .228 fo r the Roadrunners, and won the m atch 15-4, 15-11, 15-12. ASU ’s o vera ll hitting a vera ge last sea­ son w as .228, w hile opponents hit .232. Senior h itter C h risty N ore led the attack, h itting .655. D efen sively, she dug a team high 15 balls and earned Pac-10 player-ofthe-week honors despite having played in only one m atch. Th e evening w as a reunion o f sorts fo r form er Sun D evils, as T racey B arberie and Sondra Larson o f the 1987 team and Valentina V ega o f the 1986 squad cam e to support old team m ates, along w ith 1988 O lym pic team m em ber Tam m y W ebb Ira k i DauglM rty/State P rw t A S U ’s Sue Nord (No. 15) batUes with a Now M exico State player during Saturday's 3-0 victory. The Sun D evils (2-0) play host to Northern Arizona at 7 p.m. today at the Activity Center. (1966). A lm ost 400 faris filed into the P .E . E ast gym fo r the opener. A la rg e turnout also w as on hand at GCC but in fa vo r o f the opposition. A SU put the Ladylopes aw ay in just under an hour w ith scores o f 15-2, 15-11, 15-8. Freshm an D ebbie Penney, a 6-foot m id­ d le M ocker from Burbank, C a lif., led the w ay in her debut as a starter. ASU is unranked in the Am erican V ol­ leyb a ll Coaches Association top-20 poll, but plays 10th-ranked Colorado State on Saturday. H aw aii, the 1987 N C A A Cham­ pion, is ranked No 1. Brown, W ebb surprise A S U fans with visit before Olym pics By JO A N M cK EN N A State P ress Debbie Brown The usual crow d o f autograph seekers at ASU volleyb all m atches received a bonus at the Sun D evils’ opener Saturday night — su rp rise v is ito rs D eb b ie B row n and Tam m y Webb, who swung through town ju st p rio r to th eir dep artu re fo r the Olym pics. W ebb, a form er tw o-tim e A ll-A m erica m iddle blocker fo r ASU , is a left- and rightside h itter fo r the U.S. team . Brown, ASU’ s head coach and a form er O lym p ic team m em ber h e rs e lf, is an assistant coach this year, specializin g in defense. T h eir appearan ce togeth er at A S U ’ s m atch again st N ew M ex ico S ta te w as coincidental. But a gym fu ll o f fans loved it, w elcom ing the tw o w ith roarin g ap* plause. “ T h ere’s a lot o f excitem ent w ith the gam es gettin g so c lo s e ," Brown said. “ I anticipate that no m atter how the team does, it’s goin g to be a grea t experience. O f course, w e s till haven’ t gotten there y e t.” Brow n w as a m em ber o f the 1960 O lym ­ pic team that stayed hom e from M oscow as p a rt o f the boycott origin ated by form er Presiden t Jim m y C arter. She consequent­ ly m issed a ll the pre-gam es excitem ent. “ B efore, it w as called o ff in A p ril,” she said. ‘ ‘Th is is neat. W e’v e been in vited to a lot o f receptions and th in gs," which in­ cluded a recent trip to Disneyland. Brow n and W ebb had to ra ce back to San D iego on Sunday m orning fo r a team sendo ff p a rty on the Queen M ary. T h ey depart fo r Seoul, South K orea, ea rly today. A stop-off is planned in Japan fo r a few tuneup m atches b efore tra velin g to Seoul. O pening cerem on ies w ill take place Sept. 17 and the U nitedStates plays its first m atch Sept. 20. W ebb, who joined the team a fter her senior ye a r at ASU in 1966, seem ed to blush at being a focus o f attention la te Saturday night, esp ecia lly in fron t o f old friends. She said she m issed bein g one o f the Sun D evils. “ ASU ’s team was rea lly close. I don’ t know i f D ebbie had a lot to do w ith that or what. This (n ation al) team is close, but it’s a little d ifferen t.” W ebb said she had not thought o f the U.S. players as O lym pians until recently. “ It probaM y hadn’t hit m e until last w eek,” W ebb said. But she added she was being cautious about gettin g too excited. Turn to BROWN, p ig « 32. Hypocrisy of television commercials gains front seat in Penalty Box Dave Hodges Sports Editor A w eekend in fron t o f the television serves m any useful and not-so-useful purposes. W hile the boob tube can serve as an educational tool, it also hypnotizes the brain with reckless disregard in file form o f com m ercials. And it is the la tte r which deserves recognition in this w eek’s Pen alty Box. TW O M IN U T E S F O B H OOKING — One has to w onder w hether o r not N ik e is receivin g som e payola from drug d ealers. In ah a ge w here everyon e from N an cy R eagan to the m ilk m an is u rgin g people, esp ecia lly children, to “ Just say n o ," N ik e has com e up w ith a slogan that could destroy the anti-drug m ovem ent: "Ju st do it ." It is beyond m e how a m ega-corporation could prom ote such.a.cam paign. F o r tw o years kids h ave been u rged to *’Just sa y no*” and now slick com m ercials are tellin g them to “ Just do it.” One can envision it now. L ittle Joey is given a $20 b ill from his lo vin g m other, fla gs down the ice cream man in the street end orders a popsicle. Th e clerk gives him $19 in change and Joey happily trots back to the house. V eteran sportscaster R a y Scott is scheduled to broad­ But on the w ay back, b ig Johnnie steps out from behind a cast an N F L gam e on NBC as a “ leg en d a ry " p lay-by-play bush and asks Joey if he wants to try som e crack. man. Scott w ill team up w ith Joe Nam ath fo r the Los Joey searches his m ind. H e knows he has heard some­ A ngeles Raiders/Houston O ilers gam e Sunday. thing about w hat to do in this typ e o f situation. H e sees an Although Scott was a broadcaster fo r m any yea rs fo r the eg g and a fry in g pan. “ Just say no,” he hears. G reen B a y P a c k e r s , I w o n d e r w h a t q u a lifie s as The child, just en terin g seventh grade, hears a m usical “ leg en d a ry." jin gle, “ Giet a p iece o f the ro ck ." Th e kid sees a technicolor m usical production that he TWO M IN U T E S F O B TOO M A N Y M E N — T h e A m eri­ saw both on M T V and during “ Th e Cosby Show.” H e hears, can Leagu e E ast is shaping up to b e a re a l ex citin g pennant “ Just do it.” ra ce during this stretch d riv e o f the season — if you lik e Joey decides that he doesn’t know enough about crack losing baseball, that is. and wants to fin d out m ore about it. The D etro it T ig ers, B oston R ed Sox and N ew Y o rk Y a n ­ “ Just do U,” Johnnie says, sm iling w ryly. kees a ll h ave been fig h tin g fo r th e top spot fo r ab ou t'a Joey accepts. month now. B u t sin ce th e R ed S ox had th e ir record 24I think Reebok com m ercials a re b etter anyway. TWO SHNUTES F O B H O O K IN G — K T V K -T V (Channel gam e w inning streak a t F en w a y P a rk snapped, a ll th ree 3) has a unique m arketing d ep a rtm en t-it produces com ­ team s h ave b e a t, w e ll, terrib le. m ercials so bad that you can’t fo rg et them. But o f th e th ree team s, th e R ed Sox, w ho w ere in firs t Th e latest in the barrage o f m ediocre com m ercials is the p la ce go in g in to Tu esday’ s gam es, h ave looked the best in one prom oting the Phoenix Cardinals. the la st fe w w eeks. Although the Sox h ave lost som e con­ You’ v e probaM y seen this one: a gu y in a red bird suit tests, the gam es h ave been close and w ell-played. A ll they dances a ll around Phoenix to a revision o f the P o in ter h ave to do is p la y w e ll on the road and they can win it. Sisters’ song “ I ’ m So E xcited .” H ow ever, the M ilw au kee B rew ers, fresh o ff a weekend It ’s alm ost as bad as last y e a r’s prom otions fo r A SU w ith sw eep o f the T ig ers, h ave crep t back to w ithin four gam es the sam e song that’s used In “ F risk ies” com m ercials. o f the R ed Sox and the Blue Jays h ave pecked their w ay to But this type o? cam paign can also b a ck fire, as is usually w ithin 6.5 gam es. the case w ith K T V K . A s a life tim e R ed Sox fan , o f course I want the B osoxto Instead o f listen ing to the play-by-play on the television , it. But no m atter who wins the A L East, look fo r the m ost people I know w atch the pictu re but listen to the Oakland A th letics to win the pennant accounts and description o f the gam e on radio. Page 86 State Pie»« Wednesday, September 7,1988 Lever returns to campus, says program unstable By G A R Y JA C K S O N State P rses Tim es have changed fo r the ASU bas­ ketball team , and form er Sun D evil stan­ dout L a fa y ette “ F a t” L e v e r doesn’ t think It’ s a ll fo r the better. L e v e r, an N B A A ll-S tar in 1988 as a m em ber o f the D en ver N u ggets, returned to the U n iversity A c tiv ity Center last w ee­ kend fo r the Hoops fo r K ids A ll-S tar bas­ ketball gam e. L e v e r said m ost o f the N u gget players, m any o f whom a re products o f the Pac-10 Conference, support th eir alm a m aters. But recen tly, he has had trouble keeping up w ith who’ s who at ASU . “ The players change so much, it’ s hard to fo llo w them ,” L e v e r said. “ W e a ll put little side bets on our team s. N o m atter how bad they’re doing during the season, w e s till support them .” Because o f the u ncertainty o f who w ill be on the 1988-89 squad and the lack o f team unity, L e v e r said ASU m ay have a d ifficu lt tim e this season. ’ ‘Team -w ise and player-w ise th ey m ight not be as good as everyon e expects them to be,” L e v e r said. “ T h ey need to w ork on sta b ility.” L e v e r said that because o f the instabil­ ity , it is im portant fo r the righ t matchups to be on the court fo r ASU . ‘ ‘Th e players know who a re p layin g w ell and know the best com binations —■ the ones who p la y w ell together,” he said. When the coaches do not p la y these m at­ chups during gam es, it causes confusion am ong the players, he said. L e y e r said he has w orked w ith Lion el H ollins to recru it high school athletes fo r ASU . H ollins, also a fo rm er Sun D e v il A llA m erican, w as a volu nteer assistant coach fo r tw o years b efore join in g the Phoenix Suns’ sta ff in June. ' ‘Lion el w orked hard at recru itin g high school ath letes,” L e v e r said. “ I think that when he le ft, the recru its jum ped ship.” r>v-° Stretch Strap Sandal Candies Moccasin ' Although L e v e r would lik e the top high school talen t to sign w ith ASU , he said he would not g iv e anyone fa lse hopes. “ I te ll them 1 went to school here, I p layed h ere and I had a good tim e h ere,” " he said. “ But I say, ‘Do what’ s best fo r you .’ I won’t say, ‘It ’ s the best thing that w ill e v e r happen to you ,’ because it m ight not b e.” W hile p layin g fo r A SU from 1978through 1982, L e v e r set the Sun D evil ca reer record in steals w ith 236 and is second in assists w ith 444. In a gam e again st A rizon a in 1982, L e v e r set records fo r highest point total (38) and m ost fre e throw s m ade (16), and was second-highest in ASU h istory fo r fre e throws attem pted (18). H e w as d rafted by the P ortlan d T ra il B lazers in 1976 and joined the N uggets in 1984. T o m aintain his le v e l o f talent, L e v e r said he often p ractices w ith the Sun D evil basketball players. “ I liv e h ere (in the V a lle y ) during the sum m er,” L e v e r 'said. “ A s soon as the season Is o ver I head back hom e. 1 play h ere (U A C ) o r a tP .E . W est, the old gy m .” L e v e r said he tries to p ractice m ost often against m em bers o f the Phoenix Suns, but the Sun D evils a re “ the next-best com ­ petition.” H ow ever, the Sun D evil squad does not seem as close as it w as when he played fo r ASU , L e v e r said. "T h e re a re 15 p la yers on a team . When I w as h ere there w ere 11 to 12 o f us p ractic­ in g togeth er,” he said. “ Now , when I go to the old gym I see m aybe three to fou r.” The Hoops fo r K ids A ll-S tar G am e was o rg a n ized b y P h o e n ix fo rw a rd E d d ie Johnson to ben efit V a lley B ig Brothers/B ig Sisters. But L eve r, who underwent thigh su rgery on M ay 28, w as told to sit out because it m ay h ave been too risky. L e v e r su ffered the in ju ry during a gam e in January but continued to p la y through the p layoffs. Swimwear P in k o r Ice 8 ä R eg. $ 1 6 NowS9M R eg. $ 2 4 no%$12># Starting at sgn 580 S . C o lleg e, Tem pe • 968-4940 (U niversity Towers Center across from Sun Devil Stadium) twm- M -F: 10-7 Sat: 10-6 Lafayette “F a r Lever sig n s autographs at Saturday’s H oops for K ids enanty Dasaetoan gam e at m e A ctivity Center. Lever, an all-star tor the Denver N uggets and form er A S U standout, said instability Is a m ajor cause o f problem s In A s t i’s basketball program . 50 ° 8-10 p.m. E N J O Y 50* DRINKS: & D O M ESTIC Sun: 12^4 T H O R B E C K E ’S G Y M DDES N O $12 p er m onth •plus $50 one-time membership fee •Body Building •Weight Training •Power Lifting C O V E R O N L Y $1.25 A F T E R 10 p.m: RURAL & APACHE @ 6 8 -0 2 4 3 966-6621 On the south side of Curry Road between Miller & Hayden ASU Sun Devil Football ’ Student Season T icke ts A vailab le m m V isit the Sun Devil Stadium T icke t O ffice o r phone 965-2381. State P ré» Page 27 Wednetday, September 7,1988 A m e r ic a n s a p p r o p r ia t e ly s t e a l a t t e n t io n a t U .S . O p e n t o u r n e y N E W Y O R K (A P ) — F irst cam e talk o f the Swedish Slam . Then it w as the Aw esom e Aussies. A s the U.S. Open enters Its la te stages It Is, appropriately enough, the resurgent Am ericans who a re stealin g the attention. F iv e Am ericans m ade the fin al 12 In m en’ s singles, led by 36-year-old Jim m y Connors and a p a ir o f precocious teen­ agers, 18-year-old Andre A gassi and 16year-old M ichael Chang. W ith Connors’ 61,6-2,6-0 rout o f J orge Lozano Tuesday, at lea st one A m erican is guaranteed a spot in the sem ifinals. W hile Connors seeks his sixth Open title and A gassi tries to w in bis seventh cham ­ pionship this y e a r and firs t Grand Slam crow n, Aaron K rickstein is stagin g a com e­ back. D errick Rostagno sneaked into the q u a rte rfin a ls v ir tu a lly u nn oticed, a l­ though he upset another Am erican, No. 9 T im M ayotte, in the third round. On T u esd ay, R osta gn o b ea t R on ald A gen or o f H a iti 6-2,3-6,6-1,6-3 to m ake the fin al eight. But the m ost in trigu ing Am erican is Chang, the youngest p la yer on the tour. He has surged from 163rd to 48th on the com ­ puter and is certain to g o h igher a fter the O pm . “ I w anted to com e h ere and do better than I did la st y e a r,” said Chang o f P la ­ centia, C alif. L ast year, he becam e the youngest m an to w in an Open m atch when, at 15, he beat P au l M cN am ee in the first round. ■ in m m mm mm Irwin Daugherty/State Pr*ta Watch out, Daniel; ; W K K K tK i ASU freshm an tight end M ike Everitt w atches as a fan tries out for quarterback during Saturday’s photo/fan day at Sun Devil Stadium . T he Sun D evils open their season Saturday against IMnols. “ I n ever look ahead beyond an opponent, so I re a lly didn’t Want to think about how fa r I could g e t o r who 1 m ight p la y. But I didn’ t w ant to g o out e a rly ,” Chang said. A ga ssi hasn’ t gone out ea rly in a tour­ nam ent since A p ril, when he lost in the second round at Seoul. H e is the hottest p la yer on the circu it, having m oved from 25th to fourth in the rankings and had won 21 straigh t m atches b efore m eeting Chang Tuesday night. A gassi is the youngest A m erican e v e r to get that high in the rankings. "Y o u h ear p la yers lik e (top-ran ked Iva n ) Len dl talking about how the only tournam ents that re a lly m a tter a re the slam s,” A gassi said. " I think e v e ry tour­ nam ent is im portant. " I t ’s im portant to g e t the exp erien ce on the tour, and to p lay a lot o f m atches to see how much ybu can do and how much m ore you need to do. P la yin g so much is w hy I ’v e gotten w here I h ave.” K rickstein had gotten up to seventh in th e w orld in 1985, but a knee in ju ry and an auto accident stym ied his ca reer. H e had dropped to 61st in the w orld en terin g 1988. W ith a m ore a ggressive s tyle that actu­ a lly includes com ing to the net, K rickstein, once a devout baseliner, has staged an im pressive com eback. H e’s been in three sem ifin als this y e a r and m oved to 20th in the rankings. ^ “*1fe e l that m y gam e is b etter than it was when I was num ber seven,” K rickstein , 21, said. "M y ranking is goin g up and I just hav e to see how fa r I can g o ....” K rickstein ’ s vic to ry o ver No. 3 Stefan E db erg in the fourth round m ight be the biggest boost in his ca reer. “ It ’s a grea t win fo r m e, but it’ s som e­ thing that should get m y confiden ce goin g knowing that I can p la y w ith the best play­ ers,” he said. “ W henever you h ave b ig ones in b ig tournam ents, you rem em ber those and you want to keep doing w ell. “ When you are losing, you kind o f get used to losing. That’ s w hy A gassi has done so w ell. He wins so much and he w ins a ll the tim e. H e doesn’ t even know w hat losing is ." Rostagno sort o f go t lost in the headline­ grabbing o f the other kids. A 22-year-old form er Stanford A ll-A m erican, Rostagno has gone fro m No. 60 to No. 52 in the rank­ ings, a m odest gain com pared to his peers. But he n ea rly beat Connors a t W im ­ bledon, losin g in fiv e sets, has m ade tw o sem ifin als and ea sily sw ept past M ayotte. Lendl struggles; Connors, Agassi sail at U.S. Open N E W Y O R K ( A P ) — Ivan Lendl struggled w h ile Jim m y Connors and A ndre A ga ssi sizzled as they advanced to the U.S. Open q u arterfin als Tuesdáy. Lendl, stretching his winning streak here to 25 matches, beat Jakob H lasek o f Sw itzerland 6-4, 5-7, 6-2, 6-4 to keep a live his bid fo r a record fourth-straight Open title. Connors, a five-tim e Open champion, advanced to the qu arterfin als fo r the 15th tim e in the last 16years w ith a 6-1, 6-2,6-0 victo ry o ver J orgé Lozano o f M exico. A gassi, the No. 4 seed, won his 24th consecutive match, beating M ich ael Chang 7-5,6-3,6-2 in a b attle o f A m erican teenagers. ' 'v “ I hit the b a ll as clean as (co u ld today ,” the sixth-seeded Connors said. “ I w as also m ovin g w ell out there. I w as rea lly sharp.’ 8 Len dl wasn’ t. But the top seed s till w as able to slice up H lasek, the w orld’ s 25th-ranked p layer. “ I ’v e blown a couple o f sets in this tournam ent I shouldn’ t h ave,” Len dl said. “ But it’ s b etter to h ave it happen now w h ile I ’ m w inning than la te r when I m ight re a lly need that B e -D e v ile d By Hie Libraries? LIBRARY TOURS W ILL BE GIVEN IN BOTH THE Hayden and Noble Libraries JOIN O U R S T R I K E FRIDAY, SEPTEM BER 9. 6:30 TO 8:30 PM T o u r o f H a y d o n L ib r a r y a n d d o m o n a t r a U o n . o f t h é O n lln a C a t a lo g a n d C o m p u t a r S a r v ie e s . F O R C E A R IZ O N A STATE UNIVERSITY __________ B O W L IN G T E A M A rizo n a State University M em orial U nion Bow ling Team Try-O uts w ill be held this year on Saturday, Septem ber 10 and Sunday, Septem ber 11. A ll participants must b e fu ll tim e students at A S U , (12 hours and a 2.0 grade point). This is a collegiate division sanctioned tou rn a­ ment. M em b ers o f any Pro fessional Bowlers O rg an iza­ tio n are in elig ib le. ON THE FOLLOWING DATES. Wednesday, September 7 11:40 and 2:40 Thursday, September 8 |p 12:40 and 3:40 Friday, September 9 11:40 Library tours bagin In tho lobby and taka 50 mlnutaa to completa. s e t” D errick Rostagno m oved into the the qu arterfin als with a 6-2,3-6,6-1,6-3 victo ry Over Ronald A genor o f H aiti. W ith Rostagno, Connors, A gassi and A aron K rickstein m aking the fin a l eigh t, the U nited States has its la rgest qu arterfin al contingent at the Open since 1983. “ W e're doing very w e ll,” said Rostagno, who had lost in the firs t round the past three years. “ 1 don’ t know if you can say it's a com eback, but perhaps that’s true, since w e haven’t done so w ell in. the past. FOR MORE INFO CALL 965-3642 or stop by the recreation desk Page 28 State Press Wednesday, September 7,1988 Sun Devil catchers travel lonely road as transfers By DEAN GYORGY Stale Free* A m ong those new to the ASU baseball fo ld a re tw o m en talcing the route o f a m a jor co llege tra n sfer — the road less traveled. E ric H elfand played one ye a r at N e­ braska. The sam e fo r Jim H n erson at Southern C al. Both w ere released by bigtim e program s in ord er to m ake la tera l W ith the departure o f all-conferen ce selection T im Spehr, the team is without a proven catch er. Both H elfan d and Hen­ derson fit that b ill and a re am ong those vy in g fo r the position. “ I knew the catching situation w as good h e re ," Henderson said. “ It ’ s re a lly w ide open. T h ere’s nobody I h âve to step in and beat out. I t ’ s ju st a case o f w ho p erform s b etter in the fa ll. I ’m re a lly looking fo r­ w ard to it.” H en derson is w id e-eyed a ga in a fte r lea vin g a som ew hat oppressive situation at USC. H e m issed the en tire season last ye a r because o f arm problem s. W hat the team train ers believéd to be tendenitis w as in fa ct a bone chip in the elbow . H e fin a lly had arthroscopic elbow su rgery in A p ril but fe lth e w as placed on the disabled list perm anently. “ I sort o f fe lt th ey g a v e up on m e once I got h u rt... that I couldn’t throw and w as not a q u ality p la y e r," Henderson said. “ I think they m ade an erro r in judgm ent. I ’ m not blam in g them , but I thought they had a bad taste in th eir mouths and I w anted to start som ew here fre s h ." “ H e (H enderson) is a v e ry good h itter and a v e ry good re c e iv e r," ASU head coach Jim B rock said. “ I f the arm com es along, he certain ly should be a fa cto r.” T h e arm is fin e, H enderson said, and it gets b etter eve ry tim e he throw s. H e fee ls a little soreness, but that is natural, he Eric Helfand said, and he is read y to go. T h ere is a fo rm a lity, how ever. Because he is an Inter-conference tran sfer, he must file a petition to the Pac-10. E igh t o f the ten team s must approve the m ove, o r he can­ not play. The risky p art Is that h e couldn’t file the petition until he w as o ffic ia lly registered fu ll-tim e at ASU . T h e w ay could not be paved beforehand. "G en era lly w hat has h appened," Brock said, “ Is that If the school he lea ves says it’ s O K , then the other schools go along w ith it, but it ’ s not chiseled in granite- It certain ly is a precariou s situation fo r him. W e certain ly hope It a ll w orks o u t." Henderson is confident that It w ill. “ A s fa r as I know th ey’v e n ever turned anybody dow n,” h e said, “ so I would be a little shocked If I was. “ I don’ t re a lly see w hy any oth er school would not want m e to tran sfer . I t ’s not lik e I ’m (fo rm er USC sta r) M ark M cG w ire tran sferrin g over h ere.” Jim Henderson o b jective w ould h ave been to get d ra fte d ," H elfand said. “ But by goin g back to afou ry e a r school, I m ade the ch oice to get an, education too. I t would be hard to go back to school a fte r fou r o r fiv e years in the m inors, i f (a baseball c a re e r) didn’t w ork out. “ This is one o f the best program s In the country. It ’ s »ch a n ce to {d a y b a ll h ere and geta n education- It was to o go o d a n o fferto pass up.” H elfand, on th e other hand, c o m » un­ attached. O rigin a lly from Southern C ali­ forn ia, be becam e unhappy in Cornhusker land and decided not to retu rn fo r his sophom ore season. H e obtained a relea se from the school and w as set to use ju nior co llege as a launching pad to the pros when ASU called. Education again becam e a factor. " I f I w as to go to a JC, then m y m ain SPECIALIZING IN: • C o lo r & color weaving •Perms & spiral perms •Haircuts, etc. o -3 0 -Ôn VALID WITH CO U PO N O U R NAIL S P E C IA L T Y :! A C R Y LIC NAILS •Manicures •Pedicures HUGE SELECTION O F 11Riversiti} sporting gI [ m ASUand PHOENKCARDMAL , OOIHMGI u sf 1 ;g SELECTED ASU TAN K TOPS 967-3722 ONLY J a m ’s R e sta u ra n t JAM SHORTS JU S T G O O D FO O D ONLY$ 1 4 * 9 5 REG. $19.95 B re a k fa s t a n d L u n c h S e rv e d A ll D a y ■ a i (¿¿Èi'Æ lioW ANY P ! TANK TOP WITH THIS AD! OFF any meal over $2.50 with coupon BEFORE 10 a.m. ¡8 M ON.-FRI. 7 a.m.-2:30 p.ro. S A T . 7 a.m.-1:30 p.m., S U N 7:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Expires 9-21-88 S5«f5 REG. $10.95 : V O » ON SALE ITEMS EXPIRES 9-14-88 968-7725 1038 S. M ill Ave. Best Shakes in the Valley EXHIBITION I n te rn a tio n a lly fa m o u s FORI: Get 2 Large 14” Cheese Pizzas For 1 Great Price of $6.99 N O T G O O D W ITH AN Y O TH ER O FFER . EX TR A FO R AD D IT IO N A L T O PPIN G S. EX PIR ES 8-U -S 8. 1420 N. SCOTTSDALE RD., TEMPE South of McKeUips (one mile North of university) WE DELIVER QAUM CO 9 *9 9 Pocket Billiard & Trick Shot Artist , JackÜtfhite § * will be appearing at the M.U. Recreation Center September 5-9 Sept. 6 & 6 > Sept. 7-9 Sept. 9 A ppeared on N um erous TV Shows B illia rd C iin tç fo r M en & W omen- j p Tournam ent Trick Shot Exhibition ¡1 - f Featured in Top M agazines M.U. Recreation Center 965-3642 Page 29 Wilson becomes first Cardinal general manager By JEFF SHAIN State P ress L a rry W ilson said he is read y to shoulder a ll the c riti­ cism previou sly aim ed at BUI BidwUl fo r the on-field woes o f the C ardinal franchise. WUson w as nam ed the club’s first general m anager on Tuesday, taking responsibility fear a ll football-related operations o f the Phoenix Cardinals. “ In the past, a lot o f criticism has fa llen on M r. B id w ill’ s shoulders when it w as the fau lt o f advisers like m yself,” W ilson said at a news conference to announce his hiring. "N o w that criticism can and should be leveled at m yself.” W ilson, who has spent 28 years w ith the Cardinals organ­ ization, w as prom oted togen era l m anager from director of pro personnel, a position he held fo r 12 years. “ It (th e position ) goes to a person who has grow n in the organ ization — L a rry W ilson,” BidwUl said. “ H e is the firs t gen era l m an ager in the h istory o f the organization, at least in m odern tim es. W e fe lt a need to crea te the position with the m ove to Phoenix. W e fe lt the organization needed this type o f position, som ebody to run the en tire football operation.” BidwUl has served as his own gen era l m anager in the eventu ally landing in the P ro FootbaU H all o f Fam e. past, keeping a hand in aU aspects o f the organization. Only tw o oth er H all o f F a m e m em bers — S eattle’s M ike Although he wUl be less a ctive day-to-day, BidwUl said he * M cCorm ack and fo rm er R am s execu tive E lro y "C ra zy still expects to hear about the footb all operation from L eg s” - H irsch — have risen to a fron t-office position as WUson. high. “ I haven’ t retired , ” BidwUl said. “ T h ere’s s till a num ber “ In 1960, BUI BidwUl cam e to Salt L ak e C ity and hired m e o f issues on the business end that requ ire m y attention. The as a p la yer,” WUson said. " A t that tim e, I w as ex cited just footb all operation ’ s in L a rry ’ s hands, as it has been fo r a about being in pro footbaU. I spent 13 years th ere and had a whUe. I ’ m ju st g iv in g him the title and authority he should grea t tim e. I alw ays fe lt lik e you hadn’t done your job if you have.” ■ w eren’t beat up on Sunday. I fe e l this is the sam e w a y.” A s gen eral m anager, WUson wUl coordinate activities WUson said he did not exp ect to im plem ent m any betw een the coaching s ta ff and the scouting departm ent, changes in his new role, although the lines o f authority shoring up what could be considered a r ift between the two. would be m ore defined. In the past, the coaching s ta ff has had U ttle or no input into the college d raft. " I used to have to answer to m any people. N o w l h ave to answ er to one,” he said. “ H ow ever, I w ill h ave m any peo­ “ L a rry is in total ch arge o f the footbaU operation,” B id­ ple answer to m e.” wUl said. “ That’s a ll footbaU personnel. L a rry is the final authority in the footbaU departm ent.” W ilson also announced M onday the prom otion o f E ric WUson started with the Cardinals in 1980, when he w as a W idm ark to fiU his old ro le as pro personnel director. seventh-round d raft pick out o f Utah. H e spent 13years as a W idm ark had been the assistant pro personnel d irector p layer, earn in g A ll-P ro honors six tim es at fre e sa fety and under WUson. Cornier pessimistic as America’s Cup begins today in San Diego SAN D IE G O (A P ) —•D ennis Conner, alm ost as sure to win the A m erica ’s Cup as death and taxes, issued a w arn­ ing on Tuesday that is bound to be heard in any sport: “ UntU the ra ce is o ver, it’s n ever over. ’ ’ H e told a news conferen ce on the day b efore the Cup races began that he w as in a no-win situation against N ew Zealand’s far-ou t yacht. “ I f w e w in, it ’s because m y boat w as faster because you a ll (th e m ed ia ) h ave told m e that,” Conner said. “ I f we lose, o l’ Dennis lost the A m erica ’s Cup again .” Conner, in his fifth Cup series, is the only defending skipper to lose th e 137-year-old trophy and the only chal­ len ger to w in it back. H e is a p roh ib itive fa v o rite to keep the Cup fo r the San D iego Y ach t Club in the best-of-three series. H is opponent, K iw i skipper D avid Barnes, told the conference “ som e­ thing very unusual would have to happen” w ith the w eather to g iv e N ew Zealand’ s 133-foot monohuU yach t a chance against Conner's catam aran, Stars ft Stripes. Although both yachts are at the cutting edge o f technol­ ogy, a monohuU has as much chance again st a catam aran as a grandstand against a ra ce horse. Som ewhat testily Conner told the m edia “ there’s n ever a sure thing in a sailboat ra ce.” Sails have ripped, equipm ent can break down. “ You can go in the w rong direction . Th e other gu y can outsm art you,” he said. "M y attitude is I have to do everyth in g in m y pow er to saU the boat and take nothing fo r granted. Th e idea is to win. I n ever said I w anted to keep it close. T h ere’ s no extra cred it fo r that. “ T h ere’s a fin e balance betw een w inning a ra ce and pressing your boat to u ltim ate speed a t the risk o f your equipm ent. D avid is a v e ry good m atch ra cer, and I ’m sure he has som e trick s up his sleeve. I ’U try to stay clea r o f him a t the start.” Barnes didn’t roU up his sleeve, sayin g only: ‘ ‘W e have a pretty good idea o f the strengths o f our boat.” Am ong others those would possibly be a better abU ity to handle v e ry Ught airs and a lum py sea which could slow Conner’s Stars ft Stripes. The forecast was fo r onshore winds o f 12-18 knots and northw esterlies at 10-15 knots fa rth er out to sea on the 40-mUe w indw ard-leew ard course. E ven Bruce F a rr, whose Annapolis, M d., firm designed N ew Zealand, predicts his boat wUl lose b y as much as an hour in any norm al conditions. A complete personal computer package (from software to printer) for $995. LEADING EDGE MODEL D •Dual Floppy Disk Drive •N eer Letter Quality Printer >High Resolution Monochrome Monitor W ord Processing Softw are w ith Spell C h eck, DOS, B asic and Spread Sheet. _ «20 Month National Warranty_________ M ULTI S Y S T E M S 225 W . U niversity, Tem p* VISA 965-1295 MC 9-6 W eekdays » 9:30-3:00 Seturday__________ J J S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T S BEST PRICES... BEST WORK... * Ch eck O ur Prices •Free Estim ates •Insurance C laim Re •Custom Painting & B o d y W ork 717 s . H acienda, S uite 1Q3 Call 921-2048 V "MR. BOJO SAYS: YOU’VE TRiED THE REST NOW TASTE THE BEST! FEATURING: SUBMARINES GYROS PUA SPECIALS AND Mu ch MORE! B O JO ’S SUBS i SANDWICHES 829 S . R U R A L R D . 966-5543 HOURS: MON-FR110-9 • SAT 10-6 V Se r v in g a s u f o r o v e r m y e a r s _____ Have you seen th e A S U S tud en t Handbook and C alendar? It's a handy pocketsize book, filled w ith everything you ever w anted (or didn't w ant to) know about college life. It's even g ot a daily referen ce calendar! WSk. The really neat thing about the Handbook is th a t it's J produced by A S U stu den ts. T h a t's right. ¿S & L S tu d en ts g ath er the inform ation, w rite and e d it the copy; shoot the photos; design the co ve r and inside pages and la st, but ce rtain ly but not lea st, they design and se ll the advertisin g th a t su p p orts th is annual . event. S tu d e n ts spend long hours w ith cre a tiv ity flowing, ideas exchanging and th e fulfillm ent of producing th e ir very own handbook. W e'd like to o ffe r you th e chance to join th is team and gain invaluable experience w hile you're in college. W e need several ad vertisin g sa le s re p rese n ta tive s to create , design end se ll ad vertisin g to local re ta il busin esses. If you have a stro n g com m itm ent to excellence and pride in job wed done, w e'd like to speak w ith you. You m u st be self-m otivated punctual, a good tim e m anager, own a c a r and be a people person. P le a se ca ll today and join a team of dedicated A S U Students who are com m itted to m aking th e 1 9 8 9 -9 0 A S U Studen t Handbook and Calendar th e best. C all Dan EKstrom 9 6 5 -6 5 5 5 TO D AY! P.S. If you're wondering w hat in the heck a S tud en t Handbook is, sto p by S tu d e n t P u blication s in M a tth e w s C e n te r and g et a FREE copy! Page 3 0 Wednesday, September 7,1968 Bear Your Soul Say it in a State Press Personal Ad 965-6731 m otorcycles fo r sale PIN K S C O O T ER for sale, lik e new, on ly 150 m iles. $485/of«er. C a ll 786-1805, leave m essage. - # • « . . ■■' ' ■ m - .' . bicycles for sale N iS H IK I C O LO R A D O M o u ntain bike. É x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , 4 m o n th s o ld . $350/offer. A lex, 957-8649. T R EK 400 01 98 7 Shim ano com ponents; A ccu sh ift, excellen t shape. Ju st tuned up. 921-9703 evenings. $250. v / f . / Y l North Basement Matthews Center announcements Q AM ED AY SPEC IA L!! Bog o f burgers!! burgers fo r $1 a ll day when the D evils o r C ard in als play at hom e, “...at D ick's of course!!“ D ick's D rive In. 855 S. Rural Road. H E L P O T H E R S , help y o u r­ selves! O pen m eeting Alpha P h i Omega. 9 /7 ,9 p.m . P in al room ; 9/8,8 p.m. Coco­ n ino room . C a li 839-8707. M AR ANATHA CHRISTIAN Coun­ seling . C h ristia n oriented sem inar fo r sexually u n fu lfilled and damaged fem ales. Saturday, Septem ber 17,1988. C h ristian Com m unIty C e n t e r , 71 1 W . U n i ­ versity D rive, Tem pe, A Z. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., lunch included. Reservations $40, con­ tact Ann, 966-8423. W A N T E D , F E M A L E m od el s for h a irco lo rin g and co lo r draping w ork­ shops, M ondays. Phoenix H air Com pany, 258-1906, Ricardo. autos for sale 1963 RAM B LER . 25,000 m iles on rebuilt V8 engine. Pow er steering, pow er brakes, AM radio. 968-9858. 1970 S T O C K Bug, m ust sell. C a ll, make offer! New everything. Clean. S o lid dual port, m onzas. 968-0147. 1974 D ATSU N B210. Many new parts, runs w ell; body good, perfect ca r fo r stu­ dent. $450. C a ll 966-5364. 1974 PEU G E O T station wagón, blue, good care $425/offer. 838-7715. 1976 FIAT S p id er Convertible. New paint, top. and in te rior. $l700/best offer. C a ll Pat after 5:30 p.m., 921-1311. 1976 P O R S C H E 914-2.0, air, new engine, very sharp. Porsch e m echanics personal car. $7450.971-5566. 1981 M A Z D A G L C 4 -do or hatchback, aircond ition in g, cassette. 829-1007. 1981 PLYM O U T H Chàm p- Cheap, m ust se ll!! $800/offer, silver, 89,000 m iles. C a ll Sandy. 921-3477. 1982 B U IC K Skyhaw k. 4-do or, w hite, 83,000. N ew brakes, a ir, battery, alterna tor, etc. T h is ca r's been taken care o f and it show s! $3250/offer. 969-4723. 1984 J Ç T T À LÇ. A ir, sunroof, Sony stereo system , 44,000 m iles, excellen t condition, $6500/offer. 947-3704.921-7363. miscellaneous fo r sale CASIO W RITER CW -10 Personal E le ctric typew riter. Portable, 57 keyboard, spe­ c ia l auto-printing effects, one lin e co rrec­ tion mem ory, 15 character disp lay, auto centering, m uch more. $100/offer. 9245741, Sandi. C O LO R TELEVISIO N , portable, $80; con­ sole, $100, w orks perfect. C a ll Ray at 254-1412. C O M PA Q PO RT-II m odel-2 640-KBhard disk, flo p p y M S mouse. M in t condition. Softw are included. $230G/offer. Robert. 898-3135. FOR S A LE - 100% IBM com patible XT turbo. From $499, at turbo from $1095.18 m onth warranty. 837-1641. FOR S A LE - Cannon Typestar 5 electron ic typew riter. M in t co n d itio n . $90/offer. Sm ith Corona ele ctric typew riter, basic typew ri ter, excellen t condition, $50/offer. C a ll 967-5036. IBM X T Com patible. 640K, 2-drive, dual screen , pro keyboard. Epson prin ter, brand new, $1000. 784-9466. LO U IS VUITTO N and G u cci bags. Start your sem ester in style. V innie, 966-2053. O A K LE Y ’S- A L L makes (blades, razor blades, etc.) at great prices. C a ll 9625865 fo r m ore inform ation. Q U EEN SIZE futon, $75. Tw in futon and fram e, $150. O liv e tti portable typew riter, $125. Sharp hom e entertainm ent system: 19 in ch co lo r T V with rem ote. V CR with rem ote, tuner, d u al cassette, grap h ic e q u a liz e r, tu rn ta b le , 2 sp e a k e rs, 2 cab in ets, $800. W ill separate TV and V CR. A ll new, m ust go. M ake offer. C arl, 967-2567. SA V E M O R E T h rift Store. 1915 N. Scotts dale Road (2 b lo cks North o f M cO ow ell). Q u ality cloth in g and hom e furnishings, desks, chests, sofabeds, etc. 990-3364. TYPEW RITERS: D U E to sch ool budget cuts. Sm ith C orona offers brand new e le ctrics w ith internal correction, error out, e le ctric carriag e return, preset tabs, m ore. U S A m an u factu rin g w arranty. Check cred it cards/CO D /layaw ay. Free delivery! 1-714^548-4425. (AZ-CAN ) W HY B U Y hair/skin products? Over 25 organic/hom e recipes. $2. S.A. Adam s, 438 W oodland, Lexin g ton , K entucky, 40508. S h o rts m ake g r e a t A r iz o n a 1987 M E TA LL1C B lu e Iroc. $1000 down, assum e lo an. T-tops, everything power. Evenings, 835^8825. 1883 H O N D A Sabre V46 w ith fairing, b la ck , 8640 m iles, excellen t condition. 11800/offer 888-0145. 1884H O N D A M agna700cc. G reat shape, 6800 m iles, 2 helm ets, (1700.833-3343. 1886 H O N D A 150 B ite scooter, ted, custom e seatcover, m bit co n d itio n ,884-1341 d ays o r 882-8317. $1085/offer. 1888 H O N D A B its 80. U o fA graduate, w iH e e tlto A 3 U student. 5875/offer. 7305035,831-7836. 1888 H O N D A 800 H urricane. Showroom co n d itio n , 1300 m iles. Sw eetest b ike in the V alley. M ake offer. C a ll 483-7308. H O N D A E L IT E 80 S co ttar 1886. W hite, clean , and rune great. 1800/offer. tnclu d e s habitat. 887-3708. A O U EEN S IZE box spring m attress and fram e. B rand new, upgraded, sacrifice 220-**» B R A S S BED , lovely queen s ize H B-FB. Never used matt and foundation factory wrapped. $225.829-8984. D AYBED , G O R G EO U S w hite w ith brass cam elback design. Never used, includes trundle and 2 m atts. $170.829-8984. DINING RO O M table with 4 ch airs, grey lacquer fin ish . Padded ch airs, cream /grey black. 961-4749, evenings. K IN G S IZE W aterbed. Heater, head board w ith m irrors and shelves, $65.990-0255, Steve. M ATCH IN G C O U C H and loveseat, beige, b ro w n , an d ru s t. G o o d c o n d itio n , $200/offer. Evenings, 943-3615. S IN G LE BED , 3 m onths old. M ust sell, m oving. $90/offer. C a ll BUI, 829-6660. C L O S E TO ASU . New ly redecorated 1 bedroom apartm ents. Q uiet, secluded area. Lots of am enities. C a ll H idden Glen Apartm ents, 968-8183. C L O S E T O ASU . B eau tiful Southbank Apartm ents. Private balcon y and patio. Lovely pool. 2 bedroom apartm ents. C a ll 894-1041. tickets for sale $40 R O U N D TR IP ticke t to San Diego Septem ber 8th-Septem ber 12th. Contact T racy Jensen, 784-9323. real estate for sale 2 B ED R O O M condo, furnished o r unfur nished, %m ile ASU . 991-2868. $65,500,1905 E. U niversity. Bank foreclo sure, condo, 2 bedroom , 2 bath. 160% financing fo r owner occupant. T e rrific term s. Dyana Edm unds, M e rrill Lynch, 991-3300/948-7251. C O LO R A D O W ILD ERN ESS park! Repose sse d 40 a cre s. 3 b ack paym ents, assum e note $17.000.17. C o o l, treed, secluded m ountains. W ildlife, trails, great bu ild in g sites. Owner m ust se ll. 1-719846-4588. (AZ-CAN ) LIK E NEW-v 3 bedroom , 2V4 bath town hom e. Low down; no qualifying. Trade winds, 820-3333, B ill o r Grace. NO QUALIFYING 1. 2 , 3 b e d ro o m c o n d o s & townhouses. Papago Park Village from $58,0004102,000. Bob Bullock Realty Executives 998-2992 1 B ED R O O M apartm ent clo se to ASU arid M C C . Lo ts of extras. $365/m onth, assum e le a se w ith o p tio n to renew . 964*0914. furniture for sale A FU R N ITU R E sale; 7 piece bedroom set $189, tw in sets $48, fu ll sets $58, queen sets $86,5 drawer chests $39.95, sofa sets from $169, plus m uch m ore. 3332 Furn ir ture, 3332 W. M cD ow ell Road, 233-2236 or 137 W. M ain. 896-1456. B R A N D NEW Apartm ents, new low er rates, sp ecial sem ester leases available. 2 and 1 bedroom , free cable, pool, covered parking, tots more. Ju st a few blocks behind O ld Town Tem pe. 921-3036. ...7 j — IW n N U P B # 0T S M C FURNITURE SALES/RENTAL Desks...... ............... Bed Sets...Twin...... Full........ Queen.... ....... .................... 149.95 Dinettes................. Couch/Loveseat.... ............ ;ri-,... 300 00 Sectionals.......... .......... ................ 369.95 •90 Day Same as Cash •MC/Visa •Layaway •Rent to Own •Valleywide Delivery RENTAL EXPERTS 1870 E. Apache, Tempe 829*1212 FEM A LE RO O M M ATE needed. Own bedroom /bath. C lo se to ASU . Has a ll am eni­ tie s , b e a u tifu lly fu rn ish e d . 2 p oo ls, Jacu zzies. $250 plu s u tilities. Papago Park II. Jolain e, 967-5248. Q U IET A D U LT Com plex has 1 bedroom s available, unfurnished, $395, furnished, $420. A ll u tilitie s inducted. 3 b lo cks to A S U , near Broadw ay and Rural. Q uiet people only please. 967-6820. FEM A LE R O O M M ATE W anted. 3 bed­ room , 2 % bath, fu lly fu rn ish e d , poo l. $300/m onth plus u tilitie s. G rad students p re fe rre d . J e n n ife r *(H )8 92 -20 73 , (W)997-7335. S PA C IO U S 2 bedroom , 2 bath apartm ent. 0.1 m ile from A SU . $475 in d u d es a ll u tili­ tie s. P o o l, lu an d ry. 910 E ast Lem on. 966-8704. H AV E Y O U R Own bedroom and bath­ room in a 2 bedroom , 2 bathroom apart­ m ent m inutes from ASU . P o o l, cable, covered co rkin g , laundry, p lu s m ore. $235 plus u tilities. C a ll John, 9684)181 o r c a ll 967-6568. TEM PE, 829 S. Farm er. W est of M ill, off U niversity, 2 bedroom , 2 bath duplex. $475/m onth. 968-4000. SPECIAL OFFER C lo se to A S U Studios & 1-bed­ rooms, utilities included. $295 & up. M a ria n n a A p ts . 1214 E . O ra n g e 966-8597 2 B LA C K flip ch airs, $25 each. TV stand, $20. 829-6660. FUTONS FEM A LE RO O M M ATE to share beautiful luxury hom e in Tem pe Lakes. 4 bedroom , 3 bath w ith pool. F u lly furnished w ith a ll the extras. $325/m onth plus ft u tilities. C a ll L isa o r Eric, 831-2501. FEM A LE RO O M M ATE. $20Q/month plus ft u tilitie s . O w n room . Q u esta V id a, 968-1483. W AR EH O U SE S A LE. D esks from $49; ch airs from $15; bookshelves from $19; end ta b le s, ty p in g ta b le s, co m p u ter tables, din in g tables, file cabinets, plus lo ts m ore. Arizona O ffice L iq u id a to rs, 4010 S. 43rd Place,‘between 40th Street and 48th Street, N orth o f Broadw ay. 437-2224. FACTO RY O UTLET 789-9747/NW PH X 254-5943/DWNTWN rental sharing NEW , LA R G E 2 bedroom unfurnished apartm ent, $425/m onth, $125 secu rity deposit. Pool, laundry room . W alk to A SU . Cape C od Apartm ents, 910 S. G ary D rive. 968-5238. S O FA S FRO M S cottsd ale lu xu ry home bu ilder’s m odels. Contem porary styles and fab rics. Three to choose from . $250, re ta il $700. M atch in g lo ve seat $200. 829-8984 apartments fo r rent 1982 G R E Y A u d i 5000S. Loaded, A-1 shape. $4900 o r best. 829-6660. 1882 H O N D A S ilve rw in g 500. Interstate package w ith cover. M ust te ll or. get divorced . 8648. C a ll Jeff, 888-7254. 2 M ATC H IN G loveaeats. B eige tones, like new. Both for $200.966-5303. ________ ’ apartments for rent FOR SALE: H P-11C S cie n tific calcu lator with m anual, $40. C a ll C in d y at 784-0911. 1985 V O LK S W A G O N C ab rio let converti b le , 4 6 K , g re a t c o n d itio n , $9800. 431-1598. m otorcycles for sale furniture for sale S iN r N w townhomes/ condos for rent 2 B ED R O O M tow nhouse, 2 story, n icely decorated, lau n d ry hook-ups, fenced patio, close to Fiesta M alll. $475/month, 890-0880. 2 BED R O O M condo, w asher/dryer, turn ished o r unfurnished. 2 to 3 students, very clean. $450/month. 991-2868. homes for rent 1 B LO C K to A SU . S paciou s 5 bedroom , 2 bath hom e, fire p la ce r p lu sh carpet. $845/m onth, 967-4248. 1 B LO C K to A SU . C lean and com fortable 4 bedroom , 2 bath home. $695/month, 967-4248. M ALE/FEM ALE: 2 bedroom , 2 bath near A S U at W orthington Place. F u lly turn ished. Pool, Jacuzzi, volleyball. Imme­ diate availability. Own room, $250/month. Share, $l80/m pnth plus u tilitie s. Lisa, 921-3551, C huck. 894-5518. M A LE RO O M M ATE needed. 2 bedroom , 2 bath co n d o . W a sh e r/d rye r, p o o l, Jacuzzi. $175/m onth, u tilitie s. 892-2778. M O VE IN Now - W orthington Place. Share room , $225 plus u tilitie s. A ll am enities. C a ll K irsten, 966-6720. C lo se to cam pus! N EED 2 room m ates to share room at Hayden Square. $300/m onth. Furnished. C al! 966-4699 OW N BATH /roorh fo r rent in furnished Scottsdale home. $300 plus u tilities. 481-0490, leave m essage. R E S P O N S IB LE N O N -SM O KER to share peaceful house near Southern and M c­ C lin to ck. Large room , quiet room mates. $250, u tilitie s included. Robert, 831-5595. R O O M M A TE W AN TED . H ouse. North Tem pe, 1* m iles A S U . $29Q/month. C a ll 990-9545. R O O M M ATE W AN TED to share 2 bed­ room , Q uadrangles. Own bedroom , bath, $215 p lus u tilities. Dan, 921-1185. S TU D EN T C O N D O needs 2 fem ales to share new ly furnished room w ith 2 super n ice fem ale students. C ld se to cam pus. Reasonable. 968-9923. S T U D EN T S N EED ED to share. F u lly fur­ nished, in clu din g linens, dishes, washer, dryer, m icrowave, m uch more. Tw o blocks from cam pus. $22S/m onth p lu s ft u tili­ ties. Regal Professionals, Inc. 437-4877. 2 B ED R O O M , 1 bath, block from cam ­ pus. B ig yard, $40Q/month. C a ll 8940288, anytim e. TH IS B EA U TIFU L, huge house has every lu xu ry know n to man. Broadw ay/Rura! area, $230/m onth. 829-0224. V ER Y Q U IET, serious person. L ig h t cook in g on ly. Clean, private, furnished trailer. W ash er/dryer 15 m inute w alk ASU . $200. 969-1809 after 6 p.m. TW O RO O M S fo r rent in condo close to cam pus. $225 a m onth plus u tilitie s and phone. C a ll Ja ck at 829-7241. rental sharing 1 O R 2 fem ale room m ates wanted to Share very spacious condo. Includes a ll a m e n itie s p lu s p o o l. C a ll Y v e tte , 423-1685. 1 O R 2 room m ates needed fo r m ostly furn is h e d a p a rtm e n t. O w n roo m fo r $200/m onth p lu s * u tilitie s . C lo se to shopping/cam pus. C all Kara, 921-1764, leave m essage. $225 PER M onth plus u tilitie s. Three bedroom , fu lly furnished condo w ith a ll am enities. CaH Dan, 921-0098. 22 Y E A R O ld disabled A S U student to share house with 2 bedroom , 2 bath, fire­ place. pool. M ale/fem ale. Free rent in exchange for evening help. C a ll Tom, 840-3857. 2 BED R O O M apartm ent, fu lly equipped, pool. $200/m onth, u tilitie s. 279-1827. 3rd Street and Hardy. 2 FEM A LE room m ates needed- F u lly fu r­ nished condo. 1 bedroom , own bath. $230.1 bedroom , share bath. $200. Plus u tilities. 968-7796. 2 RO O M M ATES. Share 4 bedroom town house. $2Q0/month. $200 deposit. M ill and B aseline àrea. C a ll R ich or V al at 967-4056. A R O O M M ATE needed to share room . 2 bedroom , 2 bath. C ondo ctoee to ASU . Pool. R e n t negotiable. Jason, 966-8969. CHRISTIAN HOME, furnished, utilities included, $250. Richard, 829-755L C L O S E T O A SU . 1 bedroom , 1 bath, quiet area. 829-0548. FEM A LE/M A LE N O N SM O KER . Share * bedroom hom e. 1‘O O p lu s u tllitto* D obto n an d W arner. Pau l. 821-1097/893- 7756, business opportunities D EA LER SH IP LO G hofiw s. Y o u r com plot« log hom e m anufacturing com pany has a ll of Am erica’s fin est Ones, starting at $9675. G reat earning potential, w ill not interfere w ith present em ploym ent. .In­ vestm ent 100% secured by m odel home. C a ll M r Lam ont, to ll free, 1-800-321-5647. The O rig in a l O ld-Tim er Log Hom es and S u pply Inc., Route 6, 346 Logue Road, M t. Ju lie t, TN 37122. (AZ CAN ) M AKE YOUR FO RTUN E W rite fo r free details on 101 enor­ m ously profitable yet am azingly easy businesses anyone can start. One w ill be perfect fo r you l W rite to: Am erican iu aln aaa Enterprises P.O . B ox 1315 B ryn M aw r, P A 1(016 help wanted $10-$660 w eekly/up m ailin g clrcu la rsl Rush self-addressed, stam ped envelope: Dept. A N -7C C -G . 8300 W ltshlre. Suite 470, Beverly H ills, C A 90212. $107HO UR STAR T! N o experience neces sary.~ We need aggressive career m inded people to se ll contractors tools and supp­ lie s fo r national firm . 4 weak train in g w ith rapid advancement opportunity. C a ll Oeve Green, 929-3190. A C C O U N T IN G 2 1 2 tu tor needed! O neon one in stru ction necessary and fee Is negotiable. C a ll Jen n ifer at 784-9143 as soon as possible, please! A A A A A T E LE P H O N E Interview ers fo r Tem pe marketing research firm , absolute ly no safes. F lexib le evening/weekend hours. Start at $4/hour. Rapid raises for good people. O ’N eil Associates, Susan, (87-4441. help wanted 22 Y EA R O ld m ale quad lo okin g fo r expe­ rienced aide for weekends and travel ing. G ood pay. C a ll Tom , 840-3857. AM BITIO U S P E O P LE needed fo r prorfuc tion com pany telem arkeflng. Part-tim e (flexible) hours. G ood hourly rate plus com m ission. For inform ation c a ll 8409335, ask fo r Oebbie. A R B Y’S - 4412 N. M iller. Days and even inga available. S tart $3.50. For interviews, ask fo r M aureen, G erald, Karen, Shawn, 946-4481. A TH LETIC S. A R O B IC Instructors, body b u ild e rs. N eed 5 m ore to earn $50$100/day part-tim e. Interview, 278-3006. BARTEN D ER /Q RILL cook needed fo r hin neighborhood sports bar. Flexib le ache dule. $8-812 per hour. A pp ly W oodshed I, M ill and Baseline. B U S Y S T A Y at hom e mom seeks raspón albte person sen sitive to needs o f tod­ dlers to h elp care fo r 2 young boys ages 3 years and 18 m onths. Flexib le hours, part-tim e, 55/hour. V ick i, 947-1044. C H ILD C A R E attendant needad fo r 3 w orking m others in ou r Tem po m edical o ffic e M onday, W ednesday, Frid ay mom ings. $3.35/hour. C a ll C indy, 829-8741 days o r 820-2280, evenings and week­ ends. C O R A L B A Y h irin g w aitresses, staff, cooks and dishw asher. A pp ly Tuesday Friday. 2-4:30,8380 V ia de Ventura. C O U N TER H ELP, Dry cleaners, full-tim e. Thom as and Hayden, Scottsdale; South ern and MIN, Tem pe. 947-7530, Afforda­ ble D ry Cleaners. C R U IS E SH IPS now h irin g. Sum m er and career opportunities. (W ill train). E xcel­ le n t pay plu s w orld travel. Haw aii, Baha­ mas, Caribbean, etc. C a ll now! 206-7367000, ext. 102C. (A Z-C A N ) D ISA B LE D S TU D EN T needs help part tim e. Approxim ately 10-12 hours/week. $5/hour. N o experience necessary, w ill train. References required. Liftin g re­ quired (100 pounds). 829-0927. D O U B LE YO U R Pleasura/fun. Babysit­ ters needed evenings/w eekends for ac­ tive tw in boys. Scottsdale, M cD ow ell/Hayden. 941-4325. EA SY W ORK! E xcellen t pay! Assem ble products a t hom e. Cab fo r Inform ation 504-641-8003 e x t A-7836. EX TR A M O N EY Is nice, but you can help people too. Earn $120 p lu s a m onth. Safer, faster plasm a donation o n ly at A B i Centers due to autom ated procedure. $5 bonus to new donors on first donation wltb th is ad. A sk about add ition al bo­ nuses. (M onday-Saturday) U n iversity Plasm a Center, Asaociated B ioscience, Inc. 1015 S. R ural R d, Tam pa, 968-8139. FIN A N C IA L PLA N N IN G A ssistant. 10-20 hours w eakly. Ju n io rs, se n io rs only. Career potential. C a ll M ark R. 346-7466. G AM ER O O M ATTEN D AN T, no expert ence necessary . D ependable and honest. M ust be a b lrto w ork 11 a.m .-8 p.m. parttim e. A p p ly In person to C h ris at Players C h oice Ltd, Cornerstone M all, 83.75/hour. G O O D PAR T-TIM E job to r student who can study w hile w orking. 20 hour work week, 10 p .m .4 a m., $5/hour. Send resume: PO box 8500, Phoenix, 85066. G O VERN M EN T JO B S! Now hiring In.your area, both skille d and unskilled. F o ra Hst o f jobs and app licatio n c a ll 1-615-3832627, e x t J321. GO VERNM ENT JO B S. $16,037to $69,406. Im m ediatehiring! Y ou r area. C a ll (refun­ dable), 1-518-459-3611,ext. F203forfederal list 24 hours. H AV E YO U seen th e A S U Student Hand book and C alen dar? It's a handy pocket size book, fille d w ith everything you ever wanted (or d id n 't w ant to) Know about co lle g e life . It’s even got a d a lly reference calendar! The really neat thing about the Handbook Is that it's produced by A S U students. That's rig h t Students gather the inform ation, w rite and e d it the copy; shoot five photos: design thè cover and Inside pages and last, b u t ce rtain ly riot le a st they desig n and se ll the advertising that supports th is annual even t Students spend fg ng h ou rs w ith creativity flow ing, ideas exchanging and the fu lfillm e n t o f producing th eir very own handbook. We'd tike to o ffe r y o u the chance to jo in th is team and gsin Invaluable experience w hile you're in co lle g e. W e need several ad ver risin g sales representatives to create, design and s a li advertising to lo ca l retail businesse s. If you have a strong com iM tl m ent to excellen ce arid pride in a jo b wen done, w e'd lik e to speak W ith you. You m ust be satf-m otivated, punctual, a good tim e m anager, ow n s ca r and be a people person. Please c a ll today and jo ln a team of dedicated A S U students who are com ­ m itted to m aking th e 196649 A S U Stu­ dent H andbook and C olander the béat C a ll D ari Ellstrom a t966-6565 today! P.8. If you are w ondering what In the heck a Strident H andbook is, stop b y Student P u b licatio n s In M atthew s Center and gat a free copyi state Pi*»* Wednesday, September 7,1988 help wanted HELP FO R o ffice cleaning. Dependable, own transportation, Scottsdale location, night-tim e. C le an record . $4.25/hour. 391-0813. H O U SE C L E A N IN G W anted. F le x ib le hours, w eekly, $6/hour, cloae to cam pus. C all early evenings, 821-3877. HO USE C LEA N IN G , 2 m ornings a week. Scottsdale. O w n tra n s p o r ta tio n . J 5.50/hour. 948-2003. IMMEDIATE EM PLO YM EN T to r kitchen prep cooks. A p p ly In person at Chopan daz. Tuesday-Frlday. afternoons. Corner of Scottsdale Road and M cK ellips. IMM EDIATE O PEN IN G S to r part-tim e positions in com eum er opin ion research. National telephone Interview ing, no sell ing. Part-tim e openings: days, 8-2:30; evenings, 3:30-9. M inim um requlrem ent3 week day and 1 weekend shlft/w eek. Apply In person, M onday-Friday, 9-4, personnel office. 4515 S. M cC lin tock, Tempe. 831-2971. M ala/fem ale. EO E. LEARN SM A LL B usiness from the ground up. Lo cal ca r ren tal com pany needs counter representative fo r fu ll o r parttime. 833-0995. LIVE-IN, LIV E-O U T nannies. W eekend, day, evening babysitters wanted. Own tran sp o rtatio n . C a ll F rie n d s Forever Child care, 438-1099. LO CAL RAD IO Station has a part-tim e opening for a telephone m arket research position; no se llin g involved, d o se to campus. Great opportunity fo r a sophmore or junior. C a ll M ike M aloney after 1 at 966-6238. M ALE A ER O B IC S Instructor. B usy N.E. Mesa fitness center. O ut-going personal­ ity and dependability a m ust! A pp ly In person only. S tu dio Four, 2060 N. G ilb e rt Rd. help wanted help wanted M ALE/FEM ALE RECEPTIO NIST. Busy N.E. Mesa fitness center. O ut-going per­ son ality and dependability a must! Apply in person only. Studio Four, 2060 N . G il­ bert Rd. R E S PO N S IB LE PAR T-TIM E babysitter needed fo r 10 m onth old in ou r home. Contact Pant, 284-9716. R ESTAU R AN T D ELIVERY D rivers wanted, part-tim e and full-tim e, lunch dinner s h ift Advancem ent a v a ila b le / South Scottsdale. C a ll after t1 a.m., 423-0095. M ATU R E BABYSITTER needed for baby and pre-teens, afternoons and evenings. Dobson and Broadw ay area. 962-7466. M E SA FAM ILY YM CA prim e tim e, after sch ool ch ild developm ent program is h ir­ ing site directors and counselors. Hours are 2-6 p.m., M onday-Friday. A pply at 207 N. Mesa Dr., Mesa. N o phone ca lls please. N ATIO N AL FIRM now accepting applica tiona from A SU . $9.25 starting rate. Train­ ing provided. Management, branch office, and personnel opportunities. C a ll the Better B u sin ess Bureau, then ca ll us. V ector M arketing Corporation, 827-8535, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Felons need not apply. NU RSING STUDENT, grad o r undergrad, help care fo r fem ale A LS patient on respi­ rator. Liftin g required. Flexible hours, evenings/w eekends, p o ssib le liv e -in . Tem pe vicin ity, Rural/Baseline.839-3084. M EED M O TIVATED fun-loving people to w ork pool-side at valley resort catering to touristy and sellin g Panam a Jack. Benef­ its and great w orking conditions. Must have car. A pply in person at Here’s the Beach, 7607 & M cD ow ell Road, Suite 105, South corner of M ille r and M cD o­ w ell, between 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 941-2751. PAR T-TIM E W ORK. Tennis clu b atten dant, nights and weekends. C a li Bonnie, 948-5990, fo r appointm ent. PAR T-TIM E M O RNINGS. D elivery coun­ te r position *, $4.50 plu s. C a ll Pastry Courier. 230-0200. R E LIA B LE W O RKERS needed at K inkos Copies. Evenings and graveyard shifts preferable. 715 S . Forest, next to ASU . 894-9588. SNO W O ASIS Is now h iring counter help. H o u rs n eed ed a re 10 a.m .-5 p.m ., M onday-Friday, and 5 p.m .-l a.m. Frid ay and Saturday nights, and be w illin g to w ork som e week nights. Com e by and pick-up an app lication at 1037 S . Rural Road, corner of Lem on and Rural, Tempe. S T O C K Y A R D S R E S T A U R A N T h irin g lu nch w aitresses and bus boys. A pp ly 1:30-5, M onday-Friday. 5001 E. W ash­ ington. $100-$400. C a li University Plasma Center, A ssociated B ioscience o f Tem pe, 1015 S. Rural Rd.. is accepting applications for th e fo llo w in g p a rt-tim e positions: Phlebotomist & Front O ffice R E P L IC A W ATCH ES. H ighest q u a lity available. Rolex, G u cci, Piaget, Perpetual m ovement, end Lo u is Vuitton purses. $60-$125.376-9662. free lost/found FO U N D 9/6/88- Set o f keys in Stauffer H ell Breezewey. C laim at M U Inform ation Desk. FOUND: M IC R O C A SSETTES in Physi­ c a l S c ie n c e B u ild in g F -w in g . C a ll 732-9827 LO ST: BRO W N w allet with a ll ID between L L and Sahuaro H ail. C a li 784-9684, leave m essage. R ick N iles. - personals A O P i are psyched to be team ed w ith thé A -P h is for S ig N u relays. A D PI PLED G ES . You a il are great! Your actives love you! FA S332, 11:40. B lo n d e in back w ith glasses. Love to meet you soon. Reply here. FA S332,11:40. G E T PSYCH ED ! L ittle S ister Rush starts Thursday night s t 8:30. A ll g irls welcom e. Applleatlona wIM be aoeaptad until Monday, September 19. $ TAKE A B R EA K FRO M TH E BOO KS AND EARN $7-10/HR PART-TIME With our flexible hours you’ll still have plenty of time to study. •Guaranteed wage plus commission and incentives •Paid training KAREN : H A PPY U te Birthday!! Love. T risti. LA M B D A CH I AM K elly: T h is sem ester w ill bathe beet) R o cky P o in t was o n ly the beginning! B ig B ro C h ris. P A T R IC K M O SHER: You goof! It’s been 11 m onths and I s till th in k you’re wonder­ fu l! Happy anniversary sweetie! I love you! Jennifer. TRI SIG M A pledge K risti: Have you fig ­ ured out who your mom is yet? O nly one m ore day to go! Sigm a Love, Mom. R oses sre red, violets sre blue, just the right P srson sl, ca n m ake h er want you! •Convenient to A S U cam pus •NO C O L D CALLING At TMI, our friendly, supportive management staff will help you meet your earnings potential. This is telemarketing the way it’s supposed to be! 437-0116 For personal interview call T o m Stevens at M on d a y-F rid a y 8:30am-4:00pm 967-0066 $1.50 A N D Up. A A A Q u ality w ork and laser printer. 33 years experience. C a ll M arian. 839-4289. $1.5Q/PAGE and up. Class/term papers, thesis; 1 page resum es $15; laser printer. P ick -u p /d e liv e ry availab le, in clu d in g W est Cam pus. C a li Sue. 944-4882. $1.50/PAGE FO R quality work! T h is week: 10% discou n t to students from Illin ois! Sesam e Street W ord Processing, 8393626, anytime) A C C EN T S IN Typing. Typing service near A SU . Q u ick turnaround. O ver 30 years secretarial experience. 946 9982. A S U A R E A . Typing, w ord processing, editing. F a s t accurate. C a ll anytim e. P ri­ ces com petitive, negotiable. 966-2186. C E R E U S W O RD Processing. Q uick, ex­ perien ced, q u a lity guaranteed. Term papers, theses, form letters, resumes, D ictaphone. 947-7796. FA ST RETU RN. Experienced typist. W ill edit spelling, punctuation, grammar. Accu­ racy guaranteed. Joan, 839-0772. FLYIN G FIN G ERS now has a M ac II and la se r p rin ter! Resum es, rep orts, etc. Susan. 945-1500. FO RM ER ASU staffers: W qrd Perfect. Xerox M em orywriters, M cIntosh com pu­ ter/!aser graphics. A rtist available for charts, diagram s, and desktop publish ing. Experienced with APA, M LA, gradu ate school, etc. G radutate students and faculty w ork welcom e. C a ll Donna or Joan, 945-6302. services Q U ALITY, Q U ICK typing. Papers, reports, -resum es. Pick-up/delivery available. One day service available. Glnny, 956-5163. ED ITIN G AN D Proof reading, inclu din g th e sis and dissertation s. Reasonable, 968-8898. TH E PAPERW O R KS- Thesis, report, and resum e typing. IBM com patible word processing. Near A SU . 921-9575. EX PER IEN CED M ATH tutor available for W est-side students. M AT077 through C a lc 3. Reasonable rates. Tom , 979-7915. wanted H AV E U NW ANTED fa d e ! o r body heir rem oved perm anently by electrolysis. Free consultation. N ear A SU . C a ll M aria at A S o ft Touch Electrolysis, 829-7829. PER SO N A L W EIGHT Training- Private gym - Set you r own hours- O ne on one sessions. C a ll 897-2975. •Regular pay increases •4 to 9 p.m. shift with some flexibility typing/ word processing AA KU R IT T YPIN G - short papers, over­ n ig h t/ lo n g pap ers, prom pt service/ tra n scrib e tapes/ g oo d ra te s/ L in d a 831-0349. V O IC E M AIL box w ill take message« w h ile you are in e late o r unavailable.280* 9063,24 hours. •Paid vacations C H EA P ER TH AN the cheapest airfares to moat m ajor citie s. C a ll now, 820-8808. K A PPA S : G et ready to fly w ith the ducks R elays 88... Brad and K elly. TH A N K YO U St. Jude for favors granted. ABU . For application Information eontaet the student RID E- N EED ED anytim e by 8 a.m. to A SU . S ou th ern /Priest, Tem pe. D aily. Back after 5:30,829-1128. 20% O FF a il resum es and w ord process ing. Sam e day service. Laser printing. Professional im age. 921-1129. T H A N K YO U St. Anthony fo r prayers answ ered. T.U. CO ACHES & OFFICIALS A PP R O X. $210/S EA S O N A L L STA T E S Dr!ves w ay- C ars available21 o r older. 992-5200. H A PPY BIR TH D AY Matthew Eldridge!!!! Have a fantastic day) Love your sister, M ichele. WANTED: G irla VO LLEY B A LL transportation $1.50 PER page. Any Type W ord Process ing. S p ellin g and gram m ar corrected. Som e graphics available. C a li Debbie. 961-1495. C IT Y O F S C O T T S D A L E R EC R EA TIO N DIVISION hety wonted PA Y O F F your bids and reduce your m onthly paym ents w ith a new hom e ow ners co nsolidation loan. C a ll us now fo r, varyfastapproval. 1stand2nd mortgagee a v a i l a b l e . C a l l n o w : 6 0 2 -4 1 3 0378. W o r fd w y n A c c e p t a n c e Com pany, a firm you Can trust. MB-6011 (AZ-CAN ) G R EEK S: D O N 'T forget, Greek Steering Chairm en app licatio ns are due today! A vailable in the Greek L ife O ffice. Employment Office or call 904-2482. Call today, Mesa Y o u c o u ld rece ive Autom ated Plasm apheresis C enter C U S T O M G O L D S M IT H IN G . s ilv e rsm ithing and Jewelry repairs. M ill Avenue Jew elers, 968-5967. S IG M A C H i Den Cam pions- Long tim e no ta lk sin ce the D evil House la st Friday. W ish I had yOur num ber, so instead, here's m ine (423-1685), Your Parkview V illa Bud. •Top commissions paid •N icest office in town •Flexible hours available •Guaranteed salary M ales 19-55 needed to participate in ; pharm aceutical studies Find it In the Classifieds! $ Great way to earn a lot of money if you can read, and have a pleasant but ag­ gressive personality. Laboratories, Inc. W ÉLL-G RO O M EO women fo r part-tim e em ploym ent in health fitn ess field. C a ll fo r interview , 278-1117. PIAN O IN STRU CTIO N . A ccepting new stu d e n ts now , a d u lts an d c h ild re n . Nation a lly ce rtified teacher and pianist. Ask abdut special offers. 1st lesson free. 898-1404. B eys FLA G FO O T B A L L Harris W EIG H T RO O M consultant. Part-tim e position. B usy ty .E Mesa location. O ut going person ality and dependability a m ust! A p p ly in person only, Studio Four, 2060 N. G ilb ert Rd. PER SO N A L W EIGHT trainer. Ready to help. O ne-on-one o r group train in g. C a ll Tom , 966-0299. a ve rag es $5-$7 a n hour. O u r T e m p a o ffic e is lo ca te d approxim ately 5 m inutes from cam pus. P le a se c a ll D ia la m e rtca M a rk e tin g fo r d e ta ils. O f W A R E H O U S E /Ç O U N T E R M an, p arttim e. fle x ib le . 2220 W. 14th Street. Tem pe, 85281. C L A S S IC A L G U ITAR in stru ctio n - de­ velop any style o f play- firs t lesson % price- c e il 966-8621. KARISM A 947-0142 O ut: sa le sp e o p le w ork in a m odem , com fortable b u sin ess en viron m ent, co n ta ctin g e sta b lish e d cu sto m ers o n lo n g d istan ce lin es. G u a ra n te e d sa la ry o r co m m issio n , w hichever is greater, and 926-0516 W ANTED PART-TIM E. Light office duties. $4/hour. Late afternoon hours. C a li 9676424. Lee. A E R O B IC IN STR U C TO R C e rtifica tio n w orkshop by N ational A ero b ics Training A ssociation at Phoenix C enter fo r Sports M edicine. W eekend of Septem ber 30th. C a ll 963-9415. 1-6 p.m ., 8-8 p.m. $ C A S H PAID. Jew elry o f a ll kinds, in clu d ­ in g g old, sterling, gem s, pearls, antique, etc. Rare Lion , 921S. M ill Avenue. Tem pe Center. 968-6074. instruction Weekends Also Available PHONE SALES W A I T R E S S E S W A N T E D f o r fu n neighbor hood sports iounge/restaurant. F le x ib le s c h e d u le , g o o d $; A p p ly W oodshed II, Dobson and U niversity, after 5 p.m. C A S H FO R your trust deed, contract, m oftgag*. A n y «fz*. ferm , location. Fast fa ir co n fid e n tial quotas. C a ll today, no obligation. M B7778.1^00-348-1731r Note Brokers o f Am erica. (A Z-CAN ) V IN E T A V E R N . P a rt/fu ll-tim e co o k wanted. A pply in person, 801 E. Apache. D ie le m e H ca M a rk e tin g , th e n a tio n 's fin est telem arketing firm , is now a cce p tin g a p p lica tio n s fo r th e follow ing shifts: $ C A S H FO R g o ld and diam onds. M ill Avenue Jew elers, 414 S. M ill, S u ite 101, Tem pe. 968-5967. S U B JE C T S N EED ED , food and nutrition lab feeding study. Nonsm oking men, 3055 years old. Subjects receive free food, free lab w ork, free blood pressure m oni­ toring, m edically supervised, free nutri­ tion counseling. Parking available. Maura Carney, 965-2110 o r Sue M urphy RD, 965-6450. Com plete training pro­ gram . O ur custom ers call us. Beginners earning $300 per week. Young, c a s u a l a tm o s p h e re . S e c re ta ria l p o s itio n s open. Established ’ na­ tional com pany. 829-1140 V IN E T A V E R N . P a rt/fu ll-tim e b o o k­ keeper wanted. A pply in person, 801 E. Apache. STU D EN TS EARN $5.85/hour for parttim e w ork weekends in d som e m ornings, Scottsdale area. C a ll the A rizona Repub lie , 271-8687, between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. FU LL-TIM E P A Y AFTERNOON EXPANSION S5.50 per hour guaranteed services STU D EN TS: PART-TIM E w ork, full-tim e pay. Great opportunity fo r those who qualify. For personal interview c a ll C B S S u p p ly , Inc. betw een 9 a.m .-4 pirn. M onday-Friday, 921-2697. PAR T-TIM E HOURS/ AFTER CLASS HOURS Jewelry help wanted S A LE S LA D Y . C A R E E R fashion, parttim e, flexib le hours. C a ll N ancy, 2532890. Towne Square Shop, Sheraton Hotel, 101 N. Central, Phoenix. Page 31 HIV or DRUG SCREEN (Alcohol, TCP, THC,etc.) $29 each 35+ BLOOD CHEMISTRIES with tO study URINALYSIS (Including explanation of test) . $39 special Know your unique profile. Early warning of infections, dietary prob­ lems, enzymes, heart risk meters, cholesterol. H 0L, LDL, triglycerides. Confidential tasting a t a lab n ear you. EA R LY H EA LTH A LE R T 996-7600 W ANTED EA R LY sports care. English. Italian, Germ en. A ston M artin/H eaiy. Ferrari, M aaerati, Cobra. Race cars, early Jacquar. Lotus. Speedster. 213-392-0680. (AZ-CAN ) adoptions ADO PTIO N: W E have everything we have alw ays dream ed o f except a baby to love. W ish to adopt a newborn. M edical/legal expenses pate. Celt co lle ct516-586-5450. (A Z-CAN ) AD O PTIO N . LO VIN G C a lifo rn ia couple, professional, w ish to adopt w hite new­ born. Legal, confidential, expenses paid. C a ll Kathy co lle ct, 213-843-5643 after 5 p.m., weekends. I AM a teacher long in g to be a full-tim e mother. M y author/screenw rifor husband, yearns to be a father. Adoption is ou r on ly hope. B eau tiful sunny bedroom s in both ou r hom e end ou r country house are just w aiting fo r a ch ild . S o are m any close relatives. Beet education/health «rare. Expanses pete. Lagal/confteential. Phone M addy end Bob co lle ct. 212-957-1073. Please answ er ou r prayers. (AZ-CAN ) Page 32 S M iN t i Leo n ard lo se s cou n t of retirements, says he w on’t a d d LO S A N G E L E S ( A P ) — Sugar R a y L eon ard, adm ittin g he has retired so m any tim es he cannot rem em ber the ex a ct count, vow ed Tu esday he would not be adding to that figu re. “ I 'l l n ever re tire aga in ,” Leonard said at the firs t stop o f a seven -city tour prom otin g his N ov. 7 fig h t at Caesars P a la ce in L a s V egas, N ev., again st W orld B oxing Council ligh t-h eavyw eigh t cham pion Donny Lalonde. “ I lo ve this sport, and w ith God’s help, I can continue to do it. I ’d rather do this than a 9-to-5 jo b .” Leonard, 32, refu sed to say how long he would continue fightin g. “ I ’H know when to c a ll it quits, and that w ill be before they h it m e m ore than I hit them ,” Leohard said. “ People say I ’ m gettin g older, but I think I ’ m as fast as I was fiv e years a go.” to it Leonard previously had announced his retirem en t before upsetting M arvin H a gler to win the W BC m iddlew eight title on A p ril 6,1987. Leonard also retired a fter su fferin g an eye injury follow in g a knockout o ver then-W orld Boxing Association cham pion Thom as H earns Sept. 16,1981, and a fter a 1984 com eback fig h t against K evin Howard. Caesars oddsm akers h ave m ade the 28-year-old Lalonde a 4-1 underdog, a status he knows w ell. B r o w s ^ flH H ConDm nd from pag« 25. . “ I fe lt (m y play had been) p retty good and I just don’t want the w hole atm osphere to a ffe c t m e. I w ant to go in and do a good jo b .” Brow n said the team has q u ite a jo b ahead o f it — elim in atin g China or Peru , tw o opponents the U nited States has fa iled to beat consistently, to m ake the fin a l round. “ W e’re not a fa v o rite to m ed al,” Brow n said. “ But w e do h ave a chance to m edal. W e’ re goin g in w ith the attitude, ‘L e t’ s g iv e it our best shot.” ' Com e O ctober, W ebb said she plans to continue p la y­ in g fo r the national squad fo r a couple m ore yea rs and then finish her degree. M eanw hile, Brow n said that no m a tter w hat the outcom e o f the gam es, she has on ly one plan o f action. “ I ’ ll be righ t back h ere,” she said. Olympic security deployed around Seoul lor Games S E O U L , S ou th K o re a (A P ) — Thousands o f com ­ m an dos and p o lic e a re b e in g d e p lo y e d arou n d O lym pic stadium s, hotels and oth er fa c ilitie s as part o f a m assive secu rity oper­ a t i o n f o r th e S u m m er G am es. Com m andos in green uni­ form s o r cam ou flage battle fatigu es arm ed w ith sub^ m ach in e guns p a tro l the A th letes V illa g e and Seoul’ s K im p o In tern ation al A ir­ port. C hildren and anyone else en terin g the airp ort a re ch ecked w ith m eta l scan­ ners. P eo p le visitin g Seoul’s top h otels h ave to w alk through m eta l d etectors and answer questions from p o lice about w hy th ey a re th ere. Com­ m andos w ith m ine detectors and sn iffin g dogs check the m ain press cen ter and its grounds fo r b om b s., “ T h e sec u rity and bur­ ea u cra cy a re in cred ible. It takes hours to g e t things d o n e ,“ s a id a C an adian jo u r n a lis t w a itin g to be clea red through a security check. T h e O lym pics a ré shap­ in g up as the m ost h eavily gu arded sports even t in his­ t o r y w i t h s o m e 120,000 p o lice and m ilita ry guard­ in g the G am es. T h e South K orean m ilita ry is on a lert alon g w ith the 42,000 U.S. troops based in the country and oth er A m erica n f o r e » . in the surrounding region. South K orean authorities a re try in g to m in im ize the secu rity and sm ooth it as m uch a s p ossib le b y in­ stru ctin g guards to b e polite and sm ile . S ecu rity has been toned down to keep it fro m b ein g a m a jo r head­ ach e, o ffic ia ls said. “ T h e pedice a re not used to sm ilin g. W e try to m ake them keep sm ilin g,” said H w an g ICyu W oong, head o f s e c u r it y fo r th e S eou l O lym p ic O rgan izin g Com­ m ittee. -fi m m Thursdays Max celebrates his passion for the ladies, giving away $1,000.00 in personal check to some very lucky ladies. Drinks are just $1.00 for the ladies and there is never a cover for the ladies on Thursday...Just ask for M A X S Every Friday the party starts early with Max’s Happy Hour. Live music from Azz Izz, theValley’sFunky Reggae. Complimentary Buffet and Two for Ones til 8:00PM. Then Max’s will connect you to international nighlife till AMaxOriginal- Bring any coin and Max will give you any drink in the house till 9:00PM then the City Night­ life begins, the best European and Domestic music in the Southwest. Party till 3:00AM or until the sunrises on the Join TheOfficialMeetingof Max's Bird Watchers Club watching the Cardinals. Specially priced drinks, 25C Hot Dogs & Hamburgers. Beat the Bookie with our own Johnny the Geek, ride on Max’s Fmetrolley service to& from the game. 919 EAST APACHE BLVD. » TEMPE, ARIZONA 85281 » (602) 921-9776