S RP's Pfister, Tueson executive appointed to two regents Slots tu e sd a y J a n u a ry 2 6 , 1982 ~ sta te p re s s Tempe, Arizona Arizona State University V o i. 64 N o . 63 © Copyright, State Press, 1982 By Phil Daschner Staff writer Gov. Bruce Babbitt has ap­ pointed Jack Pfister, Salt R iv er P ro ject gen era l manager, and Don Shrop­ sh ire, Tucson M edical Center’s administrator, to the Arizona Board of Regents. “I am glad that men of the caliber of Don Shropshire and Jack P fister have agreed to serve on the Board of Regents,” Babbitt said. “They have a long-standing commitment to high quality public service and have spotless national reputations in their professional fields.” The eight-year appoint­ ments, now pending Senate confirmation, were made to replace Tempe insurance ex­ ecutive Rudy Campbell and Mesa rancher Dwight Pat­ terson, whose terms expired this year. Senate confirmation hear­ ings are tenatively schedul­ ed to begin Feb. 10. Pfister, 48, received a b a c h e lo r ’s d egree in m etallurgical engineering from U of A in 1955 and a law degree there in 1959. After serving as aq a t­ torney with a Phoenix «Jaw firm from 1959 to 1969, he joined the Salt River Project where he has served as general manager since 1976. .. A native of Prescott, Pfister sits on a number of local boards of directors, in­ cluding the ASU Foundation, the Arizona H um anities C o u n c il, th e A riz o n a Academy, and United Ban­ corp of Arizona. “I’m going through a learning process,” Pfister said. “I think my respon­ s ib ilitie s as gen eral manager of SRP, which in­ v o lv e s p la n n in g and b u d getin g, w ill be of assistance to me. “My principle goal on the board will be to support the concept of improving the quality of higher education in Arizona,” he said. c i___ __ u :__ c l Shropshire, 54,u has been administrator at the Tucson Medical Center for almost 15 years. He w as associate director of the University of M aryland H osp ital in Baltimore before coming to Tucson in 1967. Shropshire has served as president of the Arizona Hospital Association and the A ssociation of W estern Hospitals. He w as also chairman of the Board of Governors for Pim a Com­ munity College from 1974 to 1976, and currently serves on the board of the Arizona Academy. Shropshire could not be reached for comment. Amended bill allows some pre-21 drinking By Tracy Fletcher Staff writer The drinking age bill, which originally prohibited anyone under 21 to purchase alcohol, w as amended Monday to allow 19year-olds to purchase alcohol in “controlled situations.” The am ended bill w ill allow 19-year-olds to buy alcohol at on-site retail outlets, such as bars or restaurants, but prohibits the sale of alcohol to anyone under 21 at off-site outlets, such as liquor stores and conven­ ience marts. Rep. P ete Corpstein, R-Paradise Valley, proposed the com prom ise amendment to the original bill. Rep. Jim Skelly, R-Scottsdale, who op­ posed the am endm ent, said it was “utterly inane” to perm it 19-year-olds to drink in a bar, but not to allow them to purchase packaged liquor. Skelly, chairman of the Commerce Com­ m ittee, voted in favor of the bill in the Judiciary Committee. ,But he said the amended bill would create “utter chaos” in enforcement, and he voted against it in the Commerce Committee. Rep. Jjfn Cooper, R-Mesa, who proposed the original m easure, -said the amendment’* “weakened the bill, but at least kept it alive.” . Cooper said he will try to get the amend­ ment rem oved from the proposal during discussion in the House. Corp6tein’s amendm ent was defeated in the Judiciary Committee by a vote of 7-6; the original bill passed thAt committee with a 9-6 vote. The amended version of the bill then nar­ rowly passed by an 8-7 vote in the Com­ m erce Committee. An attem pt to appropriate funds for better enforcement of the bill1was defeated in both com m ittees. Rep. Sam McConnell, R-Flagstaff, pro­ posed an am endm ent to allocate $100,000 to the state Department of Public Safety for in­ creased enforcement. McConnell said that “unless the means of enforcement is provided, the bill is a play for the public.” Col, Lloyd Robertson, superintendent of the state Liquor License and Control Board, said raising the drinking age to 21 would in­ crease the need for enforcement. “I don’t think w e’re doing an acceptable job (of enforcement) now,” he said. “If we layer 200,000 (19- and 20-year-old) people on top of that, it will only serve to aggravate the problem.” Rep. Tony West, R-Phoenix, who opposed the amendment, called the $100,000 alloca­ tion a “mere drop in the bucket” for the DPS, which has a $54 million operating budget. “The resources for enforcement are there,” West said, “but the DPS has to reorganize its priorities in enforcement within the existing structure.” Col. Ron Hoffman, chief of the DPS Criminal Investigation Bureau, said en­ forcement of liquor laws has improved since 1980. Hoffman said the department has 51 en­ forcement officers statewide and that liquor license investigations have increased by more than 110 percent since 1980. He also said the number of arrests for li­ quor license violations has increased by almost 50 percent and warnings issued for violations have increased by 80.4 percent since 1980. Rep. Earl Wilcox, D-Phoenix, co-sponsor of the bill, said he was “optimistic the bill will pass in the House,” will die in the Senate but become law through a public referendum. Associated Students President Denise Dreiseszun has said she will begin a voter registration drive and a referendum petition if the bill is passed by the Legislature. Dreiseszun called raising the drinking age “a Band-Aid solution” to the complex prob­ lem of drunk driving. She also said she was “somewhat pleased that they (legislators) were willing to com­ prom ise,” but said the compromise does not directly address the problem. O p e n Staff photo by Jim Qund w in n e r Lanny Wadklna grimaças altar missing a putt on the 7th green In the final round o t play of the Phoenix Open. But, It didn’t slow him enough as he ended Monday with a 6-under-par 65, and a first place finish 6 shots ahead of Jerry Pate to win the open. Pate finished the day alone In second place w ith Mike Reid one shot back in third place. Related photo page 18. ¡3 5 m illion fo r stadium repairs asked ■ „ GOP may attach ASU loan request to bill By Jim Austin Staff writer *, . , c „ , c M 5 The likelihood of the state Legislature passing ASU s $3J> million loan request for stadium repairsm ayim prove if sup­ porters d e c id ^ o attach it to a bill that already has solid sup^ R ep . Doug Todd, R-Tempe, said Monday that by in tr^ ucing the loan as an amendm ent to an em ergency i P funds to NAU for its natural gas-line reiPa,rs’ lt,^.““ d 8 the support of the legislators already backing that bill. ' “T heL egislatu re is deteply involved in this, Todd said. “We’re tryiiffi to appeal to those who can lend support By m aking it an em ergency amendment d w o ^ d b e a pplemental appropriation and not an entirely dif * said. Todd said the loan probably would not be approved in less than a month. “It (the loan) is subject to many whims along the way, he said. .. . If the House Appropriations Committee approves the loan, it will go to the Rules Committee and floor debate before a final House vote. Although the loan is being put together by Republicans in the House, Todd said the issue is non-partisan and he an­ ticipates support from Democrats as well as other Republicans. Currently, the terms of the loan would provide ASU with $1.5 million the first year and $1 million for the two following years. . • , Under the terms of the proposal, ASU would repay the loan by making payments of no fewer than $50,000 a year begin­ ning in 1984. 1 „ . Frank Sackton, ASU vice president for business affairs, said before the repair estim ates climbed from $2.5 to $5 million, ASU considered the funds obtainable from within the University. “Originally, we thought we could handle it with the Univer­ sity’s receipts and investment income, but when it rose to $5_ million we decided to seek legislative assistan ce,” he said. Todd said the possibility of having a pro football team and subsequent revenues at Sup D evil Stadium will have no bear­ ing on whether the loan is awarded to ASU. “That would not be good legislative practice,” he added. v b tc g E ttr iEk H O W TO R E C E IV E $ 5 0 0 0 .“ U.S. property taxes rise Polish prem ier lashes out WASHINGTON (AP) — Property taxes in the United States rose 5.5 percent during fiscal 1980 to an average of $302 lo r every man, woman and child in the country, a private tax research group said Monday. The Tax Foundation said total property taxes climbed to $68.5 billion during the fiscal year ending Oct. 1,1980, up $3.6 billion from 1979. Although taxes continued to rise, they did so at a slower rate than during m ost of the 1970s, the non-profit organization said. From 1970 to 1978, property taxes rose at an annual rate of 8.7 percent, theioundation said. Property taxes declined 2.2 percent in 1979, due entirely to the im pact of Califor­ nia’s tax-cutting Proposition 13. (A P) — - P olish P rem ier Wojciech Jaruzelski bitterly attacked tbe independent labor federation Solidarity, the United States and its allies Monday and hinted that military control of Poland’s mines and fac­ tories will continue for som e time. In his first address to the Sejm, or Parlia­ ment, since martial law w as declared Dec. 13, Jaruzelski said som e restrictions on civil liberties could be lifted by the end of February, but only if there are no “illegal activities” directed against the state, Radio Warsaw reported. W ORTH OF Air Florida lost speed Double $1 GRANTS & DIP LOANS ‘A N N U A L L Y ONTARIO, N.Y. (AP) — A tube ruptured in a cooling system at the Ginna nuclear power plant Monday, emitting radioactive steam into the atmosphere and leaking thousands of gallons of water into the reac­ tor’s containment sump before the plant was stabilized, officials said. The reactor of the plant, 18 m iles north­ east of Rochester, New York’s third-largest city, was shut down autom atically and was doused with w ater to keep it frdm overheating, sa id Gary Sanborn, p spokesman for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. ill ’ Vac! T Sundaes Re9-$165 Your c h o ic e o f flavors and toppings, w hipped cream , n u ts and cherries. LIM IT: 4 p e r cou p o n . Good through Feb. 1,1982. For B o o klet: 915 E. Broadway (at Rural) Lucky Center — Tempe 966-8950 Send $1.00 plus 20‘ fot postage to: Leaking nuclear plant stabilized WASHINGTON (AP) — The Air Florida jetliner that plunged into the Potomac River barely reached takeoff velocity after roar­ ing down the runway 15 seconds longer than normal, then lost speed alm ost as soon as it was airborne, according to instrument readings revealed Monday. Federal investigators, disclosing data from the Boeing 737’s flight recorder, said the twin-engine aircraft had trouble developing proper acceleration almost from start of takeoff and never got more than 377 feet into the a i r , SCHOLAR­ S H IP S , R V D EN TER P R ISES P. O . B o x 135 68 Spokane, W A 9 9 2 1 3 TEMPE J UKjO) C CENTER STOR E H O U R S PAPA JA Y ’S JEW ELER S SUN-3-1 MON•THURS4-1 FRIb SAT4-2 Orinwy ErMs 'AHourSofoco Closing O N E A N D O N LY FOR ALL YOUR JEWELRY NEEDS Whatever your degree will be, the Navy can give you a management position (if you qualify). 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D R IN K S 7 M A R G A R IT A S CO Cam i>limenlr a n m u A ( A 25c CLAMS 25c oystfrs PAC I F IC #n » . •.* ) X ’ .* a=« r 4321 4 A j t / p f A J l North Scottsdale Road. Scottsdale, Arizona < /' ( (• a 602 -941-0602 4 ( Tuesday, January 26,1982 State Press Page 3 ' Loan program proposed Director questions feasibility By Roy Schechter , Staff writer The director of ASU’s financial aids department said he q u e stio n s the feasibility of a state subsi­ dized loan program pro­ posed last w eek by the U of A’s budget director. Gary M usinger of the U of A told a joint appropriations committee of the Arizona Legislature that the state will have to create its own loan program to offset the loss of fédéral money for guaranteed student loan sub­ sidies if President R eagan’s b u d g e t p r o p o s a ls a r e enacted by Congress. “I’m not very confident (of Arizona’s ability to enact such a program) because of the fiscal problems the state is experiencing,” Daniel Martinez, ASU financial aids director sdtd. “Any budget cuts that would m ake federally in­ sured loans m ore difficult to obtain would drastically reduce students’ ability to enroll and pay for school,” Martinez said. The federal government is calling for a reduction in the amount of money available to subsidize interest rates for guaranteed student loans. Musinger says he believes that a phase-out of the sub­ sidies would occur gradual­ ly“I do not expect the phase­ out to occur overnight,” . Musinger told the commit­ tee. “I think, well before that happens, ..Arizona and most other states will be having som e state alternative,” he said. A reduction in federal money for the loan programs ,w ill have far-reaching ef­ fects on the student popula­ tion. Approximately 8,000 ASU students receive alm ost $22 million from the GSL pro­ gram. Student loan programs are assisted by the federal government in two ways — students have the interest on their loans paid by the federal government while they are in school. Also, lenders receive an additional percentage rate from the federal government when loans are repaid. Also discussed at last Thursday’s meeting of the state Board'of Rlegents were IU BS.M «. I M oi»nîii,i H v ...., & Camaro included | j*6995 («¿Ism G id jf j ! ________ t i n t i n g 1 5245 S. K Y R E N E R O A D I TEM PE ! 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The regents have asked for more than $300 million for the three state universities — $107 million for ASU, $124 million for the U of A, and $41 million for NAU. This is an increase of 11.25 percent over the present budget, while Governor Bruce Bab­ bitt has requested that state agencies limit their in­ creases to 5 percent. D1981 Texas Instruments' Incorporated Page 4 State Press‘Tuesday, January 26,1982 — --------:-------Drink today, and drown all sorrow; you shall perhaps not do it tomorrow. —John Fletcher The drinking age is on the way up J a y H eiler O p in io n Editor The bill that would raise Arizona’s legal drinking age to 21 moved one step closer to passage Monday morning as the House Judiciary Committee stretched and yawned for more than hours before passing it and sending it on its merry way. • **> It was m y first real-life exposure to the legislative process, and the experience was educational, enlightening, and predictably disappointing. Thè com m ittee listened to testimony from a seem ingly endless stream of sources, ranging from a representative of the Department of Liquor License Control to a 15-year-old girl from a Christian academy. And excluding a couple of refreshing exceptions, it is doubtful the committee m embers listened any more intently to the thoughts of the former than to those of-the latter. In a nutshell, it was dishearteningly clear that no matter what anyone said to the people supporting this bill, they weren’t even going to bother to listen, let alone reconsider the issue in light of the m any well-founded argum ents that were put before them. Ignored w as the assertion that the genuine problem at hand is alcohol abuse itself, rather than widespread, unusual m isuse by young people. Ignored w as the idea that w e should ¡first toughen up the penalties for all drunken drivers before making scapegoats out of 19- and 20-year-olds. Ignored w as the contention that 21- to 25- year olds also cause a substantial number of alcohol-related accidents, so if there is cause to raise the age to 21, w e might a s w ell raise it to 25. Ignored were the often-repeated but still valid arguments that if an individual is old enough to marry and rear children, old enough to enter contracts, and old enough to b e asked to defend his country, then he ought to be old enough to accept the responsibility of purchasing liquor. And finally, ignored was the fact that as the bill stands now, there is no appropriations amendment to ensure that the extra funds that will be needed for its enforcem ent will be available. And it is this latter ignorance that pulled off the scab and revealed this bill to be exactly what so m any of us have suspected it to be all along: a politically popular m ove that will secure a lot more votes than it will lose any lawmaker who votes for it and, hot dog ! It just happens to have com e up during election year! You see, the supporters of this bilNyiQw that an appropria­ tions amendment will certainly make it m ore difficult to pass and possibly will prevent it from passing altogether. So they defeated a $100,000 appropriations motion and essentially left the bill naked and toothless — completely without true poten­ tial to effect the change they claim to see a | so vital to highway safety. Time and time again both those testifying against the bill a s well as several committee m em bers suggested that the bill was nothing but a sort of community piece of pork barrel legislation, but it wasn’t until the 'proponents of the bill passed it in such an impotent form that all the suspicions w ere verified. But verification or no verification, the fact rem ains that the bill has taken another step toward becoming law and the w ay it looks right now it probably will do just that. Something tells m e that at this point I should issue some sort of call to action on the matter, but to do so would be in­ sincere; I really don’t think it would do a bit of good. If you'fe 19 or 20, m y advice is to start stocking thè wine cellar. opinion IN OTHER N e w S . . . A N IN V £ S T l6 A T l ON HAS REVEALED THE SEVERE E A S TE R N C O LO W A V E T O B E A PLOT B y THE Ar iz o n a b o a r d o r r e g e n t s . Th e Bo a r d p l a n n e d to lure O u r-O F - STA TE S TU D E N TS TO T H E S TA TE , M o M ATTER W H A T T H E T U IT IO N , Í&DK&&. NFL is biowin' in the wind T a fC Ç a H o r * jo * * v C U v ta igip wM I don’t know where all this talk about pro football in Sun Devil Stadium cam e from. Like lightning on a clear day it flashed before us in a storm of governor’s committees and gossiping legislators, with regents and ASU officials looking up, pensive, since, after all, it ’s their stadium. There was a tim e when talk of pro football here would be m et with an icy stare and a white fist from former ASU foot­ ball guardians John Schwada, Fred Miller and Frank Kush. The former president, athletic director and head coach wielded considerable influence on whether Sun Devil football gate receipts would be lost in defectors to the pros. Alas, those days are gone; now the question is not whether ASU is going to allow pro football, but how ASU can get a substancial cut of the pro football pie. To athletic director Dick Tamburo, the specter of pro foot­ ball in the Valley really is a specter ; he anticipates a $2 million ASU loss per year if pro football arrives. If ASU were to allow a pro team u se of its stadium, though, a rental fee of $2 million would not be unrealistic, according to those caught up in this mess. Monday night and Thursday night football gam es, as the pros are wont to have, would not fit well with those trying to park for night classes at ASU, and inconveniences are many. But it doesn’t seem to m atter; everything will work out, say pro ball proponents. > Among those caught up in these fiérce winds are attorney Robert Stark and businessm an Gene Felker, who have pro­ posed framing a non-profit foundation to buy 30 percent of an NFL franchise and siphon gate receipts to ASU’s general fund, where monies would benefit not only our a ilin g athletic department but academ ic interests as well. The Stark-Felker plan would guarantee a franchise 37,000 sold tickets, which should give som e peace to an enterprise being asked to turn over 30 percent of its stock to outside in­ terests. Everyone seem s to be straining their imaginations over whether the Stark-Felker plan is plausible, and over whether the Stark-Felker plan should include its provision that Sun Devil Stadium be expanded to 87,000 sea ts, and over whether it would really help retire the stadium ’s existing debt, and whether such a non-profit organization vliould be against Na­ tional Collegiate Athletic Association rules, and over whether ASU should charge an exorbitant fee for stadium rental to this alleged pro team, and over how ASU should make sure rental terms are fra* at least lOyeprs so revenue won’t be lost to another stadium built too soon, and one legislator told me. if ASU doesn’t allow use of its stadium there won’t be pro football here for 10 years, and legislators are groping for un­ pulled strings to get the pros here, and the regents are for­ mulating a policy on pro football in Sun D evil Stadium. . . And meanwhile, the reason you don’t hear anything from the National Football League on the m atter is that all this ex­ citement is premature speculation. The NFL has very little to tell our wide-eyed Valley media because the NFL has other things on its mind. While pro football zealots here are playing with a toy whose Christmas waits far away, the NFL is busy with resolving Oakland Raiders-Los Angeles R am s stadium litigation — from which an expansion franchise in California is expected to emerge. _Its next highest priority is a major NFL Players Associa­ tion grievance that requests 55 percent of gate revenues to go to players salaries. When it gets through with that, the NFL is going to negotiate cable TV deals that w ill no doubt leave Commis­ sioner Pete Rozelle reaching for the aspirin bottle. Then, maybe, the NFL just might start fulfilling rumors — not policy — that it will expand to two m ore team s in the next five years. The California team w ill be one. Memphis, Tenn., Indianopolis, Ind. and Phoenix, Ariz. are the candidates for the other team. The NFL is not completely oblivious to the storm here. Felker went to the Super Bowl last weekend to talk with NFL executives about his plan. It’s a plan with no precedent designed to give ASU a piece of the pie long after the pros have left Sun Devil Stadium. Don’t be surprised if he comes home tonight blowing more air for the pro football storm. STATE P R E S S VIVIAN WARNER Editor Cut Ned some slack! Editor: I believe that cartoon was nothing less than a cheap shot, an insult to Ned Wulk’s character, portrayed him as a dummy and was a com­ pletely inaccurate view of the situation. The 1982 men’s Sun D evil Basketball team is young this year, due to the graduation of key players such as Sam Williams, Johnny Nash and Alton Lister. How quickly we forget our past. Remember when Sam and Alton were young? We w ere losing three years ago under Ned Wulk -with Sam Williams, Alton Lister and Kurt Nimphius. Was Ned a dummy then too? If so, the dummy brought us In closing all I would ask is back the next year (1980) to that you spend your energies go all the way to the second supporting the team through round NCAA tournaments, a their young days instead of 20-point upset in Corvalis cutting them to shreds. Give a g a in st h ighly r a n k e d ______ them, time and support and Oregon State (1981) and also” ineyfeill go a long way! the 1st round NCAA’s also in Anthony V. Simuel 1981. Is this the work of a Senior dummy? I hardly think so. ASU Pep Band JEFF SELLERS Manafling Editor City Editor ELLEN HAGGERTY Asst. City Editor ADRIANNE FLYNN Sports Editor KEVIN WIOUC Asst. Sports Editor PETE PRISCO News Editor JULIE MANN Entertainm ent Editor KARL BYRN Photo Editor BOB BEAMESDERFER Copy C hlet KAREN BREBNER Opinion Page Editor JAY HEILER The State Press is published Tuesday through Friday during the academic year except holidays snd exam periods, at M atthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Temps, AZ 85287. Newsroom: 965.2292. Advertis­ ing & Production: 965-7572. , The State Press Is the only newspaper exclusively published for and cir­ culated on the ASU campus. The news and views published In this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. Tuesday, January 26,1982 State Press Page 5 Sale of University bonds delayed until U.S. interest rates, stabilize By PhilRoth Staff writer ASU will sell $40 million worth of bonds to fund several major construction projects, but must w ait until the economic conditions are right before such a sale, the vice presi­ dent for business affairs said Monday. Frank Sackton said Ra use her Pierce Refsnes Inc., University investment ad­ visers, discouraged ASU from selling the bonds at this tim e since the current interest rate is 12 to 13 percent. David Smith, senior vice president of Rauscher P ierce Refsnes Inc., said interest rates are at an “all-time record high. ” Smith said the right tim e to sell bonds is a x relative decision. “You have to weigh the in­ terest rates in the bond market versus the construction costs,’’ he said. He added interest rates are not stable, so ASU will have to keep a close eye on them to determine the right tim e to se ll bonds. Proposed projects to be funded by bonds are divided into two groups — one com­ prised of ready-to-go projects and the other which still needs finalized plans. The first group includes $16 million for an engineering research building with an addi­ tional $2 million going to the Physical Plant for other work on that building and $7*6 million for a new College of Business Ad­ ministration building. The remaining $15 million will fund the second group of projects: three high-rise parking garages and an annex to the Memorial Union. Sackton said the figures are rough estim ates. He said the garages still need to be de­ signed and located. A committee set up by ASU President J. Russell Nelson will make recommendations for details of the project. “My interest in the parking garages is to get the funding,” Sackton said. He said the Memorial Union annex prob­ ably will be a part of the present building. “There’s a strong possibility it will not be a separate building, but it will be an annex — connected to the present M.U.,” he said. Sackton said selling the bonds would take about 30 days and actual construction would take about a year. Other capital projects which have been bonded in the past include additions to Sun Devil Stadium and dormitories, he said. Those who buy bonds are paid interest for several years and after a certain amount of time, the seller will buy the bond back for the original price. ASU generates funds to pay back the debts from three main sources according to Sackton: the State Legislature, money generated from the project itself and a _ change in the amount of tuition ap­ propriated to the University, University administrators asked the legislature Friday for a $107 million operating budget and funds for other major projects. Nelson presented a list of eight growth priorities of the University in a “decision package,” and proposed construction of a $7 million student services building. Sackton said Governor Bruce Babbitt in­ dicated that very few of the projects would be able to be funded under the current economic condition. Classes Starting: Jan. 26 April 27 Educational Canter W ith R egular 50c OFF C a rW a s h KLEEN KAR WASH DORMS, APTS., VANS ALL SIZES NEW & USED ♦5 * (Formerly University Car Wash) 28 W . University Tempe up Coupon Good on Mon., Tues. or Wed. Coupon must be presented. Expires 6-30-82. 1516 E. Van Buren Phoenix w* “ 10” Contest Be the best looking lady in the house on Thursday, January 28th and w in $100! Second prize is $50, third is $25, and Heineken and M ichelob are 75* all night long! -COW BOYS’SUPB&SPECIALSTUESDAY, JANUARY 26 LADIES NIGHT t DAT ^ A p r il 17 Feb. 20 Classes now available for GRE, PSYCH, GREBIO, NLE, TOEFL, VAT, MAT, MSKP, OCAT, CPA. CALL TODAY FREE H O T W A X d a n c e re v ie w . GMAT March 20 June 23, Carpet House T o n ig h t fr o m 6 to 9 e n jo y 25« w e ll d rin k s , w in e & b e e r. 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Family are excluded from all contests or drawings Page 6 State Press Tuesday, January 26,1962 Pluralism threatened says Lutheran pastor By Michael Consol Staff writer By attempting to legislate m orality in the United States, the Moral Majority is threatening the pluralism the Constitution intended to protect, the pastor of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church of Tempe said Monday after a speech at ASU. Tom Peterson, who w as in­ vited to speak at the ASU College of Law by ASU Civil Liberties Union President Shaw n A iken, sa id he they propose (such as the F am ily P rotection A ct) com e to the fore, I think you have there an exam ple of a group proposing what the A m erican fam ily should b e,” he said. “ If this is where its ideology leads them, I think it’s really con­ trary to the rules of the gam e as it appears in the First Amendment — freedom of speech and freedom of association." Peterson said the Con­ stitu tio n g rew out of. munity should determine whether the creation story or evolution should be taught in the classroom. “T lir e is ample oppor­ tunity o u tsid e of the classroom to espouse the creationist views, as I do,” Peterson said. Peterson added that he doesn’t think society is any less moral today than in past centuries. Annual faculty award nominations being tàkerïby alumni association Nominations for the 19th annual ASU faculty awards, which will be presented during a Founders Day dinner in March, are now being accepted by the ASU Alu m n i Association, sponsor of the event. Nomination forms are availablé at the information desk in the Memorial Union, at the Alumni Center, at academic department offices throughout the cam­ pus or they m ay bè obtained by calling 965-3566. Deadline for the nominations is 5 p.m., Feb. 8, and alumni as well as faculty, staff members and students are eligible “I’m not convinced at all that w e’re any less moral pluralism and w as designed to guarantee the concept. “American society allows and encourages religious pluralism ,” Peterson said. “It is a unique thing in the history of the world. There’s nothing quite like it.” P eterson ’s speech, a t­ tended by about 15 people, d ea lt m a in ly w ith the technicalities of the First Amendment and how it has been interpreted in relation to religious issues by the courts. ^ Peterson sauf that a s part of the separation of church and state, the science com- than previous generations,” he said. “ I think m aybe the sensitivity about issues has changed. “The generation coming out of the late 1960s and ’70s is much m ore sensitive to moral issues involved in our environment and business practices,” he added. “My generation never even asked q u e s tio n s a b o u t w a r. Whatever the government said, w e did.” He said people in a pluralistic society arq$nore m oral-con scious b ecau se they are forced to ask ques­ tions: COMPLETE AUTO PAINTING SPECIAL Quality Work t _ m Guaranteed *1 TO QC Insurance Share Lunch with us on Tuesdays at Hillel e W We 11:30 un. to 1:00 p.m. every week u* ’V n U S B E E 0 '" Looking For A N ew Sport?? Learn disc games like Ultimate, Guts, Freestyle, Self Caught Rights, Discathlon and Frisbee Golf!! The UFC will b e having a general meeting and officer elections on Jan. 27, 7:30, in the Pima Room. ALL NEWCOMERS WELCOME Rims of the 1981 World Frisbee Disc Championship will b e shown. Join us for our first meeting. ' For more info, call Willie Williams, 267-0826. Spring Break Mazatlan *$394 ‘ Per Person / D B L O ccupancy C all Today March 13-20 Tour Includes: 894t9620 • Round Trip Airfare * 7 Nights at the Playa Del Rey • Transfers/Taxes/Gratuities Member Estimates Welcome coupon UNIVERSAL TRAVEL V in y l T o p C o lo rin g - B ody S id e Mouldings: 425 S. Mill Ave. 1st in Tempe • Since 1960 Ron's Auto Body and The dinner, which is open to the public, will com m em orate the 97th anniversary of the U niversity’s founding in 1885. «H “ If some of the legislation they propose com es to fore, I think you have there an exam ple of a group proposing what the Am erican fam ily should be.’’ disagrees with the Moral M ajority’s approach to changing society. “What I’m for is the preservation of pluralism,” Peterson said, “and that is the acknowledgement that there are various punts erf view .” For one group to presume they have the answer is “alw ays arrogant,” Peter­ son said. He said the Moral Majori­ ty wants to bring Christian values to society through law s to make society much m ore consciously Christian. “If som e of the legislation to submit candidates for the awards. The Distingdfehed Teacher Award (classroom teaching) and the Faculty Achievement Award (research, publica­ tion, or com m unity service) will be presented, with a $1,000 check for each, at the annual Founders Day dinner. Selec­ tion of the award recipients will be made by a com m ittee comprised of former winners and students. American Society of Travel Aflente m r OHlTHtg Only $1.25 Served w ith love 1012 S. Mill 234 W . 4th S t., Tempe 9674597 ATTENTION: P R E -L A W S T U D E N T S The Pre-Law Club is having its 1st meeting of the new year this after­ noon at 3:00 p.m. in the M ojave Room (222) in the M em orial Union. Here's som ething-that s sure, to put a shimmer in you r „ shamrock* and a «mile in your Irish eyes : Timothy O 'T o o le s is now Dr. Nick A. LaPlaca, from M cG eorge School of Law^will speak on “Legal Em ploym ent and Salaries in the 8 0 ’s.” That'S r iy h t ! Tempes Favorite drinking establishm ent fe soon t o become T e m p e ’s f a v o r it e E A T IN G establishment'. S an d w iches, salads, app etizers, m o r e ! And you c a n 't b eat t h e p rices (n o t e v e n w ith a s h if le la jh !>. serving POODM! Sore, IreVand is Heaven... but Tim othy O'Toole'S /s your nearest branch! C lu b m em b ers a n d all Interested a re e n co u ra g e d to attend Refreshm ents will be served. j 1 1 2 3 S. R U R A L R D . |f 968-0243 Kv«t > Dwy RED LIGHT SPECIALS NIGHT!----- -------- EVERY «••--••-•JII <*• O n - L in e ■mi iMiMMSiTf it a Tuesday, January 26,1982 State Press Page 7 FREE - FREE - FREE - FREE - FREE - FREE ■ by Mark Litton n tcto co sn 0Fn t MAI UOtLO. IT Mi A M ea t t e l i c i Pon.ce a m o ck CootAUneur, A thmtas ano n* usrApìa-- 31 A College Degree and no plans? 2 fu ll quarts o f Coca Cola w ith purchase of i i i LARGE PIZZA \J or \1 fu ll quart o l Coca Cola w ith purchase of a ¡¡^ MEDIUM PIZZA Please mention coupon when ordering. Expires Feb. 1,1982. B ecom e a Lawyer's Assistarft G IN O ’S PIZZA A representative of the University of San Diego, dnd the National Center for Paralegal Training's WE DELIVER Tempo 822 S. M ill 966-4666 LAWYER’S ASSISTANT PROGRAM FREE - FREE - FREE - FREE - FREE - FREE will be on campus Tuesday, February 2 , 1032 B IG M S A N D W y 2 fo r* A C IC H 1 .8 9 Just bring In this coupon and your dslicious mouth watering Big Mac Sandwiches are 2 for $1.89. Limit one coupon per customer per visit. Please present coupon when ordering. D R IVE-TH atfN O W OPEN 24 h r s .F ff.& S A T . 1031 E. APACHE TEMPE Cash valuel/20 ol 1 cent. • Valid until 1/31/82. to discuss details of the Program and career opportunities for college graduates in this growing, new field. . . . Y o u may qualify for this intensive 12 week, post-graduate course, which en­ ables you to put your education to work as a skilled member of the legal team. Contact: Arizona State University Career Services 9C5-2323 'V For Free Brochure, contact: I t itrA UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO Room 318, Serra Hall I U n J Lawyer's Assistant Program San Diego, CA 92110 (7141 2934579 I The U n iv e rs ity o f San D iego does no t d isc rim in a te on th e I basis o f race; sex, co lo r, re lig io n , ag e, n a tio n a l o rig in , I an cestry, o r hartdicap in its p o lic ie s an d program s. collage c a re e r. O n ly a fe w Campus Right to Life w ill have a general meeting in the MU Yuma Room on Jan. 26 at 7:30 * p.m. A lpha Kappa A lpha "» sorority will meet Jan. 29 at 7 p.m. in P.V. Main CWing for spring rush orientation. - t Gay Academ ic Union will meet Jan. 28 in MU Room 217 at 7:30 p.m. QS Club will meet at Hooter’s Jan. 27 at 3:30 p.m. C ollege R epublicans will meet op Jan- 26 at 7 p.m. In the MU Room 212. N a tiv e A m e ric a n Students Association will meet Jan. 27 from 4-6 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room. Women’s Studies Stu­ dent A sso ciatio n will meet at noon on Jan. 28 in Social Sciences room 103. U nder g.raduat« - A ssociation of Social W orkerswill meet from 3-4 p.m. in the MU Santa Cruz Room on -Jan. 26 for a B.S.W. recruitment ses­ sion. Omicron Delta KappaN a t io n a l L e a d e rs h ip Honorary will meet at Dash Inn on Jan. 27 at 4:30 p.m. Alpha Epsilon Delta will meet tonight at 7 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. Rodeo Club will meet in ro o m 250 of th e Agriculture Building on Jan. 28 at 7 p.m. W ANTED GIRLSFORPOSTERWORK If you a re p h o to g en ic, can pro­ je c t m oods, have a good figure, and in terested in photographic m odeling, this m ay be fo r you. Fees p aid to successful candi­ dates. Send photo,, statistics and phone num ber to: R O STE R S -v c /o L. T ahler 6525 N. 10th Place Phoenix, A Z 85014 -*» w il l in flu e n c e th e w o While most graduates in die areas of Elec­ tronic Engineering, Computer Science, Mathematics and Languages are deciding on a career direction, a select few are finding more than a1career. They are the graduates who will work in a challenging environment where matters affecting our national security are a part of our everyday activity. They are the graduates who choose a career with the National Security Agency. Fromthe very outset they will influence the growth and direction of their fields of specialization. You too, can experience the very same opportunity and challenge in any of these NSA career fields. ” Electronic Engineering: There are opportunities in a vanety of research and development projects ranging from individual equipments to very complex interactive systems involving large number? of microprocessors, mini-computers and computer graphics. Professional growth is enhanced through interaction with highly experienced NSAprofessionals and through contacts in the industrial and academic» worlds. Facilities for engineering analysis and design - automation are among the best available. C o m p u te r Science: At NSA you’ll dis­ cover one of the largest computer installations in the world with almost every major vendor of computer equipment represented. NSAcareers provide mixtures of such disciplines as systems analysis and design, scientific applications programming, data base management systems, operating systems, computer networking/security, and graphics. You'll work on diverse agency problems applying a variety of mathematical disciplines. Specific assignments might include solv­ ing communications-related problems, performing long-range mathematical research or evaluating new techniques for communications security. linguist*: NSAoffers a wide range of challenging assignments for Slavic, Near Eastern and Asian language majors involving translation, tran­ scription and analysis/reporting. Newly-hired linguists can count on receiving advanced training in their primary languages) and can plan ori many years of continued professional growth. The Rewards at NSA. NSAoffers a salary and benefit program thats truly competitive with private industry. 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Staff photo by Jeff Havir E n lig h te n in g fe d e ra lly lice n se d A S U Members of The Phoenix Coalition and Solidarity W ith The People of El Salvador end National Solidarity W ith The Peo­ ple of El Salvador Day w ith a candlelight procession through the ASU campus. Citing the oppression in El Salvador as one of the tap worst-covered stories in the world, the group sought to increase public awareness to the plight of Salvadorans last Friday night. “ O” In te r e s t F in a n c in g JOHN’S SHOE REPAIR j Own you r condo fre e and clear in ju s t 5 years I 7 1 8 M ill A v e n u e , T e m p e 0 967-9101 Let Us D o Your R epairing j d We K n o w H ow To Do It R ig h t f •Resoling Tennis Shoes •O rthopedic Shoes •A ny Kind of Footwear If The Shoe Fite Repair It et John’el 4 Attention: Foreign Car Owners S A V f U P TO <70%'*ON R EC Y C LED F O R E IG N A U T p PARTS MG T R IU M P H H O N D A D A T S U N T O Y O T A .V W and OTHERS A ll Models Foreign 243-3291 309 4 So. 4 0 t h S t re e t P h i. (near 4 0 t h A U n iv e rsity ) * M e n tio n this od A g e t a n a d d it io n a l 57»o f f ! Walk to ASU Rent• Lease• Buy INTERESTED IN PUBLIC RELATIONS? b e a PR gíirl for the Phoenix Giants and be a part of the fun and excitement of a professional baseball team!! Make It a memorable summer and call 275-4488 for more information on how you can g et in on all the excitement!!! Tomorrow's Major Leaguers TODAY! Now’s the time to beat the housing hassle. Rent, lease or buy, and enjoy‘‘on campus” living with off campus freedom to beat the hassles. Facilities include: Recreation Room—fireplace, conversation pit, kitchen • Heated therapy pool • Heated swimming pool • Hardwood cabinets • Individual washerdryers in units • Private patios • Disposal • Private entrances • Dishwasher • Covered parking (assigned) • Generous guest parking • Individual utilities • Common water • Heavy landscaping • R -30 ceiling insulation • 6" R-19 wall insulation • Contemporary Spanish architecture • Drapes • Refrigerators (frost-free) • Wall-to-wall carpeting • Well-lighted site. Walk over today and see the models before semester break. Talk it over. Then come back to the ASU lifestyle you deserve. Condominiums From $45,000 t aj 2míes -----^ / X%t n e e « Zee X 1mie \ \ A \ iÌ ' \ i 1/ 1 |k«uj ^ \\^.= URtNRRJ / // A 1 / 1 / \ 1 s * N s University Trape Via» \ V Southern 1111 E. University 967-7477 (24 Hours) Models Open 10:30 - 5:30 Tuesday, January 26,1982 State Press Pagé 9 —A ft Collections director to speak Turk heads great gallery Museumconsidered consideredseliinc sellingsome som e pnnarti wnrir workrpnrp«pnfpH representedin infhpthepnllpptcollect­ Museum By P att Leonard of the art donated to it. ions, which shows ‘‘all the a rts: Scenes writer “We don’t sell any. This'is state the pot as well as the painting, the “Infamous” Rudy Turk, director property,” Turk said. “I feel very drawing as well as the sculpture.” of the University Art Collections, strongly about that.” He said his taste in art does not will give a free and public talk The top floor of the Matthews determine what is shown. “I hope from noon to 1 p.m. today in the Center, home to the collection, is you will never find outwhat I think Lyceum Theatre. inadequate to protect it, said Turk. abmit some of theSe^mngs.” Turk inadvertantly earned the The converted library is plagued We is reluctant to discuss the infam ous title. The o rigin al with problems of roof leakage and publicity m aterial for the Tak'ff'a« » jmmetary value of the collection, excessive humidity. but he admitted there are a handArt Break series, a noontime lec­ In the summer, the’ cooling ture series sponsored by the Col­ ■recycles the sam e air, producing lege of Fine Arts, promised 60 to 91 per cent humidity. Every “famous and infamous” speakers. change in humidity causes gesso “I hope you never The lighthearted terminology of­ on the paintings to expand and con­ fended som e people. So, Turk said, find out what I think tract, which leads to mold growth Jean Micuda, assistant dean of fine on the canvas. When the air is so arts, “officially” designated him about some of these moist, prints take on a washboard, the infamous one to lighten ten­ crinkled effect. * things.” sions. Turk said he’s “very uncomfor­ Turk has been director of the table even having the collection in University Art Collections sinpe this building.” In addition to the ful of paintings “ w orth a 1967. He w as a professor of art and humidity problem, he worries million . . . We have a few real humanities at ASU before retiring about the possibility of fire. He masterpieces here.” in 1977 to devote his time to the art said a museum is “incompatible He wouldn’t say which piece it is, collections. with a multi-use building. ” but Turk described one work pur­ Turk said that ASU’s collection, “I cam e here with the promise of chased in 1951 for $450. It is now “is considered one of the finest a new museum in three years,” worth between $300,000 and university art collections in the Turk said. He believes the ad­ $325,000. United States.” He said, “People ministration is sincere about wan­ As is the case with most public will fly out to Arizona to see our ting to build a new home for the art institutions, most of the work in American collections. ’’ collection. • “We have been very the University Art Collections has Turk admitted the European col­ high on the priority list,” he said. been donated. This can present an lection was “short,” but he said the “ I’m sure if we had the money, it ethical problem. There w as a scan­ print and the ceram ic collections would go up . . . t h e acknowledg­ dal in Pasadena, California, in are “absolutely first class.” ment of the need has been there. 1981, when the Norton Simon Turk is proud of the variety of WHY, Dooley's, KOPA, M ille r host danceathon Also appearing for the Registration for a danceathon danceathon w ill be Rick sponsored by Dooley’s, World Foucheux of P.M. Magazine and Hunger Y ear (WHY), KOPA and the Playboy Bunnies, The KOPA Miller Beer is currently being and Miller High Life Girls, the held at the WHY booth oh Cady Phoenix Giantettes, Freebird and Mall. the Eastern Onion Singing The danceathon will be held at Telegram Messengers. «1 p.m. on Sunday, March 7. Prizes for the danceathon in­ E n te r ta in e r s fo r th e clude a ski trip to Sunrise, a danceathon include Tom Chapin weekend at Mountain Shadows (brother of the late Hairy Resort, a chauffered limosine C hapin, WHY’s founder),^ **• dnddtftner at the Playboy Club. Destiny, J o e Bethancourt, Gang* Included in the registration fee B u sters, Home F re e, Ray is a complimentary t-shirt and Cerimeli, Giles Cassidy, Standing five drinks.. Room Only and Rigsby & Lamb. jg f SERVING FINE FOOD FOR OVER 28 YEARS Stan photo by Jan navtr T w ilig h t Z o n e Sergei Edelmann, 21-year-old Russian pianist, was ASU’s artist-in­ residence last week, performing at ASU Sun City and holding several master classes. The Immigrant said it has been tough adjusting to the United States, but “being able to play makes it worth all the trouble.” Concerts explore Latin sounds . . . . By Jim DeFazio Scenes writer ASU’s Latin American Mu$ic! F e s tiv a l w ill p resen t two outstanding concerts this week. On Wednesday, Jan. 27th, guitarist Frank Koonce, music faculty member,, will perform at 7:30 p.m. in Recital Hall of the music building, and on Friday at 7:30 p.m., noted pianist Leonardo Gala will show his talents in the music theatre. Various types of Latin m usic will be performed in the concerts, but most of it will be concert pieces quite unlike the popular Latin music most of us are used to hear­ ing. Rhythms are characteristi­ cally Latin, but they are combined . * •«. : ____ • _ - _ with classical elem ents forming a style that is unique. Latin m usic also embodies a strong sense of nationalism. For exam ple, rhythms and melodies are usually taken from dances which are indigenous to specific regions or countries. Koonce will perform som e pieces dating back to the guitar’s origin in the 1600’s. “Some of the pieces had already been arranged for guitar,” said Koonce, “ but I went back to the original piano score and did my On F rid a y , ASU alum nus Leonardo Gala will grace the m usic theatre with a diverse selec­ tion of Latin American piano music. nGala « 1*» iis c an on a u i h n r i t v fon in 1 J it in authority Latin American music and has donated several rare sco res to the ASU music library. , Born in Boston, Gala cam e to Arizona in 1974 and entered Phoenix College- He made his first public appearance in 1977 with the Scottsdale Symphony and is now living in Los Angeles where he is performing and doing research on Latin American music. Gala will perform pieces from eight Latin American countries, in­ cluding Puerto Rico, Mexico, Guatemala, and Brazil. Admission for both perfor­ mances is free to the general public. For more information, call 965-3398. ^ M a t t a ’s in T em p e now o ffers A ll You C an Eat S p ecial for $4.50. G ood •a n y tim e M onday • W e d n esd ay at T e m p e L o cation . IN MESA (Good Anytime at Tempe Location Only) TEMPE HOURS: FREE THE HRTJSMHS ! 1 1:30 a .m . t o fcOQ p m . * M on , th ru T h u rs. 1 1 :3 0 a.m. t o 1 0 :0 0 p .m . F it. a n d S a t. FUU COiO* POSTEtS, T-SHUTS * SWIMSHtm Postait: *S.OO**I.ÏO *»!•«•.» T-SNttt: » » .» o * S w M ts N rts : $ 1 5 . 0 0 ♦ E n tw « K i$ M ,í8 S « NOW IN TEMPE 3138 S. M ill Avenue M ill Avenue and Southern (Smitty's Shopping Center) " reoou—« •-*5i$■—1 KSK T H o ttC L Blu ¡ ¡ » ■ Sui»‘t83,Boulder.Co. 90301 M EX ICA N A N D A M E R IC A N F O O D tMwaiw*) O M W O M PM O M Phone: 966-0776 I ’¿ é l also MESA: 932 E. MAIN (2 Blocks W est o< Staptey Or.) 964*7881 Page 10 State Press Tuesday, January 26,1982 J A N U A R Y C LE A R A N C E SÀLE o n l y w it h Vs % OFF t h is a d G f o w i n g u p w it h v id e o Our Indian ft Western Jewelry — over 5,000 Item s — V id e o u s a g e g r o w s . . .a n d g ro w s ..; anc All our Gold and Estate Jewelry has also been specialy reduced for this special sale! th e . F or Your CASH Gold * Silver • Diamonds has revolutionized itself in the past cou­ By Patt Leonard ple of years. It is a product of the space Scenes writer TRADE your old jewelry for new program.” Amid the cacophony of synthesized _ S ilv e r Video gam es developed in the early C O M E IN A N D E X P E R IE N C E T E M P E S sounds in thé arcade, a player drops C a ro u s e l M O S T U N IQ U E J E W E L R Y S T O R E . seventies when Nolan Bushnell in­ one quarter into Tempest. He takes con­ vented Pong. It was a simplified ver­ trol of the firing mechanism, poises his sion of tennis that was temporarily body and forgets himself. popular because of its novelty. Bushnell On the screen, an abstract spider ¿ IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi: founded Atari, Inc., which he sold to begins a fight with m alevolent MEMORIAL UNION ACTIVITIES BOARD | geometric shapes that are climbing its Warner Communications Industries in | Students Programming for Students | web. The spider must fight off all ad­ 1976 for $30 million. The video craze intensified when vances of these horrible spirals and Atari imported Space Invaders from trapizoids. The player’s heart begins to b ea ta lit­ Japan. The gam e was more im ­ tle faster. He tensès with every attack. aginative than Pong, and required The fight is all that matters. greater skill. M .U . A L U M N I L O U N G E The boy is playing Tempest, one of Space Invaders becam e so popular the newest video gam es made by Atari, W E D N E S D A Y , J A N U A R Y 27 that over one million cartridges for Inc. He is one of the addicts who spend home versions of it w ere sold. Atari 1:00 p .m . to 2:30 p.m . their time hunched in front of the earned $2.4 million in the first quarter refrigerator-sized machines, oblivious of 1980, and $33 million in the sam e time Be A Volunteer On Any Of The to everything but the electronic period of 1981. Following MU AB COMMITTEES: scenario, their faces reflecting the blue Since that time, thousands of video glow of the screen. gam es have been released. “ Bally and Video gam es have become one of the • E N TE R TA IN M E N T Atari bring out new machines every biggest sources of revenue for the coinw eek,” Nenaber said. • FILM operated am usement industry. Frank Video gam es are the logical form of Ballouz, a vice president of Atari, • FINE ARTS amusement for a generation raised on estim ates that in 1981, between five and - six billion dollars were dropped into, television watching. P sychologists • P U B LIC ITY estim ate that average Am erican coin-operated gam es such as pinball children see 17,000 hours of television machines, pool tables, and video • H O ST & HOSTESSES before they graduate from high school. games. It is exciting for people raised on that The video gam e industry is growing. • IDEAS & ISSUES kind of passivity to push buttons and Midway Manufacturing, a subsidiary of control som e of the action on the Bally, made approximately 120,000 EVERYO N E W ELCOM E screen. ' machines in 1981, as compared to 90,000 R e f r e s h m e n t s W ill B e S e r v e d ! in 1980. Stanley W. Jarocki, a vice presi­ “You get a lot less crap out of these dent of marketing for the Company, machines than out of TV,” said Mark I For further inform ation, said a 10 per cent increase in their -Johnson, a m anager of J.R. Markson manufacturing was expected in each of please call Securty Systems. the next two years. “The vided’gam e itself is a very neat I 965-MUAB Terry Nenaber, director of the MU concept,” Johnson said. “It’s like a ^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiminniiiiiHiiniimiiniiiiiimiiiiimmiiiimmimi Recreation Center, said, “The business challenge to go up to a m achine and see • I " H ig h e s t P r ic e s P a id Tempo C enter. 911 M ill Ave. 968-2230 R E C R U IT M E N T R E C E P TIO N S tay a h e a d o f th e g a m e ! if you can beat i t . . . You get the ex­ perience of what that machine has to of­ fer.” Johnson feels the games are im­ a g in a tiv e b e c a u se they show “something from the future rather than something from the past.” Video gam e playing is primarily a male phenomenon. An informal survey of the people playing in the MU arcade on Friday afternoon counted 27 boys to 7 girls. The contestants at the Atari tournament in Manhattan in Oct. of 1981 ranged from a four-year-old boy to a woman in her 70’s, but most of the players were teenage boys. The New York Times reported that Harold Rubin, a vice president of pro-duct m anagement for Gottlieb Pinball Co., said, “When w e learn how to ap­ peal to women, w e can double our business.” Chris Lamberti, a freshman architec­ ture major at ASU, said his girlfriend doesn’t like to play video games because of her long fingernails. “She’s afraid of breaking them. ” Michael Shadel, manager of Starship Fantasy, a video gam e arcade in Tempe, attributes the women’s lack of interest, to their “more mellow” disposition. “Ju st the difference between the m ale and fem ale genders,” he said. “Girls go for Frogger and PacMan. They don’t go for the shooteruppers.” What Frogger, Pac-Man, and the other gam es women tend to favor have in common is an anthropomorphic theme. In Frogger, cute green frogs must cross a highway and a river. PacMan features furballs that eat fruit. Men tend to favor the gam es with intergalatic war themes. Defender, one of S T U D Y E F F E C T IV E L Y COM PREHEND AN D Reinforce your college degree by getting a better start through Army R O T C ’s special Two-Year Program. REA D FASTER! W IN WITH BASIC ARMY ROTC BE ALL STAICI SCHOLARSHIP CHALLENGE YOUR <1 MIND FRIENDSHIPS COLLECT BODY YOU CAN BE It includes six weeks of challenging summer training that’s both tough] but rewarding. When you finish, you’ll be in the best shape ever. And proud of it! Earn good money during your training, plus an,additional $100 per month when you return to college as an Army ROTC Advanced Course student. Meet students like yourself from more than 275 college campuses all over the country — making lasting friendships you’ll never forget. So take the best shortcut to your future, no matter what your career goals may be. Begin the Basic Start with Army ROTC — and stay ahead of the game) For details and more information, call or contact the Department of Military Science. At A.S.U. SEE •CAPTAIN CRAIG SCOTT ROOM 240 OLD M A IN 965-3318 Army ROTC. Be all you can be. Do you want to learn how to comprehend more of what you read? Would you like to read faster with improved comprehension? Would you like to study more effectively? If your answer is YES, the Arizona State University Reading Center has a highly systematized reading improvement course that is designed to fit your needs. The six weeks non-credit course can be taken by anyone who pays the $35.00 fee. Registration will take place from 9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., Tuesday, January 26 through Friday, January 29 in the Reading Center, Room B112 of Payne Hall. Further information may be obtained by calling 965-7766. Pick a class that fits your schedule from the list below: FIR S T S E S S IO N F E B R U A R Y 1 - M A R C H 11 DAY S E C T IO N S M -W 12:30-1:45 T-TH 12:30-1:45 N IG H T S E C T IO N S T W TH 6:30-9:00 6:30-9-00 6:30-9:00 Discounts are avaiaU e for faculty and staff. the i »ost popu teas res space itory line will e spac ¡craft as dran atic conf: flags irip.” Th» newer con] ilex. The )roduces play rs. Thei) was >ne of the conté:ur shadot As the g soph sticated, tions Psychol Medi ;al Cent« i sing Poni Ireatment of stroke dementia. The Hop! ins Univ Vtari sets of an ¡convulse abilil f. Th)re are n video)g;;ames. / Fort Eustis, 1 modi!ed video It is onsidera praci ce runs i cost! lOOapieci Veimer Wulf trainipiig who 1 said Ihe game like, ‘They w senses It wil . visua it will I are aircraft si: thrill of flying becoifrie a garr will bfc able to of flyihig ” J Tuesday, January 26,1982 State Press Page 11 2 for 1 Buy 1 Shirt or Pant, Get 1 a n d g r o w s . , (Select Groupf 2000 Shirts or Pants to Choose From - 1lost popular gam es in the nation, the feah res space rockets firing at aliens. ■ tory line of the Gorf gam e reads, The “Yoi will engage various hostile spacecraft as you journey toward a dran atic confrontation with an enemy flag hip.” Til! newer games are increasingly com ilex. The Gremlim Saga corpora­ tion iroduces games that speak to the play rs. Their Space Odyssey gam e was me of the first to use illusionistic conti ur shadowing. 711S. M ILL (Inside Ski Tech) Back to School Specials M EI M T T A M the gam es b ecom e m ore soph sticated, they have more applica tions Psychologists in the Veterans Medi ;al Center in Palo Alto, California are i sing Pong and Air-Sea Batttle in thelreafment of brain-damaged vie-, tims of strokes, accidents and senile demi ntia. The Epilepsy Center at John Hopk ins University Medical School usess Uari sets to determine the effects drugs on learning and of an iconvulsant i abili! f. Thjre are military applications for videajg.;ames. At Fort Stewart, Ga., and Fort Eustis, Va., the Army is using modijied video gam es to train recruits, It is onsiderably less expensive than practl ce runs in tanks. Artillery shells' costi l00 apiece. Vei ner Wulf, a Phoenix architect-intraining who likes to play the gam es, said i he games will become more life like, ‘They will involve more of the sensed It will be tactile, it will be . visua , it will be aural.” He said there are aircraft simulators that m imic the thrill of flying. “Eventually, that will becoifiie a game,” he said. “Everyone will b£ able to experience the sensation of flyihi Book Pack Reg 1 7 " Sale Price $14" • Rourtded Zipper to main • 8 oz isklon Para Pack • Urethane Coated foam for shoulder strap 10% O FF All other Book Packs MTWF 9:00 -7:00 pm Thurs. 9:00 -8:00 pm Sat. 9:00-6:00 pni Sun. Noon - 5:00 pm. 8 ta n p n o to o y 000 M m m a v n w • Starting At 6" Sale Ends January 3 1 ,1 9 8 2 SU R PLU S A tim e exposure reveals the amount of activity some video games require of players, as a player works the control of the Asterotdsgam eliM tje video arcade on the lower level of the M.U. Student Foundation COLLEGE LEADERSHIP SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM T he re p re se n ta tiv e , liste d b elo w , fro m y o u r c o lleg e is c u rre n tly se arc h in g fo r n o m in é e s fo r th e ASU S tu d en t F o u n d a tio n C ollege L eadership Scholarship. This sc h o larsh ip is a w a r d e d . annually to th e o u tstan d in g stu d e n t le a d e r in e a c h o f th e u n d e rg ra d u a te c o lleg es at ASU p lu s th e C ollege o f Law, a n d is c u rre n tly v alu ed at $355.00. If you: —a re c u rre n tly a full-tim e stu d e n t at ASU —w ill b e re tu rn in g to ASU in th e fall —have a cu m u lativ e GPA o f 3-0 o r b e tte r, and —have d e m o n s tra te d le a d e rsh ip ability o n o r off cam p u s th e n c o n ta c t y o u r c o lle g e re p re se n ta tiv e n o la te r th an Jan u ary 29, 1982 in o rd e r to b e c o n sid e re d for n o m in atio n . Dr. D onald Bush Interim Assistant Dean Dr. R oger H utt Assistant Dean Ms. Lenna N ieboer Student Services Mr. Jack Stadm iller Ms. Sue Janssen Assistant Dean Dr. R obert B ininger Associate Dean D c D olores Santora Kennecott is on the m ove... And w e are looking for graduates in: a Chem ical Engineering # Electrical Engineering a Mechanical Engineering a Geotechnical Engineering a Geology and Geological i(e .s ,-Ph.D. degrees only) as Kennecott M inerals Company will be on Campus February 1 Make an appointment today at the Campus Placement Center Kennecott Minerals Company is part of the growing Standard Oil Company (Ohio) and is engaged in worldwide ex­ ploration, mining, concentrating, smelting and refining of nonferrous minerals. KMC is also a leader in process technology and development and construction engineering. The company offers competitive starting salaries and outstanding benefits programs and advancement opportunities. Associate Dean Mr. D udley M elichar Student Service Coordinator Assistant Dean Dr. Jules H eller Ms. Maria G am er Dean FREE I With This Coupon 1 Com m unity Coordinator K ennecott M in erals C om pany An Equal Opportunity Em ployer M /F /H /V Page 12 State Press Tuesday, January 26,1982 C h ic a g o S y m p h q n y p e rfo rm s to p o f to p s By Jim DeFazio Scenes writer On Friday night, a responsive Gammage audience was treated to an im pressive performance by the Chicago Sym­ phony Orchestra. The group was first-rate in every sense of the word, from its precise, assertive attacks to its smooth, flawless intona­ tion. Sir Georg Solti, conductor, should be commended (as usual) for leading the orchestra through ambitious works by Beethoven, Strauss, Debussy, and Bartók with uninhibited verve. Although Solti’s motions often appeared ragged and dis­ jointed, his musicians responded by playing in whatever manner a particular movement needed. In Beethoven’s lively “Symphony No. 8 in F Major, Opus 93” , the strings punctuated the tonal base provided by the other sections with unequalled precision. In the Strauss piece, “Till Eulenspiegels Lustige Streiche, Òpus 28”, the orchestra demonstrated its expertise by tastefully contrasting dynamics with almost startling results. Debussy’s im pressionistic m asterpiece, “Prelude to ‘The Afternoon of a Faun’” , w as interpreted with such intense delicacy that the tonal ambiguity inherent in the score was further enhanced. The concluding piece, Bartok’s “Concerto for Orchestra”, was an appropriate finale as its pounding, frenetic rhythms combined with the piece’s dissonance to lift the audience emotionally as well as physically : only the most jaded, reluc­ tant listener could, in good conscience, remain seated at the performance’s end. union cinem a Bach group plays By Jim DeFazio Scenes writer On Wednesday, Jan. 27th, the Louise Lincoln KenCultural Centjer in Scottsdale will present Bach West, a local chamber m usic ensem ble, in one performance at 8:00 p.m. a , Bach West, formed last year, is confprised of five ASU music faculty mem bers and fouiC other respected m embers of the Phoenix classical m usic community. The group features a vocal quartet accompanied by violin, cello, flute, and bassoon. Rounding out the ensemble on various keyboard instruments is the group’s coordinator, Ralph Lockwood. “The group is unique,” said Lockwood, “in the blending of vocal and instrumental music. We have the potential for all sorts of variety by combining different vocal tex­ tures with string, wind, and keyboard instruments. Tickets for W ednesday’s performance are priced at $4.00 for students with ID and $5.00 for the general public. For more information, call 948-6424. It doesn't matter who you love or how you love, but that you love. —Rod McKuen P A ID A D V E R T IS E M E N T The F-16 Fighting Falcon isjust one of many successful General Dynamics programs. And it offers just one of the many areas of opportunity we have for college graduates in Engineering Math, Physics, Computer Science, and Business Administration. If you're interested in aerospace, shipbuilding, or telecommunications, we'd like to show you the benefits of starting your career w ith us. See your placement office to arrange an on-campus interview. Or, send your resume to Sue Shike, Corporate College Relations Administrator, General Dynamics, 1519 Pierre Laclede Center, Department SP, St. Louis, MO 63105. It could be to your advantage. Advantage America M A SII An Ingo Preminger Production Color by Dt LUXt * '" " R Ì PANAVISION' Ja n u a ry 26 and 27 LOUU6R l€V€l OP M6MORIRL UNION TU6SDRV-SRTURDRV: 7 pm and 9:30 pm SUNDRV: 7 pm The Valley's Best Now Delivers Coors & Bud B ottles & C ans n URGE 16 CHEESE P IZ Z A $099 PIZZA' a ^ M W w With Coupon Additional Items 75c Fast Delivery 11 a.m.-Midnlght Delivery Charge 50c G E N E R A L. D Y N A M IC S AnEqualOpportunityEmpi« (A dd. D elivery C harg e o u ts id e 3 -m ile rad iu s) MR. B's C h eck o u t ou r D in in g R oom fo r P izza, B eer, Ita lia n D inn ers 966-2605 Please Mention Coupon G E N U IN E N .Y . STYLE P IZ Z A M o n .-S a t. 11 a .m .-1 2 p .m . Now Open Sun. 5-11 1024 S. McCLINTOCK at Don Carlos (Lemon) E. S id e o f S in C ity L__ 7 W E 'L L B E O N C A M P U S FEBRUARY 10 & 11. Be sure to attend our corporate presentation. Details and I n te r v ie w times available at your Placement Office. \ Tuesday, January 26,1982 State Press Page 13 T U E S D A Y , J A N . 26 Van Deren Coke, of the San Fran­ cisco Museum of Modern Art, lectures on photography at 6:40 p.m. in Neeb Hall. Free. 965-3468. MASH plays at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. 11.50 wth ASU I.D., $2 without. Under the auspicies of ASU’s L y r ic. Opera Theatre, Texas Opera Theatre presents an opera for young people, “One Pig Puppet Show,” featuring Miss Piggy, at 10 a.m . and noon in Gamma ge Center. 965-3434. Both H ie Shopping S a g and the An­ nual Art Faculty Exhibition continue through Jan. 31 at the University Art Collections, 2nd floor of Matthews Center. Hours: 8 a.m . to 5 p.m. weekdays, 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. 9652874. The Paperworks exhibit of art by Bert Brouwer and John Fox continues through»Feb. 2 at the MU Gallery. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m ., weekdays. 965-2874. Photographs by Thomas Barrow, Esther Parada and John Wood con­ tinue to show-through Feb. 4 at Northlight. 'Hours:s40:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Sunday through Thursday. 9655667. Am erican Playhouse featu res “Seguin,” a drama based on the memoirs of Juan Nepomueceno Seguin, a leader in San Antonio who raised an army to fight the Mexican forces of General Santa Anà at the Alamo. 8:30 p.m, KAET-TŸ. 965-3506. W E D N E S D A Y , J A N . 27 Texas Opera Theatre presents a opera for children, “Starbird,” at 10 a.m . and noon in Gammage Center. Guitarist Frank Koonce, a faculty member of the ASU m usic depart­ ment since 1978, gives a recital at 7:30 p.m. in Recital Hall of the music building. Free. 965-3371. MASH repeats at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. T H U R S D A Y , J A N . 28 Escape from New York plays at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in the Union Cinema. Robin Rickabaugh lectures on the synthesis between the designer and the businessman at 7 p.m. in room 220 of the Art Building. Free. 965-3468. Movie 8 features “Mother Wore Tights” (1947), in which Betty Grable and Dan Dailey team up as a married song-and-dance act. 8 p.m., KAET. G4M M AGE CENTER • • • JURY’S IRISH CABARET OF Friday, January 29 • 8 p.m. Saturday, January 30 • 8 p.m. T h is is a very s p ecial show , fille d w ith th e w arm th , th e love, th e hum or and m usic o f a ll o f Ire la n d . Ju ry's Iris h C ab aret takes you w ith them on a v is it to ttffe “E m erald " Is le fo r an evening y o u 'll cherish fo r years to com e. Tickets: $8, $7, $6 • • • WINTER IN MEXICO N arrated by Lisa C hickering and Jeanne Porterfield MAKE YOUR CAMPUS DAYS MORE ENJOYABLE) Join a campus b ow ling league sanctioned by the A8C/W IBC C ollegiate D ivision It's a bargain LEAGUE BO W LIN G : SO CIAL OR COMPETITIVE? Y ou 'll enjoy b ow ling each week as a team member and competing w ith students from your ow n campus.In a dd itio n to bow ling w ith your friends, yo u may also have the chance to meet new friends and p articipate in special campus activities- Campus, regional and national championships can a ll add to the season's enjoym ent . N o m atter w h at yo ur goats m ight be, league b ow ling has something fo r everyone. B ow ling is fun. B ow ling is relaxation, It's a great , w a y to m eet new W inds. Bow ling can be casually, social o r highly com petitive. B ow ling Is one college a c tiv ity th a t w ill last a lifetim e. Y ou're never to o o ld o r to o young to bow l. M onday, February 1 * 8 p.m. V isit O axaca, T axco , M exico C ity , A capu lco. M azatlan , G u ad alaja ra , C uern avaca and m ore w hen Lisa C h ickerin g and Jean ne P o rte rfield n arrate th e ir new film and prove the p o in t th a t a n ytim e is th e rig h t tim e fo r M exico bu t w in te r is th e best o f a ll. Tickets: $3 in advance; $4 at the door • • • You don’t have to be the tallest basketball player o r the biggest fo o tb a ll star. B ow ling takes skid, b u t size is n o t the key factor. M ARCEL M ARCEAU M onday, February 8 • 8 p.m. Th ere is o n ly one M arceau and his unique perform ances a re a m ust fo r th e e n tire fa m ily . T ick e ts fo r th is en co re ap­ pearan ce by M arceau a t G am m age w ill go fast. B uy yours early! Tickets: $9, $8, $7 ‘ Reserved S tu d e n t S eries tic k e ts a va ila b le a t th e G am rfiage B ox O f­ fic e . b e g in n in g Janu ary 18. K Y U N G -W H A C H U N G Violin Friday, February 1 2 * 8 p.m. K yu ng-W ha C hung is u n iversally ackn ow led ged as one of th e fin es t v io lin ists perform ing tod ay and she has appeared reg u la rly w ith every m ajor in te rn a tio n a l o rc h e s tra , a t a il leadin g m usic festivals and in re c ita l in th e w o rld's great re c ita l halls. Tickets: $8, $7, $6 (University Discount until 6 p.m., - Evening of Performance)' LEAG UE SC H ED U LE S u n d ay 5:15 Lucky Strikes (coed 4’s) Starts 1-24 S u n d ay 8:00 Sunday Swingers (coed 4’s) Starts 1-24 M o n d ay 5:30 Sun Devil Singles (Advanced Scratch) Starts 1-25 T u esd ay 5:00 T u es d ay 7:30 T u rkey T rio (coed 3’s) Starts 1-26 Faculty-Staff-A lum ni (m ixed 4’s) Starts 1-26 W ednesday 5:30 Pinseekers (scratch 3 ’s) 520 M ax. Starts 1*27 W ed n esd ay 8:00 T h e T rip Fours (coed 4’s) Starts 1-27 T h u rsd ay 5t15 T h u rsd ay 7:45 • • • . VIENNACHOIR BOVS Saturday, February 13 • 8 p.m . Th e in co m p arab le V ienna C h o ir B oys present a program o f costum ed op erettas, sacred songs, secu lar and fo lk m usic th a t w ill d e lig h t th e e n tire fa m ily . Tickets: $8, $7, $6 (University Discount untH 6 p.m., Evening of Performance) ' . Beginners Luck (coed 3’s) Starts 2-4 Fearsom e Foursome (coed 4 ’s) Starts 2-4 SSS Swan Lake. Presented By BALLET FANTASIO Jf a t the M.U. R ecreation Center Tickets: $9, $8, $7 FOR FURTHER INFO RM ATIO N: (University Discount- until 6 p.m.. Evening of Performance) C O M E TO TH E M .U . RECREATION CENTER OR CALL 965-3642 • • • M EM ORIAL U N IO N ARIZONA STATE UNIV€RSITV BOWL ■ing this a d and bów / a gam e on ood 'til Feb. 12, 1982. Lim it one p I L r iv e t - uuuuumn r r - r 1 M onday, February 15 • 8 p.m . T h e new and vib ran t B alle t Fan tasio is th e p rid e o f Ro­ m an ia. T h e com pany ha?, a v e rs a tility and v irtu o s ity to m atch th e rep erto ry . See th ese ta le n te d dan cers in th e ir fu ll-le n g th presen tation o f “S w sn Lake" a t G am m age. O ffe r *Student Sariaa avants ara avaHabla to fuH-tima ASU atudanta. With tha axcaption of “Annla," ona tlckat may ba purchaaad for $1 toStudant Sariaa avants by praaanttng a photo ID and acttvfty card. A maximum of two $1 defeats may ba purchaaad by praaantIng two photo ID cards and two activity cards. Ona guaat tlckat, at full pries, may ba purchaaad with a atudant tlckat. Nota: Spacfai Studant Sariaa tlcksts for “Annla” ara avaHabla at ona-half tha putoHshad raaarvad aaat tlckat prica* __________________ For additional Information, caN tha Gammaga Box Ofhca, 965-3434. o n tr a c k By Karl Byrn Scenes editor Adam the Ignor-Ant » u m Adam Ant certainly wants to be somebody. That he’s a just a poor clown is beside the point; he’s sim ply epitomizing what keeps new w ave from being taken seriously, that fear among youth that they’re sm all people with no future and no alternative to neuroses but clinging to them. Rock certainly offers more strength than that. But by being such a flagrant display of trivial obsession, Adam Ant is extrem ely amusing, even clever. “S.E.X .,” whiclj closes the new Adam and the Ants album “Prince Charming” on as spacy a note as any record, is an unusual view of making love that shows an intelligence about its own ignorance ( “And sex is sex forget the r e st/-' . . . the only great adventure left” ). And he’s cool enough to humor himself on songs like “Ant Rap” and “Prince Charming, It’s also refreshing to hear Adam em ­ phasizing tonal dynamics rather than the obnoxious drumbeats of the Ants’ first album. Still, it’s tough to give much musical credence to a guy who write lin es like “I watched Picasso visit the Planet of the Apes.” The live side of Joe Ely Joe E ly ’s appearance as the opening act for the Rolling Stones last December was m et with a detached curiousity. But the reaction was not negative — and that should be a cue for checking Ely out further. After all, he deserves a second chance; the man is used to playing 300-seat clubs in Texas, not outdoor stadiums. E ly ’s newest album, “Live Shots,” shows E ly’s roots in early rock and country and would aptly introduce newcomers to his fiery style, but may disappoint veteran fans in its partial view of E ly ’s performance range. Ely is a great rocker, so he’s best seen live, in a sm all honky-tonk. There’s more flair to E ly’s show than “Live Shots,” would indicate, and much more punch than hi?,timid stadium appearance. Still, “Live Sliots” is a dynamic album, and if you get one of the limited edition first pressings, you’ll be treated to a single con­ taining a piercing version of Buddy Holly’s “Not Fade Away” and one of E ly’s strongest rockers, the self-exposing “Crazy Lemon.” PRIME RIB & ALASKAN“ ! KING CRAB in town. 6 ounces of ■ I |% | |% | W* f t # choice prime rib M l V1 MMJMm Cooked to absolute A T perfection. Add to 1 1 that 8 ounces of delicious Alaskan ^ O A C King Crab Legs, and you’ve t gotyourself quite a meal! It’s all served with vegetable or potato, baked or fries ... plus, our famous Butterfields’ salad with your choice of dressing, and fresh warm bread. A special meal, at a very special price. $8.95. 5:00-Close Tuesday ours l unch i 1:30 2 .0 0 Monday l i iday Dinner 5:00 1F00 Monday Saturday 5:00-10:00 Sunday Happy Hour4:00 7:00 Sunday Friday 1112 East Apache, Tempe 966-4344 I •I Tuesday, January 26,1982 State Press Page 15 New combination works in ASU hoop win By Kevin Widlic Sports editor For the first tim e in 1982, the ASU basketball team won a game. And it wasn’t even an upset. The Devils rolled into Tuc­ son Saturday night and drove back home with their first Pac-10 victory of the season, winning 55-54 over UofA. It was also Coach Ned Wulk’s 399th career win at ASU. “I didn’t think w e’d ever climb that h ill,” Wulk laughed. But the youthful D evils (16 in PAC play, 6-10 overall) still have plenty of “clim b­ ing” to do if they’re to gain som e measure of respec­ tability. Leading the Sun Devils to their narrow w in w as shooting guard and leading scorer Paul Williams, who’s had to bear the offensive burden all year. Williams had 22 points and knocked down the deciding points on two free throws with only seconds remaining. “We’re very anemic in our distribution of points,” Wulk sa id . “ And th a t’s an understatement. “It comes down to scoring inside. We just haven’t had any point production from our front line.” That’s one of the reasons Wulk decided to sta rt freshm an cen ter P hil McKinney and junior for­ graduate of Marcos de Niza ward Tom Kuyper. In fact, H.S., logged 17 minutes in those two players became the middle, scoring four the 10th and 11th ones to points and yanking down one start a gam e for ASU this rebound. season. Kuyper, who played 37 McKinney had seen little minutes, fared even better action prior to the gam e, with 10 points and four while Kuyper — a shooting boards. “Kuyper made three key forward — had averaged on­ ly 4.4 points in the D evils’ buckets in the second half,” first 15 games. Wulk said. “He’s becoming “McKinney did som e good m ore con fident in his things in the second half shooting.” after getting off to a slow Wulk also returned for­ start,” Vfidk said. “ But ward Walt Stone to the that’s to be expected. He just starting five in hopes that he needs m ore seasoning and might regain his shooting playing time. touch. Stone scored 46 points “ He did m ake three in tw o £ a m ^ in last month’s outstanding plays for us in Milwaukee Classic. On the other side of the the second half though. ” M cKinney, a 6-foot-10 court, UofA’s lame-duck Coach Fred Snowden has the sam e problems. His ‘Cats, 07 in the Pac-10, have been looking for someone to fill the scoring slack left by in­ eligible guard Jeff Collins. “The loss of Collins hurt them tremendously,” Wulk said. “He was their kingpin. But they’ve had several problems over the past two yea rs.” The Wildcats were led by junior post man Frank Smith, who grabbed 10 re­ bounds while scoring 18 points. Forward Greg Cook, who’s vital to UofA’s court success, had but nine points in the los­ ing cause. The D evils did have a good ;a m e rebou n din g-w ise. ASU forward Jim Dainas lays one up off the glass against Washington State. Saturday, Daines went scoreless in the Sun Devils’ 55-54 win In Tucson against U of A. Though they were con­ sistently being outmuscled under the boards in PAC play by a 34-28 average margin, they were outre-, bounded only 35-34 in Tuc­ son. So, quite possibly, the Sun D evils’ starting five in Tuc­ son m ay become consistent regulars. At least Wulk said he hopes so. “We’re looking for five players whose chemistry works best,” he said. “I’ve tried just about every possi­ ble combination in hopes that one will become consis­ tent.” Which m eans that Wulk has been consistently hop­ ing. Stall photoby Bob Beameaderler So pay attention. Next time you plan a trip, do what our customers do. If you book your trip with Valley Travel or Sky Harbor Travel Service you can pull right into our FREE parking lot and we will chauffeur you right to your terminal. When you return to Phoenix we'll pick you up and deliver you to your car. All this free of charge if you purchase your ticket from Valley Travel or Sky Habor Travel Service. IF YOU'RE PAYING FOR AIRPORT PARKING... YOU'RE NOT PAYING Attention W. Al Pasley's 'College St o ASU •£• Campus Forest Dr. VALLEY TRAVEL 3800 E . A lrlin a D r. D ivision o f V alley Travel Phoenix, AZ 85005 Phone: 244-1688 7Ò7 S. FOREST DR. 967-9403 LOCATED JUST Vz BLOCK NORTH OF ASU, VALLEY TRAVEL IS THE TRAVEL SERVICE FOR ASU STUDENTS! Open Monday - Friday 8 a.m . - 5 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m . - 4 p.m. NALLEY TIW EL Page 16 State Press Tuesday, January 26,1982 DISTINGUISHED TEACHING AWARD NOMINATIONS Sun Devil netters land jew el from California junior college By Michael Graham Sports writer For ASU tennis newcomer Todd Nelson it was simply a case of mind over matter. With a little help from ASU coach Myron McNamara and Pac-10 rival USC, the Devils have improved their chances of improving on last season’s sub-par showing with their newest addition. Nelson, a transfer student from Grossmont Junior Col­ lege in San Diego Calif., ar­ r iv e d An T e m p e la s t sem ester under very whimcircumstances, had planned on attend­ i n g USC this year on a ten­ nis scholarship,” Nelson said. “However when I got College of Liberal Arts Nominate your most Outstanding Teaefier there for the first week of Nelson explained. “It was school I learned that I had really a last minute thing to com e here. not been formally accepted “It was also a big gam ­ to the school. There w as a re­ cent policy change that ble,” he added. “I hadn’t made the transfer credits ever seen the school and all I and m y grade point average knew about the program was , that Myron was a good insufficient.” It w as at this point that teacher and coach.” But once Nelson finally ar­ ASU becam e the beneficiary o f ' USC’s en tra n ce re­ rived, the roller coaster was q u irem en ts. With fa ll not quite ready to quit rolling sem ester in Tempe already and let him off. McNamara two weeks in progress, began to make several ch an ges in Nelson called McNamara s t r a t e g i c powerful but and asked him if his scholar­ N elso n ’s somewhat raw and unre­ ship offer w as still open. Luckily for both parties, it fined game. The very articulate and was. “I cam e to school late and critical Nelson is the first so I couldn’t qualify for a one to admit to having com*mmdpags17 scholarship right aw ay,” ELIG IB ILITY: Any College of Liberal arts teacher, including Teaching Assistants/Associates DEADLINE: February 15,1982 « Nomination forms can be picked up at the Memorial Union Information Desk, in the Office of the College of Liberal Arts (SS 109), and in each department office in the College. ST. MICHAEL S ALLEY IM PO RTED BEERS Terrace R oad A partm ents W 75c JANUARY & FEBRUARY SPECIAL! W ALK TO SCHOOL A LL IM PO RTED BEERS: • H ein e ke n Light & Dark -«aI 1/2 block from Campus. Huge, well furnished 1-bedroom, • Becks • M oison 1-hath, and 2-bedroqm, 2-baths, all utilities included, plus many am enities. 950 S. Terrace Rd. Groat Sandwiches Unusual Burgers Delicious Soups & Salads 966-0540 112^E. U niversity Drive v Tem pe Open 11 am to 11 pm Daily &OC Singers are needed to be a part of the Valley’s premier performance of Ragan Courtney and Buryi Red’s “A cts.” Rasa _ £