W edn esd ay state' V ol 68 N o 3 A u g u s t 2 8,1985 i v w f v M M A r iz o n a S t a t e U n iv e r s it y Tempe, Arizona „ - Copyright, State Press, 1985 Student killed on ‘hazardous’ Tempe road By W. TIM AHL and PATRICK J. KUCERA State Press An ASU student died Monday night on a road rated as one of the four most hazardous in the city of Tempe. Eric Thomas Salada, an 18-year-old ASU student, was kill­ ed when a driver reportedly ran a red light and slammed into his bicycle at the intersection of Rural Road and Lemon Street, Tempe police said. A document from the City of Tempe lists Mill Avenue, from Apache to Curry Roads; Broadway Road, from Mill Avenue to 52nd Street; and McClintock Drive between Southern Avenue and Baseline Road as other locations with high acci­ dent rates. Monday’s accident happened “just as we were trying to stress bicycle safety,’’ sidd Lt. Jdhn Garlington of the Tempe Police Department. “Not that'the bike did anything wrong, but there are so many around campus.’’ Basilio Lerma Jr., 710 E. Hardy in Tempe, was arrested in connection with the incident and charged with second-degree homocide, felony hit-and-run and driving while under the in­ fluence of alcohol, Tempe Police Sgt. Larry Rodriguez said. Lerma reportedly fled the scene and was apprehended less than one minute later at the intersection of Terrace Road and Orange Street, Rodriguez said. “An officer (from the Tempe police) was heading south­ bound on Rural and saw the truck heading north-bound,” he said. “He turned around and followed it.” According to Tempe police reports, Salada was riding west on Lemon crossing Rural when he was struck by a four-wheel drive 1973 Ford pick-up traveling about 40 mph. Salada and his bicycle were thrown nearly 75 feet down Rural before he came to rest on a curb, Rodriguez said. S U M p h o to b y Kevin J. Larkin SgL Lawrence Henke of the Tem ps Police Department examinee the bike of Eric Thom as Salada, which was struck at the Intersection of Rural Road and Lemon Street. Salada, an 18-year-old Fine Arts major, was killed in the accident, which carried him more than 7S feet from the Intersection. He was pronounced dead on arrival at 10:45 p.m. by Scott­ sdale Memorial Hospital physicians. A spokesman for the hospital said he died of massive head injuries and cardiac ar­ rest. Julie Totman, an ASU student who was in the area im­ mediately following the incident, said: “It was ugly. That bicycle was gone—in a little ball. ” Pilot in fatal crash indicted OToday "D By VICKIE CHACHERE State Press A pilot involved in a mid-air collision last spring, which claimed the lives of two ASU students, has been indicted on two counts of manslaughter and two counts of reckless endangerment, the Yavapai County Attorney said Tuesday. Charles Hastings said Robin Thompson, 20, was served a summons on Saturday and wUl be arraigned Sept. 3. in a Yavapai Superior Court. Thompson, who also is a flight instructor, is charged with manslaughter in the deaths of Samantha Fraser, 18, and Timothy Streit, 23, Hastings said. The two counts of reckless endangerment are for injuries sustained by ASU students Paul Bjonistad, 20, the other plane’s pilot, and Kimberly Marble, 24, a passenger. F raser and Streit were killed when Thompson’s Piper Cherokee 140 collided with the Cessna 172 they were riding in near Camp Verde, according to a Yavapai Sheriff's investigation. A spokeswoman for Lt. Donald Spicer of the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Department said Thompson’s indictment stems from a four-month sheriff’s investigation into the crash. A second investigation alpo was conducted by the National Transportation Safety Board. The Cherokee's propeller apparently struck the Cessna, destroying the fuselage and severing the rear Section of die Cessna behind the passenger compartment, the in­ vestigation determined. F raser and Streit, who were seated in the rear of the Cessna, were killed when they fell approximately 6,500 feet from the severed tail section. According to the report, Bjornstad and Marble were injured when the remainder of the Cessna crashed into a hillside. Thompson’s plane landed on a nearby gravel road. The report said neither Thomp­ son nor Ms three passengers were injured. Hastings said the sheriff’s investigation was used by die granfi jury in indicting Thompson, 'but the sheriff’s investigators did not blame Thompson for the collision. ' “As a gennai rule, the investigations are just a m atter of interviewing witnesses,” Hastings said. “Basically it is a fact-finding (study) rather than a conclusionary one.” The parents of F raser ami Streit have filed a $24.7 million lawsuit against Thomp­ son and his father, William Thompson, thè owner of the Cherokee. “ The lawsuit, filed in Maricopa County Superior Court, earlier this month, charges both Robin Thompson and William Thomp­ son with negligence. According to the claim, William Thomp­ son was negligent in entrusting his aircraft to a reckless pilot. The suit claims that F raser and Streit were “violently sucked out and ejected into m idair and then thrown to the rocky can­ yons below." Hastings said the lawsuit will have little bearing on Thompson’s indictment and probable trial. “From our point of view, it really doesn’t have any relation,” he said. Hastings said Thompson will enter his plea during his arraignm ent in September. “Assuming the plea is ‘not guilty,’ the m attar will go to trial,” Hastings said, add­ ing that the majority of defendants in such cases idead “not guilty.” ” y| £■ The new deputy chief of police for the University would like to see his officers patrolling on bicycle. Page 3. The new student ticket policy for ASU football games has received mixed response from campus Sun Devil fans. Page 21. Thanks to Federal Express, Bloom' County is back on the pages of the State Press. Penguin Lust. Page 5. Recently Mied track and field coach Clyde Duncan faces the prospect of a newly combined men's and women’s squad. Page 25. ASU veterans’ Upward Bound pro­ gram may lose its funding and close its doors. Page 7. Bloom County............. 5 Classified......................................27 2 Nation/world................. Opinion........................... 4 Sports............................................ 21 Well, you’ve found one box You are out in the middle of campus, walking to class and thinking about that next lecture on the use of onomatopoeia in Renaissance literature. Better pick up a State Press to read: But wait. There are no boxes where they used to be. The campus is literally de-PreM-ed. Not quite. We’ve just been moved. There are several distribution points, particularly on the campus perim eter, that you can still pick up a copy of the paper. Those points include:the west |gg•A || box on >iISlSpS Si! side of■'• the '.' Business Annex complex. •A box on the south side of Murdock Hall. •A box b jra planter northwest of die Psychology building. •Bundles in Hayden Library. •A kiosk at Tyler Mall and Palm Walk. •A box northwest of Armstrong Hall at McAllister Avenue and Terrace Drive. •A box on Cady Mall near College Avenue and University Drive. •Most kiosks on campus. •A bundle at the State Press office in the Matthews Center basement. For a complete m ap of distribution prints, turn to pjSge 15. StatcPrew n a t io n / w o r ld agreements this year on how rival U.S.-backed insurgent groups should divide privately raised military supplies. The leaders, active in Misura, the main coalition of Indians fighting Nicaragua’s leftist government, said the agreements, brokered in Honduras, were struck with the larger Nicaraguan Democratic Force (FDN) in February, and again in June. The CIA’s reported role in the deals came after Congress hamwd the agency from “supporting, directly or indirectly, m ilitary or param ilitary operations in Nicaragua.” Congress passed the ban, known as the Boland amendment, last Oc­ tober. Two congressional panels next month plan to examine whether the Reagan administration complied with the ban, particularly following reports that the White House s Na­ tional Security Council helped the rebels raise money and of­ fered military advice. While refusing to comment on the Indian leaders’ asser­ tions, CIA spokeswoman P atti Volz said the agency is “complying with congressional obligations and restrictions. ” The ijndian leaders said despite the agreements, the FDN has faiw-t to live up to the commitments and has used its con­ trol over supplies to gain control of the Indian movement on Nicaragua’s Atlantic coast. As a result, they said, the In­ dians’ m ilitary campaign against the Sandinista government has been crippled in recent months. Nicaraguan Indians accuse CIA Bosco Matamoros, the FDN’s representative to of brokering illegal agreements Washington, denied the charge. “We have always lived up to WASHINGTON (AP) — Three Nicaraguan Indian rebel our obligations,” he said. “We have always helped out the leaders said Tuesday that CIA officers have brokered two other groups when they are in need.” • • • a a S S S tS S S $ » 6 S $ $ $ $ 6 $ i$ Cuban inmates. That figure is only .an estim ate and the final cost will de­ pend on what contractors charge, said Jam es Martin, as­ sistant division director for the U.S. Immigration and CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — The space shuttle Naturalization Service. Discovery was launched Tuesday through the worst weather Thursday’s disturbance involved 63 Cubans who were pro­ in the history of the program, then the crew had to rush the testing the uncertainty over their desire to return to their release of an Australian satellite to keep it from broiling in home country. INS officials said the riot left the facility thesun. , , ■minhnhitthit» and 40 inmates w o e immediately sent to NASA also decided to go ahead with the scheduled release federal facilities in El Paso, Texas. later in the day of another satellite, for the American Another 20 were sent to the Maricopa County Jail, and of- , Satellite Co. It would be the first time in the shuttle program ficials said 10 of them were flown on Tuesday to federal that two satellites were released « 1 a single day. facilities in Lompoc, Calif., and El Reno, Okla. The Australian payload, one of three satellites carried aloft The Maricopa County Sheriff’s Department said one of the in Discovery’s cargo bay, had been scheduled for launch Cubans sent to Lompoc had attacked two jail guards Sunday Wednesday but a damaged sunshield forced the early The guards were checked over by doctors and later were release back on the job, said sheriffs spokesman Corporal Jay After back-to-back scrubs Saturday and Sunday, tense Ellison. ___ launch officials gambled on a break in the clouds and sent F.iiimn identified the inmate as Rolando Herrea-Perez, 34, Discovery on its eight-day mission with a spectacular liftoff adding that it was not certain if charges would be filed. that colored the clouds red, white and orange. Soon after the H ie inmates all came to the United States during a 1980 liftoff, the pad was obscured by a torrential downpour. boatlift and later were convicted erf crimes in the U 5. Cuban On Sunday, space-walking astronauts will try to “hot­ President Fidel Castro had allowed some Cubans to return wire” a derelict $85 million Syncom satellite stuck in a earlier this year, but refused to take any more after the U.S. uselessly low orbit. started its Radio Marti broadcasts aimed at Cuba . Shuttle launched in bad weather; satellite successfully deployed Rioting Cubans do $200,000 damage to Florence detention facility ; PHOENIX (AP) — Federal immigration officials said Tuesday it will cost $200,000 to $225,000 to repair damage caused last week to a Florence detention facility by rioting Photo FinishingSavings L d r.v.c l e a n i n g now hiring for the following student posi­ tions: forklift operators, truck loaders, and general stagehands. Pick up stagehand Our everyday low prices 12 exposures... • • *-• f S W 15 exposures disc .............. $3.09 24exposures ............. 36 exposures.................. $6.09 Reprints....,........ .......... .*** ASU PUBLIC EVENTS . - CAMPUS DRU6S 712 S. College Ave. • One block north of University McKELLIPS & SCOTTSDALE flOS. (alpha beta shoppihg cmj STUDENT DISCOUNT job referral forms at Matthews Center. Interviews are August 22-30,1985, M-W-F: 9-12, 1-5; T-TH: 9-1 at the stagedoor at Gammage Center. S T U D E N T S . . .D o n ’t m iss o u r 20-20 offer! Fine arts materials Canvas, paints, stretcher bars, brushes, frames, paper, etc. Drafting supplies Parallel rules, triangles, templates, leads, drawing boards, technical pens (all brands) and more. ALSO Airbrush equipm ent & supplies, graphic arts m aterials and books. SHOW I.D. CARD W ITH INCOMING ORDER M E M O R I A L U N IO N I m Art, architecture, engineering & design students: Shop for your art supplies from The Valley's most com plete selection by SEPTEMBER 20, and savd-a big 20%. Shop any other time and you'll receive our standard 10% STUDENT. DISCOUNT. 29% OFF DOT CLEANING w I M M D e liv e r y A v a i l a b l e 9 65-3474 6 p.m.-10 p.m. 7 days a w eek ; cn M a ric o p a Freew ay FOth Street & Jefferson • 254-0840 Hours: Mon-Fri. 8:30-5:30 Sat. 9-5 Lots of tree parking I Now Open W eekends 11 a.m .-10 -p.m. FLA X FLAX CO., INC. I P I Z Z A --------- “— i Jefferson £ m M C heese Pepperoni p Combo Large .M edtain M $ 4 75 I I I i $6-00 ■rf. $ 7 .9 5 $4.25 $ 4 .7 5 $ 6 j0 0 s Page 3 State Press New deputy chief b eg in s work; p ro p o se s pedal patrol program By THERESA WILLEFORD State Press If the new assistant director of public safety at ASU has his way, campus policemen will soon be patrolling on bicycles. Deputy Chief Douglas L. Bartosh said he has only been at ASU for a week, but already has high aspirations for the department. “I’d like to see a specialized bicycle safety and enforce­ ment team ,” Bartosh said. “The campus has a problem with bicycles being stolen. 1$u.um’t a problem that is unique for ASU, it is a problem with any university campUs,” he said. “We need to have officers on bicycles who will not only patrol the area, but teach others bicycle safety and theft prevention.” Bartosh came to ASU from the University of California at Irvine, following C. Russell Duncan, who is the chief of police for ASU’s Department of Public Safety. “I always stayed in touch with Chief Duncan,” Bartosh said. “And when he told me about this position, I came out and interviewed for i t ” Bartosh received an associate of arts degree in Liberal Arts from Orange Coast College, in Costa Mesa, Cal. He also received a bachelor’s degree from UC at Irvine. He has done graduate work at both Notre Dame and the University of Southern California, he said. "I chose a police career more out of necessity than anything,” Bartosh said. “ I m arried young and had a wife and small child to sup­ port, and a career in law enforcement seemed like an ex­ citing way to make a living.” Bartosh said he left his first job with the police force in Ox­ nard, Calif, because he did not like the style of enforcement that went with the job. He left to pursue his education, and later went to work at tlie campus police level. “1 really liked the way the University departments were run. In many ways the University departments are way ahead of the public dapartments. “They have already established and accomplished things that the public agencies are just now looking a t,” he said. Besides the bicycle issue, Bartosh feels much can be done to improve the security and safety of ASU students, as well as improve the relationship between students and police. For example, he said, “At my previous university there was a Community Service Assistant (CSA) program where students helped the police force. “We could hire students for general staff work and other D o u g la s B a rto s h low-level security jobs. “It was really fun and exciting a t the other university, a very positive experience, ” he said. Bartosh said the ASU community should have a preven­ tative attitude about crime, and be willing to work with the police to ensure a safer campus. “Just like a lot of places, people at ASU have the feeling that ‘It can’t happen to me’ about crim e,” he said. “We want to bolster that feeling, that yes, it won’t happen because you’ll make the effort to see to it that it doesn’t hap­ pen. - •• • !■< '■ • “It will be the whole community preventing crime — not just us.” New study finds ASU costs higher than average Vcri^RE By VICKIE CHAC State Press ASU students may save $250 in tuition costs compared to the national average, but they lose $300 compared to the average per­ sonal expense rate, according to figures from a recent College Board survey. The College Board is an educational association designed to monitor trends in U.S. universities. Janice Gams, a spokeswoman for the New York City-based organization, said that reports that said ASU was m e of the most expensive public universities in the nation were inaccurate. More than 2,500 colleges and universities are members in the College Board. Gams said a recent university costs survey conducted by the College Board in­ dicated that ASU did not rank in the top 22 in universities with the greatest expenses. She said ASU’s $990 yearly in-state tuition compares to a national average of $1242 pm year. When room and board, transportation and personal expenses are averaged into the figures, ASU students average $5,640 per year, while the national average is $5,314. According to Gams, students’ spending habits bring ASU’s cost of living closer to the national average. “Students could get by with a lot less if they can manage their money,” Gams said. Paul Barberini, ASU’s director of student financial assistance, said, “In terms of public universities, (ASU) has m e of the lowest tuition rates on the West Coast. ’’ According to data released by the College Board, Colorado State School of Mines, at $7,800 per year« has the highest in-state tui­ tion among 3,000 universities surveyed. Gams said the board considers tuition and fees, bodes, room and board, transportation and personal expenses when indexing the university costs. She said ASU in-state students living J n residence halls can expect to pay $5,640 tor two semesters. Students living at home average $4,740 a year in costs, she said. But figures also indicated that ASU’s outof-state tuition rates are slightly more than the national average. The average additional fees for out-ofstate students is $2104. ASU’s additional costs are set at $2854. George Hanford, College Board president, said average university costs have risen 7 percent in the last year. Hanford added that financial aid will be offered to off-set the increases, and estimated $16 billion in funds will be available. Stete Press Wednesday, August 88,1965 ON U N B - A T T H C f O U N lA lM 7 /. I editorial XM SICAC O F Peak energy usage decides yearly rate • ^ ¿ L U . . . -* * ••• ' \ One advantage most of us associate with our August return to campus is the cool indoor tem peratures air conditioning provides. After forking over tuition, parking fees and bookstore bills, isn’t nice to have an added luxury we don’t have to pay for? Or do we pay?, Well, through opportunity costs and a limited University budget, utility bills do get back to students. It has come to our attention that ASU could save a con­ siderable amount of money on its utility bill without skimping on air conditioning or cutting out any functions which hich re­ quire electricity. The manager of University Utilities has stated that thousands of University dollars (that means our money) can be saved with no reduction in total consumption, but simply by cutting the rate' of consumption during peak hours. Arizona Public Service charges ASU not only for how much power the campus uses, but also for its peak rate of consump­ tion based on the University’s most gluttonous 15 minutes of the month. Those 15 minutes don’t just raise that months bill. Hie peak consumption rate during September, when ASU’s kilowatt appetite is the most voracious, affects energy bills for the next 11 months. No m atter how low the consumption rate falls in February or March, the charge never falls below 80 percent of the charge for September. The bottom line: if the ASU community can possibly defer activity requiring electricity to times other than peak: con­ sumption hours — between 1 and 5 p.m. — then the Universi­ ty will save a significant amount of cash. The crucial month begins next week. If a cooperative effort brings about a 1-percent drop from the peak consumption rate, the savings will continue for the next 11 months. Neocalvinism : it is better to take than to receive Eric T. Felten Columnist Every time a fraternity or sorority holds a charitable fundraiser, discontent is ram p ant among unhappy puritans who complain that the Greeks actually had fun while ex­ ecuting their civic responsibilities. They argue that the fraternity members are not so much interested in the needy and the homeless as they are in an excuse for chink­ ing “brewskis” in a crowded jacuzzi. These calvinists conclude that the fraternity members deserve no credit, and that their activities m erit no publicity. To justify their conclusions the calvinists cite die predominance of collars (either up­ turned or buttoned-down), BMWs, empty Heineken bottles, topsiders, and worst of all, facial expressions lacking even the slightest trace of tortured pseudo-intellection. They claim of tee fraternity members’ wardrobe, as would John Toole’s character Ignatius J. Reilly, that “(it) onty reflected a person’s lack of theology and geometry; it could even cast doubts upon one’s soul.” And they are right, to some extent, about tee Greeks’ priorities; for tee most part the Greeks are more interested in drinking beer than in running soup kitchens — most everyone is. But let us inquire also into the priorities of our genteel friends, the calvinists. Are they more interested in the sins of their fellow men, e.g., fraternity members, or in tee stomachs of the poor? I am afraid it is the former. Despite what the calvinists would have us believe, that we should heap contempt upon those who have fun while performing charitable services is not a given. Let us cnnsider two very different views on the m atter. Aristotle Wrote that ethics is concerned with virtue, or excellence (tee attic Greeks considered these two very much the same) and that virtue is concerned with actions. It is on the basis of one’s actions, claims Aristotle, that one should be praised or blamed. Fraternity members have fun, it is true, but some of their actions are benefi­ cent. Thus, from a classical viewpoint, those actions deserve .praise — certainly not blame. " ^ ^ — V -7 ' Im m anuel Kant, by no means a lenient moralist, was concerned (as opposed to Aristotle) more with a person’s fram e of mind than with his actions. Kant would not have praised the fraternities, for their ac­ tions do not always come strictly from a sense of duty; but be would not have blamed teem either, for those actions, though not REPORTERS: Vickie Chachara, Linda Coulaon, Andrea Han, Rob KeHon, Carri L. M itchell, Dave Rook, Ed 8chubart, There** W illeford, Oartd O'Brien STATE PRESS STEVE W ATERSTRAT Editor necessarily born of duty, are in accordance with duty. Kant wrote of this very kind of situation in “The Grounding for the Metaphysics of Morals,” saying that the passages of S crip ture that command us to love our neighbors and enemies cannot be about any, pathological feeling of love. Love as a feel­ ing cannot be commanded, though love in tee form of beneficent actions, perhaps, can. But the calvinists disagree: they value feelings more highly than actions and believe that these feelings can be command­ ed. So what, then, do the calvinists want? It seems they want us to censure tee Greeks so long as they fail to take vows of poverty, chastity, humility and sobriety (little realiz­ ing that monastic orders can be far more elitist than tee average fraternity). Perhaps they would be happy if the Greeks merely furrowed their brows, or delivered stirring, self-condemning soliloquies on the plight of the pom:. — Or even better, perhaps we should em­ power tee government to make fundraising mandatory. That way no one would ever have to say thank you. Nobody writes letters to tee Welfare Department, or to the tax­ payers who underwrite it, for tee checks he is receiving: There is no need to be grateful for tee benefits of an entitlement program —one is entitled. The armed robber does not PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Kuczak Jr., Karin Larkin, Wck W iley _ SPORTS REPORTERS: Brad Halvoraan, Bob HaHar, Chrta McKay, Dean Obanauar COPY E0IT0R8: Judle Gaillard. Rebecca Kleeallng, Khali Crawford TOM BLOOGETT Managing Editor City Editor W. TIM A H L Sporta Editor M ICHAEL KQNZ Aaat. C ity Editor JOHN CONW AY Aaat. Sporta Editor JERRY BROWN Aaat. C ity Editor M EUSSA SMYTH Copy C hlai JACOUIE CIROU Now* Editor MEAD SUMMER Art* Editor CINDY PEARLMAN Opinion Editor GRAY T. ECH O LS Aaat. Art* Editor PATRICK J.K U C ER A Aaat. Managing Editor WHITNEY PETERSON Photo Editor KIP WILLIAMS S TA FF ARTIST: Jon Bacatone CARTOONIST: Chip Sbeaan EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Laura Wllaon The State Pteaa la pubUahad Monday through Friday during the academ ic year except holiday* and exam period*, at Matthew* Canter, Room 18. Arizona Stata Univaralty, Tampa, A Z 86287. Navaroom: 988-2282. AdvertiaIng 8 Production:988-7872. thank his victim, for no generosity is involvedinhisgain. To our calvinist friends, saying thank you is embarassing; to accept charity is humiliating. Neither should be withstood. Gratitude is a low emotion to them, something akin to the groveling of a slave. But tee problem remains that gratitude naturally, and rightly, follows generosity -rtee calvinists must hope to defuse generosi­ ty by either making it mandatory, or by labeling it as a cheap brand of hypocrisy. True, the Greeks could give more. They could give until they had to dip into the beer and pretzel money. But then, so could all of us—including the calvinists. Essentially, I have a very simple argu­ ment against the calvinists: if one is in­ terested in the welfare of the poor, and if giving tee Greeks publicity entices teem to benefit the poor, then one should give tee Greeks publicity. Thus I think the calvinists are not as wor­ ried about helping the poor as they are about grabbing the moral high ground. Aside from being a less than felicitous method of en­ couraging the Greeks to give more, the calvinists’ tirades against tee fraternities aresim ply petty. One wonders who the true hypocrites a r e .. LETTER POLICY The State Press encourages letters on any topic. Letters should be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages. Letters are subject to editing on the basis of clarity, length or conformance to newspaper style. Include your full name, class standing and m ajor, or other affiliation with the University, along with your phone number. Requests for anonymity are considered If a reason is given. Send letters to: Letters, State Press, Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, Az., 85287. Page ! Wednesday, August 28,1985 State Pies* Penguin lust is here-again Thanks to a quick delivery . _ , , i- „ - ___ via Federal Express, Opus, Milo, Binkley and the gang managed to roll in only two days late for the fall State Press. J» The popular feature returns from last sem ester and can be found daily as it floats through t he newspaper. Check the “Inside Today.. box for page number. This Sum m er D id Y o n W o rk M o re on Y o u r T an or Your BLO O M C O U N T Y WHOAM I ? WHATAM 1 A l ABOUT ? This AMNB6IA tS W e P lT S / IFS B L UKB AN UNFINISHSP PAINTING-. PO 1 PR£F€R SPINACH SALAPS FOR LUNCH T...OR PtSTACHK)iw ic e c m * ? p o t ASAP SAUL BBLUM ?.. OP SI&HeN KING ? SPECIAL DONOR PROGRAM E A R N $30 E A C H W E E K , O V E R $120 P E R M O N T H ! R E C E IV E $10 Y O U R FIR ST D O N A T IO N A N D $20 Y O U R S E C O N D D O N A T IO N IN T H E S A M E C A L E N D A R b y B e rk e B re a th e d SLOWLY, W B TRUTH RBAR6 ANP FOR G00PN&65 SftKF, PO 1HAVF GOOP TASTE IN PERSONAL A rru te ?.. OR PePLORAFLB TA6TB ? irs uglynew... M Mm ». | t« aM < ... ... ■ ____ 0 .» ■ •"■ •» * » M M » W " a * .* " * .w C * * * * * * * t*> « m —•m a C LA SS RINGS 4 I .# Tb i u d s * 966*a7 1 0 0 A U G U S T 26 T H R O U G H A U G U S T 30 ASU BOOKSTORE 1*1/4 M ites Souttt o f M cO ow eH R oed • Just North of the Salt River Bridge 9-4 Deposit Required ©1985 ArtCarvedC Jass Rings StatcPna» Wednesds£AujuJ5t£i^9M Page 14 ASASU to bring diversity to cam pus lecture series By ANDREA HAN State Press Associated Students of ASU officials are trying to make “Celebrate Diversity” — the theme for this year’s lecture series — representative of different cam pus organizations, according to Brad Golich, ASASU lecture series director. r In an effort to improve on last year’s series, a lecture series activities board was formed this summer to work out the kinks from previous years, Golich said. “We hope to improve upon last year’s series and serve all the student population. We want to ensure diverse, quality speakers. We are planning on scheduling 13 lectures for the 1985-46 school year com­ pared to seven last year,” Golich said. Actor Mike F arrell, who portrayed B.J. Hunnicut of the television series M*A*S*H, will speak Sept 26 at noon in the Arizona Room of die MU. Tentatively scheduled for an Oct. 10 lec­ ture is Larry McMurty, author of “Terms of Endearment” and “The Last Picture Show.” The lecture is co-sponsored by the Creative Writing departm ent and ASASU lecture series, Golich said. Tentative Oct. 23, 8 p.m., Dr. Christian Barnard, a pioneer in heart surgery, will police re p o rt University police reported the following incidents in the 24hour period ending at 1 a.m. Tuesday: •The right front fender and bumper of a 1979 Corvette were damaged when it was struck by a truck while parked in Lot 59 early Monday, police said. The driver of the truck told police that he was unaware he U.S. poverty drops after decade lull WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States experienc­ ed its first significant decline in poverty in nearly a decade last year, as the improving economy helped 1.8 million Americans climb above the poverty level, the govern­ ment said Tuesday. “There was a very signifi­ cant increase in income and decrease in poverty in 1984,” said Gordon W. Green Jr., who is in charge of* socioeconomic statistics for the Census Bureau. “Economic recovery and (the reduced level of) infla­ tion are important factors in the continuing decline of poverty,” he said. Green said the national poverty rate declined nearly one percentage point to 14.4 percent, or 33.7 million peo­ ple living below the poverty line. The poverty rate in 1983 was 15.3 percent, or 35.5 million people. The poverty threshhold tor an urban family of four was $10,609 last year, up from $10,178 a year earlier. The rate is slightly lower for rural families. Although there were small declines in poverty in 1977 and 1978 — before the sharp increases of the last few years began — the last significant drop cam e between 1975 and 1976 when poverty dropped from 12.3 percent to 11.8 percent, ac­ cording to bureau records. Also released Tuesday was the latest in a series of studies'of how government programs affect poverty. These reports have drawn sharp controversy in the past' by estimating that poverty would actually be reduced sharply if govern­ ment programs to help the poor were counted as in­ come. The new study indicates thatf counting non-cash benefits as income would remove between 5 million and 11 million people from . the poverty rolls, depending on how the values of the benefits were calculated. The current estim ates of the number of people living in poverty are based only upon their cash income. speak in the MU. On Nov. 5, F. Lee Bailey, a famous defense attorney who hosted the television show “Lie Detector,” is scheduled to speak in the MU at noon, Golich said. Former CBS Evening News Anchorman Walter Cronkite will he on campus Nov. 15. The lecture is open to ASU student, staff and faculty members only, Golich saidEleanor Si^eal, president of NOW, the Na­ tional Organizaton of Women, will speak Dec. 2. Smeal’s appearance is tentative, ac­ cording to Golich. During the spring sem ester, Randall Robinson, executive director of the Trans- had hit the Corvette and that his insurance would pay for the damages. Damages were estim ated at $250. •Police said they were called in to remove a white goose from a first floor shower in Hayden Hall. The police took the goose to the Phoenix zoo where it was accepted and found to be in good health. Police did not know where the goose came from and said the act was a fraternity prank. •A blue, five-speed Schwinn bicycle valued at $200 was stolen from in front of Manzanita Residence Hall Monday evening, police said. Africa Organization, will speak Feb. 12 as part of Black History Month. The organization is one of the largest anti­ apartheid groups in the United States and will be co-sponsored by the Blade Student Union and ASASU, he said. ASASU officials are also trying to bring William F. Buckley, Cidly Tyson and Gen. William Westmoreland to campus as part of thenfecture series. According to Golich, all lectures are free to students with an ASU identification card. The cost is $2 for non-ASU students. All lec­ tures wUl be held in the Memorial Union unless otherwise posted. The student told police she had locked the bicycle with a kryptonite lock. •A grey men’s ten-speed Royce bicycle valued at $105 was stolen from in front of Manzanita Residence Hall sometime between Saturday and Sunday, police said. •An ASU student told police that another student deliberately collided with her while jogging at the Selleh Trade, breaking her Walkman. The student denied breaking the Walkman. No value was put on the radio and the victim was advised to take her case to small claims court. -.MELISSA SMYTH S te te P m t ^ Wednesday, August 28,1965 ' GRAND OPENING G E T SER IO U S A BO U T YOUR S H A P E • Discount for Current 24 Hour Nautilus Members • 43 New Weight Machines • Aerobics Hourly • 5 Heart Mate Bikes • 10,000pounds of Free weight • Ladies WorkoutArea • Professional Trainers • Air Conditioning • N o Salesmen! Southern M Y BY THEWORKOUT: $25* Card Fee Plus $3.50 Per Visit RAY BY THB MONTH: m $25* Card Fee Plus _ $25.00Per Month RKYBYtHBYBAR: $25* Card Fee Plus $200.00Per Year or $350.00for 2 Years * Initial Registration Card Expires after 2 years B e a u v a is’ r 1102 IK Southern Avenue Tbmpe • 820-6969o r829-6960 Open 5am-1am 7 days per week e a u v a is FITNESS &AEROBIC CENTER Page 15 State Press Wednesday, Ausust 88,1985 Page 16 JJ l ALPINE SKI & SPORT S T A R T IN G W EDNESDAY A U G U S T 28 9:30 A .M .-9 P.M . HOURS: W ed.-Frl. 9:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Sat. 9:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; S u n . 10 a.m .-7 p.m. Alpine Ski & Sports has brought in truckloads of bargains for 5 D A Y S O N LY . Save on over two million dollars worth of top quality name brand discount ski and sporting goods NOW ! SAVE 20% -50% AND MORE! DON’T WAIT! DON’T DELAY! This Is It, The V a lle y 's BIGGEST LAYAWAY • USE YOUR VISA • MASTERCARD • AMERICAN EXPRESS A PA CH E G-* * ît* * * 'Æ Æ k lp tn e Ski & S p o rts Corner McClintock & Broadway Rd., Tempe QUANTITIESLIMITEDTOSTOCKONHANO 9 6 8 -9 0 5 6 BRO ADW AY | o O S A LE ■ SOUTHERN u $ / Stete Press Page 17 Wednesday, August 2 8 ,1 9 8 5 Collision releases radioactive material BOWDON, N.D. (AP) — A truck hauling drums of uranium oxide collided with a freight train Tuesday, killing the driver of the truck and spilling the low-level radioactive material, authorities said. A crewman aboard the Burlington Northern train was ex­ posed to the chemical but was not hospitalizedr No evacuations were ordered in the 4:45 p.m. accident, but authorities sealed off the area, about three miles east of Bowdon and 70 miles northeast of Bismarck, said Doug Friez, a supervisor for the North Dakota Division of Emergency Management. The truck was hauling more than 50 drums containing powdered uranium oxide, a low-hazard, non-fissionable m aterial that presented no danger outside 20 feet from the accident site, he said. • ' Uranium oxide is a low-grade ore that after being refined is used as fuel in nuclear power plants, said Terry Lindsey, a state radiological officer. It does not pose a high radiation threat but Can cause respiratory problems, he said. The driver of the truck was killed in the crash, said Sgt. Doyle Schultz of the Highway Patrol. The victim’s name was not released. The truck collided with the first of two engines hauling six empty freight cars of the train, which was traveling at 10 mph and heading to Turtle Lake from Jamestown, said A1 Wiegold, a spokesman for the Burlington Northern Railroad in St. Paul, Minn. Court awards damages in ‘sticky’ case Staff photo by Kevin J. Larkin Shafted F ra n d tco Barrios, a Junior painting major, clim bs from the elevator shaft o f the Art building onto the third floor after being trapped In the elevator for 40 mtnutes. • PHOENIX (AP) — It was a sticky case, but a state. Supreme Court ruling Tuesday could mean a sweet settle­ ment for a Scottsdale couple whose home was drenched in honey. In a 5-0 opinion, the justices reversed two lower courts and ruled that a policy issued by State Farm Insurance could ap­ ply to damages caused by a bee-hive that leaked after bees were exterminated from the home’s attic. The policy, issued to Donald and Elsie Roberts, excluded losses that were “caused by” insects but covered “any ensu­ ing loss” from insects. A Court of Appeals panel had split 2-1 on the issue, with the majority saying that another factor had to enter into a situa­ tion for it to be an “ensuing loss.” Thus, honey spilling from an abandoned hive was not an ensuing loss, but damages caused by a bear that smelled the honey would be an ensuing ^toss. The Supreme Court disagreed in Tuesday’s opinion, saying “ensuing” means “to take place afterward or following as a chance, likely or neccessary consequence.” “The plain import of this language is that the loss, due to honey seepage, is an ensuing loss and is covered by the policy, unless one of the other various exclusions applies/’ Justice Jack D.H. Hays wrote for the court. “It was errin' for the trial court to dismiss Roberts’ suit. ” William Stinson, attorney for State Farm , could not be reached for comment immediately at his office, but Wayne Arnett, attorney for the homeowners, said he expected the decision could lead to an.out-of-court settlement in the case which dates back to 1980. “It’s a little sweeter than it was in the Court of Appeals,” he said. Artists’ Supply C enter "*«SS* iO p ’ F R E E OF ART L U N C H ! D on’t y o u k n o w th e re ’s no s u c h th in g a s a free lu n c h ? Fine Arts & Crafts But: M a y b e y o u ca n s a v e e n o u g h to b u y a c o u p le o f fre e lu fic h e s (y o u r fe llo w s tu d e n ts have) w ith S a v-O n In su ran ce. ART SUPPLIES CALLUS! Jewelry Supplies Painting & • Art Books & Magazines Drawing Silkscreen & • Clay & Ceramic Printmaking Materials 820-1620 S A V -O N / A C T IO N 26 E. UNIVERSITY E 967-3681 In s u r a n c e C e n t e r o f T e m p e 2062 E. Southern, Tempe, AZ 85282 • 820-1620 Just acro ss University from the Fine A rts Building! %block eest of Mill on Univeralty r % M UAB H O S T A N D H O STESS C O M M I T T E E S p e cia lizin g in P h o to g ra p h y f o r F ra te rn itie s, S o ro ritie s, Clubs an d O rg a n iz a tio n s Welcomes all prospective and returning members to a reception on Sorority and Fraternity Memory Books " TO D AY fr o m 965-M U A B in GRAND OPENING SPECIAL 3 to 4 :3 0 p .m . th e M o n tg o m e r y L o u n g e o f th e M e m o r ia l U n io n BRING AD & ASU I.D. FOR 4X5 MINI-PACK Reg. $12 .9 5 FOR $ 3 .9 5 i Cad for Appointment and Weekly Student Prices T h is c o m m itte e ushers G a m m a g e C e n te r a n d th e in th e U n io n U n iv e r s ity A c tiv ity C e n te r , C in e m a , a s w e ll a s b r in g in g th e S e r e n d i p i t y A r t s a n c f C r a fts F a ir t o c a m p u s . C o m e jo in u s a n d g e t in v o lv e d w i th m a n y - e x c itin g s o c ia l a n d s e r v ic e ‘a c tiv itie s . 252-9667 405 w est University Tempe, AZ 85281 J V at Stai» Pie»» Wednesday, August »8,1965 Page 18 Rebel Apartheid critic jailed on eve of Pollsmoor Prison march CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — The Rev. Allan Boesak, one of the nation’s most outspoken foes of apartheid, was jailed Tuesday on the eve of a mass protest march he planned to lead to Pollsmoor Prison where Nelson Mandela is serving a life term . Boesak’s lawyer said the march would go ahead as planned despite the detention of Boesak and despite government warnings that it would act to halt the illegal assembly. Mandela, black leader of the banned African National'Congress, has been in prison since 1964, convicted of plotting sabotage. Boesak, 39, is of mixed race and is presi­ dent of the 70 million-member World Alliance of Reformed Churches. In Washington, the State Department con­ demned the arrest and made a protest to the South African government. In Geneva, Switzerland, the World Alliance of Reformed Churches called Boesak’s detention “a manifestation of in­ tolerance on die part of the South African . government” and demanded his release. The statem ent was issued jointly by the alliance and the World Council of Churches. A fiery and eloquent opposition leader with a strong personal following, Boesak risked arrest when he announced the planned illegal m arch to Pollsmoor. Out­ door political gatherings have been banned since 1976. The white government warned Saturday that Boesak’s march, which he said would draw 20,000 people, was illegal and said police would take “stern action” to stop it. Unconfirmed reports said police set up roadblocks to turn back buses bringing par­ ticipants to the Cape Town area. Boesak was arrested by four security policemen near the campus of the universi­ ty. Aides said he was there to head off a con­ frontation between some 400 placardwaving students and police firing tear gas. Police in riot helmets marched across the campus to dispose die students demanding the release of two lecturers who are among the 2,222 people detained without charge under a state of emergency imposed July 21. Boesak, however, was held under the In­ ternal Security Act. Twenty-seven other top leaders of the main anti-apartheid organiza­ tion, the United Democratic Front, were picked up last week under term s of the act. Minister leads civil crusade against South African poljcy JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (API “ From within the segregated fold of the Afrikaners’ church, the Rev. Allan Boesak has emerged as one of South Africa’s foremost rebels against apartheid. The Dutch Reformed minister, who has denounced the rul­ ing whites as “die spiritual children of Adolf H ilter,” was jailed without charge Tuesday on die eve of an illegal mass march to Pollsmoor Prison to demand die release cd jailed black leader Nelson Mandela. [A member of the mixed-race minority who commands widespread support among blacks, Boesak got the white branches of the Dutch Reformed Church expelled from the World Alliance of Reformed Churches. His appeal for a “united front” resulted in 1983 in the for­ mation of the United Democratic Front, an umbrella organization with 600 affiliates which is now the main anti­ apartheid organization. , In speeches at home and abroad, he has urged civil disobe­ dience and sanctions against this country, promoted con­ sumer boycotts of white businesses and accused the Afrikaners of a “subtle form of genocide.” Leading demonstrations and preaching at funerals for vic­ tims of a year of anti-apartheid riots, Boesak was inviting ar­ rest even before he announced the march to demand the release of Mandela, who is serving a life term for sabotage. Boesak, who had predicted the march would turn the coun­ try on its head, had been one of the few United Democratic Front leaders still at liberty five weeks after South Africa declared a state of emergency. Thé South African Broadcasting Corp. described the march as “reckless.” The Citizen, a pro-government daily newspaper, said Monday that Boesak wanted political m ar­ tyrdom. • COUPON' SP EC IA L MARTIAL ARTS? to Students and Faculty Try Jujitsu! Register now! U n e #56204 PED105 PEBWRm.114 A regularly p riced $35 fu ll set o f sculptured nails and tips at a special price of $25 w ith co u p o n ! 7-8:30 p.m. Mon. & W ed Located in g P a M i iÀ tc *J / U U (e *è NAIL TECHNICIAN à / ie c M ii t f f i n p in n o d iem e 31 E. 9th St. Tempe, AZ 85283 602-894-0573 Headlines Hair Salon Tem pe C e n te r By a p p o in tm en t o n ly 894-0573 Coupon expires 6-30-85. v*V v*v^: , .COUPON.—____ i____ _— ----------- J JONATHAN’S PIZZA Job Opportunities SEE H ELP W ANTED PRANKSTER’S •B EST B O O D & 1 024, EAST BROADWAY F E V E R A G E IN T O W N 967-8875 D O R M S, A P T S ., V A N S A L L SIZES U S E D R O O M SIZES *10 SUP WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRI. & SAT. SUNDAY HAPPY HOUR 4-7 *FREE HORS D’OEUVRES CHICKEN WINGS 120 EACH HAPPY HOUR 4-7 HAPPY HOUR 4-7 ALL DAY & ALL NIGHT HATS, SHIRTS TOBE GIVEN AWAY 2 FOR 1 PIZZA BUY 1 GET 1 FREE REVERSE HAPPY HOUR 10-1 HOT, BBQ, MIXED PLAIN, DIP ’EM YOURSELF AlL L1 mum NlfiHT 10Nfi n LUIVU FREE HORS D’OEUVRES MONDAY NIGHT BASEBALL REVERSE HAPPY HOUR 10-1 FREE HORS D’OEUVRES FREE HOT HORS D’OEUVRES ALL DAY & ALL NIGHT HAPPY HOUR 10-1 M olson Golden $1.25 a bottle FREE LUNCH iMteMier.¡*aúw»*rmi•« —orders to go— TUESDAY NEW CARPET TOOI 1516 E. Van Buren Phoenix SER VES W HOLE MENU UNTIL 1?:10 MONDAY REVERSE HAPPY HOUR 10-1 House B R O IL FRI., SAT. A U G . 30-31 4 to Close BUY ONE G ET THE NEXT ONE FREE EVERY DAY 11-4 GOOD THROUGH OCT. 1,1985. State Press Page 19 Wednesday, August 28,1985 Army’s air-defense gun scrapped after $1.8 billion spent WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said Tuesday he was scuttling production of a new air-defense gun on which the Army has spent $1.8 billion, because it doesn’t work much better than the weapons the service has now. Before Weinberger’s decision, the Army had planned to spend another $3 billion on the weapon, a twin-cannon gun unit mounted atop a tank chassis and known formally as the Divisimi Air Defense gun or Divad. “The independent operational tests demonstrated that the x system’s performance does not effectively meet the growing (Soviet) m ilitary threat,l’ Weinberger said. “ (They showed) that while there are marginal im­ provements that can be made to the Divad, these are not significant compared to the capability of current air defense weapons. “So we will not invest any more funds in this The company, which assembles the Sgt. York at a plant in Newport Beach, Calif., had delivered 65. Weinberger said he system.” The cancellation of a weapon program, particularly after had ordered the Army not to accept any more of the guns. production has begun, is rare. Ford Aerospace said Tuesday the Sgt. York had met the Although the Sgt. York has been plagued with development “contractual specification requirements established by the problems almost from its inception, Weinberger’s decision Army.”': " Designed to protect armored columns and troops from air caught many Army leaders by surprise. They had argued privately the weapon was worth preserv­ attack, the gun consists nf two 40 mm cannon — mounted ing because additional improvements could be made, and atop a modified M48 tank chassis — linked to a special com­ that the Army needed a radar-directed gun that could puter and radar. Weinberger said the weapon may have been flawed from the start because its cannons didn’t have the operate at night and in bad weather. The gun has been under development for more than seven range to strike Soviet helicopters carrying modern missiles. years. The Ford Aerospace & Communications Corp., after “We have to have a system that can deal with the threat winning a,competition against the General Dynamics Corp., ' that those helicopters pose, a helicopter that can stand off six Deceived a contract in 1981 to supply up to 618 Divad units. kilometers and fire lethal fire into troops,” he said. Three leftist guerrillas accused of killing Marines arrested SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) — Three leftist guerrillas suspected of par­ ticipating in a cafe m assacre in which four U.S. Marines were killed have been arrested and a fourth is dead, President Jose Napoleon Duarte said Tuesday. At a news conference, Duarte read a letter he sent to President Reagan advising him of the arrests. He said other guerrillas who took part in the June 19 killings of 13 people at two sidewalk cafe in San Salvador have been identified and are being sought. A rebel group, the Central American Revolutionary Worker’s Party, claimed responsibility for the night-time attacks on the cafes in the Zona Rosa entertainment district. Among the 13 slain by the killers firing automatic weapons were the four Marine guards at the U.S. Embassy who were off duty and two American businessmen who worked for a computer company! Duarte and members of the military high command, who flanked the president at the news conference at the executive mansion, Supply C enter THE r X A Artists’ r ffc fs ’ J OF ART ¿ M io p L J r A rch ite ctu ra l ■" A Engineering I \ Com m ercial ’a r t disinterested aid” to Salvadoran authorities in tracking down the suspects and making the arrests. American help included the cooperation of the FBI. They said the slain suspect was in the gang that attacked the Marines and others in the cafes and also had participated in other urban guerrilla actions including the bombings of vehicles and and an attack on a truck carrying national police. Few details of his death were given, but the officials said he was wounded in a battle and was taken to a hospital where he died. •M ountain Equipment Back To School Savings •O utdoor Prod. •Bristlecone ►Dolt nv> < v**° s u p p l ie s • Transfer Type & Tapes • Inks, Pens, Berol M a rke rs S a le en d s 9-19-85. • D rafting Supplies • Expanded Selection of Sheet Papers for • A r t is t s Books A rtis ts , A rch itects, & M agazines &, Engineers 26 E. UNIVERSITY 967-3681 MM Just across University from the Architecture Building! V»Mock east of Mill on University H refused to say when, where or how the three were captured. A government communique later iden­ tified those arrested and the suspect killed as members of the Central American Revolutionary Workers’ Party, known by its Spanish initials as the PRTC. It is the sm allest of five guerrilla groups in the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front coalition that is battling the U.S.-backed govemmnent. Duarte’s letter to Reagan praised the U.S. government for providing “efficient and C A N W E TALK? 894-9137 •Cam ping •New & U sed Clothin g •G en uine G .l. Surplus •M ASH B A SH HEAD Q U AR TERS SU RPLU S 1332 E. A pache M -F 9-8 Sat. 9-6 Sun. 10-5 (A. J, Bay less Center) M C/VISA BOOK PACKS 15 % WELCOME BACK SALE tt Are you creative, spontaneous, an idea personl Do you have artistic abilityl or are you la PR buffi If you like to take the bull by the horns and can let your imagination run wild,, then we believe you have what it takes to promote a fast growing organization. Join us on Thursday, August 29,2-3 p.m. 211 Yuma Room, 2nd level of the MU, and become a part of the MUAB ADVERTISING COMMITTEE I n il r i i Memorial Union Activities B o a r d CALL 965-M U AB The Avenue to Student Activities at A S U ° ^ to * ° fu « v Re9' VOTED AS B E S T B IK E S H O P IN P H O E N I X A R E A 1985 C r it ic ’s C h o ic e Many Makes and Models at Special Clearance Prices. PLUS A Reputation for Service and Value TEMPE BICYCLE SHOP The old g a s station on the corner 6th Street and M ill, T em pe 966-6896 Wednesday, August 28,1985 Page go Slate Press l i n e cheats for banking convenience! V KpXït&tC ■ a iw ä 'V 3 y<>5 YÄ 's ! ■t-Sfjfr i QP?> & V o. [fe fell .»A » 41 Al 3 3 rf£ _ 0»tf7 v/J \ / rr n n lw \ What with classes, studying, and the occa­ sional extracurricular activity, a little conven­ ience in the finance department would certainly be w elcom e. And Valley Bank gives you conven­ ience three ways. Start with a choice of checking accounts aim ed at limiting your hassles and your expenses. There’s ValueChecking™ —the account that gives you more value for your m oney Or you might prefer a checking account designed expressly for students. We call it the Student Express Account. You’ll call it terrific. Because it’s an account that has no minimum balance requirement and a low annual fee that makes it about half the cost i. o f m ost regular checking accounts, v Best of all, every Valley Bank checking account gives you access to 150 Valley _ National Banking Machines all over Arizona, for self-service banking around the state and around the clock. Need more convenience? How about two Banking Machines right on cam pus, just outside the Bookstore, for quick cash between classes or after dark. And there’s a full-service Valley Bank branch (with two more Banking Machines) located right around the cor­ ner, at 826 E. Apache Boulevard, where you can open your checking account and take care of all your other finan­ cial needs. > Saving you time and saving you money. That’s the value of conven­ ience. And only Valley Bank gives you convenience worth cheering about. VALLEY NATiONAL BANK Member FD1C Page 21 Wednesday, August 28,1985 State Press state press W alker lo o ks to uncertain future in se co n d year promising freshman who impressed Darryl Rogers’ coaching staff by graduating from Tempe’s Marcos de Niza High School a John Walker will probably kick off the semester early in order to participate in 1985 football season the same way he did the ASU’s spring drills. year before — watching from the bench as All he wanted was a chance to show his Jeff Van Raaphorst directs the ASU offense. stuff somewhere down the road. But this time, he’s prepared for anything. "I really don’t know what to expect,” said However, when Van Raaphorst went down ASU’s sophomore quarterback. “It could be with strained knee ligaments during the from