B allot sh o rta g e holds up vo tin g By KATY McGREGOR Staff Writer A shortage of ballots and poll workers caused delays for students trying to vote in the Associated Students of ASU elections Tuesday. According to Elections Coordinator Tami Penberthy, ASASU officials anticipated the ballot shortages in the Col­ lege of Business because too few were printed. Some of the registration sites ran out of business college ballots Tuesday afternoon. “We are getting a lot more (ballots) printed up” for today, the last day to vote, she said. According to Penberthy, approximately 500 ballots were printed for each college. Individual college ballots are need­ ed this year, because students are allowed to elect their col­ lege senators for the first time. Penberthy said more ballots also were needed for students from the College of Liberal Arts. Students can vote at any polling place on campus, but are given separate ballots for their college, Penberthy said. Due to a shortage of workers, polls at the Student Health Center, Murdock Hall, and on Orange Mall between the MU and Hayden Library never opened Tuesday and less polling places may be available today, Penberthy said. “The problem is partly because (poll workers) don’t know where to go and some are forgetting,” she said. Penberthy said one reason not enough poll workers were scheduled was a “lack of interest by students.” Penberthy said she has consolidated the polling places on Palm Walk into one location in front of the Physical Science building, and omitted the location in front of the MU. “I tried to make them accessible (to students), with as many (poll workers) as I had available,” Penberthy said. According to Nancy Parks, campus affairs vice president, the poll in front of Hayden Library was established this year. Seven polling sites were open Tuesday, Parks said, while six were open last year. Some polls opened late after tables used at the locations were not delivered on time, Penberthy said. Penberthy said polls should open on time today when voting continues for executive and senatorial offices. Most polls close at 6 p.m. today, but polls at the College of Business and Hayden Library are open until 9 p.m. Graduate students and those with less than seven credit hours can vote at the Hayden location only, Penberthy said. Students need to show their activity card and a picture I.D. when voting, she said. Last year 3,000 ASU students, participated in ASASU elec­ tions. W e d n e sd a y April 3, 1985 state Vol. 67 No. 115 Arizona State University Tem pe, Arizona C opyright, State Press. 1985 Staff ph o to by Todd Qraon B allot boosters Anyone who ventured onto Cady M all Tuesday unaware of the ongoing student election was soon Informed of the democratic process by the above candidates. They are, from left: Dave Varnell - President; James Emmelkamp - Activities VP; Amy Young -Cam pus Affairs VP; M ark Isenberg - Activities VP; unidentified student; Darren Chuckry - Activities VP; Linda St. Angelo Campus Affairs VP; John Anton - Activities VP; and Paul Barker - President. Below, having his leg In a cast did not stop business senior Danny Balanon from campaigning for Chuckry and Cummlskey. Staff ph o to by Kip William« Dean plans to accept FDIC chairmanship By DOUG NEWMAN Staff Writer L. William Seidman, dean of the ASU College of Business, has been offered and will accept the position of chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. in Washington, D.C., ac­ cording to the director for External Affairs for the college. “He says he will take the job,” said Marilyn Seymann. “That’s a direct quote from the dean.” Seymann said she knew no other details. “He was in transit when he called,” she said. “He will be back in Tempe on Thursday.” Seidman, in New York Monday for a meeting of the board of the Phelps Dodge Corp., could not be reached for com­ ment. FDIC Chairman William Isaac, whose term expired last year, will remain at this post until a replacement is found. The FDIC insures deposits in banks and savings and loans associations for up to $100,000. Seidman, 64, has held several prominent positions in business and government. From 1974-76 he was an assistant for economic affairs to President Ford. He then served as vice chairman of the Phelps Dodge Corp. from 1976-82, where he is still a member of the board of directors. Seidman was a co-chairman of the White House Conference on Productivity from 1983-84. He has been dean of the College of Business at ASU since June 1982. Committee to evaluate education dean applicants By VICKIE CHACHERE Staff Writer A 20-member search committee has been formed to evaluate applicants for the posi­ tion of ASU College of Education dean. Jack Kinsinger, vice president for academic affairs, said Tuesday that the committee is headed by Carleton Moore, director for ASU’s Center for Meteorite Studies. The committee will consist of ASU faculty and staff, one undergraduate and one graduate student, representatives from the community colleges, and members of the Governor’s Commission on Teacher Educa­ tion, Kinsinger said. “It’s a very broad-based committee because there are a lot of constituents who have an interest in (the College of Educa­ tion ), ” Kinsinger said. Robert Stout, dean of the College of Education, leaves that post June 30 to assume a faculty position within the college. His resignation follows an Arizona Board of Regents call for reform in the college, and the release of a series of reports criticizing the college. Stout said he resigned because it was ‘‘generally time for me to resign. ’’ Moore said the academic affairs office has received about 20 applications for the position. “I expect we may have 200 applications and nominees (by the April 19 application deadline),” he said. Kinsinger said: “I expect a good response from a national search. There are plenty of high-quality candidates and (the College of Education) is an attractive unit to be dean of.” Kinsinger said recent criticisms of the col­ lege will have no bearing on the number of candidates applying for the post. “A number of colleges of education all over the country are going through a similar kind of review,” he said. Moore said the search committee will sub­ mit a list of 10 candidates to Kinsinger, who will make the final decision. From main interest of the faculty is “generating a list of excellent candidates,” Moore said. No deadline has been set for Kinsinger’s decision, Moore said, adding that he hopes the decision will be made “as soon as possi­ ble.” Page g State Prc»» Wednesday, April 3, 1985 nation/w orld Gorbachev 'agrees in principle' to summit meeting with Reagan WASHINGTON (AP) — Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gor­ bachev has "agreed in principle" to a summit meeting with President Reagan, but the time and place still must be work­ ed out, a senior U.S. official said Tuesday. It would be the first U.S.-Soviet summit since 1979, when former President Jimmy Carter and the late Leonid I. Brezhnev signed the second Strategic Arms Limitation Trea­ ty (SALT II) to reduce some kinds of nuclear weapons. The two sides are stockpiling other missiles, however, and have been unable to agree on ways to stop their arms race. The president’s spokesman, Larry Speakes, told reporters “there have been no discussions about arrangements for a summit, no meeting set, no time set, nothing along those lines.” Reagan, in an interview Monday, refused to discuss the contents of the letter he received from Gorbachev, but said he was “hopeful” that a summit could be held. “I wrote, and he (Gorbachev) answered, and we’re in negotiations, and we’ll just leave it like that,” the president said. Soviets ahead of U.S. in work on defense systems, Weinberger says WASHINGTON (AP) — The Soviet Union is protesting President Reagan’s “Star Wars” initiative only because it has launched a gigantic, similar effort of its own and wants to preserve a monopoly in the area of high-tech warfare, Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger said Tuesday. “What I’m trying to portray is what we know to be the grits facts," Weinberger said in releasing the Pentagon’s fourth annual report on Soviet military power. “And that is that the Soviets are working, have been working for a long time — longer than we have — on defensive systems.” The Soviets are campaigning against the American effort to develop an anti-missile system that could be deployed in space “because they are doing it themselves and they want to be left alone to do it,” he said. President Reagan has said the U.S. Strategic Defense In­ itiative research program would contribute to world stability by eventually making nuclear weapons obsolete. However, Weinberger said it would be highly destabilizing were the Soviets to develop such a system first, “because of the dif­ ference in the (government) systems, . . . the difference in usage, . . . the way they have behaved in the past and because of their obvious world ambitions.” Jewish officials charge groups with thwarting search for Nazi criminals NEW YORK (AP) — More than 30 Baltic and Ukrainian emigre groups have stepped up a campaign to thwart the Justice Department’s investigation of Nazi collaborators, World Jewish Congress officials charged Tuesday. The organization’s investigation disclosed “a widespread campaign, fraught with anti-Semitism, to derail the govern­ ment’s pursuit of war criminals,” said Kalman Sultanik, vice president of the Jewish group. The charges were denied by members of the Lithuanian and Ukrainian communities, who said opposition to the Justice Department effort focused on its use of evidence pro­ vided by the Soviet Union. NEW LOCATION LOW AIRFARES THORBECKE’S GYM Round Trip Air Fares Special Low Rales $250 B o ston ................................... $195 Chicago $212 Detroit ................................ $230 M ia m i................................... $250 New York $250 Philadelphia .......... . . $230 Pittsburgh $230 Washington ... .......... $195 M inneapolis.......................... $699 London .. $607 Frankfurt $396 Hawaii, air only ... $459 Hawaii Package ................. . $899 Tokyo ................................... $927 Hong Kong. air. h o t e l.......... 28-day Tour. New Zealand $2,500 and Australia, land & a i r ....... Some restrictions apply. Mon-Wed 9-9• Thors -Fri 9-6 • Sat 8-5 • Sun 10-2 Fares subject to change PANDA TRAVEL 1311E. 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Condiiiom ng und G uarantee’ Reg *50 NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY A PRECISION HARICUT BY EXPERTS OF GALLERY HAIR SPECIALIZING IN Al l PHASES OF HAIR CARE Gallery of “A FAMILY HAIR CENTER” m 4744 E THUNDERBIRD N W CORNER OF THUNDERBIRD & TATI 1M 867-0807 HOURS: M on Fri 9 8 ...... __Saturday 9 6 Closed Sur]j s 3415 S M cCLINTOCK t thugs (but blacks doing unto blacks is OK) and/or an allbioodbath ( gee. that’s not a liberal concern). Mr. !.'hnson, I suggest you take a larger look and see who are the ■■«I villains in the world — how about the 900 peasants recently slaughtered in Afghanistan — who will vote for them? Name withheld BLOOM COUNTY ' he m s aware a lone ntne before he rememberep that Hß HEART M S BROKENT hemincwiay wrote ir. I FEAR THAT THAT IS MV RDMANVC PEST!NY : TOBE fi BROKEN HEARTEP tPtOT. by B erke B reathed NEVERTHELESS.. 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