Pilot’s m anslaughter trial postponed Crash killed two ASU students near Camp Verde last semester By VICKIE CHACHERE - State Press The manslaughter trial of a pilot involved in an April airplane crash that killed two ASU students has been delayed until Nov. 29, a Yavapai County Attorney said Tuesday. Charles Hastings said the trial of Robin Thompson will be delayed for more than a month because both attorneys needed more time to prepare their cases The trial originally was scheduled to begin today. Thompson’s attorney, Jordan J. Green, declined comment oh the proceedings. Thompson was indicted on two counts of manslaughter and two counts of reckless endangerment for the April 14 midair «uiisinn near Camp Verde. Samantha Fraser, 18, and Timothy Streit, 23, were killed. Paul Bjomstadt, 20, and Kim Marble, 24, also ASU students, were injured in the crash. “This is kind of a unique case,” Hastings said. “The majority of the cases involving homicide rarely (are tried) on the first setting. ” Hastings said because so many witnesses are involved in the case, attorneys are having a difficult time organizing the information and the testimony. Thompson, who also is a flight instructor, was the pilot of a Piper Cherokee 140 that collided with Bjomstadt’s Cessna 172. According to an investigation by the Yavapai County Sheriff’s Department, the Cherokee’s propeller struck the fuselage of the Cessna, severing the rear section of the plane behind the passenger compartment. Fraser 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. Bjornstad and Marble were injured when the remainder of the Cessna crashed into a hillside. Thompson’s plane landed on a nearby road. Neither Thompson nor his three passengers were injured. The aircrafts were part of a nine-plane group that included several ASU students. The group had been flying to Grasshopper Point near Sedona for a picnic. W e d n e s d a y October 30,1985 s ta te p re ss Tempe. Arizona Arizona State University Voi. 68 No. 46 Copyright. State Press. 1985 Finance committee supports in-state tuition fee of $1,136 Thatain't Clark «leu |nwiv v j n vfii. v. Matt Zlnn, an aeronautics engineering junior, slumps against a pay phone Tuesday outside the Engineering Building during a conversation. Zlnn, a disc |ockey at a local bar, said he had a rough night and a long day.” PHOENIX — The Arizona Board of Regents’ . Finance Committee voted unanimously Tuesday to support a recommendation by the Presidents’ Council to set resident tuition at $1,136. The committee also proposed that the board approve out-of-state tuition at $4,261 for the 1986-87 school year. The council recommendations are based on a revision to the tuition-setting formula that bases tuition fees on the anticipated cost of education for three universities. The plan also would increase the number of tuition waivers granted by the board and reduce the percentage of education costs out-of-state students are required to pay. Regent Jack .P fister, a Finance Committee member, said he believes “tuition for higher education in Arizona is too low.” He said boards failed between 1972 and 1979 to increase tuition at the same rate of inflation and “subsequent boards have been in a catch-up mode ever since.” Pfister said the tuition increases will not limit access to the universities and that the Waivers will take care of the severe hardship cases. “Students will have to work a few more hours, and parents may have to struggle more, but it’s not a question of access,” Pfister said. The council’s recommendation was opposed by the Arizona Students Association, a student lobbying group which submitted a recommendation in September that would increase tuition by $35 to $50 for resident students. Molly Broad, executive director of the board and a council member along with the three university presidents, said that eVen with the tuition increases, fees at ASU, NAU and UA would be less expensive than at similar public institutions. She said th«t with the increase, 84 percent of the nation’s larger public universities would still have higher tuition rates. Out-of-state fees would be slightly above the average for public institutions, with 46 percent of the universities having higher tuition. Broad said if the council’s recommended tuition rates are approved by the board in November, it would mean a $12.3 million increase in state university revenues. ASA members argued that the council’s proposal would limit students’ access to the universities. John Heigl, Associated Students of UA president and ASA member, said 11,000 middle-class UA students who are on financial aid will be hurt by the increases because they cannot receive more federal help. He said many of the students would not conttnu«d page 11 Varnell passes gavel to help kill club funding amendment By KARI BLAND State Press Using parliamentary procedure, Associated Students President Dave Varnell helped kill an amendment that would have changed club funding policy. Executive Vice President Chris Cummiskey reintroduced an amendment to strike from the Executive Committee’s guidelines two clauses that deny funding to clubs that “promote a sexual preference” or “align ASASU into biased co-sponsorship of partisan political viewpoints. The amendment also included a disclaimer indicating that ASASU would not endorse the clubs but would be willing to promote their programs. During the Get: 23 Executive Committee meeting, Varnell said he could not be impartial on the guidelines issue and used a procedure called “passing the gavel” to give up his chairmanship. “It is a standard parliamentary procedure used — hopefully rarely — by a chairman that can no longer chair because he is.not impartial on an issue, he said. ‘It was an issue that I could not chair objectively.” Varnell said the procedure allows the chairman to pass his position to someone else in order to discuss and vote on the issue before the committee. The person chairing a meeting cannot vote. Varnell passed the gavel to Cummiskey because he said it must be passed down the chain of command. Cummiskey declined to accept the chair position and passed the gavel to Campus Affairs Vice President Amy Young who, in turn, passed it to Activities Vite President James Emmelkamp. Emmelkamp accepted the gavel. Cummiskey said he needed four of the six voting members on the Executive Committee, or a two-thirds majority, to pass the amendment. The amendment failed by a 3-3 vote, with Varnell, Young and Sen. Bridget Shelton voting against it. Cummiskey said in addition to his vote, he was counting on the votes of Emmelkamp, Appropriations Committee Chairman Henry Pres seller and newly appointed committee member Sen. John Lipp to pass the amendment. When Emmelkamp accepted the gavel, he forfeited his right to cast a vote. Cummiskey said this allowed Varnell to vote against the amendment, canceling Emmelkamp’s potentially favorable vote. But Emmelkamp said he did not know before the meeting OToday S Ï A $29,000 bill to repair corroded gas lines will have to be paid if an ASU-West branch campus is going to.be heated this winter. Page 3. about his new movie, “That Was Then . .. This Is Nowi" which Is a departure from the average teen movie that fie deplores. Page 13. debuts today as a weekly feature in the State Press, courtesy of the College Press Service. Page 12 ASU weather A crossword puzzle Emilio Estavez talks — Clear and sunny all day today. The expected high is 88 degrees. The expected low is 63- how he was going to vote. “I can see that there are valid points for both sides,” he said. Cummiskey said, “It appears as if President Varnell attempted steamroller tactics in order to defeat the amendment.” Varnell said members of the Executive Committee may not have known they could refuse the gavel, but he said he asked Emmelkamp before the meeting if he would accept the gavel and Emmelkamp accepted. “James was neutral,” Varnell said. “Everyone knew he should have chaired the meeting. He was the best person.” But Emmelkamp said when Varnell asked him if he would chair the meeting if the gavel were passed to him, he thought it was a theoretical question. “I didn’t know I was going to chair the meeting until I saw the gavel being passed from person to person,” he said. Cummiskey said, “It appears as if it (was) a deliberate attempt to remove James from taking part in the vote.” If Emmelkamp had refused the gavel, Varnell said any member of the Executive Committee could have chaired the meeting. If each member declined to accept the gavel, continued pag* 11 Bloom County... Classified......... Crossword puzzle Entertainment... Nation/world---Opinion............... Police report---Sports................ ....1 0 . . . . 27 ....1 2 ....1 3 ....... 2 .. 4 .......10 . . . . 23 Wednesday, October 30,1985 nation X world Soviet sailor signs statement declaring wish to return home WASHINGTON (AP) — A Soviet sailor who jumped ship twice into the Mississippi River near New Orleans does not wish to defect and wants to return to his homeland, the State Department announced Tuesday. U.S. officials who interviewed the sailor, Miroslav Medvid, said he signed a Russian-language document reaffirming “repeated statements that he Wished to return home,” the department said. Medvid then was released for return to his vessel, the grain freighter Marshal Koniev. The announcement concluded a four-day saga in which Medvid twice jumped from the freighter into the river only to be returned to the vessel by U.S. Border Patrol agents who thought he was a stowaway. The Immigration and Naturalization Service said it interviewed him by telephone on Thursday night, shortly after his first leap into the river, and concluded he was not a potential defector, spokesman Verne Jervis said. During subsequent interviews aboard a Coast Guard cutter and at a U.S. naval support facility nearby, the State Department said Medvid told his U.S. interrogators he wanted to return to the Soviet Union. Medvid was taken into U.S. custody Monday evening and informed U.S. officials then that he had no intention of defecting. But the officials remained skeptical because he had become nauseous. Soviet Com m unist newspaper says reporter was killed in gang clash MOSCOW (AP) — The Communist Party newspaper Pravda reported Tuesday that Afghan authorities claim Charles Thornton, an American reporter, was killed last month in a clash between two Afghan bandit gangs. Pravda’s report differs from an account carried earlier this month by the official Soviet news agency, Tass, which said he was killed when Afghan troops ambushed Afghan guerrillas. Thornton, 50, medical writer for the Arizona Republic, was killed Sept. 19 while on assignment in Afghanistan. Pravda wrote in a report from Kabul: “It was established that on the night of Sept. 2-3 this year, Thornton illegally penetrated, together with Mulla Malang’s gang, into the territory of Afghanistan in the area of Kandahar province. Thornton and two other Americans visited a number of bases F R E E M O V IE with this coupon and a recorder rental at only $5.95 3118 S. M ill«Tem pe 9 6 6 -6 7 2 2 no membership fees • Proper I D. required Expires 12-31-85. of Afghan counter-revolutionaries. They filmed and photographed their atrocities against the local population ” and their attacks cmcivilian targets. ” On Oct. 2, Tass said Thornton died when the bandit gang he was traveling with “met with the crushing fire of the Afghan armed forces, which killed Thornton and wounded one more U.S. journalist, who like Thornton, had left for Afghanistan in search of sensational reports from that country.” Stained Circle K sm ock examined for connection with clerk abduction CHANDLER (AP) — A stained and tattered Circle K Corp. uniform smock found in the desert was being examined Wednesday to determine whether it belonged to a clerk apparently abducted during a July 11 robbery at a Maricopa store. Lt. Cesar Leija of the Pinal County sheriff’s office said the garment was found in Maricopa County but that Pinal County authorities were summoned because of the robbery case. Leija said authorities continue to believe clerk Carol Moody, 20. was abducted in the early-morning robbery in which a 31-year-old co-worker, Florenda Benitez, was slain. Ms. Moody’s disappearance remains unsolved, said Leija, in Florence. “We’re just looking for a good break.” Authorities hoped for completion by Friday of tests to détermine whether the stain on thesmock was blood and, if it was blood, whether it was human, he said. The smock was of a size for a person larger than the missing clerk, and it was not known whether it belonged to the missing clerk, he said. It appeared the smock had been in the desert several months, Leija said. . The smock was found Saturday by a teen-ager riding an al£ terrain vehicle, he said. Deputies searched the area Sunday but did not find anything else, he said. Soviet dissident's w ife released from exile for medical treatment MOSCOW (AP) — Yelena Bramer, wife of Nobel Peace Prize laureate Andrei D. Sakharov, will be released from exile in the Soviet Union and allowed to go to the West for medical treatment, a Soviet journalist said Tuesday. If the report is true, it could signal a reversal of Kremlin policy toward Sakharov, the country’s best known dissident, and his wife. State Press state press The-West German newspaper Bild reported Monday that Bonner, 60, would be allowed to leave the Soviet Union immediately. Soviet journalist Victor Louis, who has close ties with Soviet officials, said the United States was her likely destination. The Sakharovs were exiled to Gorky in 1980 and have been isolated there since last year, when Sakharov went on hunger strike to try and get permission for his wife to be treated abroad for eye and heart ailments. Bonner had been allowed to make trips to Moscow until last year when she reportedly was sentenced to five years’ exile on a charge of spreading anti-Soviet slander and forced to remain in Gorky. In Newton, Mass., Bonner’s son-in-law could not confirm the reports, but said, “If she is about to leave, I would expect this to happen today or tomorrow.” New fatal disease linked to AIDS causes weight loss in heterosexuals NEW YORK (AP) — A new fatal disease that is linked to the AIDS virus and produces extreme weight loss has been found in heterosexuals in Africa, where it has become known as “slim disease.” “Although slim disease resembles AIDS in many ways, it seems to be a new entity,” its discoverers wrote in the Oct. 19 issue of The Lancet, a British medical journal. AIDS and slim disease share many of the same symptoms, the researchers report, but AIDS does not generally produce the extreme weight loss and diarrhea seen in slim disease. Victims of slim disease are not as likely to exhibit the swollen lymph glands and the rare cancer called Kaposi’s sarcoma, both common features of AIDS, or acquired immune deficiency syndrome, in American and European homosexuals, the researchers said. Sixty-three of 71 patients with slim disease showed evidence of infection with the AIDS virus. Studies are under way to determine why evidence of the virus did not appear in all patients, said the researchers. The disease, found in Uganda and believed to have originated in Tanzania, differs not rally from AIDS in America but also from the heterosexual form of AIDS seen in neighboring Zaire, the researchers said. Slim disease occurs predominantly in promiscuous heterosexuals. Not all researchers believe that slim disease is a new illness, said Dr. Timothy Dondero of the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta. Page : Wednesday, October 30,1985 A S U - W e s t c a m p u s f a c e s c o s t ly g a s lin e r e p a ir s By ANDREA HAN State Press ASU will have to pay a $29,000 hill to repair gas-lines at an ASU brancAgampus if it is to have heat during the coming winter, an ASU official said Tuesday. David Brixen, a Physical Plant assistant director of finance, said the gas pipes at the ASU-West Montebello campus will have to be replaced to provide the heat. Barry Bruns, acting assistant vice president of ASU-West, said the gas lines were already corroded when the facility was leased from the Alhambra district in July. an agreement with them to be reimbursed or a reduction in rent.” The gas lines are needed to heat the campus, located at 27th Avenue and Montebello Avenue, because the facility is equipped with gas furnaces, he said. The faulty lines have not posed a problem for classes because the weather is still warm, he said. “It could be a problem for night classes, but hasn’t because we are still using the swamp coolers,” he said. Bruns said the gas lines were rotted because the building, a former grade school, “When we rented the facility, we assumed the gas lines were OK, but discovered they were rotted after further inspection,” Bruns *aid._ .________ __ ‘W e took the building as i& W e want to put as little money into the place as possible.’ — Barry Bruns “It is their problem, but they don’t have the money to correct it so we are going to pay," he said. “Hopefully we can work out had not been used during the five years before ASU rented the campus. “We took the building as is,” he said. “We didn’t want to replace them right away because we want to put as little money into the place as possible. ” The gas lines should be replaced by winter, but if they are not replaced in time, officials are looking into temporary heating options, he said. The facility will not be able to use portable electric heaters because the electrical system would not be able to handle the added voltage, he said. Engineers invent sm allest transistor By COLLEEN MOORE State Press An ASU professor and graduate student have invented the smallest transistor in the world. The discovery occurred Oct. 11 when the transistor was successfully tested by David Ferry, director of ASU’s Solid State Electronics Center and professor of electrical engineering, and Gary Bernstein, an electrical engineering graduate student. When the transistor passed its test, Ferry’s reaction was “elation, ” he said. ; : ~. Bernstein said he was “relieved." “I had spent about two months making transistors that didn’t work, and when this one finally did, I was excited,” he said. “It always feels good to have a success, and we were very excited.” The transistor is used in computers and satellites, Ferry said. “A transistor is like a gate,” Bernstein said. “If it’s on, then the electrical current flows through the transistor. If it's off, then no current flows through. “The smaller the gate, the less time it takes to switch from on to off or from off to on, and the faster the device can opcr&te. “This is important, because computers can work faster with smaller transistors, and everybody wants computers to work faster," Bernstein said. The transistor, which can be used to enlarge computer memory, is only visible under a microscope and measures 400 angstroms or «-billionths of a meter across compared to current transistors which measure two-millionths of a meter across. They have been working on the project for about two years, Ferry said. “He (Bernstein) does the work, and I do the thinking.” “We built it, we tested it, and it worked,” Bernstein said. “Almost anybody in the transistors industry wants to know how small you can make a transistor before it won’t work. ” A small transistor has advantages, Bernstein said. “It works faster (than a large transistor). . . it takes less time to do the job. “It takes up less space. Then computers can be smaller. Everybody wants smaller computers. “It also takes less power to run,” Bernstein said. For gyampie, a watch with a small transistor can run much longer on a battery than one with a large transistor, he said. Bernstein and Ferry said they have received positive reactions from local industry. “Local industry’s happy to see such work going on atASU,” Ferry said. Bernstein said, “This kind of research being done at ASU sends a message to potential graduate students that ASU is a good place to be, career-wise.” Ferry added, “It’s not just a party school.” FILM DEVELOPING SPECIAL SAVE *4** D eco ra te Y o u r D o rm W ith P o ster Prints o f Y o u r Favorite P ictu re s Pop <6 2 fo r 1 (with this ad) Expires Nov. 30,1985. Popcorn Flavor of the Week: 1 5% Off w / ad R e a s o n a b le P ric e s ! D e liv e ry 903 S. Rural Rd. SERVIN G A S U SIN C E 1972 Papa Jay- s Pizza We Also Deliver Ice C o ld Beer FAST FREE DELIVERY •Limited Delivery Area 804 S. 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Larkin David Ferry, director of solid electronic circuitry, left, and electrical engineering graduate student Gary Bernstein stand next to a scanning electron M icroscope used to view their transistor. The transistor assembly is about the size of a human hair's diameter. Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10p.m. Fri. &Sat. 11 a.m.-12 p.m. 9 6 7 -4 3 4 4 O ffer extended through the m onth o f O ctober by p op u lar dem and. C A M P U S D R U G 7 1 2 S. C o lleg e (Across the street from ASU) IS THERE A DEFENSE FOR SOUTH AFRICA? A perspective from the South African side EARL HANSEN Permanent resident of South Africa will speak on the current situation In South Africa G ood on deliver, take-out or dine-in. . Expires 11-30^85. Sava $1.95 Sava $1.00 #2 Sun Devil Combo #3 Sun Devil Combe Any targe pizza with your choice of up to 4 toppings. Any medium size pizza with your choice of up to 4 toppings. Any small size pizza with your choice of up to 4 toppings. ONLY $6.95p/us tax ONLY $ 5 . 9 5 p/us tax ONLY $4.95 p/us tax Good on delivery, take-out or dlne-in. Expires 11-30-65. Good on delivery, take-out I or dlne-ln. Expires 11-30-85. Good on delivery, take-out or dine-in. Expires 11-30-05. TODAY! ° O C T O B E R 30,1985 4:15 P.M . Social Science Room 101 Sponsored by Students Against A Marxist South Africa •\ slate press State Prc— Wednesday, October 30.1985 The aim of a college education is to teach you to know a good man when you see one. — William James opinion Reader vs. AIA: the sins of omission recalls that nuclear energy was an infant science in the 1940s, and, as such, was the object of intense scientific inquiry and political debate. Gray T. Echoit Now one would suppose that if obscure affairs such as Aborigine and “Clamshell” Opinion Editor unrest over nuclear energy were mentioned in Dr. Reader’s edited chronology, then one might also expect to see early U.S. proposals to the United Nations regarding With all of the hoopla surrounding the nuclear disarmament reported. Strangely, targeting of Dr. Mark Reader by Accuracy this is not the case in the Reader in Academia (AIA), I thought it might be chronology. interesting to learn a little more about the Specifically, Dr. Reader fails to mention man. To this end, I picked up the book the U.S. proposal delivered to the United “Atom’s Eve” (an anthology on ending the Nations June 14, 1946, by Bernard M. nuclear age that he compiled and edited in Baruch. The Baruch Plan, as it became 1980) and did a little reading last weekend. known, was the American solution for the As an opponent of nuclear energy, I found problem of nuclear weaponry. And what a some of thé selections informative, others a plan it was: America, the sole possesor of bit extreme. But one item in this book the atom bomb, agreed to dismantle caught my eye. And it is a genuine outrage existing A-bombs and never again construct to those engaged in honest scholarship. I am a nuclear weapon. On one condition — all speaking of the section entitled “The Rise and Spread of the Nuclear Age: A- nations had to agree to allow an International Atomic Development Chronology.” It is my belief that this A u th o rity ( IADA) to c o n d u c t chronology lends credence to charges by the investigations/inspections in any country, AIA that Dr. Reader is biased and at any site, and at any time. The IADA, to be intellectually dishonest. Composed of Russian, American, Chinese, The chronology is an extensive French, Canadian and other U.N. enumeration of what, in Dr. Reader’s representatives, was also to be given editorial judgment, the salient happenings absolute power to punish offenders without in nuclear energy over the past 40 years Security Council approval. (Normally, a have been. It spans 33 pages and boasts single veto of any Security Council member, some 425 important dates. Now, that’s a lot of which America and Russia are members, of dates. In fact, this averages to a little can overturn a ruling. ) more than 10 significant dates per year, Imagine! America willing to scrap its The chronology goes so far as to cite infant nuclear arsenal before an instances such as Aborigines blocking unmanageable, expensive arms race could access roads in Australia (Aug. 29,1979) and even get started. The whole world rejoiced, disgruntled “Clamshell Alliance” members minus one voice which anticlimactically being arrested in New Hampshire (March 9, wailed that this proposal was an 1979) ; unarguably, a detailed and carefully infringement on “national sovreignty.” And constructed list. can you guess who cried foul? Why, It is the careful construction of this list that begs further inquiry. The first three ‘surprisingly enough, it was the boys in the Kremlindates in this chronology are the 1945 atomic Sobered, President Truman realized that blasts by the United States — one in* New the Soviet rejection amounted to nothing Mexico and two in Japan. Curiously, the more than a foundering attempt to buy time next important date listed by Dr. Reader is for the development of their own nuclear the January 31 decision by Harry Truman to pursue research into the hydrogen bomb — arsenal. The Soviet rejection set the precedent of distrust and initiated the arms January of 1950, that is. Dr. Reader race that today consumes billions of dollars. apparently found nothing worth listing for Certainly, this is significant history. So I the period Aug. 9,1945 —Jan. 31,1950. Agap would here like to amend Dr. Reader’s list of this breadth seems somewhat odd in so with the addition of two neglected dates: detailed a chronology, especially when one June 14,1946 (the day Baruch presented the American proposal), and June 19,1946 (the day the Soviets rejected the Baruch Plan by refusing to accord the IADA autonomous enforcement power). Another quirk deserving comment appears in the Reader chronology. The Oct. 14, 1979, entry tells us that on this day the Soviet Union first expressed doubts about the safety of nuclear power. This is simply ridiculous. The Soviet Union, along with the rest of the world, had witnessed the horror of military nuclear power in the Japan bombings. If Dr. Reader is referring to civilian dangers and concerns associated with nuclear power, his very own chronology tells of hundreds being killed after an accidental explosion of buried atomic wastes near Blagoveschensk, U.S.S R., in 1957 — some 21 years before 1979. Surely Dr. Reader is also aware of the Soviet proposals made in June of 1946 which, while rejecting the absolute power of the IADA, simultaneously acknowledge the serious threat posed by nuclear energy. I would further amend the Reader chronology by striking the Oct. 14,1979, date as the first Soviet expression of doubt about nuclear energy and correcting it to June 11,1946. Now these errors and deletions in the Reader chronology may not seem alltogether harmful, at least ostensibly. But one is at a loss to explain how they occurred. Perhaps Dr. Reader simply forgot about the Baruch plan, or maybe he hasn’t ever beard of it. But, then, the Baruch Plan is mentioned in two different chapters in “Indefensible Weapons,” a textbook that he has assigned for his political science classes. Dr. Reader has been teaching at ASU for 18 years now, and his views on nuclear energy have been widely published. Clearly, Dr. Reader is perceived as knowledgeable in his field. It is highly unlikely, then, that his omission of the Baruch Plan stems from simple ignorance. Perhaps he thinks, as do the authors of “Indefensible Weapons,” that the Baruch Plan is silly — simply an off-the-cuff American gesture lacking any real substance. Yet it was formally proposed, and even the authors of “Indefensible Weapons” at least saw fit to openly discuss it in their text. In an attempt to end speculation, I asked Dr. Reader if he would answer a few questons about the book. He responded: “I really do not have anything to say about it.” I was somewhat taken aback, so I pursued the matter. Again came the reply, “I’m really not interested in discussing it.” This from the man who so fervently espouses “academic freedom” and states that at the university, “all matters are open.” Apparently not all matters. In light of Dr. Reader’s assigned textbook “Indefensible Weapons” and “Atom’s Eve,” which either fail to mention or belittle well-intentioned American proposals for nuclear disarmament, his recent statement about AIA being “un-American" seems more than a bit hypocritical. When considering Dr. Reader’s editorial interpretation/selection, one colls into question just what he means when he retreats behind the exhausted “academic freedom” phrase. Does academic freedom imply editorial license in a presumably objective classroom? . Do Dr. Reader’s lectures supplement the same agenda advocated in the “Atom’s Eve” chronology? Perhaps Dr. Reader should re-evaluate just what academic freedom is, and where academic responsibility lies in relation. Surely the freedom to profess implies some sort of reckoning with other viewpoints. Alas, perhaps I have been presumptuous in supporting AIA charges against Dr. Reader based on my limited knowledge of the man. And I would certainly not like to be the one to unjustly tarnish the image of ASU’s celebrated champion of “academic freedom.” But I am afraid that Dr. Reader simply will not speak with me — I’ve tried twice. Yet I have a hunch that he will read this, so I would now like to invite him to respond on this very page. No strings attached, Dr. Reader. I would like to know why you deleted the Baruch Plan, why you cast the Soviet Union in such a benevolent light, why America is to blame for today’s nuclear nightmare. And I open up page 4 for your response. nyhöj A'fmsv'TOoKTMöW' yoMOVAUV fW tt l- Scathing review hotly received 7 po 9cCAXf. KÛtXIAkr*. VMS.... Editor: What have I done? Why am I here? Steven DeCosse’s scathing review of ASU (letter, Oct. 25) and its philistine population has destroyed me entirely! I buckle under the sheer weight of his verbosity. I am awed by the number of words he knows that have more than seven letters. After we Philistines graduate, we should all start crawling on our hands to San Francisco, where we can then live for five months with one goal in mind: to return at the end of that time to ASU, armed to the teeth with dog-eared copies of Roget’s Thesaurus, and dump — oops! — defecate all over our alma mater. Of the person who held a gun to Mr. DeCosse’s head and forced him to have to graduate from the bullion logo capitol of the universe, thereby acquiring a stigma Steven clearly has no hope of overcoming, of this prison I ask one question: did he really believe it was loaded? Barbara Maxwell Junior, Psychology STATE PRESS STEVE WATERSTRAT Editor TOM BLODGETT Managing Editor Sports Editor MICHAEL KONZ City Editor W. TIM AH L Asat. Sports Editor JER RY BROWN Asdt. City Editor JO H N CONWAY Copy Chief JACQUIECIROU Asst. City Editor MELISSA SMYTH Arts Editor CINDY PEARLM AN N ew t Editor MEAD SUMMER A sst. Arts Ed. PATRICK J . KUCERA Asst. Managing Ed. LINDA COULSON Photo Editor KIP WILLIAMS Editorial Assistant LAURA WILSON Opinion E d ito ri GRAY T. ECHOLS. WHITNEY PETERSON REPORTERS: V ickis Chachere, Andros Han. Rob Kalt on, Carri L Mitch all, David O'Brian, Karl Bland, Ed Schubsrt, Tharasa WIHoford PHOTOGRAPHERS: Ron Kuczek Jr.. Kavin Larkin, Rick Wllay SPORTS REPORTERS: Brad Halvoraan, Bob Hollar CO PY EDITORS: Judio Gaillard. Khali Crawford STA FF ARTIST: Jon Basalone CARTOONIST: Chip Sheean Tha State Press Is published Monday through Friday during the academic year except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Canter, Room IS, Arizona State University, Tampa, AZ 85287 Newsroom: 965-2282. Advertising & Production: 966-7672. The State Prase la tha only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on tha ASU campus. Tha news and views published In this newspaper are not necessarily those of tha ABU administration, faculty, staff or student body. Pages Wednesday. October 30,1985 Chair-ity Greeks rock, raise money to benefit Arthritis Foundation ByCARRI L. MITCHELL State Press Two ASU Greek organizations are “rocking ’round the clock” this week to raise money for the Arthritis Foundation. The Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity and the Chi Omega sorority will be teetering in rocking chairs for 108 consecutive hours this week, said Leigh Ann Bardach, the Chi Omega pledge class philanthropic chairman. The Rock-A-Thon began Monday at 9 a.m. by the fountain on Cady Mall and will last until Friday at 9 p.m., Bardach said. The two organizations .gathered pledges and donations from nine Valley businesses including Grantree Furniture, The U-Shop and College Street Deli. been helping the foundation, they have raised almost $10,000, and television have been set up on a table by the rocking which has gone to help the 660,000 Arizonans with arthritis, chairs. . Bylowsaid. TinA» Bylow, the development director of the Central “I’ve been impressed with what a nice job they (the Arizona Chapter of the Arthritis Foundation, said the fraternity members) have done,” she said. “They work proceeds from the Rock-A-Thon will go to the three arthritis really hard.” clinics in the Phoenix area, self-help groups, exercise Bylow said the crippling disease does not affect only the classes, support groups and research. In the three years the Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity ha«_ elderly, but also affects 250,000 children in the United States. T h e Rock-A-Thon shows a willingness to help the community and do a good thing.’ — BobJeney Bob Jeney, associate member of Lambda Chi Alpha, said the groups aré hoping to raise $3,000 in pledges and $400 from donations collected from people passing the rockers on the mall. “The Rock-A-Thon shows a willingness to help the community and do a good thing,” Jeney said. Angela Bonacci, member óf Chi Omega, said until She actually participated in the Rock-A-Thon, she never thought about how important it was to help others. Bardach said about 200 Greek members are expected to rock this week, with the sorority members changing shifts every hour on the half-hour, and the fraternity members changing shifts every hour on the hour. Jeney said they will have two men escorting the women back and forth to their sorority at night. To keep the organization’s members entertained, a radio ¡S k Ctaff nhntn hu Dirli Wllai During the Rock-A-Thon on Cady Mall Monday afternoon, these rockers found die best way to pass the time was to watch reruns of “I Love Lucy.” From left, Leigh Ann Bardach, pledge class philanthropic chairperson and Angela Bonacci, both of Chi Omega and Bob Jeney of Lambda Chi Alpha. Gino’s delivers. We're open for lunch! FREE QUART . OF CO KE FRFF 12” CHEESE PIZZA Get a free 12” cheese pizza valued at $3.45 with purchase of a large pizza with this coupon. Not valid with any other coupon. Free quart erf Coke with the purchase o f a large or medium pizza with this coupon. Not valid with any other coupon. Expires Nov. 5,1985. Expires Nov. 5,1985. GINO’S PIZZA 966-4666 O pen M onday ...........3:30 p.m.-Midnight Tu esda y -T h u rsd a y .........11 a.m.-Midnight Friday & S a tu rd a y . . . . . — 11 a.m.-2 a.m. S u n d a y .......................: . . . Noon-M idnight 822 S. Mill Avenue We ’ve been delivering in Tempe since 1970. j 25< DRAFT • 99< SUBS OFFICE PR O D U CTS W AREHOUSE MON.-FAI. 11-4 " O P E N TO THE P U B L IC " uiNCHCON m m "THE MOST E X C IT IN G spcam GROUP IN TOWN" H A W T H O R N E / H IL L WED. 9-1 • FRI. 5-8 H A P P Y H A L L O W E E N N IG H T WED. Reverse Happy Hour 8-12 THURS. 754 Margarita 7-Close 2 for 1 for $1.85 FRI Happy Hour W here you get nam e brands at w arehouse prices] brother « - .H E W L E T T mLfiM PACKARD S M ITH CO RON A 2-1 4 to 8 V IC T O R F ft€ € D € U V € R V T exas In s t r u m e n t s SOWING NV STVL6 PIZZA SUBS. CHICK6N UJINGS 801 €. APACHE 894-2662 W e ’ll m a tch any advertised price. J u st bring in the a 1755 W. University Dr. 172miles west of campus 968-1198 Wednesday, October 30,1985 Latin American studies center presents movie on Nicaragua A scene from “Nicaragua Was O ur Home," a film to be shown at 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. In Language and Literature Building room C-57. ByEDSCHUBERT State Press The oppression of Nicaragua’s Miskito Indians under the Sandinista government is the subject of “Nicaragua Was Our Home,’«, a film to be shown Thursday by the Center for Latin American Studies. Lee Shapiro, who clandestinely filmed the documentary in eastern Nicaragua in the fall of 1984, will be present to answer questions after the film is shown at 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. in the Language and Literature Building room C-57. “Nicaragua Was Our Home” focuses on ( the forced relocation of the Miskito Indians by the Sandinista government, and on Miskito refugees who have fled to neighboring Honduras. According to the film, 10,000 people have been forced into concentration camps by the Sandinistas, 49 Miskito villages have been burnt to the ground, and one quarter of Nicaragua's 115,000 Atlantic Coast Indians have become refugees. In a number of interviews, Miskito Indians tell of brutal forced migrations in which incapacitated people — such as old people and pregnant women — are killed by being tied together inside buildings which are then set on fire. According to the film, the Miskito Indians are being relocated because they occupy a strategically important area near the Honduran border. The documentary made the point that although the Miskitos had inhabited this region “long before their ancestors greeted Christopher Columbus,” they had never been forced to flee until the advent of the Sandinistas. According to Shapiro, “Nicaragua Was Our Home” was featured at a White House showing, has just won the CINE Golden Eagle Award and will be broadcast nationally by PBS in January or February. Kim Barry, a member of the anti-Marxist group CAUSA International, which helped finance the film, said the largely Christian Miskitos are victims of religious persecution by the Marxist Sandinistas. “Marxism-Leninism is an atheistic Ideology that denies the existence of God,” she said. “That is one reason the Miskitos are being persecuted so much. ” Barry said her organization “leans toward political conservatism,” but “CAUSA does not promote the status quo.” “We are not supporting dictatorships in Central America or apartheid in South Africa,” she said. “We just don’t see Marxism as aR alternative to these things. “The purpose of the (Nicaraguan) revolution was to help the poor and the common man, and the Miskito Indians are a perfect example of how they’re doing just the opposite. “The Sandinistas have betrayed the whole purpose of the revolution,” she said. R U N D L E ’S THE CO UN SELO R TRAINING CENTER Located in Payne Hall 402, offers counseling FREE to full-tim e ASU students, faculty and staff. Part-tim e or non-students pay a small fee. For morè information , please contact the Center at 965-5067, Monday-Friday 8-5 (closed LIQUORS a MKT. 730 S. MILL 27 E. Southern TEMPE. AZ 85282 Phone 968-7790 Corner Mill A University Ave. DIAMOND WINE COOLER tali MEISTER BRAU BEER h * TEQUILA BEAMERO Tsomi PLAYBOY Used Magazines $ 1 .9 8 $ 1 -8 9 $ 4 .7 2 $ .9 4 L atest Comics S C IE N C E FICTION TAKE THE TROLLEY TO Haagen Dazs Natural Ice Cream, Adult Magazines. Groceries, Ice. Wines, over 40 Imported Beers. Valley Fair Shopping Center S E. Comer of Mill W Southern 9 6 7 -9 0 7 9 Open 7 Days • Collector Comics ■ Dungeons S’ Dragons • T-Shirts • Posters • Dr. Who • Used Books 1 2 -1 ). Grand Opening Special! 10% Discount with i.P . 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Indian statue link with fountain’s past ByEDSCHUBERT State Press Part of the Old Main fountain’s past can be found on display in the Arizona Collection of Hayden Library. “The Flutist,” a 3-foot-tall bronze prototype of a life-sized statue, is all that remains of plans to have a statue placed on top of the 52-year-old fountain east of the Language and Literature Building. Anna Kopta, 104, wife of the late sculptor Emry Kopta, presented the bronzed statue of the Hopi Indian to the University in 1972. “That statue is more than just an ordinary statue,” she said. “It’s sacred . . .it’s a religious experience.” The larger statue, created under the auspices of the Work Projects Administration in 1933, was planned to be cast in bronze. Instead, because of a lack of funding, it was cast in concrete without the sculptor’s consent. When Kopta learned of the change he destroyed the concrete statue. He said the baser material had profaned its Staff photo by Kavln J. Larkin “The Flutist,” a bronze statue by Emory Kopta which stands In the Special Collections room of Hayden Library . . . spiritual meaning. Hie Kachinas, representations of Hopi deities and heros which adorn the fountain’s base, are prominent reminders of “The Flutist’s” original design. •The legend of the flutist has been explained by Dr. C.R. Hooper and his wife, Mildred, who are frequent visitors to the Hopi Reservation and the authors of numerous articles on Arizona history. According to the legend, centuries ago a wandering troupe of Hopis known' as the Blue Flute and Horn Society began a procession up the First Mesa to the Hopi village of Walpi, singing and playing as they went. The Hopi Indians — whose name means “Peaceful Ones” — are known for their affection for the high, remote mesas in northeastern Arizona, where they have lived since ancient times. As the troupe approached Walpi. the Snake and Bear clans who then inhabited the village stopped the Staff photo by Kevin J. Larkin procession by sprinkling a line^ of . . . and the fountain In front of the Old sacred corn in their path. Main Building where the statue Is The line of sacred corn represented supposed to be displayed. the earth mother, and no Hopi would Flute and Horn Society to remain and ever cross it. The Bear and Snake Clans then live in Walpi. Mildred Hooper, who first learned of challenged the troupe: “Who are you the flute legend from the Koptas, and what do you want?” The Blue Flute and Horn Society described the couple as “very gentle and fine people.” replied: According to an article by Walter “We are Hopis Collins O’Karte in the August 1957 issue Our hearts are right of Arizona Highways, Kopta and his Our speech is true wife spent 12 years living with the And we know how to make it rain-” Following Hopi custom, the challenge Hopis. “This is where I’m going to work,” was repeated four times. Each time the Kopta said. “These people . . . the old response was the same. After a tribal council, the Snake and people. . . the character in their faces, Bear clans removed the line of sacred they are going to be my models.” O’Kane said Kopta had come to know corn and bade the troupe enter Walpi to the Hopis more intimately than any perform their rain ceremony. At the height of the ritual, which took white man in his time. “He had visited them in their homes; plaee near a deep spring at the base of the mesa, a priest played a flute at the had witnessed their ceremonies, had edge of the water while facing south, modeled the heads of their prominent men and women. . . . ” then east, then west and>finally north. According to O’Kane, Kopta “had The priest then placed the tip of his found in himself a deep understanding flute in the spring and played again. Carrying prayer feathers and stones, of his subjects and a profound he disappeared beneath the water to admiration of their character. “Ask one of the older Hopis today if anchor the prayer feathers to the he knew Emry Kopta. ‘You mean the bottom of the spring with die stones. Shortly thereafter, it began to rain. man with a limp,’ he will say. ‘Oh, yes! The grateful villagers invited the Blue I know him. He was a fine man.’ ” 7 G o u rm e t F ra n k s w /9 m u s ta rd s t o c h o o s e fro m FR E E s m a ll d r i n k w ith a n y fr a n k fu r t e r pu rch ase! m sa e n On S co ttsdale Mall a t Civic Center Plaza 7373 S co ttsd a le Mall, s u it e 2 Expire* 11-22-85. L O W E R P R IC E A N D S M A R T A D V IS E ! •Rentals •Complete Dark­ room Selection •Video Transfer STUDENT DISCOUNT ON PROCESSING, FILM, DARKROOM SUPPUES AND MORE! C u sto m P rocessing and Enlarging Available We use K odak paper for a g o o d look W ils o n ASU TEM PE 204 E. University 894-8337 ( B e h in d th e C h u c k b o x ) I $22 EYE EXAM including contact lens professional tee FromArizona's Leading Contact Lens, Eyeglass »Hearing Aid Centers 2 P a ir s f o r th e P r ic e o f 1 All offices celebrating the relocation of Sierra Vista store. Month of October only! Certain power restrictions apply. Restricted to selected brands of contacts. D A ILY W E A R L E N S E S E X T E N D E D W EA R Soft C o ntact Lenses 2 pairs $59.95 Plano to —6.00 No Other Discounts Apply SO FT CO N TACT DAILYWEAR PACKAGE SOFTCOLORS BYCIBA VISIONCARE $69.95 $44.95 _ p s t '8 Package includes J r lpr. softcontact lenses..........0 Start-upkit...................... J) Wearinginstructions..............0 Service agreement.................. 0 ‘Compete package. . . . $69.95 $34.95 Power From +6.00 to —12.00 Most Brands No Other Discount 2 pairs per pair Soft contact lenses in tour natural colors: blue, green, aqua and amber. One pair per customer. B&L extended wear tinted lenses available $99.95 SO FT C O N TA CT EXTENDEDWEAR PACKAGE $99.95 a Ó # !* * Package includes: « * 1pr.extendedwearsoft lenses. 0 Start-upkit........................0 Wearinginstructions. . . . . . . 0 Serviceagreement.............. 0 ‘Completepackage. . . . $99.95 Certain Power Restrictions apply. One pair per customer. No other discounts apply. Rated one of the best contemporary hair salons in the Southwest! LICENSEDDOCTORSOF OPTOMETRYAVAILABLE W a lk in g d is ta n c e fr o m A S U NATIONALEYE &EAR 215 E. 7th Street, Tempe, Arizona » 966-5192 3133S. Mill(Mill&Southern)HuntingtonSquarePlaza, Tempe C R IM P E R S L T D CALL ORCOMEIN. PHONE967-3197 Page 9 Wednesday, October 30,1985 Change ail, filter & lube No extra costs Includes: Pointe, Plugs 8 Condenser I FO UR W HEEL DRUM SYSTEM WITH C O U P O N C H A N G E OIL, FILTER ft LUBE, N O EX TR A CO STS WITH C O U P O N | I INCLUDES: POINTS. PLUGS ft CONDENSER 6 ft 8 SLIGHTLY HIGHER WITH C O U P O N m m rn m Æ m Ê Ê m m m m m 1 F le e t s W e lc o m e « 4 4 1« B r o a d w a y P h o e n ix « A r is e n e JË 8 ____ 1 ifw tw y 8 N State Pro« Wednesday, October 30.1985 College offers solar heater kits, courses yniversity police reported the following in­ anything else. The student walked past the car and noticed it cidents in the 24-hour period ending at 6:30 a.m. did not have license plates. She continued walking Tuesday: •A man drove up to a student in Lot SI around mid­ and the man drove out of the area. Police told her night Monday and told her he was naked, police to call them if she ever saw the man again. •Someone scratched a zig-zag pattern across both said. The student told police she was walking toward sides of a student’s 1985 Honda CRX parked in Lot the Palo Verde Main Residence Hall when a man 59 on Monday, Oct. 21, police said. Damage was estimated at $417.28. driving a new silver Datsun Nissan 300ZX stopped •A silver Panasonic VHSVCR casette recorder in front of her. He told her he was from Tucson and was on cam­ valued at $300 was stolen from Matthews Hall pus to perform a “Strip-O-Gram” for a girl on the room 225 sometime between Friday and Monday, third floor of Palo Verde Main. He informed her he police said. An employee told police the room had been was not wearing any clothes. locked on Friday and was locked when he The woman told police she noticed he had no shirt on, but did not check to see if he was wearing discovered the theft on Monday. B LO O M CO UN TY uHJtNF/um executive vfre seers r e m w ee m rs m o aewinb Floors, postino, chilomriNo, cochino, reRpem c CHeerFVLNess hnp rmecmNO just mho me neck werrs me punts in me FAMILY.* The College of Architec­ ture and Environmental Design has re-established its Solar Hot Water Heater Workshops, and will hold a series of lectures in November and December. The programs will include a Friday lecture from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. and a day-long workshop the following Saturday. Instructional tuition for the course is $89, payable through the Professional Development Office of the college. The cost of a solar hot water heater kit and collec­ tor is $790, with each addi­ tional collector costing $395. Arrangement for this pay­ ment will be made during the Friday evening meeting. The system will supply up to 95 percent of the annual hot water needs for a family of two, 85 percent for a fami­ ly (¿ four or 65 percent for .a family of six. Additional col­ lectors and a larger storage capacity will increase the annual percentage of solarheated water. •A Daytron Electronics equalizer power booster valued at $100 was stolen from a student's vehicle in Lot 51 sometime between Sunday and Monday, police said. The vehicle was locked. The right rear window had been forced open. •A license plate valued at $5 was stolen from the rear of a student’s 1983 blue Buick parked in Lot 53 sometime between Tuesday, Oct. 15 and Friday, police said. •Another license plate valued at $5 was stolen from the rear of a student’s 1978 silver Honda Civic parked in Lot 53 sometime between Wednes­ day, Oct. 23 and Friday, police said. —THERESA WILLEFORD no prosceni. weu just soueeze ir Here unom ere., e h. how's m is..? 'm r c ciernen seers ju n e cierneR* V b y B e rk e B re a th e d I ■ - Early B ird Advisement for Spring Registration T ir e d o f “C A N N E D ” L iv in g ? ATTENTION: "Undecided" Students in liberal Arts College Department Majors check with Department THE TIME IS NOW! THROUGH NOV. 13,1985 Avoid the last minute rush Make an appointment today in Social Sciences 111. Come in or call 9 6 5 - 2 9 5 4 . THE COMMONS The ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT o f th e ■ o n Lem on ■ S T U D E N T C O N D O M IN IU M S STATE is interview ing for an opening in the advertising departm ent sales staff. Freshm en, Sophom ores and Ju n io rs are preferred, in that successful sales representatives and interns can continue for several semesters. The rewards include tra in in g and experience in a professional newspaper operation and realistic com pensation. A pplicants m ust p ick up referral form from Student Em ploym ent in M atthew s Center and an application blank at the State Press office. M atthews Center. We all know the problems of on-campus living: cram ped quarters, no privacy, high costs, strange arom as drifting up from the carpet, yuckt For those fortunate few who wont procrastinate, we otter Just the opposite and. a little bit-more. Its called The Commons on Lemon FOR RENT... Gives you the good life. For about the sam e cost as dorm-llving, you get the following: a town-home life style with massive amounts of living space, fully furnished with a com plete housewares package, a real kitchen with all appliances including refrigerator with ice m aker and microwave, washer/dryer, walk-in closets, private parking, pool, spa. barbeques, storage, computer hook-ups, etc., etc., etc., and its all NEW! No crunchy sofas, no cigarette burns, nothing! A nd.. .The Commons axe only two blocks from ASU, right behind the Lunt Ave Marble Club. Now, a lot of students are going to read this and we have to be fair. There will only be tilty three town homes. A priority list is being formed — don't be left out! FOR SALE.. ■lake big bucks for Mem and Dad, Although The Commons is a student rental property, these condominiums are for sale to parents and investors also. Due to new tax legislation, this investment can pay the major portion of a college educaton - Uyou or your parents want a chance to participate in this excellent opportunity you need to get your priority number now. Drop in to our office for a com plete information package to take home with you. Mom and Dad will thank you. Either for rent or for sale, kick the rrm an d get off yours. This is truly a lim ited opportunity. If you don't act quickly, you may have to rem ain living a t .. .wen, we don't want to think about that. The Commons on Lemon an uncommon opportunity CALL NOW ! 9 6 8 -6 4 2 7 (C lo se d Fridays) MJEALTTT ¿XECVTIVES* TOURS Sales by John Albert Ritter No oiler to sell or 1m m m a r be m ade a n d no öfter to purcbaM or lecae may b e accepted prior to Issuance of the linai Arizona Subdivision Public Report. 9 9 7 -7 2 3 4 Page 11 Wednesday, October 30,1985 P rm Tuition _____ ^ continued from 1 qualify for the regents’ tuition waivers and federal Pell Grants, which are designed to help students from low-income families. “My initial reaction is that the student waivers won’t be adequate and the full need will not be met,” Heigl said. Dave Vamell, Associated Students of ASU president a&l ASA member, said he had hoped there would be some effort by the council to provide adequate financial aid before increasing tuition. “1 don’t see a long-range tuition waiver plan,” Vamell said. “I do see long-range (tuition) increases.” Vamell advised the committee to look closer at financial aid before raising tuition, so it could avoid having to “pick up the pieces afterwards.” —VICKIE CHACHERE Saving babies is wir goal! \\ „ u in n v A S T U D E N T S P E C I A L Free color TV o r Microwave or Half Month’s Rent (with a 6-month or longer lease) FAMILY OR ADULT stu d io. 1 Bedroom . 2 B e d ro o m » Cable TV A vailab le •Laundries »small pets Allowed *2 Pools •Playground «Ample Parking S U N F L O W E R Support the IMIS J A P A R T M E N T S 833-3981 or 833-2511 505 S. Roosevelt — O ff Broadway between Price and Dobson | se*ctCONTWlBUTfO B