friday S e p t e m b e r 6 ,1 9 8 5 state press o V o i. 68 N o . 8 Arizona State University Tempe. Arizona Co p yright. State Press. 1985 Gas odor causes building evacuation • t e ll photo by South X Larkin Chuck Engman of Southwest Gas Co. searches a gas line outside the Home Econom ics buHding for leaks. By EDSCHUBERT State P rest The Home Econom ics building w as evacuated at about 5 p.m. Thursday when students reported a gas-tike odor around the building, U niversity P olice Sgt. Charles Erickson said. “Ajl we have is a sm ell” of natural gas, he said. “We don’t know where the leak is or what concéntration” the gas is in, he said. Erickson said he w as waiting for the Southwest Gas Com­ pany to arrive with a “gas sniffer.” At about 6 p.m ., a radio report from the building to a police dispatcher indicated that no source of gas had been found on the first or second floors, and that air conditioning vents on the roof were being checked. At about 7:30 p.m ., ASU Security Officer Pete Granillo said gas company workers and policem en checking the building still had not found the exact source of the gas leak. At least one class had to be evacuated when the gas sm ell was first noticed, according to custodians Lois Benoche and Jim Galgano. s' “Class had let out and and people said the gas was really strong,” Benoche said. We "cam e in sm elling g as,” said Gaigano. According to Granillo, all evening classes scheduled in the building were canceled. . Divestment issue tops regents’ agenda By V IC K IE CH A C H E R E State Press In response to requests for South African divestm ent by local groups, the Arizona Board of Regents w ill review university in­ vestm ent policies today during its monthly m eeting in Flagstaff. The regents’ review of the policy may lead the board to a decision on the future of $3.3 m illion in ASU and UA holdings in com ­ panies that do business with South Africa, Ausländer said. Regent Edith Ausländer, a member of the board’s finance com m ittee, said, “We are recommending that the policy be altered to include social im plications.” Regent Donald Shropshire said the board is expected to reach a decision on divest­ ment either today or Saturday. Arizona Rep. John Kromko, D-Tucson, said W ednesday that Tucsonans Against Apartheid, who originally requested the regents com pletely divest, are planning to picket the m eeting. Kromko said he w as unsure about the ex­ tent of the protests, but the group has decid­ ed to attem pt to sw ay the board’s decision to divest during the call to the audience. Kromko earlier testfied at a board finance sub-com m ittee m eeting, and urged the regents to divest their holdings from those com panies. The board also w ill review and may ap­ prove the distribution of $3.7 m illion in state appropriations designated for m aintenance at ASU, NAU and UA. The distribution of funds was delayed dur­ ing the regents’ July m eeting when all three universities subm itted funding proposals that exceeded $3.7 million. The regents agreed to review each project and base their decisions on individual needs. According to Victor Zafra, ASU vice presi­ dent for business affairs, more than $3 m illion is needed to com plete asbestos rem oval' procedures and install, firepreventive sprinkler system s and elevator em ergency telephones in cam pus buildings. The board also w ill begin reviewing capital appropriation requests from the three universities and ASU-West that w ill be subm itted during the Arizona Legislature’s next session. | > The board also is scheduled to discuss the allocation of $125 m illion in bonding authori­ ty granted by the Legislature last spring. The - funding has been designated to finance capital im provem ent, or constraction, projects at the three schools. Bob Law less, associate director of finance for the regents, said the funds w ill be allocated among the three universities bas­ ed on the need for each project. / The regents also m ay approve a proposal to seek additional bonding authority during the 1986 legislative session. In other board m atters, the regents w ill: •R eceive information on tuition fees for the 1966-87 school year and take action on the m atter at its October m eeting. •R eview and possibly revise this year’s Arizona Student Association budget, which was adopted by the regents in May . H ie ASA is a lobbying group com prised of the student governm ents of ASU, NAU and UA. 0) T o d a y ..------TJ ~ y) NASA selects ASU to be one of seven centers in the world organlzing and conducting the International Hailey Watch for the comet. Page 8. ASU is No. 1 in the out-of-control party school category, according .to one new book on Greek life. Page 14. ASU’s first sporting event of the year is the volleyball team's match with Utah Saturday night in P.E. East. Page 23. Bloom C ounty............................... 6 Classified'.................................... 26 Collage............................. 8 Entertainment............................. 11 Natlon/world..................... 2 Opinion . . . . . . . ». . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Sports . . . .19 Leaders of student groups claim board ‘avoiding’ apartheid battle The Black Student Union “is am azed but not am used by the cowardly action of the Arizona Board of R egents,” spokesman Santiago Vega said. Vega, speaking Thursday at a press conference organized by Students Against Apartheid, said the Regents w ere m eeting at NAU in Flagstaff to avoid confrontation with anti-apartheid groups that aré stronger in Tucson and Phoenix. “They are hoping we w ill disappear,” he said. “But w e are growing bigger and stronger every day.” • Vega also said that individual regents have ex­ pressed indifference to the plight of South African blacks. “We as the BSU w ill not tolerate this m adness, “We w ill bring you (the regents) back to % Senior biology major Santiago Vaga Maats the Arizona Board “cowardice” on the South African divestment isetie. Vega was apoakh In tha Memorial Union at a speakout and presa conlarenca on aporthaid. . press conference and speakout w as “ to send a clear m essage to the Arizona regents” that they should withdraw ASU funds currently invested in com panies doing business with South Africa. “The students of ASU pledge to pressure the board of regents” for divestm ent, Hale said. Vega said, “the m oney that cranes out of South Africa has a crim son tinge to it. It’s blood money. “We want full divestm ent and w e want it now. ” SAA activist Andy English said he w as “encouraged” by the A ssociated Students of ASU Senate’s vote Tuesday approving a petition urging the regents to undertake divestm ent. ASASU V ice President for Campus Affairs Amy Young said the senate vote does not im ply any con­ demnation of the regents’ handling of the divest­ ment issue. “It w as never presented that way a t a ll,” she said. Young said the divestm ent issue has both a moral and an econom ic side, and the regents “have to look at both sid es.” She said the regents usually m eet in Flagstaff during the summ er because of the cooler clim ate. Hale said SAA has grown from a membership of “five or six ” at the start of the school year to “more than 70” . by the end of its first official m eeting last week. English said SAA is part of a broadly based coalition that includes other anti-apartheid and student groups, as w ell as American Federation of States, County and Municipal Em ployees, AFL/CIO, American Federation of Teachers and U niversity Em ployees, Arizona Catholic Con­ ference, Arizona Ecum enical Council, Jewish Federation of Phoenix, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, People United to Save Humanity, Western Conference of Team sters, and Young Socialist Alliance — an af­ filiate of the Socialist Workers Party. English said he is a member of the Socialist Workers Party, but that SAA represents a broad range of view s and includes conservatives and in­ dependents. Elen Lauper, SWP candidate for mayor of Phoenix and sister of rock star Cyndi Lauper, at­ tended the Aug. 29 SAA m eeting and said she sup­ ported the group, but that there w as no official connectjon between SAA and SWP. “There's no o ffic ia l« # thing,” she said. K elly Mulhollan of the Committee in Solidarity with the People of E l Salvador said her organiza­ tion has a working relationship with SAA. A flyer published by both groups states that they w ill jointly sponsor a speaker on Sept. 10 who w ill “present the Nicaraguan viewpoint on the U.S. war in Central America and the struggle for freedom in South A frica.” — ED SCHUBERT n atio h rw o rld Reagan campaigns for tax overhaul at North Carolina State University RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — President Reagan resumed his cam paign for an overhaul of the income tax system Thursday, playing the underdog challenging the vested in­ terests he says are the enem ies of change. “The special interests may think they have tips one locked up tight, and w e m ay be starting this battle for tax fairness as underdogs,” Reagan told more than 13,000 students and faculty m em bers at North Carolina State University. But he said he wanted to remind “the nay sayers, people who tell you it can’t be done . . . that this is America,^and there are no lim its except those that w e put on ourselves.” ' “A lot of cynics in Washington are laying odds against our fair share tax plgn,” Reagan said. “Our plan has too many enem ies, they say, enem ies among those with a vested in­ terest in the status quo — ‘status quo,’ that’s Latin for the m ess w e call the present incom e tax.’’ “The present system , with all its shelters and loopholes, is not only unfair, it’s dumb econom ics,” the president said in the university’s sw eltering Reynolds Coliseum. Although many of the provisions he now com plains about w ere initiated or expanded by his m assive 1981 tax cut bill, Reagan’s new plan generally would lower individual tax rates, notably for those in the highest brackets, w hile giiminaHng many of the deductions and credits that give preferential treatm ent to particular groups. U.S. administration works on arms packaga for Jordan, Saudi Arabia WASHINGTON (AP) — The Reagan adm inistration is pin­ ning its M ideast peace hopes on Jordan, but has informed Congress in a secret study that the Arab kingdom “w ill face ip/^Miwwl threats to its security a s it proceeds further in the peace process.” son said. “This, I think, would be a very unfortunate situation to perm it to happen.” He declined to specify the size of federal bailout that w ill be needed, but said it w ill be “m ultibillions of dollars.” Members of C ongress fam iliar with farm lending have put the potential cost to taxpayers a t $5 billion to $20 billion. While it is exploring possible avenues for a federal bailout, Wilkinson said, the system w ill operate under an em ergency rule that enables money to be shifted between various banks in tiie system to m eet operating losses that have been concen­ trated in areas hardest hit by a farm depression. Still, the adm inistration recommended arm ing Jordan to bolster its confidence even though new U.S. weapons pur­ chases “cannot guarantee” its participation in peace talks with Israel. 1 The State Department study also reported that Saudi Arabia had offered use of its bases to the United States in case of Soviet m ilitary action in the Persian Gulf or threats to oil supplies there. “Although the Saudis have steadfastly resisted form al ac­ cess agreem ents, they have stated that access w ill be for­ thcoming for U.S. forces as necessary to counter Soviet ag­ gression or in regional crises they cannot m anage on their own,” the study said. It surveyed the security situation and U.S. policy in the Middle E ast “a s a basis for future decision-m aking on arm s sales” in the region. The adm inistration is com pleting an arm s package for Jordan and Saudi Arabia and has begun in­ form al briefings for m em bers of Congress. Tw o commune members isolated after detection of AIDS virus WASHINGTON (AP) — The Farm Credit System , the na­ tion’s largest farm lender, is facing its m ost severe crisis since the D epression and could be forced to begin liquidating within two years unless the federal governm ent com es to the rescue, the system ’s top regulatory official said Thursday. Donald E. W ilkinson, governor of the Farm Credit Ad­ m inistration, said increased losses in die system ’s m ortgage landing arm w ill result this year in the first operating loss since the 1930s for the 37-bank, $74 billion system . At a news conference he said w ill begin exploring, with rm igresB and the Reagan adm inistration, w ays in which the governm ent can help the system survive s severe crunch ex­ pected to hit w ithin 18 to 24 months. “If w e are unsuccessful . . . w e w ill begin to face the necessity off possible liquidation of portions of the Farm Credit System ,” including som e of its regional banks, Wilkin­ RAJNEESHPURAM, Ore. (A P) — Two disciples of Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, once touted as the “guru of free love,” have been exposed to AIDS and have been isolated, of­ ficials of the Oregon commune said Thursday. Although the two followers of the Indian guru have been ex­ posed to a virus linked to acquired immune deficiency syn­ drom e, they have not shown any. sym ptom s of the fatal disease, said Ma Anand P uja, a nurse and secretarytreasurer of the Rajneesh M edical Corp. As a precaution against the spread of the virus, the man and woman are being housed on a hill above the central Oregon city-com m une and their outside contact is being lim ited, she added. D r. Laurence Foster, an assistant state epidem iologist with the Oregon Health D ivision in Portland, said his agency had not been contacted by the com m une. A person exposed to the virus has a 5 to 10 percent chance of contracting AIDS, he said. M edical tests revealed about a month ago that the pair, who at the tim e w ere living in separate quarters, had an­ tibodies indicating they had been exposed to the virus, Ma Anand Puja said. B O O K S ETC. H A R V E ST W ESLEYAN CHURCH Farm Credit System requests federal aid to avoid liquidation VA LU ECO U PO N OROWEAT B AK ER Y O U T L E T A F u ll S e rv ic e B o o k s to r e L o c a te d In T e m p e C e n t e r 1115 W. Broadway Rd. Tempe, AZ 85282 OUR SPECIALTIES INCLUDE: (one coupon per person) Good 9-5-85 to 9-10-85. 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Hudson, a blind sociology professor, teaches two courses including an upper-level courtship and m arriage class., ' ... .. Hudson lost his sight in a basketball accident when he was 13-years-old. The accident damaged the retinae in his eyes, he said. “Today they have laser su r g e s to correct the problem, but back then they couldn’t repair them. The techniques were pretty crude,” he said. His injuries kept him in the hospital a great deal and when he was able to attend high school, he w as too old. He was sent to Kent State U niversity where he enrolled in freshm en courses to com plete his high school education. “When I transferred to Ohio State U niversity, they transferred m y credits (from Kent State) as college credits,” he said. “.It w asn’t until four years later, when I w as ready to graduate, that I found out about the m istake. ” He graduated from OSU in 1956 with an undergraduate degree and later a Ph.D in sociology. His accom plishm ents appear to have com e easy, but the road w as full of bumps. He changed his m ajor three tim es before graduating in sociology andwhen he graduated he w as told social work was not the proper thing for a blind person to do, he said. He sw itched to business adm inistration and got as far as his senior year before an adm inistrator told him that a blind person has no future in the business world. “My senior year I switched to education,” he said. “I ap­ plied to teach a class at a public high school, but was told by the principal that it would be better to teach in a school for the blind." Hudson said the m ost difficult part of college was the stereotyping of the blind by adm inistrators. “When I went to Kent State Univ e r ify , the dean of the liberal arts college told m e to quit school and learn a trade,” he said. He spent two summ ers working in à sheltered workshop for the disabled. At the workshop, Hudson said he did encounter supportive people arid m et a sociology professor who encouraged him to change to sociology. “Thé best thing about teaching is that I see a change in the students. I get a live opportunity to participate in that proc­ ess of learning,” he said. * “I like to see a student get a new idea, get excited about us­ ing it and m ake a difference,” he said. Hudson said he doesn’t teach his classes any differently than other professors except that he can’t call upon students. Hudson said all his students have been very cooperative and he hasn’t had a major problem with cheating. Hudson said he conducted an experim ent and found that more studënts cheated in other classes than in his. “Those who cheat have ethical values, surprisingly. I guess they feel guilty if they cheat with a professor that can’t catch them ,” Hudson said. Hudson recently received a $10,000 computer that is equipped with a voice synthesizer. The computer has the capacity to talk and reads what is displayed on the video screen. “Once I get to learn how to use it, I want to m ake it possible for the visually-im paired students to have access to the system ,” he said. “The computer allow s m e to be more in­ dependent so I don’t have to w ait for somebody to read me an article.” S ta ll p hoto by R ick W iley John Hudson sits in his office with his faithful seeing-eye dog, Hobo. The dog is friendly toward visitors at the expense of efficiency, H udson said. “If you ever see HObo walking me toward an open pit, please steer us around it,” he said. Student reported m issing found visiting friends in Flagstaff Wolf’s truck, a 1977 GMC, w as found on Saturday three m iles from Saguaro Lake, but he w as nowhere to be found. “There w as no sign of him or any evidence of where he had headed,” Ellison said. Apparently, Wolf had hitejihiked through Globe after aban­ doning his truck and had continued on to F lagstaff to visit friends, Ellison said. “We’re glad that he’s sa fe,” Ellison said. “But it’s situa­ tions like this when so much valuable manpower tim e is By KARI BLAND State Press Several hundred people spent Labor Day Weekend search­ ing for an ASU student after he had abandoned his broken down truck and w as visiting friends in Flagstaff, said Jay Ellispn, a Maricopa County Sheriff’s Department public in­ formation officer. Robert L. Wolf, 25, was reported m issing on Aug. 30 when he did not return home from a trip to Saguaro Lake. w asted.” Between 2,500 and 3,000 manpower hours were used in the search for Wolf, according to Ellison. O fficials believed Wolf w as all right because he was in good shape, knew the area and had taught classes in desert sur­ vival, Ellison said. 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Expires 10-31-85- , Sfrtc N u state press Science without conscience is but a ruin of the soul. — Francois Rabelais opinion Scientific progress not always good for man Gray Echols O p in io n Editor Perhaps no other discipline than that of science has afforded its student a more ex­ citing course of study. Its historical develop­ ment has been one of the greatest success and adventure epics yet w itnessed by mankind. It encom passes m ysteries that are never com pletely solved: the horizons of science are unlimited, ever expanding. The end discovery of one investigation yields to its inquisitor not only the answer he initially sought, but a plethora of unanswered ques­ tions beckoning further study. And the benefit reaped by mankind has been, let us say for now, highly beneficial. Science is not entirely unlike other human institutions. Along with the benefits com e drawbacks; along with certain aspects of progress com e elem ents of retreat. In ex­ panding the horizons of its own field, science has concurrently created a tremendous strain on another: that of ethics. Vicariously pace back and forth across the floor of the lonely Oval Office in the shoes of Harry Truman and try to im agine the burden that science placed upon his shoulders when it presented him with the atom ic solution to World War II. R egardless of whether one agrees with his end decision, one m ust take note of the obvious: thanks to this “rem arkable scientific advance,” one man w as asked to make a m oral ruling of such m agnanim ity that he had to virtually play God for the inhabitants of two entire cities. I don’t think it is all that difficult for us to identify with the bind that science put Harry Truman in som e 40 years ago. Any who have m ustered the intellectual strength to offer intelligent comment on the abortion issue m ust surely realize that this was a virtual non-issue not so long ago, when the technology w as not available. The ability of science to provide the m edical doctor with the m eans to perform an abortion also has thrust us into a rather heated ¡controversy. (Of course science has the answer for the headache it has created — Tylenol 3 or som ething like that.) But let’s leave the previous questions, for the moment anyway, to the doctors and presidents. The continued progress of science w ill make ever more stringent demands on the m oral reasoning of its creators, a realization that causes many among us to 3hudder. I fear that 1 have isolated the university student from a perti­ nent exam ple, one that w ill draw a more personal interest. Abortion would be a good exam ple, but unfortunately m ost men don’t concern them selves with the issue. In order to illustrate the point, I have chosen a topic in which science has not only m ade “progress," but which w ill probably directly affect the vast m ajority of ASU students within the next five to 10 years. It has to do with children, and I expert that a great many of us w ill be blessed by them som e day. (Provided, of course, that they are not all aborted.) If you can get your hands on a copy of the October 1984 issue of Discover m agazine, turn to page 24 and read the article on choos­ ing your baby’s sex. Remarkably, science has given us the ability to greatly increase the odds of having the baby of our choice. M ale or fem ale? Today, it’s up to us. And now, the question that no one is supposed to ask: Is this a right thing to do? Straight aw ay it could be argued that of course this is a right thing to do. Man has every right to unlock and use for his benefit the secrets of nature. If a fam ily has two daughters and wants a son, who are w e to stop them? Very w ell, then, let’s take a closer look at what transpires The parents have tres­ passed (if, for the sake of argum ent, you w ill allow m e the word) onto God and nature’s sacred ground and chosen for their progeny a trait they believe is right. Now let’s rem em ber that these parents are human beings, and that human beings often, and particularly with regard to their own children, use som e rather bizarre and highly subjective form s of reasoning. God and nature, on the other hand, are not sub­ ject to this human lim itation. This tim e the parents feel that a sex manipulation is ade­ quate, and they are satisfied to stop at that. Several years pass by, several more “ad­ vances” are made in this science, and the parents return to the clinic. This tim e, they are informed, the technology is available not only for a sex manipulation, but also for several other “desirable m odifications.” After som e discussion, it is felt that the fam ily would look so much nicer with a little girl. But only if this girl could be made to grow to certain “specifications” : five-foot-two, eyes of blue, and with an IQ of oh, say, 145 — no dumb blondes for this fam ily, thank you. (I realize this m ay seem a bit far-fetched in 1985, but , hang in here with m e for a m inute.) No problem scientifically, says the geneticist, but the government has recently passed a taw stating that no more babies can be artificially programmed to have IQs above 120. It seem s that other parents have taken advantage of science’s wonder and there are just too many sm art people and not enough intellectually challenging jobs to keep them busy. But the good news is that the governm ent is subsidizing the blonde hair-blue eyes category — there are too m any brunettes with brown eyes and the m ale population is getting a bit bored. . . . You see, of course, what I am asserting: man is too lim ited to decide for him self what constitutes a good or bad baby. The moment he does, as he is already doing in at least 12 different centers around the United States, a dreadful sort of chaos w ill begin. The old world, controlled by forces other than him self w ill pass aw avr ywil