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Arizona State University
Tem p», Arizona
© C opyright, State Press, 1962
Staff photo by MHn HynM non
F ran k Kush m ade a triu m p h an t retu rn to Sun OevH Stadium Saturday n ig h t aa head coach o f th e B altim ore C otta o f
th e N atio n al F oo tb all League. T h e C o tta b eat th e A tlan ta Falcone 34*9- F o r stories and m ore photoa, turn to
S e c tio n B ,p a g e 6.
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ASU Apartments
add living space
By Chris Coppola
Staff w riter
The addition of die ASU Apartm ents to cam pus housing
facilities is helping to alleviate shortages of student living
quarters, said Housing D irector Clifford Osborne.
Osborne said the number of students turned away becau.
of limited housing is less than half of what it was last year a t
this time.
•
“ At the end of our sum m er assignm ent cycle last year, we
found it necessary to say ’no’ to about 1,200 people,” be said.
“This year at the sam e tim e, it was about 565 to 570 people.
The addition of 650 beds in the ASU apartm ents certainly did
have an im pact.”
Osborne said 98 percent of all cam pus vacancies had been1
filled as of Monday and the Housing Office was receiving only
“mild demand” for more housing.
He said 85 to 90 beds rem ained vacant, m ost of'which w ere
available to females.
Although students already are living in the ASU A part
ments, Osborne said restoration work on the complex is ex
pected to begin early this fall.
“The prim ary project is the fire and lifesaving system ,” he.
said. “We do have a good system , but it’s not as up to d ate as
we'wish.”
Osborne said new lighting, security locks, elevators,
m aintenance and roofing also will be p art of die construction
plan. The renovation could cost close to $1.7 million, he said.
Cathy Cummer,'residence hall director for die ASU A part
ments, said the planned work will cause residents little in
convenience.
“When sprinklers were installed in some of our other
houses, there wasn’t much of a problem,” she said. “The
main thing is to get the correct information to people as to
when work is being done so that they know what to expect.”
Cummer said the residence hall staff has doubled since last
spring to handle the increase in facilities.
Despite ASU’s acquisition of the apartm ents, Osborne said
housing demands probably will continue to exceed the
number of available space.
He said assessm ent of further housing needs will continue,
but there are no immediate (dans for additional bousing.
R, w illiam Phelps, associate vice president for business af
fairs, said a broker representing the Lemon Terrace Q yh
Apartments approached ASU earlier this month With a pro
posal to sell the apartm ents to the University for housing.
However, Phelps said the University refused the otter. He
said tim e would be needed to assess the result of the $3.5
million addition of the ASU Apartm ents before the purchase
of m ore housing would be considered.
R o c k 'n 'ro ll?
N e ls o n
t o
d e c id e
By M ead Sum m er
Contributing w riter
ASU President J. Russell Nelson is expected to m ake a
decision today which could se t a precedent for future
scheduling of Sun Devil Stadium.
Nelson Will decide whether to allow the scheduling of
events other than football gam es during the season or to
uphold an Intercollegiate Athletics Board policy restricting
the use of the stadium to intercollegiate football gam es.
The University Scheduling Committee decided last
Wednesday to table a proposal to bring a number of “rock”
stars to Sun Devil Stadium until Nelson can clarify the ICA
policy.
The committee will m eet again today to m ake a decision
about scheduling the concert based upon Nelson’s final inter
pretation of the policy.
Gammage Center D irector M iriam Boegel and Associated
Students Concert D irector Kevin Burns proposed a plan that
called for die use of the stadium for a concert featuring The
Who, Tom P etty and John Cougar.
Tbs m ajor contro ver sy with the concert plan was the pro
posed date — O ct as— which is four days before the ASU
football team hosts the University of S o u th ern C alifatta.1
Herman Frazier, assistant athletic director, said the
atM etic departm ent was “ 100 percent opposed to the con
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Vietnam vets
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deal w itti b itter memories
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F irs to f a three-part series
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PageA-11
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ce rt.” He said die USC gam e is very im portant and d iet the
departm ent would like to “put its best foot forward” for th at
particular game.
Boegel said thaU w dpg the recent Rolling Stones concert,
less than a half-dozen complaints were received.
B ut Frazier said that after the concert, it took some tim e to
prepare the football field far athletic use.
“Three days after the Stones’ concert, if we had a football
gam e, we could not (have used) the field,” he said.
The Rolling Stones concert was held a t the stadium last
D ecem ber—after the footballseason.
According to F razier, the Athletic Departm ent felt the date
of the proposed concert was too close to the game.
The controversial policy, ICA board policy 7—1, states:
“Sun Devil (stadium ) fadU ties are for the prim ary use of the
intercollegiate football program a t Arizona State University.
. Accordingly, it is die policy of the Intercollegiate Athletic
Board that Sun Devil Stadium be utilized exclusively for Sun
Devtt fooduU gam es diming the regular college season. ”
The policy under question goes on to define the football
season as being the months of September, October and
November, |J
Manuel Figueroa, coordinator of scheduling and student
organizations, told tbp com m ittee what choices Nelson had in
interpreting the policy.
f u t u r e
u s e
Figueroa said Nelson m ay either abolish the policy, m ake
an exception th at will stand for future concerts, make an ex
ception for the one concert or uphold the,policy, which would
ban the concert from the stadium .
Despite the policy, Boegel said the groundwork for the con,cert has been set. Representatives from Gammage have had
contact with Tempe officials regarding possible problems of
mdse, parking and traffic.
Even if die p ro p o sals approved, Burns said no final plans
wouM be arranged until the University’s share of the concert
revenue and the definite availability of die groups could be
established.
The scheduling committee said the concert could inconve
nience the Sun Devil M arching Band, which usually would
practice the Tuesday before« home gam e.
However, the ICA policy was the m ajor problem discussed
aS committee members tried to decide whether to m ake a
decision on the concert or to send it to Nelson for his action.
Kim Fuller,. ASASU activities vice president, moved to ap
prove the concert plan and after a second, it was put to a
vote.
Denis Kigin, committee chairm an, broke a 6-6 tie by voting
against die proposal.
The scheduling committee is scheduled to m eet agahTth-'
day to m ake a final decision on the concert, based on Nelson’s
interpretation of the policy.
W hat’s new
at the Phoenix Zoo?
Devils take stock
in Bonds
PageB-4
PageB-10
Section A
Page 2 State Press Tuesday, August 24,1982
Stock market posts
another record day
Polish leaders blast
W estern media
Pe$o, M exican economy
getting stronger
Arizona banks cut
prim e rate
NEW YORK (AP) - H ie stock m arket
swept aside some mid-session hesitation
and surged to another broad and sharp ad
vance today as trading volume on the New
York Stock Exchange soared above 100
pillion shares, far the second tim e in
history.
Prices opened mixed, moved higher in
pre-noon activity as trading accelerated and
then paused in what appeared to be a fullfillment of some analysts’ prediction of
heavy selling by investors taking advantage
of the record gains posted last week.
But in afternoon trading, particularly in
the session’s final hour, prices again tu n ed
up and “the m arket ran over all the profit
takers and everybody else,” said Eldon
Grimm, senior vice president of B irr,
Wilson&Co.
;
Much of the m arket’s recent surge has
been attributed mainly to sharp declines in
interest rates and congressional passage
last week of a I9B.3 billion tax-increase bill.
WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Outraged by re
cent protests ahd apparently fearing more,
Poland’s m artial-law authorities said Mon
day they had demanded a halt to W estern
radio “slander” and warned dem onstrators
to scrap any new action.
The F oreign M inistry sum m oned
diplomatic representatives from the United
States, B ritain, France and West Germany
to protest “propaganda subversion against
Poland,’’ the state-run news agency PAP
reported.
U.S. Em bassy officials said the deputy
chief of mission was called on last Friday,
and B ritish sources said their charge d’af
fairs was summoned. Officials of the French
and West Germ an em bassies could not be
reached for comment.
The state-run m edia has grown increas
ingly harsh in. attacks on foreign radio
broadcasts heard here in Polish, apparently
because some have described police repres
sion of anti-government protests to com
m em orate the two-year anniversary of the
independent Solidarity union. The union was
suspended when the Communist govern
ment decreed m artial law Dec. 13 and
crushed 16 months of labor unrest.
The latest diplomatic protests appeared to
underscore a growing concern among
Polish officials with the approach of Aug. 31,
the, date underground Solidarity leaders
have called for m assive nationwide pro
tests. The date m arks the anniversary of the
independent labor movement farm ed during
Baltic shipyard strikes in August 1980.
MEXICO CITY (AP) - The peso
strengthened in light’ trading Monday fls
most Mexico City banks bought cash dollars
a t 90 pesos each and sold them for 100 pesos.
Some bankers attributed the trend to the
reprieve Mexico won Friday when interna
tional bankers meeting in Ndw York agreed
to delay loan repaym ents of $10 billion for as
long as six months.
“This has given Mexicans more con
fidence in their economy,” said a central
bank official who declined to be named. He
predicted the peso would settle a t a rate of
80 to 85 to the dollar.
PHOENIX (AP) - Arizona’s leading banks
cut their prim e lending ra te Monday to 13.5
percent, a half-point change that followed
action taken by m ajor banks nationwide.
The rate, a 22-month low for the prime
lending rate, reflect a steep decline in the
bank’s cost of funds.
The hew rate was announced by Valley
National, Arizona Bank, United, F irst In
terstate and G reat W estern.
The last tim e the prim e rate was as low
was in October 1980. At that tim e, it was on
its way up toward a record 21-5 percent.
New Lebanese president
chosen Monday
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - To the joy of
Christians and the despair of Moslems, 34year-old C hristian' rnilita commander
Bashir Gemayel was elected Monday as
president of war-torn Lebanon.
“I hope that we can say today the w ar has
come to an end and a new era of peace,
security and tranquility has begun,”
declared Gemayel over his Phalange
P arty ’s Voice of Lebanon radio.
Lead levels in air
In Washington, White House spokesman
to be decreased
Larry Speakes said President Reagan sent
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Reagan ad
congratulations to Gemayel.
m inistration, bowing Monday to en
Israel’s Prim e M inister Menachem Begin
vironm entalists’ concern about the danger
sent congratulations to the stocky, black
of lead poisoning in children, proposed m ore
haired Gemayel, saying, “My God be with
stringent rales governing lead levels in
you, dear friend, in the fullfiUment of your
gasoline.
great, historical mission for the liberty of
The proposal ended months of behind-theLebanon and its independence. Your friend,
Menachem Begin. ’’
scenes struggle and represented dram atic
reversal from what the adm inistration first
Israel has backed Gemayel’s Christian
sought when it placed the present standards
m ilitia with $100 million worth of weapons
on a regulatory “hit list” last year.
since the Lebanese civil war, but Gemayel
Instead of weakening the rules, as had
has avoided public identification with
Israel.
.been urged by many refineries, the proposal
£ s soon as news of Gemayel’s parliam en would result in a 31 percent improvem ent in
airborne lead levels over the next eight
tary election waff broadcast, Christiancontrolled east Beirut erupted in celebra years, the Environm ental Protection Agen
cy said.
tion, with people firing submachine guns in
The rule proposed Monday would provide
the air, m otorists honking their car brans
some relief to sm all refiners, but not as ’
and am bulances and fire engines sounding
much as they wanted, and it clam ps tighter
their sirens.
controls on refineries producing 96 percent
At least 40 people were wounded by flying
of the nation’s gasoline.
bullets in the first hours of the celebration,
police said.
Environmental groups, which had flooded
the EPA with objections to any loosening of
current standards, said they were pleased
R ecently found letter
with the proposal.
confirm s Mormon history
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Copies of a
recently discovered, 153-year-old letter
were released Monday by Mormon Church
historians, who said the document lends
credibility to church founder Joseph Smith’s
account of how he translated the Book of
Mormon.
H ie letter refutes critics who claim Smith
concocted his account of how the Book of
Mormon, which church members regard as
scripture, was translated from ancient gold
plates, said Dean Jessee, a w riter and hand
writing authority in the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints’ history depart
ment.
G ood u n til
9/30/82
Thatcher undergoes
vein surgery
LONDON (AP) - B ritish Prim e M inister
M argaret T hatcher underwent m inor
surgery to veins in her legs Monday a t a
London hospital, her office announced. ’
The 56-year-old B ritish leader had a
general anesthetic for the operation a t the
Fitzrqy Nuffield Hospital, a private facility,
in Bryans ton Square.
She was expected to be released from the
hospital within hours. “It’s a condition she’s
had tor some tim e and which caused some
discomfort,” said a spokesman for the
prim e m inister.
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Tuesday, August 24,1982 State Press Page 3
Section A
First misstep earns students
jaywalk fine from city courts
B yPaalG yaro
Contributing w riter
In an effort to reduce the num ber of bicycle ancbpedestrian
related accidente the Tempe City Court has discontinued its
policy of suspending sentences for first-offense student
jaywalkers.
Chief M agistrate Judge Steve M oretti said the policy was
changed because it had the opposite effect of what he had in
tended.
“We have a lot of studénte from out of state and many don’t
realize th at we have (pedestrian) statutes or th at they’re en
forced, So I thought it would he fair if fines w ere always
suspended for the first offense,” M oretti said. That way,
students m ight stop jaywalking after they had become aw are
of the statute.
But M oretti said the students were encouraged to jaywalk
since their fine had been suspended. In addition, word spread
around cam pus that there was no fine, and people cam e into
c o u ^ saying they had jaywalked because they knew they
could hot be fined.
“It was as if they thought it was their right and not a
privilege,” M oretti said.
M oretti stressed that the change in policy does not mean a
fine will not be suspended in certain cases where the judge
feels O at the fine is not deserved.
Officer G ary Clapper, Tempe Police Departm ent public in
formation officer, said the police will be concentrating their
attention on University Drive, Apache Boulevard, Rural
Roadand other streets surrounding the ASU campus.
He said they a re concentrating on these streets because
these a re the busiest streets around campus.
The cam paign of enforcing the fines was prompted by 43
pedestrian accidents accompanied by 248 bicycle accidents
last year.
Apache Boulevard, near Ocotillo Hall, is frequently cross
ed illegally because there is a lack of convenient crosswalks.
Clapper said the police will continue to keep a close eye on
violations around cam pus for the rest of the year.
Budget cuts leave regulation
of mall bike ban to students
By Tom Bickford
Contributing w riter
Budget cute are forcing the University
Police departm ent to rely heavily on student
“self-regulation” to enforce the longstand
ing Cady Mall bike ban, a University Police
officer said Monday.
Capt. Norman Peck said the num ber of
student police aides — used mainly to pro
hibit bike traffic on Cady Mall — was sliced
from 17 last sem ester to nine this sem ester.
“We’ve been tremendously affected by
thef'budget cute,” he said. “Our outlook for
police a ides right now is not that g re a t”
Peck said tin t on a norm al day police will
have only two people patroling the m all —
one walking and one in a cart.
However, be em phasized the bike policy is
very .“ self-regulating” and he anticipates no
problems with enforcement.
“When w e pot the policy into action last
sum m er we wfere very surprised a t the
amount- of positive student response,” he
said. “They (students) realized it is for their
benefit.”
Roy F a v re , U n iv e rs ity P o lic e
m aintenance coordinator, said students so
3456
fa r have adhered to the bike ban. “They are
waBting th eir bikes,” he said.
Favre also said no tickets will be given for
the first week of school—only-warnings.
When tickets are issued, “police judge
m ent” is the decisive factor in who receives
one and who does not, he said.
“ If they (bike riders) come off too pushy,
I give them a ticket,” be said. “If they are
polite, I give them a warning. Talking
sometimes does m ore good than ticketing,”
headded.
4
Each ticket carries a $3 fine, which is
payable in the Parking A dm istration Office.
Peck said “flagrant violators” — people
who repfeatedfy bleak t|jp bike ban — are
subject to suspension.
No one has ever been suspended for a bike
violation, “but the provision is in the park
ing guidelines in case we need it, " he said.
William Phelps, associate vice president
of business affairs, said no statistics are
available as to the number of bicycle tickets
issued last year.
“We receive our statistics in a lump
sum ,” he said. “We have no need to
categorize different variations.”
If ever you see a suspicious character — some guy
hanging around a bike rack or lurking by a dorm —call
-the University Police at 3456. No names necessary.
And no victimless crimes, please.
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Section A
Page 8 State Press Tuesday, August 24,1982
ASU News Bureau provides
campus-happenings hotline
By M aria Khan
Staff w riter
By calling 965-2-ASU the ASU community
now will be able to get a one-minute sum
m ary on what is going on around campus.
The calendar line is new this sem ester,
Ann Bergin of the ASU News Bureau said.
The service will operate 24 hours a day and
is designed to highlight campus events
which are open to the community, Bergin
said.
Listings will include happenings at the
University Activity Center and Gammage
Center.
Currently, inform ation on the calendar
line comes from the monthly calendar on
cultural events and from press releases. In
tile future, information will be submitted
from students, staff and faculty, Bergin
said.
Anyone with information about campus
Course offers
to augment
reading pace
activités can call John Matthews at the
News Bureau. The final decision as to what
will be announced on the calendar line will
be the News Bureau’s. Bergin said the
messages will be reviewed daily.
She said in addition to campus activities,
emergency inform ation will be provided
which pertains to ASU as well as academic
information.
She said by 2 p.m . Monday, the Une had
received approxim ately so calls, but that
number is expected to increase as the com
munity becomes aw are of the service.
“The calendar line is p art 6f ASU’s effort
to reach out m ore and m ore into the com
munity. We are trying to provide a service
that doesn’t duplicate anything else,”
Bergin said.
“We are an urban university and an urban
resource,” she added.
T h e H a irc u ttin g
C o m p an y
Wants You To Come In
R egistration for speed
reading classes to be offered
through ASU is this week in
the reading education office,
Room B112 of Payne Hall.
Registration far the noncredit course will take place
from 10 a.m . to 3 p.m.
Students may choose from
five classes scheduled dur
ing day and evening hours.
The course will meet Aug. .
30 through Sept. 24 on cam
pus. Cost for the four-week
program is $25 per person.
M dre inform ation is
available by calling the
Reading Education Office at
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Section A
Tuesday, August 24,1982 Stete Presa Pepe 9
Student realizes college dream in internship
By Meaii Summer
covered,” he added.
Contributing w riter «
Still, it is not ju st anyone who would spend four months
Andrew M iller, «rbo has had Ms mind set on being a lawyer working for nothing, albeit in a job as special as this.
since high school, has been selected as an intern in the office
However, as friends and acquaintances will m ake very
of the adm inistrative assistant to the chief justice of the U.S. d e a r, M iller is fa r from ju st anyone.
Suprem e Court.
“HO has always struck m e as being very strong-willed,
The internship, which will involve a good deal of research agresslve and straightforw ard about Ms goals,” Christine
and speech writing, is a goal for which M iller had been striv M aria, a firm er em ployer said of Mm,
ing since the begining of his sophomore year in college.
M iller becam e associated with M arin when he worked in
“This kin^l of thing is not really known about unless you the Arisona Collection section of Hayden Library.
take the effort to find out about it,” he said.
“H ehas always wanted to g et as much on-hand experience
Life in Washington , D.C. will not be ode of luxury, the ASU as possible,” M arin, who is the acting head of tire collection,
political science senior said. F or the first four months of said. “He was always inquisitive and curious, but he was
work for the nation’s highest court, M iller will not be com- never a sm art aleck. ”
Sandi W alters, M iller’s girlfriend and a freshm an a t ASU,
. pensated m onetarily. It will be up to him to finance Ms stay in
the nation’s capital.
provided a look a t the other side of her beau.
This, M iller contends, is not enough of a negative aspect to
“He’s really sm art, but he’s not an egom aniac. . . he likes
to play around — a t tim es, he’s kind of like a little bay,” she
m ake him think twice about forfeiting the opportunity.
“ I’ve been saving up for this for a long tim e,” he said. said.
These qualities, as well as others, have now paid off for the
“ I’ve got a few places to stay, so th at end is pretty much
young m an who graduated second in Phoenix’ West High
School’s class of 187».
Miller, a native Arizonan, is one of six children, all of
«diose names begin with “A” . He has worked for several
years to support a fam ily he described as “not exactly
wealthy.”
During Ms high school years, he garnered five varsity let
ters in four different sports.
The resum e he sutanitted for the internship contained
honors ranging from his high school’s Outstanding Senior
Award to the ASU Medallion of M erit, wtach he received Ms
junior year.
Miller, who is a member of numerous honor societies, cur
rently holds a 3.64 grade point average a t ASU.
The
first government-related job was when he worked as a page
in the Arizona House of Representatives.
M iller said he would eventually like to attend law school a t
Stanford University, H arvard or the University of Chicago.
Professionally, he hopes to have Ms own law practice or
perhaps become a clerk in the U.S. Suprem e Court.
Safety escort service
hopes for fall increase
in students' patronage
By lu io e W arell
Staff w riter
The Associated Students Safety Escort Service escorted
approxim ately 1,880 people across campus last year and the
service’s director hopes to increase th at num ber this year as
the program begins again Monday.
E . Scott Jackkon said he would like to see the operation
escort 35 to 40 people a night—nearly twice as many as the 20
to 28 calls received last year.
The escort service was established last fall when ASASU
began providing funds for the operation. The service replac
ed a private operation that had suffered financial problems,
p L ast year, ASASU allocated $5,047 to the escort service.
The seggpe used $3,045 to purchase five two-way radios.
“One of ttte problems we bad last year .was that we were
borrowing the radios from housing,” Jackson said.
^
When the radios were being used by ASU seciaity. for
events a t Gammage Center or toe Activity C arter, the escort
service would do without, he said.
A&tSU has allocated $4,000 to the escort service this year,
which includes money to be used for advertising and promo
tion:- j l .
Jackson said this year the service is also planning on in
creasing the num ber of volunteer student escorts.
“L ast year, we generally kept the escorts a t 20 to 25 (peo
ple). We need 30 to.42 to m ake things run smoothly,” Jackson
said:
•'
He said escorts donated approxim ately 3,000 hours last
year — providing most of their service to students living iff
M anzanita Hall.
The service’s escorts m ust be students and are hired on a
volunteer basis.
“Generally you-get bettor people if they’re devoting their
tim e because they want to, rath er than getting paid for it,” he
said,
operation provides only walking escorts although i t .
rhave a “fleet of two bicycles” t a t enable toe escorts to
anw ser calls m ore quickly, Jackson said.
Escorts will be trained with the use of a new handbook
designed by Jackson which outlines the service’s procedures ,
such as rules of conduct and em ergency procedures.
University Police L,t.. R ichard Hydro sa'id since its
establishm ent the service has decreased the calls for escorts
to the police.
'“ It’s freed som e of our officers to answ er other calls,”
Hycbo said. “They’’ve helped us out quite a b it."
“ It just puts m ore eyes out th ere— not only to help the stu
dent, but to help us,” be said.
Wanda Jones, ASASU campus affairs vice president, said
she will be working with Jackson on a public relations cam
paign for the service.
“We want to m ake it better well known and let women
know they need to be using it,” Jones said.
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Section I
P>0« 1ÓState Press Tuesday, August 24,1982
1982
MCMORIfll
UNION
leî/ure
learning
IN F O R M A L , N O N -C R E D IT C LA S S E S
,
Staff photo by Mika Rynaarson
A tta r w aitin g fo r m òra than tw o hours to g at to the fro n t o f th e lina, C ath y C a lz a ti show s her
fru stration , w hile app lying fo r fin an cial aid. T h e F inancial A id O ttica has bean sw am ped w ith
applications this sem ester causing long delays as lines exten ded 50 deep at tim es.
S H A R P E N YO UR S K IL L S !
v /u i
mm.
Parking chief
F IN D N E W F R IE N D S !
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F U L F IL L YO UR FAN TASIES!
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BEAUTY SALON
I
By Chris Coppola
Staff w riter
I
Hie director of the newly ■
formed Office o f. Parking
' and Transit says one of his
- top priorities is to encourage
feedback from both students
and faculty.
Edward Hickcox said he is
pleased with the response his
office has received and he
hopes it will continue.
“We’re starting to get a lot
of calls already,” he said. "I
want to talk to as many peo
ple. as possible who have a
problem or complaint.”
The office was established
Aug. 1. According to Hickcox
it was the first m ajor step in
directly addressing tbe park
ing problem a t ASU.
“It is a response to the Ad
Hoc Parking Committee
report of last May 15,” he
said. “One of its recommen
dations was file establish
ment of this office.”
Hickcox said the expanded
tram service implemented
this fall has been the other
m ajor change to occur
regarding the parking prob
lem. •
Hickcox was director of
ASU’s Auxiliary Services
prior to his appointment in
parking and transit and has
been a t ASU for 25 years.
“My first job as an
undergraduate was with the
campus police,” he said.
‘¿We thought there were
(parking) problems back
then, but it was nothing com
pered to today.”
Hickcox received his
m aster’s in education hem
ASU, served as housing
director from 1958 to 1968
and A uxiliary S ervices
director from 1968 until this
year.
He said be sees his years
a t ASU as an advantage in
his new position.
“I enjoy working with
these kinds of problems; I’ve
had a long exposure to it,” he
said. “That’s one of the
reasons I’m looking forward
to it.”
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MEMORIAL U N IO N INFORMA TIO N DESK
Section A
Tuesday, August 24,1982 State Press Page 11
Vets'anger unreconciled toward Vietnamese
By Ciel Lotion
Associated Press W riter
PHOENIX - Ask a Vietnam veteran how he feels about the
Vietnamese boat people and you may get a surprise.
“I’d ju st as soon they got blown up in the middle of the sea
and fed to the sharks,” said Dan, one of many veterans who
agreed to be interviewed if he was not identified.
“They’re thieves. The only thing they really appreciated
the Americans for was boosting th eir economy. Bringing
them to this country is throwing dirt in the face of every Viet
nam vet in the United States. They had the best opportunity
to get their own freedom and to hold i t They didn't.”
Dan is a farm er arm y medic, a m an who spent m ost of 1971
in Vietnam doing “dust-offs,” going o u t in the field and pick
ing up the wounded in a helicopter.
.“ I hate to put down another type of people as people, but we
w o e in a d ustoff taking fire,” he remem bered. “There were
a lot of South Vietnamese who weren’t wounded and there
were a lot of wounded. After we got the wounded loaded, the
South Vietnamese were jumping on the skids of the chopper
to the point where, we had too much weight to get off the
ground. There wasn’t a damned thing wrong with them, yet
they were yelling, ‘Get us out of here.’”
Ask a Vietnam veteran how he feels about the Vietnamese
and you m ay strike a nerve;
The scene is a group rap session a t the Phoenix Vet Center
where about 25 veterans have gathered for their weekly
meeting. Now the conversation has turned to the Vietnamese
boat people.
One veteran says that if he encounters an Oriental in a ,
superm arket, he has to leave his ca rt there and walk out of
the store.
“My anger is that bad, but I can’t help it," he said. “I don’t
feel any g u ilt All I can rem em ber is how unwilling they were
to fight. They were back there laughing and drugging it up
while my buddies w o e beside me, getting killed.”
Bob, obviously agitated, interrupts.
‘ “I feel a lot of guilt and I don’t dislike the Vietnamese. I
don’t understand you guys who feel th at way. I did a lot of relly bad things over there. T hat wasn’t m e. That was another
Bob, but I still have to live with it,” Bob says as he buries his
head in his hands.
©
Vietnam vets reme nber
First o f a th re e p a rt seriek
“That’s your problem right there,” Danny yells back.
“You haven’t accepted the fact th at it wasn’t another Bob, it
was you. Until you learn to live with that, you’re going to be
confused about everything.”
According to Bob Stapleton, president of the Arizona
chapter of Vietnam Veterans of America, m ost Vietnam
veterans have unreconciled feelings of guilt and anger about
the Vietnamese people.
“We did so much to them sim ply because it had to be done,
and they did the sam e to us,” he said. “One tim e I watched as
a corporal shot a baby on the road. The baby had been boobytrapped and there was no way to save him. He would have
blown up no m atter what you did. The child had become ex
pendable.”
ALL SAINTS CATHOLIC NEWMAN CENTER
College Ave. & University
967-7823
MASS SCHEDULE:
Saturday 5:30 p.m.
Sunday 8:00,9:30, 11:00 a.m. 6:00, 7:30 p.m.
D aily Mass:
Danforth Chapel on campus 11:46 a.m.
Newman Center Chapel.4:45 p.m.
C onfession:
Saturday 4:00-4:30 p.m. or by appointm ent
Charismatic Prayer Group
Every Thursday at 7:30 p.m. i; -
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Staff fo r 1982-1983 sch oo l year:
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Fr. Jeremiah Burmeister, O.P.
Miss Nan Jenkins, M.C.
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“A few weeks later I saw jthe sam e situation and did the
sam e thing m yself,” Stapleton said. “I didn’t like killing
babies, but you do w hat you have to do. ”
Stapleton adm its that alm ost every soldi«’ has at least one
intensely personal reason to hate die Vietnamese. His cam e
late in his tour in Vietnam in 1969 as a U.S. Marine.
“We had been told that a young soldier had over
confidently walked through a pacified village the year before
unarm ed and had been captured by the National lib eratio n
F ront,” Stapleton said. “As a propaganda function they were
dragging him around naked from village to village. They
took a bamboo stake and thrust it through his cheeks, then
drew a length of barbed w ire through the hole and dragged
him around, luting that as a halter. ”
The word cam e down th at anyone who saw the young
soldier should try to kill him.
“I had a 20-power range scope and I could see him quite
close up,” Stapleton rem em bered. “There w ere eight rounds
in a M-l Girand clip and I burned up two clips trying
desperately to kill the guy, but they darted off into the bush. 1
just buried my head in my arm s over the rifle and sobbed.” .
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SIDE BY SIDE;
An evening of special liturgy, fellowship and dinner. Open to all members of the Community
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September 1
November 3 r
O ctober 6
December 1
SUNRISE COFFEE SHOP:
Open class days 7:15 a.m. to 2:15 p.m.
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NEWMAN CENTER OPEN DAILY
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"The Catholic Parish Serving the Unirersity C om m unity Since 19.12
”
•
Section A
Page 12 State Press Tuesday, August 24,1982
FITNESS.
FUN.
If you purchase a members
Nautilus facility at the same prk
you will incur the following hide
Based on going fromjthe ASI
club” six days each week during
travel a total of 1,000 maes usin
Ions of gas at a cost of aoout $87
A B D O M IN A L M A C H IN E
Helpful only for persons who desire flat
stomachs; one minute, three times a week
can produce better results than all those s i t ,
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AEROBII
Lots of fun w hile having a great \
exercise classes for everyone from
veteran. Y ou can soon be ready for <
W e’ve over 100 classes each week wi
in Arizona.
A R M C B O S S / IN C L IN E PRESS
This douDie m achine does an increaiDie jo d in firm ing and
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"A
workou
>nA
Section A
"
Tuesday, August 24,1962 State Press Page 13
MID A FABULOUS BODY
Wa*NIHq
¡e a membership at the next closest
t the same price as Sun Devil Nautilus,
following hidden costs: ;
3 fromithe ASU campus to that “other
:h week during the school year, you will
000 maes using approximately 67 galst of aoout $87, and waste a ton of time.
A B D U C T O R /A D D U C T O R
B efore N autilus developed this machine, the inner and outer thighs
were left up to M other Nature, but now you can have strong,
beautiful upper legs in only two minutes, three times a week.
H IP A N D B A C K
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Tg a great workout! We have aerobic
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OBICS
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$69 for the first 50 students
$75 for the next 75 students
$79 for the next 100 students
CLOCK THE AVERAGE LENGTH OF WAIT AT THE “OTHER
CLUB” BEFORE YOU GET PRESSURED INTO A QUICK
DECISION AND SPEND YOUR MONEY AND TIME WAITING
TO GET ON THE FIRST MACHINE.
■ak&MNBHVKj
Section À
Page 14 State Press Tuesday, August 24,1982
Law fails to jail more drunks
two or three months when people have stood trial and are
By The Associated Press
Arizona’s new drunken driving law has not led to a signifi sentenced, ” Froning said.
An increase in DWI prisoners may sta rt to appear in about
cant increase in the number of prisoners in county jails, but
sheriffs said Monday it may be too early to assess the im pact one month, Pim a County Corrections Director Howard
Ferguson said.
of the law.
“I think the courts haven’t been able to address those firstThe law, passed by the Legislature during the past regular
session, went into effect one month ago.
.
, offenders yet,” he said.
Mojave County plans to assign DWI prisoners as trustees to
The statu te elim inates pled bargaining in DWI cases, man
dates tougher sentence» and sets a sim pler legal definition ^county farm , Col. Harold Pershall said.
Sheriffs contacted differed on whether the tougher law is
for DWI.
. i ■
..„X /
With one exception, officials in nine of Arizona’* 14 counties ' having a deterrent value.
If the law is enforced, the incident of drunken driving
contacted by The Associated P ress said the law has not
should decrease, Yavapai County Sheriff H. Curly.Moore
caused their jail populations to swell.
“We have not experienced any large influx of inm ates, but said.
“Once the effect hits, it will slow down, ” he said.
I really didn’t expect to until several months after the law
“A lot of the talk around the bars is that they’re scared of
had gone into effect,” said Sheriff Marlin Gillespie of Navajo
the new law, ’’ Graham County Sheriff Roy Curtis said.
County.
“Maybe the m essage is getting across that you can’t drink
In M aricopa County, sheriff’s spokeswoman Myraa Froning, said the num ber of DWI bookings after the law went into and drive,” PershaO said.
Pershall and others, however, predicted the deterrent
effect “rem ained very near the average before.”
The exception was Gila County, where Sheriff Lyman value will not last long.
“I look for people to return to their old habits in about 90
Peace said the average daily jail population had increased
from 35 before the law took effect to about 65 in recent weeks. days,” Pershall said.
Apache County Sheriff Art Lee said some drinkers will stay
“I think the drunken drivers a re being sought, out m ore,”
he said. Gila County has a new jail that will be able to accom off the road because the law and its provisions are the subject
modate the added prisoners, but the county did not budget for of high public awareness. But the deterrent value will fade,
hesaid.
the extra mouths it m ust now feed, he said.
“I think after it becomes a subconscious p art of your mind,
“We had a m eeting with the Board of Supervisors to figure
it won’t later on,” he said.
out how to get food cheaper,” Peace said.
Same people will not pay attention to the law, said Chief
Other sheriffs and sheriffs’ officials said it will be several
months before they will know if they will face jail over Deputy Dave W arren of Pinal County.
“Your habitual drinkers, I don’t think it will affect,” he
crowding problems because of the new law.
“The impact, if it happens, is expected to occur in about said.
MU beckons entertainers
to participate in auditions
N o M in im u m
G o o d th ru A u g . 31 st
20lb White• 8, x11Copies
C O P IE S
kinko's copies
969-3326
LM
M
Coupon Special
PER M $2 1 S0
Sham poo & Set *750
Sham poo & C ut *6“
WITH THIS COUPON
Darlene*«
1820 E. Southern
Tempe
<
COUPON
Deal,
Just bring in this coupon and find out how big a deal this
really is. You’ll get the biggest size of the best-tasting pizza
in town—generously topped with just-picked vegetables,
fine natural cheese and the leanest meats, baked on a
fresh-rolled pizza crust. Pick any of our 17 varieties, or think
even bigger and make up your own.
. Courtesy Discount to
Students, Faculty, Staff
JackG. Walz, D.D.S.
General Dentistry
Larg e p izza $ 5 .9 9
Anv2«oppili#kirgi*pizza,acidII farcountry.styk*.
(;M
14 and 15. .
Those entertainers wishing to participate
in the series are requested to sign up for the
auditions a t the MU Activities Cent«* on the
lower level of the building Sept. 7.
The registration period is from 8 a.m . to 8
p.m. Sept. 7-9 and from 8 a.m . to 5 p.m. Sept.
10.
Additional information about the audi
tions and the entertainm ent series may be
obtained by calling 965-6649.
COUPON
DENTISTRY
2525 S. Rural Road
The Memorial Union has extended an in
vitation for a wide range of entertainers to
participate in auditions fo r its annual pop-up
series of perform ances throughout the
school year.
Perform ers for the Tuesday noon pro
grams will be selected from the group of
musicians, dancers, jugglers, magicians,
comedians and others perform ing in the
auditions, which will be held from l p.m. to 4
p.m. in the MU Rendezvous Lounge on Sept.
COUPON
W
) .ia w i« M w 1 r | p | n n r i r i n
| - | |- [ a t ; 1 D a | - | a
OVER2,000 DIKESPRICEDTOSAVEYOUMOREY. SELECTFROM
RALEIGH, MOTOBECMK, NISHIKI, WHVE0», FUR, KHS, PEUGEOT.
Can'you picture yourself
swinging dow n a cliff? O r
hiking the canyon? O r
crossing a river using only a
and your own two
Is?
a chance to do
m ore in Army
Q\Cfc
* e fe b e i
fOB V U 50
Example:
Nishiki 10-speed
Fully assembled
ROTC.
Adventure training like this
helps you develop many o f
the qualities yo u 'll need as
an Army officer.
Q ualities like
self-confidence. Stamina. And
the ability to perform under
pressure.
,v s ,
If you’d lik e to find out
more, make a date to see
your Army ROTC Professor o f
M ilitary Science.
ARMY ROTC.
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
List Price *160°°
N O W *12950
Special Sale Prices on Locks and O ther Accessories
Tempe Bicycle Shop
The old gas station on the corner o f 6th & M ill
966-6896
AT ASU SEE
LTÇ JÇRRY LAPE
OLD MAIN ROOM 240
965-3318
Tuesday, August 24,1982 State Press Page 15
Section A
The Devimouse Presents:
School-Daze ’82
Monday, August 23 — Sunday, August 2 9
—-Seven Crazy Days—
M onday, August 23
Minor Madness
8 to 12 p.m.
No one over 19 adm itted
$3.00 cover
Tuesday, August 24
Rock Night
This week featuring the music of
Bruce Springsteen
$1.00 Drinks — $2.00 Pitchers
W ednesday, August 25
New Wave Wednesday
O onna Larson, a lib ra ria n a t H aydan L ib rary fo r th a past 10 years, says she is « .fix tu re d urin g
noontim e u n d er th e la rg e o live tre e in th e cou rtyard in fro n t o f th e b u ild in g . Larson has been eatin g
h er lun ch th ere everyday since she startad w orking th ere.
“Go-Go's Vacation Night”
Go-Go’s Concert Video and Tickets
Chicago Dance Company performing
$1.00 Drinks - $2.00 Pitchers
Thursday, A ugust 26
Ice Tea Party Safari
DRIVE OARS
FREE
w#
Insu rad. Must
ba
21
WRITE ON! LEARN CALLIGRAPHY
*
B E G IN N IN G , IN T E R M E D IA T E
W CO PPERPLATE
SCHEALL DRIVEAWAY
991-5533
Friday, A ugust 27
Happy Hours
"Classic Vinyl Spinning"
years
m ora.
No cover for the ladies
$3.00 Pitchers of Long Island Ice Tea
754 Drinks
MEMORIAL UNION
LEISURE LEARNING
j
W e lco m e to th e
U n iv e r s it y
F ro m
th e Univ
We’re the Univereity Plasma Center. And we're-here because you are.
Because there are times during the course of a college education when
you may need extra cash. W hether you’re ju st starting here or
finishing yotir doctoral thesis, you cao.eam up to $96 a month
donating plasma. And study white you donate! Or ju st relax and enjoy
the company of other students like you.
Almost everybody can use some extra cash. How 3)out you?
If you are new to our University — bring this ad for an addi tional $2
for your first donation.
Top summer tunes of th e last 10 years
754 Drinks - $1.50 Pitchers
Free Nachos and Pizza
ftfei
^S aturday, A ugust 28
.* f a l l f e s t ’8 2 ^ "
-
O utside on the lawn 1 p.m. to sunset
Enjoy the Min with The letzo n s, '
Driftwood, Sparky Richards and Encore
Arts and Crafts, Skateboarding. Roller Skating
Sunday, A ugust 2 9 ] ^ !
Return of the JetzonsV
A KSTM Sunday Special
$1.07 well drinks — $1,07 bottles of Bud and Bud Light
$2.00 cover
Also Com ing to th e DevUhouse:
Marshak CreiulMw
with Special Guest Sparky Richards
Septem ber 4 , 9 p.m.
Tickets $4.00
T M J S tZ O M
Septem ber 5 and 12
$2.00 coyer — KSTM Sunday Showcase
P la s m a C e n te r
105 S. Rórdl Rd„ Tempe
968*6139
O p en M onday-Satu rd ay 8 :0 0 a .m .-6 :0 0 p .m .
fe d e ra lly lice n se d
TMSckooBon
l l ^ sStf
Septem ber 14
KUPD Rock Night - $2.00 cover
4 3 0 N o r th S c o tts d a le R o a d I
__________
0 0 4 -0 7 7 0
Section A
Pagò 16 State Press Tuesday, August 24,1962
Overcrowding initiates
bus route improvement
By P ra t Gyuro
C oa trlbuting writer
Service oo Route 22 of the Phoenix tran sit bus system
will be improved to a 20-minute frequency, storting
Monday, Aug. 30.
t . _ &
The improvements was implemented because the
buses on Route 22, whidrtink Phoenix tp ASU, Tempe
and Scottsdale, hque^besis.bfqmuipg more flrmded,
according to E £ l ^ ', f l i N i l ^ | n b l i c transit ad
ministrator.
OCi —1! :") pTO ':t
1.
He said the decision to improve the service was a ,
joint effort of the Phoenix; Tempo and Scottsdale city
councils.
To reduce the cost of the upgraded service, the
Tempe and Scottsdale city councils have raised the bus
fare from 60 cents to 70 cents per ride.
Tempe seeks clean-up funds
for purification of local wells
By JesaarieLeene v
S taff w riter
Tempe’s long-term demands for w ater and the possibility
of future emergencies have prompted Tempe to compete for
—5,000 in state funds to d ean up tainted city wells, Tempe’s
rater and w astew ater superintendent said.
BID Hughbanks said the state has $500,000 set aside for the
-*~sMlitetion of «riding wells and for the construction of
ones. The city has $50,000 of the necessary m atching
__ is in its current fiscal budget.
. if the city receives the money, Hughbanks said it will be
, used to purity two existing wells located near Rural Road a^d
lem o n Street and near McKellips Road and 78th S treet th ^
are polluted by trichloroethylene (TCE), a possible car
cinogen.
^
Neither well >8 currently in use, however. He said the well
near R ural and Lemon “could be used up to six months out of
the year” because the TCE level is not extensive.
Hiighhunfc» m id the technology for purifying well w ater is'
lim ited so the city has two alternatives.
£ tTbe first if P*cfc tower aersfig n — $ method by which the
whter fe separated into tjay qwptoto for purification. The
second alternative is th ro d ^ h e tM te d carbon filtration. Ac
cording to Hughbanks, in the second method “carbon acts as
a purifier to abtofh unwanted chem icals. ”
He said
method can be ca rtMdgnf within the wellsite
and tlie c i j ^ 1 v ^ i | looking a t ah jrm ajo r construction."
idoes not foresee arty disturbances for
.thesurroundihgneighborhoods.
fateffttomtifeiveilB does not s e r ^ x i^ p ^ i te a s in which
wells are lodalki. Most of it is p tp w iw Im lM n city line,
i After the wells Are cleaned up, t h e a t e r IteV supply will
be reserved for ush in tim es of emerg ency, s m e ilt is less ex
pensive to use toe two surface purification plants now in
operation to satisfy Tempe’s demands, Hughbanks said.
J
shoplifting| isstealing
-59Ave.—
0
->5513A
Avvee—
—
00
STEM
o f ARIZONA few.
- 43Ave.-0 0 0
- 39Ave.-{•)
- 35Avo.-0 0 0
- 27Avo-0 0
Ava.—
0
-15Avo.—
0
- 7 Avo.-—
0
- Central—
- 7 SI.—0
-12SI.--0
- 16Si.—0
-20SI.--0 0
- 24SI—0 0 0
-19
-32SI.—0
-40Si.—0
-44SI.- 0
/
ir
PHOENIX
■
SllE74Si.
T-A
QQ
94St.
A—
—
1—Scoilsdato-0
SCOTTSDALE
asm
m
Iti
7 5 0 0 0 0 in p rize s!
AW ARD
W IN N IN G
LASER
PR IN TS
Mon. thru Fri. • Aug. 23 thru 27
8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
In front o f
Hayden Library
$3 o °each prin t
■
oo
r ro prints
e e fo fo
r tw
Q U A LIT Y FRAM ES A L S O AVAILABLE
IMPACT
-.A
Now Hat...me fabulous Instant
CondMoner and Shampoo-invites you
to be a big wheelon campus! Enterthe
Flex-Rampage Rally Sweepstakes! Ihi
easy.,and you maywin a1983Rampage
Sport Dodgdl personal size pickup.
Theraly ItaSports CarClub otAmerica
Soto 19di Raly I youwin y o tfl beat
tie wheel o( yourown Rampage Or
wtaotre ofhundnch ofotherprizes
Go to your pariidpailng Flex retailer
and pick up an entry blank. J u rifll
outand take t to your parfctpallng
Dodge dealer
Kyourname Isdrawn youl get $50
cariv a new Rampage on loan to drive
to Ihe Flex-Rampage Raly In yourarea
and a year* supply of Flex Shampoo
and CondMoner
REVLON
• «Knmtatte.
Tuesday, August 24,1982 State Press Page 17
Section A
H
O
L
T
O
D
V
O
E
C
R
S
W e lc o m e s Y o u B o c k
mm
Silt
v
aqoiaT tfii
zm m
wc’re
Direct From Chicago
Comes The Original
Chicago Dog
F eaturing A u th en tic
100%
628 E. APACHE
A pache & Rural
968-0495
•Ml photo by Mid* Rynwnon
S tu d e n t* go through tho sem i-annual ritu al o f sorting o u t th e ir belongings and m oving In to a new
environ m en t, in th is case M an zanita H a ll. (A bo ve) T h e elevato r was a p o p u lar spot as students got
acq u ain ted w h ile w a itin g th e ir tu m . (B elo w ) Susan E lias takes a b reath er a s th e 100° plus
tem peratu re began to take its to ll.
Staff ptiolo by Andy Arffli
**33 EAST
O N lV E R iirf
TesA FE
TtfcWN
PUV2A
£ * 4 -6 7 0 0
W IN E BAR
RGSMUMMT
V ID E O M O V IE S
*V90 A
G o B a ck To S ch o o l
D A Y *
SCHWINN
MEMBERSHIP
¿ U n o et
Ì U R K & K RENTAL M OVIE CLUB
Rent Movies $ 1.00 Doy
N O N -M E M B E R S
W ELCO M E
•C am era rentals
•R ecorder rentals
'
CO M PU TER
QF THE 80’s
m jR H m m 's
s c h w in n
W hy buy- jo r tW iftfà o g a m e ?
—WtHiöm.Shatner
1l J(t -,
STUDENT DISCOUNTS on BICYCLES
SAVE
*20 * *50
ON SELECTED BIKES
6W / 9
or backpack
W e carry Kryponlte and Citadel locks
NEW
■
g M & J l Ia AVE
Ui
USED
3
3
s
SERVICE
7 1 6 M ill A v e • 9 6 7 -2 1 3 7
s199
‘With membership
$39.99 per year
. •
Section A
Old company goes bankrupt;
bookstore completion by new
Phelps said there were only minor details to
By Emily Smith
be completed in the bookstore’s con
Staff w riter
struction when T.G.K. McCarthy took over.
The finishing touches of the new
“The thing was substantially done except
bookstore's construction are to be com
for a punch list, which lists all the things
pleted within the next two weeks by a con
that nepd (jo be fixed or have been overlooktractor hired after the original contra tor
went bankrupt, a Spokesman for the con : ed,” Phelps said. .
■mu*, had a longer punch list than norstruction company said Monday.
T.G:K. McCarthy, was hired to finish the : màÎTbut there were no real problems and
job after Terra Cfr«pide, the. original con ‘ the bookstore had already essentially mov
ed in,” hesaid.
tractor, filed for bankruptcy in June.
“There wasn’t much left to be done,”
D ouglas H anson, ASU B ookstore
Steve Methot, project engineer for T.G.K.
m anager, said one of the things overlooked
McCarthy sa id .'“We are ju st doing things
during'the bookstore’s construction, was the
like patching walls, fixing door dings, and
implementation of a public address system.
all kinds of other little knick knacks.”
“It wasn’t until we got moved in here that
William Phelps, associate vice president
we discovered we had no P.A. system ,” he
for business affairs, said the University lost
said. “ I am not exactly sure what happen
no money while changing contractors
ed.” ■
because a perform ance bond had beat pur
A tem porary system has been installed by
chased by Terra Grande insuring the
ASU’s Physical Facilities P lan t until a per
University against any failures on their
m anent one is installed, Hanson said.
part.
Alfonso Mages, ASU project m anager of
“Before we issue a bid to a contractor, the
planning and construction, said basic wiring
contract«* must purchase a perform ance
for a future public address system was in
bond,” Phelps said.
stalled in the bookstore, but he was not sure
Although a spokesman from T erra
why it was not completed.
Grande was not available for comment,
PROTECT AND BEAUTIFY YOUR CAR
A tte n tio n :
F oreign C ar O w ners
SAVE UP TO 70%ON MCYCLiO FOREIGNAUTp PARTS
MG TWUMPH. HONDA DATSUN TOYOTA VW and OTHERS
A ll M odels F o reig n 243.329t
3024 So. 40th Street Phx. (near 40th A University)
*Mention this ad Aget an additional 5?«off!
L E A R N TO R E L A X !
YOGA MASSAGE &
SE L F HYPNOSIS CLASSES
. MEMORIAL UNION
LEISURE LEARNING
Q UALITY 3M
•Protective Side Molding
W INDO W T IN T
•D ecorative Striping
*68 -20r.
•Sun-Protective Finishes
*78 - 4Dr.
•Sun Roofs
738 S. Perry Ln.
•Luggage Carriers
2 bike. East ot McClintock
•R oo f Edge Guards
off University. Tempe
•W heel W ell
U
MB
Molding
TEMPE«MESA*CHANDLER
894-9166
D IS C O U N T T IC K E T B O X
Movies, Sporting Events, Road Shows and m ore ^„.centrally located
near 24th Street & Indian School Rd. — Open 8:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Mon.-Fri. — 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Sat. — Phone and mail orders
accepted — 3743 N. 24th Street — 954-0941.
- &
the
Memorial Union G allery
Needs Volunteers
Help with the
grubby stuff:
TOTE
SPACKIE
PAINT
and you'll learn to
INNOVATE
PLAN
and become the selection
panel for next year's shows
Stop by the M U Activities
CASH CARD
Center or coll 965-6649
M U G allery coordinator
Memorial Union
GflUEflV
Designed to give preferential treatment to cash paying
customers at over 500 valley locations. From Clothing to
Haircare — from Health Clubs to Contact Lenses — from
Custom Draperies to Custbm Landscaping — from Furniture
to Pest Control — from T.V. Repair to Dry Cleaning — from Formal
Dinners to Pizza. Membership fee includes quarterly updates,
portable directory and free certificate book.
- ....... . . r
1
^
Tuesday, August 24,1982 State Press Page 19
Section A
GAME PLAN FOR FALL FUN
(Read this ad doing your best Howard Cosell imitation.)
P la y # !
H ay #4
P ow er Sweep-You and your
friends sw eep into $he
dining room and take ■
advantage o f Willy’s 2 for 1.
dinners every p^dnesday
w ith ycmr coiiege l.D. or a
good fake ID.
(it’s a tradition!)
Q uarterback Sneak-You
sneak in on Monday or
IXiesday and get som e
quarters back on our great
I b s io d á B á r .
(Make it yourself!)
, On|y $3.95,4-10 p.m.
Play #5
Play # 2
Optical Play-You get Happy
Hour prices on drinks in
the dining room during
Happy Hour (or the option
to pay double.) You choose!
S tatu e o f lib e r ty PlayYou
and your gang guzzle down
drinks a t Happy Hour until
you’re torched.
>
Monday-Friday 2-6 p.m.,
(Start extra early!)
Play #6
D ouble PlayOops, wrong game!
Play # 3
Forw ard Pass-Pass out
forward, backward or
sidew ays w ith pitchers o f
M argaritas during Happy
Hour for $3.25
G am e tim e:
Guillermo’s
Good Food from Bad G uys
1120 E. Apache Blvd. 967-1129
(fo r dinner)
Sunday-Tltesday: 4-10 p.m
Wednesday-Thursday:
4-11 p.m.
Friday-Saturday 4-12 p.m.
(O pen for
late night m unchies.)-.
8MMM
W0wÊÊm
WMÉSi
Section A
Page 20 State Press Tuesday, August 24,1982
REWARD
1rtibu,O Nly
\
B etter !
u im H w ith Parman«nl H air Removal.
Oat RM of Unalgtitly Facfal or Body Hair,
5
C all for a FREE CONFIDENTIAL
/
CONSULTATION
Yo
DESERT ELECTROLYSIS CENTER
;
STUDENT DISCOUNTS
Sharon V aught
Physicians
E le c tro lo g is t • M «m ]^er A g fe o * A sso cia tio n o f E to ctro log lste i
SKIN CARE
PRODUCTS
-NATURE AND EARTH UNITED UflTH SCIENCE
• ASSURE • THEARPPE è EX/OIL • ENSURE
• HUMECTfliESS • KEAApHIX • ALOE/AID
• HAIR SPARV • BIOTIN CREME • AiOTIN
SHAMPOO' • HAIR FOOD SUPPLEMENT
• VELVET • RENAISSANCE FACIAL MASQUE
• FIRMAPLEXx MASQUE • SUBDUE MASQUE
• SUPERIOR PROTEIN • MAXI 0 • 0OTANOIL
• VITAMIN C • EPITOME*
H A IR Y
HEADS
Staff photo* by Andy Aranx
Bookstore's new
but not the lines
Cleansing • Conditioning • C u t* Blow-dry
'
Perms \
;>
*20-*25 Y $1^00
Cut Not Included y
T h e cam pus b o o ks to re is
now , b u t th e lo n g lin o s In
sid e tak e on a fa m ilia r loo k
as thousands o f s tu d en ts
flo c k to th e sto re d u rin g th is
firs t w eak o f th e s e m e s ter.
W h ile a ll 14 cash re g is te rs
w are In o peration M o n d a y ,
In clu d in g tw o “ c a s h o n ly”
lin o s , s tu d en ts . re p o rte d
w a itln g b e tw e e n 1 s m in u te s
and a h a lf hou r to p ay to r
th e ir su p p lies.
\
Rag. $16.00
UNIVERSITY
7thSTREET
Valid with
this ad
w
(limit one pe^persçn)
kinko's copies
1840 W. Southern
J 5th
" STREET
3
LJ
’ Expires 10-15-S2
NEW SPEED B E A D IN G C O U R S E
STARTS
AUGUST 30, 1982-SEPTEMBER 24,1982
A special four-week course, based on the Sack Ydürman
Speed Reading Program, will be offered to graduates,
undergraduates, faculty and staff. This special program
requires pre- and jkist-read ing hate testing and reading of
timed passages. S
‘
,.**
.
REGISTRATION: August S 3 (Monday) thru
August 2 6 (Thursday)
Payne Hall B -T 12
. 1 0 a.m .-3 p.m.
SECTIONS:
A.
T - T h '«
T -T h
T -T h
W ed.
Thuns
0 : 1 5 a .m .-1
(Study SkHts only)
1 0 :« 4 Q a .m .-1
1 2 : 1 5 p .m .6 : 3 0 p .m .© : 3 0 p .m .-
0 : 3 0 a .m .
1
1
0
0
:5
:3
:3
:3
5
0
0
0
a .m .
p .m .
p .m .
p .m .
FEE: $ 2 5
in The Heart of sun Devil country
U n iv e rs ity & M ill
LOCATION: FARMER BUILDING 101
FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL £ 6 5 -7 7 6 6 /6 7 /6 8
Tuesday, August 24,1982 State Pro»» Pape 21
Section A
'Standby' draft boards
to include more women
PHOENIX, Art*. (AP) — Twenty-five draft boards have
been organised in Arizona, according to the Selective Service
System.
David GraybiU, state director of selective service, said the
boards will not meet on a regular basis, although board
members are familiarizing themselves with new laws on con
scription and gi«fajeH«ma for deferment so they will be
® fShese
p e o p le
serve strictly in a standby capacity,”
F L Y IN G
B U F F A L O
G A M E
S H O P
FINE GAMES FOR IMAGINATIVE PEOPLE
^R ole Playing Games
th e a rt buM dlng. Just because S k in n e r w orked Jn th e a ir co n d i-
C raig S kinner, a sophom ore in aerospace technology, pulls his
feet up and enjoys th e sm all b it o f shade provided by his c a rt H e
was w aitin g to r h is co-w orkers to re tu rn fro m In stallin g titters in
tioning shop this sum m er did n ’t g uarantee him re lie f fro m th e
h eat
Dungeons & Dragons, Tunnels & Trolls,
Traveller, Runequest, Champions, Villains
& Vigilantes, ana morel
^H istorical, SF, Fantasy, Sports
Fulfill your fantasies w ith
FOR STUDENTS & FACULTY
OF
ASU
THE SOAP OPERA GAME
^Accessories
COMPLETEEYEEXAMINATION
Dice ( 4 - 20 sided), miniatures by Ral
Partha, Archive, Heritage, Citadel, Archive.
COME TO OUR STORE AT THE CORNER
OF 52nd AND UNIVERSITY, AT THE
SILVERGATE BUSINESS PARK
CALL DR. SMITH
AT 957-9056
• 915 S. 52nd St., Suite 3 • 966-4727 •
$15.00 postpaid from
quirtel, inc.
3525 Taurus Drive
Racine, Wisconsin 53406
3116 INDIAN SCHOOL RD
Kachina Shopping Center
EYEGLASSES
C O N TAC TS
SPI, Avalon Hill, GDW, Metagaming,
Yaquinto, Task Force, Mayfair, Simulations
Canada, and more!
Welcome |
Back
Student
I
Bulge?
Special
B o d y
w r a p
th o s e
e x tra
in c h e s
a w a y
WITH COUPON
t h e
n o U m it f
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
• 10s.rn.-11 p.m.
U
I and receive FREE m ini-tanning
membership w ith above.
O tter good
through 8/31
U nder New M anagem ent
single burger w ith "M ore Burger Than Bun . A
small order of crispy, golden tries. Your favorite
small drink. And. to to p # off, a cool a n d dreamy
5 or. DARY QUEEN* Sundae. A ll for onV OCX
G et a good d e al on a tek m eal. Head for your
p a rticipatin g DAIRY QUEEN* BRAZIER* store
brazier.
© A M D Q Corp , 1981
CALL-IN ORDERS WELCOME
aa
}D
n n n n
b u
O U O
1389 E. Apache Blvd.
Next to the Vagabond
GOLDEN C LO
43 E. B ro a d w a y (B ro a d w a y & M ill)
966-2150
Hours 9 a.m .-8 p.i
S ection A
Vacancy causes protest
By Jom arie Leone
Staff w riter
About 14,000 square feet of space in the Memorial Union is
empty and controversy has arisen as to how it should be used.
And one Tempe m erchant says the Tempe Chamber of
Commerce should be consulted for suggestions.
Frank Plencner, Tempe city council m ember and owner of
Universal Travel, said no one is expressing discontent with
free enterprise taking over the space.
■
|j
But Plencner said he is worried about unfair competition.!^
Last August, a six-m em ber ad hoc copumHee was created
to represent the University community oh <
d ew iw 'oim cerife
ing MU expansion, according to T rhd^ Thomas, director a t
MU adm inistration. " *- fi
** ¡.iwk-.v,--:*
At the sam e line«' the ASU Bookstore moved to its new
location on Orange Street.
___ Pj
Thomas said tlto com m ittee conducted student surveys to
come up with recdmmendations on how the space could best
fulfill student and adm inistrative needs!
“When the bookstore was there, th at space produced in
come totaling SO percent of our budget,” Thomas said. “So
the m ajority of the space m ust be income-producing now. ”
Thomas said private enterprise m ust be considered as a
high income producer for the available facility.
A new com m ittee will be formed in cooperation with the Of
fice of Business Affairs a t ASU to make recommendations on
the types of businesses that will be sought to bid on the space.
Thomas stressed any planning was strictly tentative and no
decisions have been made.
Plencner suggested that die MU adm inistration consult a
committee of Tempe Chamber of Commerce m em bers to
help them decide how the old bookstore could best be put to
use.
“I’m not just concerned about my agency, but other Tempe
m erchants as well,” Plencner said. He added there are many
needs currently not being fulfilled by Tempe m erchants.
Thomas said Plencner’s company would be invited to sub
m it a bid for MU space should the space become available for
private business.
Thomas said the upstairs portion of the form er bookstore
will open as a sweet shop operated by Saga Food Service,
With tem p e ra tu re s breaking
100 on a (tatty basis, TMka
(laft-cantoi) and Karris cool
off In the fountain In front of
the MU, while their owners
Tom Graves and Stehanie
Thudpucker gat acquainted
behind them.
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$ 1.00 off Haagen Dazs Ice C ream Drinks all nite
Thursday— Shorts & Shots Nite 754 Kam ikazes — Schnapps —
Skip N G o Nakeds all nite — KDKB Ladies N ight 5 -8 p.m.
Som e lucky lady will get a com plim entary dinner & drinks in celebration of
Brad, the bartender’s birthday (he’s a real party anim al).
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Friday & Saturday— Party Down All Nite.
Ladies Margaritas — Frozen Pina Coladas &
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Restaurant — $4.95 Bar-B-Q D inner — The Best Hickory Smoked
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PATIO HOMES PRICED If* THE 50’s
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M uscular Dystrophy Assoc. Superdance U.S.A . Sunday, S ept. 5. Pick up
entrance forms at Pony Express and all 7-Eleven stores.
K ZZP Pony Express Labor Day get-aw ay. Sept. 5
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Pony Express Class B & C Slo Pitch Softball Tournam ent, Sept. 28 & 29.
C ontact Randy M iller, 277-2171.
Reel Stuff, Aug. 28 — Noon to 6 p.m. For more info, contact PaL 957-2201.
Watch fo r the Big Big Screen Monday Nite Football Partys
B eginning September 13
’ ! * 'O PEN8FO R LUNCH
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Torture charged in Shrock confessions
MEXICO CITY (AP) - The court-appointed attorney for six
He said the defense also would ask Judge Enrique Escala
polfr»m«n charged with m urdering University of Colorado te Lopez for proof that Schrock, 42, who disappeared May 31
professor Nicholas Schrock claim ed Monday that pro- while driving to a sum m er teaching job in G uadalajara, had
secutors used torture to extract their confessions.
entered Mexico. Seven policemen, including the police chief
Jesus Michel Jacobo, president of the Sinalos state bar of San Ignacio, were arrested in June after Schrock’s truck
association, said he would present evidence to support his was found in the town.
contention when he appears Tuesday before the ju ^ e trying
^Schrock was also a visiting professor a t the American
the
in CuUacan, the Sinaloa state capital. The lawyers’ Graduate School of International M anagement in Glendale,
group was appointed'hy the court toregreaent six defendants’ Aril. V
n nahle to hire their own attorneys.
. “ |3§g ‘Ts therereally such a professor Schrock,” the lawyer askMichel Jacobo said Dr. Belem Romos examined the six ed.'?‘jLhd if he was killed, where is the body. Until his body
joiiaH policemen a week ago and found evidence they had turns up, he’s alive as far as the law is concerned and these
b e e n hanged by die w rists, given electric shocks and had
men are innocent.”
mineral w ater and hot pepper juice forced up th eir nostrils
Although Schrock’s truck was found in San Ignacio, his
^ rin g ia days of interrogation.
•
body has not been found. The policemen w ere charged when
"The evidence is
tbair «onfessions lack legal a body was discovered buried near die town. But a team of
validity,” Michel J 9c o & s a id ib a ;te!epbone interview. “We medical exam iners in Denver examined the corpse, and
believe the state p a s under pressure from the United State* determ ined by comparing it to Schrock’s medical records
to solve this crim e and they chose the easiest way out.”
• that it was the body of another man.
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BRINO TH IS AD FOR GIFT CERTIFI
CATE DRAWING, EXPIRES 10/22/82.
f l A M rissi1
The trucks bearing thé guerrillas to the «uvot
port lw
ere delayed
about an hour when a car bomb exploded a m ile away and
Palestine Liberation Organization security officers checked
the convoy route for m ore explosives. No one was hurt in the
blast.
The loading of the fighters onto the ship also was delayed
while some turned over rocket-propelled grenade launchers,
not covered by the U.S.-negotiated agreem ent that allows
each departing guerrilla one pistol, rifle or m achine gun.
Com m ittee announces seven to
receive scholarships for '8 2 -'8 3
a law student; Jennifer Mish, a sophomore
in liberal arts; Jan R estai, a sophomore in
business; .Robert Wexler, a senior in
finance; and ^ctanifer Zarbock, a junior in
pre-med/enghieering.
The scholarships were established in the
spring sem ester.
The ASU Scholarship Committee has an
nounced the selection of seven students as
recipients of the 1982-33 ASASU Student
Scholarship.
The aw ard winners are: Terrence
’ Babilla, a junior in m anagem ent; Kenneth
Bauer, a junior in accounting; Marie Downs,
TO PROTECT
1HEUNBORN AND
T€NEW BORN
3121 S. MILL, TEMPE
966-5840
M -F10-7
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DISABLEDSTUDENT
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M __a_____ a__L.____ ! __ A L l — ----- »99----1A .
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Cheered on by their leaders and
exhorted to conduct “m erciless underground w ar” against
Israel, some of the PLO’s^nost radical guerrillas Sailed from
the port of B eirut Monday mi a ship bound for South Yemen.
Both sides of the divided capítol erupted into volleys of vic
torious gunfire as Moslem west B eirut saluted the third
group of departing guerrillas, and residents of the Christian
eastern sector celebrated the election of Bashir Gemayel, the
rightist leader of Lebanon’s biggest Christian m ilitia, as
president of Lebanon.
and more
Huntington Square
PLO sails amidst gunfire saluting exit, election
_____
P.C.H.
LIGHTNING BOLT
is compiling a lis t o f persons
interested in w orking as
personal attendants fo r
disabled students.
The list w ill be used fo r
referral to paid positions.
N o M in im u m
G o o d th ru Aug. 31st
C O PIE S
if interested comeby the
Z '/2 <
DISABLED STUDENT SERVICES OFFICE
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A
Air raid
Airplanes over ASU too loud,
airport expansion foes daim
By Sandy Sistek
Staff w riter
Survey team s have found noise levels
from airplanes passing over ASU to be
higher than Federal Aviation Administra
tion recommendations, said a member of
the Tempe A ircraft Noise Abatement Com
m ittee.
Jerry Kempton said the surveys con
ducted by the committee show the noise
levels a t ASU to be 65 decibels, 10 decibels
higher than the FAA’s recommendation for
schools and libraries.
Kempton said the studies were prompted
by the possible expansion of Sky Harbor Air
port. The expansion, as designed in the Sky
Harbor M aster Plan, calls for the building of
a third runway south of the existing run
ways.
He said it is feared that the third runway
m ay create a flight path directly over
Tempe and ASU, raising noise levels even
more.
Kempton said the high noise levels are
caused by airplanes deviating from the
prescribed flight path.
Currently, the prescribed flight path is
over the Rio Salado Beacon, located one
m ile north of ASU on Gilbert Road.
Kempton said although the planes are re
quired to fly over the beacon, the planes
have a tendency to fly closer to ASU.
“H ie (danés flying out of compliance for
» flig h t procedure cause the problem and we
recommend th a ta second noise study be in
vestigated by a professional firm ,” he said.
P.R.C. Speas, consulting firm for the air
port expansion, completed a study in
January of 1981 and found noise levels
sim ilar to those found by the Tempe com
m ittee.
\V V °\ .
However, the Tempe com m ittee believes
th at both studies underestim ate the true
noise problem.
Kempton said the committee would like to
continue m easuring the noise levels until
they have accurately assessed the extent o '
the problem.
Kempton said the com m ittee has revealed
that Tempe takes a disportionate num ber of
flights compared to Phoenix.
“One Study we did showed that a m ajority
of the aircraft taking off from the airport
have ranged 70 to 90 percent to the east
(over ASU) opposed to flying toward the
w est,” Kempton said.
The committee also has requested to ob
tain current tower inform ation indicating
what kind of (danés are taking off, their
direction and tim e of day.
The committee agrees that the Sky H ar
bor Airport is a definite asset to Tempe, but
feel some changes should be made.
According to Paul Nichols, ASU assistant
professor who has been taking the noise
readings, said despite the economic asset
Sky Harbor is to the community, the noise
problem on campus is a reality.
Nichols, who is an in structor in
aeronautical technology, said the noise con
cerns the entire University because it inter
rupts class lecture time.
“I have seen a few cases where an
airplane will fly directly over the cam pus a
good m ile south of where they should be and
I had to stop the lectures,” said Nichols.
Kempton said the situation is a t a crucial
stage now and hopefully the problems will
b e salved soon.
City leaders were sent to the FAA’s na
tional headquarters in Washington, D.C.
and were advised to establish some ground
ruletrbefore expansion begins.
A tentative public meeting with Tempe
and Phoenix city officials has been sched
uled for September to iiiscu ss the current
noise problems .
TbeSky Harbor M aster P lan, if approved
by the FAA, will increase passengers from 7
million a year to 32 million by the year 2,000.
Cyclists conquer North America
By Jim Austin
A sst City Editor
,
Forest fires, black bears, and snow were a few of the
obstacles two ASU graduates encountered this sum m er while
riding th eir bikes 3,300 miles across North America.
For two and a half months, B rad Chmelka and Tim
Joganich, both engineering graduates, pedaled their way
from Vancouver, Canada, through the Yukon to Anchorage,
Alaska
“Anything I do now will seem very tam e,” 22-year-old
rhm eitai said. “I don’t think I’ll ever do anything of this
magnitude again. Maybe Europe or New Zealand in three or
four years, but right now I ju st don’t know.”
The two bikers began their trip in mid-May and had to (deal
with M other N ature’s transition from spring to sum m er.
In May and early June, their, trip was-plagued by cold
w eather, light snow, low tem peratures and rain.
“When we w ere in the Canadian Rockies our w ater bottles
froze over,” Chmelka said. “All the lakes were still covered
with ice.”
.
•
Chmelka said the cold weather didn’t keep the anim als in
hibernation. Bears, moose, caribou, mountain sheep and
goats were all p art of the scenery.
He said they were lucky they had no problem with the
anim als, because Canadian law forbade them from carrying
guns.
As a safety precaution, Chmelka and Joganich cooked their
m eals away from where they planned to sleep for the night..
They also would hang their food supply in a tree before turn
ing in for the nigbt.
One of the m ajor problems they confronted on their tn p
was the terrain. Chmelka said he had four flat tires from th e ,
900 m iles of gravel roads they traveled.
Phmollt» said he was prepared with a tire patch kit and
spare parts to take care of any unexpected, bike
He said they preferred the gravel roads of the StewartC assiar Highway in B ritish Columbia to the traffic of the
AlkanFreew ay.
T_
However, a huge, uncontrolled fire in the Yukon prevented
them from continuing on the gravel roads and forced them to
travel an the Aiken.
•T here wasn’t nearly as much traffic a s we had expected, ”
rhwiftMta sakl. “Usually there are large, diesel trucks on the
road, but I guess the economy isn’t doing that well up there.
Both bikers brought cam eras with abundant film supplies
Andkept daily journals to rem em ber their travels.
“You live a trip three tim es,” Chmelka said. “When you
plan it, when you do it and when you look back a t it.
Although each biker was equipped with a SO pound
backpack filled with food and other camping essentials, their
sense of humor became their m ost im portant equipment.
“With cold rain and mosquitoes all around us, our sense pf
humor was theonly thing that saved us,” Chmelka said.
He said a sense of humor also helped them to deal with the
isolation from civilization.
“You can’t help but feel fa r away from everything,” he
said “It was five weeks between hot baths. We were bathing
C hm elka is dw arfed by th e maieeMc C anadian R ockies In B ritish
C o lum bia. A lthough th e tem peratu re was in th e 70’s In th e
mostly in snow stream runoffs.”
Chmelka, who arrived in Arizona in mid-August, returned
for a job with Union Oil in Colorado to work on the first com
m ercial oil shale pro ject
However, his traveling partner, Joganich, is still on the
road. His father said that after riding a ferry from An
chorage to Seattle, Washington, he plans to ride his bike to
California and then to Colorado to visit Chmelka.
» •**•*•
P «**“ fn
snow covered a ll year.
background stay baton» freezing and
*
Section B
Page 2 State Press Tuesday, August 24,1982
More about
bikers
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S e c t io n
Tuesday. August 24 1982 State Press Page 3
B
Phoenix variety show displays an ASU flair
By Bridget Eckenrode
Scenes w riter
The Women’s Center of Phoenix, an all
volunteer fem inist organization, produced a
benefit show last Saturday night a t the
Phoenix Perform ing A rts Theatre.
The Women’s Center was conceived at
ASU eight years ago and has grown into a
m ajor networking organization in Phoenix.
“Women Are Many Faces n ,” was a
benefit to “assist the Women’s Center in its
work for women, encouraging women’s selfexpression, growth and autonomy, and pro
moting women’s solidarity.”
Such serious words belie their humorous
and entertaining production. It was done
with much finesse, considering the limited
budget, sparse surroundings, and the fact
that all perform ers and workers were un
paid.
Several ASU women were involved in the
production. They included Theresa Burr,
Susan DeBree, Donna Hawxhurst, Chris
Tetzloff and Carol Templeton.
I have been to benefits before and the
mood of the audience and perform ers was
often self-aggrandizing and self-conscious.
Sometimes, a benefit can serve as nothing
m ore than a fashion show for “pretty
ladies" who have often spent far in excess
on attire than on tickets. The perform ers
may be less than professional in their stage
demeanor, fobbing off second-rate m aterial
in the name of charity. .
This was not the case for the Women’s
Center production. The audience was warm,
relaxed, and fam iliar with the entertainers;
expressing their appreciation for the guest
artists with great rounds of applause. The
entertainers ran the gam ut of mimed com-
edy, “street theatre,” and classical piano.
The spa re p e a t was backed by a large
weaving. Prior to the show, slides were
flashed onto it. Repetition of pictures was
the only fault here.
A “Reader’s Theatre” prefixed each per
formance, with pertinent m aterial for each
act.
The definite stand-out perform ance was
by Sherry Roberson. Appearing last on the
program , she belted out “Foggy Day in Lon
don Town,” “ Route 66,” and other tunes
with a vtnce that bottomed out With a
healthy baritone and rose to flute-like tones.
The audience let her know their pleasure
and called her back for an encore.
EASY
m
TEAPE
Frey's work proves worthy of raves
By Thomas W elter
Scenes w riter
The work of Viola Frey is
currently showing a t the
University A rt Collections in
the Mathews Center.
Frey’s work will send you
into a fantasy world of
fig u re s an d fig u rin e s
emblazoned with odors and
mind-boggling statem ents.
When she creates ah arti
cle, she illustrates the forms
with bright textured colors
and thick glazes th at dimensionalize an otherwise com
mon figure.
Most Of the sculptured
m iniatures depict' m ale
forms seemingly loosely ex
ecuted, yet with a concept of
detail and light which flows
from within and without to
intensify the shape.
Her use of anim als, in
anim ate objects and human
figures abound through-out,
as added pictures of the ar
tist’s mind.
In a “Bricollage,” the ar
tist is capable of utilizing dif
ferent objects — whatever is
a t hand >-*•■ to produce a
recognizable form.
In Viola Frey’s pieces,
th e s e
p s y c h e d e lic
bricollages knock the spec
tator off his feet and into the
a rt, achieving many im pres
sionistic reflections. It is fan
tastic. ~
Her paintings and draw
ings seem to follow the sam e
within/without theme. She
utilizes not only the flatness
of the surface with thick
blobs of acrylic, but by plac
ing canvas on canvas, she
dem onstrates the inner
direction of this dimension.
Frey then cuts a figure out
here and there, letting' it
hang outward to extend the
piece toward the viewer, as
in the case , of “Cascading
Figurines.”
Conspicuous in this exhibi
tion is the absence of recent
work by Frey. However, the
appreciation of her work is
spreading > 4 s is the overall
medium of ceram ics..
The exhibition is prepared
and installed with sensitivity
toward Frey’s work. There
are chairs and plenty of floor
space to hang-out on for a
culture -break during the
day.
m
P L A S A A corr
933 £. UNIVERSITY
SUITE 112PHONE 891-1336 FOR APPT.
EARN 100... A riONTH.
10... CASH FOR EACH
DONATION«^ BONUSES.
2 ... NEW DONOR BONUS
W IT H T H IS
Frey’s exhibition will run
through S ept 22. The gallery
will be open 10 a,m . - 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday.
AD.
no pets,
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T h e e m o tio n al ceram ics o f V io la F ray a re cu rre n tly on exh ib i
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it« H
Denver’s show Sunday, was indeed, a
show; for the whole family. When the MC
warned the audience smoking was pro
hibited in the UAC, he was greeted by a
rousing ovation.
When the sam e MC asked people to re
m ain seated during the perform ance, rntta
whimper of protest was released by the
crowd. In fact, the m andate was a (Sheared
to throughout the show.
But if Denver’s fans Sunday night w ere on
th eir best behavior, than Denver himself
was positively saintly.
Playing in the round, Denver stood on an
elevated platform gently revolving around
his assem bled musicians .
Section B
Page 6 State Press Tuesday, August 24,1982
M em ories
The teacher.. . the student
By Ken Sain
Sports w riter
F o r , the 56,748 fans
assembled in Sun DevilStadium Saturday, a living
legend made a trium phant
return to the Valley'. -Frank
Kush retu rn ed to the
stadium which was first used
while he was head coach.
The B altim ore Colts
d e fe a te d th e A tla n ta
Falcons, 34-3, to give Kush
his second consecutive vic
tory as a National Football
League coach.
Kush compared his return
. to the last time he set foot on
the playing field of Sun Devil
Stadium. His last visit he
was carried off the field by
players after the Sun Devils
upset Washington, 12-7, in
Kush’s last game as a col
legiate coach.
Ju st a few hours before the
game, Kush announced he
would be dismissed follow
ing the game for allegedly
covering-up a punching inci
dent with form er Sun Devil
punter Kevin R utledge.
Kush was being sued by
Rutledge for the alleged
punch and allegedly forcing
Rutledge to quit the team
and forfeit his scholarship.
Kush did not want tu place
Frank Kush bsam s as h is B a ltim o ra C o lts douse A tla n ta ’s
Falcons 34-3.
Kush began as ASU’s head
coach in 1958. He is given
credit for giving ASU na
tional credibility. In 1970,
Kush had his first unde
feated season and capped it
with a 48-26 victory in a bliz
zard a t the Peach Bowl.
too much importance on his
The next three years the
return to the Valley.
Sun Devils compiled a 32-4
“It’s a unique situation record and appeared in the
(returning to the Valley),” new Fiesta Bowl each year.
K ush sa id . “ T h is is - Iq ,1975, the Kush-coached
something that I did not an Sun Devils finished the
ticipate.”
season with a 12-0 record.
TO THOSE INDIVIDUALS
W HO WOULD LIKE TO
TRY-OUT FOR THE ARIZONA
STATE FOOTBALL TEAM
Any full-tim^ student who would like to.
try-out for the Arizona State football team
should report to the training room in the
University Activity Center at 3:00 on
Monday, August 23, 1982. You will be
required to furnish your own running
shoes and shorts. You will be weighed,
measured, and sign a release form. On
Tuesday, August 24,1982 at 3:00 you are
to report to the football practice field
across from the tennis courts on Rural
Road. You will be timed on the 40-yard
dash, put through some agility drills and
be
allowed
to
demonstrates your
proficiency in your specialty, i.e. passing,
kicking, punting, and pass receiving.
Those individuals that the coaching staff
feel possess the requisite size, ability,
and/or foot speed will be retained, issued a
uniform and allowed to participate in Fall
Practice. You must be a full-time student
taking 12 credits or more, and be able to
pass a physical examination. See you at
3:00 Monday, August 23.
Football Coaching S ta ff
D efeating second-ranked
Nebraska University in the
F iesta Bowl was still not
enough to gain them the No.
1 ranking by the wire service
polls. Oklahoma University
was declared national cham
pion with an ll-l record.
In 1978, the Sun Devils sur
p ris e d
sec o n d -ran k e d
U niversity of Southern
California with a 20-7 victory
in Tempe. The Devil defense
shut down Heisman Trophy
By Michael Graham
Sports w riter
Be it ever so humble,
there’s no place like home.
And you will not get any
argum ent from forme* Sun
Devil quarterback Mike
Pagel, now of the Frank
Kush-led Baltimore Colts, on
that point.
Pagel, who, like Kush, was
welcomed back to “the
house that Frank built” with
a standing ovation, gave the
hometown folks and the NFL
a little sam ple of what he can
do in a preseason game
against the Atlanta Falcons
Saturday night.
Pagel wasted no time in
reaffirm ing any notion that
he will be the Baltimore
Colts’ No. 1 man come open
ing day. He riddled the
Falcons’ secondary for 207
yards passing cm a 9-for-ll
effort which reaped three
touchdown strikes, all in the
first half. K it despite all the
homecoming hoopla and his
outstanding encore perform
ance .of lus collegiate career
(5,196 y a rd s an d 54
touchdown passes), Pagel
rem ained m odest and
rem arkably composed about
the whole affair.
“Playing on this field with
all the people yelling was
like playing in college all
over again,” Pagel said. .“I
w asn’t really a ll th a t
psyched up, I just tried to
take it all in stride like I’ve
Pt
V a * ; '. •
Staff photo by Jim Ound
Form er ASU q u a rterb ack M ik e P ag el p u ts h is b es t arm for
w ard d u rin g S atu rd ay n ig h t’s N F L e x h ib itio n gam e a t Sun
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Section B
Tuesday, August 24,1982 State Press Page 7
NIGHT
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Section B
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Section B
Tuesday. August 24,1982 State Press Page 9
Ladies, Enter Cowboys’ Fantastic
C A LE N D A R G IR L C O N T E S T
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1 10 State
Section B
Press Tuesday, August 24,1982
Devils fight recession
by investing in Bonds
By Ken Sain
Sports w riter
At the beginning of each
school year, head baseball
Coach Jim Brock holds his
breath to see how many of
his recruits will show up for
classes.
“You have to w ait until the
first day to be sure,” Brock
said.
College baseball coaches
m ust double recruit most of,
-*Cthe high school stars that
sign national letters of in
tent. The first tim e to outsign the other colleges, and
the second tim e after a
player is drafted by a Major
League team.
“Coach (Darryl) Rogers
knows after the recruiting
day if he’s had a good year,”
Brock said. “I don’t know
until today.”
One of the m ost highlyrecruited players far ASU
did show up for classes
Jim Brock may be wondering what his slogan
yesterday. The son of m ajor
will
be
In
’83.
league star Bobby Bonds,
B arry Bonds, will attend and
play for ASU this spring.
Bonds was drafted by the
San Francisco Giants and
reportedly turned down a
The 100% Natural Cotton Mattress
professional contract in ex
* F o r M a x im u m H e a lth
cess of $80,000 dollars to at
& C o m fo r t
tend ASU. Brock said that is
•C a n .a ls o b e m a d e in to
the highest amount ever
^sofa
turned down by a Sun Devil
• P u ll- u p B e d -fra m e s &
recruit.
A c c e s s o rie s
According to Brock, both
father and son felt the educa
tion was important.
B u y F a c to ry D ire c t & Save!
“It was a real emotional
25% S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T
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. M on.-S at. 9-6
G$nts.;' He played a t San
SNOP AT HOME SERVICE & INFO 943-6734
Frtmcisco, and he was
negotiating a contract for his
- ®
ARIZONA'S
BICYCLE BARGAINS
We Meet or Beat A n y Comparable D eal Around
Clearance Sale on Panasonic and Raleigh Bicycles
D IS C O U N T S UP T O *10000
Choose From a Large Selection of Locks and Equipment
The Closest Bike Shop to ASU
CO LLEG E CITY CYCLE
9 6 6 -0 8 4 2
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S U N D E V IL
H A IR C U T T E R S
FUTONS
continued page 15
k ù
tz o
n
ë
LEADING FUTON
MANUFACTURER
T ry o u ts
s la te d
H ie perennially strong
ASU baseball team is
holding a m ee tin g
T hursday for walk-on
hopefuls, Sun Detil.Coach
Jim Brock said.
The meeting will begin at
3 p.m. at the A-Room in the
University Activity Center.
For more information, call
the baseball office at 9653677.
And for those walk-ons
who are dream ing of
playing third base for
the Devils, don’t wake up
yet. Ronni Salcedo, who
manned t£e hot corner last
year, recently signed with
the Baltimore Orioles.
“We’ll have a pretty
young team ,” Brock said of
the defending Pac-10
Southern Division cham
pions.
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-
Section B
Tuesday, August 24,1982 State Press Page 11
M ore about
Student
continued frontpages
*
been doing for the last couple
of years.”
As relaxed and confident
as Pagel appeared, his
present and form er boss,
Kush, was very im pressed
with his rookie signalcailer’s play and believes
these type of perform ances
could become a weekly oc
currence in Coltland.
‘‘Mike has done an excep
tionally good job in camp
and in the preseason
ballgam es,” Kush said. “He
has the natural ability to
avoid the pass rush and still
have good balance while
throwing the ball.
“Mike is a very capable
young m an, and I don’t think
mosphere a t Ohio State
University and experienced
some problems adjusting to
the straight, drop-back style
Kush employs a t Baltimore.
Despite the competition
for the top quarterback
duties for the Colts, Pagel
and Schlichter have re
mained supportive of one
another.
“I think I have some ad
vantage over A rt because I
played in the pro-style of
fense at ASU thatF ran k u ses
here (B altim ore),” Pagel
said. “Art and I have com
petition on the field. But once
we’re off it stops right
there.”
As the pressure mounts,
Pagel can also expect a iot of
Staff photo by Jim Gund
Baltimore Colts quarterback Mike Pagel is the center ol attention during the Colts’ 34-3 trouncing of the Falcons.
" / w a s n 't really a ll th a t psyched
S tu d e n t R a te s
up. I ju s t tried to take Ita llln stride
Don’t w orry "about moving around. Get your
OWN box so you don’t miss the checks and
packages from home.
like I'v e been doing for the last
couple o f years." — M ik e Pagel
he’ll losehis composure once
the regular season starts.
He’s been through the mill
before and knows how to
handle the pressure. ”
As a* fourth round draft
pick, Pagel was forced to
take a back seat, a t the
outsetof cam p, to first round
selection and three-tim e AllAmerican A rt Schlichter of
Ohio State. Despite being
selected after Schlichter,
Pagel w restled the No. 1 spot
from the form er Buckeye
early as a result of his strong
p ro -ty p e
offen siv e
background a t ASU.
Schlichter received his
training in a collegiate at-
heat from the win-starved
Baltimore fans. After a
disastrous 2-14 season last
year, it is safe to say they
will be a bit restless for a
winner.
But as the sun went down
beyond the friendly confines
of Sun Devil Stadium, which
saw Mike Pagel modestly
basking in the wake of the
near-perfect performance,
ho one dared think of the
hungry defensive linemen
and speedy cornerbacks
w hich m ake an NFL
quarterback’s h air turn
gray.
Somehow those thoughts
do not go well with a
homecoming celebration.
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C L O T H IN G
SU R PLU S
r
Section B
School spirit sought by group
By Tony Alba
Contributing w riter
Anyone who has ever watched a University of Southern
California football game on television has undoubtedly seen
its student card sections and cheer groups and how much
they add to the game. Those card-carrying students form
several designs and scream school cheers as their gridders
battle on the field.
Well Sun Devil fans, an ASU student group is attem pting to
bring the sam e thing to Sun Devil Stadium.
The group, known as the Devils’ Dominion, has been
form ed to “promote ASU sports and boost school sp irit,” ac
cording to group m ember Keith Staser.
Devils’ Dominion, which has several organizers, will pro
vide T-shirts, parties and an opportunity to buy choice stu
dent tickets for all members. Also in the planning stages is a
November trip to Tucson for the ASU-U of A gam e.
“We are not charging anything to join the organization,”
Staser said. “All it costs is some enthusiasm a t the gam es.
We w ill provide free T-shirts and the right to purchase good
student tickets without the hassles of standing in line for
them.
»
“We’ve been thinking about this since last spring,” Sally
Rieck, one of the chief organizers, said. “The State Press ran
an article about a lack of school spirit, and we figured we’d
do something about it.”
For this year the Devils’ Dominion will be prim arily a
cheer group for the football, basketball and baseball games.
Next y ear however, the group is planning to expand into
forming a card section sim ilar to those a t UCLA and
Michigan State.
The Devils’ Dominion already has begun accepting
m em bers. Registration booths are located in front of Sun
Devil Stadium, on Cady Mall, and at m ost dorm sites
throughout campus.
Among the sponsors and groups supporting the Devils’
Dominion are Coors beer, KTAR/KKLT radio, ASASU, the
Resident Hall Association, the Alumni Association and the
ASU athletic departm ent and coaching staff.
“We really think it will help us as a football team and also
as a university,” ASU football Coach D arryl Rogers said.
“Our tickets will be from the 10- to the 42-yard line, ” Staser
said, “depending on how many people we get. They’ll be from
rows 10 through 28.
“We’re looking for around 600 to 1,000 people,” he added.
“Right now, about 250 have signed up.
I
“The only real problem, and it’s not that big, is from the
Resident Hall Association,” Rieck said. “They’re supporting
us, but p art of our seats would be from their section.
“But if we get enough people signed up, they (RHA) said it
wouldn’tb e any problem .”
The last day to register for the group is Wednesday, Aug.
25. The fee for season tickets is $21 for fulltim e students.
Ticket sales officially sta rt this Thursday.
Once the group closes its sign-ups, Staser said the Devils’
Dominion will have meetings on Sept. 7 and 8 in the MU
Arizona Room. The meetings, where the group will distribute
tickets, T-shirts and information, will begin a t 7 p.m.
The Sun Devils open up the season Sept. 4 in Eugene, Ore.,
to face the Oregon Ducks. ASU’s first home gam e is Sept. 11
against Utah.
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__________RflIZONfl STATE UNIVEftSnv
Section B
Tuesday, August 24 ,1982 State Press Page 13
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704 S. College Ave.
1 Block North of ASU
966-6226
Section B
Page 14 State Press Tuesday, August 24,1982
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August 25. 19l?2
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DEVELOP AND PRINT (C-41)
o
winner Charles White and
the rest of the Trojan of
fense.
After taking a two-year
layoff from coaching, Kush
' returned to the profession he
has known for so long with
the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of
the Canadian F ootball
League. The Tiger-C ats
finished with the best record
in the E astern Division.
That was enough to con
vince the owner of the Colts,
Robert Irsay, that Kush was
what his 2-14 team needed.
Kush was hired at the end
of last season as head coach
of the Colts. Many of the ex
perts felt Kush would not be
able to continue, using his
d i s c ip lin a ry
co a ching
methods on the milliondollar athletes of the NFL.
Kush immediately chang
ed everyone’s notion that he
would change by giving the
players a weight and diet
program to follow during the
off-season.
The Colts were one of the
. worst team s defensively last
year. Saturday, the Colt
defense did not allow any
.points. A tlanta’s field goal
cam e on a fumbled punt
return.
Kush is proving that he
can coach his way — and win
on any level.
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A d e tecte d F ra n k K ush m em o rize s every d e ta il in h is la st w in as A S U co a ch , a 12-7 v ic to ry o v e r
W a sh in g to n o n an O c to b e r n ig h t in 1979.
5
S
S un 12-4
Section B.
Tuesday. August 24,1982 State Press Page
M ore about
Bonds
contfcMMd Iron page 10
son with friends of his from
the Giants. They live close to
Candlestick P ark.”
In addition to Bonds,
Brock is expecting help from
c e n t e r f i e l d e r O d d ib e
McDowell. McDowell was
named to the USA team that
went to Japan.
“He was named MVP, and
he is rally a freshm an,
Brock said. “This was out of
a group of the best college
players in the nation.
“Depth-wise, this is our
best recruiting year. ”
The Devils lost 14 players
from last year’s Pac-10
(Southern Division) cham
pionship team .
“This m ay sound silly, but
I’m excited to see them
play,” Brock said. “Normal
ly we w ait a couple of weeks
to sta rt taking a look a t our
recruits, but I am going to
take a look a t them tins
Saturday.”
Brock also feels this .is one.
of the better years for
Arizona high school recruits.
Some of the top in-state pro
ducts that will play for ASU
include: Roger Caldwell,
Coronado H.S.; Ted Dyson,
Amphitheater H.S.; Jim Jef
fries, Chandler H.S.; Lewis
Kent, Tucson Sahaura H.S.;
and E duardo S errano,
Bisbee H.S.
One of the best pitching
prospects fra* the Sun Devils
will be Jam es Benedict from
La Valley Junior College.
Benedict had an ERA under
1.00 and as a short reliever
he led his team to th e
California championship.
Reggie Mosely and Tim
McNaughton are expected to
give a hand in the powerhitting departm ent.
“This is the first tim e
since they lowered the
scholarship limit in 1976,”
Brock said, “.that we have
been able to bring in this
many quality players.”
Brock will be counting on
these new faces in the spring
when the Devils begin play.
“Last y ear we had a lot of
help from our new people,
and this y ear we have better
quality of recruits,” he said.
“I’m hoping it will happen
again.”
As for having to double
recruit m ost of his players,
Brock doesn’t seem to let it
bother him.
“It’s a pain in the neck, but
I can live with it,” he' said.
“These last five months
have been exhausting.”
J a c k s o n gets hotter
as A n g e ls stay in f irst
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - A guy who
makes diving catches in the outfield and.
runs the bases like a gung-ho kid trying to
m ake the squad? A consumate team player
who is modest and humble and tactfully
avoids controversy? Reggie Jackson is ruin
ing his im age.
Jackson, whose years with the Oakland
A’s and New York Yankees were m arked by
turbulent success, is proving a quieter - but
nonetheless effective - catalyst for the
California Angels.
.When he signed as a free agent with the
Angels last January, Jackson emphasized
that he intended to be just another con
tributing membra* of the California lineup
that already included three other former
American League Most Valuable Player
Award winners - F red Lynn, Don Baylor and
RodCarew.
As expected, Jackson has contributed his
share of home runs and clutch hits for the
Angels, who have led the Am erican League
West m ost of the season. He also has con
tributed in less obvious ways.
In one recent gam e, Jackson, not known
for his fielding prowess, made a spectacular
diving catch in right field. In another game,
he got a. routine hit to the outfield, noticed
that the outfielder who caught the ball
wasn’t paying much attention, and sped to
second to turn a single into a double.
As the Angels began a two-game series
against Milwaukee Monday night, Jackson
was hitting .274, was second in the league in
homers with 29, and had driven in 76 runs for
California, which led Kansas City by one
game in the West race.
And, off the field, the form er Sun Devil
has been distinctly m odest After hitting a
two-run homer in the seventh inning that
gave the Angels a 6-5 victory over Detroit
last Sunday, a feat acknowledged by
thunderous chants of “Reggie" by the
Anaheim Stadium crowd, Jackson said:
“The media and the fans m ake a real big
deal about'm y home runs, like mine are dif
ferent . . . Today was ju st my day . . . Fred
Lynn, Doug DeCinces, and especially Don
Baylor, have been providing clutch hitting.”
Even Yankees owner George Steinbre li
ner, who publicly has questioned how much
longer the 36-year-old Jackson can be effec
tive, hasn’t been able to stir up much con
troversy with him. Asked if he thought he .
was proving something to Steinbrenner this
season, Jackson replied: “Baseball is tough
enough without getting involved in all th at.” Jackson sometimes seem s alm ost in awe
of his team m ates. Comparing the 1962
Angels with championship chibs he was on
a t Oakland and New York, he said, “For
sheer names and sheer ability, this is the
best hitting team I’ve been on. F or sheer of
fensive pop one through nine in the lineup,
this is the best . . . look a t Rod Carew, a
future Hall of Fam er.”
California Manager Gene Mauch, asked
about Jackson’s contributions, paid hdh a
team -player compliment.
“He’s ju st like the re st of the team , he
cranes to the ballpark to win ballgam es. ’’
Former N.Y. Giant tailback
prépares for brain surgery
NEWARK, N .J. (AP) - The surgery
that fram er New York Giants running
back Doug K otar will undergo Tuesday
for removal of a brain tum or is “just as
frightening as it sounds,” said a physi
cian who will assist in the operation.
D r. Kim Sloan, the orthopedic
specialist retained by the Giants, said
K otar’s family requested that no details
be released on K otar’s condition until
surgery has been completed. .
Solan said doctors will not know until
toe operation is in progress whether they
can entirely remove the tumor. He said a
biopsy will be taken to determine
whether the tum or is benign or malig
nant.
“It is ju st as frightening as it sounds,”
Sloan said. “It is surgery where the skull
is opened, the m ass in the brain is ex
plored and tissue is taken. ”
Kotar, 31, who retired last month after
eight years in the National Football
League, was adm itted Saturday to the
hospital which is operated by the UniversityVif Medicine and Dentistry of New
Jersey.
The form er Kentucky standout learned
he had the tumor last week after seeking
medical treatm ent for headaches he suf
fered after being kicked in the head while
playing volleyball in his swimming pool.
Doctors have not determ ined how long
Kotar has had the tumor.
Coach Ray Perkins, who broke the
news to his team after Saturday night’s
exhibition game against the Steelers,
said the Giants will do everything they
can to help Kotar.
Perkins and several Giants players, in‘eluding linebackers B rad Van P elt and
Brian Kelley, left training cam p Sunday
to visit K otar a t the hospital
“I saw him for about an hour,”
Perkins said. “He was in good spirits and
he is handling it well. ”
Kotar’s team m ates were stunned by
the news, and many left the post-game
meeting in tears.
“I was shocked,” said punter Dave
Jennings. “You aren’t ready to accept
things like this about anybody. I don’t
know the specifics yet, but he’s a fighter
and I ’m sure he’ll pull through. ”
A nnouncem ents
ATTORNEY AT law, Paul Schneider.
Reasonable fees. 1000 E. Apache, Suite
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Bicycles________
BICYCLES — . NEW , used, and
economical repairs. See us fo r
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9800642.__________________________
QUALITY REBUILT 5 & TO speeds $50
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SPECIAL CLEARANCE sale on
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Books
BUY • SELL • TRADE
your books at Changing Hands. Fdr
quality cloth and paperbacks (no
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(Sorry, no trade-ins on Saturday:)
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BOOKSTORE
414 MM Avenue
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utilities. Gali 831-5392 after 5 p.m.,
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Part-time position Friday thru Tuesday,
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Tempe
8/24
For Rcnt/Leas»
RESERVE YOUR room or house for Fall
today. Several com pletely furnished
homes available Vi to 4 miles from ASU.
Many have pools, washer dryers and
mora. Call Campus Roommate Service,
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For S ale________
1962 HONDA URBAN Express, brand
new, excellent condition. $ ^ 0 . Must
sell, Call 894-5114.
°
MOPED, 1981 4-CYCLE (no luel mixing).
8300/best ofer. 838-1516 after 6 p.m.
MOBILE HOME two blocks ASU. 8x39.
New plumbing, cooler. Excellent elec
trical, roof, interior. Awning. Shed.
Economy space. $3500. 967-5839, 8949870.__________________ " -,
OWN YOUR own co-op. One bedroom
apartment, pool, laundry room, stove,
refrigerator. Close to ASU, $8,500/$135
month. 945-5290.
______
STEREO NEW never used in cgiginal In
dividual cartons arti/f m receiver,
cassette deck, turntable, speakers,
guaranteed cost $400 sacrifice $165.
964-9541 private home. _______'
.
USED ROOM size rugs $10 and up. New
carpet specials for dorms, apartments,
cars, vans. Carpet House, 1516 East
Van Suren, Phoenix. ______________
F urniture
K IN G -SIZE WATERBED Includes
pedestal, frame, liner, mattress heater
and $50 designer sheets. $125. Steve
955-2421, must sell. ___________ _ _
P ersonal________
CATHOLIC SINGLES! All races. Free in
formation.’ Write: Harmony Interna
tional. P.O. Box 385, Evanston, IL
60204.
________ _________
FINANCIAL AID! I We guarantee to find
scholarships, grants you’re eligible to
receive. Sand for free Information.
Financial Aid Finder, Box 1053-AH, Fairlleld .lA 52556.
_________________
FLY ANYW HERE U .S.A ., airlin e
coupons. No restrictions. Cheaper than
any super sever. Call Art, 965-8604.
P e a l Estate
HOUSE THREE bedroom, two bath,
pool, patio, fireplace, fam ily room.
Close to ASU. Low CTM, 948-3507.
OWNER RELOCATED. $11,000 below
appraisal. Three bedroom. W alk to ASU.
Low down, affordable m onthly
payments. Merrill Lynch Realty 9913300. Patricia Baya 948-8242._________
$3,000 REBATE TO buyers of three re
m aining new tow nhouses, from
$72,500. Pool and tennis. Ideal for ASU
people. Agent Marion Jachowski 244>8703.:
_______ ________
SOLAR HOME skylights near ASU.
Three bedroom, two bath, $58,000.
Erazona Realty. 949-9600 or 955-6606,
Mary,__________ / _______
TOWNHOUSE $16,400 DOWN only $185
month, two bedroom, two story, south
Scottsdale co-op, pool, get roommate,
make moneyi 946-0794,______________
THREE BEDROOMS single level
townhouse, $63,0002 Near ASU $5000
down. 253-1210.______ '' "
,
S e rv ic e s _______
PARTY C IT Y
In less than an hour you can under
stand the very few things that you
have to know to make better grades
■— EASILY!!! People who make A’s
often study fewer actual hours be
cause they understand how the brain
memorizes and learns information in
the quickest possible way. This is
what wiH be spelled out to you in
simple, easy-to-understand terms.
There is no technical jargon, no com
plicated, time-consuming directions
or activities and ALL supplies are
enclosed. Each program is tailored
to your individual needs.
i guarantiee that you w ill be able to
spend the sar^s amount of time that
you presently use for studying and
make much better grades AND have
more time to party because you won’t
be cramming. If you are not satisfied
after using it, you can receive a fun
refund. You have absolutely nothing
to lose and more partying time and
better grades to gainlll And it's only
$27 — less than the cost of most
textbooks! Send check or money
order to: Better Grades, P.O. Box
8778. Scottsdale. AZ 85252. Must
include schedule of classes and
coursenumbers. Out-of-state checks
accepted. Allow one week for delivery.
8/24
COLOR ANALYSIS. Discover colors
suited to enhance your own individual
coloring. Save tim e and money, develop
it ■'coordinated wardroWfc! ’ 'Sp4W£fty
selected color swatch packet for man
and worsen included. Color Analysia is
a “one-time” investment to last a
lifetim e. Call today for appointment
before your$pi and winter clothing purchasea. 990-83$2.
_____ .
IMPROVE YOUR grades! Research
catalog, 306 pages, 10,278 topics. Rush
$1. Box 25097C Los Angeles, 90025.
(213)477-8226.
MODELS: TRYING to build a portfolio?
How does $20 for 72 shots sound? Call
"The Camera Man”. 829-1514.
T ravel ________ _
DRIVE CARS free to most points of the
United States, over 21. Schead'
Driveway, 991-5533:_____________. . . ' v
TRAVEL MART, the lowest fares and
the best service, walking distance from
campus. Let us handle the hassle. 8298181.
■-
Typing________ __
AAA TYPING- Former secretary. IBM
Selectric. Generally $1.25 page. (Rural/*
Southern). Fran or Ann. 838-8027.
ACCOUNTING AND secretarial ser
vices. Quality typing, fast, accurate.
IBM Electronic. 20 Years experience.
Dana 941-5111.
_____________ ___ %
ACADEM IC
TYPING
S ervicesDissertations (excellent Graduate Col
lege references), research papers,
resumes, repetitive cover letters. AH
work guaranteed. Cyndy, noon-10 p.m.,
968-3627.
______ ___
ACADEMIC ACCURACY! Word Pro
cessing equipment provides: perma
nent document storage, accurate revi
sions, outstanding typewritten quality.
Work quaranteed. Call Precision Typ
ing, 838-1327.
JEANNIQUE SECRETARIAL, IBM elec
tronic tape transcriptions, books,
manuscripts, epa form at, term papers.
Scottsdale, 94*8635/948-3888._______
TWO BEDROOM condo. Low down pay
ment. On University. Call Steve Rosa.
John Hall Assoc. 839-5827.
_______
KEYPUNCH SERVICES — Cards or
tape. We can key from moat anything —
fast, accurate, economical. FM4 Gila
River Corp., 1210 S. Nader, Chandler.
981-1044. ____________________ W;
P oommafe
TRANSCRIBING FROM standard
cassette. Dictate your papers, inter
views, research for typing rough draft or
final copy. Dana 941-5111.__________
wwmd
FEMALE WANTED to share completely
furnished mobile home near ASU.
Cheap. 994-4128 Cathy.
_________
— $5 per hour. 894-1098._________ .
LOOKING OR renting, Roommates Pro
fessionally, Howard A Faltz and
Associates. 988-4333, 1000 East
Apaphe.
________ ________
GO-GO DANCERS. Auditions held 12
moon to 4 pirn. Monday thru Saturday.
Broken Arrow, 4747 East Baseline
Road, Phoenix, Arizona.
‘
. MALE* ROOMMATE wanted to share
townhouse close to ASU. $150/month,
V) utilities. Paul 894-0203.
BOOKKEEPER/SECRETARY
ex
perience preferred. Must have grit. $4
P oom m afe
•>. %»
W an ted
1-2 CUBIC FT refrigerator (dorm size).
Lynne $79-1242.
________________
LIVE-IN GRAD, student. Light house/
yard work. Free room/board. ASU prof.
North Scottadaif, 991-3877 evenings. .
Section B
Page 16 S tate P ress Tuesday, August 24,1982
O N E
m;
Y E A R
A
r.
FULL ONE YEAR MEMBERSHIP
Just stop by our dub and show
usyour student I.D. and receive a
FREE DESIGNER T - SHIRT
l i
M
. * I
N o obligation.
m
■
prtce
Aerobics
W e dareyou
\o
co m p a^
Pool
25O N 0U ».
O r oSe d v*t ^*0^, .
O p e n 2 A h rs .
sun Devil
N a u tilu s
NO
NO
W e H J r ts ^ J W
NO
NO
NO
NO
# * * *
$99
NO
$49
tn
tovs/h-
tudent
The most pQPu^
r s
24
HOUR
^
W
SCOTTSDALE 7750 E. M cDow ell 941-8296
N.W. PHOENIX 35th Ave 8c Bell Rd. 8 4 3 -3 2 4 7
MESA Country Ctub 8c Southern 83 4-7 28 3
TEMPE Rural South of Fwy. 83 1-8 08 1
MARYVALE 51st Ave. 8c Indian School 2 4 5 -1 1 7 0