D ecal ‘crunch’ can be avoided, Landreth says By BR AD H ALVO RSEN State P ress W riter H ie ASU Parking and Transit office is expecting its annual barrage of parking decal seekers in August, but buyers can avoid lengthy lines by purchasing perm its during summer school, the assistant director said. “ We’ll alw ays have a crunch in August,” Richard Landreth said. “ It seems that no m atter V hat we d o— put up signs in residence halls or whatever — people w ait until they show up on cam pus in the fa ll to buy their d ecals.” Landreth said decals can be bought now without a wait in line, although they w ill not be distributed until August. Sales have been “ slow” since they began on April 28. The lines this August should resem ble those of last August, when 17,000 decals were sold in three weeks, Landreth said. “ We tried to reduce the lines one year by sending out 6,000 applications to residence hall students during the sum m er,” he said, “ Only 600 responded. At that rate, it’s not a cost- effective m easure.” The )ines consist mostly of students desiring residence hall or perimeter decals, he said. Approximately 8,000 perimeter stickers are currently on sale, while some 5,000 have been sold. New permits take effect on Aug. 15. Excluding perimeter and open parking areas, all but five lots have been sold out for the 1986-87 school year. Only three of these lots — 3, 42 and 65 — have spaces available to students. The rem aining lots, their locations, the distribution of available spaces to students, staff and faculty mem bers and annual fees include: □ Lot 3, surrounding Gam m age Center for the Perform ing A rts— five student, eight staff and 18 faculty. Cost is $90. □ Lot 18, the new parking garage on College Avenue and Apache Boulevard — no student, 201 staff and 213 faculty. GbÉtis$90. ' t u e s d a y | June 2 4 ,1 9 8 6 p m □ Lot 42, across M cAllister Avenue from the College of Law Building— 688 student, one staff and 58 faculty. Cost is $75. □Lot 44, north of Lot 42 — no student, 48 staff and 59 faculty. Cost is $90. □Lot 65, surrounding Tower Center — 11 student, 11 staff and 10 faculty. Cost is $90. pen lots, scattered throughout campus — 61 student, 44 staff and 59 faculty . Cost is $55. Lot 65 was previously used by Southwest Biom edical Research Institute, which has relocated its offices off cam pus. The organization had been renting 32 spaces from A SU , Landreth said. Parking and Transit is hoping to soon upgrade its computer system to facilitate student-billing, a move which m ay deplete lines, Landreth said. ' Currently, students must pay by cash or check-while most faculty and staff members have the option of being billed. d a te . ' « ■ n l p H n ...................................... ' vol. 11 NO. 7 . - Arizona State University CD © Copyright, State Press, 1986 Temps, Arizona OT o d a y 1 U ■*“ Q) m The Arizona monsoon season is just around the corner, and expect the humidity and tempers to rise as dust storms creep into the Valley. Page 3. “ Ruthless People” has all the funny scenes in the preview. Save your money. Review. Page 8. -■ Pick-up basketball is a major form of entertainment at ASU. Page 9. ASU weather — Partly cloudy today with a chance of a thundershower. Expected high is 102 degrees. A m Barbeque Staff photo by Andy Mrozinski Mem bers o f the Phoenix Fire D epartm ent w ork to douse a brush and scrap wood fire at 42nd S treet between Superior and University Drives Saturday afternoon. According to Public Relations O fficers Steve Jensen, em ployees of the Am erican Continental Com pany w ere having a barbeque when some stray sparks started the blaze w hich spread to a pile of lum ber and a sam ll flat-b ed tru ck. Firefighters b attled 140 degree tem peratures fo r 45 minutes to control the fire. Dam age was estim ated at $500. Bloom County . Classified........ Entertainment. Nation/world .. Opinion............ Police report .. Sports____, . . 5 11 6 2 it 3 9 ASU hoping to scratch stray cats from campus By P A T R IC K J . K U C E R A State Press E d ito r Stray cats on campus are being captured and observed for signs of rabies or other disease after two visitors w o e bitten one cat, the director of the physical plant said Monday. Del Overstreet said the cats have propagated the campus and serious problems with disease and insects m ay develop if the cats are not removed. “ The number o f cats on this campus have been increasing quite a b it,” he said. “ I am very surprised we have not had a flea outbreak on this cam pus.” A business supervisor for M aricopa County Rabies and Anim al Control said the cats suspected in the biting are being watched for signs of rabies. The supervisor, who asked that her name not be used, said other cats brought in from ASU w ill be either put up for adoption or destroyed. “ Alm ost a ll of these cats are wild anim als,” she said “ They are not some cute little pete from down the street.” The decision to capture the cats ca*he after two visitors to campus were bitten by a cat, Overstreet said. It is unclear if the cat that bit the two has been captured to determine if it has rabies, he said, adding that if the cat is not found, the two visitors w ill have to undergo a series of rabies shots. “ It is required by state law that they w ill have to have those shots,” Overstreet said. T h e tw o v is ito r s w ere b itte n approxim ately 10 days ago. Overstreet said the cate are being lured into traps and then taken to the Tempe C ity Pound for observation. “ They are humane traps," he said. “ The don’t hurt the cats and we need the cate for observation.” He said each trap is obtained from the county fo r $25, which ASU gets back when they are returned. About 35 cate have been captured so fa r, and Overstreet said “ a couple hundred” cate roam the campus. So fa r, one trap has been stolen, Overstreet said. “ The trap is state property and it is against the law to remove them .” Overstreet said die number of cats on cam jius is large because “ people dump the cate here and then people on campus feed them .” Reports of food and water being left out for the cate around the D ixie Gam m age area have been m ade, he said. “ Those things are wild and they are not pets,” he said. “ Lord help us if we have a rabies outbreak on cam pus.” The rabies control supervisor said she believes one of the causes for the number of cate on campus is the “ irresponsibility” of many ASU students. “ Every fa ll, we have hundreds of young people —: many from ASU — who adopt a cat even when they know they aren’t allowed in their dorm room s,” she said. “ Then, they will leave them when they leave school. They w ill not take the responsibility. ” Overstreet said the ASU adm inistration is concerned because the cats can also cause infestations of fleas and ticks on campus as well as the University into a “ liability situation.” If someone gets bitten by a. c a t, they could sue the University, Overstreet said. The idea to trap the cate was initiated by the physical plant after the report on the two visitors was filed, Overstreet said, adding that the trapping of the stray cate w ill continue until the situation is under control. “ We are asking the students to help us in this m atter by not removing or tampering with the traps,” he said. Stray cate have w andered the A S U campus fo r years. T he University Is now tryin g to rid the area o f the cats after a visito r was bitten by one. ARIZONA NATION/WORLD F ren ch u n v e il c o p y o f Lady L ib e rty in P aris A c h ille Lauro w a ite r te s tifie s a g a in s t g u n m a n G E N O A , Italy (AP) — A Portuguese waiter and an Italian hairdresser who were aboard the Achille Lauro testified Monday that a hijacker forced them to throw overboard the body and then the wheelchair of an elderly Am erican passenger. The w aiter then identified one defendant in court, Youssef M agiealM olqi, as the gunman who gave them the order. The testimony cam e on the fourth day of the trial in the O ct. 7-9 hijacking of the Italian lino- and the shooting death of L e t» Klinghoffer of New York. The court is trying I 5 defendants, three of them accused as hijackers. Speaking through an interpreter, waiter Manuel De Souza told the court that he was summoned and ordered to bring Klinghoffer, 89, in his wheelchair to the deck. De Souza said that having done that, he was ordered to go back down to where other hostages were being held. Minutes later, he testified, he beard shots and then w as summoned again , this tim e to throw Klinghoffer’s body into the Mediterranean o ff Syria. He said that when he arrived on deck, he saw Klinghoffer, bleeding from a chest wound, already dead. De Souza and Ferruccio A lberti, the hairdresser, heaved Klinghoffer’s body into the sea and then threw overboard the wheelchair, the w aiter testified. He recalled he then went inside to wash the blood off his clothes. When asked to identify the m an who gave him the orders, De Souza turned around and pointed at Molqi in a metalbarred defendant’s cage. P A R IS (A P) — A 52-foot replica of the Statue of Liberty, restored to shiny health after a century of corrosion and war wounds, was unveiled Monday by Prem ier Jacques C h irac, accom panied by m ilitary bands and cheered by Parisiens lining the banks of the River Seine. From a boat moored in the river, Chirac pulled a cord rem oving giant French and Am erican flags draped around the statue, which faces West toward the New World from the tip of the He aux Cygnes — Isle of Swans — downstream from the E iffe l Tower. The bronze statue was a gift from Am ericans in P aris in 1885, one year before her more fam ous sister was placed on her pedestal in New York Harbor. The P aris statue suffered much the sam e kind of age and weather dam age as New York’s M iss Liberty, which was a g ift from France. The P aris statue, which is about onethird the size of the New York one, also had a big gash in the right shoulder, apparently caused by a stray shell during W orld W ar II. French officials are taking every opportunity to emphasize France’s historic ties to the monumental statue and to the Am erican Revolution, partly in an effort to soothe resentment felt in the United States when France refused passage to Am erican fighter planes on their way to attack Libya last April 15. President Francois M itterrand is going to New York for next week’s cerem onies, which w ill be followed by a Frenchsponsored Festival of Liberty starring the P aris Opera B allet and tightrope, walker Philippe P etit, among others. D e c re e 'k e y ' to D o u g las s m e lte r, d ire c to r says 3,000 w o rk e rs to lo se jo b s w ith G reyh o u n d P H O E N IX (AP) — Arizona’s health director says a federally enforceable court decree is the key to whether the state perm its Phelps Dodge Carp, to continue to operate its sm elter in Douglas. In a letter to the U .S . Environmental Protection Agency’s regional chief, Ju dith A yers, Lloyd F . Novick said Arizona “ is interested in entering the negotiations between E P A and Phelps Dodge for the purpose of satisfying all state and federal air-quality regulatory requirements through a comprehensive, court-enforceable docum ent.” “ P art of the settlem ent must contain an em issions lim it that is adequate to protect persons w ith resp iratory problems who are exposed to smelter em issions,” Novick said in that letter last week. Phelps Dodge’s Douglas sm elter has been operating without pollution controls and tentatively has been denied an E P A w aiver of regulations governing federal air-quality standards. “ It is my understanding that E P A is actively pursuing negotiations with Phelps Dodge Corp. to consummate a federal district court consent decree to control em issions” from the sm elter, Novick said. P H O E N IX (A P) — About 3,000 workers w ill lose their jobs with Greyhound Corp. as Greyhound turns over 96 bus stations to independent operators who w ill receive a percentage of each term inal’s business, officials announced M onday. Novick said he can issue an operating perm it to the sm elter ‘i f the state is able to negotiate an acceptable federally enforceable consent decree with the E P A and Phelps Dodge.” Otherwise, he said, he w ill be required by state law to deny P helps D odge’s operating perm it because of non-compliance with airquality regulations.____________ . The $1.99 Chicken Meal Plus! Terrace Road. Apartments GREAT SUMMER RATES RESERVE NOW FOR FALL 1/2 block from Campus, Huge, well-furnished 1-bedroom, 1-bath, and 2-bedroom, 2-baths, all utilities included, plus large pool, spacious laundry facilities, and cable TV. 9 5 0 S. Terrace Rd. AT CO RN ERSTO N E °T h e ° rornerstonR ESTABLISHED IM* Md 829-1743 9 6 6 -8 5 4 0 THEM C riS H O P The layoffs w ill save the nation’s largest bus carrier money in the long run, company officials said. Greyhound should sta rt _ sav in g considerable overhead expenses once the term inals were converted to commission agents because the company would not be paying the employees who worked there, company spokesman Don Behnke said Monday. Behnke said he didn’t know how much Greyhound officials hoped to save, and he didn’t know when the layoffs would be completed. U nions rep resen ting Greyhound workers agreed to the move, Greyhound said in its statem ent. Union officials could not im m ediately be readied for com ment, according to a woman who answered the phone early Monday a t the Am algam ated Council erf Greyhound Divisions, but would not give h e r n a m e . T h e p re sid e n t o f Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1223 in Phoenix, G ary Atkinson, said Monday he was unable to comment on the move. The $1.39 Mini-Meali T w o pieces o f chicken (dark or m ixed o rd er), a regular order of fren ch fries and a 16-ou n ce drink. All O n e piece (o u r ch o ice) of big, ju icy ch icken , a regular o rd er of french fries and a sm all drink. F or just fo r just $1.99! $1.39 Add 309" for all whit« orders. Offer good only at participating locations. Not valid with any other offer. One coupon per customer per visit. Offer expires 7-15-86. Customer jMys all applicable taxes. Offer good only at participating locations. Not valid with any other offer. One coupon per customer per visit Offer expires 7-15-88. Customer pays all applicable taxes. Good only at 1135 E. Apache (comer of Terrace & Apache) Tempe. t Severance pay for the workers and other expenses related to the move w ill cost Greyhound about $15 m illion, to be taken out of Greyhound’s second-quarter after-tax earnings, Greyhound chairm an and chief executive officer John W. Teets said in a prepared statem ent. Good only at 1135 E. Apache (Corner of Terrace & Apache) Tempe. CHURCH’S FRIED CHICKEN ~ ^ e m e m b e T T :h u rc h 's on Apache offers a 10% discount for all ASU students and faculty " I w/I.D. Offer not good on any special offers. ________________ __ | HOURS: i/2 P R IC E TU ESD A Y! M-F 10-9 Sat. 10-8 Sun. 12-6 ASV Students, Faculty and Staff Present your ASU I.D . b eat th e h eat w ith Special Savings on th e p u rc h a s e o f a Tank Top and Shorts c o m b in a tio n . Exp. 6-31-86. * 3.00 OFF Any Tank Top and Shorts combination (w ith th is c o u p o n ) Void on sale items & w/other coupons and receive a 50% discount on any large pizza. It ’s tapped w ith just-picked vegetables, fin e natural cheeses, and the leanest m eats, on a fresh rolled pizza crust. (Country Style Included) — Dine-in only — TEMPE SCOTTSDALE 1849 N. Scottsdale Rd. 7901 E. Thomas Rd. ( A t th e c o m e r o f M c K e U ip s ) (a t H ayden) 947-4396 9 9 4 -3 3 6 0 l ( K RoundTablePizza in Page3 Tuoday. June 84.1966 Wind patterns, dew point main factors in monsoon Departm ent of Public Safety, said motorists who are caught on the highway during a severe monsoon dust storm should pull all the way off the pavement and stop. Then motorist should set their em ergency brake and make sure both the headlights and brake lights are o ff. “ It is very im portant that your brake tights are off because other cars w ill see your lights and try to follow you and then hit the back a t your c a r ," he said. Davis said if for some reason motorists cannot pull off the highway they should proceed at a reduced speed with their lights on, using the center line as a guide. B alling and Sandra B razel, another faculty associate, are studying the effects of the “ urban heat island” over Phoenix and how it m ay alter storm patterns, including die monsoon. “ (The heat island) is created by any kind of man produced heat that is put in the a ir. It can be caused by all the concrete and asphalt, a ll the ca rs producing heat or all the pollution in the air which holds heat inside,” Brazel said. By C A R R IL . M IT CH E LL S tate Press W rite r Arizona summers are famous for being hot, but when the monsoon season begins, dust, thunderstorms and humidity add a change to the usually dry V alley o f the Sun. Robert B allin g, faculty associate a t the ASU laboratory of clim atology, said the monsoon season is characterized by a change in the wind patterns wtych brings in more moisture from the G ulfs of M exico and California or the P a cific Ocean. H ie arrival o f the monsoon is characterized by a rise in the dew point tem perature. Balling said the dew point is a measure of how much moisture is in the air. The dew point is reported by die tem perature in which the air becomes saturated with water. The higher the dew point temperature the more chance of rain, he said. The m ain effect of the monsoon is the dust storm , which can cause reduced visibility and have high speed w inds.' Len D avis, a public information officer for the Arizona B alling and Brazel said they think the heat island is inhancing the chances of severe strains at sunset while decreasing the chance of storm s after midnight. The two have also recently completed researching the changing humidity patterns in Phoenix. Brazel said they studied the humidity reading in Ju n e at the area around Sky Harbor International Airport from 1898 to the present. She said despite common opinion, the study found the humidity is decreasing. “ We have replaced irrigated land with urban development, and by replacing that we have increased the temperature and decreased the amount of w ater,” Brazel said. The average humidity during Monsoon season is 30 percent depending on the tim e of the day, B alling said. Although the average day of the start of monsoon season is Ju ly 8, the season has been known to start as early as June 16 and as late as Ju ly 24. It usually last until mid-september. The onset is the day in which the dew point reaches 55 degree. POLICE REPORT University police reprated the following incidents during the 55-hour period ending at 7 a .m . Monday: □ A man unaffiliated with the University was arrested in connection with grand theft auto Saturday night, police said. Kevin E . E llis , 19,1115 E . Lemon S t. %415, was stopped for driving a vehicle on the sidewalk a t Orange Street and Cady M all. A check of the vehicle, a Ford Bronco, indicated that it was reported stolen. The car belonged to an auto dealership in M esa. Authorities fr o m M esa P olice Departm ent arrested the m an and took him into custody. □ A n ASU student was allegedly assaulted on an elevator at P alo Verde E ast Residence H all Sunday afternoon, police said. The student began to exit the elevator after it had stopped, when one of five other DISC BRAKE Special 4-CYL. TUNE-UP Special Only $4995 only $4 9 95 fiÿ u e l 1. Turn Two Rotors 2. Repack Front W heel Bearings 3. R&R Front Pads 4. Check Hoses 5. Check Rear Brakes 6. Road Test 7. Parts & Labor Add $15 for sem i-m etallic pads 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. fu óic c. BUY• SELL• TRADE Your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no textbooks, please) we pay 30% of our re-sale price in cash or 50% in tradein credit which may be used to pur­ chase anything in the store. (Sorry, no trade-ins on Sat. or Sun.) Browse through our three floors of: •New 6 Used Books •A rt Prints & Posters •Calendars & Cards •Handbound Journals n ie r IN THE LITTLE ARCHES SHO PPING CENTER Sales Rentals Repairs INCLUDES: INCLUDES: □ A n A SU student reported three pieces of jew elry valued at $1,350 were stolen sometime between 2 p.m . Friday and 6 p.m . Saturday from a pair of pants she left in the A rt Building, police said. The student, who was working in the building Friday, changed her pants and left the jew elry in a front pocket. The pants rem ained in a secured room overnight. — BRAD H ALVO RSEN women present struck her in the arm and in the face. The suspect threatened her, saying, “ I’m going to kill you. I’m going to kill you,” police stated. A ll parties involved said words were exchanged between the two women and the suspect lost her temper. P olice advised the suspect that a warrant would probably be issued on her. Band Instruments Accessories Sheet Music, Etc. 968-2310 Spark F*lugs Cap Rotor Points Set Tim ing & Dwell Road Test Adjust Carburetor Parts & Labor M -F 10-0 SAT 10-6 SUN 12-5 C h a n g in g H ands 122 E. U n iversity D r., T em p e 414 MW Avenue 846-0203 OM Town Tempe Open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. six days M ost cars and trucks. Expires. 8-9-86. Most cars and trucks. Expires 8-9-86. Unlvtriity TEMPE IMPORTS 6th St. 9 6 6 -6 6 8 0 • 18 3 6 E. 6 th S t., T e m p e SHEPHERD'S G re a t Atmosphere — Dancing — G am es - M ore for less Home o f the $1 Kamikozee featuring H appy Hour Prices All Day With fre e Hors D'oeuvres, Appetizer til 9:00 s g ì» TUESDRY Mexican Madness PTT $1.00 Drinks All Night (Wed.) FR€€ TACOS S I .50 Coronas & morgoritos ^ ç C \J& \P^ rts . Ç Ÿ Î& C -Ç \ °^ idt' Presenting UJICKCD WEDNESDAYS $ 1 .0 0 BUYS YOU ANY SINGLE DRINK RLl NIGHT LONG 'Pacific £yes Party at Shephard's uuhere there's NEVER fl COVER CHARGE 1123 South Rural Road in Tem pe. Rural & Rpoche 968-0243 / y — ^ r r ôScbp rRim ÏC É S R llH ¡Gq lk r - 1Phoenix lower Plaza 244-9H9 Christown Mall 433-2949 ■■ 5 t f UNDERSOUL, W L L ------ IT “ “ !C o rn ersto n e I Westridge Mall T#mP 966-5560, m m 873.2607 ^wlÎMhisad only thru 6-29-86. Smwnur N U N m OPINION Betar's 'iron fis t' needs to return We hated her, we berated her and we abominated her. And now that she’s gone, we need her back. Deanna Be tar, the notorious campus policewoman who patrolled A SU ’s bike paths dealing out citations like there was no tomorrow, relinquished her duties less than a year ago. A lread y, two-wheelers tool around forbidden Cady M all like they own the place. Pedestrians, beware. Those omnipresent “ dismount bicycle here” signs enveloping A SU ’s busiest walkway no longer act Uke traffic lights. Now, they work like yield signs at 3 a.m . B icyclist behavior is gradually returning to the state of disarray it exhibited before Betar took over and showed A SU students what a little authority could do. She became a fixture to Cady M all, dressed in police garb with her sunglasses, whistle and w alkie-talkie. Her m ilitaryty p e , m onotone y e ll b e ca m e a s commonplace a sound as birds signing. She showed little m ercy for those individuals who believed they were above the bicycle traffic law s. If one tire treaded onto the m all, Betar would stop the driver, advise him of his wrongdoings and slap him with an $18 violation. Betar paced the grounds throughout the day, performing a thankless job which Brad Halvorsen Staff W riter generated only Sneers, glares and probably a few obscenities. But the get-tough policy worked. B icyclists began realizing she meant business Few would venture onto the m all atop a bike. W alking a bike through a restricted area was no longer considered unnecessary and foolish. B icyclists not only started riding on the bike paths, they actually rode on the right side. Remember those days’ The other day, while a cruiser bike driven by two happy-go-lucky girls weaved across a section of Cady M all, a security officer spotted another violator and made an approach. “ Uh, excuse m e, m a’a m ,” the officer started. “ Did you know that you’re not allowed to ride your bike on the m all? The lady acted like she had never heard of the rule. The officer politely asked her to get off walk her bike. Quite a change from the Betar days. Had she been on duty, the violator would have been nailed and the two girls on the cruiser bike would have received a bitter tonguelashing. Even after Betar left cam pus, her drive to ca tch b icy clists somehow did not completely subside. A t homecoming festivities last fa ll, Betar, an ex-employee, was the m ain attraction at one of the features — the dunking booth. Fin ally, those hundreds of bicyclists victim ized by B etar’s keen eyes and quick pen, would have a chance for revenge: hit the target with a ball and watch Deanna take the plunge. Y e t, while sitting above the pool of w ater, soaking wet and loving every minute of it, Betar spotted a stray bicyclist wandering through the dozens of people on Cady M all. “ Hey you! G et off of that bike!” she yelled, turning the heads of the a couple hundred onlookers. The crowd began to laugh. “ Do you think I’m kidding?” Betar scream ed, suddenly sounding a bit serious. “ G et offydur bike! ” The violator obeyed. That may have been Betar’s final victim , unless she happened to come across another Unlucky sole or two on the way back to her car. And now that the cat is away» the m ice are playing — not to mention zooming, thrashing and nearly crashing. Take notice. The problem may not seem im perative at the moment, but then again, nothing seems im perative when the temperature reaches 110 degrees on a relatively empty cam pus. Wait until an extra 30,000 students cram the m alls in the fa ll. Wait until a few hundred bicyclists are late to their first class. Wait until one of them clips your heels If Betar patrolled the paths today, the cam pus would be a safer place. — or worse. If Betar patrolled the paths today, the campus would be a safer place. No m atter how much students loved to hate her, she got the job done. Until another authorative figure em erges to restore a once-respected law, bicyclists w ill in creasin g ly ignore tw o-w heel regulations. S o c’mon back, Deanna. We really didn’t hate you that m uch. LETTERS Faculty Club gets Arts Annex; graduate art students get shaft Editor: This letter concerns your cover article on the Ju n e 3 issue of the S um m er State Press concerning the proposed Faculty Club. Your article placed at issue allegations that the Faculty Club would comprise membership of an ‘elite’ group. An issue that should be investigated which is more appropriate and more objective is the history of the Fine Arts Annex (sic) building itself, and the history of its use. •Your paper covered the proposed “ demolition” of this same building when, in the fa ll of 1983, the School of Art was not permitted use of said building due to structural insecurity and fire hazards. Classroom s, faculty offices, the Northlight G allery and many graduate studio spaces were lost due to these safety rulings. Inadequate classroom space was relocated in Krause H all, the faculty offices were not reallocated, the Northlight G allery w as, fortunately, able to relocate to Matthews H all, and graduate studios are now scattered in the Visual Arts Annex (old Clim atology building) and M itchell School. The Athletic Department covets the space in the Visual Arts Annex for expanded weightroom facilities, and, at best, the studio spaces in both that building and M itchell School are sm aller, less private and less secure than those which were in the Fine Arte Annex. I had a studio in the old building and now have one in the Visual Arts Annex building. E ssentially, what we graduate students lost w as: hot running w ater, adequate clean-up sinks, separate bathroom facilities for men and women and privacy. Faculty lost office space and the classrooms at Krause H all allocated to the School of A rt to replace those in the Fine Arte Annex do not have clean-up sinks, windows, appropriate storage space, and easy access for students. I would like to see the Sum m er State Press address the larger issue of how space and monies are prioritized by the University ; particularly in regard to this issue. Name withheld upon request SUMMER STATE PRESS PATRICK J. KUCERA Editor Reporter*: Brad Halvorsen. Carri L. Mitchell. Cindy Pearlman Sports: Bob Heiler, Carol Boos Photographer. Kevin J. Larkin Circulation: Stanley Rowley Advertising Intern: Cathy Czagany Advertising Representatives: OanieHe Carbone. Amy Fellner, Jennifer Hughes, Tom Hutchison. Mark Petpraon. Craig Wacaser The Summer State Press is published Tuesday and Thursday during the summer sessions at Matthews Center. Room 15. Arizona State University. Tempe. AZ 85287. Newsroom: 965-2292. Advertising & Production: 965-7572. PROFESSIONAL STAFF BRUCE ITULE Manager of Student Publications Secretary JO ANNA OLDAN4 Production Manager ROBERT S. SZORADI Administrative Asst. SALIMA KEEGAN Asst. Production Mgr. RANDY POOLER Acctng. Clerk GINGER TRUMBAUER Comp. Supervisor DIANA BRUBAKER Receptionist SUSAN HEITING Paste-up Technician MARK McKINNEY The Summer State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. 1.ETTER POLICY Thu Summer State Press encourages letters on any topic. Letters m ust be typed, double-spaced and no longer than tw o pages. Any submissions n o t In adherence with letter po licy w ill not be published. Letters are subject to editing on the basis of clarity, length or conformance to newspaper style. Include your full name, class standing and rhhjor, or other affiliation with the University, along with your phone number. Requests for anonymity are granted if a reason is given..' > Send le tte rs to: Letters, S u m m e r S ta te P ress, Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287. Or bring them to the newspaper’s front desk in the basement of Matthews Center. "í*"íï;T Page 5 Tuesday; June 24/1986 by Berke Breathed BLOOM COUNTY i . i m single AT AGE SIX.. WITH ONLYA 3% CALM POWN, onsJ M C H eC M M P M Y ounceoreuex voûte tm n e m e m . BfOCOm-CLOCK getting marriep... YOUR 'BIOLOGICAL CLOCK'. SO WHAT HAPPENS AT 'M IP N M T / YEAH/ i i ■COUPON' FREE BREAKFAST Buy one a t the regular price, get the second YA WAKE UP LOOKING LIKE EP KOCH. BEK! FREE yíf '• 3 \ WE FEATURE A COMPLETE N.Y. STYLE DELI MENU Beer • Wine ¡¡WJ PUMPERNlK'S 1985ArtCarvrdClassRings Deposit Required “ Legal E agles” is one of those combination movies that lives or dies because it gets its ideas from previous successful box office film s. This latest film , produced and directed by Ivan Reitm an, entertains with the influence of “ Jagged E d ge,” and “ Kram er vs. K ram er.” Because these two movies were the cream of the crop of their years, “ Legal Eagles” proves to be very clever Mid charism atic, thanks to the high energy level generated by Robert Redford, Debra Winger and D aryl Hannah. The movie begins at the scene of the crim e when Chelsea Deardon, played by Hannah, receives one of her father’s priceless paintings for her eighth birthday, only for it to be stolen by a friend of the fam ily. This friend also sets fire to the Deardon studio/home, killing Daddy Deardon. Twenty years later, Chelsea discovers her painting and tries to claim the piece as her own and winds up being accused as a crim inal. . . . . Debra Winger plays the part of Laura K elly, a fiesty lawyer who will go to all lengths to make a good case for her clients. When she takes on Chelsea’s case, the situation continues to escalate until she turns to the assistant district attorney for help. Tom Logan, played by Robert Redford, is the lawyer with the great reputation and record until he meets the strange^ and mysterious Chelsea. After he finds him self in a compromising position with her, his career starts to crum ble and collapse. According to Laura, who is hopelessly in love with Tom , the only way to save his career and save Chelsea’s life is to join forces and conquer the bad guys. From this point “ E agles” takes off into whirlwind of laughs, excitem ent, and even a bit of fright and frenzy. II.A aha alrnnont that maltPS this film w hat it nQtionuuide vi/ion center 933 E. University *105 in Tem peTow ne Plaza Across from Cornerstone M all • 966-4991 5130 N. 19th Avenue (One block north o f Camelback) Phoenix • 242-5292 437 S. G ilbert Mesa • 844-7096 D AILY W EAR . . . . . . . . Two Pairs $ 3 9 .5 0 EXTENDED W E A R ______ Two Pairs $ 6 9 .5 0 CO LO R ED S O F T ______ Two Pairs $ 7 9 .5 0 One colored, one dear EXTENDED W EAR S O F T CO N T A CT S One colored, one dear. FREE sunglasses when purchased with contact lenses FR E E CO N TACT LEN S CO N SULTATIO N O utside Prescriptions W elcome Most contact prescriptions available the sam e day. M ARK A . HECHTMAN, O .D . NEAL A . 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Fourteenth Street, Tem pe, Arizona 85281 ___ ___ ___ j Tuesda£June>246J986i Page 8 'Ruthless People’: DeVito, Midler are humorless By C A R R IL . M IT CH E LL State Press W rite r Comedy movies are a businessman’s dream . A ll you need is a few big nam es, and enough really funny lines to make the previews hysterical, and you’ve made big bucks. This is the way the producers of “ Ruthless People” hope to m ake their fortune T h ^ have taken Panny DeVito, Ju dge Reinhold and Bette M idler; They put them in a glorified made-for-TV movie, and added just enough funny lines so that people who saw* the previews would be convinced into shelling out five bucks to see it. I f is abhorant that such a ploy would work, so today’s bit of advice is: don’t see this movie. The basic idea of the movie is sim ple, and with a decent script it could be funny. DeVito m arries his w ife, M idler, for her money, then he plots to kill her. But Reinhold and his wimpy w ife, played by Helen Slater, kidnap M idler and demand big bucks for her release, or else. W ell, DeVito wants the “ or else,” so he does everything they tell him not to do. This aspect of the story is basic, but what the w riters of this movie did was add little sub-plots that end up only confusing this already very long m ovie. The actual tim e on this movie is only about an hour and a h alf, but it seems more like two and a h alf. DeVito plays a convincing M r. Stone. He certainly looks greedy and evil enough to want his w ife dead. P ut his character is just not written w ell. How many tim es can one person say how much he hates his w ife, or giggle slyly into the cam era. It just gets old. M idler’s character is even more annoying. She plays a too old mod that spends the m ajority of the movie scream ing, kicking and being nasty to her kidnappers. But the character’s attitude towards them changes when she realizes she has lost 20 pounds while being chained up in their basement. The audience has a hard time believing that she is so grateful that she forgives, forgets and then plots against her husband with them. Tickets: $50, $25, $17.50 at Gam m age and Diamonds outlets. E T C At the Celebrity Theater: Stephen Stills and Am erica at 7:30 p.m . on Ju ly 13. Tickets are $16.50. And Bruce Cockburn on Ju ly 20 at the Celebrity at 8 p.m . Tickets are $13.50. M ike and the M echanics, who were scheduled to play the Mesa Am pitheatre at 7:30 p.m . on Ju n e 30 have cancelled their show. Tickets can be returned at the point of purchase for a full refund. Stevie Wonder w ill be at A SU ’s U A C on Ju n e 30 in the round. Tickets are available at Diamonds and the University A ctivity Center. Ju lio Igiesias plays A SU ’s UA C on Ju ly 11 at 8 p.m . r D IE T > ,CENTER> THINK SUM Slater’s character and perform ance are hardly worth mentioning. It is hard to tell if Slater’s character or if Slater herself is the wimp. Reinhold does the best job of anyone in this movie. He plays a good-hearted person who has been pushed too fa r. He does not want to hurt anyone, He ju st wants to get back at DeVito for stealing his life savings. The only thing really good about this movie are the sets. The house that DeVito and M idler live in is prim e decoration. Even the scuzzy, motorhome DeVito’s m istress’ accom plice (just part of a confusing sub-plot) lives in is done really w ell, right down to the dirty carborator on the kitchen table. This movie is ju st a real disappointment. Nothing in it is actually good. It would have been better suited to the ABC Sunday Night at the M ovies. It is just not worth the money to go see this sad attem pt at com edy. If you want laughs go see a decent summer movie early and watch the preview of “ Ruthless People.” A ll the good lines are there. represent his wprk from 1964 to 1963. The most m ysterious thing about the Duck’s Breath M ystery Theater is that none of the members knows what duck’s breath sm ells like. The best guess, they say, is minnows and garlic. D r. Science, his lab assistant Rodney and another dozen or so of the strangest characters w ill be at Gam m age Center on June 28 for,an 8 p.m . show. Meanwhile at A SU : An exhibition of 18 large-scale works by contemporary sculptor Seymour Lipton is on display at Matthews Center. Lipton is known for his signature style, an abstract im agery growing from direct m etal construction techniques invented by him in the 1950s. Fabricated of nickel silver on monel m etal, the sculptures on display The group’s stage show is a collection of short skits and absurdist characters, some from their broadcast shows, others created ju st for the stage. Tickets for D uck’s Breath are $6, $3 for student, available at Gam m age and all Diamonds tickets offices. TIME OUT LOUNGE NO RTHEAST CORNER O F M IL L & S O U T H E R N FREE POOL! SuiL-Frl 11 a.iii-2 p.m. The Weight loss Professionals At Diet Center you can lose 10 pounds in two weeks . . . be two sizes trimmer in three weeks. It’s quick. It’s safe. And perhaps best o f ail, you won’t see the weight you lost come back. We can show you how, right now. Your first personal consultation is free. Call today. HAPPY HOUR 3.-00^00 M-F (11 to 6 Toes.) BIG SCREEN SPORTS * VIDEOS • DARTS TIMEOUTLOUNGE « S TEMPE • 967-1371 911 E. Broadway LUCKY SHOPPING CENTER Open Daily 7 a m. 6p.m. 4WO RRfBfUfR THAW O N & ASU DIAMONDS, EMERALDS, RUBIES, SAPPHIRES, RINGS, EARRINGS, BRACELETS, NECKLACES, PEARLS AND MUCH, MUCH MORE! AND THAT'S WHAT YOU GET EVERY MONDAY & WEDNESDAY PHOENIX 2 fo r 1 — D o u b le P rints I cm pc Cent ci M ill & Li ni V comparable quality and value and we'll discount it by an additional five percent! This guarantee includes, all so-called "50% OFF” sales, wholesale centers, factories, malls, exchanges and any other place that springs up overnight! 9.36 W. Cam el back Donald'.' < amclh.ick \ iliaciof M< SCOTTSDALE 277-7080 Mon. F-'r i ¡«U'. » I fuii ' 1814 E . Southern 820-3909 8320 N . H ayden R d. 991-4814 Southern at M. ( lint«» Behind -Irurlrx E\rh on develop and print orders 8 2 9 -0 4 2 4 OUR ULTIMATE GUARANTEE We guarantee our prices to be the lowest in the Valley. Bring us any quote of Mi n ado I (enter Mon, Ill, km ; a Ihm. Mon,- f ri. I 1-<>• Thurs. I 1 m.----- ------ jiim in e r a w e ^ ------it c m ~ * Tuesday, June 84,1986 1' y, ; *. Page 9 ft >* 1 .. . x Pick-up basketball a way of life to some at the P.E. West gym By BOB H E IL E R State Press W rite r H it the J , pound the boards, post up low, get back and D-up. Take ball, stick it to him , take it to the hole, don’t camp in the lane. These are just a few of the most-heard phrases in the world of pick-up basketball. ASU has its own sub-culture, centered around the P .E . West Building, that speaks this language fluently and often. ‘I hate it when I get into a gam e with a bunch of hacks. The gam e alw ays deteriorates into a h a c k -te s t’ Walk in the gym at any tim e between noon and 9 p.m . on a weekday, and you’ll see them. A motley assortment of men (and a few women) who probably have little in common with each other besides a love for the gam e of basketball. Gam es go to fifteen points by ones. You have to win by two buckets. Players call their own fouls, and there are plenty to be called. The veterans call “ next gam e” the minute they walk in the gym ; then at least they have a leg to stand on when they start to argue that it’s their turn when the gam e in progress ends. Then it’s time to choose their squad. Sometimes there’s a lot of talent around. Last week there were five members of the ASU team in the gym at one tim e. E ric Holloway, Tarre Isiah, Arthur Thomas, Bobby Thompson and Steve Beck — the gang was all there. And in the off-season, no less. . Other tim es, it’s hard to field a solid five- man squad out of the whole place. When this happens, the good players either leave or play to the level of their competition. “ I hate it when I get in a gam e' with a bunch of hacks,” said Tim , a southpaw junior accounting m ajor with a strong move to the hole and a good pull-up jum per out to 16 feet. Good defenders overplay him to his left. “ The gam e alw ays deteriorates into a hack-fest.” Sometimes the gam e deteriorates into an argum ent instead. Frequently, play will stop for several minutes so that players can argue with each other about whether someone carried the ball, traveled, hammered the shooter or k ick ed the b a ll. U su a lly , som eone eventually goes to the high ground and says, “ We’ll take the next close one,” throwing the ball (with considerable force) at the opponent with the loudest voice. The competition at the gym is always cutthroat, though, because the winners get to stay on the court and face the nexe challengers. Nobody wants to sit down, because if they wanted to sit down, as one player put it, they could “ stay at home and sit in air-conditioning. ’ ’ Air-conditioning is not one of the high points of he P .E . West gym . Most of the gym is extrem ely hot, except for three spots. These are the spots underneath the blowers that hang from the roof. The wind at these spots is strong enough to throw off your jumpshot. There’s only one thing wrong with pick-up hoops at the P .E . West gym : The guys who keep their shirts on when they’re on the skins team and then call for an outlet pass when the other team gets a defensive rebounds. And, oh yeah, the guys who actually throw them the ball. Slot* Pres* photo Eric Holloway can be found In a pick-up Q8in6 at P.E. West sometimes, as can most of his Sun Devil teammates. Tragedy Bias’ death can teach important lesson to many Bob H eller Sports Tragedy can strike any of us, anywhere, at any tim e. It’s out to get us all. But when someone gives it a hand, it’s sure to catch up with him. Len B ias was on top of the world less than one week ago. He had just been drafted by the Boston Celtics, the best team in basketball, perhaps in thè history of basketball. Friends say he had been p ra y in g that the Celtics would draft him . His prayers were answered. God was on his side. Tim e was on his side. His friends and fam ily were on his side. The greatest basketball tradition ever was on his side. Reebok, who had just signed Len to a $1 m illion promotional contract, was on his side. ' Everyone was on Len’s side, except Len. Traces of cocaine were found in B ias’ body. M ore of it was found in the car he was driving (see related story, pg. 10). There is every reason to believe, although the coroner’s tests are not yet com plete, that this young, athletic “ picture of good health” killed him self with a chem ical overdose. Now it doesn’t take a genius to know that drugs are dangerous. It certainly doesn’t take a genius to know that drugs aré detrim ental to the performance of athletes. A ll it takes is a little common sense, and a little ability to think more than fifteen minutes into the future. People only have to consider the long-term , to think about what cimice they would rather have to live with three years into the future. That future — at least the part of it known to the public, which was a m ajor portion — was as bright for Len Bias as it could have been. Talent, a great team , lots of money for playing a gam e he loved — literally nothing could have been sweeter for him as an athlete. Apparently, if Len’s friends, coach and fam ily knew him as well as they thought, cocaine use was entirely out of character for the young man. He has been described as a “ good Christian boy who had never had anything to do with drugs.” His roommate said that if Len was using cocaine that night, he would “ bet his life that it was the first tim e he had ever been affiliated with drugs. ” Apparently, Len bet his life that he could get away with it justhis once. He lost. That seems reasonable, because if Len were a habitual cocaine user, his body would have built up some im munity. It probably would not have killed turn. The question, then, is this: What makes a guy with everything going for him , with his future laid out before him , decide to stick a chem ical up his nose? Chances are someone lied to him . Someone told him that cocaine would “ intensify his em otions.” He was happy, so he figured more intense happiness would be even better. He bought the big lie, just like m illions of other people have bought it. One has to wonder how the slim e that sold Len the cocaine feels right now. Does he even care? M aybe it was even a “ friend” of his. Soemone trying to share in Len’s good fortune; in some sick way, someone who really thought he was doing Len a favor, making^wrjey more “ intense,” That pusher, whoever he was, ougnt to be made to pay for his actions. Len was certainly made to}pay for them. One can only hope that some good m ight come out of this tragedy; and there is reason to believe that some w ill. It is seldom that the lesson that all people should remember abut drugs is so graphically illustrated. D ru g s k ill people. In a sense, the m illions of addicts across the country are no more alive than Len is right now. They breathe, they w alk, they talk. They exist. But they certainly don’t live. To live is to discern one’s self from all other things, and to understand the importance of the self. Drug addiction prohibits this. The addict thinks of nothing except where his next fix is coming from. In any event, the death of Len B ias, assuming it is determined to be a direct result of drug use, w ill do what dozens pf public service advertisem ents, 24-hour hotlines and concerned “ support groups” have been unable to accom plish. It w ill stop some people from using drugs. W hat m akes a guy with everything going for him, with his future laid out before him, decide to stick a chem ical up his nose? Especially athletes. High school athletes w ill think twice before getting involved with drugs, because they w ill be aware of how one apparently ideal life was cut rather short. If the public service announcements mention this incident, they w ill be more effective. If the parents of athletes discuss it with their children, they may avert a. disaster in their own fam ilies. If coaches recall the incident to their team s, a few lives m ay be made not only longer, but better. If young people think about the incident and talk about jt with friends whom they fear might m iss the point, they m ay keep the friends a little longer. And if any of those things happen, the Len B ias w ill not have died in vain. :. C O L L E G E P A R K , Md (AP) — Monday, about 1,300 mourners, including Boston Celtics President Red Auerbach, packed the University N '° & w e*s , 0 t n e \TV P W h ere A i r i i n e C a r e e r s B e g in ! c 0 ro P ^ e IN TERNATIONA!AIRACADEMY Vancouver Washington St. Louis Missouri ^ rtx a V ie *• y \ e a < ^s p \ , \ j S ' ° e ° " a Ontario California w ■ " " 'C O U P O N " " “ b razier W o riX " “ a A '3 0 , T SINGLE BURGER FULL MEAL DEAL JlLO ! fas^ o n Sa; d / P r e p la n ° /1ance to Z n hion ' bo*tlecl b e e 0theS' Look whai you get! 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