Closure o f stadium seats affect Fiesta Bowl participants to lose money By Glen Creno and Charlie Diaz Although team« in thia year’s Fiesta Bowl will lose more than 915,000 each if the north end of Sun Devil Stadium re­ mains closed, top athletic officials have said the bowl will not be seriously hurt by the loss. Bruce Skinner, Fiesta Bowl executive director, said the $15,000 is a "fraction ” of the $500,000 appearance money each team will receive from NBC for the Dec. 26 broadcast. " It (lost revenue) doesn't hurt us at a ll,” Skinner said. “ A $15,000 loss to a team isn’t any big deal. ” ASU closed the north section of the stadium after cracks appeared in an entrance tunnel and ram p area. A geological firm investigating the deficiency said the north end was built on soft fill m aterial, not solid bedrock. Dave Strack, UA athletic director, said teams choose bowls after considering the payment, but would not refuse the Fiesta Bowl for just that reason. " I ’m sure that the team s, if they have a choice, would select those bowls that have a greater amount (of pay­ m ent),” he said. "B u t it ($15,000) shouldn’t make that much difference.” UA and Pittsburgh participated in last year’s bowl. Strack said the availability of seating was not a m atter in accepting the bowl bid. " It’s one of the better bowls,” he said. "W e would have played regardless of the seats. ” th u r s d a y Septem ber 25, 1980 Wayne Duke, commissioner of the Big Ten Conference, said the closed seats are an "isolated factor” in a team ’s decision to come to the Fiesta Bowl. “ There are a lot of factors that go into a team playing in a bowl gam e,” he said. "W e consider the opponent, when the gam e is played and how it fits a school's final exam schedule.” Duke said the empty section would cause “ no loss of prestige” to a team coming to the Fiesta Bowl. "The New Y ear’s Day bowls and the Gator Bowl pay more, but the (Sun Devil) stadium still has a larger capacity than most bowls,” he added. A Big Ten team has never appeared in the Fiesta Bowl Skinner said the Fiesta Bowl is a non-profit organization that gets its operating expenses from fund-raising events, donations and dues. N BC pays a flat fee to the Fiesta Bowl Committee for the rights to broadcast the gam e, but network officials told Skin­ ner not to reveal how much they paid for this year’s gam e, he said. More than 30,000 tickets, at $13.50 each, have been sold for this year’s gam e. The committee is required by the National Collegiate Athletic Association to pay 75 percent of the ticket revenue to the competing team s. The committee stages the event and gets 25 percent of the ticket revenue. "The Fiesta Bowl makes very little money from ticket revenue,” Skinher said. People who already have bought seats in the affected area will be relocated, he also said. The relocation problem was sim plified because game day is still a “ few months aw ay,” he added. "R ight now we have very few people sitting there,” Skin­ ner said. “ The only way it could affect us would be if the two teams would command a big audience. Skinner also said publicity would not be adversely affected by the closed seats. "W e were prepared for that (closed seats),” he said. “ But it’s obvious we’d like the seats and we’d like the revenue. ’ Skinner also said ticket revenue depends on what caliber teams are contracted to play in the bowl. “ O f course we would make more if we were to sell out,” he said. " It depends so much on who the teams are. “ The big names will always draw more people." ASU officials have contacted Skinner but have not told him whether repairs on the damaged section will be made before the Fiesta Bowl is played. “ They have given us no indication what the situation will be,” he said. stateI press Arizona State University T am p s, A rizo n a Copyrlflht, Stata P ra tt, i960 Temporary support to be built around stadium's section Stati ptiotB by John Raid S k ip p in g stones Jerry Kotak, a Junior music performance guitar major, tries to keep hie balance while walking in the cold water of Oak Creak. By P at O’Connell Construction of a tem­ porary “ bracing shell” to support the sagging north end of Sun Devil Stadium will cost ASU approximately $75,000, the assistant vice president o f business affairs said Wednesday. B ill Phelp6 said costs to put steel bracing around the main tunnel will not be definite until the project is put up for bid later this week. Reports in local media Tuesday had placed the tem­ porary repair cost at slightly more than $100,000. The steel shell will keep the stadium ’s north end stable until a permanent solution can be found, Phelps said. “ It’s absolutely essential that you shore the walls up to prevent any chance of a col­ lapse,” he said. “ The tunnel is the area with the greatest amount of distress. It also is one of the keys to m aintaining struc­ tural integrity,” he added. Phelps also said sinking ground below the north end is putting pressure on the north tunnel walls. If the tunnel w alls col­ lapsed and the area caved in, the columns sitting on the fill would be exposed and weakened, he added. Currently, there are no plans to reopen the 5,447 seats closed Sep t 9, but the temporary repair should be completed in tim e for the O ct. 11 home football gam e against Washington State University, he also said. An additional $47,000 is be­ ing spent by ASU on a stadium study by Fox Con­ su ltin g E n gin eers and Geologists. Terry W ojtulewicz, direc­ tor of ticket sales, said he ex­ pected a m axim um of $150,000 to be lost in ASU ticket-sale revenue. “ That figure is if we sell out every gam e,” he said. “ We did not sell out the Oregon State gam e, so w e. didn’t losea nickel on th at.” At each home football gam e, ticket revenues are split 50-50 between ASU and the visiting team . “ We lose a little more than the other team because o f lo s t s u r c h a r g e s ,” Wojtulewicz added. 4 /-{ J) ■ i> » É É É ÍÉ É Page 2 State Prese Thursday, September 25,1980 NOW OPEN n e i/ i/ s b r i e f s The New Orleans Taste Treat Created with Shaved Ice & Natural Extracts Party Ice for Dacquiris Now Available from the A ssociated Press rled world watched, the "oil war” continued. U.S. TO SHIP INDIA URANIUM WASHINGTON — In a foreign policy victory for Presi­ dent Carter, the Senate voted 48-46 Wednesday to per­ mit shipment of 38 tons of enriched uranium to India, which diverted U.S. nuclear material in 1974 and used it to detonate an atomic bomb. The vote came after one of the most thorough and contested Senate debates in years. IRAQI ARMY ADVANCES IN IRAN BAGHAD, Iraq — Iraqi armor and infantry pushed deeper Into Iran Wednesday, claiming the capture of three more towns and driving hardpressed Iranian troops away from the border. The two Moslem enemies urged their people to fight on in a “holy war." As a wor- E x tra C A S H fo r ! CLASS RINGS i * 2 5 ° ° — * 1 5 0 00l CALL STEVE AT 9 6 9 -3 0 0 8 / w ill make house calls! | I E x p .10/2/80 9677735 Kathy’s f^ainpow HANDMADE NEW YORK PIZZA Italian town tom apart by fear, bitter feuding CIM IN A , Italy (AP) — A 14-year feud in this tiny southern Italian town has claim ed 36 lives — nearly one-fifth the m ale population — and neither the townspeople nor the police can stop the bloodshed. Police arrest murder suspects in w in . Villagers refuse to testify, partly out of fear they w ill be the next victim s, partly out of distrust for a government that they say has abandoned and forgotten them. “ They have their own codes, their own laws which have nothing to do with normal law s,” Police Chief M ilazzo Antonini said. The deaths are blamed on the “ Ndrangheta,” the Calabrese M afia. The Ndrangheta is powerful all over Calabria — police report 900 murders in the region last year — but in Cim ina it grips the town. Everyone has been forced to side with one of two factions to survive. The two clans, the Romanos and Barillaros on one side and the Polifronis and Francos on the other, want to control the m arkets, the patronage jobs, the protection money paid by anyone who wants to do business in town — in short, almost every aspect of town life. The sm allest transaction — even selling a chicken at market — is controlled by the Ndrangheta. “ If you want to come to this town and sell two chickens for 2,000 lire, about $2.40, you have to give half of it to the Ndrangheta,” Antonini said. “ The people accept it, not because they like it but because they are afraid ,” he added. Cim ina is hidden in the Calabrian hills in the tip of the Italian boot. Mo6t who lived here 15 years ago have left, some to find work in the North, some to escape the feud, or “ faid a.” The population has dropped from 1,000 in 1965 to about 400 in 1960. H alf the houses are abandoned. The streets are empty and silent. No one ventures out. There are alm ost no cars and the only sound at night is the ringing of church bells. The spiral of violence began in Ju ne 1966 with the murder of Francesco B arillaro, area chief of the Ndrangheta and boss of the Rom ano-Barillaro clan. Barillaro’s murder was followed by a string of vendetta attacks, each clan trying to make the other “ pay” for its crim es. Some of the murders were triggered by banal disputes — in one case by the theft of a goat — but most were part of a bitter struggle for power. People in Cim ina blame public corruption for many of their troubles. They claim the ruling Christian Dem ocratic Party buys votes from the Ndrangheta, that government aid to Cim ina falls into Ndrangheta hands and that local judges look the other way when crim es are com mitted. “ Their attitude is: As long as they just kill each other, so much the better," said one man who refused to be identified. “ Even the judges are afraid of the Ndrangheta.” 12 FLAVORS TO CHOOSE FROM ABSCAM DEFENDANT FACES POSSIBLE EXPULSION FROM CONGRESS WASHINGTON — The House ethics committee voted Wednesday to recommend that Rep. Michael Myers, D-Pa., be expelled from Congress for accepting a bribe. Rep. Charles E. Bennett, D-Fla., the panel’s chairman, said the vote was 10-2 to strip Myers of his seat In Pennsylvania’s First District. Bennett said a committee report would be filed in the House by mid­ night enabling that body to take up the expulsion mat­ ter this week. ir 14" 3.23 4.00 4.00 400 400 400 400 400 400 400 4.00 4.00 6.30 l*«e»|Meremi Tooy*eHpmmtmi $joo OFF StmUimm M yto - V t g e U r lM EjMpte* O it e t e A — ■ $ ■ ioC fffU chm d- 1 AFTER 5 P.M. 50c Delivery Charge 11 AM MON. thru FRI. Vegetarian Sicilian —fresh rmishnssns. green iieiigers, liluck olives, ft mozzarella elieese «misled Inulzza (loughft oserei! with homemade *t>ughciil sauce M t Sicilian —imwhnsuns.greenpc|i|icr*. Muckolives, meullnlls. ft mozzarellacheese «ruins'll Iniilzzudisigli ft erneredwith homemudes|iughcttl sauce. 1M Cul/mie—Kksrttucheese, mushroom*,ft mozzarellacheesewrainiedInl»izzuiksigh ft coveredwith homemade sfaighelti sauce. M t Ilief* Suiud —lettuce, lomulis-s, mushrman*. Muckolives, mikm*. humft sulunll. Vegetarians! ! ! n o ¿ £ X Z )° ¡iL .. 967-3073 ★ 2S0 Z30 leak for non-meat sauce if you are vegetariani 606 S. Mill ★ 967-2941 ¡NO CHECKS, PLEASE! The most fun at the Cactus Country Saloon S Dance Dali e » Two floors tor dancin’ t = » Free snacks [=»13 oz. Coors Draft - 75* 6 » Well Drinks-30’ t = » Bud Longnecks - 30* = = » Canada’s Moosehead Lager Beer ^ Best Country Swing Lessons in town! Call 966-9121 for information Open Mon.-Sat. 4 p.m. to 1 p.m. *100 cover on Friday and Saturday Cactus Country Saloon t Sance K ail 919 E. Apache Blvd., Tempe, A Z 966-9124 Jj 2.30 Itr tin u “ The Finest Pizza In Tempe! ” -ttj Specialties oPthe house fH* One Coupon Per Customer. M M 9W I Fem u Pw TTon-mesX subs OPEN FOR LUNCH VALID ON DELIVERY Expires 10/2/80. o T^r'K5T,,nt Ba© S Maybe America lost its savour Editor: I must commend D r. Mason for the statem ent in his analysis of the televised debates that he could not help but evaluate Sunday's forum between Reagan and Anderson according to a bit of his own preconceived no­ tions, for his “ preconceived notions” were reflected by more that just a “ bit” in his analysis. May I respond as a member of the “ M oral M a­ jority” to which he referred. Both D r. Mason and D r. Reinard took pot shots at Is Reagan’s statem ent con­ cerning the “ city on the h ill.” May it be noted that the statement is not a new one, but coined by a much more debatable man that Reagan. That particular speech may be found in the “ ar­ chaic” book of history called the Bible, and it m ight be in­ teresting to read a little before and little after that phrase, for the description is analagous: “ Y e are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savou r, wherewith shall it be salted? It is thenceforth good for nothing, but to be cast out, and to be trodden under foot of m en.” (Matthew 5:13). M aybe we, as a nation, have “ lost our savour” — m aybe we are no longer the “ light of the world, a city set on an hill” but refuse to believe that we can’t become so again. Principles of freedom, justice and liberty never change, and men’s attempts to fetter their fellow men’s liberty by denying them any or all of their inalienable rights are m orally wrong. F in ally, it sickens me to note that these few con­ servative view s of the “ M oral M ajority,” which is probably the silent m ajority, are hardly ever reflected by the very partisan ideologies of the media and universities in their reporting and teaching as evidenced by D r. Mason and D r. Reinard and CB S and AB C and N B C . . . Richard Platt Junior Business Engineering war aprerequisite for pride? Editor: Is it a sm all price to pay, M s. Bower? In rebuttal to your guest editorial Sept. 24, we do not sup­ port your defense of the draft, nor your ethnocentrical at­ titudes towards Am erica. The draft is not a form of employment, it is a mandatory servitude for our country. Is not our defense budget sufficient as it is? By having a strong foreign policy, we can get around the draft. Must we fight a war to be proud? Can’t you see that our country is being led into the war with red-scare propaganda by the government and current attitudes. Am erican suprem acy is a fallacy. We are only one country in the world. As for the other countries struggling for power, aren’t we struggling also? Can’t people serve our country in unm ilitaristic ways? Fine Arts M ajors: Eve Jalcob E ric Zimmerman Henry Sennett A O C can't be totally responsible Editor: This is in response to Tom R eilly's letter (State Press, Sept. 23). As a member of the Outing Club, I believe his letter was a m isrepresenta­ tion of the club. Having attended the Labor Day trip, I share his concern about the misconduct of a very few members of the club. However, I do think it only fair that he note the club did not condone their con­ duct and actions were taken to stop inconsiderate action. The largest number of those on the trip were responsible and a truer representation of the club. Remem ber, the Outing Club is the largest and most popular single club on cam ­ pus. The AOC aim s to educate its m em bers. However, short of screening potential m em bers and lim iting membership, the club cannot possibly be responsible for all the ac­ tions of all its members. The AOC remains an ex­ ce lle n t opportunity to become fam iliar with cam p­ sites throughout the state and to meet other ASU students who share the same interests. Laurie W illiams AOC Member state press DAVE WALKER Editor LORI WEINRAUB Managing Editor JULIE MARTIN O pinion Page Editor City Editor ELLEN HAGGERTY Sports Editor JIM WALTERS Asst. C ity Editor TRICIA REESON Asst. Sports Editor CHARLIE DIAZ News Editor JAMIE JOHNSON Diversions Editor SUZANNE McELFRESH Photo Editor LARS JONES Copy Chiefs JEFF FRIES, BECKY NOTHNAGEL REPORTERS: M icheel C onsol, Glen Creno, S cott Knutson, Bruce Levine, J. J. M artin, Pat O’C onnell, Rich Palmay, Fred Podesta, David Schwartz, Phomia Slim an, Vivian Warner PHOTOGRAPHERS: W illiam Ashby, Bob Beamesderfer, John Reid SPORTS WRITERS: W ill Hart, Pete Prisco DIVERSIONS WRITERS: Michael DeMarsche, C hip Haubrock, Rory Rosegarten, Eric Searieman COPY EDITORS: Andy Cohen, Mary Townsend, Rebecca Zoilars STAFF ARTIST Valerie M artino EDITORIAL CARTOONIST Karen Portik The State P re ss is published Tuesday through Friday during the academic year except holidays and exam periods, at M atthew s Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85281. Newsroom: 965-2292. Advertis­ ing & P roduction: 965-7572. The State Pre ss is the only newspaper exclusively published to r and cir­ culated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU adm inistration, faculty, staff or student body. L e tte r P o licy The State Press welcomes letters on any topic. Type them, double spaced, with m argins set on 60 characters. Include your full name, class standing, major and phone number. Letters that do not conform to these guidelines, as well as anonymous letters, will be discarded. However, if it is im perative that your name be withheld, state why. Letters are subject to editing or rejection. Address letters to: Letters, State Press, Matthews Center, A SU . Tempe, AZ 85281. Thursday, September 25,1980 State Press Page 5 CONTACT LENSES" Fired housekeeper claims harassment Glen Creno An ASU housekeeper fired in Ju ly said Wednesday she is considering legal action against the University for on-the-job harassm ent. Dolores Steele's claim that her superiors tried to force her to quit and when she refused, fired her, was rejected by a University grievance committee Friday. It was Steele’s second grievance hearing this year. “ They (housing officials) put lots of pressure on me to make me quit, and when I didn’t they gave me a lot of (evaluation) papers and fired m e,” Steele said. Steele, who left ASU Ju ly 18, said she cannot find another job because her personnel file at ASU contains “ dam aging” information. Don Crabtree, assistant housing director, said the decision in Steele’s latest hearing was sent to ASU President John Schwada for approval. “ The committee recommended to the president that her termination be upheld,” he said. Deanna Betar, head of the committee, said witnesses testified that Steele was “hard to work with and threw so ft * temper tantrum s." Others added they saw no harrassment of the housekeeper. An earlier witness said she had no problems working with Steele. Steele said the ASU grievance system is “ a farce.” “ They cover up the problem, ” she added. Crabtree added that he could not consider possible legal claim s until Schwada made a decision on the com mittee’s recommenda t ion. Steele received a series of unscheduled job performance evaluations and form al reprimands from housing officials before she was fired. Steele, a divorcee, said problems began when she refused to meet Virginia Larson’s brother socially. Larson, Steele’s form er boss, is the head housekeeper at Manzanita Hall. However, Larson said it was “ untrue” that she asked Steele to date her brother. Steele said Larson gave her a “ rough tim e” following the incident. She said pressure increased when she was late for 10% DISCOUNT ON FRAMES 7 9 95 10% For M o d S o ft Lenses U K MV Kimn tar Mt Sin LOBU DISCOUNT ON LENSES OR GLASSES $ 7 9 9 5 OUR NEW LOCATION IN C LU D E S A N O U TSTA N D IN G FRAME DISPLAY HARD TRIAL WEARING PERIOD FOR CONTACT LENSES •S o ft C on ta ct Lenses F o r A s tig m a tis m A vailable •P ro fe s s io n a l Fee N o t Included F ill you r d o cto r’s p re s c rip tio n . FOR APPOINTMENT OR INFORMATION EYE EXAM 941 5228 DR. W.G. AM ES OPTOMETRIST OPEN FO R G LA SSE S ¡,3666 N. MILLER RD. Tu ■ Suite 114 Scottsdale 8*t ♦20 continued page S %e law faculty and Studentsat ASUCollege,of law extend a warm welcome jo a ll pre-law Students,pre-lawadvisors, and persons inter­ ested in attending law school: Engineering B.S. degrees proposed By David Schwarts ASU Officials are submit­ ting a proposal that would tra n s fo rm e x is tin g engineering studies into bachelor of science pro­ grams, the assistant provost said Monday. Dr. Mathew Betz said a proposal to create aerospace engineering and engineering science degrees will be brought up before the Facul­ ty Senate at its Oct. 13 meeting. “ The degrees give students a firm major to go into,” Betz said. The change could affect more than 300 students now enrolled in the two areas by o ffe r in g th em m ore specialized diplomas, Betz added. In the past few years there has been a rising student in­ terest in the 15 engineering science and 15 aerospace engineering classes, Betz said. “Before, the areas were options under special pro­ grams,” he said. “Now we are asking them to be elevated to majors.” E ngineering science already has an approved master’s and doctorate pro­ gram, but does not have a degree that is recognized on the baccalaureate level. Betz said the College of Engineering is “ recognizing what already exists.” Holland Haden, dean of the co lleg e, said additional faculty or classes will not be added since the existing facilities will serve the degree program s ade­ quately. The degree program s must be approved by both the faculty senate and the Arizona Board of Regents before they will be form ally recognized. Haden said he did not an­ ticipate any problems in the approval process and only paperwork is left to be done. P R E - LA W C O N FER EN C E 102 S. 24th St. Phoenix, Az. 85034 Ftm y - / V Se . ir;-X t T .V . INFLATION 25” Color Console Portable T.V/s 100% guarantee Reg istr atio n : iz : 3o p m Au0u.VICl<»» 1 1i fd 0 6 d tw $ A m Mes«, AZ 85201 k SSI s1m w M M M a m m m ----------- PRINT Custom Printed T-Shirts and Sportswear Teams, Clubs, Fraternities, Sororities 225 W. University Suite 103 967-2127 a n e A r n e oood o d B i w fu n m To: ADMISSIONS OFFICE, ASU C ou£6£ OF LAVO, TEMPS ,A Z *6 2 8 ! / X I T S IN S A N E !! Yes, Jimmy ,' h â ïy h o c r is 5 -7 ® ^ L mCHEIXJB ISONLYj W HW ItSITY SCREEN o CO LLEG E OF LA W ASU G REAT H A LL Color Console & ROM *125® is , m t V S O - g : O O p . in . FIGHTERS U l p t e m b e r \ P O U N D B U R G E R "' /F R IE S F ò t * t.4 9 Page e State Prase Thursday, September 25,1980______________ _____ ___________ __ ______ — — Tutor shortage reported at ASU By Fred Podeeta A shortage of ASU tutors is forcing some students who are falling behind in their classes to wait up to two weeks for help, the coor­ dinator of the Educational Opportunities Program has said. Bernard Jackson said the E O P office does not have enough tutors to meet stu- dent demand due to insuffi­ cient funds and a lack of qualified students to tutor their peers. “ We used to operate with 65 to 70 tutors, but now we have 40 or 42,” Jackson said. “ Some students apply for a tutor the year before, so they have one (a tutor) when they first start a class ” More about Grievance. continued from papa 8 work commuting to ASU from Phoenix during the floods last winter. Larson was particularly “ rough” on her when she arrived late a second tim e, Steele added. Larson said she lid not single out Steele for special punish­ m ent, and the housekeeper’s problems entailed "m ore than just the floods.” She refused to elaborate. A witness at the Friday hearing said Larson was “ capable of losing her temper. ” Steele said she tried to clear up problems with Larson but Larson told her to “ do what I say to do. If you don’t, I ’ll fire you.” Steele said Larson also threatened her with her fist. “ That is an untruth,” Larson said about the incident. On Feb. 28 Steele received an unscheduled job per­ form ance rating signed by Larson. Her ratings plunged in “ getting along with fellow employees” and “ accepts direc­ tions” categories, areas of strength in previous evaluations. “ Her attitude was unbearable,” Larson said. “ She was argum entative. Any little thing set her off like a firecracker.” Steele filed a grievance with Crabtree and received a for­ mal reprimand two days later that said an investigation by Crabtree revealed she had been disrespectful, would not listen to instructions, became “ very irritated” if things did not go her way and could not control her temper. The reprim and, which did not mention the alleged attack, was approved and cosigned by Housing Director Clifford Osborne. Steele said when Larson learned the housekeeper signed a grievance against her she “ really worked me over.” “ She began to overcriticize m e,” Steele said. “ She followed me around to find something to jum p me about. ’ ’ “ The allegations toward me all are untruths,” Larson said. Steele filed a second complaint and was transferred to another supervisor. Crabtree said he thought the transfer to a new supervisor would elim inate the problems. “ We were hoping to salvage her but she began the same rigm arole again,” Crabtree said. “ On the basis of that she was term inated.” Steele said problems began in the new department when Hazel Rouse, a co-worker, told her she “ wasn’t happy” with Steele’s work in Manzanita H all. Steele said she ignored Rouse because Rouse was a housekeeper, not a supervisor. Crabtree said Rouse was appointed temporary supervisor earlier in the day, but Steele said Rouse was given the job the following day, Ju ly 16. Crabtree refused to comment on the incident. When Steele questioned Rouse’s authority, Crabtree fired her. Crabtree’s letter of dism issal said, “ Your belligerent at­ titude has adversely affected necessary teamwork.’’ CONTESTING YOUR NON-RESIDENT TUITION STATUS? Tuition status appeals are financially import­ ant administrative law proceedings at which the student must prove his Arizona domicile for the requisite period of time by clear and convincing evidence as defined by law and consistent with the expectations of the Board. Seeking subsequent relief through the Super­ ior Court from an unsuccessful appeal is a difficult, time-consuming, and generally fin­ ancially prohibitive proceeding for the student. Steven B. Yarbrough and Boyd W. Dunn are available to represent you in your appeal to the University Appeals Board on Tuition. Attor­ ney’s fees may be contingent, i.e., payable only if resident status is granted. The deadline for filing your notice of appeal is THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1980. STEVEN B. YARBROUGH BOYD W. DUNN Hocker, Yarbrough & Gilcrease, Attornies 1650 W. Alameda Drive Tempe, Arizona 85282 967-9401 Jackson added tutors are most needed for upper-level business and math courses. Off-cam pus tutoring costs an average of $12 per hour, he added. The E O P , a special ser­ vices division of the Student A ffairs O ffice, processes about 1,500 to 2,000 students each year through its free tutoring program. Qualified applicants for the tutoring jobs are hard to find because each tutor must h av e a good o v e r a ll academ ic performance and a “ good attitude” , Jackson said. '“ We get a lot of students who come in here looking for a job but don’t have the grades or the attitude they should,” he said. “ Some of them just can’t seem to want to work. “ We can’t afford to turn them loose on the students if they’re not qualified,” he added. Jackson said his office does not have enough money to pay for the total number of tutors needed because this year’s E O P budget did not increase enough to cover the rise in minimum wage. Jackson said students who receive tutoring are more likely to stay enrolled at ASU . Studies show that from 49 percent to 70 percent of students who are tutored continued peg# 7 Railroad Tlaa and Powar Polas ASU H O M E C O M IN G SPECIAL presents CABLE SPOOLS FA LLF E S T 1 9 8 0 Great tor dorm* and apart­ ments as end tables, plant stands. 3 days o f Fun & F ro lic Your Choles An opportunity for your club to earn over $5,000. Applications available ASASU OFFICE Room 208-J — M.U. S310 E. Washington 273-eeae Mon.Sat.S-S Cloaod Sunday Rewards. Respect. Growth. Sound Management. Credibility. Direction. W ith o u t a doubt, you’ve heard these words plenty o f times. Some people call them “buzz” words because they’re supposed to draw your attention. A t Signetics, w e do m ore than simply a ttrac t you w ith impressive sounding words. W e make them come to life. W e ’re setting th e pace fo r the '80s in the semiconductor industry. And w e o ffer college graduates challenging career opportunities in a variety o f exciting areas, including all phases o f engineering: product, design, process, test, reliability/quality assurance, and failure W e're seeking individuals w ith a bachelor’s, master's o r Ph.D. degree in electrical, mechanical o r chemical engineering; m aterial science; com puter science; physics; metallurgy; electronics o r industrial technology. W h ile most o f our openings are o f a technical nature, w e encourage you to contact us about non-teehnical opportunities which exist from tim e to tim e in Finance, Sales, Adm inistration, Personnel, M aterial C o ntro l, M arketing, Production, and o th er Support Functions. analysis. Wife'll be on campus Wednesday, October 8 W h e re you s tart your career is e x tra ­ ordinarily im portant. Your first job—and w hat you do w ith it—will shape your fu tu re fo r years to come. Take tim e to review the Signetics Recruitm ent Binder which you will find in your Placement C enter. You II learn about our opportunities in C alifornia, U tah and N ew M exico. O r, w rite to Signetics College Relations. O pportunity C P -8 0 ,8 II East Arques Avenue, Sunnyvale, C A 9 4086. W e are an equal opportunity employer. Permanent residency visa preferred. The Good People Company sHjmitffis a subsidiary of U S . Philips Corporation Thursday, September 25,1980 State Press Page 7 New disease linked to tampons Despite recent deaths connected to toxic shock syndrome and tampon use, the ASU Student Health Center has not been over­ whelmed with calls for information. “ This is a relatively new problem ,” said D r. Richard Jones, the center’s director. “ Presently there is no information in any of our journals regarding the subject.” Jones said the disease has been at­ tributed to tampons for a long tim e but only recently has the disease been linked to a specific tampon m anufacturer. Last Thursday, the Center for Disease Control in A tlanta, G a ., reported a high incidence of toxic shock syndrome among tampon users. Women who used R ely, a product of Procter and Gam ble C o ., face an even greater risk, the center’s researchers said. Procter and Gam ble halted sale of the product last week, and local drug stores have taken Rely tampons o ff their shelves. ASU students need tutors, The disease is characterized by a rapid drop in blood pressure often resulting in shock, high fever, vom iting, diarrhea and a skin rash. Sandy M erim ski, unit director at the Palo Verde Main dorm itory, said most of the Resident Assistante are spreading in­ formation of the disease. She added the girls in a ll ASU dor­ m itories were given com plim en tary packets containing Rely tampons at the beginning of the sem ester. “ It’s a little late to recall the packets,” she said. "However we are telling as many girls as possible what little information we do know.” ■ H P MARCH I T O F D IM E S C o m m itte e s Did you k n o w th a t the V p r o g r a m t h e f o llo w in g ? forum ■• - - .. - . V .- . 5 3 K V ■ ' , CiassiciiFilm :v - .. . De bales 1 Rising Star Concerts • Outdoor Contsfets §| A rts & C ra fts Fair Union Cinem a v 'U ; Natip'nai Speakers '-r Red Eye S pecial ; H o m eco m ing B o n fire Hollywood Sneak Previ« Boogie & Bar-B-Que ' 'Chanty Fund Rats^r.s Poetry Readings ; . V id e o t a p e s , Highlights Paper Airplane Content Academy Awards Cont« Usher Garrimage \ Print and C eram ics Sale A rt E xhibits. 1Re'ceotionW Art.sts.■ •PUMPKIN FEST. . . CLIO AWARDS HAUNTED HOUSE Casmo International Day Comédÿ Corner . . Documentary Films • Usher Union Cinema Wo rk at In forma’ ¡on Des*t Pop-Ups - Local Speakers p a i l 5 -M U A B When you need big favors yon ask good friends. stay at A SU , while only 40 percent of the untutored students rem ain in school, he said. Ja c k s o n s a id m ost students needing tutors have problems with study skills and tim e managem ent. "M any of them don't have the skills needed to survive four years at the Universi­ ty ,” he said. “ They have a lot of free tim e they didn’t have in high school. We try to get them to convert this in­ to effective study tim e in­ stead of standing out in front of the M U .” Shelly Kam rath, a senior business m ajor who tutors M athem atics 141 and 142, said most of her students can be effectively helped with tutoring. “ They usually don’t have a hard problem ,” she said. “ U sually it’s just that the teacher moves too fast for them in cla ss." Carrie Stopek, a senior communication m ajor who has tutored English, said t u to r in g h e lp e d her discipline her own studies. “ I have to practice what I preach,” she said .“ Since I ’m telling my students to do these things, I start doing them m yself.” Most tutors work with 10 or 15 students, and some have a waiting list. The tutors meet with the students once or twice a week for as long as th e h elp is needed, sometimes throughout the entire sem ester, Jackson said. “ When they find a tutor they like they’ll hang on to them ,” he said. “ Good tutors translate into good grades, and good grades translate in­ to good job s.” foresee youheip. CARPETS F o r D O R M S , A P T S ., C A R S . ALL S IZ E S . N ew A U sed. 9 x 12 Used Carpet $ *75 0 " CARPET HOUSE 1516 E . Ven Buren P hoenix ' . AfufNovv’ for Somethingi v .Completely piHerfitht a . 7; contlmiwi from page ( <§> • .. Student Fi'm Making Contes,t official says m . A When you ask good friends for a favor, you know what they’re going to say. So you tel) them you’re moving again and then wait for the groans to stop. They may not like the idea, but you know they’re going to be there. When you’re finished, these people are going to deserve something special. Tonight, let it be Lowenbrau. Lowenbrau. Here’s to good friends. 1980 Beer brewed i i U S A by Miller Brewing Company. Milwaukee, Wisconsin Page 8 State Press Thursday, September^5/1980 __________— Universities nationwide suffer housing crunch College Pres» Service and State Press staff Which one of the facets of university life is only a recent phenomenon, yet threatens to become as fam iliar as the annual homecoming weekends? The housing crunch. Bom in the late 70s, this infant has provoked temporary chaos on schools across the country. From Arizona to Maine, dorms are full, leaving the unlucky cramped into either converted study lounges, doubles changed to triples, or even motel rooms. In some cases, the in­ convenience lasts for only a few weeks. In other schools, it takes months to cure the problem. At A SU , more than 800 of the 3,000 students who applied for housing were left without dorm space this fall. The Arizona Board of Regents recently approved a request to float local bids for a $4.5 million dormitory for N AU. Earlier in the semester Clifford Osborne, ASU housing director, said that extensive research will have to be conducted before formal requests for funding can be made. At the University of Oklahoma in Nor­ man, between 100 and 125 freshmen re­ ceived notices they would be tripled in rooms norm ally inhabited by two students. Students at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque are living in rooms previously reserved for studying. Cots have been moved into them, though that is only expected to last several weeks. Those who are now living in triples originally designed for two students were given a letter when they arrived on campus which stated, “ It may be necessary to m aintain this triple room status for the remainder of the fall semester and perhaps for the entire academ ic year.” Texas A&M housing officers over-booked student housing at a rate 300 percent higher than last year, leaving 600 students tem­ porarily stuffed into study carrels or overcrowded rooms. And the list goes on and on. The reason is that “ university ad­ ministrators have been unwilling to create more open housing for the students, since they know it won’t pay off in a few years,” according to Dan Hellenbeck, housing director at the University of Georgia. “ If they were to construct more dorms, it would be financial suicide because the an ticip ated enrollm ent drop-off is scheduled for any year now. Once that happens, the school may have problems filling the spaces, and thus lose m oney,” he explained. The housing crunch has become a problem of such magnitude that studies have already been completed analyzing the effects on students who lived in temporary units, or were crowded into sm all spaces. Not only have the initial findings produced evidence of irritation and bickering, but some students have not done as well academ ically as they might have under more normal circum stances. Ed Spencer, a housing official at the University of Delaw are, recently concluded an exam ination of students who lived in triples or in temporary housing such as lounges or study carrels. “ There seemed to be no significant dif­ ference between the grade point averages of those in temporary units and the students in regular situations,” Spencer said. “ However, the averages of the students in converted spaces go up by a greater per­ cent over the years after they leave that situation, suggesting that they would have done better if they had been in normal rooms.” He added those living in triples or other temporary spaces wind up going home more frequently on weekends, don’t get along with their roommates and become very irritated with the university ad­ ministration. “ We were always bumping into each other,” said Steve E ckels, a sophomore at Oklahoma who lived in a double with two other roommates last year. “ It didn’t do much for my studying. I just felt that I had no privacy.” Spencer said a recent study done by a sociologist demonstrates a “ shifting coatition theory.” According to that hypothesis, when three people are stuffed into a crowded situation, an alliance of two roommates against the other occurs. Research suggests the phenomenon laps over to other social settings. Y et most housing officials remain adamantly opposed to constructing new dorms. They insist the situation is under control, that temporary units are not counter-productive, and that the an­ ticipated enrollment decline will remove the problem once and for all. “ We’ve had this problem (housing shortage) for some tim e, and it usually goes away after a few weeks,” said Charles Fredericksen, Iowa State University’s housing director. P laza 3 opens in M esa ■■■ you’re invited to some very special events! Event #3: Saturday, September 27,11:30 - 2:30 pm pageants . . . talk to the winners! See Chen Short, pageant winner and talented pageant m ake-up artist do m ake-overs on our pageant winners! Win a private Make-up Session with your own Plaza 3 Make-up Artist! Win a B asic Modeling and Personal Development Course. a fS t PI ,A ZA 3. FIESTA VILLAGE /1318 WEST SOUTHERN AVENUE / SUITE 4 / MESA. ARIZONA85202 834-8 2 2 2 ALBU Q U ER Q U E / MESA / PHOENIX RESTAURANT t BAKERY N o ta h raIth fo o d re sta u ra n t b u t a re sta u ra n t th a t serves healthy bead th a t leaks a n d tastes g g a d lf/f TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS W ACQUAINTED" OFFER ______________________ COUPON 1 r fi /tJ 4 two OR MORE MEALS Bv pre&erffmd this coupon to the y cashier any 5und& tnrou^h ThunsdavTftgJ 3p.m until closini, 151» of your tata I bill will be deducted on two or more meals. I J L khe « g o o d e o fth R E SSTTAAUURRAA N T & B A K E R Y T W O LOCATIONS 4102 EAST THOMAS RûAt> - PHOENIX, A Z gOt SOUTH M IL L (COrtNIA UNIVERSITY < MILx) TEMPE, AZ (ßaRM KLY H e r r » Oamh ) _________________ $ $ $ $ $ $REW ARD$ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ INSTANT CASH $ $ $ FOR High School & College Rings $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ FOR Wedding Bands — Engagement Rings & ANYTHING MARKED 10K, 14K, 18K $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ Gold Coins — Gold Jewelry — Gold Teeth Also Silver Coins & Sterling Silver $ $ CASH PAID INSTANTLY $ $ petite (4 grams) ...................... small (9 grams) average (16 grams) ................ large (22 grams) ...................... oversize (31 grams) $ 24 $ 54 $ 95 $131 $185 .... ___ ___ .... ... . $ $ $ 17 $ 38 $ 67 $ 93 $131 NOTICE: BRING THIS AO FOR ADDED CASH BONUS $ $ $ $ $ ZURICH GOLD BUYERS $ 18K WEDDING BANDS small (3 grams) medium (6 grams) large (10 grams) ...................... $ $ 10K 14K CLASS RINGS 14K $ 18 $ 36 $ 60 $ 23 $ 46 $ 78 Prices Subject to Fluctuation with World Metal Markets $ $ O P E N MON. thru THURS. Noon - 8 p.m. • FRI., SAT., SUN., 10 a.m . - 5 p .m .$ ^ in TEMPE at tha HOLIDAY INN, 915 E. Apache ^ ^ For Later Appointment Call Before Closing ^ / TUCSON $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ Thursday, September 25,1980 State Press Page 9 Certification test criticized Board to review use of test By Fred Podesta The controversial use of a test required for Arizona teacher certification may be struck down, the ASU chair­ man of the secondary educatio n d e p a rtm e n t sa id Wednesday. D r. John Bell said a 21member task force to be named by the Arizona Board of Education must review use of the test. The task force probably will change the way the test is weighed or may even find a new one, he added. Dave Bolger, assistant to the state superintendent of e d u c a to n , re fu se d to speculate on the test’s future. “ We have no way of know­ ing what the task force will d o,” he said. The National Teacher E x ­ am ination was selected by discrim inatory, inaccurate and too difficult. B ell said the test's language may shut out com­ petent minority candidates. Other educators have said the test's questions on social studies, fine arts and science surpass the requirements of the exam law. However, Bell said the test is deficient in other areas. “ This test doesn't include any tests of reading sk ills,” he said. “ It’s more of a general knowledge test than com petency.” Bell said the University w ill have to adapt to whichever test the Board of Education decides on. “ W e, the College of Educa­ tion, m ay have to give an ad­ mission test to make sure students can pass (the cer­ tification exam ),” he said. teachers may be required to take it when they apply for c e r tific a tio n re n e w a l, however. The members of the task force will be nominated ear­ ly next week, Bolger said. He added each member of the Board of Education will name two educators and the president of the board will name five lay members. Bolger said the educators will include adm inistrators and instructors from univer­ sities and public schools. He would not speculate on the background of the la y members, but did not rule out the possibility of students beng named. PABST BOCK BEER 3 ■ rt K 1.99 XXX] 6-Pack LA PAZ TEQUILA 3.99 750 ml. RIUNITE LAMBRUSCO 750 m i. *1.00 OFF STM ST Your Choice Of UNIVERSITY OB. CH IM ICH A N G A 2.99 9 1 Offer Good 2- 10 p.m. With This Ad. Expires Oct. 15,1980. RUNDLE’S LIQUORS A MARKET University & MUI • 967-9079 BROADWAY BO DAX’s Ho-Hum Sale S eptem ber 24 th ru 27 Were we to say that th is sale is tru ly unique, we’d really be saying all our sales are truly unique. The reductions are real and very attractive at up to 50%. Ho-Hum indeed. First come, first serve. C loseout of lim ited m erchandise from our regular stock. All sales final. M astercharge, Visa & Am erican Express. Mlacollanaous Rock port Shoes now$32.99 Staff photo by William Ashby Dr. Jo h n Bell B ell added the m ajor burden of preparing students for the exam would fa ll on the College of Liberal Arts due to the m aterial the exam covers. The test would not affect teachers that are certified already, Bell said. He added the Board of Education Mon­ day to comply with a recent­ ly passed state law requiring teachers to pass a test m easurng competency in reading, m athem atics and gram m ar. The test has been criti­ cized due to claim s that it is Casual Shoes and Sandals $9.99 - 17.99 Short Sleeve Dress Shirts d is c o n tin u e d - ite m s ; va lu e s to $95 ' ;■ . y o u r c h o ic e Knit Shirts Reg.S20.00 - 27.50 $11.99 - 15.99 ¿ $14.99 - $23.99 $13.99 • Anortad Long and Short Sleeee , $9.99 - 14.99 Selected Wash & Wear Pants Belts S p e c ia l G ro u p Rag. $24.00 - 20.00 $18.99 - 20.99 $1.99 ' Lee® Painter’s Pants Reg. $18.00 - 21.00 Now Suits Regular $160.00 - 265.00 Special Group R e g u la r $21 00 • 40 00 512.99 - 25.99 R eg. $24.00 , ■ Now$16.99 Traditionally Styled Selected Dress Shirts O c e a n P a c ific Cotton Pants Sportshirts 1/3 to 1/2 Off ¡ Regular $14 00 - 20.00:- *56.99 Name Brand O c e a n P a c ific Pua O ffs h o re ® $ 24'00 - 27*50 ’ • 'i- Shorts and Swimsuits Now ;; Hawaiian Shirts VafuM to $24.00 Now Cole Haan Shoes -s $11.99 - 14.99 Sport Coats R e g u la r $140.00 225.00 $99.99 - 179.99 1/3 - 1/2 Off F a s h io n J e a n s Excellent Selection in Junior Sizes 7 to 12, Mens Sizes 28 to 31 reg. $18.00 - 25.00 now THURS. SEPT. 25 thru SUN. SEPT. 28 * S H O W T IM E S 7:00 & 9:30. p .m . « S U N D A Y 7 p .m . O N L Y 706 South Forest • O ne block north of University • T em p e • 967-8747 W ednesday & Thursday 10 to 9 • Friday & S aturday 10 to 6 T H E U N IO N C IN E M A L O W E R L E V E L O f T H E M .U A d m i s s i o n si.so w i t h v a l i d $ 2.0 0 W IT H O U T ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ i,o . ★ , I f l I-I > 1 : 4 ‘m y I" ! ' <• «* ★ * $4.99 - J+- * Paga 10 State Press Thursday, September 25,1980 C y s t ic f ib r o s is : •leadership «service •friendship •activities •involvem ent Get in on the fun! CALL 5-MUAB MIDDLE EASTERN BAKERY & DELI INC Wholesale — Retail Arabic Bread - Flllo Dough Cracker Bread - Halawa Baklawa - Prepared Fooda Tahlnl - Spices Burghul - Cheeses - Olives Complete Line of Arabic Groceries Arabic Tapes A Cookbooks Open Mon. - Sat. 8 a m. t o 6 p.m. 3052 N. 16 ST. • 277-4927 By J . J . Martin For a newborn baby, each day is a fresh episode in seeing, touching, hear­ ing and learning about the world. But each day, every five hours, such an in­ fant is born with a disease that will crip­ ple its exploration and endanger its life. Cystic fibrosis, an inherited disease of children, adolescents and young adults, is the No. 1 killer for these age groups in the United States. The earliest C F symp­ toms appear at birth in about 10 percent to 15 percent of the cases. For Carol Blazek, a senior math m ajor at A SU , the diagnosis cam e when she was two y e a n old. “ As a child I had to take antibiotic pills and I hated it," Blazek said. “ It took a great adjustm ent to get over the fact that, unlike my friends, I had to take these pills and go to the hospital for treat­ m ent.” In C F , mucous-producing glands fail to produce norm al, free-flowing fluid. In­ stead they secrete thick, sticky mucous that tends to block ducts and other passageways in the body. The abnormal mucous accum ulates in various parts of the body, particularly in the lungs and in­ testines, where it interferes with vital functions such as breathing and diges­ tion. When Blazek was six years old she was enrolled in a special hospital in Denver, Colo, where doctors ran testa on her and taught her breathing exercises. She said "S o m e patients take as many as 50 to 60 pills a day. The individual cost of treatm ent and care can range from $6,000 to $12,000 per year." — Barbara Halpin her seven-month stay was an emotional strain. “ I was angry with my parents for quite a w hile,” she said. “ I spent my birthday in there as well as Christm as and Easter. c JOIN THE CLUB 4C Ful11■ Service Copies* 30 Self Service Copies Become an AlphaGraphics University Club Member! Just bring your valid student or faculty 10 to your nearby AlphaGraphics to receive FREE an AlphaGraphics Student/Faculty Discount Membership card You'll be entitled to the above discounts all fall semester long. In addition we will be having special discounts on printing, binding, padding and color products which w ill only be available to AlphaGraphics University Club Members! Tuck-in-Time snuggles up campus men Respiratory At the tim e it hurt me very badly emotion ally." She added because of the mental trauma many youngsters went through, the program has since been shortened to one month. After graduating from high school in Iowa, Blazek chose to attend ASU in the fall of 1977, hoping the weather would improve her health. However, the disease soon began to take its toll on her school work. ” 1 have to get at least eight to nine hours sleep every night or I get sick ,” she said. “ I knew I couldn’t stay up late studying and preserve my health, so I chose to keep up in school and worry about my health later. “ Hopefully, I’ll be able to build it back up in the future.” Since coming to A SU , Blazek has kept up a 3.8 grade point average while her health has declined. “ My lung capacity is a lot lower now than three years ago ,” she said. “ Before I cam e to college I never even noticed my coughing. Now I find I ’m coughing all the tim e. I definitely don’t feel as good as I By Scott Knutson In these inflationary days, a evening, two women from Tuck-In“ good tim e” on Van Buren Avenue Tim e circulate around the men’s south dorms. The women, clad in can costas much as $50. modest pajam as, tuck in each But the men at ASU can “ get custom er, read him a good night that lovin’ feeling” for only 50 story and kiss his cheek or hand, cents a night. Gonnerman said. Tuck-In-Tim e, a service which gives the customer a short story, a tucking-in and a good-night kiss, is now available from the women on the third floor of Best dorm, Bwing. “ It’s a service for guys who miss dear old m om ,” said Katrina Gon­ nerman, a freshm an business m a­ jor and co-director of the opera­ tion. “ It was kind of dead around here, so we thought this m ight get the girls together for some fun,” she added. iipiairiiiiir •8 ” x 11" unbound originals Guaranteed Lowest KEG BEER Prices in the state with Tap and Tub! (or the different» in cashj O Q ftiV Different Kinds of KEG BEER £ L ow c .i o r i . 13 Regulars REGISTER FOR FREE ALBUMS AND T-SHIRTS “DAWN OF THE DEAD” “ALICE IN WONDERLAND” “KENTUCKY FRIED MOVIE” ALICE COOPER IN “WELCOME TO MY NIGHTMARE” Friday & Saturday Nights JERRY'S LIQUORS (1217 S. RURAL RD.) Corner of Apache and Rural KEG HOTLINE JUST OFF CAMPUS 966-TOLL N o C harge For Tap, Tub acnx CF s an ot said. CF mom defet Ge detei as ej man; Ea “ car Uniti 20 p< ries for lem isn’l pari it W£ idea Sh are ] nigh grad “ We also give them hot cocoa ® and cookies for an extra 50 cen ts,” _ she said. “ And some of the guys have asked for back rubs, so we m ight start doing that. J colli “ Anything within reason, we som m ight consider,” she added. to tl stor Gonnerman and her partner, ther Resident Assistant Linda O ’Leary, distributed leaflets describing the O service before they went into !'av< business. min “ We sent out a lot of publicity to kind of get the reaction of Every Sunday through Thursday everybody. A lot of people thought 122 E. University Or.. Tempe. 968-7821 did tl Ba for tl Chap tiona is t know MIDNIGHT SHOWS AT T0WM & COUNTRY THEATRE AND LAKES 6 THEATRES $2.00 PER PERSON The first 750 people at each theater w ill receive a "2 for V coupon good at Pizza Hut. “1 wou imn Thursday, September 25,1980 State Press Page 11 ratory disease preys on young people ly emomental hrough, :ened to :hool in J in the >uld imdisease ' school to nine :k,” she up late th, so I I worry it back as kept lile her er now ‘Before cedm y ; all the od as I n Tuck-Inthe men’s si, clad in in each good night k or hand, did three years ago. Barbara H alpin, adult representative for the Greater Arizona Cystic Fibrosis Chapter, said this week is the first Na­ tional Cystic Fibrosis Week and its goal is to increase understanding and knowledge of the disease. "W e want to let the people at ASU and across the nation know there are other C F students on campus and that there is an organization ready to help them ,” she said. C F is not contagious, but begins at the moment of conception as a result of a defect or abnorm ality in a gene. Genes, the basic units of heredity, determine physical characteristics such as eye color, stature, facial features and many health conditions. Each parent of a child with C F is a "carrier” of a single C F gene. In the United States, an estim ated one of every 20 persons (about 10 million people) car­ ries a C F gene. Inheriting a single gene for C F causes no special health prob­ lem s, and a person’s carrier status often isn’t recognized until he or she becomes a parent of a child with C F . "A lot of kids aren’t diagnosed until they reach the age of 7, 9 or even 20,” said H alpin, who also has C F . "Children may be walking around without even knowing they have C F . A lot of times it is m istaken for asthm a or other lung problem s.” W heezing, coughing, weight loss, per- Barbara H alpin sonality change and fever are the most common symptoms, Halpin said. She added the disease can be treated, but it is very expensive. “ Some patients take as many as 50 to 60 pills a d ay,” she said. “ The individual cost of treatment and care can range from $6,000 to $12,000 per year. ” There are, however, several programs and organizations that help pay these high costs through the 84 Cystic Fibrosis Foundation chapters across the country. Halpin said although there is no known cure for C F , the outlook for the future is improving. "In the past 10 years, diagnostic pro­ cedures have become more accurate and treatment has im proved,” she said. “ The result is more affected children are being treated early before crippling physical dam age can occur, and when given preventive treatm ent, they live longer.” Blazek said the disease is no longer a drastic hindrance. “ How much you want to live is how badly you let it affect you,” she said. “ Although somewhat restricting, it’s something that is very livab le.” H O M E F O R C H R IS T M A S ? Su p e r-sa v e r fa re s B u y now tick e ts delivered to your door.' W e can help y o u fin d the b e st fares! C a ll A im ee C re a tiv e T ravel 2 5 4 -5 9 4 9 f First check out all that new stuff just unpacked at The Gallery Store; then feast your eyes on exciting new exhibits in the adjacent galleries . . . Ernst Barlach ’til September 30 George Miyasaki - til October 5 THE GALLERY STORE ..atthews Center, 2nd Floor 12 to 4 WEEK DAYS >1* % \ T h e J e w e lry S h o w (Formerly The 14k. Gold Co.) Huge inventory of 14K. gold C h a in s . . . i from S ^ q OO f the guys radioibs, so we , “ I heard on K B B C that a lot of colleges back East were doing iason, we something like it,” she said. " I got led. In thinking about it. Tell a little story, tuck in their covers and give - partner, them a little kiss. It's a lot of fun.” a O ’Leary, :ribing the O 'Leary said most of the clients went into have been honorable and "openminded” about the whole idea. \ Complete selection of: diamonds, wedding sets, wedding bands, stone rings, pendants, earrings and charms. FREE FOR Layaway ALL SUN DEVILS 10% Minimum Deposit member of Sun Angel Foundation Statt photo by Bob Baamaadortor THE JEWELRY SHOW A M ercad o Shop » T ri-C ity M all M esa • 964-7035 M o n .-S a t. 10-6 Time Service. U f IMPORT PARTS* MACHINE SHOPS 9 LOCATIONS IN ARIZONA 90 days 10% DISCO UNT “ If something did happen, it Tim Hilbert, sophomore business major, gets s glass of milk and a bedtime story from would nullify the whole operation sophomore Kathi Gordon and frsshman Stacey Thier. Kathi and Stacey both work for Tuck-inim m ediately,” said Gonnerman. ^ 1 ^ & it was a joke, but now they like the idea,” Gonnerman said. , _ .. she “ ‘d only f*ve ° r six clients are Put to bed by the service each night, but business is increasing gradually. hot cocoa O ’Leary said the idea for the 50 ” business cam e to her over the local niblicity to action of lie thought LOVE DOUBLE SURPRISES? 301 F. BROADWAY - MESA 833-8934 1324 W. UNIVERSITY - TEMPE 894-9677 9 6 6 -9 3 2 2 OUR GAME ROOM 620 S. College, Tempe THURSDAY IS PIZZA PIE DAY featuring: SPECIAL SUCE AND 16 oz. 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Pepsi for *1.00 FREE DELIVERY and FREE LITER PEPSI With Any 15 Inch Pizza Valid 9-25-80 Only Valid 9-25-80 Only. Page 12 State Press Thursday, September 25,1980 s p o rts Apuna gets another shot; this time w ith New York Giants By Charlie Diaz F o rm e r Sun D e v il linebacker Ben Apuna has been offered a two-day tryout by the National Foot­ ball League New York G iants, the State Press has learned. Apuna's agent, Philmore Hirohata, said Apuna left Tempe Wednesday morning after the Giants called to of­ fer him the tryout. H irohata also handles form er ASU linebacker Gary Padjen, who is in Winnepeg for a 14-day tryout with the Canadian Football League Blue Bombers. “ He has an excellent chance of being their start­ ing m iddle lineb acker,” Hirohata said. Apuna told the State Press in a seperate interview, that he had been offered a fouryear contract by the Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Football League, at $55,000 a year, but he turned it down "They want to sign me for life ,” Apuna said. “ 1 could sign and play here if I wanted too, but I’m holding out for the N F L ." Hirohata said tryouts nor­ m ally consist of physicals and basic drills and he is optom istic that Apuna will make the G iant’s roster. "P e rso n ally ,” Hirohata said, “ yes, I think he has a great opportunity with the Giants. Ben’s got a good chance.” If Apuna fails to make the Giants’ roster, he will sign with someone in the N FL for the 1981 season, Hirohata said. A c co rd in g H ir o h a ta , Apuna is on 10 N FL team s’ “ short list” — a list of Ben Apuna Pool it Coll: 965-3161 __ paid, •for laying down on -the j o b ! E arn o p + o * 9 5 per mon-th. and p ro v id e a p r e c io u s h u m a n re so u rc e ,... your plasma! T em p e Plasm a C orp. 933 E. University 894-1338 PRIMSTMI9AP FOR $5___EXTRA (New Donors O nly) _ __________ players that franchises look at to add r o s te r replacements. The team s, by conference are; Baltimore Colts, Buf­ falo B ills, Cleveland Browns, Kansas City Chiefs, New England P a trio ts, and Oakland Raiders in the Am erican Football Con­ ference and Detroit Lions, New Orleans Saints, New York, and St. Louis inthe Na­ tional Football Conference. The Giants play a “ threefour” type of defense that re­ quires a larger number of linebackers to be carried on the roster. They recently lost two linbackers, one to injury and the other has cancer. If the New York deal falls through for Apuna, Hirohata said, the Cardinals appear to be the team Apuna will play for next year. “ St. Louis was awfully im ­ pressed with Ben,” Hirohata said, "and (when he was cut) it was just a m atter of experience.” Apuna was drafted in the seventh round of the 1980 N FL draft by the St. Loius Cardinals. He lasted with the Cards until the final cut, Sept. 1. Padjen was drafted in the tenth round by the Dallas Cowboys but was also cut before the regular season started. According to Hirohata, Padjen has the option of sign in g w ith the B lue B om b er's, whose 1980 regular season is alm ost over, or sitting out this season and signing with the National Football League Washington Redskins for the 1981 season. Thursday, September 25,1980 State Press Page 13 Race tightens in National League East Attention: Foreign Car Owner* » A V I UP TO TO% ON R IC Y C IIO » O R IIO N A U T f PA«T* MO TRIUMPH HONDA OAT4UN TOYOTA .V W - « I OTHIR» A ll Models Foreign 243.3291 M M » . 40*H PH*, In««» 4 0 * * » M M w *W y ) » Man* ton fh l. a4 A • " ■ A A itl« M il t l ' O l t t Tempers best kept secret * 2? _ K n o w n f o r p e o p le pleasin frie n d ly service. \4 o fc ü A a U â tA J A . Tempe/ASU 1 « \ of Tempe// 915 E. Apache at Rural/968-3451 Editor's note: Baseball has been very, very good to a number of people, but to some teams in the National League's East division, it's not all fun and games. The following is an analysis of the top three teams in the NL East and their playoff chances. By Je ff Fries Pittsburgh Pirates Back in the E ast, the fall is fallin g, the leaves are falling and the defending World C h am p io n P itts b u r g h Pirates are falling — right out of contention in the Na­ tional League E ast division. The B ucs now find themselves at this late date in third place, trailing both the Montreal Expos and the a g in g , but u p s ta r t, Philadelphia Phillies. The problem that Pirate m anager Chuck Tanner has to deal with now-is how to make his lazy World Champs come to life. The third-place Pirates, who led the N L E ast prac­ tically all season, now suffer from a nest of term ites in the bat rack and an ailing cap­ tain, first baseman W illie Stargell. But let’s face it Chuck, a healthy Stargell is not going to revive the FA M -A -LEE . And neither is another Sister Sledge tune. Only the solid team effort you had last year will. Despite the above, the Pirates have some consola­ tions Dave "the franchise” Parker has quit asking for his ticket out of Pittsburgh, for now, and has come to life in the fast lane — raising his average considerably and contributing some gam e winning hits that have kept the Bucs on the brink of con­ tention. But even “ The Franchise” can’t carry the weight of the Pirate burden. The burden prim arily has to be taken by the pitching staff — a pitching staff that locked up so many victories last year that led to the World Series destruction of the Baltim ore Orioles. The P ira te ace and Rolaids tablet this year has not been reliever Kent Tekulve but starter Jim Bibby. Between Bert Blyleven’s crying and Tekulve’s sorearm ed-below -. 500-record, Bibby has been relied on heavily (to say the least) to good earth East champs for three years (1976-78), the Phils are once again in contention after a poor fourth place showing last year. One can say that m anager Dallas Green has had a lot to do with the recent success. Ever since the Phillies fired Danny Ozark, now Dodger third-base coach, and hired Green, there have been more workouts, more chewouts and more W’s under the Phillies' belts. One can say Cy Young can­ didate Steve Carlton has had a lot to do with it. Carlton has returned to his 1972 form this season, something he didn’t even have during their re­ cent playoff years, winning 23 while leading the m ajors in strikeouts. One can say Captain Mike Schm idt has had a lot to do with it. Schm idt continues to come through in the tight spot, and lately he’s been on fire. In his past three gam es, he has hit a homerun in each. But, for my money, the revamped pitching staff has done it. Philadelphia Phillies What do you know — the The Phillies brought up Philadelphia Philles have rookie right-handed pitcher their come back from retirem ent. Bob W alk from continuad p*