Regents may give ASU eviction power over fraternity By KIM SERTICH Assistant City Editor The Arizona Board of Regents may decide Friday whether to grant ASU officials power to revoke the campus housing of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. The item has been placed on the agenda as a result of Sigma Phi Epsilon's failure to pay rent, but the statutory agent for the fraternity said payment will be made by the end of the school year. Ronald Paquin said the $39,830 the fraternity owed the University on March 6 “will be paid very shortly.” According to the regents’ agenda, $20,000 of that amount is 30 days or more past due and has increased during the past several months. “ It is a result of a debt we have been carrying,” Paquin said. “We have agreed to bring the account up to date.” He said the fraternity has been working with its alumni and national organization to pay the debt. “ I have made arrangements to get the thing paid,” he said. monday April 8,1985 ASU Comptroller Gerald E. Snyder, whose office placed He said the payment is overdue because of the time involv­ the item on the regents’ agenda, said he has been in contact ed in obtaining loans and transferring funds. with the fraternity about the overdue payment. Fries said, “It is just a question of having the money “We are very hopeful the fraternity can make the past due transferred.” payment within another week,” Snyder said. “We have an in­ According to Paquin, it is a possibilty the regents will take dication that will happen. It had not happened as of the item off their agenda. He said it is also possible the board (Thursday).” will grant ASU President J. Russell Nelson the authority to Greek Life Coordinator Don Worcester said he is aware of terminate the lease. the financial situation and is actively working to correct it. If the authority is given to Nelson, he would only have that Brian Fries, fraternity president, said, “We have been power for one year, Paquin said. negotiating with the national organization, the alumni and ASU has recommended that the board grant authority to the University, and it will be paid on time.” the University to terminate the lease at any time during the Fries said the balance due to the University could be paid next 12 months if payments are overdue. this week. Robert Huff, the board's executive director, said, “It is still “It will be paid before the regents have to take any action,” on the agenda I have, but it could easily be pulled at the he said. meeting. The decision to pull it may already have been Paquin said the money will come from lending institutions made.” and alumni. He said some of the money will be raised locally Worcester said, “The agenda is set in advance so this may and some will come from the national account. not be the situation anymore. ” state press Vol. 67 No. 118 Arizona State University Tempe, Arizona Staff photo by Ron Kuczofc Jr. At left, Associated Students of ASU President-elect David Varnell shares congratulations with Amy Young, who won the office of campus affairs vice president. The two had just heard the election results Friday. Paul Barker, above, hears of his loss to Varnell, by 1,580 votes to 1,046. Chris Cummiskey captured the executive vice presidency, and a run-off election is set between Darren Chuckry and James Emmel­ kamp, the top vote-setters for the activities vice presidency. Neither received a required majority vote in the four-way race. V arn ell, Cum m iskey, Young w in ASASU o ffice s By KATY McGREGOR Staff Writer David Varnell has been elected Associated Students of ASU president, ac­ cording to election results announced Fri­ day in the MU. “ I’m looking forward to an extremely pro­ ductive year,” Varnell said while being con­ gratulated by supporters. In the other ASASU executive office elec­ tions, Chris Cummiskey was selected ex­ ecutive vice president and Amy Young defeated Linda St. Angelo for the office of campus affairs vice president. James Emmelkamp and Darren Chuckry will enter a run-off election Tuesday and Wednesday to elect the activities vice presi­ dent. Newly elected ASASU officials take office June 1. Varnell, who faced Paul Barker in the race for president, had a vote total of 1,580 to Barker’s 1,046. Varnell said one of his biggest priorities is to work with the University task force in solving advisement problems. In the race for ASASU executive vice president, Cummiskey, a sophomore from the College of Public Programs, beat Ben Hoglund with 55.4 percent of the vote. Hoglund congratulated Cummiskey but declined to comment on the election. The results, phoned in from the Maricopa County Elections Department, are con­ sidered unofficial until verified by ASASU said Nancy Parks, ASASU campus affairs vice president. In the race for campus affairs vice presi­ dent, Young defeated St. Angelo by a 58 per­ cent to 42 percent margin. Emmelkamp and Chuckry beat John An­ ton and Mark Isenberg, who were also can­ didates for activities vice president. At least one candidate needs 50 percent of the votes to clinch the election. “We’ll just get re-motivated, rest a little bit, and get the flyers and the posters back out again,” Emmelkamp said. Chuckry said his campaign team would work to get voters out for the special elec­ tion by “word of mouth. “We’re going to have people out in force,” Chuckry said. ASU students also elected representatives from their colleges to the ASASU Senate for the first time. In the senate elections: •Kim Carroll and Kim Weaver were elected to represent the College of Business. •An eight-way race in the College of Ar­ chitecture and Environmental Design ended with the two incumbent senators, Dave Virden and Jeff Dehart, retaining their posts. •Bob Taylor and Chris Euzarraga were elected to their first terms in the College of Education. •Two incumbent senators from the College of Engineering, Robert Oldach and Robert Marsland, also retained their seats. •Linda Pearl, who currently serves as a senator from the College of Fine Arts, was elected along with sophomore John Lipp. •Alex Vakula and Ed Rubacha were elected from the College of Law. •Bridget Shelton and Jeff Lanham, who were unopposed, were elected by the Col­ lege of Liberal Arts. •From the School of Social Work, Cindy Goodwin and Ann Marie McNeil were elected to serve as senators. •Senators-eiect Lisa Mastrangelo and Wen­ dy Schwartz will serve the College of Nurs­ ing. University not targeted in student loan scam, aid official sayj R v VICKIE v i r v n r rCHACHERE u A r iiE 'o ir By Staff Writer An investigation into the pilfering of an estimated $500,000 from Guaranteed Student Loans did not involve ASU and was mainly concentrated at the community college level, said Paul Barberini, director of the student financial aid office. “We talked with the officials at the loan guarantee associa­ tion and, to the best of my knowledge, the University was not involved," Barberini said. Reports of the investigation, headed by the state Depart­ ment of Public Safety, surfaced Wednesday in the The Phoenix Gazette. _ ................................................. The FBI is also involved in the investigation. A group of six to eight people are under investigation for applying for Guaranteed Student Loans under assumed names obtained from local telephone books, The Gazette reported. Once the loans are granted, the applicant receives the checks and are not heard from again, according to Dan Mills, director of client relations for the Arizona Educational Loan Program. Mills said the DPS would release further details of the in­ vestigation next week. “If they are trying to defraud the GSL program, they may » try at any institution," Mills said. Jack Smythe, an FBI spokesman, said the investigate has not been extended to Arizona’s three universities at th time. It s hard to say,” Smythe said. “When you are into an i vestigation like this, you don’t know where anything is goir to lead." Mills said, “What we don’t know is the extent of th defraudment. Barberini said ASU’s lengthy admission process has mac it difficult for people to defraud the financial aid departmen State Press Monday, April 8,1985 Page 2 state press nation / world Iranian president will not end war with current Iraqi regime in power World birthrate drop due to China's population curbs, study group says President Ali Khamenei of Iran told the U.N. secretarygeneral in Teheran Sunday the war with Iraq will not end while “ the present Iraqi regime” remains in power, the of­ ficial Iranian news agency reported. In rebuffing a peace move by Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar at their meeting in the Iranian capital, Khamenei said: “We have logical things to say about the war and no one has so far been able to alter our view with logic. Based on what we have experienced, we are sure that as long as the present Iraqi regime remains, our conditions will not be realized.” On arrival Perez de Cuellar said, “I have come to Teheran only to find out more about the stance of the Islamic Republic of Iran concerning the war.” He told Khamenei the losses in the war could be cut if at­ tacks on non-military centers were stopped, the use of chemical weapons ceased, and attacks on ships were halted. Iran says the war cannot end without Iraqi President Sad­ dam Hussein being overthrown and tried as a war criminal, and the payment of billions of dollars to Iran as war repara­ tions. But it has said it will accept a partial cease-fire ending the escalating air raids and artillery attacks by the warring sides on each other’s cities. WASHINGTON (AP) — The world’s birthrate has dropped from 29 to 27 births per 1,000 people since 1983, largely thanks to sharp curbs on China’s population growth, a private population study group reports. The Population Reference Bureau reports that China is currently averaging 19 births per 1,000 residents, down from 23 only two years ago. With one-fifth of the world’s population, changes in China’s population have far-reaching effects on world averages, the independent, non-profit research group pointed out. The new statistics, estimating the world’s current popula­ tion at 4.8 billion people, were published in the bureau’s an­ nual World Population Data Sheet, compiled by demographers Mary Maderios Kent and Carl Haub. The current worldwide birthrate of 27 per 1,000, coupled with an average of 11 deaths per 1,000 people, results in an an­ nual world population increase of 1.7 percent, the resear­ chers reported. That is down from 1.8 percent in 1983. However, they said this rate still resulted in an extra 84 million people being added to the world’s population in 1984. They estimate the total number of people in the world will top 5 billion in 1987 and will exceed 6 billion by the year 2000 if current rates continue. Overall U.S. crime rate fell in 1984; no decline in violence, says survey WASHINGTON (AP) — A government gauge shows overall crime fell by 4.5 percent last year, but there was no drop in the rate of violent crimes such as rape, robbery and assault, the Justice Department said Sunday. The National Crime Survey, which measures crimes not reported to police as well as those reported, also showed that the rate of household burglaries and larcenies fell to the lowest level in the 12 years of the survey’s existence. The crime survey is based on interviews with a nationwide sample of more than 125,000 people. Based on the preliminary figures for 1984, there were 35.3 million “vic­ timizations” compared to 37 million the year before, the Bureau of Justice Statistics said. Sudan military government begins reorganization following takeover KHARTOUM, Sudan (AP) — After its weekend coup, the new military junta began dismantling the state security ap­ paratus on Sunday and arresting supporters of deposed President Gaafar Nimeiri. Gen. Adbul-Rahman M.H. Swareddahab, who announced Nimeiri’s overthrow on Saturday, said the army would take over the security agency and appropriate its weapons and communications equipment. Attention: Foreign Car Owners SAVE UP TO 70% O N R E C Y C LE D F O R E IG N A U T O PARTS M G . T R IU M P H , H O N D A . D A T S U N . T O Y O T A . VW and O THER S All Models Foreign 3024 So. 40th Streot, Phx. 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Contact: SSgt Irv Keck State Press Page 3 Monday, April 8, 1985 Rideshare program aids students bothered by commuting problems By DOUG NEWMAN Staff W riter Members of the University communi­ ty who are frustrated with the hassles that go along with parking and com­ muting may now be able to alleviate many of their problems, according to the Associated Students of ASU Com­ muter Coordinator. Ross Butler, a junior majoring in finance, said the ASU branch of the Rideshare program “just became func­ tional this week.” “Rideshare is a nationwide program which assists commuters in cutting commuting expenses and parking hassles,” he said. “Many large cor­ porations take advantage of it.” Butler said that ASU students, facul­ ty and staff members can visit the Tenants Commuter Association office, in the MU Room 210A to fill out Rideshare applications. The application asks basic questions such as the individual's name, address and telephone number, Butler said. “It also asks when your classes start and end, when you want to arrive at and leave campus and how flexible are your hours,” he said. In addition, the questionnaire asks whether you have a car, or are you just looking for a ride, he said. Butler said the information is put into a computer and matched with a map of the Phoenix area which is “gridded out” into nine-square-mile blocks. “The computer will give lists of peo­ ple with their names, numbers, hours of availability, etc., within these areas for the applicants to go by,” said Butler. “From that point on, people are on their own as far as making ar­ rangements for sharing gas money, parking expenses and so forth,” he said. Butler said the more people that are part of the data bank, the easier it will be to pair people. He also said that the list will include all Phoenix Transit bus availability. “Many students currently take the number 22 bus which runs down Camelback, Scottsdale and Rural,” he said. Butler said the people at Phoenix Transit are helping to get the ASU Rideshare program off the ground. “Since people are matched on the basis of class schedules which are sub­ ject to change, we would appreciate it if students came in each semester to up­ date their records on the computer,” he said. “As of now we are trying to increase awareness of the program through ad promotions,” he said. “Since the semester is coming to a close and people are concerned with final exams, we are not expecting much immediate participation,” Butler said. “But we certainly encourage it.” G A M M A G E CENTER Performing Presents 1 9 8 4 -8 5 An Entertainment jubilee • •• AT GAMMAGE CENTER: "Night Court" star HARRY ANDERSON An Evening of Magic and Comedy T h u rsd ay, A p ril 1 1 * 8 p.m. “ Anderson (is) one of the most marvelously inventive, uniquely self-styled comedians presently standing in shoe leather.” . . . Hollywood Reporter. A sure-fire evening of entertainment. Tickets: $11, $9 • •• THE BERLIOZ REQUIEM w ith T h e P h o e n ix S ym p h o n y O rchestra, the A S U C h o ral U n io n an d A S U C o n cert C h o ir S atu rd ay, A p ril 13 • 8 p.m . ASU's Centennial Choral spectacular, conducted by Douglas R. McEwen You won't want to miss this monumental performance. Tour offers low er prices on eastern U.S. vacation The price of the American Heritage Tour of the waterways from Washington, D.C. to Boston, Mass., this summer has been reduced by $250 by the ASU Alumni Association. The price of the two-week tour beginning June 11 now ranges from $1,959 to $2,959, because of a price reduc­ tion in airfares. The rates include round-trip airfare from Phoenix, all hotel accommodations and excursions in Washington, D.C. and Boston, and a seven-day yacht cruise from Baltimore to Boston. For more information about the tour, call 965-3566. Tickets: $15, $13, $11 • •• K A BU K I WEST S u nd ay, A p ril 14 • 8 p.m . Music and dance are integrated with drama in this unique, 300-year-old art form. Don't miss Leonard Pronko's Kabuki West in three fascinating and entertaining short plays. Presented in English. Tickets: $10, $9, $8 • •• An Evening with WYNTON MARSALIS T h u rsd ay, A pril 1 8 * 8 p.m . Wynton Marsalis, 1985 Grammy Award winner for "Hot House Flowers." brings his own brand of hot and sweet sounds to Gammage. Tickets: $15. $12.50 deli sandwiches, • •• AT KERR CULTURAL CENTER: fresh squee/.ed juices • •• M U S IC A D O L C E bagels muffins / ¿ whole grains * fresh baked bread Satu rd ay, A pril 13 • 8 p.m . Four centuries of Italian music — on period instruments — featuring works by Landini. Frescobaldi. Caccini and Vivaldi. f i l l Tickets: $6.50 ($3.25 fo r ASU Staff, Faculty and Students with I D.) bulk oils : r|T ■ I S S I I1 i 1 I '1 l 1! Z m J rM • •• flour milled dailv AFFETTI MVSICALI * L is a L y o n s , B a r o q u e V io lin ■ nuts honey J o h n M e tz , H a r p s ic h o r d F riday, A pril 1 9 * 8 p.m . S atu rd ay, A p ril 20 • 8 p.m . organic vegetables. W complete Japanese m m ® 4 7 organic fruits ■ macrobiotic section, The Bach. Handel. Scarlatti Tercentenary continues with this program of Bach sonatas for violin and harpsichord. Barbara Bailey is featured on Viola da Gamba. Tickets: $6.50 ($3.25 fo r ASU Staff, Faculty and Students with I.D.) • •• cheeses , organic coffee AT THE UNIVERSITY ACTIVITY CENTER: ••• shampoos soy products ASASU/UAC Present: CHICAGO T u e sd ay , A pril 16 • 7:30 p.m . The music of this durable rock group spans 17 years from "Does Anybody Know What Time It Is?" to "Stay the Night" and "Along Comes a Woman " Come and hear your favorites Tickets: $15, $13 • •• G R AN D OPENING AT SUN DEVIL STADIUM: April 13-14, 1985 9-9 Sat., 10-8 Sun. OUTLAWS vs. ORLANDO RENEGADES Information tables, demonstrations and special workshops with local and guest holistic health practitioners Parking lot dance on Saturday night featuring the Girilla School Band, an avant rock group, 8 til midnight Celebration includes: • Free food and beverage sampling all week-end • Live music and entertainment including belly dancers, fiddling, modem dance, ragtime and classical guitar, rock and blues, mime, clowns and a singing bee keeper for the children • Grand Opening Drawing with prizes including free massages, gift certificates and a Champion Juicer G e n tle S tr e n g th C o -o p 234 W University • Tempe • 968 4831 10% OFF! Bring in this coupon and get 10% off rion-member prices. REGISTER FOR OUR GRAND OPENING DRAWING! Name Address ______________________________ __________________________________ Drawing held April 14 P ho ne_______________ Z ip __________________ Presence not necessary to win a prize. • •• S u nd ay, A pril 14 • 2:30 p.m . The Renegades, with Reggie Collier and Curtis Bledsoe, w ill be gunning for the Outlaws. Let's keep the home win streak rolling Tickets: Adults $14, $11, $8.50 High School and ASU Students $6 in the North or South end zone. • •• For further inform ation about G am m age C enter, A SU Activity C enter, Kerr C enter, and ASU Stevens House events, call 965-6681. STUDENT TICKET POLICY: ASU students receive 50% off all Gammage series events. Two discount tickets may be purchased by presenting a photo I.D. AND current activity card. One photo I.D. and activity card may be required at the door. Part-time students may purchase a special Gammage Center activity card tor $15. State Pres» Monday, April 8,1985 Page 4 Girls must be encouraged to go on (after college), to make a life plan . . . their marriages then are not an escape but a commitment shared by two peo­ ple . . . — Betty Naomi Frledan state press opinion M e n c a u s e d w o r l d ’s p r o b l e m s ; g i v e w o m e n a c h a n c e For years a woman’s place was always considered to be in the home. After gradua­ tion from high school, women were suppos­ ed to get married, have children, clean house and wait for their husband to come home from a hard day at the office. As time went on women began going to college as a way to find a better husband. There they could go through four more years of school, find Mr. Right and then set­ tle down to cleaning house. But now, women are making it through college and going out to become a major force in the work world. Women are still get­ ting married and it seems it is possible to hold down a job and raise a family. So why do so many women still hate to ad­ mit to actually being in college to prepare them for a profession? Should they be ashamed that they are not in college just to obtain their Mrs. degree? College women should feel good about get­ ting an education, knowing they will feel l e t t e better about themselves, and also be trained to support themselves. Even if they graduate from college with that wedding band around their finger, it is good to have some marketable skills behind them. Today it takes two incomes to support a family, so many men may be more inclined to marry a woman who has the initiative to get out and get a job to help pay for the family’s expenses. Husbands and wives have come to realize that there is no written law that says the man must work while the woman sits at home. If both the husband and wife are working it can make that marriage the 50-50 partner­ ship it is supposed to be. Raising a family and keeping up a home is hard work, so why should the woman have to do it alone? With both partners working, the financial and homemaking aspects can be split in half, taking a burden off of both. When deciding on a career or marriage, women must also think about the realistic possibilities of separation or divorce. While the storybook campus romance may sound great at the age of 21, if divorce sets in at 30 it won’t he such a pretty picture for the female college graduate who can only list homemaking skills on a job application. Not that homemaking skills aren’t great, but there has got to be more to life than men­ ding pants and cooking a great meal, ready and waiting on the table for the man who waltzes in after a fulfilling day at the office. In looking at the state of the world: famines in Ethiopia, racial violence in South Africa, and a civil war in Nicaragua, with the United States and Soviet Union on the verge of total destruction of each other, the men are obviously doing something terribly wrong. The men have been (mistakenly) running the country for some time now, and no ma­ jor improvements have really taken place. The world has become the man’s playground, not only in politics, but on the college campus as well. Funny how in a typical “pick-up” situa­ tion, the man is always considered a stud, the woman nothing more than a sleaze. It’s time for women to turn the tables on these so-called men. throw them out of their individual empires and start running their lives and the world around them. Women must break away from the mold that men have tried so hard to push us into. Steer away from the ones who wish only to employ you as a maid/wife and go for a man who needs a partner in life, a co-worker and a friend. If the maid/wife aspect of life is something you want, at least demand some type of payment. Payment is not a new dress from J.C. Penney, puchased by your loving husband. Pull out your own checkbook, write your own check and put the money you earned in­ to that checking account. Wouldn’t the satisfaction be so much greater because you purchased the dress, not that it was given to you as a handout for your years of servitude? Part of the blame must be put on society for making women believe that their role in life was to be a “help-mate” to their hus­ band. When we were little girls, we were given dolls to play with while the little boys were given building blocks. The girls were taught to serve and care for their doll, i.e. man, while the boys were taught to build and think. Yes, discrimination against women began at an early age through an in-bred process. It’s something that must be fought and con­ quered, but it can be done. Women should never be afraid to step for­ ward and grasp what they want as easily as they pick up a magazine or a glass of wine, even if a man must be stepped on. in the pro: cess. r s Homosexuality is victimless activity; should be protected E ditor: If Mr. Ferrell, in his April 4 letter to the editor, was paying attention to the origin of the amendment to the Phoenix AntiDiscrimination ordinance G-1900 that he is so blatantly against, he would have also bothered to cite that it was the same “sexually disoriented" group of people who first in­ troduced the amendment to help stop discrimination in hous­ ing and employment against the elderly and the handicap­ ped. We are not living in the Garden of Eden and heterosex­ uals will always rule this world so you have not a thing to worry about Mr. Ferrell. If you had done your research instead of espousing your moralizing rhetoric you would easily recognize that homosexuality is not an illness as you call it but a natural. Congress must act to save wealthy E ditor: Today, we announce our conversion to the liberal side. The ultimate tragedy has befallen the greatest nation on Earth. The Phil Donahue Show documented a newly arisen problem, and we must act without haste. No country can long endure half-poor and half-middle-class: the wealthy must be preserved. It is sad when a nation lets its rich fall through the safety net of prosperity. Donahue interviewed three former millionaires who experienced the ultimate tragedy — going from riches to rags. No agency or care exists for these downtrodden souls. We must unite or we face the danger of the extinction of the rich in our time. As Donahue so aptly put it, “ . . . but, is this what we really want?” Unite, Americans! Muster your resources, dig deep into your pockets, and look into your hearts. We propose an enabling act before the Congress of these United States to create the Department of Wealth Revitaliza­ tion (DOWR). This new agency would raise the life of those pitiful former wealthy to their previous level of prosperity. This will be accomplished by a 5 percent increase in taxes to all incomes below $32,500. And until such time as the Presi­ dent informs Congress that the crisis is over, the bounty in helping these deprived souls shall be plentiful. And to ensure this nation its proper manliest destiny, we resolve that the economy shall restore America's wealthy to their entitled bounty, so that a nation of the wealthy, by the wealthy, and for the wealthy shall not perish from the Earth. Russell Klever G raduate, History John R itter Freshm an, Political Science biological given that is just one of the many different aspects of human sexuality, and that your ignorant opinion of the matter is based none whatsoever on any proven fact. Homosexuality is another in a long list of victimless ac­ tivities that society has criminalized for centuries. If you tru­ ly have nothing against homosexual people then you would have no trouble on agreeing wholeheartedly that employers and landlords should not legally be allowed to discriminate against them just as they should not legally be allowed to turn away the elderly, the handicapped, women, or any other race, creed, sex, religion, or national origin that knocks on their door who is not male, white, and heterosexual. The fact that you implied that the marital clause in this amendment is only a way to give homosexual couples spousal benefits ignores the fact that single heterosexual women and men are also discriminated against in many landlord situa­ tions solely because that are not married, not because they have a monogamous sexual relationship with someone of the same sex. If you feel the need to inform the immediate community about these atrocious proposals that are being presented to the Human Relations Commission right in your own backyard, then learn to check out all sides of the argument before you commit yourself to such an uneducated opinion again in the future. Amy Rosenhaus F ine A rts, Senior State Press Page 5 Monday, April 8,1985 by Berke Breathed BLOOM COUNTY •AVAILABLE: w a tte m p B anna honest sin gle m ale. Birchers allege that BSU practices racism Abe ... vu... . 3 feet squat, po t e e u r.. FAT TOES.. GAFGANTUAN NOSE ..OFTEN SMELLS OF FICKLEP HERfttNG... " _ttesemes 9L6AHCH./ MEL GIBSON NOT IN THE LEAST* E ditor: As a newly formed campus organization, the ASU students for the John Birch Society, we feel it a necessity to write this letter. During the past two weeks we have faced continual ques­ tions as to whether or not we are a “racist organization.” Most of these questions have been asked by members of the Black Student Union (BSU). We have repeatedly and truthfully stated that the John Birch Society is not racist in any way. Both our ASU group, and the natonal society have large percentages of minority members. Two of our bestknown national speakers are black economists Charts Smith and William Keyes. Last week we openly addressed these accusations of racism with the leadership of the BSU. After massive evidence was made available by us to the BSU denouncing racism, we were still met with hostility. The BSU represen­ tatives with whom we met were no more interested in equali­ ty of white and black than the organizations they attack, namely the Ku Klux Klan (KKK). The John Birch Society has no tie to, and gives absolutely no support to the KKK in any way. When asked whether we were “also members of the KKK,” we couldn’t help but seriously wonder how many BSU members have affiliations with the Black Panthers. From evidence presented, the John Birch Society has a far higher precentage of minority members than the BSU could ever dream of; a dream we believe they would rather not dream of. We feel that this is the issue of racism. Racism practiced by the BSU — n o t the John Birch Society. The leadership of the BSU gave the blatant impression of wanting the John Birch Society to be racist. We have never, and will never give them that opportunity; as we are simply not a racist organization. We are sure these types of statements greatly disappoint the BSU. We really have to wonder why the BSU leadership praises such avowed black supremacists as Louis Farrakhan and Jesse Jackson, who are both openly striving to achieve black supremacy in the United States at all levels. The John Birch Society wants neither white nor black supremacy, but simply a freer world for all peoples. A m m u tì w m ffv L . m m m \tio u - m a Q . * -w . a STATE PRESS The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287. Newsroom: 965-2292. Advertis­ ing & Production: 965-7572. LEN MUNSIL Editor Managing Editor STEVE WATERSTRAT Sports Editor TOM BLODGETT City Editor W. TIMAHL Asst. Sports Editor JERRY BROWN Asst. City Editor KIM SERTICH Copy Chief MICHAEL HUMPHREYS Asst. City Editor SHERRY LOWE Arts Editor CINDY PEARLMAN News Editor ROSANNE DUPRAS Asst. Arts Editor PATRICK J. KUCERA Opinion Editor GRAY T. ECHOLS Photo Editor D. KEVIN ELLIOT Wire Editor WHITNEY PETERSON Staff Aide LAURA WILSON The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and cir­ culated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. PREVENT BIRTH DEFECTS M arch of Dimes The ASU Students for the John Birch Society AFTER EASTER SALE 6 0 s e \ e c ^ , ' less „ r a w a v' oN A L . S 0 9 9 eS 11 U pm upm 1 75 LO NC IS LA N D * CAPE CO S ICE TEAS 2 50 PITCHERS OF BEER sC0 0JU*>Ve '^ e S a " ^ TEMPE BICYCLE SHOP The Old Gas Station On The Corner ,6th Street and Mill, Tempe I 0- 3 2 c * BEER A » 0 ^ 966-6896 "TWO POUNDER’’ 4 3 0 N. SCOTTSDALE Page 6 State Press Monday, April 8,1985 Prof discusses formats of mass media, methods to determine news coverage By JONATHAN HIGUERA Staff Writer The desire to always be first detracts from the quality of stories in broadcasting and journalism, said an ASU sociology professor and author of the book “Media Power." David Altheide, who has studied the media for the last 15 years, said it is better to be second or third and be accurate than to be first and be careless. “We’ve turned broadcasting into a horse race,” he said. “And that’s a holdover from another time.” Altheide said with the issues we face today, being first isn’t important, especially if credibility is lost. “But you can still be concerned with ratings and competi­ tion,” he said. Altheide’s book deals with communication formats found in the media. It is this format that many times determines what, why and how a story will be covered. “Networks emphasize visuals, and the availability of videotape dictates the air time," he said. As part of the research for his book, Altheide spent more than 100 hours looking at more than 1,000 reports on the Ira­ nian hostage situation in 1979. He also analyzed a week of television network news. “ I found a certain kind of logic that governs what gets em­ phasized in network reports,” he said. “If the families of the hostages would have agreed to talk to reporters but not be videotaped, they would have received very little coverage.” Altheide, who has written two other books dealing with the media, said the print medium often tries to come up with other angles to complement television. Although all the media draw on one another, television is increasingly taking the lead. His book takes a close look at the relationship between the media and professional athletes. “ I noticed a lot of conflict between the two, especially with writers,” he said. “ I was trying to understand these con­ flicts.” Altheide mainly observed the relationship between writers and baseball players because he said that was where he noticed the most conflicts. “ Before television, it was the job of newspaper writers to write the game story. But with television, people already knew who won the game,” he said. “ Newspaper writers started engaging in personality journalism, behind-thescenes reporting. “This is when conflicts started happening.” Altheide said many athletes weren’t prepared or trained to deal with this type of journalism. “They weren’t used to seeing that they were moody in print," he said. “But there is an emphasis to get colorful quotes and personalities.” And ballplayers have necessarily become more wise to the media, according to Altheide. “I’ve talked to guys who have made comments at a Rotary Club meeting and writers have picked it up,” Altheide said. “ I’ve seen it happen where the other player sees it and ap­ proaches the other guy. Egos get involved.” Altheide wouldn’t elaborate on players he interviewed and observed. He said the mass media should be powerful. “ I think it is one of the most important institutions in David Altheide America,” he said. "I study it to improve it.” Altheide said the celebrated Bernard Goetz vigilante case is an example of television imitating people and people im­ itating television. Referring to the Charles Bronson movie “Death Wish,” he said, “It provided the script and Bronson provided the bill.” Altheide also said within a week of the Goetz incident, Bronson was quoted as saying he was making another “Death Wish" movie. Bikini Bare-lt body waxing CRIMPERS LTD walking distance 966-5192 from ASU YOUR LOCAL ^ h’lLT-Th'l DEALER ” 1 SERVICE SPECIAL 1 5 % D IS C O U N T Every TI calculator com es w ith one extra number* On Service Work and Counter Parts (except new air conditioning unit) FORANYOATSUN SERVICE TO ALL ASU STUDENTS. FACULTY. STAFF WITH ASU I.D. CARO TO BE PRESENTED AT TIME OF PURCHASE. Good through April 15, 1985. 1-800-TI-CARES When you buy a Texas Instruments calculator you don’t just buy a calculator, you buy Texas Instruments’ com­ mitment to quality. It’s a commitment backed by a fully developed service network that includes the above toll-free number you can call from anyplace in the United States. If you have any applications, C opyright C 1985 Texas Instrum ents Incorporated. operations, or service questions, call us Monday thru Friday between 9 am and 4 pm CST, and we’ll be glad to help. If your calculator needs repairing, we’ll direct you to one of our 46 conveniently located service centers for an immediate exchange. Under warranty, it’s free. If there’s no center near you, we’ll do it all by mail. Your Local O f course, there’s just one catch. It has to be a Texas Instruments calculator. But then, if you’re as smart as we think you are, why wouldn’t it be? Te x a s » In s t r u m e n t s Creating useful products and services for you. 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BROADWAY, MESA • 834-3366 Service Hours Mon 7 30 a m 8 30 p m . lues Fn 7:30 a m 5 30 p m Parts Open Sat. 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. I I State Press Monday¡_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ — Z22£i Graduate program reveals career options to students By DOUG NEWMAN Staff Writer Liberal arts majors who are concerned about the marketability of their degrees may want to investigate the graduate program in public history, according to two members of the history department. “Our program consists of two options which prepare students for careers outside of teaching," said Noel Stowe, director of graduate study for the history department. “One involves historical editing and publishing, which is directed by Beth Luey, director of the publications for the history department, and the other is the business option,” Stowe said. Stowe directs the business option, “which prepares students to do research and analysis with the assumption that they will go on to careers in these areas,” he said. Students do research in any area involving background analysis and history of given problems and issues, he said. Stowe said the key features of the business option are a man­ datory internship in some practical aspect of history and short courses taught by historians already employed in the business sector. Stowe said that some of the internships that students in the business option have participated in include the Salt River Project and Arizona Public Service. According to Luey, the historical editing and publishing op­ tion includes “not only document editing, which is the tradi­ tional interpretation of the field, but also university press, tex­ tbook and non-fiction trade publishing. “Like the business option, we have an internship program where students spend at least eight weeks of a summer work­ ing for a publisher," she said. Luey said that in both programs, students do all the work that is normally required for a regular master of arts or doc­ toral program, plus the extra courses and internships that are part of the public history program. She said that some of the internship students in the editing and publishing option have experienced include the University of Pennsylvania Press and Prentice-Hall, Inc. in New York. The publishing and editing option began in 1980, she said. “Of the publishing and editing graduates that have gone for jobs, just about all of them have found them,” she said. Stowe said that the business option had not been around long enough to have graduated anyone and placed them in a job. "Both options have advisory boards composed of people from outsid'' 'he University," said Stowe. Stowe said that the program takes about two years to com­ plete. Luey said “both programs are small, with five or six students per class. ” Stowe said that the public history program grew out of a “necessity to recognize that historians need to develop career paths outside of teaching. Stowe was the recipient of a grant from the National Endow­ ment for the Humanities to train teachers in the field of public history around the country. From April 25-27, ASU is hosting the seventh annual Con­ ference of the National Council on Public History, Stowe said. “We will meet in Phoenix and feature speakers from historical consulting groups around the country,” he said. The ASU public history program has been written up in The Times of London and The Christian Science Monitor, said Stowe. Study shows decline in grad school entrance exam scores By the College Press Service WASHINGTON, D.C. — Students hoping to become college teachers are showing lower scores on their graduate school entrance ex­ ams than other students, a new study shows. “The doctoral degree programs are not at­ tracting the best and the brightest anymore,” said Clifford Adelman, who wrote the report on the test scores for the National Institute of Education. His study found graduate school entrance exam scores have declined nationwide since 1982, particularly among liberal arts students likely to become teachers. Adelman said the decline indicates undergraduates in discipline such as history and political science are more likely to skip graduate school and go directly into the job market or professional programs such as law. Although Graduate Record Examination Lead th e p a ra d e... AVOID THE RUSH! Undeclared Students in the Liberal Arts College Early R egistration A dv isem en t for Fall R egistration fro m M arch 25 to April 12, 1985 M ake an a p p o in tm e n t to d ay in SOCIAL SCIENCES 111 C o m e in o r call 9 6 5 -2 9 5 4 (GRE) test scores have declined as a whole since 1962, the decline varies widely among disciplines, Adelman said. Political science majors’ scores have drop­ ped sharpiy, while those of mathematics, economics, chemistry and engineering ma­ jors have held steady or risen slightly. Most graduate schools use the GRE as an admissions test. The exam focuses on certain thought patterns — such as deductive reason­ ing and the use of symbolic systems — that are more common in some disciplines than others. But Adelman believes another factor is that the brightest political science majors are not even taking the GRE test because they’re not going on to grad school. If true, the quality of teaching in many academic disciplines is in jeopardy, Adelman said. 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He found a black leather jacket and other articles of clothing in a bathroom shower and held them as evidence. The delivery man refused medical treatment. Two juvenile boys were arrested Thursday night in connection with the at­ tempted theft of a bicycle in front of Life Sciences C-Wing, police said. The owner of the bicycle noticed the two boys trying to remove the front tire and call­ ed ASU Police. The boys were released to their parents. Two men attempted to steal pool furniture from the Campus Inn Apartments early Fri­ day, police said. The manager saw one of the suspects handing a lounge chair over the fence of the pool area to the second suspect and yelled at them. The two men fled in a 1976 four-door Chevrolet. The manager told police nothing was missing from the pool area. In other activity, University Police reported the following incidents in the 24hour period ending at 5:30 a .m . Friday: •A student cut his left little finger after he lost his footing and fell into a glass door at the north entrance of Old Main Thursday afternoon, police said. He was taken to the Student Health Center where he was treated and released. The cost of repairing the glass in the door is estimated at $150. •Smoke was reported in the elevator of the Engineering Center G-Wing Thursday mor­ ning. ASU officers and Fire Marshall Andy Anderson found the panel in the elevator red hot and smoking. University electricians repaired a short in the elevator controls but do not know what caused the problem. •A 1969 Cadillac caught fire in Lot 51 due to an electrical problem or fluid leak Thursday night, police said. The Tempe Fire Depart­ ment responded to check the car before the owner had it towed. •A radiator valued at $100 was stolen from an ASU 1957 Chevrolet pickup in the Univer­ sity’s storage compound on First Street and Price Road, police said. The suspect entered the compound by draping an army blanket over the 6-foot-high barbed wire fence. Police found water spots where the radiator was dragged from the truck to the fence. — MELISSA SMYTH Students offered help in passing law entrance test By NICOLE MASSIE Staff Writer Phi Alpha Delta, an international law fraternity, has started a program to help students pass the Law Scholastic Acheivement Test (LSAT), according to the president of the undergraduate chapter. Carol Rosinski said the course concentrates on different types of questions which appear on the test and suggests techniques in answering the questions correctly. The course teaches students methods of preparing for the test and previews the experience of attending law school, she said. The course costs $10 to attend and students must also pur­ chase the LSAT, “Monarch’s Prep Guide,” and bring it to the course. The group will meet every Thursday in Armstrong Hall from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. She said law students do most of the in­ structing and will mainly concentrate on reviewing sections of the LSAT test. According to Rosinski, the course began with instruction on reading comprehension Thursday, a lecture on facts and issues in law on April 11, logical reasoning on April 18 and analytical reasoning on April 25. In addition to the classes held on Thursday evening, students may receive instruction at informal study sessions offered Saturdays from 10 p.m. to 2 p.m., she said. Following the four-week course, students will have the op­ portunity to evaluate what they have learned by taking a mock LSAT test, she said. The mock test is a an exam which was previously given during an LSAT testing period, Rosinski said. The cost of the mock exam is also $10. She said the fraterni­ ONE CALL TO DIET CENTER COULD CHANGE YOUR LIFE We’l l show y o u h o w to lose weight fast, a n d keep i t o f f fo re v e r! HOURS: 7 a.m .-6 p.m . ty can offer students the course and test so cheaply because ASASU is sponsoring the program and funding the law stu­ dent instructors, she said. Rosinski said that since this course has never been offered at ASU, it is not known how helpful it will be. However, it is similar to successful courses offered at other campuses. Students do not have to be a member of the law fraternity to take the course, she said. “Phi Alpha Delta is an international law fraternity,” she said. “The fraternity has more than 100,000 members worldwide.” “Our purpose is to provide students with information so they may make an educated choice on whether to pursue a legal education or a career in law,” she said. The fraternity provides social events to give students a chance to interact with the professionals, she said. 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S o u th e rn Southern & M cdlntock, Behind Jew elry Exchange 8 2 0 -3 9 0 9 MON.-FRI. 10-6 SAT. 10-5 BRING IN THIS AD AND RECEIVE 3% DISCOUNT W ITH CASH sp o rts state press World best in sprint medley highlights Sun Angel By BRAD HALVORSEN Sports Writer It was not billed as a record-breaking event, and it was not run in record-breaking style. But Carl Lewis and his Santa Monica Track Club team­ mates set a world best in the sprint medley Saturday night in ■■ I ■■ ■ I ■ ■■ Staff photo by Ron Kuczali Jr. ASU's Cedric Fullard, considered the top high school pole vaulter in the nation last year, clears the bar in Saturday's Sun Angel Classic. the sixth annual Sun Angel Classic. Lewis, the winner of four gold medals in the 1984 Summer Olympics, showcased his blazing speed to 4,211 awestruck fans at Sun Angel Stadium, blowing away the rest of the field with his time of 19.6 in the initial 200-meter leg. But a bad exchange between Ferran Tyler's 200-meter leg and Benny Hollis' 400-meter leg cost important time and gave up a sizeable lead over the Bud Light team. “I guess he underestimated how fast I was coming in,” said Tyler, making his first appearance with the Santa Monica Track Club. "And we had never taken a handoff before. It was our first time.” Bud Light held the lead until the final lap, when anchorman and Olympian Johnny Gray secured the record and an easy Santa Monica win with his 1:43.3 in the 800-meter leg. The final time of 3:10.76 shattered the old American record of 3:11.06, set by Athletic Attic in 1983 at Sun Angel Stadium. “If you have a little botched handoff here and there, it can kill you,” Lewis said. “But if the guys still work on the in­ dividual parts of the race, it won’t make a difference. ” Lewis said the quartet was going for the record, although the claim was not publicized. “We tried last year very bad (in the Sun Angel Classic) and we tried at Mount Sac (Calif.), and we missed it both times,” Lewis said. “Then of course this year we finally got it. so we’re pleased.” Because the sprint medley is only run in the United States, the mark will be recognized only as a U.S. record and a world best — not a world record. The men’s 4x200 was the event originally tabbed as a possi­ ble world-record breaker. The favored team, Bud Light, ran without Olympic gold medalist Calvin Smith, who pulled a thigh muscle during the 4x100 relay. Southern Methodist upset the six-team field winning in 1:21.19, nearly a full se­ cond off the world mark. Including the sprint medley, seven stadium and meet records were set in men’s events. Southern Methodist’s Ronald Bradstock set a United Kingdom record in the javelin with his throw of 291 feet, 7 inches. Iowa State’s Danny Harris, an Olympic silver medalist, set a stadium record in the 400-meter hurdles in 49.06. He follow­ ed by anchoring the Cyclones in the night's final event, the 4x400-meter relay. Iowa State set a stadium mark in 3:02.02. Other stadium records were: Robert Cannon (Accusplit Track Club), 55 feet in the triple jump; Bill Green (Stars and Stripes Track Club), 235-11 in the hammer throw; and Bud Light’s distance medley team of Jack McIntosh, Clarence Daniel, Mark Scruttin and Frank O’Mara, clocked at 9:32.86. The ASU men's track team entered in 10 events and finish­ ed in the top three eight times. Treg Scott was the only Sun Devil to win an event, waiting until the homestretch to take the lead for good in the 1,500 with a time of 3:46.54. The field was not as good as expected, with Accusplit’s Mark Fricker and Athletic West’s Henry Marsh dropping out. “That was disappointing,” Scott said. “I wanted a fast pace, but after I saw the short field I had to run for the win and not the time.” Steeplechaser Mike Scannell broke his personal record by 2Vfe seconds with his 8:55.49 second-place finish to NAU’s Mark Souza. Scannell missed the school record by less than one second and qualified for the Pac-10 championships. Scannell remained back in the pack for most of the race before eventually catching Souza with two turns to go. “I had the strength behind my move,” said Scannell, who led briefly before Souza regained the lead and won going away. “It’s just I didn’t make a full move. I should have but it all on the line there and broke it. But I didn’t.” Ron Kamaka finished second to Olympic high jumper Milton Goode of New Balance Track Club, clearing 7-2Vi. Goode also was eliminated at that height, but won by missing fewer times. Dan Fisher qualified for the Pac-10 finals by finishing third in the 5,000-meters in 14:12.60. Jim Camp finished third in the shot put with a throw of 617Vi, despite injuring his fingers during warmups. Former ASU star and Olympic medalist Gary Williky breezed to victory in that event, retarding 66-8Vi on his final put. continued page 11 Sun Devil women ‘stuck’ with 2nd place in Classic By MICHAEL KONZ Sports Writer For ASU women’s track and field coach Roger Kerr, the Sun Devils' performance at the Sun Angel Track Classic was summed up in their first event — a second-place finish in the women's distance medley. “A second in this (meet) is good,” Kerr said. “But it set the tone. We were stuck with second.” The team of Mette Berger, Pam Brown. Julie Seleine and Lynn Nelson finished in 11:30.80. The team from Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo took first in 11:26.52. “I was a little disappointed in Mette," Kerr said. “ I told her she had to run a tac­ tical race. She did exactly what she shouldn't have done. Pam Brown ran a good leg, Julie Seleine ran a good leg and Lynn Nelson ran a good leg.” ASU followed this with a second-place finish in the 4xl00-meter relay. The team of Brown, Sharon Ware, Marbella Washington and Tamika Foster ran the fastest ASU time in four years, Kerr said. “ It was a national qualifying time,” he said. “It tells me that if they improve threetenths to half a second, they have a shot of being (in the top three) at nationals.” Running the anchor leg, Foster came back to redeem a poor start in the mile relay. Although she ran in last place, Foster posted the fastest time ever in the 400meters for an ASU runner, Kerr said. “I’m happy with Tamika because she had tenderness in her leg,” Kerr said. "She’s just a freshman, and she’s coming off an in­ jury. I can't say enough good things about her. “The confidence Tamika got translates in­ to half a second. Tonight there was much tougher competition, but she didn’t lose her composure one bit. ” Less than two hours later, Ware took third in the 100-meter dash in 11.40. The race featured Merlene Ottey-Page, who won two bronze medals in the 1984 Olympics, and Chandra Cheeseborough, who won gold and silver medals. Ottey-Page won the race in 11.13. Cheeseborough had to settle for fifth in 11.54. “Sharon beat some really fine competi­ “ HAPPY HOUR HAPPY HOUR tion,” Kerr said. “It’s as important who you beat as the time. You’ve got to beat the good people.” Kerr said Ware can improve and probably will because of her mentality. “She’ll get there,” he said. “She has a great attitude. She really has her act together.” All together, Kerr has high expectations for Ware, Washington, Foster, Brown, Nelson and Seleine. " I’m impressed with all six,” Kerr said. “For those six, I’ll buy their tickets for the national meet because they belong there.” Kerr said his team’s performance also will help recruiting. He may be able to sign twice as many athletes as he expected before the meet, he said. “ •COUPON"“ ” " " * ! DOUBLE BURGER FULL MEAL DEAL Î $ 1.99 Your Campus Hair Care Center 709 S. Forest Ave., Tempe North of University • Behind the Chuck Box • In Oxford Square 9 6 8 -5 9 4 6 $400 O F F With This Ad Look what you get! An all-beef burger A small order of crispy, golden fries Your favorite small soft drink And. to top it off, o cool and credmy 5 oz DAIRY QUEEN “ Soft Serve Sundae Head for your participoting DAIRY QUEEN* BRAZIER* store, to get the Burger Full Meal Deal “ the best bargain Expires June 1. 1985. REGULAR PRICES Develop & Print HAPPY HOUR DOUBLE PRINT SPECIAL EVERY MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY AT REGULAR LOW PRICE 2 for 1 • Sham poo • P re c is io n C ut » C o n d itio n « B low D ry ln,own W ITHCAT YOU MONT c AM D O Corp M E N $13 • W O M E N $15 SUNSET C A M E R A OPEN M O NDAY TH R O U G H SATURDAY. 1389 E. APACHE fempe Center • Mill & University • 829-0424 T U E S , W E D . & T H U R S . T IL L 9 P .M . (Between Rural & McClintock) » * 1963 ONLY AT: L M n H m C O U PO N »— » — I Page 10 __________________ Monday, Sun Devils blast Cardinal after losing 2 to Arizona The ASU softball team gained back some of its pride Fri­ day night, sweeping a doubleheader from Stanford after be­ ing swept Thursday by Arizona. The Sun Devils (26-11 overall, 3-3 WCAA) toppled trie Car­ dinal, 7-0, in the opener with Laura Houle getting the win. In the nightcap, Cheryl Persinger pitched five innings of shutout ball, leading ASU to an 8-2 victory. Lisa Martin came on to pitch the final two innings. Persinger’s performance was another chapter in the Devils’ continuing quest for a second pitcher. “Cheryl’s done a good job for us,” ASU coach Mary Littlewood said. “We would definitely be in trouble this year without her. “But it’s been a while (two years) since she’s pitched. We’ll have to work with her some more before she’s a Divison I pit­ cher.” Persinger, normally an outfielder, has been forced into pit­ ching duties because of the continuing inconsistency of Mar­ tin. Persinger had trouble Thursday against Arizona, however. She gave up two runs in the first inning of the second game, and the Wildcats went on to win, 4-0. In the first game, Houle pitched a two-hitter but Arizona pulled out a 1-0 victory. “We had seven hits but we didn’t get them with runners on base,” Littlewood said. “They had two hits, but they put them towett*«*’ ” G R A N D O P EN IN G S P E C IA I •R esid en t m anager on site •R e n ta l self-storage lockers •O u ts id e RV storage •R e n ta l mail boxes , •C o p y in g m achine «* * •K e ys made » —! I I I ’ } ’ '*t RENT O NE M O NTH 'G E T T H E S E C O N D M O NTH FREE! ¿ ì H ¡¡¡S lip ASU’s Linda Neely steals second base in the first game of Friday's doubleheader against Stanford. Seder in the Desert Students *4 Faculty or Staff $7 ~ m\ I H ■<0 .'• A pril 12, 1985 6^ 1 M eet a t H illel a t 5 p.m . o r at th e p a rk ( ra m a d a 1 ) a t 5:45 p.m . RSVP b y April 9 o r there w ill be a S2 surcharge. Staff photo by Ron Kuczek Jr. if ö FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLE'S •G R A IN S «NUTS «DRIED FRUIT AND TRAIL MIXES Come in and take a look around. We have two big walk-in coolers! 10% o ff a n y p u rc h a s e w ith A S U I.D . Please present I D before checking out. NOT GOOD WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. EXPIRES 5-25-85 BEEN GROV Park™' Just 3 short drive from ASU at ° P.£N Available 2111 E. A p ach e Blvd. in Tempe m—.'¿¿¡L N o re s e rv a tio n s a c c e p te d w ith o u t p a y m e n t. L im ited s p a c e available. 966-3401 W hat do these ASU students have in common? Dale Prentice Junior, Mech. ENG ARMY ROTC SCHOLARSHIP WINNER Eric Bohn Senior, English ARMY ROTC SCHOLARSHIP WINNER Paul Rivera Junior, Business ARMY ROTC SCHOLARSHIP WINNER ARMY ROTC All are involved in Leadership and Management Training. All are seeking an Army Officer Commission as a Second Lieutenant. All are ARMY ROTC Scholarship Students. All attended Army ROTC Basic Camp last summer and were awarded a Two-Year Scholarship which pays tuition, laboratory fees, a flat rate for books and a tax-free subsistence allowance of up to $1,000 each year the scholarship is in effect. To find out more about Basic Camp, contact Ken Schwartz at (602) 965-3318/3319 or stop by Room 228, Old Main. ARMY ROTC BE ALL YOU CAN BE State Press Track continued from page 9 Jim Camp finished third in the shot put with a throw of 61-7'z, despite injuring his fingers during warmups. Former ASU star and Olympic medalist Gary Williky breezed to victory in that event, recording 66-8'z on his final put. Cedric Fullard placed third in the pole vault behind Tom Hintnaus and Chuck Suey, both of the Los Angeles T rack Club. F u lla rd s cleared 16-03/4 along with Suey but took third due to having more misses. Hint­ naus won the event easily at 17-4 Ms. Kenny Robinson was beaten outdoors in the 100meters for the first time this year, finishing third in 10.42 behind Polytabs’ Harvey Glance (10.3) and USC’s Darwin Cook (10.33). Dave Ryer broke the ASU record in the hammer throw for the second time this year with his 201-7, but finished well back in the pack in sixth place. ASU’s T erry P ayne’s came within one inch of his personal record and finished eighth. In ASU’s other two events, the Devils placed third in the sprint medley and fourth in the distance medley. Monday, April 8, 1985 classified s Rates. 15 words or less: $1.80/day — 1 to 4 insertions $1.71/day — 5 to 9 insertions $1.62/day — 10 or more 10c for each additional word ALL WOOD secretarial desk with return for typewriter. Will sell for $100. Call David 820-3252.____________________ 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 LIVING ROOM, dining room, bedroom for sale. Call 967-8498. Moving overseas. H a ir Dressing ADOPTION--AN alternative to abortion. We can’t have our own child and seek to adopt newborn. We can pay your medical expenses and help you through this difficult time. Strictly legal. (818) 781-0658 collect anytime. THE CINEMA Tree at Neeb Hall Movie Magic Hotline 965-5659 “For your movie needs.” ESC NANTES Program. College of Business is offering a five week international business program this summer from May 23rd to June 26th. Students will earn up to 6 hours of international management credit, will live in a french family, will have several free days a week to travel throughout Europe. For more information please contact Or. Dick Montanari 9657203/438-2278 or Gabrielle Fry 968-1916/965-8281.______ PLANT PHYSIOLOGY may be offered second summer session. Sign up for it at the Botany/MIcro office! A utom obiles 1978 FIAT 128, 4-speed. 4-door, AM/FM cassette. 63k miles, $1000. Excellent mechanical condition. Bob 225-9252 or 234-0208. DENVER (AP) — Denver Gold officials, their finger­ nails already chewed to the quick, await another anxious moment. Will Mile High Stadium be teeming with hum anity for Monday night’s United States Foot­ ball League game, or will Gold fans once again come disguised as empty seats? The Gold, 4-2, entertains the Arizona Outlaws, also 42, in a key Western Con­ ference m atchup. Both team s trail conference leader Houston, 5-1, by just one game, with Oakland, 4-21, just a few percentage points behind in a tight early season race. Denver plays a wide-open, pass-oriented offense called the run-and-shoot that ought to attract big crowds — something in t he neighborhood of the 41,735 the team averaged in its in­ augural season. But after three games this season, the Gold is averaging a meager 13,969 — last in the league. And one can’t blame the weather (which has been good for all three home games) or the team's perfor­ mance (they've won all three games). The competition, admit­ tedly, has been detrimental. San Antonio was 1-3 when it played there; Orlando brought an 0-5 record into last week’s game, and their lackluster play didn’t help to draw people into the stadium. But Arizona will present a truer attendance test The Outlaws are among the league’s best defensive teams, boasting a fierce pass rush led by two-time USFL lineman of the year Kit Lathrop. The offense is keyed on strong-arm ed quarterback Doug Williams, formerly of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. CLUB FUJI 10-speed, 27 inch frame, extras. 5 months old, $190,968-8552. TEMPE BICYCLE Shop 620 S. Mill. New and used bicycles, special student discounts. Expert repair at reasonable rates. 966-6896. WOMEN'S 3-speed bike, excellent condition, green with extra seat, bookrack, cable lock. $65.967-3086 B u s in e ss Opp. BE YOUR own boss! Ground floor opportunity with Sublimai Tapes. We need distributors. Please call Mrs. Wheat 867-7283. P or Rent or Lease BROADWAY/RURAL area. Cute one bedroom apartment In four-plex, $295. Joanne Mailhoit, Realty Executives 831-1010,831-1031._________________ ONE BEDROOM villa with pool and clubhouse rights, unfurnished, close to ASU. $375 month. 946-9000.__________ POOLSIDE SUMMER condo. Three bedroom, two bath, patio, small yard, garage, semi-furnished, $660 per month, available mid-May through mid-August. Call Libby, 9496546. WALK TO ASU. Scene One, one bedroom deluxe condo: washer, dryer included, pool, spa, $350 a month. Joanne Mailhoit, Realty Executives 831 1010,831-1031._________________ P o r Sale FACULTY HOME-nice neighborhood, 1449 N. McAllister, Tempo, iVz miles north of campus, 3 bedrooms, pool, private backyard^ fireplace. FHA assumeable. Call Tom 941-9291 or 965-7735._________________________ DO YOU want to buy Avon? Call Nancy 831-1053. Campaign 9 until April 10. A-1 KINKO'S has high quality word processing 966-2035,933 E. University. SECURITY OFFICERS, full or part-time, uniform furnished, Internal Security Agency 820-1919.___________________ LOVING AND secure professional California couple wishes to adopt newborn. Will pay all costs. Call collect 714-522-2694/Attorney 714-841-3444. A-1 PROFICIENT typing, IBM Selectric. Loraine 833-8365, at University and Dobson in Mesa.___________________ TELEPHONE SALES. Our office, Rural and Apache, $4 hour plus bonus. 5-9pm, M-TH, l0-2pm Sat. Will train, no experience necessary. 968-9728.______ TELEPHONE SOLICITORS: Student loan program. Set appointments from home $4 per hour. Call Katie 955-1622. WANTED COCKTAIL waitresses. Ex­ perience preferred but not necessary. Apply Tuesday, April 9th, 6-8pm. Donny O'Brien’s, 222 S. Mill. No phone calls please.____________________________ ALARM MONITOR, night shifts, cam­ pus area, permanent position. Call Leslie at 269-8338 9am-3:30pm._______ ALASKA SUMMER jobs! Workers needed! Make $500-$800/week working in Alaska this summer. For complete information send S.A.S.E. to: Alaskan Summer Jobs, P.O. Box 8005, Suite 162, Boulder, CO 80306._________________ WANTED PART-TIME help retail. Evenings, weekends through summer. Hard worker, opportunity for advan­ cement. previous work experience helpful. Apply in person Todays Swim & Patio, 2107 W. Guadalupe (Dobson and Guadalupe).____________________ ART STUDENTS earn $100 quick. Design a 3 letter logo. Call 965-0256. WANTED! PERSONS to distribute flyers for popular Tempe nightclub. Approximately 8 hours week, $5 per hour. Will work around your schedule. Call Pete M-F after 8pm 964-9866._____ A SALES and educational career opportunity is available in Phoenix area for leading professional hair and skin care products distributor for those wish to excel. The position offers draw against commission, bonuses and professional sales training. No ex­ perience necessary. Full-time. Submit resume to: CTA, 930 W. 23rd St., Suite 26, Tempe, AZ 85282. No phone calls please.______ WILL TRADE 24-hour Nautilus mem­ bership in exchange for 14 hours of light delivery work 833-3171.__________ In stru c tio n LEARN FRENCH fast with a native speaker, educated *in Paris. Conversa­ tion, grammar tutoring. Cali Stelina 956-5357 or 955-2599. CAMP STAFF, male and female, eight weeks in Prescott. Summer salary $560-$720 plus room and board. Camp Fire 263-7725.______________________ kenpo ' « B e g in n e rs In tr o d u c to r y C o u rs e $ 1 5 ’h Mile North o f ASU IF YOU are an excellent singer or belly-hoola dancer with good sense of humor and reliable transportation, Eastern Onion Singing Telegrams needs you in the Mesa-Tempe area. From Mesa-Tempe call 966-6200, from Phoenix call 971-6100._______________ 1 0 2 0 N . S c o tts d a le Rd. 966-1080 The most effective way to learn about computers is by being personally guided. LIVE-IN FEMALE, non-smoker, room and board, salary In exchange for babysittlng/light housekeeping. Pool home South Tempe. M-F afternoons. 839-8828 mornings._________________ Topics: Introduction to Computers BASIC Programming FORTRAN Programming COBOL Programming LOCAL NEWSPAPER In the east Valley area is hiring afternoon motor route drivers. Permanent part-time employ­ ment for those who have good transportation. Call Frank at 994-0766 for interview.________ ______________ NOW HIRING: Cooks, hostesses, dining room assistant, cocktails. Apply in person at Red Robin, 1539 N. Scottsdale Rd.________________ P u m i ture PART-TIME: $1004150 a week Flexible hours. Call noon-3pm only. 941-1363. _ FUTONS GRAND Opening Salelll Beds, sofa beds, accessories. The Futon Store. 2620 W. Broadway #8 (Broadway Plaza) Mesa. 966-8031.___ PERMANENT PART-TIME paid child care aides and volunteers needed. Two blocks south of ASU. Energy and enthusiasm are a must. Hours are flexible around class schedule. Work study welcome. Call Anne or Jan at 894-9370. EOE. Call 994-4533 after 5 p.m. 4/8 M otorcycles 1981 KAWASAKI KE12S Bought new last May. 1800 miles. A steal at $650. 894-5340,_________________________ B eal Estate______ ACCURATE, FAST typing. $1 per page. 838-1977.__________________________ ACCURATE CUSTOM typing, spelling corrected. Seven days/week, rush jobs welcome. Nancy, 830-5572, Linda 838-6830.__________________________ CONDO-PAPAGO Park Village. College and Curry. 2 bedroom, 2 bath, upper level, $83,900.894-2269 after 5:00pm. ACCURATE TYPING. Experienced in all reference styles. Will edit spelling, grammar and puncuation. Christina 8391082.__________________________ HOUSE BY owner. Central Scottsdale, 3 bedroom, 1 % baths. Assume FHA at 1116, $620 month. 947-6436._________ ALL PAPERS typed to your complete satisfaction. Convenient. Reasonable. Mrs. Oakley 967-0802. _________ LUXURY TOWNHOUSE for sale. Three bedroom, 214 bath, 2-car garage, 1 mile from ASU, $106,500.82941531. ALWAYS DEPENDABLE typing, excel­ lent spelling, puncuation skills, minor editing included. $1.50/page. Shirley's Typing 838-5099.____________________ WALK TO ASU. One and two bedroom deluxe condominiums, fully applianced, pool, spa, sell or trade, $43,900 to $54,900. Joanne Mailhoit, Realty Executives 831-1010,831-1031. CANDY'S ACCURATE fast and de­ pendable typing and word processing service. Excellent qualifications. Reasonable 9597699.__________________ R o o m inate wanted FAST TYPING. All documents, term papers, etc. 1-day turnaround. $1.25 page. 9692672._____________________ FEMALE, NON-SMOKER $225 month 14 utilities, $125 deposit. Patio home, washer, dryer, fireplace, microwave, etc. 968-6399. FEMALE ROOMMATE $172.50 plus 14 utilities, close to ASU, pool, nonsmoker, own room, washer, dryer. 967-1814. FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted $145 month, 14 utilities. Private room, non-smoker, need May thru August. Call 968-2869.__________ _ _ _______ FEMALE ROOMMATE. Brand new three bedroom, two-story Continental house. Mesa DrJ Brown. $250 utilities included. 898-1488. S erv ices CARS AVAILABLE • 21 or older. All States Drive-away, 992-5200._________ COMPUTERIZED TAX Service. Don't miss April 15th. Short form from $10, long form from $25. Most states. John 629-6709 evenins.___________________ HAVE UNWANTED facial or body hair removed permanently by electrolysis. Free consultation. Located in Tempe. Call Sharon, Desert Electrolysis Center 839-1886.__________________________ TAX PREPARATION federal and state.Short forma $13-$16. Long form $32. Mitchell 244-1368.____________ WORD PROCESSING services, kernes, resumes, term papers. Close to campus. Call 9495398.____________ T ravel AIRLINE AWARDS: Fly most places USA $349 or less. Stay as long as you want. No restrictions. London $680, Caribbean $499. Arthur 988-7283. AIRLINE TICKET to Buffalo via Chicago. Use April 9, $90.972-9512. T yping__________ HIGH QUALITY great prices, word processing and typing. Call 894-9607 J&P Enterprises.___________________ JUST YOUR ty p e l.W o rd /P ro c . $l.50/page. Letter quality pmtg. P/UDlvry on campus. Call Cyndl 953-3621. NEED A typist and need it quickly? I will type most anything. Call Rhonda 252-1502.__________________________ PROFESSIONAL TYPING Service: competitive rates, editing, proofread­ ing, pick up and delivery available. Suzanne Anderberg 8291843._________ PROFESSIONAL TYPING and editing. Reasonable rates. Near campus. Deborah 966-8393.____________________ PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Excellent spelling and grammar. Fast and reasonable. Call Jaline 990-9595 or 948-4647 eves._____________________ PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Resumes, term papers, theses. Scottsdale, area. Call 951-1978.______________________ T.S.S. TOTAL Secretarial Services. Typing, resumes, xeroxing, etc. Tempe 897-9059.__________________________ TYPING. 9692186.__________________ TYPING THESES, dissertations, term papers, etc. Ten years experience. Accurate fast service, spelling corrected. 9499207.___________________ WORD PROCESSING Professional, term papers, must be easy to read, North Central Phoenix 277-8182.______ WORD PROCESSING, theses/dissertations, experienced in all styles. Will edit spelling, grammar, puncuation. Excellent rates. Christina 8391062. WORD PROCESSING/typing. Letter quality, daisy wheel printer, reasonsble. Kathy 991-4595._________________ WORD PROCESSING, typing. Can type anything! Guaranteed word perfect. Located in Tempe 8393412 after 3:30pm weekdays.________________ __ WORD PROCESSING by Phyllis. Tape transcriptions and manuscripts. MesaTempe area. 834-6616 evenings, weekends. Fast turnaround. W anted 1984 HONDA Aero 125. 135 miles, like new, $900 firm. Call 947-9025 Matt. CASH FOR gold, diamonds, class rings. Mill Avenue Jewelers, 414 S. Mill. 9695967. P erso n al P erso n a l P erso n al DESPERATELY SEEKING SUSAN $5 to $7 Per Hour • IVe Putty Train PLEASE CALL DIALAMERICA FOR DETAILS. 829-1140 BEAUTIFUL BABY African gray par­ rots, 4-months old, written health guarantee, $129.95.944-3516. AAA QUALITY typing/word processing. $1.50 per page. Call Linda 962-8075. 1 DAY turn-around typing, word pro­ cessing, term papers, resumes, newsletters, letters, etc. Call Nora 820-9681 A N Y T I M E / flexible scheduling T h e nation's finest telem arketing firm is now accepting applications for the follow ing shifts: 5-10:30 p.m. • 6:30-10 30 p.m. • W eekends O u r sales people work in a m odern, com fortable business environ­ m ent c ontacting established custom ers on long distance W A TS lines. G u aranteed salary o r com m ission, whichever is greater, and averages $5 to $7 an hour. O u r Tem pe office is located approxi­ m ately five m inutes from campus. 4/is Computer Tutoring JAPANESE MASSEUSE needed. Flexible hours, chic, legitimate. Train­ ing available if qualify, don't delay. Call Funn-oh-gram today, 256-2444.________ MCDONALD'S NOW hiring. No ex­ perience needed, flexible schedule, vacation bonus pay, uniform and meal policy, activities, incentives, opportun­ ity for advancement. Apply in person at 5144 S. Rural Road (Baseline and Rural). EOE.______________ _ ’ Chinese ■ k a ra te Confidence and Control Strength and Agility Self Defense FEMALE CASHIER, needed full or part-time. Chinese restaurant 941-4733 ask for Linda.______________________ P e ts FEMALE ROOMMATE to ^ room in three bedroom ^oolside condo, ' p i pi plus Va electric. Call 945 V r BE INDEPENDENT! Earn extra $$$ while you learn! Over 2200 sensational moneymaking opportunities currently available! Directory $18.95. F.A.I., 8306 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 384-AS, Beverly Hills, CA 90211.____________________ DRIVERS-BIG bucks. Courier Cabs needs you! Part-time, full-time. Start immediately. We require: clear driving record and some knowledge of area. 1033 N, 24th Street. Ken._____________ T yping__________ QBA 222 tutor needed immediately. 968-7519.__________________________ SWIMMING INSTRUCTORS wanted pre-school program in Paradise Valley. WSI Certified training conference required before hiring. Call Gymnastics for Growth. 971-2919.________________ H elp Wanted TRS80 48k model 1 disc smart modem, software manuals, cassette, joystick $550, with printer $700.938-6194. H elp Wanted H elp Wanted_____ P erso n al LIVING ROOM, dining room, bedroom for sale. Call 967-9204. Moving o v e r s e a s . _____________________ A n n o u n cem en ts B icycles Outlaws test Gold on field and at gate P u m i ture The STATE PRESS disclaims all respon­ sibility for quality and prices of goods and services offered in both classified and display advertising by its adver­ tisers \ Meet me at the movie. Thursday, April 11, j | 8 p.m. Bring this ad into Graffitti’s, 411 S. | Mill, Tempe and receive your free ticket, j \ f 4/10 \ Page 12 State Press Monday, April 8,1985 Late goal forces overtime; Water polo club tops ’Cats By JERRY BROWN Assistant Sports Editor The ASU water polo club, ignited by the two-goal perfor­ mances of John Ransom and Gary Ahern, beat the U of A 7-5 in overtime Saturday in Tucson. The Sun Devils, who trailed most of the game, were down 32 when Ransom, who entered the game for the first time in the fourth quarter, scored with 12 seconds left in the game to force an overtime. Coach and co-captain Jon Lorant, who also scored a goal in the game, said Ransom made a major contribution to the win. “John really came on when we needed him,” Lorant said. “He was a big part of our success. ” The Devils quickly scored three goals in the first three minutes of the overtime period to go in front to stay. “They started to tire in the overtime," Lorant said. “That was our strategy. It worked for us in the overtime.” The Devils will leave Thursday for Albuquerque, New Mex­ ico to compete in the Rocky Mountian Championships. ASU, Wildcats split 2 games prior to finale The ASU baseball team, which set a school record for errors the night before, turn­ ed it around dh Saturday night and blasted the U of A, 19-10 to square their series at one game each. The final game was played Sunday night in Tucson after State Press deadlines. The Devils committed 10 errors on Friday night dur­ ing their 13-12 loss. On Satur­ day, ASU turned around its play in the field but picked up where it left off at the plate, totaling a season-high 21 hits. Catcher Don Wakamatsu and outfielder Todd Brown, both of whom had been struggling at the plate lately, each clouted two home runs for ASU. Wakamatsu had six RBI on the evening, while Brown knocked in five. The Devils (22-26 overall, 7-7 in the Pac-10 South) scored three runs in the first inning off Wildcat starter Joe Magrane (8-6) and add­ ed three more in the third. The Wildcats (33-15, 6-8) scored three runs in the bot­ tom of the fourth, but the Devils came back with three more in the top of the fifth to take a 9-3 lead and chase Magrane. Splinters — The Sunday game with the Wildcats was shown nationally by ESPN . . . The Devils return to ac­ tion at Packard Friday even­ ing when they open a threegame series with Southern California. ASU won two of three games when the teams met in Los Angeles in March . .. Brent Hahn remains at first base in place of Louie Medina, who is still unable to play because of a strained right forearm. JERRY BROWN Reg $40 includes shampoo, cut, condition & styling. Expires M ay 11, 1985. Alpha III S ty list 818 w. Broadway, #107 • Tempe 8 2 9 *9 6 9 4 COUPON - CALL T O D A Y MILL AVENUE TRAVEL 9 6 6 -6 3 0 0 Ford is back on campus with FO RD GREAT START D.4Y! Come see, kick, and feel the latest cans and trucks from Ford Divi­ sion and ask about the special values available to your campus community. Don’t miss the fun! Don't miss the prizes! And don’t miss your chance to get off to a great start with Ford! CO-SPONSORED BY HUAB FILMS COMMITTEE Investment. Tkke stock in America. SPECIAL SPRING PERM $ 2 5 FREE T-SH IR T W IT H EACH PASS W EHSDAY.APR.im Sound Buy IIS. Swings Bonds. 1984 PRICES ON EURAIL PASSES! FORD DEALER LOCATION / TIME EARNHARDT FORD So. Entrance of Memorial Union 9:00 a.m.—3:00 p.m.