\ Parking revenues projectoil at $1.8 million By Mike R yneanan Staff writer Revenue generated from parking citations, permit sales, lot fees and ASU parking meters will bring in a projected $1.8 million during the 1963-84 school year, according to Jim Hogan, assistant director of Univarsity budgets. Hogan said the bulk of the revenues—slightly more than $1 million—will come as die result of parking fines. The remainder of the estimated revenue includes $860,000 from permits and $150,000 from lot fees and metered perking. The projected total of $1.8 million compares to an approx­ imate $838,000 in revenue collected for the 1982-83 year. The almost $1 million difference comes about largely as the result of die hike in permit prices and parking fines under the new parking program. The additional projected revenue sparked the concern of Associated Students President Walter Batt, who called for a meeting Wednesday night with top ranking ASU officials. Batt said he asked Victor Zafra, vice president for business th u r s d a y September 1,1983 Vol. 66 No. 8 Arizona State University © Copyright, State Press, 1983. affairs; Bill Phelps, associate vice president for business af­ fairs; Ed Hickcox, director of parking and transit; and Russell Duncan, chief of ASU Police, to attend. B att said he feels there are unanswered questions about the use of the revenue and unresolved problems in the new park­ ing program. He also said he wants to see a large portion of the revenues put toward lot improvements. “ I want guarantees that neccesary improvements will be done on both faculty/staff and student parking areas,” Batt said. Hogan said the $1.8 million will be allocated in the following maimer: $504,000 to ASU Police, $518,000 to parking and tran­ sit, $154,000 to cover expenses of the tram , and the re­ mainder, $556,000, to lot improvements. As a direct result of the increased fines and fees, money is now available for parking improvements. In the past, when fines were low, there was no money designated to lot repair and modification, which lead to die neglect of certain lots, Hogan said. Although Batt likes the idea of lot improvements, he thinks it is unfair that they should come about a t the students’ ex­ pense. “I think the idea (the new parking program) is correct and I agree, but you don’t give out four $18 tickets to someone in four days,” he said. “This is a lot of money to a college student,” Batt said. “Many of these fines probably won’t be collected. Then we’re faced with a problem of a different kind.” Duncan said despite the large number of citations issued during the past two weeks, he thinks ticket issuing will decrease when people learn the penalties. “We usually issue somewhere between 85,000 and 100,000 citations a year. This year we only expect to write about half that many,” he said. “Control isn’t based on the amount of revenue; it’s based on how you conform,” Duncan said. s ia te P re ss ® Tempe, Arizona _________ Student's voice may play role in prof’s promotion, retention By Bob Beamesderfer Staff writer Student’s evaluation of faculty is being considered as a possible part of evaluation guidelines for decisions mi employee reten­ tion, promotion and merit pay by a task force of the Arizona Board of Regents. Robert Huff, chairman of the Compensa­ tion Plan Task Force and executive director of the board, said student evaluation is be­ ing examined to determine what role it will play in influencing distribution of m erit pay. “There’s not a negative attitude toward (student input),” he said. The task force was set up to make recom­ mendations to the regents for a compensa­ tion plan for administrators and profes­ sional employees, policies on m erit pay distribution and employee evalutation pro­ cedures. The regents have until Dec. 31, 1983, to submit a m erit pay [dan for legislative review, which according to Sen. Anne Lindem an, R—Phoenix, will get a “thorough” hearing early in the session. If the Legislature accepts what is proposed by the regents, it will become effective July 1, 1964. Lindeman, chairman of the Senate Educa­ tion Committee, was co-sponsor of the bill that requires a plan to be submitted. She said research is important but should not be the only factor used to determine m erit pay. Any plan, she said, “should be based on true merit and teaching skills, not just publishing and research. There’s a feeling (in the Legislature) that they (faculty) are judged on how much research-money they bring in.” The Arizona Students Association is re­ questing that the regents implement a uniform faculty/course evaluation program at all three state universities, said Brian Casey, chairman of the ASA board. He said ASA wants the program to be designed by the administration and be incoporated into the method used far deter­ mining m erit pay. The lobby grôup also wants thé evaluations to be used to develop a self-improvement program for faculty that includes expert interpretation of the ratings. He cited a recent study done at the In­ stitutional Research and Development Department a t U of A, which found that faculty who had access to expert interpreta­ tion showed improvement in subsequent evaluations. The five-point proposal has been dis­ cussed by the task force, Huff said, adding conttmiMi pagt § Pointing the way Sparky appears to have a devilish idea about the use of M s trident as an A S U student crosses the U niversity Drive Bridge. Actually, the mascot Is sim ply a one-dim ensional figure painted on the back of the Sun Devil Stadium scoreboard. T ontozona Gamp’s financial problems skewed, report may show By Wayne Baker Staff writer A report discounting former Vice President for Business Affairs Frank Sackton’s recent Camp Tontozona report is forthcoming, a source within the University requesting anonymity told the State Press. The counter-report could be made public by early next week and will show that figures representing monetary losses from ASU’s operation of the camp were inflated in Sackton’s report, the source said. Dan Mardian, a member of the Sun Angels, ASU’s athletic booster club, has publicly disputed Sackton’s report, say­ ing the form «' ASU adminstrator used incorrect accounting procedures to determine the camp’s financial losses. Mardian also is the sponsor of a pro­ posal that would allow the Sun Angels to buy an available 29.4 acres and sell it along with Tontozona to a resort that would allow tiie University to lease the facility for future use. The source said Sackton’s report on the financial status of the camp was com­ piled before “all the facts ram e in.” John Edwards, director of off-campus services, said he gets more requests for use of the camp than he can book, primarily because only one academic group at a time can be booked into the camp. He also said he has been ordered by University Officials not to accept any new bookings for.the facility after Jan. 3, 1964. Lawyer downplays threats to deny access road usage If the past is any indication, attempts by homeowners to block the use of the side access road leading to Camp Ton­ tozona most likely will prove unsuc­ cessful. Recent concerns by the Tonto Creek Home Owners Association that highvolume use of the 24-foot-wide dirt road would cause numerous problems are not the first In 1966, abundant use of Buenagua Road by the ASU community prompted homeowners in the area to hire a Phoenix law firm to legally block the University from i t Examination of the deed to Tontozona by then ASU President G, Homer Durham and the University’s legal ad­ visors found a “ right-of-way” clause that gave ASU permission to enter and exit by the road. And according to Doug Cook, an a t­ torney with Killian, Legg, Nicholas and Fischer, which represents the University in most legal matters, if ASU sells Ton­ tozona, it also sells the right-of-way to the road. “ I think it’s safe to assume that a new owner would have the right to use the road,” be said. Cook added, however, that his firm has not been asked to look into the legalities of the matter. In 1948, when ASU first acquired the camp from M. W. Hollinshead, none of the surrounding lots had been sold to thé current landowners and no viable access road existed. eondnuidpag»8 n a t io n X w o rid Stanford band tunes up state press THE ÜTTEIg when their positions near the Beirut airport were attacked by artillery attacks from radical Moslem militiamen. As for the future, Shultz said, “Let no one doubt, if attacked the Marines will take care of themselves with vigor.” STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — The Stafford University band, renowned for its helter-skelter marching, erratic dress and helping an opposing team win a football game, is vowing this year to be “less straggly. ” \ “We’ll all be moving together,’’ said drum major Simon A P S to file for Streets of Redwood City, ««plaining the significance of “syn38.6 percent rate increase chronicity” — a song title the. band will spell out during halftime of the Sept. 10 game between Stanford and the PHOENIX (AP) — Arizona Public Service Co. announced University of Oklahoma. today that it would be filing a request for a 38.6 percent rate Band members, who once dropped their trousers in con­ . increase as a result of costly delays in starting up the Palo cert, are still unlikely'to be confused with a Marine Corps Verde Nuclear Generating Station. drill team, said Patty Stokes of Placerville, the hand’s ad­ Spokesman Marie DeMichele told a news conference that ministrative assistant. But she said the group would be “less the original cost estimates of $4.3 billion for construction of straggly.” the plant had soared to $5.7 billion, a 16 percent increase. DeMichele said the original estimate of APS startup costs of $600 million has skyrocketed to $1.66 billion — an increase Peacekeeping M arines of slightly over $1 billion. v In tro d u cin g m R e n e F o s n ig h t Form erly of C C Cutters f I s 3 oo" o f f STYLE CUT Reg. $12 M en • $14 W om en (O ffer g o o d w ith a ll s ty lists.) With T h is Ad. (E x p ire s 10-1-83.) w ill return fire 709 S. F orest Awe., T em pe WASHINGTON (AP) — The Reagan administration said Wednesday that American Marines on peacekeeping duty in Lebanon will continue to fight back if attacked. Meeting with reporters, Secretary of State George Shultz also-said he does not believe there has been any “concerted effort to single out the Marines and to target them” but that they have been caught up »^generalized violence.” Two Marines were killed and 14 were wounded Monday North o f U n iv ersity • B e h in d the CORRECTION POLICY It is the policy of the state Press to acknowledge and cor­ rect errors when they occur. If you see an error, call our newsroom at 965-2292 to let us know. All corrections will ap­ pear on this page. C Y C L IN G tZ ^ B R T S (602)967-7700 LO C K S & C A B LES From $7.50 Waterbottle 24-oz. Zafal Pump $189 $169 $249 $229 RALEIGH Isl R a m p a r $149 $129 W R eco rd $209 $189 Was $399 N O W $249 ft $2.50 $8.50 ($7 value). $300 guarantee SPECIAL $16.9511 SR— ALPINE, Model 500 SR— SEMI-PRO RACING, Model 1000 SR— GRAN COURSE,. Model 600 ★ Buy 3 body wraps and get one FREE visit on the tanning bed 1st time customers. Must bring coupon. 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At Wholesale Auto Sales, we’ve got over 25 cars waiting for you. Hours: 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 10a.m.-5 p.m. Sun. 2 BLKS. EAST OF G oto RUSH Live Bands For Yoyr.Dancing Pleasure PYRAMID — Wed. thru Sat. ★ ★ No Cover Charge W ith T h is A d ★ ★ Thundey, September 1,1983 State Press Class tries to counteract lack o f H ispanlcs In Jobs Prof says few chosen for government posts By Deaone Hutchison Staff writer Government representation of Hispanics in the United States has failed to keep pace with die group’s growing population, and an ASU program for Hispanic students is at­ tempting to improve that situation. Richard Eribes, associate professor in the Center for Public Affairs, is the director of a graduate program designed to encourage Hispanic students to pursue government positions. “The idea fat this kind of program came when the federal government realized they were developing. . . an unrepresented body,” he said. “There were no Hispanics acting as a part of the decision-making pro­ cesses.” According to Eribes, Hispanics are not well represented in local governments, and this realization “of the realities of a growing population and a growing political force” has caused the government to begin funding programs like the one at ASU. “The Board of Regents was upset for a time that the local universities were not do­ ing much for the Hispanic students, but we have had the program going for three years,” Eribes said. Although the federal government funded the program in its beginning years, this year funds ran short, he said. “Now it is up to ASU to see the program continue,” he said. "We had a fund-raising dinner this summer and we really got a lot of support from the local Hispanic com­ munity. The funding far the remainder of the fellowships will probably come from there.” Eribes said the 3-year-old program offers fellowships and internships to Hispanic graduate students. “The fellowships pay their tuition, fees and also $4,500 for the year,” he said. “The BUBBLES OF JOY Balloon Bouquets internships are in local government posi­ tions.” ‘ T. About 10 students have entered the pro­ gram to pursue the master’s degree in public administration offered, Eribes said. “The students we recruit for this program are only those who have graduate record ex­ am s and grade p a n t averages that could qualify them to compete for any other fellowship,” be said. “They really have great capabilities.” Eribes said the most outstanding thing about the program is that the students who have completed it have all filled jobs in local government positions. Some of the students have competed for internships that were offered to students all d m a EREV ROSH HASHANAH D IN N ER W ednesday, S eptem ber 7 5:00 pm . H illel Students $4.00 Non-students $7.00 m •Loudspeato rebuilding t repair (home/auto/pro) •JBL/EV/6AUSS/ALTECwarrantystation •Raw speakers •free estimates «Custom crossovers »Custom designs Payment due Septem ber 2 THE SPEAKER SHOP 3030 N. 24th St. *956-1824 NEW LOCATION: 1515 E. APACHE, TEMPE (Next to Tang's) • 829-9110 A SWEET AND H APPY NEW YEAR D R IN K I n d ie s a d m it t e d F R E E o O e ry T h u r s d a y W ear a Hawaiin s h it and get l£ T D at the dootl S o let’s get Zombeed o r Bombed, o r M ai Thai’d . a tC L A N C E Y S L rO e guys $130 cover Comparing Prices^ Why was CAMPUS DRUGS not included In Barb's Dark Room ‘Price Comparison' ad? Campus Drugs Barb's $5.79 n a r 24 exp. «6.09 $7.79 36 exp. $1*79 $2.49 20 slides THAT’S WHY! CAMPUS DRUGS 1 Block North of University doors open at 730 < 2 l APACHE BLVD LA____ (In The Arches) OVERNIGHT PHOTO PROCESSING entertainment provided by C L A N C E Y S NIGHT C LU B - The place that com es aliyef 122 E. UNIVERSITY TH E CO M PU TER T E R M IN A L EVERY T H U R S D A Y LIS T E N (with this ad) 967-0900 N IG H T A ll o f Clancey’s refreshing tropical drinks are 2 for 1, all night long. Computer Time Rental party decor Collese Ave. Y ou are in vited to sBare w ith us™ in an over*the United States, and even though these were not positions to be filled by a Hispanic, two of the ASU Hispanic students received these internships. “One internship was a management posi­ tion in Phoenix,” he said. “It was funded by the City of Phoenix but advertised nation­ ally. They are usually filled by people from out of state.” Though the program is successful, Eribes said it has not been widely advertised and there are probably more students who could qualify for the program and possibly even receive a fellowship. “Right now there are three students who have accepted the fellowship (for the year) and there are still two more available for the spring semester,” he said. for all occasions 893-3346 • 831-6840 L’SHANA TOVA BROKEN SPEAKER? ‘The realities of a growing political force have caused the government to fund programs like this one.’ $ 4 /h o u r talking, foils & hot air balloons K **3 ’. . *r / i l i 9 1 9 1 A p a ch e 966-7770 OPEN M o n.-Fri. 9:30-7 Sat. 10:30-5 A L L A T D IS C O U N T P R IC E S SMITH-CORONA Texas Instrum ents We handle the full line of Hewlett-Packard and Texas Instruments calculators and accessories. We also carry Smith-Corona typewriters — both electric and electronic. See us for all your office supply needs. O ffice Products WarehQuse won’t be undersold. We will meet or beat any legitimate price. O FFICE P R O D U C T S W AREHOUSE 9 6 8 -1 1 9 8 • 1755 W . U n iv e rs ity 52nd 8L A University • Tempe 2 m iles west o f cam pus Stote Press o p í n i e f i is no The liberty ot the Individual must be thus far limited; he must not make*himself a nuisance to other people ' ' — John Stuart Mill »4* Matthew Scully Opinion Editor 'S t a t e press Most ASU students seen! to enjoy the time they spend each day on campus. No doubt some survey could be cited to support that observation, but one is unnecessary. It s the sort of thing you just sense. You sense it, for instance, in the infor­ mality which characterizes the campus. Despite the size and bureaucratic com­ plexity of the University, there is somehow a personal atmosphere. There is even unless this is peculiar to me — a certain ex­ citement in finding oneself each day amid so many thousands of other students. There is also the obvious effect of our himself. salubrious environment, which is what Third, my guess is that those “stamp lick­ lured a good many students to ASU in the ing Republicans” he refers to will probably each be placing one stamp on a check to the _ first place. The temperate weather, the sprawling lawns, the simplicity of the ar­ unemployment insurance agency, so as to chitecture all give the campus a fresh, tran­ keep food on the DeCosse table. quil look. But,most important you can detect Let’s hope this letter will provide some at least a vague sense of community, food for thought. I suggest that Steve move without which all the other advantages we to Moscow or Boston. I’m sure either of the enjoy here would seem incomplete. two would better suit his political views, end we would all be happier. So who, in this setting, could find cause for P.S. Where can I get a subscription to the complaint? Well, I have found something. Tempe paper mentioned in Mr. DeCosse’s My complaint is against the political and letter? If it made him angry, it is bound to religious groups who each semester intrude make sense'to the average ASU student upon our campus — on the mall, where you such as myself. can’t avoid them — with their tables, ban­ Dennis Joseph Dixon ners and pamphlets. Sometime back the • Sophomore, Architecture University accepted the responsibility of furnishing every local activist, zealot or demagogue with a platform and audience; each is given a little place on the mall from which to rail at the rest of us, or to enlist supporters for his particular cause. At the moment these groups are not out in greet an out-of-state student on hisher se­ full force, though each day brings one or two cond day of class! Needless to say I was late new arrivals. Today there were five or six for class and my day was ruined — but not religious organizations with tables on the entirely. That came when I went to pay the mall — not counting the table for fine and learfted that is was $45! Transcendental Meditation — and three or four political groups. The Palestinians had When 1 showed 'my surprise at this sum, the woman at the police station informed me their table and banner out there, as did “MeCha,” an Hispanic club, and a curious that, along with bicycle violations, such fines are the chief source of revenue for the group called Students for Cooperative Alter­ Tempe police department during the school natives. This last one was distributing a year. rather confusing pamphlet, in which it It appears to me that they are wrongly declares itself “dedicated to supporting depriving students of their hard-earned economic and social democracy,” and also money. I realize the Tempe police depart­ to the “principle! of political neutrality.” ment has a tough time keeping all us rowdy Those principles strike me as contradictory , college students in line, plus all of the nor­ but then maybe I’m just being un­ mal duties of a police department. Still, I cooperative. Any day now the anti-nuclear activists think they are going a bit too far ; and from what I hear from other students, it’s not just will arrive on the mall to do their bit for world peace. Last semester they were par­ for jay-walking. ticularly conspicuous because they not only Steve Henson had the usual posters and leaflets, but each Junior, Public Programs D e C o s s e letter assailed Editor: , ' Although I am approximately two years away from becoming an average ASU stu­ dent, I resent the amount of space give in the Friday, Aug. 26 edition of the State Press, to anyone so fa r left of the norm. I noted that DeCosse is a Political Science major. It is apparent that he is as fa r from the distorted picture he painted of the Republican Party as he can get. First of all, he noted that “we all” wanted job security. You don’t need 2020 vision to see that Mr. DeCosse’s political career will pot amount to much here in Arizona. Second, I see no point in discussing the Trident submarine with the man, because it is obvious he doesn’t know the first thing about the subject. The more he writes on the m atter the deeper the hole he digs for T raffio p o lice overzealous Editor: I am a resident of Arizona and a student at ASU who until recently thought the surroun­ ding community and ASU itself welcomed students back, particularly students new to the area. But that vision was recently shat­ tered by the Tempe police department. One morning this week I was a little late coming to campus and, having had trouble finding a place to park, ended up out in the river bottom, or close to it. As I walked toward campus from the north, a" traffic light in front of me turned red; I didn’t have time to wait for it to change, solcrossed. I continued walking along the north side of University until I found a gap large enough to cross the street without risking injury or disrupting the flow of traffic. I have been making such decisions for over ten years and feel I am therefore qualified. The Tempe police department thinks otherwise. When I reached the other side of the street I was promptly stopped and given a ticket for jay-walkiqg! What a fine way this is to morning set up a little gallery featuring gruesome pictures of radiation victims — their contribution to calm, rational political discourse on campus. We can also expect to see the feminists, the Student Rights Coali­ tion, the Young Socialist Alliance, the Coali­ tion for Peace in E l Salvador, the Iranian Marxists and various other ideological fac­ tions, each there to appeal to our con­ sciences, and of course to bring attention to themselves. Sometimes the whole scene takes us into the surreal, as when we find ourselves sub­ jected not only to the distracting enlistment efforts of the ideologues, but to the vigorous exhortations of religious zealots who regularly hold forth in the area, often simultaneously. For these people one has more sympathy than distrust, because they tend to be very sincere and amiable, though just a bit overbearing. An example of restraint would serve their purposes better. Now I grant that most of these groups are harmless enough, and that with a certain stoical detachment we can tolerate their presence on campus, even as we have learn­ ed to live with more serious impositions in this era of ideological excess. But somehow this scene strikes one as so incongruous on a university campus as to be, well, in­ tolerable. Why?, Simply because any university which takes ideas seriously must also insist that they be expressed on a certain level, in the form of reasoned arguments instead of crude propaganda. The ideologues out there only demean the University, whose purpose, in part, is to teach us to articulate our ‘Any university which takes ideas seriously must also insist that they be expressed on a certain level.’ political and religious opinions intelligently and responsibly — in Woodrow Wilson’s famous p hrase, to “ educate for democracy.” Yes, I know, those groups have a right to promote their causes, ultimately in whatever manner they choose. That right is not in question. What is arguable is whether they must for some reason exercise that right in a particular location — the mall — instead of some less congested area; and whether the University is not entitled to in­ sist on a more rational level of discourse than is represented by campus activists. And if we must speak only of rights, surely one can be invoked on behalf of ordinary students: the right to enjoy a few moments of serenity as they go about their work on campus. Ca n t y o\) s e e ? w e Must s w -rv*rs ma&ness i AU- WE WANT Ts PEA££• N e e b Hall ad inap p rop riate Editor: ' I t seems to me-that only the Women’s Studies Film Series truly represents a “progressive film series” at ASU now. Though the Neeb Hall Film Series claims that honor, i t seems debatable in light of their sexist poster advertizing and their conventional Fall offerings — good films but typical of what is readily available a t local commercial theatres. Their films are less offensive to the liberal conscience that the lightweight and lowbrow M.U. series, but commercial circuit films still. How about siane lesser known films by foreign directors, American auteurs Hawks or Ford, or films of special interest to minorities that educate as well as enter­ tain? More regressive than the films, it is the Neeb Hall poster that really undercuts its own intent to represent a pro-* gressive series, with its exploitation of female form to sell commodities. Under the heading “Neeb Hall, ASU’s Only Progressive 'F ilm Series,” is a startling close-up image of a 'woman’s bare, high-heeled legs seen only from her red mini-skirted trunk down. Progressive? Or, ironically, regressive? These images may satisfy males, but they dehumanize women, and are ludicrously inappropriate fen: illustration of the vaunted “ASU’s Only Progressive Film Series,” Jackie Hayes Lecturer, Women’s Studies and English N O N -V I O L E N C E !; _ / 1 * R£AU0UCN4S OWN STO CK tr-V Jr* - pss-"': ia n i Av y ih l 1 4 * freeze iy a f? NOVI 1 !>NP so wi>a£* tioRaep » n . MAHKTTNJ rito)^r ©Sfg •J «**«??* Page 5 Thursday, September 1,1983 Guaranteed Lowest Keg Beer Price with Tap & Tub in the State. ( W e will meet or beat any advertised special!) JERRY Weekly Beer & Liquor Specials Walking Distance from ASU 966-865$ 1217 S. Rural R<±, Tempe State Prett More about DON'T FORGED___ C om pensation s conllniwd from pag* 1 that it has made “some progress” in the two meetings held and is establishing basic guidelines and principles. Assistant professor of history Chris Smith, who is the president of Local 2050 of the American Federation of Teachers, said the local has not adopted a postion on what student input should have on merit pay, but he personally believes that “it is a legitimate factor to be considered. Smith, who has been an opponent of merit pay, said a cost-of-living increase and a retroactive increase to compensate for in­ flation of the last decade should be part of the overall compensation plan because University employees have lost ground to increased costs. “People’s position a t ASU has.been ero­ ded in the last decade by inflation,” he said. “People make less now than 10 years ago in terms of real dollars.” The cost-of-living in­ crease should be tied to the rate of inflation in Phoenix, he added. John X. Evans, a professor of English and chairman of the Faculty Senate, said the various departments should have the "op- portunity to use their own criteria in distributing merit pay. “ I don’t believe the regents should dictate compensation criteria that are standard and inflexible throughout the University because of the differing academic oppor­ tunities,” he said. “The nature of research and teaching can be different from depart­ ment to department. Smith said, “ If a merit system is forced on us from above then the guidelines should be written at the lowest possible level. It should not be determined by administrators or cen­ tral administrators.” Evans said, “University employees cer­ tainly deserve cost-of-living increases,” but only if there is room in the state budget. “I would prefer some consideration of cost of living, if there are funds in the overall state budget," he said. “There’s no way that something like that can be man­ dated.” Sen. Lindeman added that cost of living was one of the “sticking points” of the legislation, which’ resulted in any cost-ofliving proposal having to be optional to the overall compensation plan. IT'S ASU WEEK •Happy Hour Prices 4-close •Hors d'oeuvres 4-8 •Prizes, gift certificates given away •Lots of dance music and I the latest in Video Rock j ANGUS RESTAURANTS f r f l . 507 W. Broadway, Tempe More about Road continuad tram paga 1 According to Lovatt Burges, University coordinator of surplus property salvage and reclamation, ASU and Hollinshead took it upon themselves to build the road. Burges, in charge of managing the sum­ mer sessions held then at Tontozona, said $800 came out of his accounts to plow the road. He said the University then secured the right-of-way to use the entire length of the road, from Highway 260 to the front gate of Tontozona. Durham’s study also found that the first • lot in the area was not sold until after the road was built, with subsequent lots sold with the knowledge that ASU had full legal rights to use the road. But in -1966, after the road endured a period of heavy use, landowners tried to legally block ASU from using it, with at­ torneys representing the owners who were contending they had a-legal right to block the road. But examination of the deed prevented such action from occuring. According to Bob Eggers, a member of the Tonto Creek Home Owners Association, homeowners along the road fear abuse of the road if a commercial resort buys the facility from ASU. — Wayne Baker j [|^QJ £ L u th e ra n C h u r c h and S tu d e n t C e n te r A JEW ELER S il FOR ALL YOUR JEWELRY NEEDS 1 0 3 4 S. M ILL AVE. 894-2610 D iam o nd s, W atches 14k C h a in s, Pendan ts |Sorority-Fraternity Jewelry Join us In Sunday Wonhlp 9 : 1 5 a .m . — S t u d e n t C e n t e r ¡W atch & Jew elry Repairini (on Mill a c ro s s from Gammage) 966-7587 1 1 a .m . — D a n f o r t h C h a p e l (C en ter of cam pus by the fountain) THE JO YN T TEMPE CENTER « WE D E LIV E R Town T em pe | 967-7926 j B E E R • WINE Large 16” Cheese Pizza $3.99 EXTRA TOPPINGS SOI EACH P r e - L a w C lu b Trial LSA T Registration V; Thursday & Friday Septem ber 1 & 2 Room S S - 1 11 I D E C A L S F O R C L O S E -IN P A R K IN G A V A IL A B L E Due to the restriping of Lot 40 and the release of unpurchaserd faculty/staff allocations, additional parking decals for Lot 40/42 have been released to students. •WHERE: Room 210 in the Memorial Union •W HEN: Every day this week between 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.. until the decals are sold out •D ECA L FEE: $40 for the year If you have already fjrurchased a $30 decal for Lot 17/55/59 and wish to exchange it for a $40 decal for Lots 40/42, here is what you need to do: 1. If you have a movable (hanger-type) decal, simply take it to Room 210 in the Memorial Union and pay $10 to exchange it for the new decal. 2. If you have the type of decal that is affixed to the windshield of your car, first record the number on a piece of paper, then remove the decal with a razor blade, (You may not be able to get it off in one piece.) Take the recorded number and decal remnants to Room 210 in the Memorial Union and pay $10 to exchange the old decai for a new one. Remember to record the number before you attempt to remove the old decal. 3. If you still have your receipt for the purchase of your Lot 17/55/59 decal, please bring it with you to Room 210. State Press Page 7 Thursday, September 1,1983 Nelson stresses ‘dialogue’ to senators By M.K. Reinhart Staff writer President J. Russell Nelson, invited for the first time to ad­ dress the Associated Students’ Senate, called for a “united front” between senators and their constituents a t the year’s first meeting of the senate Tuesday night. Nelson stressed the importance of reciprocal dialogue as well as the need to recognize the divergent demography pre­ sent at ASU. He noted that the senate is not representative of the large percentage of University students who are over 25 and attend school part-time or a t night. The average student senator is about 22 years old and a full-time student. “ It’s easy to lose touch with those issues” which are impor­ tant to old«’, part-time students, Nelson said. Drawing parallels between the faculty and student senates, Nelson said the faculty enjoys greater representation in numbers, making it easier for them to be closer to their con­ stituents. Nelson said the student senate would be “in a much better position to have (issues) supported by the University” if students were allowed to express themselves. . Nelson’s address was followed by reports from the various college council presidents and a vote on one amendment dealing with semantic revisions in the senate rules of order, which establish decorum and specific conduct guidelines. The revisions, brought to the floor by the Select Committee on Rules, involved removing superfluous or unclear words and phrases and inserting feminine pronouns. While there was little debate on the committee’s recom­ mendations, Mark Downs, senator from the College of Law, took issue with the inclusion of “so help me God” in the oath of office and moved to amend the phrase. “It’s in violation of the principle, if not necessarily the doc­ trine, of the separation of church and state,” Downs said. “It’s not appropriate for a state university to force a student to be put up to public ridicule. ” However, Campus Affairs Vice President' Nancy Parks said, “Personal feelings about God should be put on the back burner” while dealing with ASASU Senate matters. Downs’ amendment failed, and the committee’s original bill was passed by a vote of 17-3, with two senators absent. Do Your Com puter Work At Home! Save Time and Effort By Sandy Sistek > Staff writer Five calculators valued at $685 were reported stolen cm Tuesday from the Noble Science Library, according to ASU Police. Ann Bolser, library administrator, said the calculators had been reported missing about one month ago. The serial numbers of the calculators are unknown and the police have no suspects. According to Bolser, the 8-by-12-inch desk-top calculators, equipped with a tape and an LED display, were purchased for office use in Noble Library. .She said the calculators were stored in the storage room on m the main level of the library. “This is where the calculators were last seen by the library staff,” Bolser said. “Since they were in storage, we didn’t feel that they had to be checked very often.” The library was not open at the time of the theft, but she s$id many workmen had been working around the building. “Tliey were probably stolen within a m atter of three weeks before the library opened,” she said. “It was when we were setting up the library and taking inventory that they were not tobefound.” The Noble Library opened Aug. 22 for public use. Bolser said the calculators will be replaced as soon as the . money is obtained. C R T with co u p le r or Printer with co u p le r $509° BRS LEASING, ING. 3914 E. M cD o w e ll • 277-3282 8 Rentals / Service / Sales' C io a o o o o s o o c e o o o o o o o o o o s c o s c c o o o c e e o c o m D esigner W o m e n ’ sT ashions at D iscount Prices 1628 E. Southern • Tempe, A Z 85282 (602) 839-1900 Southern Palms Shopping Center Southern & McCliritock 1420 S a a t (Spoc L * Sam pc, (Suyo n a ^ 68-9375) _____________ -Tei nh P E 's ‘T J7 jip p e U C o A TEMPE CENTER OPEN TILL 2 A.M. if CLUB f n ig h t - n i ec w k u i ße Ss Tt / / V a*.*» 16” Pizza — $ 4 * 0 0 ( 5 9 p m > Pitcher Beer — $2*00 (afterS p.m.) »J Enjoy S p o rts & M o v ie s D a ily 954 COCKTAILS ATTITU O «.^ *)Oo PRAT! A D T H S T IW S A n - H U t i ¿ % % if - L P r n , ORAFI fh U flC H lg S “CASINO THE VERDICT Fri. & Sat. • 7 & 10 p.m. ffeKCR. B U V C * -!« c tt B A c k & A * * « iu AND JUSTICE FOR ALL S un d ay • 6 & 8:30 p.m. U flfU jU g fr “ Easily the best do u b le feature I've ever seen.” Dave Polen, Cleveland Press M ovie Inform ation 965-5688 $1.50 w ith i.D . • $2 w ithout B R iM FL veR . - a s s o c ia te d b s t u d e n t s O F »A m Z O N T V S T A T E •U N ! « Eft S I T Y Oft INK. 1 -iJ / V FREE/. / Stoic N u CHANGIN HANE®_ BOOKSTORE 3 § % COFFEE HOUSE Sept. 2 * 9 p.m. ' M U S IC A L E N T E R T A IN M E N T . S nacks, beer, w ine c o o le rs NEW & USED BOOKS OFF Meet lots o f people 414 M ill,Tem pe Arisona85Z8 966-0201 Following services at 7:30 H llle l • 1012 S. M ill A ve. Ja n tze n = m ^7Jjr7 t S alfis^ -U ie st 1015 N. Scottsdale Rd. 966-9696 WE SAY YES! WE SAY YES! WE SAY YES! BACK TO SCHOOL '"SPECIALS" OVER 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM ONLY 1979 H O N D A M O T O R C Y C L E 1973 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A S/W Automatic, A/r, Nice 1974 M U S T A N G H A T C H B A C K Automatic. Air. 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Satisfaction o f know ing yo u are provid­ ing a therapeutic drug to treat hem o­ philia and other diseases. * Course offered M onday through Saturday. Just a short walk o ff campus. < W M To E n ro ll Call D a ir y Q ueen U N IV ER S ITY P L A S M A CEN TER 968-6139 (W ITH C O U P O N ) We're having a real sale on a real treat. Three thick Jayers of real hot fudge and crisp, crunchy peanuts. With cool and creamy DAIRY QUEEN® soft serve in between. The Peanut Buster Parfait'“. WE TREAT YOU RIGHT 1015 S. Rural, Tem pe Figure 10.5 S tudent studying and n o t earning m oney. (Bad economic planning). Offer expires 12-31-83. 950 S. Mill (Across from Gammage) 966-1957 For details & appointm ent Bring in this ad fo r $2 extra on y o u r fir st donation Mon. and Thurs. 8 a.m.-8 p.m. SP-1 Page 9 Thunday, September 1,1983 S ta te n e » Jazz, classical disc recorded by prof By Mary P at Brady Assistant Scenes editor “It’s the first album that I know of that has formidable classical pieces along with some good jazz literature,” said Jam es Ruccolo, an ASU piano professor who recently released a double album. “Equipoise” is a fascinating and aesthetically pleasing recording. Ruccolo, a virtuoso pianist, plays pieces by Rachmaninoff and Persichetti and a toccata he has composed, as well as masterpieces by Gershwin and Duke Ellington. One album in the pair contains the classical pieces, the second, jazz. The title defines the concept since equipoise means a counterbalance or equal distribution of weights. “I’m trying for a self-sufficiency in each area (jazz and classical).” Ruccolo said he would consider' himself a success if a listener heard the classical sections and later heard the jazz sections, but could not tell whether the pieces were done by the same artist or not. “I feel there has always been a sort of pre­ judice about someone doing both well,” Ruccolo said. If the prejudice exists, Ruccolo’s work goes a long way toward diminishing it. Ruccolo explained that “any pianist has certain composers or periods that they play better than anything else, for example Rubenstein with Chopin. It’s a natural in­ clination or talent. For me that’s the Romantics.” Side one contains Rachmaninoff’s “Piano Concerto No. 1 in F Sharp Minor, Opus 1.” Technically demanding, it reinforces Rachmaninoff’s place within the Romantic period. Ruccolo plays the concerto beautifully. In his hands the work is fluid and tender. The ASU Symphony? a first-class student or­ chestra in Ruccolo’s eyes, assisted in the production. Persichetti’s “Tenth Sonata” on side two is a world premiere recording. As a contemp o ra ry c o m p o ser, P e r s ic h e tti is understandably controversial. The sonata is gripping, sometimes grating, and a musical challenge. Ruccolo worked with Persichetti directly on the in­ terpretation of the work. It is an important composition and this rendition merits atten­ tion. Ruccolo composed his “Toccata” during an injury-imposed absence from the piano. It was his first composition. The “Toccata” reminds one of the dramatic onslaught of a Staff photo by Andy Arenz I » " ” R o f h a r OF TEMPE " — CO UPON” " " ” ! TERIYAKI O F JA P A N | HAIR CARE for men & women TERM INAL R EN TA LS D ecw riters and C R T s Upper Case $34 Upper/Lower Case $40 Japanese Fast Food Concept I *1 0 i 8 3 3 S o u th R u ra l R d. 8 U n iv a r s it y O r iv o Tues.-Sat. » 3 0 &m.-6:00 p.m. continued page 14 Jam es R uccolo, m usic professor and virtuoso pianist, relaxes after a m orning of teaching. -i •sham poo • h a ircu t eblow dry Full Roffler Product Line monsoon-type storm. Side three begins the jazz portion of “Equipoise.” -This side is superbly en­ joyable, as is the medley from “Porgy and Bess” on side four. Ruccolo excels as an improvisator. “ I started with the accordian when I was six,” he said. “My father was an accordianist and an improvisationist. So I ac­ tually learned about improv before I prac­ ticed classical works. “There’s something relieving about jazz . . . with jazz you don’t have to worry about techniques.” With this album, Ruccolo said he wanted some jazz standards or recognizable works. “I was trying to find definite tempos, definite styles.” Ruccolo admits the move from classical to jazz is a difficult transition to make. He feels, however, that his performance as a jazz artist is best when he is “up to snuff as a classicist.” “With jazz you’re interested in ideas, movements.” Ruccolo’s mastery of the piano and his seemingly innate improvisational strength make the jazz portion delightful. Ruccolo attended North High in Phoenix. Upon graduation he studied at the prestigious Eastm an School of Music. He followed up his work at Eastman at the University of Texas at Austin, ASU and U of A. He came to ASU ten years ago after a few years of teaching at Prescott College. 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