Last call to cast ASASU ballots The Associated Students election con tinues today. Polling booths are located near the MU, the Business Administration Building, the Classroom Office Building, the Social Sciences Building, the Engineering G-wing and on Forest Mall by Payne Hall. The booths open at 8:30 a.m. and close at 3 p.m. Those by the Engineering Gwing and the MU will remain open until 9 p.m. The candidates for the four ASASU of fices, a proposition for the direct election of college senators and possible U.S. presidential candidate pairings are in cluded on the ballot. W e d n e s d a y April 4,1984 Voi. 66 No. 98 Arizona State University state press T em ps, Arizona Copyright, State Press, 1984 Students voice reactions during first day of ASASU elections By Julianne Holroyd Staff writer The first day of the Associated Students election went smoothly yesterday, and for the most part, voters were impressed with the candidates. “I thought candidates were very persis tent in achieving their ends. They were try ing hard,” said computer science major Ralph Cabrera. Christopher Gentry, who previously at tended a smaller school, said he was very impressed with the amount of time and ef fort the candidates expended for the elec tions. “They seem to be very devoted.” Some voters thought the candidates were a little too devoted. “Handing out fliers turns people off,” said education major Dana Miller. However, Debbie Arnold, an economics major, who was passing out flyers, said that students on the mall were fairly receptive. “I felt passing out flyers made students more aware about student government and the elections. I don’t think they understand the importance of ASASU. ” According to Joe Martinez, one of the peo~ pie working a t the polls, the voting process is running smoother this year than last year. “The elections were much more organized He thought the turnout of voters was very good, though he said the poll he was at was one of the busier sites because of its prox imity to the MU. According to Mike McCoy, elections coor dinator, “This is the most excellently or chestrated election in the history of ASU. “We’ve had more press coverage this year than in past years,” he added. However, some students thought there wasn’t enough publicity about the can didates or the elections. “There should have been more publicity about the public forums,” said electrical e n g in e e rin g m a jo r N a g a ra j Palasamudram. One member of the security personnel, who wished to remain anonymous, said “We’ve had a little problem with people placing (some) fliers on the election tables, which is against election code rules.” The student added that a candidate who violates the election code rules could be fin ed $10 which might pose a problem if he had spent most of the money allowed by the spending limit. “If he runs over his spending limit he could be disqualified,” he said. Every student questioned reported voting “yes" on the proposal to establish direct After two weeks of watching ASASU candidate« on the run, it was the students' turn to do some legwork and stroll into voting booths Tuesday. Meanwhile, executive vice presidential candidate Brian LaCorte, left, takes a lunch break. Kinsinger interviews law dean prospect; no decision made By Jim McCleary Staff writer One of two candidates for dean of the College of Law was interviewed in Pennsylvania recently by an ASU official, but the candidate said he has no plans to move to Arizona. ■John Bender, a professor at Pennsylvania Law School, told the state Press that any comment on the interview would have to come from Jack Kinsinger, vice president for Academic Affairs, but did say, “ I have no immediate plans to come out there. ” Kinsinger declined to meet with the State Press Tuesday concerning the selection of a dean or his trip to Pennsylvania on April la n d 2. A spokesman in Kinsinger’s office confirmed that he was in Pennsylvania on those dates. John Morris, chairman of the law college committee searching for a dean, said Tuesday he thinks a decision should be announced soon. “ I think the deal is made.” Morris said. It is not known whether an additional meeting has been scheduled with the other candidate, George Schatzki, a pro fessor at the University of Washington School of Law. Bom in 1933, in Brooklyn, N.Y., Bender is a 1957 graduate of Harvard Law School and was employed at a New York law firm after graduation. He has been assistant to the Solicitor General of the United States in the U.S. Department of Justice. ASU groundskeepers trying to protect fauna during record dry spell By Tlsa Striegter >. „ Staff writer Today will be the 90th day without rain, continuing a record-breaking dry spell, but the ASU grounds crew is managing to keep the grounds green. “We are having to irrigate more frequently,” said Don Dickerman, director of the grounds crew. “On the average we are doing one additional watering per week. ” The previous record for the longest period without a trace of rain in the Valley was 88 days, broken Tuesday, but the record for days without measurable rain is 160 days, set in 1972, according to Joe Dougherty, meteorologist for KTSP-TV, Channel 10. “There is a possibility of rain on Friday, but it’s an out side chance,” he said. “There’s more of a chance that it won’t rain.” Dickerman said the grounds crew is “also adding Among Bender’s many appearances before Congressional Committees is a recent appearance before the Judiciary Committee concerning the now-defunct school prayer amendment in the Senate. His specialties include Constitutional law, individual rights, civil rights, the Supreme Court and copyright pro cedures. The other ASU law dean candidate Schatzki was associate dean at the University of Texas School of Law from 1976 to 1979, and dean at the University of Washington School of Law from 1979 to 1982. He specialties include labor law; Constitutional law, civil liberties and civil procedure. organic mulch in some areas to conserve the water and keep it from evaporating. ” Evaporation, due to dry winds, has been hardest on flowers and plants according to Dickerman. “The flowers aire phasing out rapidly,” he said. To compensate, vegetation transplanted during this dry spell is being treated with an anti-desiccant to prevent wilting. “We are spraying the plants with a gummy substance that traps mositure within the leaf so that it does not leave the plant as rapidly,” Dickerman said. The lack of rain is the result of a “persistent high pressure system over our region,” said Anthony Brazel, climatology professor. “We have not had storms coming through the Southwest with the frequency we usually do,” he added. “Most of the storms have been going north of the pressure system and on to the e a s t” Pm* fr ee g a s nation/world between their powerful navies, Defense Department officials Soviet launch includes first Indian cosmonaut MOSCOW (A P ) — India’s first spaceman soared into orbit Tuesday aboard a Soviet rocket, carrying an Indian flagand a handful of his native soil for an eight-day mission in which he wiDattempt touse die ancient art of yoga to combat space sickness. n«k»»h Sharma, 35, and two Soviet cosmonauts, com m ander Yuri V. Malyshev, 42, and Gennadi M. Strekalev,«, blasted 0« aboard the Soyuz T-ll toward a rendezvous today with the orbiting Soviet space laboratory Salyut 7. Before the launch, which was broadcast live for only the third time in Soviet history, Sharma said it was “a great honor” to be the first Indian in space. He is the second man from a non-Soviet bloc nation to fly into space aboard a Soviet “ m g h o n ti* Moscow agenda will be the to d d ^ M o u d a y to which the 37,000-ton Soviet carrier Minsk fired ¿S** flares at the 3,900-ton U.S. frigate Harold Holt in the South ^ T h e flares which struck the Holt did not cause structural damage to the frigate or injuries to it* crew, said who spoke only on condition that they not be identififscjL Also to be discussed will be the March 21 collision m the Sea of Japan between a Soviet nuclear-powered attack sub marine and the U.S. aircraft carrierK itty Hawk. The¡colli sion caused minor damage to the carrier but sent the Soviet submarine limping home to Vladivostok at the end of a salvage ship’s tawline. Alleged long-distance fraud centered on Arizona, California Modern prisoner abuse rivals Nazis', Amnesty International says PHOENIX (AP)— MCI Communications, Inc., one of the nation’s largest companies offering discount telephone service, has lost hundreds of thousands of dollars in recent months through an alleged scheme centered in Arizona and Southern California, according to. In a 263-page report titled “Torture in the Eighties, the human rights organization listed abuses in 98 nations. The review, covering 1980 to mid-1983, marked the start of what the Nobel Prize-winning body said would be a campaign to expose and end “torture as a tool of state policy. of cruelty cited in the report ranged from small children in Iran’s Evin prison being forced to watch their mothers tortured, to pain-inducing drugs administered to Soviet dissidents held in psychiatric hospitals. U .S.-U .S.S.R . meeting geared to prevent naval incidents WASHINGTON (AP) — A U S. Navy delegation will meet with Soviet admirals in Moscow next month for discussions aimed at heading off potentially explosive incidents at sea ■ " S i s x r . w i * U-FILL-IT 1 1 1 1 S. R u ra l R o ad Car Wash • Cigarettes 95Q Auto Supplies • Diesel PROFESSIONAL HAIR DESIGNS The three cosmonauts lifted off as scheduled from the Soviet space center at Baikonur. LONDON (AP) —At least a third of the world’s nations tor ture or abuse prisoners, Amnesty International said today in releasing a catalogue of modern cruelty that the group said warranted the same revulsion aroused by Nazi extermina W eekly D raw in g First Prize — *10°° Gas Second Prize — *5°° Gas PERM SPECIAL *0050 (Includes Cut & Shampoo) (Reg. $40.00) a z organized-crime bureau, said Tuesday that the fraudulent H A IR C U T ..........S7.00 activities are national, and possibly even international, m MANICURE SPECIALS SC^ K e apparent hub of the illegal activities center in Phoenix and Southern California,” said Berentz. ‘ There seems to be one common denominator with a great many ten tacles or facets.” . . , __ There have been no arrests so far, although records have been confiscated from one Phoenix company which is being investigated in connection with the alleged scheme. Manicure w/Polish........... S6.00 Nail Tips............ 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M o n .-S a t. 9-9 S u n d a y 11-4 N0 APPOINTMENT NECESSARY (Next to Greasy Tony's) Nothing Cleons Better Than Vou find A C o m p a re o u r fe a tu re s PRE SOAK: FO A M IN G ENGINE CLEANER FO A M TIRE CLEANER: BUBBLE BRUSH: SOAP: RINSE:, v H O T TURTLE WAX: 5 0 < t C y c le w ith a r o n ' s y o u r e x is tin g c a r w a s h : Low pressure concentrate that cuts oil film Cuts the heaviest grease; makes engines gleam Powerful enough to really clean those tires Special lubricated soap that out-muscles the dirt without scratching High Pressure — soap that powers off the dirt at 1000 PSI but leaves that wax shining High Pressure (1000 iPSI) of super soft wateV to reduce water spotting Turtle Wax® to give every car the world famous Turtle Wax® suger__^_ hard-shell finish im P*. 1201 €.RPflCH€ • SCOTTSDtt.fc 1711 €OfWST. 2 5
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States should stay out. Although Hart has since refined his
position for the national media, his original statement says a
lot about the man.
__ .
Certainly the last thing Reagan wants is more involvement
in the Middle East. But his leadership qualities are
demonstrated by his unwillingness to turn his back on U S.
aUl!tilitarily, keeping the Gulf open would not be too difficult,
especially with Saudi cooperation in the form of land bases
forfiehter planes. The Gulf is too wide - 30 miles at the most
narrow point, the Strait of Hormuz - to close by sinking a
few ships And even if Iran successfully mined the channel,
military 'experts estimate that radar-equipped mine
sweeping helicopters from the U.S. carrier Midway, current
ly cruising the north Arabian Sea, could clear the waterway
,nBut the political proclamations and tactical calculations
are probably irrelevant anyway. As fanatical as Khomeini
mav be closing the Gulf would halt Iran’s own daily exporta
tion o f’two million barrels of oil, which is Tehran’s only
source of income to support its war effort.
If irrationality did get the better of Khomeini and he
managed to close the Gulf, non-military solutions would in
clude importing from other countries eager to increase their
oil output, such as Mexico, Venezuela, Indonesia and
Nigeria The Saudis could increase usage of a pipeline that
runs from oil fields in the eastern part of the country to the
Red Sea on the west. The line currently runs at only 40 per
cent of its capacity of 1.6 million barrels a day.
In event tit a real crisis, the United States has 375 million
barrels, a three-month supply, stashed away in Texan and
Louisianan salt caverns. European stockpiles would last
about90 days, and Japan has a 121-day supply.
This economic juggling act would be complicated, but
beats the heck out of military entanglement any day.
Western involvement aside, the common fear by Arab nalions is that if Iran wins, its form of Islamic revolution could
spread throughout and beyond the Persian Gulf.
Regardless of who wins (if that word applies here),
perhaps the most shuddering ramification of the war would
be Iraq’s use of domestically-manufactured and Moscowsupplied chemical weapons. If other Third World countries
pick up on this cheap method of causing heavy casualties, the
results could be disastrous.
In this war, all parties involved are likely losers. Any ac
tion the United States takes could backfire. The dilemma of
invaluable resource deposits located in. such an unstable
region continues to be a headache for Western policymakers.
The best U S. policy is to consult with all allies involved
and exercise caution: Any actitettaken should be a multiple
effort, such as suggested by Britain’s Prim e Minister
Margaret Thatcher, who offered British naval support in the
event of a crisis. Allied cooperation is in America’s best in
terests, as is prudent avoidance of military solutions.
Life in th e zoo
a beastly experience
Editor:
....
,
Contrary to the the article about Manzanita’s coed lifestyle
(State Press, March 28), the residence hall still lives up to its
nickname, toe “zoo.”
.
Credit must be given to the RAs, the staff, the maids and
maintenance men for their efforts to keep the residents in
line; however, they are not super-human, and as long as
Manzanita remains coed, it will always be a “zoo.”
t
It is difficult to find truth in the statement that Manzanita s
security policy “is sound.” .With the dorm being coed, it is
nearly impassible to detect who belongs there at night and
who doesn’t Unfortunately, the policy of checking keys after
dark has all but disappeared. Many unescorted male guests
have entered the building after l l p.m., no questions askedThe attitude which Sgt. Robert Jones took toward the
“isolated incidents” of the rape in 1982 and the trespassing
case earlier this month, must have been very annoying to the
girl who found two drunk strangers wandering around in her
room after 1 a.m. Keeping the outside stairwells locked
didn’t seem to stop these men.
The level of vandalism has drastically increased since the
hall became coed. In a past semester, the 10th flow had to be
retiled as a result of beer being spilled on it in mass quantity.
When the hall was occupied only by women, lounge dividers
were not torn down and entire doors were not destroyed, in
addition, it wasn’t necessary to take, the stairs on the
weekend because the elevators did not carry the repulsive
smell of urine and stale beer as they do now.
The wily way Manzanita can rid itself of its nickname the
“zoo” is for it to return to an all-female dormitory. With over
19,000 men attending ASU, there are numerous other oppor
tunities for women and men to meet. Living in the same
residence hall therefore doesn’t seem necessary.
Diane Hanacek
Freshman, Psychology
LETTER POLICY
The State Press encourages letters on any topic.
Letters should be typed, double-spaced. Include your
full name, class standing, major and phone number.
All letters are subject to editing at the discretion of
the opinion page editor.
Address letters to: Letters, State Press, Matthews
Coiter, ASU, Tempe, AZ 85287.
.
5Utt Press_______________ ___________________________ i-----222222
m o r e 1l e t t e r s
|
Abortion and national law
Editor:
therefore not merely bad conduct but con
Teresa A. Bellamak's appalling letter
duct contrary to natural law which ends in a
against Tracy Fletcher’s recent editorial on
“state” of existence that lacks justice, that
abortion peddles pernicious ideas that
is
to say a state of injustice.
undermine the very foundations of human
B e lla m a k believes that the humanness of
rights.
unborn
children is “unknowable.” It is
Bellamak vents her spleen oyer a
unknowable only to those who refuse to
woman’s private moral choice becoming “a
know. Bellamak trusts science to find the
matter of public policy” ; snarls because
magic moment when the zygote becomes a
women suffering from the crimes of rape
human being, but seeing that science has
and incest and in danger of losing their lives
failed to find that moment she assumes that
would be denied an abortion; and storms
the zygote is not a human being. There is not
about these decisions being made when the
such magic moment, but there is a moment
Supreme Court cannot agree on when life
at which the potential for human life
begins.
residing in ova and sperm is actualized: the
Her remarks about abortion in the cases
moment of conception. The resulting cells
of rape, incest, or when the life of the
do not appear human, which seems to be
-mother is endangered are important for
why Bellamak regards the zygote as
discussion, but such a complex issue needs a
np n h iu n a n But all this shows is the problem
separate article. Still, while it must be em
of mere science: it is trapped on the first
phasized that women are indeed the victims
level of the knowledge of nature and cannot
of the crimes of rape and incest, it should
transcend phenomenal empiricism to see
also be stressed that unborn children are not
the zygote’s ontological reality. The
the perpetrators of these crimes, nor are
zygote’s real being is human because all
they directly responsible for the health of
th in g s physically behave and develop ac
the mother.
cording to their essential nature, and the
THlamak praises the “present human
humal zygote develops as a human because
system in which each person follows her
its essential nature Is human,
own conscience,” and chides those who
By maintaining that the human zygote’s
want to honor the basic human rights of un
humanness is nonexistent, and by asserting
born children because the “personhood” of
that moral values are expressions at per
these children cannot be demonstrated by a
sonal will, Bellamak tends toward nihilism,
computer printout. First, Bellamak con
the very nihilism Hitler embraced.
fuses morality with taste in hair styles.
Bellamak has more in common with Hitler
Morality is not a choice at life-styles, but ra
than Tracy Fletcher, for Hitler embodied an
tional conduct based upon knowledge of the
egocentric, nationalized will divorced from
natural order. Knowledge of this order is
right reason and natural law. His regime
related to hunian reason first by empirical
was unjust because his violations of human
observation of nature, secondly by con
rights were contrary to natural law. One can
templation of these observations, and third
only hope that before Bellamak calls anti
ly by the operations of the will based upon
abortionists Nazjs, she will first pause to
this contemplation. This results in ^right
ponder the meaning of justice.
reasons and leads to conduct that is in ac
John M. Currin
cordance with natural law. Immorality is
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from
T H E C L A R IO N IN N A T M c C O R M IC K R A N C H
Scottsdale's lu xu ry resort, located on th e shores o f Cam elback Lake
As a special offer to ASU graduates and
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C o m p lim e n ta ry H a p p y H o u r cocktails and co m p lete breakfast each day.
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IF YOU'RE
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LOCATED JU ST Vz BLOCK
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TRAVEL IS TH E TRAVEL
SERVICE FOR ASU
STUDENTS!
OPEN
Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Wednesday. April 4,1984
Animal feeder provides care
for choosy reptilian charges
By Ted Johnson
Contributing writer
Larry Nienaber knows how to feed a
finicky snake.
At any one time ASU displays 50 to 60
native Arizona snakes in glass cages on the
first floor of the Life Sciences Center.
Nienaber, 34, an animal caretaker for the
Animal Research Center, is responsible for
the snakes’ well-being, feeding and cage
cleaning.
The snakes' food is mice and rats — about
200 rodents per month — and Nienaber has
developed a strategy for getting each of
them to eat.
“Snakes have their own personalities,” he
said. “When you first get a specimen
(snake), you’ve got to try all kinds of dif
ferent tilings until you can get them to eat. ”
The ideal situation, he said, is to get them
to eat a dead rodent — one that has been
gassed with carbon dioxide — because
feeding snakes live mice may be dangerous
to the snake and “it’s not the most pleasant
thing for the mouse.”
But some snakes don’t like dead mice;
some don’t like mice at all. Some, for exam-
pie prefer lizards and have to be condition
ed to eat mice. If they can’t be conditioned,
they are returned to the wild.
Ridgenosed rattlesnakes will eat dead
mice only if they get to bite a live one first.
One of them, a Yuma king snake, requires
a special strategy because it has two heads:
The right head is given a small mouse head
first into its mouth. The left head is fed a
sideways mouse. The right head can
swallow its mouse sooner than the left head
which hinders any mouse-jams that might
occur where the two throats connect.
At one time Nienaber fed the snakes dur
ing school hours when anyone could watch.
In 1981, someone complained to the direc
tor of animal care, and about two years ago
a student verbally assaulted Nienaber.
“She said that I was a terrible person, in
so many words, qnd that she loved mice and
hated snakes.”
Now he feeds the snakes at night when the
doors are locked.
“There are always one or two people who
don’t like to see cute little mice being eaten
by snakes,” which is unfortunate because it
is part of science, he said.
T erra ce
R o a d
A p a r tm e n ts
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ASSOCIATED STUDENT TRAVEL AND
TOURISM BUREAU ANNOUNCES ITS
IF YOU LOVE CLOTHES
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BUFFALO EXCHANGE
Date: Wednesday, April 4
Time: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Place: Memorial Union
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Wednesday. April 4,1984
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State Press
Wednesday. April 4, 1984
police report
An ASU student totaled his jeep early
Monday when it became lodged in the sandy
Salt River bottom and caught on fire. The
student had purchased the jeep on Saturday
The 1970 Toyota Land Cruiser evidently
caught on an object in the river bed while
the student was four-wheeling, and efforts to
free the vehicle produced the flames, police
said.
Both Tempe and Rural/Metro fire depart
ments responded, as well as ASU
authorities. The jeep caught fire near the
east end of Lot 59.
Heavy-equipment operators from ASU’s
grounds crews had to be called to clear a
pathway to the blaze because the area sur
rounding the vehicle also was in flames.
In other activity, University Police
reported the following incidents in the 24hour period ending at 6 a.m. Tuesday:
•A Palo Verde West resident who took an
overdose of Tylenol Monday evening was
treated at the scene by Tempe paramedics,
then transported to Tempe St. Luke s
Hospital where he received additional treat
ment.
•An ASU student had two bicycles stolen
within a seven-day period late last month,
he told police Monday. On March 23, the stu
dent reported his light-blue Benotto 10speed, valued at $100, taken from the south
side of the Physical Science A-Wing. Less
than a week later, on the morning of March
. M a rc h
dx>_.of
^ D im es
SAVES BABIES
HELP FIGHT BIRTH DEFECTS
29, his red 25-inch men’s 12-speed, valued at
$200, was taken from the north side of Mur
dock Hall, he told police early Monday.
•A student said she does not know what
caused the fall that broke her tooth and
bruised her upper lip Monday morning in
the ASU Bookstore lobby. She was taken to
the Student Health Service for treatment.
•Police brought two female youths into the
police station early Monday who they
observed on campus and suspected to be
runaways. The two girls were questioned
and then released to their parents.
•A men’s Fuji Grand Tour bicycle, valued at
$300, was taken from the south side of the
Physical Sciences A-Wing, an ASU student
told police Monday afternoon.
•An ASU student reported the theft of lus
men’s red Schwinn 5-speed from the
northwest Manzanita bicycle racks Monday
afternoon. The bicycle was valued at $350.
•Another Schwinn bicyele, valued at $160,
was taken from the Manzanita bicycle racks
Monday, according to an ASU student.
•A report from an anonymous caller that a
bomb was planted in a Manzanita Hall room
proved to be unfounded. Police checked the
area and found nothing unusual.
•An ASU student’s white Volkswagen had a
rhino boot placed on it in Lot 44 early Monda v. after owing $745 in outstanding parking
citations.
M o v in g S a le
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Wednesday. April 4,1984
State Press
U N B ELIEVA B LE
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P.V. WEST COUNCIL
SUPPORTS THE FOLLOWING
ASASU CANDIDATES
PRESIDENT —
RAYMOND BURNELL
EXECUTIVE V.P.
BRIAN LACURTE
CAMPUS AFFAIRS V.P.
NANCY PARKS
ACTIVITIES V.P.
JAMES NORTON
Police dog impresses ASU >xec
roll Hull, made the trip to ASU this week torive pose of having
the campus a taste of what a police dog, or ju
Both Hull an
S tu ff w rite r
is capable of and how such an animal might of temperame
ASU is playing proud host this week to a
benefit a university.
w perfect match.
visiting law enforcement officer who enjoys
Recently “kicked upstairs,” Hull now works included tests l
playing Frisbee, craves doughnuts and always
as a crime prevention investigator for the titude, attentii
appreciates a good pat on the back.
UCLA Police Department, as well as director occurrences si
Maxwell, who held personal meetings with
of the university’s Rape Prevention and E%a
Max spent tl
ASU President J. Russell Nelson and the
tion Services.
typical familj
University vice presidents, has been involved
Hull and Max have been a team since woi overseas tran
in police work forjnore than three years and
and until her promotion to a position requiring Mandelyn Ker
has spent the majority of that time patrolling
more office work, patrolled the UCLA carnaii what it takes ti
the campus of the University of California at
daily.
After two ar
I ^ A n g d cs
Hull, 26, was th&iirst female canine-unit of a patrol comn
“I was impressed with Max,” Victor Zafra,
ficer in the country and is now one of two. The the first time i
vice president for business affairs, said. He s
other
officer now works Hull’s former beat with nelfortwomoi
delightful.”
her German Shepherd, Barry.
“When I fin
But upon meeting Zafra, Max simply wagged
Arriving at the Los Angeles campus fromthe care for sheph
his tail and offered a paw.
The 5-year-old German Shepherd, accom UC Irvine Medical Center more than three it didn’t take ft
years ago, Hull transferred for the specific purpanied by his partner/owner Officer Mary Car
Max’s total
compares im;
months to a y
become fit for
Three basic
in police work
as Max who s
and trailing; <
dogs who spec
In addition !
suited for K-9
and intelligei
man Pinscher
dog, Bouvier c
“A Bouvier
bear, with a
around 120 po
Max tips th
complete wit
cording to Hui
If the price
fact that Mai
suspects, gw
and, if nec<
hospital.
“I can leav
a ‘watch-stay
Staff photos by James Momt
they will not
has his eyes o
Erin Black, 4, stops on the mall to pet police dog Maxwell Sm art while her child development class
“The fear <
at ASU was on a field trip collecting leaves.
By M.K. Reinhart
B rin g T his A d In For
S tu d en t & F a cu lty D isc o u n ts
FUTURE ROSEBOWL
CHAMPS
HOURS
Stata Pr
1 9 8 4
W o r ld
P o p u la tio n
F o r u m
&
S o u t h w e s t is s u e s
The nation's leading e x p e rts on
th e im pact o f p o p u la tio n on
•im m ig ra tio n fro m Mexico
•U.S. Foreign Policy
•U n ite d Nations A c tiv itie s
•O u r Own s o u th w e s t:
Human Resources
Economic Resources
6 p.m.( Thurs., April 12
The E n viro n m e nt
All day, Fri., April 13
•in d iv id u a l Choice vs. Social Needs
Educators' Workshop
Saturday, April 14
•T h e Role o f w om e n
Scottsdale Sunburst Resort
T
o
G
ai
a
C
SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE
Scholarships are available th ro u g h trhe colleges
m entioned below to cover $25 o f th e $50 co st o f
fu ll-tim e stu d e n t re g istra tio n
Registration
Name
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Address.
Phone_
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registration includes
3 meals
_$110 for non-students
_$40 educators'
workshop only
(April 14)
Check payable ta
1984 Population Forum
1Ï01 S. 7th Ave.
Phoenix, AZ 85007
To reserve space or
for more information,
contactJan Bennett • 258-4299
For scholarship inform ation
co n ta c t
College o f Liberal Arts
Dean’s Office
-Dr. Deborah Sullivan
Dr. David Rasmussen
Dr. Patricia Gober
College o f Education
Dean's Office
Dr. Arlene M etha
college o f Public Programs
Dean's Office
Diane wigand
College o f Social w ork
Dean’s Office
At’ AGL) Certr^VrÌiàievent Sponsored wi part Dv Scurwr
Hedirn Se»vice Hosted by Planned Parenthood
C
E
S
C
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Press
sut« Press
Page 11
Wednesday, April 4,1984
tSUfexecutives
1 2 CHOICE LOCATIONS *
week togive L s e of having a K-9 “selected” for her.
:
K-9, ' B o t h Hull and Max underwent several types
niraal might ¡of temperament tests in order to ensure the
11now works
•tor for the
•as director
landEducai since 1981,
on requiring
campus
nine-unit ofof two. He
ier beatwith
■
pus fromthe
than three
specific pur-
i by Jam«* Moser
pment class
perfect match.Max completed 11 trials, which
included tests for aggressiveness, curiosity, at
titude, attention span and reaction to sudden
occurrences such as loud noises.
Max spent the first 18 months of his life as a
typical family dog, but due to the family’s
overseas transfer, was sent to Bakersfield’s
Mandelyn Kennels in hopes that he might have
what it takes to become a police dog.
After two and one-half months of training as
a patrol command dog, Max and Hull met for
Ithe first time and worked together at the Ken
nel for two more weeks.
“When I first got him, I didn’t particularly
!care for shepherds,” Hull said, but adding that
it didn’t take Max long to change her mind.
Max’s total training period of three months
compares impressively to the average six
months to a year it takes most other dogs to
become fit for duty.
Three basic types of K-9s currently are used
in police work: the patrol command dog, such
as Max who specializes in searches, tracking
and trailing; dogs trained to detect bombs and
dogs who specialize in narcotic detection.
In addition to German Shepherds, other dogs
suited for K-9 work because of their strength
and intelligence include Rottweilers, Dober
man Pinschers and a breed of Belgian working
dog, Bouvier des Flandres.
“A Bouvier is a cross between a poodle and a
bear, with a Scotty head,” and weighs in at
around 120 pounds, Hull said.
Max tips the scales at 90 pounds and comes
complete with a $7,000 price tag. But, ac
cording to Hull, “ he’s priceless.”
If the price sounds a bit steep, consider the
fact that Max can single-handedly apprehend
suspects, guard suspects, sniff out suspects
and, if necessary, put suspects into the
hospital.
“I can leave five or six suspects with Max on
a ‘watch-stay’ command,” and feel secure that
they will not have moved a muscle while Max
has his eyes on them, Hull said.
“The fear of a dog is a psychological thing
Fountains
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967-0489
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967-0409
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’SPECIAL $50 MOVE-IN ALLOW ANCE’
Check with management for details.
mesi, .. ¿«/¿gao*»**- ■«
Police dog Maxwell Smart and h it handler Mary
Carroll Hull of the UCLA police pose on the
lawn across from Hayden Library Tuesday.
“Max” and O fficer Hull are on loan from UCLA
to test the student reaction to canine accom
panied patrols on the ASU campus.
. . . people are not quite sure what a dog will
do,” Hull said.
Although Max usually maintains a friendly
disposition, he has sent seven people to the
hospital. Hull said even the smallest bite from
Max warrants a trip to the doctor for safety’s
sake.
To maintain his weight, Max goes through
112 pounds of food a day. Besides an occasional
salad or a doughnut on Sundays, the K-9 dines
on IMAS, a high-protein brand of dog food
available only from a veterinary clinic.
Max gets a thorough tooth-brushing each
week and a professional grooming every
month, Hull said.
Although he is an incredible animal, with in
credible capabilities, according to Hull, Max
would “just as soon crawl up in your lap as he
would bite you.”
For those interested in seeing Max in action,
he and Officer Hull, with Chief Duncan acting
as the attacker, will put on a K-9
demonstration, along with a little Frisbee, at
noon today on the West Hall Lawn.
Are Y o u Tired of W aiting
In Lines for a Term inal?
I n s t e a d
o w n
o f
r e n t i n g ,
y o u r
t e r m i n a l
E x p a n d
N O W
t o
c o m p u t e r
Go
o w n
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la t e r .
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4427 S. Rural • Tempe, Rrizona 85282 • 897-0313
FREE SNEAK PREVIEW
N O T IC E
E n jo y a n e v e n in g o f
The following Senate Bill #84 will appear
G r e a t A m e r ic a n D e c a d e n c e
at
on the ballot of the Associated Students
General Election on Tuesday, April 3,
and Wednesday, April 4. It Is a proposed
am endm ent to the Associated Students
NEEB HALL
TH URSDAY, APRIL 5
7:30 p.m.
(Doors open at 6:45 p.m.)
Constitution.
IS
in s p ir e d b y
A N
ROBIN
WILLIAMS
A C T
C H A N G IN G T H E S E LE C TIO N PR O C
ESS
FOR
A S S O C IA TE D
SENATO R S TO
STUDENT
D IR E C T ELECTIO N,
CO LLEG E W IDE.
1. (1.) T W O
r e p r e s e n t a t iv e s f r o m e a c h c o l l e g e
2.
C O U N C IL S H A L L BE E L E C T E D IN A D IR E C T
3.
E L E C T IO N , C O L L E G E W ID E , T O BE H E L D N O
4.
L A T E R T H A N A P R IL 30.
in
Vladimir iva no ff (Robin williams) is a Russian defector w ith a
black roommate, a Cuban lawyer and an Italian girl friend.
He has to learn to live w ith Big Macs, cable TV, Hard Rock,
s o ft Core and unem ploym ent. . . a world o f “ freedom.”
D O or P rize
Fram ed "Moscow on the Hudson ” poster
C ourtesy of Hang In There, T em p e
P re-S creen in g Party
W ednesday, April 4 at
Timothy O ’Tooles “Wild Wednesday’’
5. (2.) T H E S E E L E C T IO N S S H A L L M E E T T H E
6.
REQUIREMENTS ASSET FORTH IN THE AS A S U
7.
B Y -L A W S .
B eth e re o r b e a
R e d S q u a re
CohaW a
P ictu re s
State Pres«
Wednesday. April 4,1984
12
Student-built gazebo offers
shade, picnicking for public
By Deanna McCormick
Staff writer
There is a new scenic addition to the lawn
just west of the University Archives that can
be used by students or the general public for
picnics, study sessions or friendly convers
ing.
_
As part of the Centennial celebration, the
ASU Construction Club built a white gazebo
under a few shady trees on the north end of
campus, roughly between the University Ar
chives and Old Main.
The gazebo was built by about 18 con
struction majors who complete at least one
or two community service projects every
year, said Vem Hastings, professor of con
struction.
The idea for a gazebo came from Madelyn
Wright, scheduling coordinator in Facilities
Management Planning, who thought the
gazebo might be used for opening-day
ceremonies of the Centennial celebration so
that University President J. Russell Nelson
could speak from it.
Although the gazebo was not actually used
for that, it was used on the following Sunday
by a group touring the campus.
The plans for the gazebo originally came
from a picture in a magazine, Hastings said,
but the Construction Club elaborated on the
original plans to make the gazebo larger.
“The gazebo was constructed in the Pier
son Construction Yard of Tempe, and all of
the lumber and supplies were donated by
O’Malley’s Building Supply,” Hastings said.
Wright said the gazebo probably will stay
under the trees behind Old Main. But
1984-85
Martina Arroyo, Ruby Dee, Ada Louise Huxtable^ Bess
Myersoa, Jack N ew fidd, SyM a Porter and Pearl Primus
a ll spent their junior year’ at Hunter College.
How about youl
J u n io r Y e a r A b r o a d
- in
ËH2SS
'and their freshman,
sophomore and
senior yean too.
Staff photo by Tina Oanon
Karen Qrayberg and Vicki Llndmark, both
Junior nursing majors, enjoy the peaceful
solitude of the gazebo to discuss an upcom
ing organic chemistry class.
N e w T fiw k !
Take your junior year at Hunter College, studying and
holding internships in your choice of T he Arts
(dance, film, theatre, music, visual arts), C ommuni
cations (television, radio, journalism); U rban
Leadership Studies (political science, sociology an
urban affairs), and Education of the G ifted and
T alented (elementary and secondary). You'll be able
to stay at the College's low-cost dormitory and
study at our main campus on Manhattan's Park Avenue.
And the fees are modest.
^
Deadline for applications for 1984-85: May 1,1984.
Please send me information on Junior Year Abroad-in New York!
Name________ ■
Hastings added that the gazebo is mobile
and can be taken apart and moved.
The Construction Club, which has about 90
members, has done such community ser
vices as building porches for the poor,
building animal pens at the Phoenix Zoo and
doing projects for the Salvation Army.
Status (check one)
------------- —------------ ------------
□ Student
□ Faculty
□ Other-
Your field of specializationReturn as soon is po»ible to: Junior Y«tr in New Vmk Itox 1M9N, Hrntter College,
695 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10021 212/772 5007.
A leading authority in environmental psychology will
give a free public lecture in ASU’s Neeb Hall at 4 p.m.,
Thursday, April 5.
Irwin Altman, academic vice president of the
University of Utah, will speak on “Home and Com
munity Design: A Cross Culture and Social
Psychological Analysis. ’’
Home design
lecture offered
B U R G E R
IN T R A M
U R A L
K IN G '
H IG H L IG H T S
CONGRATULATIONS INTRAMURAL CHAMPIONS!
VOLLEYBALL D O U BLES
April 6, 7 & 8
4
Men’s
Bowling
H-O-R-S-E
Team A-Lambda Chi Alpha
B-Sigma Phi Epsilon
Individual A-Greg Williams
B-Jeff Marcoux
Team-R. Gang
A-Brent Pine
B-David Maddox
Debbie Epstein
Team A-(tie) Phi Delta Theta
N. Legamaro’s Team
B-Phi Delta Theta
Individual A-Harry Semler
B-George Whitley
INTRAM URAL SPORTS OFFICE
Team-Chi Omega
lndividual-(.tie) Debbie Epstein
Cindy Dickson
(
Singles A-Matt Romanoff
B-Jim Kloss
Doubles A-Craig Brown & Tod Braun
- B-Jim Kloss & John Grimes
Physical Education West Bldg. Lobby
965-5638
Please cut out this couponI
994WHOPPER
LIMIT 5
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wim this
adoniy
0ne-on-0ne A-John Prather
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Individual-Beth Conover
Lisa Wall & Mindy Bebow
Pool
Freethrow
Women’s
Sign up fo r V o lleyb a ll D o u b les today!
T h e en try fe e is $2 per te a m and en trie s
are due to m o rro w , T h u rs d ay, A pril 5.
T w o p eo p le m ake a team . D ivisions are
M e n ’s, W o m e n ’s, C o re c and O p e n . Full
tim e A S U students, facu lty and staff are
elig ib le to en ter volleyball doubles. S ee
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Gocrt only at 740 E. Apache. Tempe._
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Hungry?
m
Page 13
Wednesday. April 4.1984
S ta u P ro «
Nelson dedicates Centennial Sculpture
b
By Asha Nathan
Staff writer
Continuing in the spirit of ASU’s Centennial extravaganza.
President J. Russell Nelson dedicated the Centennial
Sculpture Tuesday at noon on the mall area between the
F anner Education Building and Payne Hall.
Created by professional sculptor Jerry Peart, a 1970 ASU
liëS
graduate, the work is titled “Celebration.”
Almost 20 feet high and 19 feet wide, the unusual combina
tion of shapes and colors is a permanent addition to the AaU
campus.
P eart said he was commissioned at $52,000 by the Centen
nial Commission.
He said work on the project began nearly a year ago, while
the actual fabrication of “Celebration” began last December
in a studio in Chicago.
The all-aluminum sculpture was shipped here in late
February and painted with weatherproof polyurethane, ac
cording to Peart, who added that the colors are an integral
part of the design.
He said he sees the abstract design as portraying
“strength” and “playfulness.”
... .. ..
St*n photo by Tina Q*raon
He added that it involves “manipulation of the eye,’ saying
Employees of Tem p* Crane, Inc., Install the top portion of the that if everyone took a few minutes to walk around Celebra
official Centennial statue Monday. The work of art is located
tion” and look at it from different angles, they would see how
on the lawn between Payne H all and the Farmer Education the variety of shapes and colors fit together.
ASU art m a jo r Ed Kunze agreed, saying he was impressed
with “how the curves and lines and colors accent one
another.”
. . .
,
He said, “I’m impressed with the amount of thought and
detail that has gone into this. There is a nice balance, with
everything flowing together.”
Katy Svoboda, also an art major, said she hkes the
sculpture “because of the way it interacts with the environ
ment.” She said it is “clean” and “monumental.
But Bill Canter, a first-semester transfer student^didn’t
ouite feel the same way. “I don’t know what . . it is, orwteit
& supposed to represent. All I can see is that it has good co
or.”
Joanna Diulus, music education major, said she thought
the sculpture was a waste of money. “ I think they could have
put the money to a lot better use.”
P eart was chosen by the visual arts suteom m itteeofthe
Centennial Commission after it reviewed slides and port
folios of various artists, according to Dennis Petty, project
manager for the Centennial Commission.
Petty said the committee’s choice of Peart had nothing to
do with his being an alumnus.
He said the sculpture was intended to commemorate the
Centennial and not necessarily to represent anything.
“Celebration” is the first major piece of outdoor sculpture
on campus.
Building.
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SO G IA T
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tending congressional hearings, conducting research and
Congressman taking
applications for interns
Congressman Morris Udall is
plications from students who areinteres
congressional interns. Successful appl.canb w.ll work
RejEÜdall’s Washington office for one semester.
.-¿sfiss saflbJS
Interns are being sought for the fall and spring
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Congressional interns will work full time in Udall’s office°Duties will include answering constituent mail, at
federal govenmwnt. CoUege credit is available for the m-
^F or'm ore information, contact Neil Giuliano, Office of
Student Life.
■mm he Kennedy assassinations
■ I * sent tremors across the world
JL and left the nation in a state
of shock and disarray. But that’s
nothing compared to what hap
pened inside the Kennedy family.
In the May issue of PLAYBOY,
you’ll read an incredible saga that
begins on the pastoral lawns at
Hyahnis P ort and leads to the
putrid hallways of Harlem. This
exclusive account of the lost gen
eration of Kennedys is graphic
proof that the worst can happen
even in the best of families.
INTERVIEW: FASHION SUPERSTAR CALVIN KLEIN
PLAYBOY
THE FAEL
OF THE
YOUNG
KENNEDY
INSIDE. A j j
TKOURKgpl
AMI fd H T l
DYNAST**
O LD ER W OMEN
YOUNGER MEN
Oh, Canada
Ex-Devil Fteid working toward Olympics at ASU
Q
Q
h
P
f l
■Mm
m l
By Patti Bondy
SporWwriter
,
Among the hard-working men who comprise the ASU swim
team are several who are headed for the Olympic Games in
Los Angeles this summer.
One of them is Canadian-born Cameron Reid.
Although he has used up his eligibility as a Sun Devil, he
continues to train here at ASU under the supervision of the
Reid 23, grew up in Vancouver, B.C., but had his first com
petitive swimming experience in Montreal when he was 8
years old.
He has come a long way since that first summer program,
and is hoping this will be his season of destiny.
The two most important things in his life, swimming and
school will both reach their peak this summer. He will
graduate from ASU and take a degree in industrial engineer
ing to the summer Games.
Reid said he “trained in 1980 for the Olympics. When
Canada didn’t go, I decided to maintain my swimming until
1984.M
He trail» about five hours a day to perfect all strokes since
his events are the 200- and 400-meter individual medleys.
Reid and another former ASU swimmer, Andy Astbury,
are training together for the Games. They are using a train
ing program that “is pretty individual for Andy and myself
“It has been really difficult the last few weeks because An
lonely.’
° ^ i d said that “ the majority of my improvement has been
in tonSbites. There is more competition here, more swimI - . --------------J l , » , . mere.
«SK Y\ I ¡MW
SM H L.
;
life
.« .'• V ,' V.
mMmÊÊme
m
m *\
mi
«
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m
.......
wm
Stall photo by James Moser
Former ASU - m m . , C m . H U
Canadian Olympian, finished second at NCAA’s last year In the 4 0 0 IM .
* h° h W * “ ^ *
., _T .. .
After the Olympics Reid would like to stay m the United
“Vnu learn how to be a really good time-management perwant to do something, you can find
option “p fe S ttie sky. You have to
plan for
^ntrhim! UD on lost social
P ,r t ¿ h i . p u m may isctofc calcW ngup » 1 « . — W
‘“ » y j ^ / S S t h e routine. Ineeds«™ brain work.’’
Commitment is a big part of Reid ssuccess^
S H S S C mbR
ray «nÿ Phce, *nd I think 1 am I
iy. You're aliatone in the water.
- jiM m m m r n r ...................... a a a a a a w w
ww
^
Good
CINDY REIMAN
Compliments of
/gre -dat -g m a t
/ achievements
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MONGOLIAN SKI CONDITIONS
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OTHER FAR OUT FACTS WILL BE REVEALED
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State Press
S ta te d
Wednesday. April 4 .1984
Sorry Duke; Georgetown’s the national champs
never quite forgiven the Wildcats for beating Duke in the naA n d S X ° t t a t f couldn’t bring myself to cheer for a team
coached by a man named Joe B. Hall. Who in this worldgoes
by an informal name like Joe and then adds on his middle m-
T o m B lo d g e t t
A s s is t a n t s p o r t s e d ito r
Hr
li
B y S te i
1SIR2iS
through Saturday — Georgetown and Houston^
Wouldn’t it be great, I told my friends, to finally give Akeeni
and Patrick Ewing the chance to settle the question of who
Ramblings about the NCAA championship game Monday
was better on the court?
, ..
But when both teams won, I had a problem. Who would I
I wasn’t all that thrilled with the Final Four this year. cheer for’ Neither team had victimized Duke.
Duke, my sentimental favorite, had long since been dismiss
There were additional factors here, too. The
ed by the Washington Huskies (ugh!), and anyone else worth match Jay Taylor, my immediate boss, against Tracy Fie
cheering for also was gone.
t
cher, my ultimate boss, in the newsroom pool.
And I had already lost my money in the State Press
No sense angering either of them. Tracy did warn us that
newsroom pool on Maryland and Memphis State neither of
sii
0 would win this pool. •. • or else!
which survived the regional semifinals.
I have never beento Houston, but 1 have a fnend who goes
But I knew I couldn’t be oblivious to the happenings in Seat to Georgetown. She was my date for the senior prom.
tle this year. I had to find a team to latch on to.
But despite all that, my heart belonged to Houston. I m not
■ Virginia was definitely out. Although in most years, I terribly fond of Guy Lewis’s towel, but who could say no to
would have gone with an underdog, the pain of watching a
Not me
team twice-beaten by Duke win the national championship Akeem7
I should mention that this in no way reflects onm ysem or
would be more than I could bear.
prom. I had a lot of fun and I’m still good friends with thegirL
Neither would Kentucky be an acceptable choice. I have
Armed with a Pepsi and a meatball ran d w ich ^ sat back
and watched a match-up which could have topped the last
two.games for excitement.
• . .
Well as you all know, the game was not that much of a
thrill. Houston virtually lost it at the end of the first half when
it managed to let things get out of control.
Trailing by 10 points at the intermission, the Cougars could
never whittle the lead to under three points.
The most striking characteristic of the game was how poor
ly officiated it was. One would think old Booker Turner, the
Pac-10 referee who does so many ASU games so poorly, was
blowing the whistle.
By golly, it was Booker Turner! How did such a bad referee
get the call for such an important game?
Booker managed to look the other way most of the night
Houston Cougars
w ^ i ^ S d of the big m an showdown for
.
Turner also blew a technical-foul call for a Cougar hanging
on the rim. At best the player brushed against it. A secondhalf slam by Michael Graham was much closer to such an of-
such insignificant fouls in a physical game.
feS 2 h ° S ? r I S tr iv e lS io much thaU thought they were
members of Republic Airlines’ Frequent Flyers program.
But in the end, I had to tip my hat to the Hoyas. They were
the team in control and deserved the victory.
What impressed me the most was John Thompson s inter
view with Brent Musberger at the end of the gameI am no great fan of Thompson’s much-cnticized methods.
He goes to such great lengths to isolate his team frommedm
pressure that I believe it could actually have the opposite effeet
But what he stands for is much more important.
The first thing he said to Musberger was that winning the
national championship was not the bottom line. It was more
important that the players graduate from school.
Maybe there is some hope in this crazy world.
Georgetown Hoyas
NOW!
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