is Discovery launches astronauts into orbit ■ V r "' '" M M ’ ’ WKP Associated Press photo jW W d d Friday, September 30, 1988 •C op yrig h t State Press. 1988 Tempo, Arizona T h é space shuttle D iscovery leaves the pad heading fo r orbit Thursday m orning to begin the first shuttle flight in two and a half years. CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - More than 2>/2 years after the trauma and tragedy of the Challenger disaster, the shuttle Discovery rocketed into orbit Thursday, carrying five astronauts on a comeback flight that NASA hoped would signal a rebirth of the American manned space program. Riding two redesigned booster rockets, the winged spacecraft blasted off launch pad 39B at 11:37 a.m. EDT. Liftoff was delayed 98 minutes while NASA awaited a shift in peculiarly light winds along the Discovery flight path. The craft was safely in orbit, its crew ticking off a routine system checklist, when NASA officials stood before launch '.officers to hail the beginning of the four-day mission. “It’s great to be back in space again,” said the director of the Kennedy Space Center, Forrest McCartney. “Wow,” said NASA administrator James Fletcher. “It’s been a long wait.” The tension here was considerable and did not abate until Discovery shed its booster rockets, on schedule at 2:04 after liftoff. It was a faulty booster which led to the Challenger catastrophe. “Good luck and Godspeed,” was the send off from Launch Control to Commander Frederick Hauck. As the ship entered orbit, the communicator from Mission Control confirmed: “ Performance nominal.” Late Thursday, the astronauts released from the shuttle’s cargo bay a $100 million communications satellite. Months of remorse, restructuring and reb u ild in g en d ed w h e n the w inged spacecraft entered its initial orbit, about 110 miles above Earth, heading for 160 miles. President Reagan drew applause when he announced the successful launch at an awards ceremony in Washington. Saying the shuttle was “headed into orbit and America is back in space,” he saluted the bravery of the crew and added, “We ask God to bless this important voyage.” Trailing a 700-foot geyser of fire, Discovery vaulted from its pad and within seconds rolled into its desired course to orbit. An estimated quarter-million people watched from roads, river banks and other viewing spots in the Kennedy Space Center area; The atmosphere was anxious as the shuttle moved successfully through the stage of maximum aerodynamic stress at which Challenger broke apart, dooming its crew of sevenon Jan. 28,1986 just 73 seconds after liftoff. The flight passed its most critical milestone when its two 149-foot-tall solid fuel booster rockets burned out on schedule and jettisoned toward the Atlantic Ocean. The failure of a joint in one booster allowed flames to escape and led to the C hallenger exp losion . T he accid en t triggered hundreds of modifications to the shuttle and a new launch-oversight procedure in which former astronaut Robert Crippen held one-man authority to approve launch. He did, sending the shuttle toward orbit through partially cloudy skies. Aboard with Navy Capt. Hauck; Air Force Col. Richard Covey; Marine Lt. Col. David C. Hilmers; John M. Lounge; and George D. “Pinky” Nelson. With the boosters shed, Discovery’s three liquid fuel main engines burned for another 6*4 minutes to propel Discovery and its crew into orbit. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration, indeed the entire country, had to be relieved. Another catastrophic failure could have killed the shuttle program and seriously jeopardized future U.S. space efforts. “ We’ve got about nine minutes of work left to get this program back into space,” said Bob Sieck, the launch director, as he briefed the flight crew and restarted the countdown clock. Although four days of space experiments lie ahead, the shuttle’s main propulsion systems passed their tests during the climb to orbit. Landing was scheduled for Monday at Edwards Air Force Base in California. Thursday morning’s countdown was smooth, except for Florida’s fickle weather. Spacecraft computers, configured to expect autumn winds in a certain range, did not have adequate data to steer the craft through weak winds at high altitude. NASA w a ite d u n til c o n d itio n s im p ro v ed , abandoning its original 9:59 a.m. launch target. Turn to S h u ttle, page 3. O ffic ia ls to p re s e n t s ta te ’s b id lo r s u p e r c o llid e r B y SHERI JO H N SO N State P ress ’■ An ASU professor and Arizona officials will travel to Washington, D.C„ Sunday to present the state’s bid for the $4.4 billion superconducting super collider. Richard Jacob, chairman of ASU’s physics department, will join Gov. Rose Mofford, Arizona Board of Regents President Herman Chanen, Circle K president Karl Eller and others to make up the delegation’s 20 members; A complete list of names is not being released because it could jeopardize the state’s strategy, said Vada Manager, Moffords’ press secretary. The delegation will try to convince Secretary of Energy John Herrington within one hour that Arizona is the best site for the atom smasher. Their presentation will be Oct. 4. “I feel confident that we’re going to make a fine presentation,” .Jacob said. “I feel confident in the value of our site proposal. “I’m not guaranteeing the citizens of Arizona that we’re going to bring this thing home. But we have as good a chance as anyone and a better chance than most.” When completed, the SSC will be a 53-mile underground ASU professors work to overcome reduction of library system budget B y KAM H .LE NIXON State P re ss j§ ASU professors are finally feeling the impact of the library’s two-year budget crunch, § ' Some are conducting their research elsewhere. Others have started libraries within their own departments. Some say they don’t know what to do. 1 The squeeze professors are feeling has come after the Arizona Legislature, for the second year in a row, failed to compel for inflation in ASU’s growing library system. A spokeman for the Judicial Budget L egislative Committee described the freeze: “H ie current library acquisitions budget was $4,148,900 for the past two years. The Legislature funded no inflation for all other expenditures for these years. “They didn’t reduce, they just didn’t increase because we didn’t have enough money,” said John Lee, principal fiscal . - Turn to Libraries, P>0* 3. oval tunnel that will hurl protons into each other at almost the speed of light. Jacob said he will tell Herrington how hard ASU and UofA have worked to develop support for the collider. “We’ve had a very cooperative effort with our counterparts at UofA,” he said. “I have a small statement that has already been prepared that describes pretty much what ASU’s participation has been in the project,” Arizona is one of seven states being considered for the collider and will be the first to give its presentation. Jacob Tum to ColHder, page 3. W EATH ER Sunny skies and warm weather are expected to continue in the Valley through the weekend, with high temperatures in the mid 90s. Today’s high should be around 96. Overnight lows will range from the high 60s to low 70s through Monday. IN SID E., Sports psychologist. | Jud y Van RaaRe discusses A S U ’s commitment to the mental side of athletics. Page 6. -»M0Ê3 Classified............................. 21 C o m ics.................................. ............1 6 Entertainment. ...... . ....... Opinion ...... ......................' 4 Police Report................ 9 Spo rts...................................... „1 7 Tod ay.......... .............................. 2 11 mmm Voi. 71 No. 28 M I statepress Arizona State University's Morning Daily SteteFress world/nation in brief Dukakis pledges cleanup of toxic waste sites within eight years NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. (AP) - Democrat Michael Dukakis, with actor and environmentalist Robert Redford at his side, took aim today at the Reagan administration’s environmental record and promised a toxic waste site cleanup within eight years. As for his Republican opponent in the presidential race, Dukakis said: “Calling George Bush an environmentalist is like calling Dan Quayle a statesman.” In a speech prepared for delivery at Rutgers University, Dukakis cited Bush’s role as chairman of the Regulatory Relief Task Force and blamed the vice president for blocking regulations to reduce lead in the air as well as a plan to control toxic wastes. An active environmentalist and Dukakis supporter, Redford joined the Democratic nominee on the platform at Rutgers. DUkakis received the endorsement of the League of Conservation Voters, Environmental Action, Friends of the Earth and Clean Water Action. ? “Mr. Bush’s administration has had eight years to clean up toxic wastes,” Dukakis said. “They’ve started the cleanup on only 137 sites on the National Priorities List out of a total of 1,200.” He said that in his administration “cleanup will be completed or well under way at every single one of the nearly 1,200 Superfund sites On the National Priorities List by December 1996.” Pentagon okays m issile sales to Belgium and Netherlands WASHINGTON (AP) —The Pentagon informed Congress on Thursday it had approved arms transactions with two European allies involving more than 800 Sidewinder air-toair missiles. ^ Assuming there are no congressional objections, the Defense Department said it would sell 545 AIM-9M Sidewinders to Belgium for $49 million and 290 of the dogfighting missiles to the Netherlands for $27 million Soviet Parliament schedules unannounced sp e cia l session MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet Union called extraordinary meetings of its legislature and of the policy-making Central Committee, and a source said today that a shake-up in the party hierarchy is likely in -lin e with Mikhail s Gorbachev’s reforms. The convening of the 300-member Central Committee on Friday and of the 1,500-member Supreme Soviet on Saturday brought officials rushing back to the capital. The Supreme Soviet, the nominal parliament, usually convenes twice a year after meetings of the Central Committee. The Central Committee had been expected to meet by the end of October, but the source said reform plans were proceeding “faster than was expected.” « today The Today s e c tio n is a d a ily c a le n d a r o f e v e n ts h a p p e n in g a t A S U th a t is p re s e n te d a s a s e r v ic e to th e U n iv e rs ity c o m m u n ity . A n y c a m p u s c lu b o r o rg a n iz a tio n c a n su b m it e n trie s fo r p u b lic a tio n to th e S ta te P ress, Mouer Building, Room 137. • A IE S E C will have guest speakers Ed Beauvais, C E O of America West, Louis Wright, Vice Chairmen of Western Savings, and Douglas Yearly, Executive Vice President of g u a ra n te e p u b lic a tio n . D e a d lin e fo r th e e n trie s is 1 p .m . Phelps Dodge Corp. They will speak from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. in the M U Arizona Room. • S o c io lo g y D e p a rtm e n t Dr. Jam es F. Short, Professor of Sociology and Director, Social and Economic Sciences Research Center from, Washington State University will th e p re v io u s b u s in e s s d a y . speak on “ The State of Sociology: A Reassessment” in lo c a te d in th e b a se m e n t o f M a tth e w s C e n te r, R o o m 15. E n trie s m u st b e le g ib le , a re s u b je c t to e d itin g fo r c o n te n t, s p a c e a n d c la rity , a n d w ill n o t b e ta k e n o v e r th e p h o n e . D u e to s p a c e r e s tric tio n s , th e S ta te P re ss c a n n o t M eetings • A ll S a in ts C a th o lic N ew m a n C e n te r Student Association Friday Night Live will plan to go iceskating at Newman Center courtyard at 6:30 p.m. Cost: $3.00 (includes skate rental.) Social Science Building, Room 318 at noon. • A S A S U S p e c ia l E v e n ts “ Friday Fix” will be “ Let’s Talk,” an open microphone forum to express your thoughts and opinions. Old Main Park next to white gazebo at 12:30 p.m. • C o n so rtiu m fo r A tla n tic S tu d ie s Jim Cooney from The • T h e F a rc e S id e C o m e d y H o u r will be performing a free comedy show. Headlining this week in the MU Cinema at 12:30 p.m. is Karen Wright. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University will discuss admission requirements and other appropriate issues to the school. Discussion from 3:45 p.m. to 5 p.m. in • G ra d u a te S tu d e n t A s s o c ia tio n will discuss “ Tuition waiver taxes — what is the law?” at the brown bag lunch in M U Coconino Room at noon. •Esperanto A S U meets Saturday at 12:30 p.m. upstairs in the M U , to continue free classes fo r beginners and advanced Esperanto students. B usiness meeting at noon. • A S U L a cro sse C lu b Fall practice o n Saturday on Sahuaro Field. Call 926-4865 for more information. •Dynamic Exchange C lu b will hold D E X BASH on Saturday — food, drink, dance and fun at 9 p.m. in Meridian Corners Clubhouse. New members must be accompanied by a member. *" * , m •Biom edical E n g in e e rin g S o c ie ty will have stadium cleanup at Sun Devil Stadium on Sunday at 8 a.m. • A S U W o m e n ’s L a c ro s s e C lu b will Nave second meeting at 1 p.m. on Sunday at Manzanita. • T h e C o lle g e o f E d u c a tio n will have a presentation by Dr. Barbara Holmes, entitled "Recruitinent and Selection of Minorty Students and faculty: A Challenge for Educators.” She will be making her presentation in the College of Business, Room 219 on Oct. 7 from 9 a.m. to noon. r i i i i I I I xWt I n t r c d iic t c r y © ffer I I I I I ,f t k 1 I I N an cy, jr : r® i fo r m e r ly o f T a lk in g H e a d s s a lo n , I h a s jo in e d th e sta ff o f I I F la m in g o H a irc u tte rs. «■ $ 1 © . € € > H a s h & t u t Sty le F e o . S1 3 - I 17 W ith C o u p o n For y our n e x t a p p o in tm e n t c a ii9 6 6 "1 3 9 1 Sell it in the State Press ^ 0 FR EE H A PPY HOUR B U F F E T ! 5.7 P .m . $ 1 .0 0 t a u m H t n - l a t - 9 1 ï 1 . L e im h - 1 st t im e « H u n ts © ft F u r a i C e h in c i C i r c l e t \ BBQ BEEF W/CHIPS UN TIL 8 p.m. a t R u ra l & • BO YSEN B ER R Y KAM AKAZIS • s e x -ON-t h e - b e a c h t A p a c h e 4Ê>§m i N A L * S You've T ried The Rest, Now T ry The BEST!! w- ENTËRTAIN!'" '" ’-1 :a: CALL FOR DETAILS 9 6 8 -5 8 0 2 BUNDLE’S 4 £ V LIQ UO RS & M KT. New Location XXXKi « LET TH E C h o ic e o f W h o le W h e a t o r O r ig in a l C r u s t R ED BIRD Hours: M onday-Thursday 4 p.m .-2 a.m. Friday 4 p.m .-2:30 a.m. Saturday D O THE R U N N IN G FO R Y O U ! 829-0064 1340 E. APACHE 11 a.m.-2:30 a.m. Sunday 11 a.m .-l a.m. Starting at 7 p.m. We A ccept M asterCard & Visa We Accept AIL Competitor's Coupons PLEASE USE YOUR COUPONS WHILE PLACING YOUR O R D E R . • 1324 W . University (just east of Priest) Volska Vodka, 750ml....... $4.98 M e ieter B ra u , 6 pk...... ...........1 .$ $ RC-CruSh, 2 Hr..................... 99 Used Playboy Magazines...... 94 Haagen Dazs Natural Ice Cream, Adult M agazines, Groceries, Ice, W ines, over 40 imported Beers. 967-9079 C H E E S E O N E IT E M w it h 2 to p p in g s (T W O F R E E $ 8 .7 5 P IZ Z A CO KES) $ 7 .9 9 CARDINALS SUPREME Only $9.99 Any 1 6 ” Pizza With As Many Items As You Want. 12" P IZ Z A with one topping WHOLE WHEAT SPECIAL * R e c e iv e T w o F r e e T o p p in g s | w h e n o r d e r in g $ 4 .7 5 W h o le W h e a t C ru s t Friday. September 30.1988 C o llid e r Shuttle___________ Continutd from paga 1. said the order was chosen randomly and added that being first may give the state an advantage. “We set the standard,” he said. “If you’re confident about the standards you’re going to set, you want to go first.” The other states vying for the project are Colorado, Texas, Illinois, Michigan, North Carolina and Tennessee. Mofford will be the spokeswoman for the state, but she will call on others for specific presentations, Manager said. 7'm not guaranteeing the citizens o f Arizona that w e’re going to bring this thing home. But we have as good a chance as anyone. ’ — Richard Jacob “It’s the governor’s chance to put Arizona’s best foot forward,” he said. The site would be 35 miles southwest of Phoenix, between Gila Bend and Mobile. Herrington will choose a “preferred” site by midNovember and give his recommendation to President Reagan. Reagan will then name a “designated” site before he leaves office in January. Jacob said if the collider comes to the state, the University will receive some great benefits. “It will give Arizona’s universities an aura of success and recognition that, whatever4t is now, will be substantially greater,” he said. “Every department will find it easier to attract outstanding people to campus for whatever reason.” Continued from page 1. Thursday morning’s countdown was smooth, except for Florida’s fickle w eather. Spacecraft computers, configured to expect autumn winds in a certain range, did not have adequate data to steer the craft through weak winds at high altitude. NASA waited until conditions improved, abandoning its original 9:59 a.m. launch target. Had the winds remained unacceptable, officials would have scrubbed the launch effort for the day. “Stay with us, I think we’ll make it,” the launch director told the astronauts after receiving an improving wind analysis. Hauck joked in reply, “We don’t want this thing to leave without us.” Hauck and his crew of four veteran astronauts awoke early, donned their orange, specially pressurized flight suits and drew enthusiastic cheers as they left to board the $1.5 billion spacecraft. Once on board they had to overcome problems with cooling systems in two of the space suits, the sort of minor mechanical glitch that nags almost every countdown. Launch crews pumped 528,000 gallons of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen into the craft’s cavernous fuel tank. It was just before dawn when NASA announced a delay in its original 9:59 a.m. launch target. “We’ll practically be flying a shakedown flight of a new spacecraft,” pilot Richard O. Covey said of the 26th shuttle flight. Because of more than 450 post-Challenger modifications, he predicted, “There probably will be some surprises, but overall we’ll have a safer vehicle.” m mm Associated Press photo T h e D isco v e ry a stro n a u ts, from le ft, D avid H ilm ers (background), R ichard Covey (hand up), G eorge N elson (background), Mike Lounge and R ick Hauck, leave the Kennedy Space Center O perations Building Thursday m orning. L ib ra rie s Continued trom page 1. analyst for the committee. ASU deans responded last year by redirecting $90,000 to the library to prevent cuts of periodical subscriptions. Faculty members said the $90,000 has bought them some time but doubt the future value of ASU’s research facilities. The University has been bold in redefining its imagë as a research institution. “We’re stalled by the lack of money but w e’ve got a little more time (after the $90,000 deferment),” education professor Donald Jacobs said. Jacobs said the threatened library acqusitions budget is a discrepancy between the current budget and the rising costs of foreign publications. “You’re not likely to find any other unit (at ASU) that has been hit so hard by inflation,” Jacobs said. . “Current talk of regular inflation at 4 or 5 percent is deceptive. In the library, you’re looking at 30 to 80 percent inflation,” he said. “When the Legislature gives us what they gave us two years ago, they actually could be giving us 30 percent of what they gave us two years ago.” Jacobs said the squeeze is particularly hard on ASU’s eagerly-sought researchers. “We’ve recruited specialists,” he said. “We can’t just stop supplying the materials. ' We can’t come back and take their library away from them.” Library officials said they did not feel comfortable commenting on the squeeze. One professor said faculty research has been slowed by a deficiency in retrospective materials with time wasted in reviewing prospective lists of “deadwood” journals. A sso cia te h istory professor Steve Batalden said the library routinely exiles vital retrospective materials. In addition, research is further hindered when professors “must make political justification of every journal” they deem necessary, he said. Batalden said he and his colleagues conduct their research at other universties during the summers because they can’t find their information at ASU. One faculty member who did not want to be identified said his division has formed a separate libary for its research from private collections of frequently used journals. rh 0 AU New 933 E. University. Tem pe 2 EXTRA LARG E 16” P I Z Z A S 2 M E D I U M 12 P IZZA S 2 J O N B O Y 10 P IZZA S W ITH T W O T O P P IN G S W ITH T W O T O P P IN G S W ITH TW O T O P P IN G S O ffer expires O ffer expires 10-3-88. O ffer expires 10-3-88. 10-3-88. COUPON P IZ Z A E x p . 10-3-88 6 95. phis tax COUPO N 16” E X T R A L A R G E 12” M E D IU M WITH ONE TOPPING COUPON P IZ Z A M A Q C # ■ W W plus P * tax NEW! W HOLE WHEAT CRUST! WITH ONE TOPPING Exp. 10-3-88 SALAO S m plus tax Bend but don’t break: Bork and the U.S. Constitution D a rrin H o s te tle r C o lu m n ist The World Trade Center in New York City, at 110 stories, is one of the tallest free­ standing structures in existence. It is a monument in concrete and steel, constructed to endure hundreds of years as a functional and majestic part of the New York skyline. The Center’s twin towers are a symbol of permanence and American ingenuity; of our will to construct lasting institutions that ex em p lify what man is capable of achieving. But there is an unseen crucial ingredient built into the towers, without which they would have long ago cracked and crumbled to the ground. When the harsh, cold winds blow into the City off the Atlantic Ocean, buffeting the Center, the apparently unforgivingly rigid structures begin swaying in the gale. Both towers bend in the wind up to 9 feet in any direction. That flexibility and accommodation to the circumstances around them, provided for in the original design, is vital to keep the Center standing. Because not even the steel- girded towers could stand upright in the face of the constantly changing, violent winds without yielding slightly to their demands. Architects, wishing to see their creations endure for ages, understand this. Judge Robert Bork would have made a lousy architect. And an even worse Supreme Court Justice. Bork, the Reagan nominee for the high court who was dissected by a Senate subcommittee last year in front of a national TV audience before being disposed of, blew into town Wednesday night to speak at a fundraiser for Republican Senate hopeful Keith DeGreen. The button-down affair, held at the Sheraton downtown, was a gathering of heavy hitters from the state Republican party. Candidates vying for offices ranging from the state House to mine inspector were there to be introduced to the crowd, pay $50-plus a head for the standard rubberchicken dinner and hear the wisdom of the conservative judicial icon — Robert Bork. I half expected Bork to be there prostituting himself for a Republican candidate in the same manner as another Reagan refugee — Ollie North. North, a strange amalgamation of conqueror and martyr, deposed from a position of power and out to make all the cash he can by helping to hype people into office with the aid of the 10-second spot his famous face insures on the local nightly news, has been quite successful storming around the country with this kind of hit-andrun endorsement campaign — drawing $15,000 to $25,000 an appearance from candidates eager for the patriotic air his touch may bring. But Bork wasn’t there to pimp for DeGreen. He was there to discuss something that weighs heavy on his mind and to draw the battle lines, as he sees them, that threaten to fracture the nation. While the crowd ate their cheesecake, Bork plunged into a, diatribe against the threat of judicial activism that sounded like nothing less than a call to arms. “There are two sides to the struggle,” he said. “There are those who believe that the Constitution is. law and that its principles are fixed. And there are those who believe it is a malleable document. “My fallen nomination was one battle in a long-running war for control of politics and of our general culture. We are undergoing a revival of radicalized politics that we thought had been decisively beaten in the 1960s. “But they are back. . . stronger and more determined than ever.” Bork went on to decry the “activist” positions taken by the Supreme Court during the last 30 years, elaborating on the philosophy that caused the Senate to keep him off the bench in the first place — the Constitution means what it literally says it means, nothing more, nothing less. Never mind that by following that logic, every major piece of post-Civil War civil rights legislation .would have been struck down as an over-extension of federal power. And never mind that Thomas Jefferson, who Bork repeatedly cited as (me of his “strict constructionist” role models, could have b e e n im p e a c h e d u n d e r s.uch an interpretation for purchasing the vast territory known as “Louisiana” in 1803 without congressional consent. Bork is a man who fails to see that the true beauty of the Constitution is that it is similar to the twin towers of the World Trade Center — it was designed to remain rooted in a firm foundation of guiding principles while bending slightly to the winds of change. The wise men who we grant the task of interpreting the Constitution must recognize that flexibility was built in to accommodate circumstances that could never have been forseen two centuries ago. And without that flexibility to adapt to modern-day needs, the pressures put on the document would long ago have resulted in nothing less than collapse and revolution. A year after his rejection by the Senate, Bork has become a one-man traveling judical sideshow, preaching his doctrine for a profit. And a year after his rejection, it is clearer than ever before that he was and is unfit to serve on the highest court in the land. R IT T E R letters “MY CHILDREN, IN THIS BOOK YOU WILL FlNQ THE ONE TWTH...5HUT OUT ALLOTHERBELIEFS, SCORN THOSEwhoWüßr-THEYM E NO Hey, man, face reality! Editor: Hey, Stacy Coar, don’t you know that “creation science” is an oxymoron — a contradiction in terms like fundamentalist u n iv e r s ity or c lo s e t e x h ib itio n ist? Creationism is nonsense in spades. Hey, don’t you know that evolution is both a fact and a theory? The fact is evolution (i.e. descent with m odification) has happened. You are not a clone of your brother, sister, parents or ancestors. You have changed. The theory of evolution concerns how it happens which is largely but not completely understood. New results increasingly fine tune this remarkable theory — the central organizing concept of biology. Darwinism is as certain as the earth is a sphere. Hey, man face reality! the chimpanzee is your closest relative. You and he are 99 percent alike in genetic makeup. You may prefer to be a tiger or a mustang or a potted plant, but you are not. You are an animal, vertibrate, mammal, primate anthropoid, hominid and of the genus homo and the species sapiens. Cheers to your biology professor. You are at ASU to be educated not indoctrinated or brain stamped. You are here to learn facts — good, bad or indifferent. Don’t march with the armies of the night. The 120 categories of evidence you are distributing disproving evolution seem certainly to be those generated by creationist Walter Brown, but these are factoids. His last 31 “facts” concern the Noachian Flood which supposedly occured in 2348 B.C. (historical time) and drowned the earth to a depth of three miles — nonsense on stilts! By the way, Brown and I have a bet about the genuineness of the Shroud of Turin. He has lost. It is a fraud! Robert S. Dietz Professor of Geology Emeritus PLACEHERE.“ fg W "...AFTER ALL,' _ THIS IS AUNIVERSITY«" Institutional racism persists Editor: Thank you for your interest in the study of Organizational Influences on Minority Degree Attainment conducted by the National Center for Postsecondary Governance and Finance through its reseach center at Arizona State University. Much of the report in the September 28 issue of the State Press presents a good summary of the findings of our reseach. However the emphasis of the article as reflected in the headline is very misleading. The implication is that there is no need to develop strategies to facilitate minority higher education because “ . . .most minorities are satisfied with college” as your headline read. This phrase taken out of context suggests that nationally minorities are wellrepresented in colleges and universities, have a. positive experience and graduate. A substantial body of research shows that this is absolutly not true. Blacks, Hispanics, and Native Americans remain significantly underrepresented in higher education, report continuing incidents of institutional racism and have disproportional attrition rates. Our study is. unique in that our focuses involved ten universities with above average success in promoting minority degree achievement. In addition the interview data cited in the article were from successful graduates of those ten institutions. While our research demonstrates what a relatively few institutions have been able to do, our findings should not be used to reflect the overall conditions of minorities in higher education. To the contrary, our research suggests that there is a need for institutions to make minority higher education a high priority and to develop a comprehensive plan to promote degree achievement. Elizabeth Fisk Skinner Faculty Research Associate Verbal vomit Editor: For nearly four years now, I have engaged in a daily passive reading of the State Press. In general, I offer that the paper has improved considerably since autumn of 1984. Most notably, even the ink-smearing problem seem s to have been somewhat alleviated. However, a little constructive criticism is perhaps in order with respect to columnist Darrin Hqstetler. It is evident that Hostetler is an acutely aware, gifted and able writer. I. appreciate his efforts in tackling head-on some very controversial issues of the day. But his perennially pretentious, self-elevated tone is exasperating. The cynical and sarcastic manner he employs STATE PRESS M ARTY SAU ERZO PF JO AN M cKENNA Editor Managing Editor City Editor.................. v ........................... BEN M cCO N N ELL The State Press is published Monday thru Friday during the Asst. City Editor................. ...................... VICTOR BAR AJAS acdem ic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Opinion {Editor................................................ .MIKE RITTER Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempo, Arizona W ire Editor. ...................................... ADRIANE HO PKINS 85287. Newsroom. (602) 965-2292. We* do not answer News Editor.......................................PATRICIA VAN CO URT questions of general nature. Advertising and Production: (602) Arts Editor..... . .. ...^ ...4 . . ..............LAU RIE SMITH . 965-7572. Asst. Arts Editor. ............... .......... MATT LINOENBURG The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published Sports Editor..................................... ..........D AVE HO DGES for and circulated on the ASU cam pus. The news and views Copy C hief..................................................... SHAW N DAHL published in this newspaper are not necessarily ttiose of the Photo Editor................. ....... .....SUSAN SCHUM AN ASU adm inistration, faculty, staff of student body. in penning his verbal vomit leads one to suspect that each column is in fact a generic editorial kept on hand, with fill-in-the blanks for gripe and perpetrator (Bush, the Klan, the Greeks). If we students as rational, thinking, and perfectly capable beings — are to be forced into digesting Hostetler’s predictably liberal and subjective opinion, perhaps a little restaint is due so that we can draw our own conclusions. Just what is the monumental chip on his shoulder anyway? $ d ly Beth Dick Senior, Political Science quotable “ The a d v a n ta g e o f d o in g o n e ’s p ra is in g fo r o n e s e lf is th a t o n e c a n la y it o n so th ic k a n d e x a c tly in th e rig h t p la c e s .” —■ S am u el Butler Page 5 Eledroratoollsge ■ « . - Close fall vote may spell trouble for election process *i W ,£ R .N û ,Î » N W R r H ' MS 0 ^ VÍWWOW) t KNOWHl«? J e f f G r e e n fie ld U n iv e r s a l P r e s s S y n d ic a t e N ^ - 'r c ü r tP R ftftà IME N W « $ E N H M B E ß R E . \ CERTWHWWûUliNT KNCWMJRUGPU90?.. NEW YORK — I’ve got a troubling notion about where this campaign may be headed, and believe it or not, it’s got nothing to dp with the candidates or the press. No, I’m starting to worry about something a lot more important : the possibility that we will awake to find that the next president of the United States actually “lost” the election. .• ► ~ ¿G * * As every schoolchild is supposed to know, we don’t elect the president by direct popular vote. Rather, a candidate who wins the most popular votes in a state gets all of that state’s electoral votes and wins the White House if he gets a majority of those electoral votes. Every so often in our history, a president has been elected who is actually outpolled at the voting booths. The last time this happened was exactly a century ago, when Republican Benjamin Harrison ousted Grover Cleveland from the White House, even though Cleveland got .96,000 votes more than Harrison. * Those, of course, were very different times, when democracy was far less extensive than it is now. Women still lacked the right to vote; blacks were disenfranchised throughout the South; senators in most states were chosen not by the people but by state legislatures; and expectations about popular sovereignty Were far more limited. Yet that same result not only is still possible in these more democratic times, it has very nearly happened three times in this generation alone. In 1960, a shift of only 30,000 votes in Texas and Illinois — or, as some Republicans still have it, the accurate counting of votes in those two states — would have made Richard Nixon president even though John Kennedy had gotten more votes nationally.. In 1968, a shift of 110,000 votes in Ohio and Illinois would have deprived Richard Nixon of an electoral majority, giving third-party candidate George Wallace the power either to negotiate with the two major party candidates or to throw the election into the House of Representatives. And in 1976, a shift of 100,000 New York votes would have given the Republicans an Electoral College majority even though Jimmy Carter ran a million and a half votes ahead of Gerald Ford nationwide. That’s history. What about this campaign? As of now, we are heading into the dose popular contest that tends to categorize elections without elected incumbents <1960,1968, 1976). Moreover, the Republicans are far from cashing in on their presumed “electoral lock” — the pattern of dominating enough states to all but assure the GOP of victory. While the South seem s to be lining up behind Bush, there are signs of close races in states from North Carolina to Tennessee to Texas; and in die West and Midwest, states from California to New Mexico to Iowa remain within the grasp of Michael Dukakis. As for the battleground states, none of them, with the exception of Florida, are leaning very significantly to one candidate or the other. Imagine, then, a close race everywhere except in the South, where Bush rolls up big popular vote totals, imagine that we awake to find that more people have voted for the vice president than for the governor of Massachusetts, but that Dukakis has eked out narrow victories in enough big states to give him more that 270 electoral votes. Can you imagine the demands of Dukakis electors to “honor the national will” and vote for Bush? Can you imagine the angry debate that will replace the normal grace period granted to an incoming president? Can you imagine how weak a mandate Dukakis would have as he assumed the presidency — or how weak a mandate George Bush would have if he were to win the White House with fewer popular votes than Dukakis? Whoever you are for, I suggest you root passionately for this scenario to remain in the world of the imagination. None of us would want to face this as reality. SOUL ASYLUM Strike a m atch with a S TA TE PR ESS P ersonal adì S W l æ shc ^ h B U Y • S E LL » TR A D E Your books at Changing Hands, fo r quality cloth and paperbacks (no text* books, please) we pay 30% of our .re: sale price in cash or 90% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in-the store. (Sorry, no tradein s on Sat. or Sun.) Brow se through our three floors of: •New & Used Books •Art Prints, & Posters •Calendars 4 Cards •HandboundJournals M -F 10-9 SAT10-S SU N 12:6 C h a n g in g h a n d s 414MHIAVMMM 966-0203 O ld Town Tam p* SKYDIVE $105 WITH ASU I.D TAND EM at ' SKYDIVING ADVENTURES COOUDGE ARIZONA Skydive Arizona, Inc. HAN6 TIME mm w You saw them in SOMETHING WIL,D, heard them in MARRIED TO THE MOB, arid now Haledon, N.fls enigmatic Feelies are bringing, their subdued, celebratory sound to your town. Do the right thing. m Paul Kelly writes timeless Story songs with an eye for detail and an ear for the indelible hook. Catch this literate, loud, and quite brilliant Down Under band on tour with the Smithereens. P ro d u ced by A lan Thorne a n d Paul Kelly # Guitar-driven fury and visionary songs are just two reasons why Soul Asylum lands a t the top of so many “bands to watch” lists. Their new\album, HANG TIME, and their live show are two reasons why you should continue to get up in the morning, Produced by Sieve Rinkoff, Bill Million & Glen Mercer ^ Produced by Lennv Kaye and Ed Stasium © IVHS .I<4.-1/ Records. Inc, All Riijhit Resentd. j SEE P A U L KELLY LIVEAT OCTOBER 4TH AM IT y*l RECORDS Psychologists work to improve athletes’ mental abilities Sports therapists part of rapidly growing field By M ICHELLE ALLM AN State Press These days, successful athletes no longer depend only on coaches and trainers to make them strong. They have a psychologist help with the work. “You need more than just a good body to be a good athlete," said sports psychologist Judy Van Raalte, who is studying at ASU for a doctorate in social psychology. “Mental state of mind really makes the difference between winning and losing." gv i .^7Van Raalte, 23, is part of ASU’s team of professors and students who are working to develop and expand sports psychology. “In the past 10 years in the United States sports psychology has really grown a lot, and last year it was included for the first time in the American Psychological Association (publications),” Van Raalte said. “Interest in it is really growing at ASU.” The techniques used by ASU coaches and athletes are researched extensively by Van Raalte and Britt Brewer; another doctoral student. They, along with student assistants, conduct experiments designed to assist athletes in focusing their thoughts. “We work with the athletes on relaxation to help them perform well in tense, competitive situations,” Van Raalte said. “We also help them to learn imaging techniques where they imagine themselves doing something. Then they find it easier to actually do it when they compete.” Twenty years ago, athletes could be champions by working out several hours each day to gel into peak physical shape for the sports contests that pitted body against body. This year, ASU President J. Russell Nelson appointed a committee to develop the University’s sports psychology program. The committee operates under guidelines set up by the United States Olympic Committee. The committee, which is made up of three professors, has introduced a physical education class that teaches the use of psychological skills to improve athletic performance and a psychology class on the psychology of sport. R ick Aldred, a student assistant in the psychology departm ent, participates in an experim ent designed to aid athletes to learn how to fo cu s on them selves and their abilities. T ed Frtedll, a radshlrt sophom ore quick guard for the Sun D evlli, practices the Imaginary techniques team ed through sport« psychology. 'V isualization Is the key,’ Frtedll said. T visualize a play right before the gam e o r the n igh t before. It helps me to have confidence.' Heading the committee is Daniel Landers, professor of health and physical education. He said sports psychology, in the last decade, has become recognized as a vital ingredient of athletic training. “It is now more accepted by athletes and coaches, and there is greater student interest in pursuing this type of career,” said Landers, who has researched the field for 20 years. He described ASU’s program as “one of the best in the country.” “We’re well-known for the research literature we publish,’’ he said. “Also, our program.is unique in that we have an ongoing program with the intercollegiate athletic teams. “We’re finally learning what other (eastern bloc) countries have known for a long time. *4k “We still have a long way to gq. At the United States Olympic Training C ento there is one sports psychologist for 35 teams of athletes. In the Soviet Union there are 6 sports psychologists for every 50 individuals.” Landers said if the United States does not support research in the field, it will risk falling behind other countries in athletics. “If the American people don’t care enough about their own sports program, they will just have to accept that in the world rankings we will be continually slipping. “That’s just how important sports psychology is.” At ASU, the work between psychologists and athletes has helped team and individual performance, said Ken Lehman, the University’s assistant track and field coach. “ I think this program is very important,” he said. “You can physically get in shape, but how well you do after that is 95 percent mental.” Men’s basketball coaching assistant Dave Bale agreed. “Coach (Steve) ¡Patterson makes use of some visual and mental preparation, and some individual players use relaxation techniques,” Bale said. “On an individual basis, you can really see an improvement.” Laura Glitz, a senior member of ASU’s tennis team, said she tries to incorporate the techniques into her training. “It really helps . . . You have to be relaxed before you go out and play and you have to be able to concentrate on your game, even when you don’t feel up toit,” she said. “It really helps your focus.” ASU teams that use the program usually concentrate on relaxation and team unity, while individual athletes usually do not work with psychologists until a problem develops, Van Raalte said. Glitz said she discovered the program after a problem with her game developed. “I was having problems last year when I switched my (backhand technique),” Glitz said. “They really helped me to get my game back. Now I go in whenever I'get a chance.” Glitz’s coach, Sheila Mclnerney, said athletes in individual competitions benefit the most from sports psychology. “I think mental preparation is paramount,’’ Mclnerney said. “All the top players are mentally tough and focused. It is so important to have confidence in yourself, because you don’t have a whole team to pull you through.” ‘You can physically get into shape, but how w ell you do after that is 95 percent mental. ’ — Ken Lehman Van Raalte Said positive mental iniagery helps an athlete get back into the game faster after an injury. “There are different psychological strategies to deal with pain,” Van Raalte said. “ (There is) internal focus, where you focus on the pain you feel, and exton al fbcus, where you focus on the things around you instead of the pain.” Van Raalte said individual athletes tend-to accept sports psychology more readily than team athletes because many coaches of “traditional” sports still scoff at its importance. “Coaches are generally a stubborn population,” she said. “Because there were no sports psychologists when they were learning about sports, they don’t want their team to use them because they’re not sure what’s going to happen. “As coaches become more educated about sports psychology, they’re getting interested. They are becoming more aware of what is going on in the field.” A SU prof to give im prove-your-grades seminar on cam pus By MARIO M ER CAD O II State P ress For Claude Olney, success is no big deal. Studying is, however. “I’ve never gotten credit for hard work or long hours of study,” said the ASU associate professor of business whose improve-yourgrades seminars are pitched on national television by actor John Ritter. “The only thing I’ve gotten credit for was the right answer.” Olney started his “How to Get Better Grades in College” seminars six years ago when his oldest t o 1 was denied admission to ASU because of poor grades. Since then, he has conducted them all over the country. He’ll present his next seminar at ASU from noon to 3:30 p.m. Saturday in the MU’s Pima Room. Registration is $20. Olney’s seminars have been advertised on national television since March. In the commercials, Ritter and several students talk about the benefits of Olney’s formula for improved grades. Viewers are given a chance to purchase a tape of Olney ¡s seminar for $29.95 Olney said over 200,000 of the tapes have sold since March. In an interview at ASU Thursday, he said the secret to better grades is good study habits. “I went out and I bought a lot of bodes, and I found that many of them said you have to study hard,” the 57-year-old professor said. “Some of them said college wasn’t going to be fun. I disagree. “I think you can go to school and have fun too.” Olney said students need to spend more time studying, and the studying should be done in segments rather than in long blocks of time. 1 “The mind operates best with repetition but yrith breaks between study sessions,” he said f i t (the mind) is like Jell-0 — it needs time for things to set and stick." Olney said students also should choose their teachers and classes carefully. “Building up a file of good teachers could be very helpful, ’. he said. “The average student spends three ininutes checking a blind date who will spend an evening with him and spends an average of 9 minutes checking out an instructor who will be with him for months,’’ C lau de O lney Friday, September 30,1988 A SU official calls for improved education B y JO IE ANN LA P O LLA Contributing W riter Strengthening undergraduate education and increasing the number of faculty are the goals of recently-appointed ASU vice provost Elmer R. Gooding. Gooding, vice president of academic affairs for the- past year, was named vice provost earlier this month by ASU Provost and Vice President of Academic Affairs Richard E. Peck. v - • ¡1 G ooding sa id he w ill manage the provost’s office in Peck’s absence and assist him with budget counseling and resource allocation, f “I am delighted to be working with provost Peck,” Gooding said . “ He has e x c e lle n t le a d e r s h ip qualities.” Gooding, who joined the ASU faculty in 1967, said the C H EN G LI S BU FFET Fantastic Chinese Food in Peking Shanghai and Szechwan Style LUNCH »3 «* DINNER ALL YOU CAN EAT Menu Changed Daily 2 0 % OFF BUFFET WITH COUPON University’s greatest achievement has been its ability to adjust to the rapid growth of the past 20 years. “I’ve seen the University mature and take on new research missions,” Gooding said. “It has been very exciting.” Responding to ASU’s rise in student population, Gooding Said he would like to see an increase in faculty and classrooms. He said the current $100 million in construction projects underway will ease present and future space shortages, but the University will still need to hire additional faculty. “At the present time we are understaffed,” Gooding said. “Obviously, as we grow we will need more faculty.” Gooding hinted that an additional campus to complement ASU West may be in the works to satisfy increasing enrollment figures. “ASU might reach out to the far east of the Valley,1’ Gooding said. “It depends on demand.” Qooding said he believes the number of minorities hired by ASU will continue to increase. The University also is working to establish an increase in minority students through financial assistance. “Wehave funds allocated to several area« ” Gadding said. L A T E CHOICE O F 10 ITEMS IBM COMPATIBLES COMPLETE SYSTEMS A T -tu rbo X T -tu r b o s499 $1 1 4 9 FREE M odem calculator with box of 10disks 1200 B a n d $49 $499 U p g ra d e s : ‘ G olor S199 'E G A S449 ‘ M ultisync s550 CALL FOR AST COMPAQ TELEVIDEO COMPLJWORLD 311.6N. Scott-sdalè Rd Scottsdale N IT E w ith $4,6S *2” RICÉ BOWL LOWEST PRICES!! M -F_,lI-fc30 Sat Í2-&30 Sun Closed 9 6 8 -0 4 8 2 818 W. Broadway Rd., Tempe PIZZA & PUB ) M A R C O N IA S P L A Y S G U ITA R NO COVER! Arizona'» 1*1 and O nly Brew Pub: BAMERSNATCH 5th SI. A Foret» 966-4438 Eafc 1968 O R IG IN A L CRUST -white k -whole wheat M -sour dough M /Æ F A S T A F R E S H I ARE | K q u a u t y m p iz z a 'o p e n ! U N T I L COW BOY O R D ER TODAY $ 1 9 .9 5 PLUS S1.50 SHIP/HAND. EACH Credit Card Custom ers C a ll Toll-Free 1-800-432-4626 Check or Money Orders Send lb: RFG Service«, Inc. 6920 South Jordan Road, Unit F Englewood, Colorade 90112 Please send me ______ COWBOY(S) ■ FOOTBALL PLAYER(S) | „____ PROFESSONS) I ADDRESS CITY/STATE/2IP FR EE SALAD BAR w/plzza one per pizza Frid ay & Saturday FR EE DELIVERY A S U A R E A g University 968-6666 1301 E . University Temp«, Arizona (next to Beauvais) $ 1 .0 0 O FF ANY P IZ Z A . September 30,1988 Pay 8 T H O R B E C K E ’S GYM k ALL N E W ! m 15 Pool Tables Pinball AND C O CKTAILS >12 per m onth ‘ plus *50one Sms HAPPY HOUR 4-7 daily 968-3722 Must be years old *3°° Pitchers *1M Longnecks *1H W ell 4nQ O n the south side of Curry Road between Miller & Hayden L H a ircu ts •Body Building •Weight T raining •Power Lifting 966-6621 M ill $13<» m em bership fee O ne M ile North O n Bike Path O ff Scottsdale Road N O T W S A V E $ 5 .9 0 S f j Includes Sham poo !.Conditioner & Cut A ll Y o u I (With Coupon) Can Eat P e rn ia 5 5 .0 0 O ff R egular C h in e s e Japan ese M a n d a rin $ 1 0 .0 0 O ff S p ira l W raps In clu d es Sham poo. C o n d itio n e r S r'C u t W ith Coupon fo r F irst Tim e Customers O n ly r i i i i ' ' One Coupon C e llo p h a n e ......................... . $ 2 2 .0 0 H ig h lig h ts ......... .. $ 4 0 . 0 0 W ith Coupon for First Time Customers Only / Q r * % PRICE * ! LUNCH OR DINNER 1 O ffe r e x p ire s O c t 1 5 ,1 9 8 8 O ffer d o e s n o t ap p ly l o n l r e o u t orders! ^ 966-6111 M on.-Sat. 9:30-8:30 Sun. 11:30-4:00 ■ 1 Appointment | CUI For 933 E. University ! SECorner Rural &Uaiyersity j I Buy O ne Buffet at Regular Price and Qet Second for 16 Price. One Coupon j yUrris O R IE N T A L B U F F E T Tem pe: Baseline & M cC lin to ck 345-9867 ^Central: 15th Ave. & Thom as 277-9867 .. Metro: 19th Ave. & Peoria 944-9867 H r ^ i;ta .m .r9 3 0 p.m. We’re open ail day! Á m C E C H A N G É IN D EC A L SALES P O L IC Y Effective October 3, 1988, to be in compliance with the State l~of Arizona Clean A ir Bill, doc­ umented proof that a vehicle has passed the Arizona emis­ sions standards is required before a parking deCal can be issued. If additional inform ation is required please call Parking a n d T r a n s it S e r v ic e s at 965-6406 NOTE: THIS NEW REQUIRE­ MENT APPLIES TO ALL NEW DECAL PU RCHA SES, R E ­ GARDLESS OF THE STATE OR CO U N TY WHERE THE VEHICLE ÎS REGISTERED. Don’t Be Fooled, ASU Students & Faculty Others may inflate prices and offer misleading discounts. But we will not insult you with deceptive advertising. We challenge you to compare our prices on BICYCLES, ACCESSORIES, PARTS arid LABOR. We will meet or beat any advertised price on items of comparable quality. w u m T E M P E B IC Y C L E SHOP= 330 W. University 966-6896 Hours: Mon-Thurs 8-8 F ri & Sat 8-6 • Sun 11-5 CO LLEG E CYCLE1 909 E. Lemon 966-0842 715 SO UTH H A Y D E N ROAD, T E M P E , AZ 85281 • 966-1911 Hoyrs: Mon-Sat 8-6 Friday, September 30,1988 isaii M an assaults, robs Tem pe woman after she falls from bridge P y MIKE B U R G ESS State P ress A Tempe woman suffered a back injury when she fell 20 feef from a bridge early Wednesday and was robbed of $12 as she crawled to get help, police said. The bizarre incident began about 2 a.m. when Tina Vollmer, 34, was walking along the railroad bridge that crosses the Rio JSalado River in Tempe, said Tempe police spokesman Sgt. A1 Taylor. Taylor said Vollmer thought she heard a train approaching and jumped from the bridge. She landed 20 feet below and broke four vertebrae and dislocated her elbow, he said. After Vollmer crawled through the sandy river bottom toward Rio Salado Parkway where she could flag down a motorist, Taylor said she was confronted by a man: “He asked if I needed help,” Vollmer said Thursday in a police report telephone interview from her bed at Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital. “I told him to call the police and get an ambulance.” Instead, police said the man began to unzip his pants. Police said when Vollmer told the man not to undo his pants he hit her ih the face several times and fled with her purse. Vollmer, a machine operator for a Phoenix company, eventually made it to the road. She said she threw rocks at vehicles until the driver of a truck pulled over and helped her. She said she was mad when she went for a walk on the The POLICE REPORT. read it daily in the STATE PRESS Did you HARE the news. Classified Ads Work. 9656731 North Basement Matthews Center FrIDayS & sAtuRDayS OWEH9pm-4am HAPPYHOUR 9-10 254 D R IN K S tam tam AFTER HOURS 18 OK after lam TWO DANCE FLOORS S tate P re ss STA TE PR ESS C la s s ifie d s . SuNdaYS 9pm-1am . front 8"9pffi % Edite fenem personally! I li rIf llP f^ ^ H |flU K p P ¥ K : a tffhftii liTftfii ? 4Snd St & Bastine INTO 437-8882 bridge but does not remember much else. / T remember falling off the bridge and yelling ‘help me! help me! ’ ” Vollmer said. She said her attacker punched her in the face. The blows knocked out one of her teeth and may have broken her jaw, Vollmer said. Police said Vollmer could only identify the suspect as Caucasian with blond hair and glasses. In other incidents: •The ASU Police Department’s Bicycle Enforcement Safety Team issued 45 bicycle citations Wednesday in addition to issuing 81 warnings and booting 10 bicycles, police said. •A student reported to police Wednesday that she saw six teenage males near the bicycle racks at Manzanita Residence Hall and saw two of them put two bicycles into the back of a pickup and leave. Page 10 S tatcP ran ^Friday^September^J^ö^ AN ASU TRADITION Display Advertising: 965-7572 W0 Free Big One 99 F e a tu rin g Prem ium Low-Fat Y ogurt F resh Fruit 32 T oppings *-« THECHUCKBOX SERVESUPTHEBEST MESQUITECHARCOAL BBCXLEDHAlfEUBSEBS ANYWHERE1 f if [V (our Zs lb. hamburger broiled over real mesquite charcoal). Get a “Big One” FREE when you purchase one at regular price. 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A P A C H E • 9 6 7 -1 1 2 9 A TTEN TIO N A LL C A M P U S O R G A N IZA TIO N S A re yo u p ro u d o f y o u r o rg a n iza tio n ? Let everyone know w ith som e to p q u a lity, aw ard w inn in g coverage in the W AS U .S . Express *325 *195 M ontreal Express *425 *275 O rient Express *525 *395 C anyon Express *595 *500 T .7- S p a c e is lim ited a n d g o in g fast, s o c a ll u s a t 965-6881 o r s to p b y o u r o ffic e s in th e b a s e m e n t o f M a tth e w s C e n t e r a n d b e c o m e p a rt o f an A S U TR A D ITIO N . i 12635 N. Tatum Ste. A2, Phoenix I 461-1875 996-4457 ' SALE Good through Sept. 30th FRIDAYsc per AFTER ffl P. _ . glass fo r ladles from 5 pm to dose I N T R O D U C I N G : 1/2 Burgers an d F rie s . . . . only $ 3 .7 5 D A I L Y : BREAKFAST.. .:. ........ 9 9 C t o $ 2 .2 9 TERRIFIC FO O D A T U N B E U E V A B L E PRICES S U N D E V IL S P A R K Y E A R B O O K GROUP PHOTOS G r o u p s h o ts will b e tak en O c t o b e r 10-28. Y o u m u st re se rv e a tim e s lo t to h a ve a p ic tu re taken . S ite s to b e a n n o u n c e d . j 1660 W. Southern #A1 (across from MCC) $149w M o u n ta in B ik e s j 224-0307 921-3466 PITCHERS O F WELL DRINKS 8 PM-MIDNIGHT 25c DRAFTS 3711 E. Indian School R d. Phoenix , * Cksmr our » dsuvefi ¡§¡¡11 H d m m \ H B I H ilH n H h I I arts & entertainment S itte Press Y a le said she h a d no ta le n t b u t lo o k at h e r n o w 7 don’t believe any movie has to be made, but I really wanted to make this movie. It w ill send out Dian ’$ beliefs, her passion to more people. M ost people love animals; it ’s a short step to loving the more exotic animals and realizing they’re equal citizens o f the earth with us. Dian Fossey has changed the future for mountain gorillas through her work, and I ’m really gla d w e’re able to tell her story. ’ — Sigourney Weavei By LAURIE B. SMITH State P ress Producer Arnold Glimcher thought he would never see this film made. Several years before actual production began on “Gorillas in the Mist: The Adventure of Dian Fossey,” Glimcher had purchased the film rights to Fossey’s autobiography and traveled to Rwanda to discuss plans for the film with Fossey. One day after he arrived in Africa, Fossey was brutally and mysteriously murdered. “At that point, I was certain there could be no future for the movie, since Fossey had agreed to be a consultant to the film; I really doubted that we could do it justice without her,” recalls Glimcher. “At the same time, I felt that now, more than ever, it was important for people to know about the work that Dian did and to continue the preservation efforts that she had begun.” Obviously Glimcher wasn’t impeded by doubts. He, along with producer Terence Clegg and director Michael Apted ( “ Coal M iner’s D au gh ter,” “ Gorky P ark ” ), has immortalized Dian Fossey and the Karisoke Research Center on the infamous silver screen. The film itself is a mass of contradictions. It is not easy to recreate such a primitive and intimate a story as “Gorillas in the M ist” on Hollywood’s terms; the melo-dramatic music detracts from the intimacy, the sometimes flat dialogue detracts from the depth. Yet there is a lovely simplicity about the film, an understated sense of authenticity that gives “Gorillas” a rare quality of realness that makes it worth seeing. The film, shot almost entirely on location in Rwanda, compensates foF its weaknesses with a blatant dedication to creating the real thing. The gorillas |in the movie aren’t acting — they are wild. When one charges at the screen, you can rest assured he didn’t wait for the director to yell “go!’’ And he didn’t "stop when he heard “cut! ” “This picture was made totally on muscle power and leg power,” said John Seale, director of photography. “We weren’t allowed te bring in helicopters to drop us off on the mountain, so we worked at 12,000 feet, carrying the equipment with us as we went. The country is beautiful, fantastic — on the whole, I don’t think we did too badly!” Fossey’s love for the gorillas and her obsessive passion for their consistently threatened preservation is presented with great sensitivity to her emotional involvement with her work, and her story is as captivating as they come. But beware, Fossey! This film belongs to Sigourney Weaver. If Hie poor music score and the crude script threaten to disqualify this film from boisterous praise, Weaver’s dynamic performance evokes adjectives ranging from “outstanding” to “extraodinary.” “We’re very lucky to have Sigourney,” Glimcher said. “She’s not a prima donna. She has a great sense of self, and she’s very relaxed and creative around a crew. She never complains and is absolutely indefatigable." “I think my advantage over contemporaries in the profession is that perhaps they grew up thinking acting was a fairytale land,” Weaver said. “Even as a little child I saw that it was a very rough place. “It’s a great way to earn a living, but it’s vejy unfair and completely unpredictable. You must enjoy the job itself because in terms of what you’re going to reap — money, success, whatever — that’s very chancy. If you can enjoy the work and just have a good time with the people, that’s reason enough to be in it.” Her portrayal of Fossey is vibrant and powerful, and it shotild prove to be the catalyst that sends her career diving head-first into incredible notoriety. It is also one of the more challenging roles she has tackled, and a long way away from her start at Yale’s illustrious mountain slopes covered with jungle, poachers killed or captured the primates for which she w as developing a deep, almost fanatical affection. ' Fossey came into conflict with the Batwa pygmies, who also poached gorillas for the money brought by their body parts. She told the Batwa that she was a witch and entered By S C O T T C . S E C K E L their camps with threatening totems. Eventually Fossey State P ress She was a controversial figure who lived alone in the. armed and trained her own men to destroy the traps they mist-shrouded jungle mountains of Rwanda. Her peers laid. This anguish fueled her feelings, and apparently she alternately viewed her as a drunk, a master researcher, drank four bottles of Johnny Walker a week. crazy, charismatic, a shoddy scientist, the savior of the • Government offficials also met her wrath for not mountain gorillas and a commanding personality, providing sufficient protection against poachers in the Whatever current reseachers think about Dian Fossey Parc and sanctioning the capture and sale of baby gorillas and her work with the Virunga gorillas« the fact is that to zoos around the world. She saw them as “her” gorillas. they think about her. She isn’t forgotten. Her stories in the National Geographic brought Fossey, a native of Kentucky, was chosen in 1966 by the publicity to her cause and support for the gentle famed Dr. Louis Leakey to start a long-term study of the primates in the Parc National des Virungas, in the vegetarians of the volcanic mountain range. Their closeknit families became world-renowned as did Fossey emocratic Republic of the Congo (present-day Zaire). he civil war there forced Fossey to shift her base to the herself. Rwandan area of the gorillas’ range. She was murdered shortly after Christmas in 1985, At her new camp in the Rwandan Parc National des ostensibly by a research assistant. It is suspected that there was someone else behind the crime, as Fossey was Volcans, which she named Karisoke, Fossey commenced not a diplomat and her fierce actions made many the research that broke all the myths of gorillas being ferocious man-eaters. In addition to coping with the enemies. She also made concrete accomplishments. physical hardships of living and working on steep The controversial life work of researcher Dian Fossey D Sigourney W eaver photographs m ountain gorillas in “ G orillas in the M ist.” She has a lso starred in “ HaM Moon Street” and received an O scar nom ination for her role as R ipley in “ A lie n s.” drama school where, she was informed politely that she had no talent. “The theater I loved was spontaneous and informal, but at Yale it was serious and academic. I was crushed when they said I had no future because I assumed they knew what they were talking about — I never realized that it was largely due to the fact that I was different and that this difference would eventually work for me.” What it has given her is a versatility that compliments roles ranging from a British embassy official in “The Year of Living Dangerously,” a prostitute in “Half Moon Street” to the undefeatable Ripley in “Alien.” v With both Oscar (“Aliens” ) and Tony (“Hurlyburly” ) nominations to her credit, she could face the gorillas with confidence — and that took guts. “How did I get into this unenviable position?” She wrote in an article for Life Magazine. “Why is a movie star sitting in mud up to her waist, waiting to be tackled by a 450-pound mountain gorilla? What agent in the world would send his precious client to climb 10,000 feet in the pouring rain to work with furry costars?” Weaver admits that the work was as frightening as it was exhilarating. Although the gorillas were generally friendly, she was actually charged at several times during the shooting. “I quickly went into the submissive position Alphonse (her personal tracker) had taught me and hoped for the best. When you have four hundred pounds of pissed-off gorilla inching up on you, you start seeing your life flash by!” / But onscreen, she has all the confidence and passion of Dian Fossey, and she is consistently believable. According to Roz Carr, best-friend to Fossey and consultant to the film: “Sigourney Weaver is perfect as Dian, and I’m so grateful for that. She’s really made herself into a second Dian. It’s quite remarkable.” StetePress ^Rlda^SepteinbCTS^IWB^ P a s c la Elvira’s liberated lust leaves audience biting the dust By S C O T T S E C K E L State P ress Sitting down to write about “Elvira, Mistress of the Dark,” it’s tempting to stick one’s head out the window and yell, “Hey Mac, back that truckload o’titty jokes up to the window and let her drop! But we’ll resist that temptation for another one or two paragraphs. Elvira. The late-night schlock horror queen with a set that a hippopotamus cow would envy and a .wit that hits back like a broken bridge cable in a hurricane. The woman proclaims that she put the “boob back in boob tube.” Equal rights? Well, in her first feature-length flick, released by New World Pictures, Elvira doesn’t seem to have any problems getting, what she wants. Actually, this woman is so liberated that she leaves everyone else gaping for words and eating dust. Elvira (Cassandra Peterson) is hosting a series of horror flicks at a TV station in Lois A n g e le s w hen sh e q u its her job , understanding that a stage show of her own awaits her in Vegas. Her manager forgot to tell her that she needs $50,000 to seed the show, a telegram arrives, great aunt Morgana has croaked and left Elvira an inheritance that she has to go and pick up in Massachusetts. Whew. A plot device with no chocolate coating. Elvira takes off across the country in black ’58 T-bird with a spider-web garlic hanging off of the rear-view mirror and a leopard skin interior. She digs driving to thrash metal. Elvira molests ax-wielding psychotic hitchhikers. Elvira is a righteous chick. Don’t you forget it. | Naturally the town of Falwell (yes, that’s right), Mass, is full of uptight gossipy old hags, their castrated husbands who seem need a good hit of speed with their Geritol, and the usual gang of repressed teenagers whose parents won’t let .them listen to Metallica and wear lipstick. Damn. By the way, the sharp-eyed among you will notice that this is the same town “Back To The Future” was filmed. A chemical reaction takes place when Elvira thunders into town, and all the predictable confrontations flare. The townspeople are determined to throw this witch out, the kids love her, the local warlock wants a book of spells from Elvira’s shfla, shfla, shfla. But it’s fun. She hoots at every horror cliche possible, verbally and visually. Her poodle has a pink mohawk and a bondage belt instead of a collar, Hie spell book creates a monster casserole dispatched back to Hell via disposal, and the warlock menaces our heroine by telling her that “I’ll get you and your little dog, too.” This flick is somewhat in the vein of “ Airplane,” and it’s just as giddy. Relentless bombardment with sight gags and double entendre works, if you’re in the Elvira (Cassandra Peterson) sh ocks the pants off a tiny New England town. right mood. When Elvira gets hit, her friend asks: “How’s your head?” “Nobody’s complained yet.” It’s well-done gag work and packed with a lot of detail. Peterson herself wrote the movie, along with Sam Egan and John Paragon. She’s quite a sharp observer; “Flashdance,” Alfred Hitchcock, “The Hand,” “Animal House,” and “Footloose" all get cleavered by the script. And Elvira is the one to know about cleavage. Go see, laugh, leave and forget. Vraiment amusant. ASSOCIATED STUDENTS CONCERTS FREE ON PALO VERDE (the g r a s s y a re a b e tw e^ P a lo V e r d e d o r m s l^ É | | EACH ASUS NEW ASASU Concerts Thanks: Stete Pres» Page 13 F r id « ^ S œ t e m b « 3 ^ J W 8 •Sweet-souled ja zz fro m P o la n d : firing fi friend To G e t fi Haircut find Vours Is. . •Beer, sausage, music.' beer, sauerkraut, beer . . . Back in the grim and gray days of old Deutschland the brooding people of the germanic tribes used to break up the monotony by making October a time to drink viviel bier (“a lot of beer” ), eat schnitzel and get a little toll (“crazy” ). This tradition is preserved American-style every year in the Arizona Oktoberfest and sometimes begins before the month is upon us. Two Oktoberfests begin this weekend. The first, named in a style that attempts good German grammar (it actually sounds more like the name of some unfortunate metal group) — the Oktoberfest von Arizona begins Friday at Paradise Valley Pàrk and continues through Sunday. Ginderella, Icon, Brian Page, the Groove Merchants, Azz Izz and rockin’ legend (with a capital ‘L’) Chuck Berry will be featured. The second, Oktoberfest at South Mountain, claims to be more authentic in a “europeart” manner. There’s no flashy stage shows here, just folksy exhibits, polka music and dancing. This ’fest only runs from 11 a m. to 9 Saturday night. For information concerning thé South Mountain Oktoberfest, call 839-6943. M 8S Reg. M o i $18.50 University Plazo CONDITIONER MAXIMUM BODY OR ORIGINAL Think modular. Think knits. Modular Knits are soft, supple knit separates to mix, match and layer; a * wardrobe-build^ system where" • everything togethflj^ lP^ . § day W t U « , - Sade’s Polish counterpart Basia is bringing her incredible voice arid sense for jazz and latin-based music to the Celebrity Theatre thisJSunday at 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $16.50 when reserved. For details, call 244-0404. •‘Imagine’: a party for Lennon’s new movie: KASR, 680 AM, is airing a special radio fchow three days before the premiere of “Imagine: John Lennon.” Tile show“ will feature, of course, John’s music, some Beatles’ tunes, carefully garnered bootleg performance tapes and some recorded dialogues of John and Yoko. The show will be on this Sunday, Oct. 2, from 1 p.m. to 3 pm. The station is also hosting the special premiere of “Imagine” on Wednesday, Oct. 5. The film begins at 8 p.m. and there is a post-preview party scheduled at Fajita Prima, 930 E. University Drive. Albums, tapes and T-shirts will be given away. For more information, call the station, 965-4162. •Fishbone comes to ASU: These guys find it hard to sit still. But the listeners of Fishbone’s wild funk/punk music won’t have trouble finding something to do with their feet. The band will be on campus this Sunday at 6 p.m. at the PV Beach and, if you can’t catch them then, they’ll appear at Out of Water, 4211 E. Baseline Road, at 8:30 p.m. For more details about the club show, call 437-8882. 25% OFF w/coiiegei.D n u n e a r« M t > m t t f t o & t i* - f ** pnwtf owee casual ctotms. tool n tB t Matching Skirt & to p set w ith ROCK WITH REGGAE ^ Friday & Saturday OPEN TODAY 10* MWcernaI of Southern & MtClmii'-» mtwsen cert Furniture m m and Mantean j f c r RT. " «'■, ‘ " W it h W alt R ich ard son & d ie M orning Star B and Join us Sunday for a progressive music [C O U P O N starting at 3:30 We’re next to BIO SUR F in Tempel 1520 N. Hayden 947*470 call for publip skating times Expires 1Q-31-B8_ _ SEA BREEZE OR BAY BREEZE 12 p.m.-7 p.m . 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Terrace, Suite 1 Tempe, AZ 8 5 281 Order one entree and get the 2nd o f equal or lesser value F R E E . G ood for parties o f six or less. Dine-in only. N ot good w ith any other coupon or offer. Good thru O ctober 14, 1988 2 f Self-Serve Copies "The B e s t M a rg a rita s T h is S id e o f th e R io G r a n d e ’ 8 t t x 11» white 201b. bond .G ood th ro u g h 5040 North 40th Street Just North o f Camelback ML 956-8555 ^ October 2 9 ,1 9 8 8 00 Best - Boston, MA Page 15 Friday, September 30,1988 You re going to love it. T ilin g s to •H U G E one bedroom apar tm ent s • T W O bedrooms, two full baths for up to four people FR ID A Y A N D O N L Y 1/2 B L O C K FR O M CAM PUS! u n iv e r s it y ' CALL FOR t DETAILS' A .S .U . CAM PUS . ; WM H H H 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 o\ H allelujah 3pm* 8 pm B u y 1 Get 2nd O ne 1/2 Price $ 2 .9 8 Pitchers of B eer & | Long Island Iced Tea s 50C Square Deal lA lb. 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Info. 966-3877 F R E E T R O L L E Y R ID E S A V E MOM & DAD SO M E EX TR A M ONEY TO SP EN D ON YOU! S46 $49 P A R E N T S W EEKEND is Oct. 14-16 = to the Sun Devil H o u s e = running every 15 min. for those 18 & older fc. Pick up at PV Main 9 «30 pm ~3«30am Single Double per night F o r Reservations Call: (602)96 7-94 31 D o n t fo rg e t SATURDAY COUNTDOW N s ta rtin g a t 8 p m HOWARD JOHNSON Hotel 225 E . A p a ch e B lvd ., Tam pa (Across from ASU) =W â i ü S f vU= comics Page 16 ' S R R rVBSR B M ee Friday, September 3 M 9 jj8 ^ BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed e& m em i... By G A R Y L A R S O N FA R M M 'o ft'* ", ------------ WDUE TO REPORTSOF RUDE ^ ykm n g - sipe effects. LADIES AND T m n; '¡x . a m t'S c a t s w e a t sc a lp TO N IC'IS NON CONSIDERED t h e su r g eo n a com oua? substance... ILLEGAL TOOWNOR SELL g e n e r a lo f muNrmvsrmeò-* ■ ■■ Doonesbury HOU (JOULPTHIS HAPPEN, SIR? HOWCOULDA MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL I CANDIDATEBERE~ ITS I PLACEDBYHIS BEEN A . EVILTWIN? LONGTIME COMING, MR. POKE... BY GARRY TRUDEAU FOR MONTHS,UNPEOPLE HANS BEEN PUSHING M ETO TAKE THE LOU ROAD, TO KAY PO UN AN D DIRTY. B t/rn NEVER WORKED. TTW AGNTM E. I K&H~REVERT­ ING TO THE QUIET, DECENT GUY 1 W AS RAISED, TOB E. FINALLY, W HEN I PUT THAT STUFF IN M Y SPEECH ABOUTWANTING A KIND ER,GENTLER NATION, M Y STAFF H IT THE RO O F! \ siO . AND WATS WHEN THEY CANNED YOU? \ " ’aS!= 2 ? tf/T ) \\ Lk jiiiili S I I ITR W DlO EXPLAINI WAS JUST PANDER­ ING TOWOMEN, BUTNO GO! 7 \ » ,, S i « O n a clear day, Eugene róse a n d looked around him and, regrettably, saw who he was. i p m "7 b s s s l æ m \i «SäH by Garth Heckel M elon h ead by Jeff MacNelly Shoe "I u n d e rsta n d A lb e r t E in s te in s p e n t rtio st o f h is life try in g to g e t e le c te d ." r STUDENTS! 1 ALLELUIA LUTHERAN STUDENT MINISTRY an West Side o f Campus Small Original 504 off. Medium Original 754 off. SU N D A Y S 9:00 a.m . B ib le S tu d y 10:15 a.m. W orsh ip 6:00 p.m. C o n te m p o rary W orsh ip 1034 S. Mill e 894-2610 S s s s s s s s ssss sssss ssssss sssss ssssss ssss^ (Schlotzslfy's Use this coupon and save 50* on a small and 75* on a mèdium or regular Origi­ nal sandwich. Tempe Center, 18 E. 10th St. Sandw iches ♦ S ou ps ♦ Salads ■■■ L 968-0056 mmm Expires 10-6-88 J sports State Pr»«» Page 17 Friday^ September 30,1988 Lam ar hopes to make name for itself against Devjls By G A R Y JA C K S O N State P ress Sun Devil Stadium can be an intimidating place to play for any visiting team. But when a school that plays in front of crowds smaller, than McClirttock High School’s comes in for a visit, even the David vs. Goliath scenario Seems inadequate. The Lamar Cardinals, an NCAA Division I-AA school, will play the subordinate role at 7:30 p.m. Saturday when they face heavilyfaVored ASU at Sun Devil Stadium. Even Lamar head coach Ray Alborn said he does not know how his team will react when they set foot in a filled stadium Saturday. Jam es Mumaugh/State Press Sun D evil tailback B ruce P erkins attem pts to run through a hole in the defense against Nebraska Sept- 24, P erkin s and the Sun D evils play host to Lam ar University at 7:30 p.m . Saturday at Sun D evil Stadium . “Most of our guys’ towns don’t have 70,000 people in them,” Alborn said. The 2-1 Sun Devils have attracted that many spectators in both of their home games this season, while less than 1,000 appeared for the 1-2 Cardinals’ homeopener, which Was played in a driving rainstorm, f -v “ Alborn installed what is known in Beaumont, Texas, as the “Air Alborn” offense into the Lamar playbook. This runand-shoot style was used by the USFL’s Houston Gamblers, for which Alborn was an assistant coach during the 1984 and 1985 seasons. When executed properly, the offense delays defensive reactions and provides an equalizing’effect, Alborn said. But he said he was worried about the quickness of ASU’slinem en. “A big, grave concern going into the ballgame will be, ‘Can we hold up to the pash rush?’ ” Alborn said. “Their linemen are quick and do some twisting and a lot of movement.” "r Alborn said the passing attack in the offense is exciting and is great for statistics, but he is aware that those aspects do not guarantee a victofy. There will be scouts in attendance Saturday, but they won’t be watching ASU. The New York Giants, the Chicago Bears and a major scouting agency will be on hand to watch Cardinals quarterback . Shad Smith. Smith, a senior, has not thrown an interception in 108 passing attempts, which dates back to the 1987 season. He has completed 48 of 96 passes for 662 yards through the first three games this season. “He has used good judgment up to this point and has shown maturity in not making the bad throw,” Alborn said. But junior John Evans, who was a backup and part-time starter in the past two years, -may start for the Cardinals as Smith is questionable for the game because of a sore ankle. Junior Kenny Franklin, sophomore Sherwin Johnson and redshirt freshman Naisaun Ahmadi will carry the ball on the Cardinals running plays. Alborn said both the rushing and passing attacks will have to be effective for the Cardinals to fair well against the Sun Devils. “The first part is run when you say runand-shoot,” Alborn said. “We’ve got to try to keep them off balance, that’s the key.” Alborn said Franklin, who will start for the one-back offense, is a steady but not flashy player. Lamar’s defense has not allowed an opponent to score in the first quarter this season but has permitted 27 fourth-quarter points. “To stay on the field and even be close we’re going to have to improve a lot on defense,” Alborn said. “We’ve been so inconsistent that we really haven’t played very well as a defensive unit.” Although the Sun Devils’ passing attack will be a threat, Alborn said he is more co n c e r n e d about the C a r d in a ls ’ disadvantage in size. “We’re giving up about 25 pounds to their offensive line,” Alborn said. “As big and strong as they are up front, they’ll just knock us off the ball.” Brown’s appearance could help ASU spikers on Oregon road trip By JO A N M cKEN N A State P ress Nine months have passed since Debbie Brown took up. the Olympic road to Seoul. But the Games wind down this weekend, and the ASU head volleyball coach is coming home. . . . Well, almost. Brown returns to the United States tonight after serving as assistant coach to tire U.S. women’s team. But her destination is Corvallis, Ore., not Tempe. She plans to be on hand for the Sun Devils’ conference matches against Oregon State this evening and Oregon Saturday. “She’s said all along the Earliest part of the season is the most important,” acting head coach Steve Schlick said. “I think she’s sorry she’s missed what she has.” Brown has had little time off since leaving for San D ieg o (v o lle y b a ll training headquarters) in January, according to Schlick. But he said convincing her to take a break would be difficult. Whatever she does, “We’re just all looking forward to Deb being back,” he said. “We’ve missed her,” middle blocker Sue Nord said, adding that her presence at the Oregon matches should make a difference in ASU’s performance. “I’m sure everyone will be like ‘Deb’s back. We’ve got to impress her.’ “I think we’ll play well. Last spring she came back to watch us, and we were a little nervous. But we played great the last time she was here . . . (for) New Mexico State.” Brown stopped in town for four days before departing for Korea, and ASU responded with a 3-0 victory over New Mexico State. And her homecoming seems more welltimed. ASU outside hitter Christy Nore is expected to break the school’s career dig record (1,178) against the Beavers. Nore needs seven digs to do it, and is averaging 4.09 per game. The only drawback to the weekend may be that ASU (days the Beavers first. OSU (0-3 in the Pac-10) has been hampered by a weak offense this season — in one four-game stretch failing to hit over .200. ASU, hitting .257, should dominate. But added adrenaline would be useful against Oregon. The 13th-ranked Ducks are 3-1 against the Sun Devils, although Oregon assistant coach Peg Rees said the record is misleading. “I don’t think any of those (matches) have been that easy,” she said. “The Sun Devils (9-2, 2-2) are always a challenge. We prepare a s hard for them as (for) any team we play this season.” And Nord said Oregon can play tough. Irwin Deugherty/State Press A S U 's Christy Nora (right) and Dawn M eidinger attem pt to block a ball against Stanford Sept. 23 at the U niversity A ctivity Center. The Sun D evils play at O regon State tonight and O regon Saturday, “It’s going to be a dogfight,” she said. “Personally, I want to beat, them badly. They’re always, well I don’t know, cocky. There’s something about them.” Schlick said arrogance is not encouraged by Oregon’s staff. “The coach (Gerry Gregory) is extremely nice. He and Debbie are good friends. I just think teams have the personality of the players. And some are a little more forceful.”. But the Ducks (7-5 overall, 1-2) are showing less force in 1988 — off to their worst conference start in the last three seasons and in seventh place. H ie team won its first six Pac-10 matches last year. Ritter pulls upset in high jump; U .S. to defend yolleyball gold SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Louise Ritter of Dallas upset the Bulgarian world record-holder for ^ w o m e n s high jump gold medal aU he Seoul Olympics on Friday, wherethe net gain for America was: one silver and another shot at 8 The U.S. men’s volleyball team, incited by America’s basketball loss, earned the right to defend its Olympic title by beating Brazil Friday, but American Tim M ayottecould4o no better than silver in the first men s tennis gold medal final at the Games in 64 years. ‘ ;t. , . . t•. „ Ritter, meanwhile, won the gold with a leap o inches, beating Bulgarian Stefka Kostadmova, who had 6-7 A. Tamara Bykova of the Soviet Union won the bronze with 6-6*4. ■-.-'■V >, « ■ : The undefeated U.S. men’s volleyball, led by the spiking and blocking of Bob Ctvrtlik, scored an easy 15-3,15-5,15-11 semifinal victory over Brazil in a rematch of the gold-medal game four years ago in Los Angeles. “ Most of us used to play basketball, and we felt reallyhorrible for them when they lost to the Soviets,” Ctvrtlik said. “We didn’t want that to happen to us.” The U.S. men will meet either the Soviet Union or Argentina in the volleyball final Sunday afternoon. The Soviet Union, meanwhile, beat Yugoslavia 76-63 for the basketball gold, giving the Soviets their 100th medal of the Games. Miloslav Mecir, of Czechoslovakia, beat the American Mayotte 3-6,6-2,6-4,6-2 for the men’s singles gold medal, the first awarded at the Games since 1924 in Paris. Brad Gilbert of the United States and Stefan Edberg of Sweden each won bronze. Mecir, who beat the top-seeded Edberg in the semifinals, lost the first set in just 40 minutes but just as quickly turned it around. He broke Mayotte in the first game of the second set and begean running the (American all over the court. When it was over, Mecir was the one running all over the court, throwing his racket up in exultation over the biggest victory of his career. In the 14th day of the Games, the medal count looked Uke this: Soviet Union 101 total, 42 gold; East Germany 85 total, 33 gold, and the United States 67 total, 24 gold. Page 18 Friday, September 30,1988 oiympic scoreboard Bear Your Soul M edals Table S a y it in a State Press Personal Ad By The Associated Press Through 11 of 26 Friday, Sept. 30 (Day 14) Soviet Union G s B Tot 42 24 34 100 85 East Germany 33 28 24 United States 23 23 20 66 West Germany 10 10 9 29 27 Bulgaria 9 9 9 China 3 9 10 22 Romania 5 10 6 21 Hungary 10 5 5 20 Britain 4 7 6 17 South Korea 4. 3 6 13 Italy 4 4 4 12 France 4 3 5 12 New Zealand 3 1 8 12 Poland 2 5 4 11 Japan 2 3 6 11 Australia 2 4 3 9 Sweden 0 3 4 7 Netherlands 2 2 2 6 Yugoslavia 2 2 2 6 6 Canada 1 1 4 Czechoslovakia 3 2 0 5 . 2 3 0 5 Denmark 2 1 1 4 Finland 1 1 2 4 Switzerland 0 2 2 4 4 Norway ‘ Brazil 0 1 3 Spain 1 0 2 3 Kenya 1 0 1 2 Morocco 1 0 1 2 Austria 1 0 0 1 Portugal 1 0 0 1 Suriname 1 0 0 1 Turkey 1 0 0 1 Chile 0 1 0 1 Costa Rica 0 1 0 1 Jamaica 0 1 0 1 Neth Antilles 0 I 0 1 Peru 0. 1 0 1 Senegal 0 1 0 1 Virgin Islands 0 1 0 1 Belgium 0 0 1 1 Greece 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 Mexico 0 Comedy hour 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 Today & Every Friday at 12:30 p.m. in the MU Cinema headlining: § North lasement Natthews Center «•4 1-4 Karen W r i g h t Comedy Comm ittee Presented by U A D IS t k lC n M K m TWILIGHT SHOW $3.00 S tereo Theatres 4 Channel Sound n D S H O W T IM E S ■'■BETWEEN 4 : 3 0 » 6 : 3 0 I in e O u f for lacos! B 'A R B -A R A EXTRAORDINARY.” ; a H E R S I L E -Y • A W orld A part B rent N o rth ru p S E A T T LE /JO U R N A L AM ERICAN EXCLUSIVE! miri&astrol A wicked comedy. asu football PAC-10 STANDINGS PAC-10 GAM ES W L T Pet. Pts Opp 2 0 0 1.000 50 31 1 0 0 1.000 24 20 1 0 0 1.000 24 13 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 .000 1 1 0 500 30 40 0 1 0 .000 28 43 0 1 0 .000 16 17 0 2 0 000 20 24 Oregon Southern Cal Arizona U CLA W ashington A rizona State Oregon State W ashington State California Stanford ALL GAM ES W L T Pci. Pts Opp 3 0 0 1.000 99 31 3 0 Ò 1.000 81 34 3 1 0 .750 124 60 3 0 0 1.000 156 37 3 0 0 1.000 86 54 2 1 0 .667 65 80 2 2 0 .500 92 95 2 1 0 667 113 59 2 1 0 .667 98 45 1 2 0 .333 54 41 EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT r Gorgeous to look at." l) iC r AI I’C B E N — N>ck Salerno. SOOTTSOALE PROGRESS . Is l a n d i o ON! $119 Æfí*Á w a n d a Mi North « Crossing DelaiTccyss, S A TU R D A Y ’S S CH ED U LE C o m e ib a c k D O LB Y STEREO SMWBBl Mi 1 7 V D À X V iil/ l Lamar at ARIZO NA STATE Southern Cal at Arizona U CLA at Washington San José State at California Oregon at San Diego State Fresno State at Oregon State Stanford at Notre Dame W ashington State at Tennessee KINGSLEY M IS T R E S S o f T H E D ARK Married Sk^, )HNS0N SUSAN SARANDON •m u t r i THE E A STW LLE YS BIGGEST SCREEN I f t 't if t S t ì r t / H f e iB O M M M B a - -JEFF 2323 E. CamrtbwfcWo*d Ca'melbacK Road 2323E >, J p R |p n F S Z7 T 11 C K E Russi5*—8™—*i 70th SI North ol C om eib ack Rood HOTEL Scia ANDR0LL FANTASY major league baseball AM ERICAN LEA G U E TH U R SD A Y 'S R ESU LTS Late Game Not Included Oakland 6. Minnesota 2 Let M e Get Right To The Point. . . i New York 5, Baltimore 1 Boston 12, Cleveland 0 STUDIOS TO 3 BEDROOMS Kansas City 7, Chicago 6 ,1 0 innings Texas at Seattle, (n) Only games scheduled 3 M ILES FRIDAY’S SCH ED U LE Boston (Clemens 18-11) at Cleveland (Yett 8-6). 4:35 p m. New York (Rhoden 12-11) at Detroit (Morris 14-13), 4:35p.m, .. Baltimore (BaRard 8-11) at Toronto (Stieb 15-8). 4:35 juri. * ••• California (Witt 13-15) at Minnesota (Viola 23-7) , 5:05 p.m. Chicago (Manzanillo 0 0 ) at Kansas City (Leibrandt 12-12), 5:35 p.m. Texas (Brown 1-1) at Seattle (Moore 9-14), 7:05 p.m. Milwaukee (Wegman 13-12) at Oakland (Stewart 20-12). 7:35 p.m. NATIO N AL LEA G U E TH U R SD A Y ’S R ESU LTS Montreal 5, Chicago 4 Houston 5. Atlanta 4 Only games scheduled FRIDAY’S SCH ED U LE Pittsburgh (Dunne 7-11) at Chicago (Sutcliffe 13-14), 11:20 a.m. Atlanta (Mahler 9-16) at Cincinnati (Browning 18-5). 4:35 p.m. Philadelphia (Madrid 0-1) at Montreal (Perez 12-7). 4:35 p.m. St. Louis (Terry 9-5) at New York,(Cone 19-3), 4:35 p.m. San Diego (Whitson 13-11) at Houston (Meads 30). 5:35 p.m San Francisco (Cook 2 0 ) at Los Angeles (Tudor 10-8). 7:35 p.m. national football league SU N D A Y ’S SCH ED U LE Buffalo at Chicago, 10 a.m. Green Bay at Tampa Bay. 10 a.m. Indianapolis at New England. 10 a.m. Seattle at Atlanta, 10 a m Cleveland at Pittsburgh. 10 a.m. Houston at Philadelphia. 10 a m New York Giants at Washington. 10 a m. Phoenix at Los Angeles Rams. 1 p.m. Kansas City at New York Jets. 1 p.m BOTH CORAL POINT AND LAGUNA OFFER: Rich with Amenities and Activities Laguna & Cora) Point offer Furnished & Unfurnished Units Cable T.V. Available Custom M in i Blinds Throughout Washers / Dryers in select units W oodburning Fireplaces in select units , Large Sparkling Heated Pools And lactuzi Sand Volleyball Court Private Patios / Balconies • SRP Service • M ountain Bell Telephone Service • Club Rooms • Tennis Courts • Indoor raquetball $ Exercise facilities • Ramadas & Barbeque areas • Covered Parking • Public Transit to ASU (M ention in is Additional Savings) Stu d en t D iscou n ts 2343 W est M ain Street, M esa 150 S. R oosevelt, M esa j’íé?;? Denver at San Diego. 1 p.m. Minnesota at Miami. 1 p.m. Cincinnati at Lps Angeles Raiders. 1 p.m. Detroit at San Francisco. 1 p m Dadas at New Orleans. 6 p.m. MAKE IT A POINT TO SEE THEM BOTH! : M O N D AY’S SCH ED U LE • *• . ' ; 7, : . ' ,, ■' . •.'■T 'r •/ ■; J : Page 19 Friday, September 30,1998 1 >- r r . s ¡jr a ,>w „ SfiiS$*$ 2 - ; g i f t to Qm - *•* >■> • . . ; • > . • • ■ Come try the new 6"Cold Cut Combo. With three kinds of meat, cheese and lots of free forin’s, it gets the job done. $1.69 is suggested retail price for the 6" Cold C ut Combo. Footlong Cold C ut Combo is $2.99. 1 lU R K tY PRODUCTS BUY ANY FOOTLONG SANDWICH AND GET A 6" COLD CUT COMBO FREE. GET A 6" SUPER COLD CUT COMBO FOR $2.29. SUBWAY-ASU 829-7213 SUBWAY-ASU 829-7213 OPEN UNTIL 2AM OPEN UNTIL 2AM .SUBUJR Limit: One coupon per customer per visit. Not good in combi­ nation with any other offer. Offer expires. 10-31-88. Limit: One coupon per customer per visit. Not good in combi­ nation with any other offer. Offer expires: 10-31-88. 1 «< Page go JFrtdB£SMtorto«Ji(^JW8_ ;i# R OFFENSE Quarter! H p o t F «M rei H p d e R e® iV er IcTacklei 95 Keith ) 47 Myron 35 Kacv l IWmmMWmi. i© G u a rd >0 Tackle — W /m m m f ■ g | 55 Mi ^ ■ -^ o v e r B Weak Cornerbei — Strong CordMirtScV s * fp 4 MHK » S P E -" ” mm - —P m * * * mmM mm m m m THE W kM LSH± S P E C IA L P U R C H A S E S W E A T S REG. 29.95 s k o a l $ 0 1 9 9 f i I • S E L E C T E D S A L E M ERCHANDISE am ir« )« O F F SHOP TH E STORE WITH TH E LARGEST S E LE C TIO N O f ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITYCLOTHING¿^&# &IVSNlRS T H E U S H O f* . THE i in the Cornerstone at Rural and University fSHOP 8 2 9 -1743 T e m p o , A riz o n a M - F 10-9 S A T 10-9 S U N 12-6 sort» P a g e R i F I 1 £ ^ S e g te fffe ç r 3 ^ J 9 M classifieds VOLUNTEER SER VIC E through dynamic student organization. W SSC meeting 10/3/88 Yavapai, M U. Contact Max, 966-3877. , announcements ALL SINGLES dance location information. 946-4088. W ANTED M ALE models for flat top hair­ cutting workshops. Monday only, 4 p.m.-8 p.m., Phoenix Hair Company. Contact Sarah and Edna, 258-1906. Sun ofa autos for sale WANTED: FEM ALE m odels for advanced haircolor workshops on Mondays, 12 p.m.-4 p.m. Naturalites: haircolor looks of the 80’s, hair painting for extraordinary highlighting colors. Phoenix Hair Co. Contact Ricardo, 258-1906. 1978 O LDS 98- A ir Conditioning, new tire s, ru n s great. $995/offer. C a ll 899-9550.__________________________ 1979 DATSUN pick-up, automatic, cloth interior, air-conditioning, AM/FM cassette, super sharp, new tires. $1595. 990-0852. W ANTED FEM ALE m odels for advanced haircolor workshops on Mondays, 12 p.m.-4 p.m. Naturalites: haircolor looks of the 80's, hairpainting for extraordinary h ig h lig h tin g c o lo rs . P h o e n ix H a ir Company. Contact Ricardo, 258-1906. 1979 DODGE Colt, 70K, runs well. R eli­ able get around town car. $1250. 893-7741, leave m essage. B 8 LA R G E 1979 M ERCED ES 240D- AM/FM tape. 116 m iles. New engine, a ll records, $7400. C all 496-9207. __________________' autos for sale WOLFF M ot 1979 SAAB 900GL. Good condition. Stan­ dard, AM/FM. No air-conditioning. Asking $1500. 820-9859.___________ ________ 001 CO NVERTIBLE Sports Car. 1976 Fiat Spider. Beautiful- new paint, top, and interior. Must see!! $ 1700/offer. Pat, 921-1311, after 8 p.m. — s:\ 1980 DATSUN 510.2-dbOr, automatic, air, A M /F M , new b a tte ry an d tire s . $ 1950/offer. 897-7287. 1968 CH R YSLER 300 convertible. White, turquoise interior. Has 440 engine. $2000. C all Kraig. 830-2489. 965-6881. 1980 FIAT X-19. Blue, new brakes, b a tte ry , ¿ lu tc h . L o o k s e x ce lle n t, $1500/Offer. 345-7081. leave message. 1973 BEETLE. Looks and runs great. Must sell. $1200/offer. 784-9594. WITH STUDENT I.D. 930 W. Broadway, No. 5 (Between Beck & Hardy) 966-3894 1980 PO NTIAC Trans Am Indy Pace Edition. 46,000 original m iles. Showroom condition, loaded. Rob, 967-5742. 1973 MUSTANG. Power steering, power breaks, ready for air-con dition in g . $1450/offer. Sian, 968-7796. H O U R S: Mon.-Fri. Saturday Sunday motorcycles for sale announcements 8 a.m.-10 p.m. 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Noon-6 p.m 1980 TRIUMPH TR7 convertible. New interior, new exterior. Like new, must sell,$4300/offer. 986-5071, Dawn.______ 1977 PONTIAC Ventura with 49,000 origi­ nal m iles. Asking $995. Phone 951-1693. 1981 FORD Fairm ont. Great condition, inclu din g excellen t a ir conditioning, $1100. Ca ll 971-7126 or 224-2120. 1982 DATSUN 200SX. Autom atic, airconditioning, power-steering, only 18K actual m iles. Like new. $3600/offer. 966-7661. W eekday after 5 p.m., weekend after 10 a.rh; ? WS Call for daily specials cm «UPEN Chinese Buffet 1982 TOYOTA. Air-conditioning, sun roof, etc. Great condition. View on cam pus, $3800. Marianne, 839-9820.___________ 1125 E. Apache Blvd. 941 W. Elliot Tempe • 968-3322 Chandler • 821-5428 1984 M USTANG GT convertible, 30,000 m iles, air-conditioning, power windows/ locks. Cruise control. Jeff, 921-3540. MENU INCLUDES: ■Sweet & Sour Pork •Lemon Chicken «Egg Roll »Sesame Chicken •Shrimp with Almond Ding »Teriyaki Beef *BBQ Spare Ribs •Spicy Chicken »Smoked Fish «Beef with Green Bean •Vegetarian »Almond Turkey *Moo Goo Gai Pan •BBQ Pork »Ham Fried Rice »Chow Mein, etc. 1984 PONTIAC Hero, red, new engine, m ajor p ro tectio n p la n . A u tom atic. $4750/offer. Don M yers, 638-7319, 252-6971. ___________________ WE SERVE BEER & FRUIT COCKTAILS A L L Y O U C A N E A T C H IN E S E B U F F E T BUSINESS HOURS •L U N C H * n - 9 Sun.-Thurs. 11-9:30 Frl.-Sat. $3.76 «D IN N E R « $4.51 . 1984 RABBIT Convertible- 36,000 m iles. New tires, cruise, alarm, automatic. Best offer. C all Robynne, 784-8910. 1986 FIERCE Black, 5-speed, air, AM/FM stereo, alloy wheels, and moire. $6700. 968-5544 after 5 p.m. BUICK APO LLO .1975. Good condition, low mileage, very low price. C all now, 730-1434. 1- - ■ - - ' • ' ' GOOD LUCK SUNDEVILS COME W ATCH THE GAME ON OUR BIG SCREEN SATELLITE T.V. VOLVO 245DL Wagon 1975. Automatic. $800/offer. Datsun 210 wagon 1979. Auto­ m atic, $900/offer. W eekends, 829*1128. trucks for sale 2 5 % OFF • * *0 ^ u EXCELLEN T B U Y . 1972 International Vk ton. Good Jo d y, tan, mags, runs good. $500 firm. 921-2955. *^ WITH STUDENT ID HAPPY HOUR 4-8 Mon-Fri V» PRICE WELL & WINE - $2S0 PITCHERS FREE BUFFET v % » ► ♦'V T e m t iia ^ O S n 825 South 48th Street Second Year "Serving A S U " S b jfo 966-6480 V ie n n a Second Year "Serving A SU " motorcycles for sale 1981 SUZUKI 550. New condition, photo at MU Information Desk. Rick, 391-2203. 1982 SUZUKI 750GS. SHver/red. Looks and runs, excellen t, $900. W illiam , 947-1510. I Greaseless Fryer: Fries, Onion Rings, fo m ° ° 9 S- Chk:ken Nuggets, Gyros nw wog Cinnam on T re e Center Between Cholla & Dick’s ¡c o u p o n Mon-Sat, 11 am-9 pm *Sun, Noon-6 pm _ miscellaneous for sale 1985 HONDA VT 700 Shadow- 19K m iles. Good condition. M ust sell. $2000/offer. Randy, 921-3347.____________________ 1986 ELITE 150. $250 plus take over payments. Excellent condition. Sally, 966-8413. 1986 HONDA Helix 250. Red, Kenwood stereo, trunk. Excellent condition, 70 miles/hour. $2100. 969-6548. 1986 HONDA Elite 150. Great for student transportation. High m iles, $600/offer. 921-2844, Dan. 54 INCH TV, M agnivision color remote front projection, oak. $470/offer. C all 831-5579._______________ ■ CO PLAYER , Fisher, $195. JV C receiver, 175 watts per channel, $150, or both for $325. 966-8848. ELAN UNIUNE racing skis 190, with G eze 942 bindings, Raichle boots size 9, Scott poles. W hole package used one season, excellent condition. $450/offer. Chad at 967-2296»___________________________ 1986 HONDA E lite 50, $550. 921-1445. GUITAR, IBANEZ acoustic/electric, slim ­ line. W ith hard shell case. Brand new, $325. 730-6211, evenings. 1986 YAM AHA 50cc. 80 m iles per gallon, looks new. Great running condition. $400/offer. Denise, 894-9409. LOUIS VUITTON handbags and wallets. Great prices. Vinny, 986-2053. 1986 YAM AHA Riva 125 scooter. Excel­ lent condition. $600/offer. Call 585-4033. M ENS SCHW INN Cruiser, $125. Technics Quartz direct drive automatic turntable, $100. Great condition. 967-1163, Susan. 82 YAM 250IT dirt bike. $630. 921-7972. MOTOR SCO O TER, 1978 Yam aha Chap­ pie. Good condition. $125. Jack, 949-6727 or 481-9068. TW O 1966 961-4129. H onda A ero s. $1000. YAM AHA M O TO RCYCLE 72CC, 5.6hp, 1983 model. 541 original m iles, excellent condition. Phone 951-1693. bicycles for sale NEW AND Used bikes at bargain prices. ASU discount, and weekend repair. Alm ost anything. College Cycle, 909 E. Lemon. 966-0842. N lSH lK I O LYM PIC 12-speed, s ilv e r, e x c e lle n t co n d itio n , 835-7223, Dan. 58cm, $245. RALEIGH GRAND Prix 10-speed. Rides w ell. Could use som e work. $65. 730-6211, evenings. TH E O NE Place where you can get everything at the lowest prices. Expert repairs on any make. Tempe Bicycle Shop, 330 W. University. 966-6896. furniture for sale NEON LIGHTS. Various shapes and colors. $10-$35 per tube. Transform ers extra. 431-0177. __________________ NEVER U SED Apple lie , monitor IH, 2 disk drives, 128K, some software, blank discs. Mark, 989-5406._____________________ NEW MINOLTA 7000i cam era, $350. Com plete Nikon outfit, $200. Pioneer turntable, $75. R ealistic turntable, $50. M id-60's guitar, $50. Practice amp, $90. Mens speed skates, size 11, $125. C ali Kraig. 830-2489, 965-6881. NIKON F3, MD-4 motor. Nicad charger. New, in box. Also F2AS, F2A and more. 945-5136. O A K LE Y ’ S962-5865. G R EA T S election. C a ll PIANO- YAM AHA electronic. New, key board 77. Portable, $1500. 835-0785. SKI EQUIPMENT- New 89 models Head with Tyrolia bindings. Ju st $375 a pair. A ll models available. 921-9543. STARVING ARTIST’S Art Supply Sale. Papers, frames, odds and ends.,Nothing over $20. 9/28-10/8. 9-5. Scottsdale Artists' School. 7031 E. Cam eiback Rd, Suite 201 990-1422. A BED 4 U. 961-7860. Futons, daybeds, m attresses. Quality name brands below retail. __________ _ B R ASS BED. lovely queen size HB-FB. Never used matt and foundation factory wrapped. $225. 829-8984. ________ CUSTOM IZED FUTON Fram es. You order it, I make it. Starting at $60, quality work. 921-1432. DAYBED, G O RG EO U S white with brass cam eiback design. Never used. Includes trundle and 2 matts. $170. 829-8984. DINETTE SET, solid natural oak top and base, four chairs, never used. 829-8984. 1984 IN T E R C E P T O R 784-0181. O n ce Again sells "exper­ ienced cloth es" fo r m en, women and children. TWIN SIZE Bed. $50. Includes box spring, mattress, and frame. John, 966-1814. 3130 S . M ill, Smitty’s Center 829-1990 U SED FURNITURE, large selection, affordable. Furniture Consignm ent Ware­ house. 3401 W. Whitton Ave. Between Indian School and Thomas, East of 35th Avenue. 352-0041. real estate for sale 750CC V 4 . M O TO R C Y CLE/ SCO O TER SER V IC E &, PAR TS, IN SUR AN CE REPAIR EST IM A T ES , FACTO R Y TRAINED M ECH AN ICS, PICK-UP & D ELIVER Y. FUTONS FA C TO R Y O U TLET 789-9747/NW PH X 254-5943/DWNTWN FUTONS FRAMES & ACCESS. 2620 W . B ro a d w a y E a s t o f P r ic e 966-8031 Stop hoarding m oney in your closets! Y ou help price garm ents on consignm ent. FA C U LTY'S DREAM - owners leaving area. 1960 square feet, 4 bedroom, 2 bath, fam ily room, dining area, laundry room, built-in double garage. Com er lot. Desert and lawn. 2 m iles ASU . Pool. 10x44 covered patio, gas barbeque, 16x3 paved RV parking. Newly decorated. Furniture available. Sacrifice $105.000. Appoint­ ment only. 638-1793 evenings._________ GO VERNM ENT HO M ES from $1. “ U R epair." Also tax delinquent property. C all 805-644-9533 ext. 731 for information. O PEN HO U SE Saturday and Sunday. 1905 E. University, number E-217 and . number 0-169. C all Jam es tor more information. 897-9000. OUT O F Trie Dorm special. 2 bedroom, 2 bath. C all Jam es at ER A Carew, 897-9000. Hot D ogs: Polish and Italian Sausaige, Bratwurst H O UR S: 1985 HONDA Scooter 250. Professionally m aintained. Carry 2 at highway speed. With extras, $1100/offer. 963-8207. STUDENT DESK- 3 drawers and chair, $20. John, 966-1814.________ 945-6912 c o ru A H o n steam ed Poppy Seed Bun, C h oice o f Meny Toppings 903 S . R u ral R d. CARDINALS- 2 tickets a ll rem aining games. South endzone, below cost, $150. C all Kraig, 830-2489, 965-6881.________ 1982 YAM AHA Vision. Pearl white, shaft drive. 14K. $95Q/offer. 897-7246. 1900 N. Hayden Road New 1985 HONDA Shadow -13,500 m iles. New rear tire and windshield. Excellent condi­ tion. $1650/offer. C all 273-7584. SO FAS FROM Scottsdale luxury home­ builder’s m odels. Contemporary styles and fabrics. Three to choose from. $250, retail $700. Matching loveseat $200. 829-8984___________________________ RISING SUN C Y C L E H O T DOG HEAVEN tickets fo r sale D l I cí H J 0 f u r n it u r e s a l e s /r e n t a l Desks.............. ............... ..................$ 59.95 BedSets.»Twin............. ........... - .........99.95 Full...... ...... ................ ......H9.95 Queen........:.........:.............. 149.95 Dinettes...»,..-.....«...,..,..,........,..— 129,95 Couch/Loveseat...... »»—.................. 300.00 Sectionals..........—»».»»»...... ...... . 369.95 •90 Day Same as Cash •Rent to Own «MC/Visa «Layaway •Valleywide Delivery RENTAL EXPERTS 1870 E. Apache, Tempe ______________ 829-1212________ PLEA SE CO M E to ER A 'S open house at the lovely Papago Park II this Saturday and Sunday at 1905 E . University, number E217 and number 0169. W e wUt have two of our nicest condos open for your leisure with refreshm ents. For m ore inform ation cafi Jam es Murray at 897-90OO. NO QUALIFYING 1 , 2 , 3 b e d ro o m c o n d o s & townhouses. Papago Perk Village from $58,0004102,000. Bob Bullock Realty Executives 996-2992 Frida^Scptemb« f3^19B8 Page 22 townhomes/ condos for rent apartments for rent 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, $480 plus utilities Close to ASÚ. Great location. Call 966-1824. BRAND NEW Apartments, new lower rates, special sem ester leases available. 2 and 1 bedroom, free cable, pool, covered parking, lots more. Ju st a few blocks behind O ld Town Tempe. Roommates also needed. 921-3036. GO O D G RAD ES... Great deal. Rustic red brick, 2 bedroom, 1 bath, fenced back­ yard. Graduate preferred. 894-8348. LA M IRAGE Apartments- Up to 3 weeks free rent. C all 968-2042 for details. LARG E TWO Bedroom, two bath unfurn­ ished in duplex. Private patio, covered parking, laundry hook-up. Close to ASU at Apache and M cClintock. $400/month. Call M a rio n S m ith , 8 3 1 -1 5 5 5 , R e a lty Executives. NEW , LARG E 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment, $399/month, $125 security deposit, $100 off first months rent. Pool, laundry room. W alk to ASU. Cape Cod Apartments, 910 S. G ary Drive, 968-5238. Q U ADRANG LES VILAGE has apartments as low as $377/month. C all 968-8118 for details. Turn your mtecettaneous Items Into a little miscellaneous cash! TEM PE W ALK to A SU , 2 bedroom. 2 bath duplex. $475/month, 1 month free. 968-4000. ______________________ TIRED O F noisy neighbors? Very quiet!! Adult com plex has one bedroom with utilities included. Move in discount with lease. $395. Broadway/Rural. 967-6620, W ALK TO ASU. Free rent 1st 2 weeks. Junior 1 bedroom, 2 bedroom. Adults, no pets. 1031 E. Lemon. 968-2679. NEW D ELU XE Condo 2 blocks from ASU. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, washer/dryer, micro­ wave, dishwasher. Roommates OK, $600. Appointment only, 973-6981. SPRINGTREE CO NDO for rent, $575. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, both are master suites. A ll appliances, including washer/dryer and ceiling fans. Next to ABCO shopping center. Must see. C all Rick, 820-3333. UNIVERSITY/PRICE. Available October 1. 2 bedroom, 1 bath. $395. C all evenings. 966-8185. rental sharing 3 BEDROOM Condo, 1 room for rent. $230/month and V i utilities. Papago I, near ASU. Joe/Scott, 968-1826.____________ CLO SE TO cam pus. Fem ale share 3 bedroom house with fem ale grad and undergrad. V ery n ice. $200/m onth includes utilities. Barbara, 966-6367 after 5 p.m., 921-4687 9-12. DELU X LARGE bedroom in quality home. Furnished, private pool, full kitchen facili­ ties, washer/dryer, walk to ASU. $250. Phone 967-1787 evenings and weekends, 893-4834 weekdays. FEM ALE ROOM MATE wanted to share new 3 bedroom condo 6 blocks from cam pus. $250 plus V i utilities. 510 W. University, number 117. 829-8528. FEM ALE ROOMMATE to share or have own room in 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo V* m ile from ASU. $200(share)/$260(own), utilities included. Pool, washer/dryer. Com m on areas furnished. Teriann, 829-8528. M ALE/FEM ALE NO N-SM O KER to share 4 bedroom, 3 bath townhouse, Scottsdale and Thomas. $160 plus V* utilities. 990-0635. leave message. S P E C IA L O F F E R Close to ASU Studios & 1-bed­ rooms, utilities included. $295 & up. M ALE ROOM MATE to share master bedroom in 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo V* m ile from ASU. Pool, washer/dryer. $265, utilities included. Common areas furn­ ished. John, 921-3476. M ALE ROOMMATE needed to share 2 bedroom, % utilities. Daytime, 267-0511, evenings, 962-6389. Ask for Chris. Marianna Apts. 1214 E. Orange 966-8597 M ALE ROOM MATE needed to share large 1 bedroom apartment. $180 pays every­ thing except long distance, including cable, HBO. Vt m ile from ASU. C all Jeff, 921-2712. M ALE TO Share townhouse, private bedroom. $190 plus Vi utilities. Near ASU. 253-1210. M O V E IN S P E C IA L W ALK TO ASU! NUM BER O NE deal in Tempe: Master bedroom for rent, unfurnished, clean house. $320 per month, utilities included. Open m inded m ale/female only. 921-2080. O n ly V2 b lo ck from cam ­ pus. B eau tifu lly furnished, huge 1 bedroom , 1 bath; 2 bedroom ,, 2 bath apart­ m ents. A ll b ills paid. Cable T V , h e a te d p o o l, and s p a c io u s laundry facilitie s. Friendly, courteous m a n a g e m e n t. S to p by today! PRIVATE ROOM, 300 square feet, private entrance, fireplace.'$175/m onth; sm aller room , $107/m onth. C a ll Linda/Jim , 231-0665 RESPO N SIBLE FEM ALE, nonsmoker. 2 bedroom. 2 bath townhouse, fireplace, pool, 2 m iles ASU. $225. 921-2649. ROOM MATE NEEDED 10/1. $260/month plus Va utilities. Am m enities include washer/dryer, swimming pool, jacuzzi, tennis courts, volleyball, and cable TV. Los Prados townhouse. W ill have own room. Please call 894-6091 after 5 p.m. Terrace Road Apartments 950 S. Terrace 966-8540 help wanted ACTO RS, DEBATO RS and speech team members, let your voice make you money! Full training morning or night. Part-time. C all Mark or Dave, 966-5765. townftomes/ condos for rent ARTISTS!! W ILL buy your acceptable designs for printing on T-shirts. If inter­ ested contact B ill at 585-4294. 2 BEDROOM , 2 bath. Price and University area. Includes a ll appliances. $475/month. Other property available. Regal Profes­ sionals, Inc. 437-4877. CLINICIAN II to provide behavioral health services and community life skills training to adult CMI’s in a residential treatment program. College level courses plus 2 years related experience or equivalent. Tuesday-Saturday 3 p.m .-12 a.m. or 7 p.m.-12 p.m. 12.7K. Apply at 1424 S. 7th Avenue. Q U ESTA VIDA- 2 bedroom, 2 bath, full a m e n itie s. $595/m onth. J e ff, day 415-524-3991; evenings 415-222-7437. autos for sale help wanted BO O KKEEPER PART-TIM E, 10-15 hours/ week. Need organized person to write checks, balance bank statem ents, payroll, keep records for accountant. Tempe, 968-6829. COPYW RITING INTERN needed 10-20 hours a week. Are you a hard worker and a quick study with superior writing skills? If you can afford to work cheap (or better yet, for credit), I can provide you with a wealth of experience and a foot in the door to a future career. Convince me in writing to give you an internship: Karen Gray, The Hired Pen, Inc., 67 E. W eldon, Ste 110, Phoenix, 85012 DICK’S DRIVE-IN now hiring for staff and supervisory help. Flexible schedules, $3.75 starting wage. No experience necessary. Applications at 855 S. Rural. DRIVER, PART-TIM E. Arizona Youth for Change- Adolescent Day Hospital. Phone 784-5592. ____________________ DUNKIN DONUTS, 2009 N. Scottsdale Road. Help wanted, morning shift. Apply in person. EARN $1000 cash. Locate a buyer for my nice three bedroom m obile home, near ASU. Buyer can save over $14,000 in liv in g expenses. S a le price $6990. 829-8143 for details. EARN $100 Daily. Courier Transportation, 267-8713. EARN U P to $6 hourly plus bonuses w hile working on a variety of programs. We need .10 mature, dependable, experienced telem arketers for 20 hours minimum per week. C all John, 893-0411, MondayFriday 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and Saturday 9 am .-2 p.m. FUN PART-TIM E jbbs. Perfect for college and high school students. $5/hour plus bonuses. 4-9 Mondpy-Thursday, 10-2 on Saturday. C all Mr. Rod, 921-2897. FUN TIME equals incom e representing officially licensed Arizona State logo watches. 1-800-441-LOGO. G IKAS INTERNATIO NAL, a national market research company, is seeking individuals majoring in the social sciences, nutrition, or business m arketing for super­ visory'position. Immediate opportunity for full or part-time work. C all 265-2894, Monday-Friday, 8 a.m .-5 p.m. HAAGEN-DAZS ICE Cream Shoppe assis­ tant manager. Hard working, personable, honest person with flexible schedule to work days or nights. Full-tim e position. References required. 941-0400. HANG OUT in Hayden for extra cash. Fledgling start-up company needs library research done on a sporadic basis. An investigative talent and fam iliarity with Hayden, Science and Binson libraries a must. C all 821-1434 before 8:30 p.m. HAVE YOU seen the ASU Student Hand­ book and Calendar? It’s a handy pocketsize book, filled with everything you ever wanted (or didn't want to) know about college life. It’s even got a daily reference calendar! The really neat thing about the Handbook is that it's produced by ASU students. That's right. Students gather the information, write and edit the copy; shoot the photos; design the cover and inside pages and last, but certainly not least, they design and sell the advertising that supports this annual event. Students spend long hours with creativity flowing, ideas exchanging and the fulfillm ent of producing their very own handbook. W e’d like to offer you the chance to join this team and gain invaluable experience while you’re in college. Wte need several adver­ tising sales representatives to create, design and sell advertising to local retail businesses. If you have a strong commitiment to excellence and pride in a job well done, we'd like to speak with you. You must be self-m otivated, punctual, a good tim e manager, own a car and be a people person. Please ca ll today and join a team of dedicated ASU students who are committed to making the 1988-89 ASU Student Handbook and Calendar the best. C a ll Dan EJIstrom at 965-6555 today! P.S. If you are wondering what in the heck a Student Handbook is, stop by Student Publications in Matthews Center and get a free copy! FREE CAR W ASH BARGAIN BRAKES & MUFFLERS WITH ANY SERVICE 521 I E. Thomas, Phx. We Guarantee Quality a t Bargain Prices BRAKE SPECIAL $39.85 PER AXLE 840-4489 Mon-Fri 7-6 Sat 7-4 Reg. $44.85 & $3485 INSTALLED Most Cars & Light Trucks Metallics Slightly Higher GAS SHOCKS LIFETIME MUFFLER Reg. $24.85 $19.85 •THREE STAGE PAr„ •EXTRA HEAVY. DUTY INSTALLED CUSTOM DUAL EXHAUST V starting at $139.85 ¡2 0 ^ jewelry help wanted n e ip w a m e a EXTRA M O NEY is nice, but you can help people too. Earn $120 plus a month. Safer, faster plasm a donation only at ABI Centers due to automated procedure. $5 bonus to new donors on first donation with this ad. Ask about additional bonuses. (Monday-Saturday) U niversity Plasm a Center, Associated Bioscience. Inc. 1015 S. Rural Rd, Tempe, 968-6139. H EY YOU!! Yea, the wild, crazy one! Become a part-time D J for private parties and get paid for being a ham! Call 957-1967.________ _______________ _ _ I’M DOING Cancer Research and I need help from someone with the disease. If you have any type of cancer, please call me. M ichelle, 965-2292 or 921-8421.________ LARG E PRINT advertising agency needs staff assistant. Job: deliveries, phones, filing, etc. Hours: Tuesday and Thursday. Phone Susan, 957-6636. LO CAL RADIO Station has a part-time opening for a telephone market research position, no seNihg involved, close to cam pus. Great opportunity for Sopho­ m ores or Juniors. C all Mike Maloney after 1 at 966-6236._______________________ M AKE M ONEY!! S e ll an organic food supplement that increases energy. It sells itself. 840-1825.____________________ _ SENIOR STUDENT majoring in finance/ accounting for part-time position with local travel agency. C all Beverly, 894*1329. ST O C K Y A R D S R E STAU R AN T hiring lunch waitresses and bus boys. Must be able to work Monday-Friday, 10-3 p.m. Apply Monday-Saturday, 2-4 p.m. 5001 E. Washington. _______ ______ STO C KY A R D S R E STAU R AN T hiring dinner cocktail waitress and hostess. Apply Monday-Friday, 4-6 p.m. 5001 E. Washington. ____________ ____ NOW ACCEPTIN G Applications for all shifts, part-time. Resum e required. Apply in person, Com fort Inn, 5300 South 56th Street, Tempe, 85283. NOW HIRING reliable, sincere, self moti­ vated individual at The Futon Store, 2620 W. Broadway. Mesa. 966-8031. PART-TIME SANDW ICH maker, hours flexible. Must work lunch hours. $4/hour start. 437-9237, The Sub Machine. PART-TIME ENGINEERING aide consult­ ing firm close to ASU needs student in engineering program to work flexible hours. General office work and IBM PC with Auto Cad, data basis, etc... w ill train. Need a responsible individual who is technically oriented and can type. Apply at E S S 64 E. Broadway, number 230, Tempe. Lisa, 967-5278. R E C EPT IO N IS T P A R T or full-tim e. $4/hour. 966-4639. 8-10 a.m., MondayFriday. RESO RT HO TELS, cruiselines, airlines, and amusement parks, Now accepting applications for sum m er jobs, internships, and career positions. For more information and an application; write National Collegi­ ate Recreation Service, PO Box 8074;' Hilton Head S C 29938. S A LES hllABKETING assistant for national marketing ‘ company. 2 months in-store selling/sam pling promotion for Quaker O a ts . E v e n in g s an d S a tu rd a y s . $ 7 .5 0 /h o u r. C a ll D an a R o b b in s, 818*888-5459. S A LES PER SO N S needed for new team shop in ICA building at Sun D evil Stadium. Mature, personable, experienced, for fulltime/part-time sales. References required. 941-0400. C U S T O M G O LO S M IT H IN G , s ilv e rsm ithing and jewelry repairs. M ill Avenue Jew elers. 968-5967.__________________ free lost/found LO ST- C LA S S ring. Je ssica you found but I can’t call. Please ca ll 784-0750. V IN E T A V E R N . P art/fu ll-tim e cook wanted. Apply in person,. 801 E. Apache. LO ST DOG, white m altese, short hair, sm all, thin. Has heart condition, takes m edication. Lost by Papago Park II. Reward. C all G ary 921-1217.__________ VINE TAVERN. Part/fuH-time waitress wanted. Apply in person, 801 E. Apache. W AITER/W AITRESSES and prep cooks needed for immediate employment. Apply in person at Chopandaz, com er of Scotts­ dale Road and M cKellips. W ANTED SPA202 tutor. C all 951-0220, leave message. WANTED: VO LU N TEERS for the Arizona State Hospital. If you are interested, please contact Susan, 220-6014. . . . __ V B i W A t ----- ^ START IM M E D IA T E LY FORTUNE 500 COMPANY IS ! SEEKING AMBITIOUS ; TELE-SALES REPS i H O U RS: > 7:30 a.m .-4 p.m . & 4:30-9 p.m . M on.-Frl. { Sell long distance phone | services for a top leader I in the communications {field. $5 per hour { guaranteed. R aises & t bonuses. Loo ks great on { your resume. Other opj portunities available in t other departments after { 30 days. Central Phoenix { location. PART-TIME MORNINGS. Delivery posi­ tions. $4.50 plus per hour. C all Pastry Courier: 230-0200. PEPPER CO RN LIMITED, Park Central location, needs part-time fashion sales nights and weekends. Apply in person, Monday-Friday, 2-4 p.m. CASH PAID. Jew elry o l alt kinds, including gold, sterling, gem s, pearls, antique, etc. Rare Lion, 921 S. M ill Avenue, Tempe Center. 968-6074________ . _______ TYPIST. CLO SE to ASU . Full-tim e, 7-3, Monday-Friday. 968-5984. NEED 100 College Students immediately. Interested in earning $5,000-$10,000 a month part-tim e? Meet the students with the checks! Serious inquiries only! Call Chris at 921-3673.________________ ___ NEED $$$? $5/hour and up. W ork when you want to! Banquet servers, bartenders, and conference set-up. Must have black and whites, own phone and transportation. Valley-wide positions. C all 468-9499, Tad Temporary. CASH FO R gold and diam onds. M ill Avenue Jew elers, 414 S . Mid, Suite 101, Tempe. 988-5967.____________________ Ask for J ill or Barb ADDTEM PS ! N o Fee ACD SARAH , M ich elle and Cathy- 5:00 is party time!! M ichelle. A-CHI’S THE Beta’s can’t wait for the best K-bail tourney ever. ADPI PLED G E Ju lie P - You are the greatest little sis i in the world! I love you! Love always, Your big s is Steffie. ADPI TRISH: Get psyched for the Phi Sig formal, it’s gonna be a night to remember. Scott. AEPI KENNY: I am looking forward to tonight with you. Ted me about the cummerbund. A ll my love, Sara. AEPI LEE Silverm an: I’m really happy you’re going to Theta P.P. with me. W e’d have a blast! Ju st know that I’m thing of you! Love, Jules. AEPI TODD, John, Jason: Get ready for a night of wining, dining, dancing (maybe even a little rom ancing!) at KD Pledge Presents! KD K isses, Lisa, Kim , and Kim. AEPI TODD: You’re going to another KD form al? How did you get so lucky! It must be cuz you’re so cute! I love you! Lisa. AG D AMY: You're the best daughter ever! Tonight’s gonna be a blast! Love, Mom. AGD B ECK Y, Carol, Kim and Cynthia. Tonight’s the night! We'D have a blast! Love, DaNeil. AG D CINDY M iller! Hope you have a wonderful evening (tomorrow night 700) cause the rest of the weekend w ill be a nightmare 461 style. N icole. AG D H O T Dot Em ily, get ready to rage at pledge presents! W e’ll have a blast! Get psyched. Love, Susie. AGD JILL Rutledge: .Looking forward to seeing you at Pledge Presents. Enjoy! Love, your mom, Lisa. 224-5625 } personals EO E ACTO RS Phoenix’s largest and best haflnted house needs actors to portray ghouls, ghosts and goblins! Please c a ll Sjkip •94-1353 instruction AER O BIC INSTRU CTO R Certification workshop by National Aerobics Training Association at Phoenix Center for Sports Medicine. W eekend of September 30th. C all 963-9415 help wanted A FTE R C L A S S HOURS AFTERNOONEXPANSION$5.50per hour guaranteed Diatamarlca Marketing, the nation's finest telemarketing firm, is now accepting applications for the following shifts; 1 4 p.m ., 8-9 p.m . Weekends Also AvaOabte Our salespeople work in a modem, comfortable business environment contacting established customers on long distance lines. Guaranteed salary or commission, whichever is greater, and averages $5-$7 an hour. Our Tempe office is located approximately S minutes from campus. Please call Dtalamsfica Marketing for details. 829-1140 F IE S T A 'S , Scottsdale’s newest, most exciting Mexican restaurant is now hiring for all positions. W E O F F E R a fun, friendly working environment and a product you’ll be proud to serve. W E R E­ QUIRE ability to project a friendly, outgoing im­ age and a team player attitude. Please apply in person Monday-Friday 10 a.m.-6 p.m. We are located just 6 minutes north of campus at 2323 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale. A G D JILL: Your mom wants forma! to be raging. Let’ s party. Love, Tammara. AG D KIM Daiza. WeH$t’s finally here, take a deep breath! I know this is going to be our best pledge presents yet! Thanks for everything. Love CD. AGD KIM Reism an, get ready to be presented this weekend. Your Mom loves you! Lisa. AG D KRISTA: Tonight is finally the night! Get ready to have a great time! Love, Mom Lilly. ______________ ^________ ' AGD LARA: Get psyched!! Tonight the town belongs to us!!! AG D LISA Altizer: Let’s rage at formal. Your first Pledge Presents w ill be fantas­ tic. Love, Gina. AG D MEGAN: Don’t worry, be happy! Tonight w ill be a blast! Mommy loves you! Glo. ________ AGD MELANIE: Your mom is so proud of you, get excited for tonight! Love, Cathy. AG D MELANIE: I couldn’t ask for a better date, even if I tried. Let’s have a blast! Delta Sig Steve. AGD M ICHELLE, you’re the coolest daughter a mom could have! Pledge Presents is going to be out of hand! Can’t wait to see you presented. XOXQ, Susy. AG D MIKI. Thanks for being such a super friend. Pledge presents is going to be wonderful! Hope you have a super time!! Love, DaNeil. AG D N AN CY G . Pledge presents w ill be a blast! You're a super daughter! Love, DaNeil (Mom) AGD NICOLE: Spam in your room, le t's say 1:30 a.m.- Oh- unless I’m preoccup­ ied! What are the odds? Love, Glo. AG D PR ESEN TS Darla Decker, the greatest pledge daughter a mother could have! Love Mom. AG D RACH and Di: M iracles do happen! Three dates! Wow! Don’t fall off the trolley! See you, Glo. AGD RANDI: Maybe my room w ill be neat after formal! They say these things change you!?! Love, Gk>. AGD ’S CARO L, Kim , Cynthia and Daniel­ le. Get ready for tonight! W e're going to have a great time! Love, Becky. Statt PTM» personals personáis AGD’S CARO L, Paula, Becky, Cynthia, Kim, Melinda, DaNeil and the guys: Have a great tim e at the formal! I’ll be thinking about ya’! Love always, "The Ancient O ne". •' !' ;/ /'/-/'■ : • AGO S. Jane- Surprise, I’ll bet you never expected to see your name here! W ell life is full of little surprises. Tonight w ill be great. Lové, K. Bruce. AG D 'S M ICHELLE, Cathy, and Sarah: I'm so excited for tonight, the lim o is gonna be great! Get psyched! Love, M ichèlle. AGO SPIFF: Tonight is going to be awesome!! Love, Biff. AGO SŸEPHÀNIÈ: Tonight is your night, so relax and enjoy ft- AGO Sara. AGD TÁMARA: You, and Keith are the best- so let’s get excited for formal. AGD Sara. " AGD TERRI Menke! Your mom loves you! Get ready for ah awesome evening! Love, vy- • Page 23 Friday, September 30,1988 J; AGD- THANKS for a ll the encouragement! I hope I can run after formal! Love, Glo. ALPH A GAM Daughter G ayle Bates: Your first formal- don’t get too out of control, have fun. Mom Sara. ALPHA G AM S Lori, Jen, K.B.- Tonight’s our night. You guys are the greatest. Let’s rage! Luv, Karen. ALPHA G AM S Dot Tiffani Lee: I can’t wait to form ally present you at Presents. Keep shining! Luv, Karen. ALPH A GAM Gris: Tonight is it! And absolutely-nothing w ill go wrong this time. Don’t forget to bring your own twinkie! Nicole. " ' * ALPH A GAM Glo: a il the bets are in and the odds are posted. We are hoping for a score from the home team! Nicole. ALPHA GAM Susie Stein: Don’t get drunk, don’t fail down, don’t make a fool of yourself- some advise from Mom (do as I say not as I do!) Nicole. ALPH A GAM. Felisa. Here’s to one Hot Dot! Cheers to you! Have fun!! Love Mom. ALPH A GAM S M ichelle, Sarah, and Michelle: You’re the absolute best! I love you all! Cathy. ALPH A GAM M Lynda: Hope you have a great time at formal, see ya there. Love, your mom, Cheryl. ALPH A GAM Tina: Form al??? Let’s make tonight a memory for the reed of truth! Love your pledge mom, Jeannine, ALPH A GAM pledge çlean-up group: you guys are "The Best” . Here’s a special invitation to party in my room tonight! Keep your chins up and those glasses filled. Luv ya, Myndi. ALPH A GAM dot C hristy R.- Tonight’s your night. Can’t wait to see you and meet that "m ystery’1 date. Let's party- hard. Your mom loves you. Myn. ALPHA GAM M A Om ega I Volleyball team: Thanks for adoptng us as teammates on Saturday. W e had a great time. W ould like to see you a ll again. W hadda ya say? Ju lia and Renee. CATH: HAPPY 21st Birthday!! I love you, George CHI-0 MOM Karen. I’m so glad you’re my mom! Love Your Dot Veeja. CHI-0 MARY: You’re the best mom a dot could have. Thanks for the support! I love you! Lisa. CHI O M EG A pledge class. You’re awesome. Thanks so much/ Your social chair Veeja. CHI-O’S: HOPE all is well! Don’t forget me!!! Rho Beta! Love, Chi-O Stephanie Pollack. CHRISTOPHER HERR: Happy nine! I love you. i m iss you. From m iles and m iles away, I send you my love and my heart. They w ill always be yours. Forever, a sexy admirer. COOKIE, HAPPY Anniversary. I don’t know What I would do without you!rHere’s to weekends!! Love C.B. DAN: THE sky’s the lim it tonight! W e’re going to have a blast at Pledge Presentsso get psyched to party! Love, AGD Alison. DAVID H.- Get ready for the formal of your life. W e’re gonna rage dude! KD Kim S. DAVID THE Grouch: You better have fun! I know we will. We’ll dance the night away! Love, Bunny. DEKE PLED GES: Great job last weekend. You guys are tough! Way to stick together, car wrecks and all. Keep up the good work, DEKE actives. DELTA CHI Glenn: You’d -better be excited cause this is the night, Kappa Delta formal will be Oh so right! Christine. DELTA CHI Dave: W hat’s yellow check­ ered and charges per m ile? It’s picking you up, so you better sm ile! KD Jennifer. DELTA SIG John W eir... Mr Querido. Let’s light up the formal tomorrow with our souls on fire, then make the sunshine from our pure desire! Carolann. D ELTA SIGS: W e're psyched for the big game tomorrow!. Frats watch out! Delta Sigs are on a roll. Love, your coaches, Pam, Wendy, Brooke. DELTA SIGS: Jeff and Ed- Noon, the pool, champagne, us, all day/ all night- psyche!! DELTA SIG Form al is going to be awesome, especially with Mutton head there! DELTA SIG Pledges are looking forward to the pre-game party with the Kappa’s, Pi Phi’s, Dee Gee’s, ATO’s, and Sig Eps. DEW EY: W HAT’S up? Haven’t had a chance to rap. Maybe this weekend? Love, Erica. DG PLED G E Kristi: Let's have a great time Saturday night! Delta S ig Jay. DKE JIM Morse, get ready for the time of your life!! ACD pledge presents ’88. Michelle. DKES: THANKS for the great happy hour. You guys-are the best! Chi-0 love and mine, Lisa XO! DUTCH BOY: I love you more than chihuahua fajitas! Ay, ay, ay, ay! Russian 'Tem ptress. • ALPHA GÁM Shellie: Hope you’re ready to rage tonite. Your mom loves you! Love, Maryellen: DW AYNE: ANOTHER wonderful evening at KD P.P. with the folks and sisters! Get psyched! I. love you! Jacqueline. ATO CLAY: Get psyched for tonight cuz we’re gonna have a total blast! Love, Michelle. GLORIA: ARE you going to be rockus tonight? The bets are in ! Love, Randj. ATO JE F F S.- You as bartender could be scary, but. I’ll take my chances. Love, Maryellen. ' G.Z.- CAN’T wait fo r .tonight’s formal! Hope you're just as excited. See you at six! Ry. • „■ ~ • H ER E'S TO the seniors of PiPhi!! ATO KIT: Theta formal, we’ll never forget! You’re a gentlem an and you dance! I’m so glad we met! Love, Sheila. ATO PLED G ES are psyched for our 6-way blowout on Saturday with the pledges of Pi-Phi, Kappa, DG Sig-Ep and Delta Sig. Get ready to party!! ATO STAN: Are you ready? You better be cause it’s gonna be a night you’ll never forget! Love ya, Cathy. ATO STAN Godbehere. Let’s have a replay of the U2 concert, this tim e your Madona!! Love, photo cage buddy. ATTENTION: - IT 'S Kristen Entzm inger’s 21st Birthday today!!! If you see her, give her a kids and a drink! B ECK Y. ANDY, DaNeil, Chris, Kim, Jim , Cyntha, and Chris: Jeepers guys, we’re gonna be the best looking couples there! Can't wait until tonite! Caro!' and Landon. PS- W e’ll bring lots of cham pagne just for you Bex!! BETA ACTIVÉS would like to congratulate the great fall pledge class. W ooglin loves you all! . - - JEN , CHRISTINE: Get psyched for formal, we’re gonna have a blast! KD. Kim S., ¿.M S.- DON’T ruri from, your feelings, you’ll only make yourself stick to your stomach, hold me always. KAPPA CO ACH ES Wendy, Pam, and Brooke: Your Delta Sigs w ill be ready Saturday. Don’t worry, be happy! K APPA DELTA Garnett: Our nite is finally here- Yes, we actually made it! Just one thing’s clear- Please keep up your spirit! Your roommie from n w ! ! KAPPA DELTA "D r." Mom: I’m so glad that you're near to share this special time! It’s great to have you here and I'm very glad you're mine! Love, Renee. KAPPA DELTA Pledge Becky: Let's make tonite a nite to remember! Luv ya! Rachel. KAPPA DELTA Mary: Have an awesome time tonite! Remember, Dorv’t worry, Be Happy! Luv, Rachel. KAPPA DELTA Tallie: Together again! W elcome backl It w ill be a time to remember! Love, Rachel.________________ BETA’S A R E practicing their plays, and pick’en their ways to win Kappa Kappa Gamma football. W ooglin loves the Kappa’s. KAPPA DELTA iil sis Candy: I bet you think you have it a ll figured out. Guess again Pledge Presents w ill be great. I love you sweetie. KD Big Sis, ??? BILt, ???- Are a ll bum ps good? C all mb! Your study buddy! KAPPA SIGS: 10:30 a m.. Intramural field, Saturday- Be there or be square!! Kappa coaches are psyched for fraternity football Let’s win!! Love. Debbie. Tracy, Kelly. CARL-. H ELLO from ASU. T i mànço mi arhico. Ciao Bello Rebecca. personals KAPPA DELTA Becky: Tonite’s the night! Who is your big? Can’t wait! Hugs -nKisses, ??? KAPPA SIG Lance: Looking forward to a raging time tonight! Hope you are too! Wendy. KATHY N.- Long time no see! How about lunch? M. (shoe) H. KD DUDES Vince and Greg!! "W e 'll have fun, fun, fun til Daddy takes the credit away!!!!" Jeanne and Jeannie (isn’t that special}. KDEE BIG Lisa: Get ready for the most awesome formal. It’ll be exciting and fun and far from noim al! Your lif loves you! Christine. KD GARNETT: Tonight is your night! Y ou 'll look hot! I can’t wait till you know who l am! KD love, Your big sister. KD IRENE- I’m so excited! Tonight is the night Get ready to rage. Love, your Big Sis. KD JACQ U E, Lisa, Kim. and Kim C - Can't wait to party with you and your hot dates! AOT Baby Sue. KD JEANNE: Hey, hey, Cutie! Pledge Presents 1988 is gonna be a blast!! Glad you're here!!! KD JEANNIE: Can’t wait... Form al wHI be awesome! Get psyched dude! Love ya, Jeanne. KD JEEEAN N E! You have fun at yours, I’ll have fun at mine and we’ ll talk about it tomorrow! Nicole. KD KIM S.- Can I have the lim o by myself for, urn,, an hour? Ha! Love, Mary. personals LAM BDA CHI Shy boy: I couldn’t have asked for a better friend! We are gonna rage at the.KD Form al! Can’t wait. Love, your wonderful date. RECREATIO N M AJO RS- RM SA/APRA social- Friday, Septem ber 30th, 6-11 p.m., Kiwanis Park volleyball, band, refresh­ ments, fun! M ARK W.- With each passing day, I realize even more how am azing and wonderful you are. I love you!! Cupcake. RICH: W E’LL have a great time at formal! Get psyched! KD Kim. MARY: FO RM AL w ill be a blast! You hot, crazy women. So get psyched! KD, Kim. SEAN: HAVE a great Birthday! W e’ll meet you in the jacuzzi after fbrmal! Luv KD ladies Kim, Lisa, and Merriiee! MIKE: G ET psyched for KD formal. I can’t wait. W e’re gonna have so much fun. Love, Lisa. SHAUNDA CO O KES w ill be making her big debute Friday evening! I’m so proud of you! Love, Mom. M Y MANI Oooo I’m so happy! Let’s make tonight just like Heaven! Love, your Baby. SIGMA NU Nathan: Sorry no sprinklers, picnic benches, or swings on this date- but this w ill still be a night to remember, if we remember! Hope you’ re *ready! Love, Tess. M YSTICAL M ICHELLE: Congratulations on finally becom ing legal. Get ready for tomorrow cause we’re going to party your 18 year old a - off. Love Susanne, Julie, Annette, Dory, and Christy. O X PAUL: Get psyched for form al tonight. The lim o ride, champagne, jacuzzi, and much more. We are going to rage. This is just one of the few great times that lie ahead! Love in KD, Cindy. PHI PSI Keith: Put on your tails, cuz this AGD wants to party at-form al. Love, Tammara. TO M Y whipped cream bud* Dave Haller-1 want one now! Lim o ride? KD Mary. PIKES FO O TBALL team, get psyched to win Saturday! We know your the best team! Luv your Kappa coaches, TRI-DELT ELIZABETH: I can’t wait for formal. Delta S ig Obie. PRO SPECTIVE M O NSTER Grels: Guess who I am .... or you’ll be tasting Chinese fists! PS E CHRISTY A. Here’s a final d u e . Think about what life is. Then think about art. Eiwood Blues. PS E CO NSPIRATO RS: Who are the jokes really on? Even if I’m way off course, it was worth it. Your, Little Sib. P S E JEN N IFER W .-1 just wanted to tell you I had tons and tons of fun being big bro to the bestest PM , Love, M elba T. KD PLED G E Martha- Have a great time at Form al tonight! Can’t wait until you’re my little! Luv Big. PSE- MELINDA. Can you say “unscram­ b le "? Sure, I knew you could! Clue . number 4: Eajyar. KD PLED GES: Your big s is ’ are excited and so am I! Have a blast tonight! KD Love, Jane. PS E PM ER Nola! Clue number 2. I’m going to Hawaii, how about you! Your Big Sib! KD PLED GES: Have a wonderful time tonight! I hope a ll your dreams come true! Luv, Sue. PSEPM KEVIN- B ig bro is a white sox, big sis is an indian, but with you we are the three musketeers. W ho are we? Your big Sit» . KD PLED G E M erriiee: Tonight is your night to shine. I’m so proud of you. W e’ll have an awesome time. Love, Your Big Sis. KD PLED G E Jeannie!!! Oooh! In a few hours, you’ll know who I am!! I can’t wait!!! Love, BigSis. KD RACHEL: Shall we add to'the list of "I never?” M.O. KD RENEE: Tonite’s the night, I can’t wait. Big sis, Little sis, we’ll be great! KD’S CANDY and Terri: Sorry plans got changed! We w ill still rage! KD .love* Kim C. KD’S CHRISTINE and. Jenn: Thanks for ail your Support! Party tonite! I love you! Kim. KD’S LISA and Kim: W e are gonna have such a great time tonite with our A E Pi guys! I'm so glad to be a KD! Love, Kim. KD’S- READY to rage at form al? It’ll be a blast, as always. KD love, Kathryn. K D 'S S U E and Jacque: H i Suitem ates! We w ill rage tonite! I love you! Love, Kim C. KD SUE¿ Jacque, Kim , and Kim: Wp’re going to be the suite to best! I can’t wait! A ll my KD tove, Lisa. KD SU E: Ó rily a few hours left untH we unveil the big secreti H aye no fear for I w ill be the loudest to cheer! KD love, B S? KKG CATHY Reagor: Happy ¿1st Birth­ day!! Thanks for always listening and helping mo to laugh more at life. You’re a terrific roommate! W KL, Laurie. LAM BDA C H l Griff: Can I cadi you Mr. "Hanaom e” 111? Tonite is the nite- so let’s party right! Yaknow I can’t wait cause I've got the best date!! Kay Dee Renee. LAM BDA CHI’S George, Psycho, and Chris: Lim o, champagne, beautiful datesHow you'd get so lucky? KD Pledge Presents get ready! LAMBDA CHI'S: Get excited, for Kappa football. Your coaches think you’re great! Love, Sally, Lynn, qnd Stephanie. LANDON: M Y G.Q . Man! |’m going to the AGD Form al with the best looking guy around- who could ask for more!? W e're gonna have a blast! Love you sweetie! Carol. ' THETA DELT B ill Raymond! W e’ll be friends in the future. W e’ve been friends in the past. At Fridy Pledge Presents, I know we’ll have a blast!! Vy. PHI SIG Gregory: It’ll be a night to remember.... Hopefully! Love, Madame X. KD LITTLE Clam o: Only a few hours before the unveiling! Get psyched for P.P. tonite! Love ya. Big. KD PLED GES: Tonite is our night! Have fun! I love you! KD love, Kim. TERRI W.- Who dm I? Tonight we'd rage! L , KD Big sis. PHI SIG Frank, you m ake me sm ile, you make my life worthwhile. Looking forward to formal tonight and just being with you! Love you, Heidi. _ KD LADIES: Get ready to rage at PP. I love all of you. AOT, Sue. KD MARIE: Hey love, it’s time again to break out the formal attire, Tonite we’ll have a great time- because we’ll, be together. Love, Steve. % SORORITY O FFICERS: Thank you for making the dinner a success. W e’ll see you in the Spring. The Delta Sigm a Phi Fraternity. TKE CHRISTO PHER H. Even though the past five and a half months have been fantastic, tonight is going to be a classic! Love ya AGD CD. PI PHI Pledge Stephanie: Saturday night is going to be great. It’s a non-stop party, so be ready! Delta Sig Mark. KD LITTLE S is Davina: Tonight is the night I reveal, my big secret, I’ve had so much fun this week trying to keep it! Pledge Presents w ill be a blast and I’m so excited we can share it together at last! Love, Your Big! personals RALPH: W E m iss you tons and tons. But soon... Happy October 1st! Love, the girls, XQXO. RAY: BE ready to rage at formal! KD love. Kathryn. TRIDELTS: WHO is Lamar? Where is Lamar? Come find out tomorrow night. The Men of DEKE. TSA: CAN ’T wait to see you at the Dash tonight, tne writing is on the wall! S.P. VIOLET PICASSO: Why not ask David Snow if he’s a dead head? Could make for an interesting S.F. trip! Cheeselady XAVIER: H APPY Birthday!! Hope your day is great! I love you so much! Thanks for making me so happy! Love, Jane. pets G R EEN IGUANAS: Great dorm pet. Only $25. C a ll 894-5439 anytime. services ANOREXIA, BULIMIA, com pulsive over­ eating/ Private and confidential counsel­ ing. G innie Grant Moriroe, ACSW , recov­ ering bulim ic, 437-9420, 468-3850. Health insurance welcome. HURRY! AVAILABLE space for ASU skiers is filling fast on Sunchase Tours’ seventh annual January collegiate winter ski breaks to Steamboat, V ail, W inter Park and Keystone, Colorado. Trips include lodging, lifts, parties and picnics for five, six- or seven days from only $156! Round trip flights and group charter bus transpor­ ta tio n a v a ila b le . C a ll t o ll fre e , 1-800-321-5911 for more information and typing/ word processing $1.25 AND up. Professional word proces­ sor and former English teacher. Laser printer. Bob/Claudia, 964-6012. $1.50 AND Up. AAA Q uality work and laser printer. 33 years experience. Call Marian, 839-4269. $1.50 and up. AAAA Word Processing. Over 20 years typing experience. Becky Dutton, 969-8773. $1 50/PAGE FOR quality work! T his week: 10% discount to students from Texas! S esam e S tre e t W ord P ro ce ssin g , 839-3626, anytime! $1.50 P ER page. Any Type Word Process­ ing. Spelling and grammar corrected. Som e graphics available. C all Debbie, 961-1495. $1 PAG E. Term papers, theses, resumes. Spelling/punctuation corrected. Pick-up/ delivery. Fast, reliable, satisfaction guar­ anteed. G ail, 222-8122. 20% O FF a ll resumes and word process­ ing. Same day service. Laser printing. Professional Image, 921-1129. A A K U R IT T Y P IN G - sh o rt p a p e rs, overnight/ long papers, prompt service/ transcribe tapes/ good rates/ Linda 831-0349. ACCEN TS IN Typing. Typing service near ASU. Quick turnaround. Over 30 years secretarial experience. 946-9982. ALL YO UR typing needs. Word processorletter quality printer. Can Cathy at 835-5591. ASTUTE COM PUTING, specializes in large, rush jobs. Guaranteed. Ron, 829-1509/ 833-5532. ASU AREA. Typing, word processing, editing. Fast, accurate. C all anytime. Prices competitive, negotiable. 966-2186. FAST RETURN. Experienced typist w ill edit spelling, punctuation, grammar. Accu­ racy guaranteed. Joan, 839-0772. FLYING FING ERS now has a Mac II and laser printer! Resum es, reports, etc. Susan, 945-1500. FORM ER ASU staffers: Word Perfect X e ro x M e m o ry w rite rs , M c In to sh computer/laser graphics. Artist available for charts, diagram s, and desktop publish ing. Experienced with APA, M LA, gradu­ ate school, etc. G radutale students antfaculty work welcome. C all Donna or Joan 945-6302. LETTER PER FECT weird processing Rush jobs no problem. Dissertations, torn, p ap ers, resum es, th e se s. Q u ality 820-7778. MOM’S TYPING: W ord processing for reports, thesis, m iscellaneous. Reason able rates. 10 m inutes from cam pus 941-2775. PR O FESSIO N A L TYPIN G and word processing cheap! Free pick-up and deliv­ ery. Shelley, 860-6950. QUALITY, QUICK typing. Papers, reports, resumes. Pick-up/delivery available. One day service available. Ginny, 9565163. . THE PAPERW O RKS- Thesis, report, and resume typing. IBM com patible word processing. Near ASU. 921-9575. TYPING/ WORD Processing. Highest quality, lowest prices, best service. Call before 4, Sheri, 892-5710. W ORD PRO CESSING/Typing. Resum es, term papers. Pick-Up, delivery^, laser. Additional services available. W rite Solu­ tions, 946-1318. adoptions ADOPTION. LOVING California couple, professional, wish to adopt white newborn. Legal, confidential, expenses paid. C all Kathy collect, 213-643-5643 after 5 p.m., weekends. PREGANT- ADOPTION. We offer confi­ dential counseling, legal advice and assis­ tance with housing and m edical arrange­ ments at no cost to you. In adoption, be sure you are dealing with competent professionals. Remember, the adoption laws, if not properly understood and applied, may create serious legal com pli­ cations in your adoption. Our fam ilies wish to provide a loving, caring home for a child. C all Southwest Adoption Center- a licensed, adoption agency- it’s confiden­ tial. 234-BABY. PREG N AN T? LOVING homes provided to those who seek adoption. You choose the fam ily. Your wishes respected. 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