* th u rs d a y Ja n u a ry 2 0 ,1 9 8 3 V o l. 65 N o. 6 f Ariìona State University © Copyright, State Press, 1983 Financial Aids Office, ASASU to address student aid issues state press ™ By Mike Humphreys Staff w riter Two joint Associated Students-Financial Aids Office sem inars will be held next month to help students with problems regar­ ding financial aid. ASU students were asked a t the end of last sem ester to give information to ASASU con­ cerning the m ajor topics and questions they needed help with. ASASU recorded the responses and used them to help plan the sem inars. The first sem inar will be specifically for the 54 people who responded to the request for information. These students were m ail­ ed information concerning the sem inar. The second sem inar will be presented to all interested students. According to ASASU Campus Affairs Vice President Wanda Jones, most responses mentioned a need for information concern­ ing topics such as the tim etable to receive financial aids, who is eligible to receive help, scholarships and grants and other, general information. . Paul B arberini, financial aid director, and other members of the Financial Aid Office will speak a t the sem inars. The specific topics covered a t the first sem inar will be those the respondents requested informa­ tion on. ; Jones said there will be opportunities for Tem pe, Arizona ______ those in attendance to ask further questions of the financial aids workers. Although the second sem inar is for general information, the structure and topics will be based on the information received from the students who responded to the questionnaire. “Students, unfortunately, have a real negative image of financial aids and of the financial aids office,” said Jones “This is a joint effort to work with and to serve the students.” The sem inars are intended to open up communication between the Financial Aid Office and the students, according to Barberini. “We need input from the students so we can know which areas are troublesome,” he said. There will be two sim ilar sessions for the first sem inar, one a t 2 p.m., Feb.7 and another a t 7 p.m ., Feb. 8, because all the respondents are not able to attend a t the sam e time. H ie open forum fra* all interested will be held at 7 p.m. on Feb 15. The timing of the sem inar is im portant because the Financial Aid Office wants to stim ulate students to complete and m ail their applications early, according to Barberini. Both sem inars are free. Teacher encounters 'cat nip' inclass Beautyandfie beasts A S U students h u d d le a ro u n d fo r a c h a n ce to meet D e b b ie Zullo, Penthouse M agazine’s 1980 Pet of the Year, W ed n esd a y. Z u llo w as o n C a d y M a ll handing out autographed pictures of herself. T h e visit w as sp on sored b y D e lta Sigm a P h i Fraternity. By JanineW arell Staff w riter An ASU College of Nursing instructor was bitten by a “wild cat” Tuesday a t 12:45 p.m. when she attem pted to remove the anim al from her classroom, according to Univer­ sity Police Sgt. William Taylor. Beatrice Kastenbaum was treated a t the Student Health 'Center for bites and scrat­ ches to her right arm , Taylor said. According to Taylor, the anim al was in Room 207 in the Nursing Budding and Kastenbaum tried to remove it in order to continue instructing her So-member class. University Humane Officer Bill Herren, who is in charge of anim al control on cam ­ pus, captured the cat, which was then taken to the M aricopa County Rabies and Animal Control Center, Taylor said. He said the .cat will be kept a t the center for a 10-day observation period in order to determ ine if it has rabies. “We do have a number of wild cats on cam pus,” Taylor said. “And human bei igs shouldn’t handle them .” Although the University Police report 1 sts the anim al as a “wild cat”, Kastenbaum has other feelings toward the animal. “The cat was in our classroom and, in ac­ tuality, 1 would not have been bitten f I hadn’t been a really ‘good do-bee’ and tried to get him out,” she said. Kastenbaum, who has four cats of her own, said the anim al was “a beaut ful adolescent black-and-grey-striped tiger ca t.” Kastenbaum added that if she didn’t already have four cats she might have con­ sidered adopting the anim al from the center. Teachers union pursues equal merit pay suit By Michael Jam es Consol Staff w riter The president of the Arizona Federation of Teachers, Local 2050, has re-requested a court date for an equal m erit pay suit it is filing against the Board of Regents because the regents have “failed to bargain iii good faith.” The AFT originally filed the suit in January 1982, in M aricopa County Superior Court because some departm ents a t ASU were being given a higher percentage of the available m erit money than other departm ents. The m erit money was given to professors who, in the judge­ m ent of the adm inistration, had done m eritorious work dur­ ing the past year. The suit was taken off the active court calendar in August because the AFT was under the im pression that the regents would bargain with the AFT and try to resolve the issue out of court. Louis C. “Chris” Smith, assistant professor of history at ASU and president of Local 2050, said the AFT was expecting some policy decisions from the Regents that it never re­ ceived. “We understood that we would receive substantial information concerning the kinds of policies th at we were develop­ ing,” Smith said. “We were also prepared to submit to a Board of Regents’ staff or committee all sorts of information, tiu t we weren’t requested to do so. “There is not substantial progress being m ade,’ he saia. “We fe d they w ere sim ply delaying the inevitable legal con­ frontation.” OT o d a y Ü 1 C Hospitalized studént receives diplom a all f a i r - m i n d e d people should desire,” Smith said. The Board of Regents Legal Counsel, Stephen K. Smith, said he does not think the AFT’s suit is justified, and added, “I really don’t feel I’m a t liberty to discuss the suit.” However, Robert A. Huff, Board of Regents executive director, said equal distribution of m erit money to each departm ent is abandoning the concept of m ent. ^ “By its very nature, m erit is going to be distributed m disproportionate am ounts,” Huff said. “You’re not goin£ to take m erit money and give everyone exactly the sam e amount, then it’s no longer m e rit” But Local 2050’s attorney, David Curtis, sees it a different way. “The discrepancies in m erit are not based upon the in­ dividual considerations or the aggregate considerations of all of the individuals within the departm ent,” Curtis said. “The amount of money available to any particular departm ent is based mi criteria having nothing to do with the individual's activity. “So in essence what w e're saying is that individuals within the University do not have an equal right to participate in availble m erit money. “ If you happen to be in a departm ent that is blessed with a substantial amount of (m erit) money, you may be no more, m eritorious than a professor of a different departm ent, 'H it you may receive m ore money because your departm ent lias m ore to give.” Huff, however, said certain departm ents receive a higher percentage of the available m erit money because some departm ents have done m ore m eritorious work than others. “I think we understand that there are some people who are always going to be disgruntled,” Huff said. “But we would always expect that some people are going to get considerable m erit and other people are going to get very little if any.” Concerning the other'tw o aspects of the suit, Huff said a m erit distribution policy and a policy for the appeal of grievances is being left up to each university. ASU sponsors program for handicapped pre-schoolers Grappier’s return a su cce ss Page 13 Page 15 Smith said the AFT is requesting: • An equitable distribution 'o f m erit money to each in­ dividual departm ent or college within the University, • a set of guidelines distributed to all employees spelling out what the adm inistrators believe constitute meritorious service. • A fair, impartial and independant grievance appeals proCfidtlF®* “We feel that these are constitutionally sound issues that "W e feel they were simply delaying the inevitable legal confrontation." State Press Thursday, January 90,1983 nation/world press C h in a retaliates ag a in st U .S . textile cu rb s S e n a te p a sse s bill e a sin g a u to in su ran ce PEKING (AP) — China retaliated Wednesday against new U.S. im port restrictions cm Chinese textiles by barring any new contracts to buy American cotton, chemical fibers and soybeans. The U.S. Embassy refused comment cm the Chinese action, which is expected to complicate Secretary of State George P. Shultz’s talks with officials in Peking beginning Feb. 2. Shultz faced Chinese complaints over the Reagan ad­ m inistration's arm s sales to Taiwan, slowness in providing U.S. technology to China and acceptance of political defec­ tors from China. PHOENIX (AP) — The Arizona Senate passed and sent to the House Wednesday an emergency bill to eliminate the notarized statem ent required of m otorists under the man­ datory auto insurance law. The vote was 28-0. Under the bill, a m otorist could sign an unsworn statem ent that he has the required $40,000 in liability coverage. The penalty for a false statem ent, a felony carrying a 4-year prison term under the law, was reduced to a misdemeanor with a penalty of four months in jail and a $750 fine. S t o c k m a rk e t c o n tin u e s to drop NEW YORK (AP) — Stock prices took a sharp drop Wednesday extending the decline that set in Tuesday. Analysts said a rise in open-market interest rates helped touch off the selling. P H O E N IX ( A P ) —The state Supreme Court has agreed to The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, off 5.16 Tuesday, consider whether a trial court judge can forbid the use of fell 18.67 to 1,060.98 by 3 p.m. courtroom sketches on television news program s. Some of the m arkets’ récent strength has been attributed The sketches issue involves an order by a Maricopa County to speculation that the Federal Reserve would soon cut the Superior Court judge, Cecil B. Patterson, during the recent discount rate, which now stands a t 8Vi percent. But no reduc­ m urder trial of William Bracy and M urray Hooper, both of tion has been made to date. whom were convicted. ' Patterson ordered artists for television stations to subm it O ffic e rs d iscip lin e d after drawings of the jury to him for approval before they could be hiring to p le s s d a n ce r aired. Attorneys, for Phoenix television stations then asked the WASHINGTON (AP) — The Air Force has disciplined Supreme Court to halt the trial until the m atter was resolved. several officers for hiring a topless dancer to perform at a The justices refused but agreed to a hearing Tuesday after pre-Christm as party in the Pentagon, à spokesman said to­ which they decided to address the issue, even though the trial day. is over. Capt. John W hitaker, the spokesman, said “appropriate The Supreme Court’s Dec. 23,1981, order setting up a two- action” had been taken against thé officers, but he declined year test of televised trials banned the use of pictures of the to go into detail because of what he said were strictures jury. under the federal Privacy Act. The officers, including fighter pilots now on staff duty, drew the ire of the Air Force brass because the action Indian leaders assail W a tt violated Air Force policy barring “practices that are not in good taste and that are offensive to the Air Force,” Whitaker fo r 'S o c ia lis m ' rem arks said. WASHINGTON (AP) - American Indian leaders assailed Interior Secretary Jam es W att on Wednesday for comparing T h re e y o u th s sh o o t at their reservations to enclaves of “terrible socialism .” Some Israeli a m b a ss a d o r's residence called for his resignation and one accused him of “bringing new meaning to the word red-baiting.” MEXICO CITY (AP) — Three youths in an automobile In the White House, presidential counselor Edwin Meese fired an air rifle a t the Israeli am bassador’s residence here III said the Indians had m isinterpreted W att’s concern for and were chased away by arm ed guards, a police spokesman thejr well-being, but in Congress Rep. Bill Richardson, D- said Wednesday. N.M., said W att “must have picked up some of his Indian “Apparently, the youths were inebriated,” Federal policy from General Custer. ” D istrict Police spokesman Jose Sanchez said in a telephone The furor stemmed from W att’s comment on a television interview. He said no one was hurt in the incident Tuesday program called “Conservative Counterpoint” on the Satellite evening and that police had opened an investigation. Program Network: “If you want an example of the failures Ambassador Israel Gur-Âryeh was not inside the residence of socialism , don’t go to Russia. Come to America and see the a t the tim e of the 9 p.m. attack, Israeli Embassy spokesman Indian reservations. ” David Dadon said. He said police fired on the three intruders as they fled but he did not know if any were injured. S u p re m e C o u rt to c o n s id e r ban nin g c o u rtro o m s k e tc h e s L e ag u e o f W o m e n V o te rs o ffic ia lly su p p o rt a b o rtio n s WASHINGTON (AP) - The national League of Women Voters, after years of avoiding a stance on the issue, an­ nounced Wednesday it officially supports American women’s right to have an abortion. “The League of Women Voters believes that public policy in a pluralistic society m ust affirm the constitutional right of the individual to make reproductive choices,” a league state­ m ent said. League president Dorothy S. Ridings said the league is not endorsing abortion itself. “This is not a statem ent th at im­ plies m oral approval or disapproval of the procedure of abor­ tion,” she said in an interview. Instead, she said, the league believes that the government should leave the question of abortion and other m atters deal­ ing with reproduction to the conscience of each person. ! l. : if interested come by the DISABLED STUDENT SERVICES OFFICE STUDENT HEALTH SERVICE ROOM 177 A PLACE TO B E LO N G T h e Panhellenic C o u n cil of A riz o n a S t a t e U n iv e r s ity w e lco m e s you t o A S U , and e x te n d s an invitation, to you t o p a r tic ip a t e in S p rin g R u s h beginning Ja n u a ry 2 1 , 1 9 8 3 . FOR FURTHER IN FO RM ATIO N STOP BY OUR BOOTH ON C A D Y M A LL OR CALL 965-6547. Validons C o n t in e n t s , 4 w Ice Cream Without The Guilt N The list will be used for referral to paid positions. WASHINGTON (AP) — Six former Cabinet members — Democrats and Republicans — today called the looming federal budget deficits “grotesque” and urged President Reagan to sharply slash federal spending over the next two years. The group, including fram er Commerce Secretary P eter Peterson, who organized the appeal, and five former Treasury secretaries, said it was prompted by the “un­ precedented, unending and growing deficits.” Peterson said the coalition was not “pointing fingers or assigning blam e” and told reporters that the current budget crisis has “deep roots in every adm inistration and Congress which has served over the last 20 years or more. ” <0(vc | is compiling a list o f persons interested in working as personal attendants fo r disabled students. F o rm e r C a b in e t m em b e rs c ritic iz e b u d g e t d e ficits R r EsTT c HOMPIE?“ ™ NEWYORKBAGELS‘ I DISABLED STUD EN T SERVICES OFFICE 65< Bagels sm othered w ith Cream Cheese This coupon good 1-20-83 to 1-27-83. C o r n e r of Le m on & Terrace, Tem pe • 9 6 8 -9 5 1 2 H o u rs: 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. And anywhere else in the world that Dowell Schlumberger is on the job. Dowell Schlumberger (Dow-well Schilum-bur-jay) needs top notch students who want to be trained in the exciting profession (of Field Service Engineer. In this demanding, hands-on” job, you’ll take charge of vital oilw eil service opera” 0[)8 ar*d act as an on-site consultant to other professionals — utilizing the world's best training, equipm ent and management resources. 9 y r engineers live and work in more than 50 countries, providing vital cementing, stim ulation and d rill stem testing services to the petroleum industry .. . doing a job that offers more challenge, responsibility and rewards than almost any other. You can learn more about the international opportunities we have for bright, aggressive engineers. This could be your passport to a world o f opportunity with Dow ell Schlumberger! State Press Page 3 Thursday, January 20,1983 Alumni Telefund Drive gains momentum, passes 1982 total By Sandy Sistek Staff w riter The third annual ASU Telefund Drive has exceeded last year’s total effort, raising $43,000 in Hie first 10 weeks of operation, according to the director of the program. “So far, they’re doing a fantastic job,” Jam es Braun said. “They’ve (students) already raised $43,000, compared to $33,000 at this tim e last year. ” Braun said the ASU Telefund Drive is a program in which students call alumni across the country in search of dona­ tions for ASU. “We’ve got momentum going, now we must maintain it,” Braun said. “The University needs the involvement and in­ vestment of all of its friends and alumni if it is to grow and ef­ fectively respond to Arizona’s needs.” The drive is part of the annual alumni fund-raising cam­ paign designed to raise money for scholarships and other ASU programs. The Telefund began Nov. 5, with 12 students contacting about 80,000 alumni, and will continue until May. Braun said the projected goal of the drive is $100,000 and added that he expects to meet that goal. “On the average, we usually get $50 to $100 from an alum ­ nus,” he said. Braun said ASU’s annual fund drive, underway since Dec. 1, should raise about $250,000. “If so, it will surpass last year’s drive by $100,000,” he said. “Although we’re pleased with progress to date, we still have a long way to go.” Braun , said mail collections received are averaging between $2,000 and $3,000 daily. He said one student, collecting nearly $1,000 in donations per night, could single-handedly raise $50,000 before the drive is over. Braun said the donors may designate their gift to various areas on campus. “The most valuable #nioney the University can get is unrestricted money, which will go into a general University account,” he said. “The money can be dispersed through the University adm inistration, who better understands where the greatest needs are.” The donors can also designate use of their money, giving it to a particular scholarship account, mem orial account, lec­ ture series or college. Braun said 18 percent of the alumni across the nation donate money to a university, a e added that last year, 13 per­ cent of ASU alumni donated money. “We’re pleased the University has so many graduates, many of whom are so young,” he said. “Who better to give to the University than the alumni? ” Computer-age students find relaxation in traditional leisure By Emily. Smith Staff w riter Although the world has entered a computer and electronic era, students are returning to more traditional activities such as quilting, ballroom dancing and calligraphy, the MU leisure learning-coordinator said Wednesday. Rosalyn Munk said there is an increasing demand for classes in the above pastim es than there ever was. “People are into getting m arried again,” she said. “They want calligraphy for their invitations and ballroom dancing for their wedding reception. .We are definitely going back to more traditional things. ” This sem ester’s leisure learning classes are scheduled evenings Monday* through Thursday as well as Saturday mornings. Munk said classes will start the week of January 29. “Leisure learning classes are an opportunity to learn a new skill in a relaxing atm osphere,” she said. “There is no homework or exams, and it serves as a break from the schoolwork for some students.” Other leisure learning classes that are in demand a t the University are sports-related activities such as aerobics and backpacking. “This is a sports-oriented campus. The clim ate here lends itself to this,” Munk said. “ASU is not as craft oriented as areas which haveJong, hard winter». This area is unique in that you can swimfand ski in the sam e day.” Spring sports classes being offered are backpacking and hiking, cross-country skiing and effective cycling. “Effective cycling will not only enable you to enjoy bicy­ cling as a hobby, but to commute to and from school and work safely,” she said. Two new classes have also been added to this sem ester’s leisure learning agenda, Munk said. . The two new classes, “colorize yourself’ and “your per­ sonal image, ’’are geared toward helping students coordinate their wardrobe, she said. “These two classes will enable you to get the most out of your wardrobe dollars,” she said. “They will teach you to coordinate your wardrobe for that crucial job interview, and to do so with economic reality. ” LOOK FOR I b in t Your C am pus M agazin e Point will be distributed January 20 Pick it up at Point boxes and key distribution spots on campus. EVERY TUESDAY WIN COLLEGECASH! (A n y o n e 19yrs. o r o ld e r e lig ib le to com pete.) A dm issio n S21 SI w ith C o lle g e ID) Includes: D R A F T B E E R 6-9 WEDNESDAYS WIN A CARfrom TIME AUTO Ja n . 26 FEB. 2 - Best Costum es WIIM: Fifties R ock - W IN A TH U N D ER BIR D M a rd i Gras B a l l - W I N A FIREBIRD $1 w ell d rin k s a ll n ig h t C O M IN G W EDNESDAY, FEB. 9 THEMEMBERS Live In Concert $4.00 in advan ce $6.00 d a y o f sh o w Tickets a vailab le at a ll D iam on d s outlets & G rah am FREE A D M ISSIO N with this ad G o o d o n W ednesdays o n ly — (expires Feb. 3) 33rd A v e . & Indian ScFfool — 279-38 Opl State Press Those who fail to see are simply refusing to look Jay Heiler Editor On Dec. 31, 1978, syndicated columnist George F. Will wrote: “If the nation faces a protracted debate about nuclear weapons, then 1979 m ay be an educational experience. It m ay be the year when, at long last, people think hard about the-technology and mora­ lity on which their sfeQirity, such as it is, re sts,” '*■ As usual, Mr. Will was a good deal ahead of m ost of the rest of us. In reality, it was not until 1982 th at the nation found itself writhing in the intellectual, «notional and spiritual quagm ire spawned by the threat of a nuclear confrontation. Suddenly, the dominant elem ent'of every new scast was the “Peace Movement,” an initiative which, in the minds of many, moved us not toward peace a t all. Those of us harboring disdain for the “P eace Movement” were not bashful in m aking our feelings known. The obvious criticism s were made, and the controversy cam e to a boil. Leaders of die “Peace Movement” bris­ tled over charges th at they were patsies of the Soviet Union, duped into pressuring the Reagan Administration to freeze nuclear production. But the “peaceniks,” as some con­ servatives cam e to label the anti-nuclear ac­ tivists, were to have their day. On the first Tuesday in November, right states and a much larg er num ber of sm aller m unicipalities voted in favor of issuing the President orders for a nuclear freeze. The “Peace Movement” and its soldiers had won a hard-fought victory. But the celebration didn’t last. President Reagan m ade short shrift of the “peace” resolutions, diplomatically acknowledging them as a collective symbol of anxiety on the part of the American public. He flatly stated, however, th at American defense policy would in no way be altered by the the “peace” votes. Those of us in opposition to the “Peace Movement” breathed a momentary sigh of relief and waited to see what would come n ex t H ie Russians did not let us get fa r info 1983 before letting us know. E arly this week, Soviet Foreign M inister Andrei Gromyko spoke a t a banquet in his honor in Bonn, West Germany. The very fact that the West Germans were holding a banquet in honor of a Communist leaves one to uncomfortably wonder about the spirit of the day. Showing scant gratitude for his banquet, Gromyko threatened the West Germans "Gromyko, like his brethren in the Kremlin, is a trained hunter. He knows vulnerable prey when he sees it/ with a “years-long nuclear confrontation w ith all the consequences” unless NATO and the Reagan Administration scrap plans to deploy 572 medium-range missiles in W estern Europe. Europe has its own “Peace Movement,” and Gromyko was making an obvious at­ tempt to spur it into m ore flare-ups over the planned medium-range m issle deployment. Gromyko, like his brethren in the Kremlin, is a trained hunter. He knows vulnerable prey when he sees it. Many Europeans, and likewise millions of A m ericans, have tak en to telling themselves comforting lies about the Soviet Union. Perhaps they have ju st grown tired of hating despotism and fearing tyranny. Perhaps they have forgotten the origins and the history of Bolshevism. Perhaps they have become numb to the glaring atrocities of modern Communist imposition. Perhaps they are stupid. Alexander Solzhenitsyn finished writing “The Gulag Archipelago” in 1967. Since that time there has existed little reason for even the most foolish among us to question whether the Soviet system is good or evil. As Will wrote: “H ie alarm ing and sorrowful fact is not that evidence for the correct view is scanty, but that such evidence must be produced so constantly, in such abundance, with such genius and a t such'terrible cost to convince the West, which is eager to disbelieve.” The cost of such skepticism will be truly immeasurable. STATE PRESS JA Y HEILER Editor V v r KATE HATHAWAY Managing Editor C ity Editor TOM BICKFORD A sa t City Editor CHRIS COPPOLA New s Editor JOMARIE LEONE Entertainment Editor MIKE PHILLIPS Photo Editor IMKERYNEARSON Copy Chief DON SUITES Opinion Page Editor TRACY FLETCHER Thé Stale Press is published Tuesday through Friday during the academic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287. Newsroom: 965-2292. Advertis­ ing & Production: 965-7572. The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and cir­ culated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, sta ff or student body. LETTER POLICY The State P ress encourages letters on any topic. To ensure the best chance for timely publication, let­ ters should be typed, double spaced, with m argins set on 60 characters per hue. Include your full name, class standing, m ajor and „ phone number. If for some reason a letter m ust be published anonymously, state why and your request will be honored. Letters are subject to rejection or style revision a t the discretion of tiie opinion page editor. Address letters to: Letters, State Press, Matthews Center, ASU, Tempe, AZ 85287. 'Cum granos salis' nauseates reader E ditor: This letter is in reference to som e la tin-titled article by Ja n Austin: There is nothing more grating than some freshman journalist who, with an en­ cyclopedic edition of Roget’s in hand, is assigned to a twob it article of the campus variety. T h is article was a crim inal w aste of paper, the entire tb ii« could have been con­ densed into the space of the pictorial, and should have been. This makes even the m ost verbose cringe. I think the key word of the article w as noxious, and to put it delicately, it made me reach for the little blue bag that I had lifted from the seat pouch of a DC-10. My roommate was tiie one that brought this piece of trash to my attention; I will not even pick up this rag because tins is the kind of crap that one comes to ex­ pect. What a way to sta rt tiie new year. For Christ’s sake Jan , if you are going to w rite, write. But don’t, I re p e a t, d o n ’t s u b je c t everyone to this kind o f---------- again. David Fredericks»» Microbiology Nuclear'spider of death' is weaving the final web Editor: The United States Defense Departm ent indicated on January IB that they m ay have to use the doomsday devices that have been, and continue to be, proliferated throughout the world. Upon light reflection it is evident that tiie exchange of nuclear weapons between (he U.S. and U.S.S.R. would pre­ sent tiie world with the w orst, if not the last tragedy; an ex­ change that could m aim o r kill you and your families, as well as render the earth lifeless. Unfortunately, however, such an exchange is being plan­ ned betend the cold, solid walls of the departm ent of war (defense). This can be seen reflected in the attitudes of the political elite who run our country. President Reagan, for ex­ am ple, has .projected his neurotic tendencies by stating his belief m tiw simple-minded concept, unappropriatly labeled, “the lim ited nuclear w ar.” Does our president actually think that after the insane launching of im riaar m issiles by each side that we can then stop a t that point and reach agreem ent, like nice people, and thus institute a nuclear cease fire? In researching intellectual opinions one can find a common agreem ent among concerned scientists, which is the idea that in exchange of nuclear weapons between two or more na­ tions we can expect both sides to launch the sum total of their nuclear arsenals. This is because each defending side holds the philosophy of what weapons they don’t use they would evenually lose by the incoming m issiles from the aggressor. It is time that we realize the implications of the current race towards extinction. The arm s race was pushed by Truman, advocated by Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon, and now Reagan followed by Carter plans to possibly use these devices of destruction. We all have an obligation to our Byes to awaken our con­ science and realize that in the dark corners of the hearts of the past and present political leaders th at the spider of death, has been and is, weaving the web of the end. To remain passive to the unfolding tragedy is to rem ain p ari pf the pro­ blem. Steve DeCosse Junior, Political Science S ta te P re s s Page 5 Thursday, January 20,1983 SU RPLU S Sale ends 1-31-83. U Sale Leotards Leg Warmers DEE CEE BIB Corduroy Reg. $23.99 NOW»15.88 $1 OFF ANY SWEATPANT OR SWEATSHIRT ALL WOOL C L O T H IN G 20% to 60% OFF 1220% OFF Starting at pants (Blue a Green) $9.99 Su" *7.99 8 .0 0 Men's Hanes Underwear I 15% OFF •Camping •New & Used Clothing •Genuine G.l. Surplus •Mash Bash Headquarters J f a t ig u e 1* S A L E Hawaiian shorts Flannel shirts s jp p l u s 4PÒCKÈT is * M>% 894-9137 M-F 9-8 Sat. 9-6 Sun. 10-5 1 33 2 E. A p a c h e MC/VISA (A. J. S a We s s Center) “OHE OF THE YEAR’S BEST” — R o g er E b e rt, At T h e M ovies — (ie n e Sisk el, A t T h e M ovies — K evin T h o m a s. L o s A ng eles Tim es — A ndrew Sarris, Village Voice “BEST DIRECTOR OF THE Y E A R CMcagoTrioune Exclusive! [XTim By RM N ER W ERNER F A S S 8 M 0 E R g r a STARTSÌ f f i * * ;M m m à o m w p E i E Artists’ Supply Center í M l O P O FART V I V b 0 B t r r r A L W .V fe P « d 6 o p I Architectural RtEngineering \ Commercial ’a r t s u p p u e s • S e t Y our Own Headlines on the Kroy Lettering Machine • Mecanorma G o v s : • A rtis t Books • Expanded Selection of Sheet Papers for A rtists, Architects & Engineers Type 26 E. UNIVERSITY MM 967-3681 J u s t a cro ss U niversity Iron» tl»s A rchitecture Building! % M o c k e e e l o l M ill o n University eat ^ (O ne pizza per person) A iX ritö ., u è PA Y TtiaaiLL / T ra to 8A, otuiM bRoem onLy & B v m ¡ / x > Í Á TTDMIGtHTIMTWe BAI Wñ l w CMAHPAOtME. ôAûîUtiÿs^cewM^sl W tMCwAOtcsoUKy} E O U V jE lL WHV OOWE? W S» ouvy AVlAUOMMU// 5 . M U L #t c H P E S ^ 5 3 ? 7 ( A c t o n f t o M H & t M iU ) SW C PltM Thursday, January 20, 1983 Page 6 • • I I N ative A m erican s, fem in ists an g ry o ver lew d vid eo gam e By the College P ress Service A few nights before holiday break, about 100 students filed into an auditorium a t the University of Washington to wait for S tuart Keston. Keaton was due to call the auditorium from California to talk about his latest invention — a video game called “C uster’s Revenge.” In the gam e, the player becomes Gen. George Armstrong C uster, who m ust dodge cacti and arrows to reach an Am erican Indian woman seemingly bound to a pole. When he reaches her, he scores by having intercourse with her. She sm iles and kicks up her heels. The game has provoked angry protests and threats of boycotts from scores of groups, as well as from Washington, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Minnesota and other universities. Soon after the “Custer’s Revenge” controversy began, som e students succeeded in getting a video game called “Jungle King” kicked off of New Orleans’ Loyola campus. “ We have no problem with private individuals or organiza­ tions promoting a boycott, but the government (through state scitools) has no business telling people what to believe, say or prom ote,” said Kathleen Taylor, head of Washington’s state Am erican Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). T he ACLU threatened to sue a Seattle city agency that was going to organize a boycott of “Custer’s Revenge.” “ I agree th at it’s a sickening gam e,” Taylor added. “But the government should not restrain free trade.” On die other hand, the gam e “promotes the idea that rape is funny, easy and entertaining,” complained Donna Stringer-M oore, director of the Seattle Office for Women’s Rights. “It portrays rape as an erotic act, which any rape victim can tell you is a lie.” *“Custer’s Revenge’ seems to say that rape is a game, ” ad­ ded Charlean Raymond of the Albuquerque Indian Health B oard, which form ally issued a complaint against the game in December. * As in Seattle, the protest was supported by a coalition of groups ranging from the National Association for the Ad­ vancem ent of Colored People (NAACP) to the University of New Mexico’s Chicano Studies Department. “ I ’m tired of accepting these images that come out,” said Beverly Mathews, director of Native American Student Ser­ vices a t New Mexico. “It’s simple to let silly things like this go by. but it has to cease a t some point. ” Mathews, an American Indian herself, said further pro­ tests — including a proposed boycott — will come from cam­ pus. “The Indian community is upset, but they think it’s a stupid, passing thing. They lead a sim pler life .than those of us a t the university, who say ‘That’s enough. ’” Sim ilarly, the University of Oklahoma’s American Indian Student Association (AISA) is organizing a statewide boycott. BUVONE GET ONE ll& R I • • • • • M • • R E C O W D li COLLECTIBLES • • • • • ! Hard to Find •Rare • Used •Out of Print Personalities • Jazz •Hock • Country • Classical • fJJk+ rin/rifrH g f lu “Women are angry,” explained AISA President Ron Goombi, “and it’s not only offensive to Indian women, but to • Buy • Sell •Trade women in general. ” • 10315 H. Scottsdale Rd. (W indm ill Plaza) Scottsdale, AZ85253 Few adm it liking the game a t all. “It’s a piece of trash,” {602) 948-3263 said Tim Houser, the publisher of Video Advisor, a Seattle- • based m o n t h l y that tracks content and sales of the games for retail outlets. Atari is angry as well, having sued Keston and his com­ pany in Los Angeles Superior Court'. “The Atari name is on their cartridge because they are us­ ing comparable cartridges,” an Atari legal spokeswoman said. “We don’t want to be associated with pornographic •Sleeping Bags videogam es.” -, Entrepreneur Keston thinks it is all a misunderstanding. •Packs “Most people have never seen the video gam e,” he told Col­ •Dehydrated Food lege Press Service. “There is no rape scene, and the Indian girl is not tied up in the game. We ju st took artistic license on •Hiking Gear the cover.” Keston, a 41-year-old native of Astoria, N. Y., who used to m arket cosmetics and whose company —?which employs 24 m OFF WITH AD and also produces games called “Bachelor P arty ” and “B eat. ’Em and Elat ’Em ” — has already sold 150,000 copies of ON ALL BACK PACKS “Custer’s Revenge,” does draw the line when it comes to’sell­ Offer expires Jan. 27,1983. ing the game. * He says a lawyer wanted to buy 100 copies of the game to SO SA SQ U AR E sell at a rifle association convention. He declined to name which association. “The lawyer told me they would sell like hotcakes because this group ‘doesn’t like Indians,” ’ Keston recalled. “He of­ fended me, and I did not sell the games to him. ” “There are,” be said, “a lot of side people out there.” Games sales analyst Houser does not “Blink it would have sold a t all if not for the free publicity.” “I th in k (Keston) is side,” summarized Jo Ann Kauffman, head of the Seattle In d ia n Health Board and a member of the panel that gathered to discuss the game over the telephone with Keston in Washington. The one person who was not there, in person or by phone, was Keston. “He was scared,” Houser said. Keston said he did not call the meeting as promised because he was “unavailable that evening.” It was just as well. Houser, the lone m ale mi the panel, reported catching “a lot of fide” and hearing much “ name­ calling” from audience members as the discussion went on without Keston. It has been rougher elsewhere. The Colorado chapter of the National Organization of Women has pledged to picket any store selling the game. Suffolk County in New York is con­ sidering banning the gam e altogether. Keston has sued the county, and said he will “sue any jurisdiction that tries to ban' ‘Custer’s Revenge.’” THE PACK RAT 1032 S. Terrace, Tempe OPEN 9-8 M -F 9-6 Sat. 12-6 S u n . ™EM V iSHOP 9 0 5 S . M ill Tempe Center 8 2 9 -1 7 4 3 l [\ A R IZ O N A STATE Glasses case Reg. $4.55 SA LE $2.99 to— A R IZ O N A _ ■ STATE Makeup Bag Reg. $7.95 SALE $5.99 jA R IZ O N A i STATE Wallet Reg! $6.50 SALE $4.99 Here's your ch an ce to treat a M end to something special. Just buy your favorite Sundae an d v re 'l g ive you another one free (same size, cf course). Rich, thick hot fudge. Smooth, buttery caram el. Juicy-red strawberry. They're cNI on sale. So treat a friend to a Sundae. A t your p articip alin g DAIRY QUEEN* store. Good only at 950 S. Mill across from G ammage Expires 1-28-83. BASKETBALL POSTER to win 2 Arizona Wrangler seasòn tickets. S ta te P rm Thursday, January 20,1983 ■ f I s a s .l •% Ii l l I '± 1 DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORE WE STAND BEHIND OUR NAME” SPARK PLUGS P E N N Z O IL M otorO il 30W 40W êADEUYIAN'S EDGE oil 0 S .A .E . 3 0 ICHAMPIONI FOR IMPROVED PERFORMANCE <1U.S. QUART) T« Compare at 0 ) 9 HTS MOST CARS PRESTONE ITS SCIENCE BUTITWORKSUKEMAGg.- PRIME ANTI-FREEZE BRAKE FLUID 4PK Resistor 5.99 <6.99 < 6 PK Resistor PERNIO!) PRESTONE < 6 PK Regular Qt. size Mo t o r 3.99 <4.99 4PK Regular ïADELMAN'S EDGE ? the Jtnty/t ADEUMAlirS EDGE VINYL TOP . PROTECTANT I an Ffff Prima 1SUMMERca hADELMANS edge 8 PK $7 00 Regular f 8PK Resistor 8.99 > BLUE POLY WAX Liquid or Paste $ BLUt poiv ¿u sas O d. lADELMAN'S EDGE b o z ’ 1 .6 9 *2.89 99* Compare at 2.49 *3.49 16oz. Compare at 5.99 Compare at 3.79 Compare at 1.79 116 TON JACK STAND lADELMAN'S EDGE lADELMAN'S EDGE 2 TON BOTTLE JACK W e s tin g h o u s e SEAL BEAMS SUPERIORSPORT GRIP STEERING WHEEL COVER ~~s~ l-'!llllllliilna!!llm lA oaauirs edge 3.49 < Compare at 6.9 9 fADBJMirS EDGE lAOBJMirS EDGE « a tta r « a tta r ta i« n —a 7.79 * *1.99 Compare at 10.99 *3.99 * Alpha Beta Shopping Center (Broadway & McClintock) I *2.99 Compere at 6.9 9 A D E LM A N 'S EXTRA EDGE STP GAS TREATMENT 8 o z. ïADELMAN'S EDGE m ar t i l t raonaa»«« 1723 E BROADWAY, TEMPE __________ 967-5111 Daily 9 -9 Sat. 9-6 Sun. 10-6 lADELMAN'S edge Compare at 1.29 Expires 1-25-83 State I Business major, paralyzed in accident, nets diploma and looks to future By Mead Summer Staff w riter The records will list his name as just one of the many graduates of Arizona State University, but for Daryl Tillman,the buajness degree he received Wednesday afternoon represents much more than simply the culmination of his five years of study. Tillman finished the required studies for a business degree during the summer, but m issed the August graduation ceremonies due to the death of a close friend. Wednesday, Dean L. William Seidman of the College of Business Administration presented Tillm an his diploma a t a special ceremony a t the Good Sam aritan Rehabilitation Center, where Tillman has been staying for the past five months. On Aug. 13, exactly one week after Tillman had completed the necessary requirem ents for graduation, the ca r in which he was driving was struck by a car driven by a m an Tillman said was drunk. Today, Tillman is paralyzed from the shoulders down. He won’t tell you that paralysis hasn’t altered his lifestyle, but he said he still has goals to strive for. “It’s hard to make plans when you don’t know w hat’s going to happen,” he said. “It’s hard to m ake plans even when you do know what is going to happen. ” Nevertheless, Tillman has made quite a num ber of ten­ tative plans to keep him self busy when he leaves the rehabilitation center a few weeks from now. “I’d like to open up a jazz radio station,” he said. “If I get to open it, I might go back to school for a communications degree. I’d like to think about law school too.” All of these plans, however, are for the future. Wednesday was a day for celebration. Tillman, dressed in a pinstripe suit and black graduation cap, was joined by Seidman, some friends from ASU and Ins mother, Roberta, who came to Arizona from her home in Michigan to join her son following the accident. As his friends hummed “Pomp and Circum stance,” his form er employer poured the champagne and sliced the cake and his mother looked on proudly, Daryl Tillman received his long-awaited diploma. “Since he’s like he is, I think, it makes the ceremony four tim es as special,” Mrs. Tillman said. “I’d give anything if he could’ve walked across the stage and got the diploma,” she added, “but he got it. A lot of peo­ ple never get one.” The graduate was taking the day’s events in stride. “Why don’t you go accept the. diploma for m e,” he joked with a friend prior to the ceremony. “I want to stay here (in his room) and watch ‘Love Boat.’” The ceremony was organized by Tillman’s former employers, Bob and Sarah Auffret. Tillman worked as an ex­ pediter for Auffret’s company, Leisure Time Publishing. “I feel that everyone deserves a celebration when they graduate,” Mrs. Auffret said. “Daryl worked hard for his degree. I think it means a lot to him .” Seidman, who for the first time presented a diploma to an ASU graduate, said of Tillman, “I think Daryl is a symbol for the spirit he has shown and the great adversity he has been forced to handle.” Tillman agreed that he is a symbol, but in a different way. “If I can make it, anyone can, ” he smiled. C H U Y S j i D aryl T illm a n ♦ ♦ eT he Club Designed By Musicians For Musicians presents JOHN LEE HOOKER jjSi ájyghr. » M I Jan. 24 • 8 & 10:30 shows ! Tickets: $7 advance $8 day of show : Ji | Ticket Outlets: Chuys, 396 S. Mill Ave. \ Zia Records, 420 S. Mill • 1829 Indian School \ Circles, 800 N. Central Ave. • Fashion Square, Scottsdale K Students Free Admission Tues.-Thurs. For more info call 966-4980. Staff photos by Andy Arenz Daryl T illm a n receive* h it D ip lo m a from L. W illiam Seidm an, D ean of the C o lle g e of Business A dm inistration at a sp ecial c erem o n y W ednesday. S A V E $5.00 on any hi top basketball sh o e s a d id a s ^ lliifversittj sporting goods O ffers lim ited to sto c k o n hand. 1038 S. Mill (Across from Gammage) 968-77251 tTempe LET CHAPMAN TAKE YOU BACK TO CAM PUS. W hen you bring your car or truck to Chapm an Chevrolet for service, w e’ll give you a ride back to A SU . You w on ’t have to m iss a class, and your car w on’t m iss out on quality Chapm an service. It’s just one of our special features that make Chapm an Chevrolet a great place to service your car. ÿ ÇHA PUMO Chevrolet-»Isuxu Tempe Baseline & McClintock, 838-1234 The Chapman i G o o d thru 1-31-83. Add it up \ < ) \ ! State Pres» Page 9 Thursday, January 20,1983 Community service stressed by East Valley civic leaders By Michael Jam es Consol Staff w riter While in form ation, they were referred to as a “Tempe ver­ sion of the Phoenix 40,” but the members of the East Valley Partnership take um brage. “What we’re trying to say is that we are not an E ast Valley Phoenix 40,” said Paul Wolfe, publisher of the Tempe Daily News and an E ast Valley Partnership member. “The Phoenix 40 has gotten very political and very involved in things that, personally, I think people should make up their own minds about.” The Phoenix 40 is a group of businessmen, newspaper ex­ ecutives and politicians that has been influential in Valley politics. The E ast Valley Partnership is comprised of individuals with sim ilar career backgrounds from , Tempe, Mesa, Chandler, Apache Junction and Gilbert. Wolfe said one of the main attractions of the E ast Valley P artnership is the group’s non-political nature and added that the scope of the group’s involvement goes far beyond business interests. . “We’re basically an educational group. We’ll meet, hear presentations, ask questions and discuss issues,” Wolfe said. “We And people who m ake decisions involving hundreds of thousands, or even millions, of dollars every day, and sometimes they have blind spots. “There are things th at somebody in another industry could tell me that would am aze m e,” he said. “A very simple thing that could create another 100 jobs. “What we’re talking about is that there are many ways the people in one city can help the people in another city — if they know what’s going on. ” Wolfe said some of the group’s early priorities w ere as diverse as “trying to nudge the Superstition Freeway along” to working for more financial support for E ast Valley arts and cultural activities. “Behind my interest in the group is the idea that this side of the Valley is awfully close to being able to build itself a prac­ tically recession-proof economy,” , Wolfe said. “We don’t need too much more diversity of industry and employment before we can effectively thum b our noses a t the rest of Arizona and the rest of the nation. “We’re proving it now,” he said, adding: “Every tim e unemployment figures are announced, Arizona has a fa r bet­ ter employment picture than the national picture. And every time Arizona figures are announced, the E ast Valley is better than Arizona.” Charles Wahlheim, publisher of the Mesa Tribune, presi­ dent of Cox Arizona Publications and an E ast Valley P artn er­ ship member, said the E ast Valley is a definable and growing market, and one that is going to be “a kind of cutting edge” in the 1980s. Wahlheim said because the E ast Valley has the available land and quality schools that turn out high-technology people, it is an attractive area for business investm ent. Sen. Stan Turley, R-Mesa, the state Senate president, m et with East Valley members during the group’s form ation period and said he thinks the group is a good idea. “I just hope that it can be kept on the proper level,” Turley said. Planetarium show stars Indian legends A terrific total workout using jazz dance movements to swinging music. The total fitness program for everyone. WITH THIS AD 1ST CLASS FREE $2.25 per class ($14 for 8) At the Devilhouse — 430 N. S cottsdale Rd. Every Sat. at 9:30 a.m. C a ll Eva Davis for Info 831-6797 Please bring mat & non-skid shoes. T em pe Afternoon Delight - Coupon good any afternoon till 6 p.m One O FF ANY TW O -G O O D IE 50 * Coupon Per Whip PARAD ICE CREAM W H IP . withthis coupon only The Panther Cream WMp is three stoops o f homemade ice cream and your favorite cookie, candy, or fruit. -----------------------------r ~ r n t p t i m ---------------- ■------ — ATTENTION 2 volunteer Positions Now Available with ASSOCIATED STUDENTS *1983 Elections Coordinator *1983 Homecoming Chairperson -\ i “The People,” a planetarium show dramatizing American Indian legends about the solar system and the constellations, will be shown a t the ASU Planetarium on Tuesday and Thursday nights, Jan. 20 through Feb. 18. Planetarium audiences will be transported through tim eto sit around the cam pfire and look a t the heavens with the in­ nocence and wonder of Indian storytellers from long ago. Legends in the program are from Navajo, LiUocet, Iro- quois, Sioux and other American Indian sources. “Then he said to the anim als, ‘Now each of you take some sparkling rocks — as many as you can carry — and draw a picture of yourself in the sky.” ’ ASU planetarium program s are a t 7 p.m. and 8:30 p.m . and admission is $1 per person. Seating is lim ited and advance reservations are required. Reservations may be m ade by calling “55-6891. f .^ s a , • _ Apply in person a t Associated Students, M.U. 208-J, no later than 5 p.m. January 25,1983. A S S O C IA T E D * S T U D E N T S O F - A R I Z O N A - S T A T E - U N I V E R S I T Y a n n o u n ce s INTRAMURAL BOW LING A T T H E M E M O R IA L U N IO N R E C R E A T I O N C E N T E R W OM EN’S BOWLING M EN’S BOWLING Entry fee: $2 per person $8 per team Divisions: Tourney: Class A & B January 28, 29, 30 February 5 & 6 ENTRIES AVAILABLE AT: INTRAM URAL S P O R T S O F F IC E p.E. W EST BUILDING L O B B Y Entry fee: $2 per person $8 per team Tourney: Starts February 9 Entries taken: Jan. 24-Feb. 3 965-5638 Entries due: TODAYI! Thursday January 20 IN T R A M U R A LS , C L U B S P O R T S A R E C R E A T IO N Miller will provide a souvenir for every participant and awards to winners and runner-ups in each division. teaprogram ol /y s s o c w m a s T t \ t m s i State Press Thursday, January 20,1983 Page 10 (\ F a m ily P la n n in g I n s t it u t e Women’s Health Center FREE P re g n a n c y T e stin g Im m ediate Results P re m a rita l B lo o d te stin g $15.00 Same Day Results Confidential Counseling Pregnancy Termination Caring Professional Staff Established 1976 9100 N. 2nd St. Phoenix • 997-7493 2525 Rural Rd. Suite 4-C* 968-7471 T __ UkJft-Fri 1em pc Mon.-Sat. Lab Hours 9-3 Evening Hours Available Lab Ilnurs * 5 T H E W A R E H O U S E D ELI “G ood Food a n d D r in k " LIVE ENTERTAINMENT — N ig h tly — (No Cover, No Min.) 130 E. UNIVERSITY DR. AT FOREST (In TheArclm) 966-7788 - TEMPE. AZ Y o u r H o s t s : " T h e F a m ily " DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORE WE STAND BEHIND OUR NAME” ASU STUDENTS GET 10% OFF AT ADELMAN’S SHOE DEPT. Even S a le S h o e s W e A lw a y s S a v e Y o u 20% to 50% on fa m o u s m aker sh o e s *19 P osth aste ASU policeman to rideag; By Janine Warell Staff w riter Neither rain, nor snow, nor gloom of night will keep University Police Officer Steve Reynolds from completing his mission on Feb. 3. Reynolds is not after a student who park­ ed illegally, rode a bicycle on Cady Mall or lifted books from Hayden Library. He’s delivering the m ail—on horseback. Reynolds is a member of the Hashknife Gang, which for the past 25 years has been delivering the U.S. Mail once a year from Holbrook to Scottsdale via the Pony Ex­ press. On the first ride in 1959, only one letter was delivered to form er Gov. Paul Fannin a t tlie State Capitol. This year Reynolds, along with 29 other riders, will be carrying m ore thanl5,000 letters. Reynolds, who has been riding the Pony Express for seven years, said letters are received from around the world to be transported from Holbrook to Scottsdale by horseback. “We even get letters from behind the Iron Curtain,” said Reynolds, who was dressed in cowboy boots, a H obs' Cartw right hat and a w estern shirt. When a letter is delivered, it receives a special stam p. This year the insignia reads “The Hashknife Pony Express 25th Anniver­ sary .” These insignias are valued by stam p collectors around the world, Reynolds said. But what m ay be m ore valuable to collec­ tors is the knowledge of how the 30 riders of the Hashknife Gang battled the dem ents to deliver the m ail on time. Each year Reynolds dons his cowboy leathers, saddles up and heads to Holbrook for a three-day m ail run. The riders, who hand off to the next gang m em ber, are stag­ gered at three-m ile intervals from Holbrook to Scottsdale. “The easiest part is probably the ride,” Reynolds said. The hard p art is transferring the m ail from one rid«: to the next—a t a full gallop. “Our motto is, ‘If you drop a m ail sack, there better be a body next to it,’” he said without a glim m er of a sm ile, indicating he takes his job seriously.' One year Reynolds did drop the m ailbag, but he and his horse went down with it. As he was getting back on his horse, two elderly ladies from the E ast Coast, who wore out. w ill buy Show your student I.D. and save an extra 10%. That's the ADELMAN’S EDGE! Also big savings on S E B A G O • C O L E HAAN • DEXTER ST A R T T H E N EW T E A R R IG H T ! Become a Calendar: The 12-month gift! SP E C IA L P R IC E $ 6 .5 0 2 fo r $10 Your photo will be taken (4 poses) and your choice will be printed on a 10x14 1983 B$*W calen­ dar. a unique gift for friends and family. Please phone for advice on dothing choice. Delivery in one week. NOW AVAILABLE: Glamour wardrobe to help create your Va­ lentines glam our calendar for th at “some­ one special!” Calendars also available w ithout ASU im p rin t K-SWISS • C H E R O K E E (Broadway & McClintock) 1723 E. Broadway 967-5111 taking pictures in the desert, inquired as to what he was doing. When he quickly replied th at he was delivering the U.S. m ail, one of the women asked, “Haven’t they heard of those little white jeeps yet?” A fter Reynolds finishes his first threem ile trek, he loads his horse into a truck and drives to his next pick-up point. The tall ASU policeman — turned cowboy for three days — will m ake eight to 10 rides on this year’s m ail delivery. “As Pony Express riders, we’re obligated to pick up the m ail between Holbrook and Scottsdale,” he said. “We have to be there (a t Holbrook, Pine, Payson and Scottsdale) a t a specific time. “It’s a challenge. It’s a race between man and a horse and a dock constantly,” he said. — or — 9 -w e st • P a p p a G a llo E tie n n e A ig n e r • T ro tte rs N a tu ra liz e rs & M o re Daily 9-9, Sat. 9-6, Sun. 10-6 ALPHABETASHOPPINGCENTER H ashknife P o n y Express Riders “post the colo EXPIRES 1-25-83. Limit Rights Reserved 5 2 3 W. UNIVERSITY, TEMPE 9 6 6 -8 3 4 3 as State Press Thursday, January 80,1983 Page 11 D O N T FALL BEHIND Jeagain with Pony Express have first-hand knowledge about making the 200-mile trip, without a conditioned horse, the adventure could turn to disaster. “It takes about 120 days to leg the horse up for the Pony Express,” Reynolds said. And for the rider, it could take “sue years,” Reynolds said laughing. “It’s like being a long distance walker and, all of a sudden, you’re sprinting,” he said. “You get sore, and then you get over it. “You’re never in shape. I’ve never seen a cowboy that said he didn’t get sore,” he said. Reynolds said m ental preparation is also im portant before making the m ail delivery. The butterflies he had before making his first run in 197? will still be with him on his seventh run this year. “It’s like going to the Olympics,” Reynolds said. “As it gets closer and closer, the adrenaline starts flowing.” But when the Hashknife Gang rides into Scottsdale on Feb. 3 a t 10 a.m ., the men will reap their rewards. Like the Pony Express riders who rode in­ to towns 122 years ago, they will be greeted by the people awaiting the U.S. m ail. The Hashknife Gang’s ride into Scottsdale m arks the grand opening of the P arada del Sol Rodeo and celebration. Reynolds said he has dedicated his ride to certain individuals each year. This year he’s dedicating it to the University Police Department. “Chief (Russell) Duncan has really sup­ ported me in this,” be said. For those who wish to have their letters m ailed via the Pony Express, the process is simple. The m ail is carried out to any place in the United States from Scottsdale. Address the envelope as usual and place a 20-cent postage stam p on it. In the lower left corner of the envelope, write “Via Pony .Ex­ press.’” Enclose the letter in another envelope with postage and address it to: Postm aster, Holbrook, AZ 86025. “The biggest thing is th at I think everybody should get their m ail up there now,” the veteran rider said. And as a rider, Reynolds is contracted by the U.S Postal Service to deliver the m ail on time. “The original Pony Express lasted 18 months,” Reynolds bragged, “we’ve lasted 25 years.” ‘ lidcrs "post the colors” at tha N avajo C o u n ty F air ! tO ras ten ttle ee- ind joy jes ted ind ere ile) lan lid. “It’s you and the horse — and it’s a dead run.” But tim e isn’t the toughest enemy for Reynolds to beat. It’s m an’s most unpredic­ table enem y—the elem ents.' One year Reynolds carried the m ail on horseback through rain, sleet and snow, all in the sam e three-m ile run. But he is as determ ined to move the mail as he is to uphold the law on the ASU cam­ pus. “Once you get the m ail, you’re commit­ ted. You’ve got to be able to move that sack,” he said. For Reynolds, “moving the sack” is a family tradition. His father rode with the Hashknife Gang from 1960 until 1960. “I’m kinda like a second-generation Pony Express rid er,” he said. “It’s tradition.” Although the 33-year-old policeman may LSA T Prepare Now For: Classes Starting: April 16^ March 8 April 20 i Feb. 12 j r March June 18 : Jan. 25 April 26 GRE M CAT April 23 June 11 April 9 Oct. 1 Feb. 23 }April 20 Jan. 16 Feb. 12 May 21 June 4 Classes now available for DAT, PSYCH, GRE-BIO, NLE, TOEFL, VAT, MAT, MSKP, OCAT, CPA. CALL TODAY 967-2967 For information about othor cantors in moro than 80 major U.S. c illa s and abroad, CALL TOLL FREE 800-223-1782. 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