s ta te p re s s Vol. 69 No. 95 A riz o n a State U n iv e rsity T em pe , A riz o n a ®Copyright, State Press, 1987 Thursday, February 26,1987 Clerical error detected in senate budget ledger B y DARRIN H O S T E T LE R State Press The Associated Students Senate has nearly $10,000 less to allocate than it thought due to a clerical error discovered in the financial records of the association Tuesday night. The Senate Contingency Account, Irom which the senate draws money for groups that request funding after the spring and fall club appropriations bills are passed, now has a balance of $10,322, not $20,130. . Executive Vice President Bridget Shelton announced the mistake Tuesday night during senate committee meetings. “For the last few days, we’ve been conducting a thorough investigation of the books, checking balances and looking over the actual figures,” she said. College of Engineering Sen. Kevin Anderson spurred the inquiry after he noticed discrepancies in the account during a Feb. 17 senate meeting. Shelton said ASASU has been operating with phantom funds on the books since August. She said when ASASU coordinator Gary Kleemann forwarded the contingency account balance to the senate before the fall semester began, he included $9,099 that was suppossed to be later transferred to the account by Senate Bill 2, passed on Aug. 27. When the bill passed, the senate office added the funds to the books again, causing the double entry and creating a bogiis total. “We assumed the total did not include the transfer funds (from Senate Bill 2),” Shelton said. “The balance was artificially inflated by the clerical misunderstanding. ’’ Kleemann agreed, and said he “wishes the mistake had never happened, and I wish we would have caught it earlier, but I’m glad we got it when we did.” Although Shelton said the mistake is unfortunate, the impact on funding bills will be minimal. Kleemann said: “We still have more than $10,000, and that’s not bad for this time of year. Tliere is always a silver lining. ” While the overall effect on legislation may be slight, the revelation that the senate’s funds have been cut in half, may cause senators to tighten purse strings and could stall high-dollar legislation. The first casualty occurred Tuesday night in the Senate Finance Committee, where a bill authorizing the expenditure of $5,000 was being debated. Senate Bill 67 would allocate funds to Disabled Student Resources for the purchase of a new cart to serve temporarily disabled students. The bill’s author, College of Liberal Arts Sen. Mark Isenberg, defended the bill in front of the committee. “The total amount of money we have in the account should never influence what we are going to do with it,” he said. “This would service tens of thousands of students. “We do have to be careful how we spend the money, but what better way to spend it than on something that will be an immediate benefit to students. ” But the committee tabled die bill and drafted a resolution calling for Student Affairs Vice President Betty Turner Asher to provide funds for the purchase. Committee member Anderson said: “It is not the job of Associated Students to fund administrative departments on campus. “ It’s a laudable goal, but we don’t have ih e resources.” ASASU President Chris Cummiskey agreed and said he has been in contact with Asher about the issue. But Isenberg said, “With the budget cuts and all, I quite frankly can’t believe that the administration can provide the funds.” Low hurdles Ron K ucnk jrTSIalt P rcn Crista Bishop-Smith, a doctoral candidats in school psychology, takas to the air over a puddle at College Avenue and Lemon Street. S id Castle, a doctoral candidate In educational administration, accompanies Bishop-Smith but preferred to keep his feet on the ground. “I’m ready to go swimming,” Castle said. Law m aker suggests Pfister resign from board Professor’s comments on Mecham stir dispute B y VICKIE C H A C H E R E State Press PHOENIX—A University of Massachusetts professor who called Gov. Evan Mecham “an ass” last week said Wednesday she has no intention of retracting her statement or apologizing for the comment. Hellen F. Cullen, a math professor who is on sabbatical attending classes at UA, said she was exercising her right to free speech when she blasted the governor at last week’s Arizona Board of Regents meeting in Tucson. Her comments prompted Arizona Rep. Bob Denny, RLitchfield Park, to demand an apology from Regent President Jack Pfister. Denny said in a Feb. 23 letter to Pfister that if Pfister does not apologize for the remarks, he should resign. Pfister said he will not apologize or resign over the incident, since neither he nor the regents were responsible for the remarks. Cullen made her remarks during the board’s call tef the audience Friday afternoon. She blasted Mecham’s budget cuts, proposed $60 additional increase in tuition and his rescission of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. “Governor Mecham, you’re coming through as an ass,” she said at the meeting. “Your handling of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday was wrong. Your budget cuts are ridiculous. inside today MEN’S BASKETBALL Sun Devils try to extend win streak tonight againstCalifornia-Berkeley. Page 19. What are students supposed to do—go to Harvard? “You come off as a wrinkled, Bible-thumping preacher. You are an ass.” Ralph Watkins, a nominee to the board who asked Pfister to silence. Cullen during the meeting, said Wednesday he believes Pfister should apologue to Mecham but not resign his post. Cullen, a Boston-native who said she is more than 60-yearsold, said she did not believe her remarks were discourteous to the governor, but did admit her words were “strong.” “We have free speech,” she said. “Mr. Pfister called an open meeting, and my remarks were all relevant to the universities’ problems and the governor .” She said her comments were taken from “good old Massachusetts English,” which defines “ass” as a person whose stupidity is destructive. “I wanted to say things the students and faculty could not say here,” Cullen said. “I am a teacher. My business is to communicate.” During Cullen’s speech, Watkins called for a point of order twice. P oster said he tried to recognize Watkins’ request, but Cullen interrupted each time. Pfister said Cullen had ended her speech by the time he was able to respond to Watkins’request. “Even if I had recognized (Watkins), I wouldn’t have stopped her from talking,” Pfister said. “I did not create this situation. I do not know why I should apologize for it. ” Pfister, who is general manger of the Salt River Project, said Cullen’s remarks offended him, labeling them comments that “should not be made in public company. ” But Watkins said he objected to Cullen’s remarks because ASU WEATHER Partly cloudy skies today with an expected high of 60 degrees. The expected low is 41. she had not properly signed up to speak at the meeting. Under board rules, people who wish to address the regents must fill out a special form. Cullen said she filled out a form but was never recognized. Watkins said he called for a point of order three times, but Pfister never made an attempt to recognize him. “He never called on me,” Watkins said. “I looked him in the eye three times and asked for a point of order. “ If he is chair of the committee, and he let that happen, he is responsible.” Ron Bellus, Mecham’s spokesman, said the governor will not comment on the incident, but does appreciate Denny’s letter to Pfister. Bellus said Mecham was offended by Cullen’s remarks. “He feels that the office of governor should be given respect, even if the individual isn’t,” he said. Denny said the incident angered him because Pfister should not allow people to use offensive language when testifying. “We don’t allow that in committees (at the Legislature),” he said. “It’s a matter of common courtesy. “Free speech has nothing to do with it. Governor Mecham, like him or dislike him, is the governor of Arizona, and that type of language should not be used toward the governor of this state.” Denny said the incident could strain relations between the governor’s office, the Legislature and the board. “Someone like this does the students a great disservice,” Denny said. “That’s why some of us (at the Legislature) don’t want to give the student regent a vote. ” Analysis ..................... 5 Classified..... ............................ 26 C o m ics..... ................. 9 Crossword..... .1 4 O p i n i o n . . . . . . . . . ...................... 4 Police report........ .......................18 Sports _______ ... ....................19 T o d ay............. ........................ 2 today Meetings •Real Estate Association will meet at 4:45 p.m. in the Business Administration Building, Room 256. Charlotte Selby, vice president of JDM Properties will speak on “Careers in Development.” •University Toastmasters will meet at 5:15 p.m. in the MU Mohave Room. Visitors are always welcome. •Student Alumni Association will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the MU Santa Cruz Room for a general membership meeting. •Celtic Students Assocatlon will meet at 6 p.m. in the MU Graham Room. We will be viewing a videotape on the Scottish influence on the English Language. •MEChA-Movimiento Estudiantil Chicane de Aztlan will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the MU Pima Room. Cesar Chavez s video “Wrath of Grapes” will be shown. Also update on La Semana Cultural. Lectures •ESP will offer a PPST Math Review Workshop at 12:40 p.m. and again at 7 p.m. in West Hall, Room 219. •“ Death: Coping with the Loss In the Family,” is part of the Mental Health Film and Discussion Series on stress in the family. The lecture begins at 7:30 p.m. in the College of Law, Great Hall. The series will include a presentation of the film, “ Death of a Gandy Dancer.' The film will be followed by a distinguished panel of Valley mental health professionals, who will offer insight, and then respond to questions from members of the audience. Panelists for this presentation include Daniel Field, M.D., Joanne Gersten, Ph.D., Charles Guarnaccia and Karion Krieger. This presentation represents the second in a five-month series which is sponsored by the Clinical Psychology Center of ASU and Desert Vista Hospital in Mesa. Sports •Rugby Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. on Sahuaro Field. There are still positions open for new players. The more players the club has, the more teams the club will be able to generate. All those interested in playing should report to Sahuaro Field when we practice. Social members are always invited to watch and participate in our parties after home matches. W ater w alker History major Karen Stoat had to walk through ankle deep water to get to her class In the Social Science Building Wed nesday. Stephan MountMr/Stat* P m * H A PPY H O U R 7 Days a Week 4p.m. to 8p.m. IOC WINGS 2 fo r 1 Drinks E very H a p p y H o u r W e ll, W i n e & D r a f t REVERSE HAPPY HOUR S p e c ia ls l O p . m . - l a .m . Sunday, M o n d a y & T uesday THURSDAYS TUESDAYS IS PIZZA TIME Vi PRICE PIZZA “All Day All Night” LATE NIGHT w ith LUNT •Lunt Ave. Sliders 2 54 •Buffalo Wings 8 f o r 504 •Chili Dogs 504 •Melon Ball Shooters $ 1 .0 0 T em pe L u n t • 1212 E. Apache • 967-9192 't State Press Page 3 Thursday, February 26,1987 3 Am ericans, Indian in custody of Syrian officials By The A ssociated Press NEW YORK ^ Three Americans and an Indian who were kidnapped in Lebanon last month are now in the custody of Syrian arm y intelligence officials in Beirut, “NBC News” reported Wednesday. Citing Middle Eastern and Western intelligence sources, the network said Americans Robert Polhill, Jesse Turner and Alann Steen, and Mithileshwar Singh, an Indian with resident alien status in the United States, were turned over to a senior Syrian intelligence officer, Col. Amir Taleh. The report said it remains unclear who had kidnapped the four, all professors at Beirut University College who were seized from the campus on: Jan. 24. A previously unknown group, Islamic Jihad for the Liberation of Palestine, on Jan . 28 claim ed responsibility for kidnapping the four, and had demanded that Israel free 400 Arab prisoners. The group has released photographs and videotapes of the four hostages. Asked about the NBC report, Dan Howard, a White House spokesman, said, “We have no independent confirmation at all.” At the State Department, spokeswoman Deborah Cavin said she also had no information on the report. NBC reported its sources said that when it became known Syrian troops were going to move into Beirut in force last weekend, the hostages were turned over to Taleh in order to keep them out of the hands of the pro- By TINA D AUN T State Press ASASU to conduct poll on quality of education Associated Students of ASU will survey the students and college deans next week to determine the quality of undergraduate education at ASU and report their findings to the Arizona Board of Regents, the ASASU president said Wednesday. Chris Cummiskey said the survey, requested by the regents last fall, will be based on recommendations of the 1986 Carnegie report — a national study that addressed university undergraduate problems. According to the study, most universities need to achieve a better balance between teaching and research, provide more advisement, and enrich the quality of campus life. INDIVIDUAL STYLE Iranian Hezbollah, or Party of God, which is believed to hold some other hostages in Lebanon. The sources said the professors never were in the control of Hezbollah, NBC reported. Intelligence sources said the Syrians were seeking a way to release the four without offending Hezbollah or its Iranian backers, according to NBC. Of the 26 foreigners missing in Lebanon, eight are Americans. Cummiskey said ASASU members will meet with each college dean individually and will pass out surveys to ASU students at random. He said ASASU officers still are preparing the survey and hope to begin distribution on Monday. “We want to evaluate the University — from the formal side and informal side,” he said. “We want to know the priorities of the University and how they affect the students. “From there we’ll make recommendations to the board.” He said survey results will be calculated by mid-March. President Jack Pfister said the regents will reserve time during their April meeting for students to present the report. REEBOKS* FOR MEN AND WOMEN. Reeboks®— a nam e synonym ous w ith fine quality in athletic shoes. O ur selection for m en and w om en features the latest styles, m any w ith soft garm ent leather, for the ultim ate in a com fortable fit. Choose from our large assortm ent of aerobic, basketball, court sh oes and others in low, m id o r high-cut designs and experience the functional good looks of Reeboks.® Shown: A . Women's Freestyle leather uppers. The original w om en's aerobic shoe in soft garm ent leather for a rew arding w orkout in com fort and style. In assorted colors. 4 0 .0 0 . B. Women's hi-top Freestyle leather uppers. Perfect for the active w om an w h o dem ands support, comfort, durability and style in an athletic shoe. Choose from assorted colors. 5 3 .0 0 . C. Men's white Ex-O-Fit leather uppers. The finest aerobic and m ulti-purpose fitness sh oes for men. 4 4 .0 0 . A lso available in a high-cut Style. 5 5 .0 0 . D. Men's Basketball 4 6 0 0 . Fine quality leather uppers specially designed w ith high-cut tops to handle the fast paced action of basketball. In an assortm ent of colors. 4 6 .0 0 . E. Men's Workout mid-cut leather uppers. These sporty w h ite shoes are designed to give added ankle support and are perfect for the quick stops and starts in activities like racquetball. 5 5 .0 0 . M e n 's /W o m e n 's A thle tic Shoes BRING THIS COUPON IN AND SAVE 20% ON OURENTIRE STOCK OFMEN’S AND WOMEN’S REEBOK SHOES. 4 DAYS ONLY. fVSU TO ORDER CALI 861-3253 IN PHOENIX; ELSEWHERE IN AZ.. CALL 1-800-352-0703 TOLL FREE. SHOP TODAY IN PHOENIX: 10-9 AT PARK CENTRAL, THOMAS MALL, METROCENTER. SCQTTSOALE. PARADISE VALLEY, FIESTA MALL. WESTRIDGE AND CHRIS-TOWN. IN FLAGSTAFF MALL 10-8. WE WELCOME YOUR DILLARD'S CREDIT CARD. THE AMERICAN EXPRESS® CARO, DINERS CLUB INTERNATIONAL MASTERCARD.® VISA- OR THE VALLEY NATIONAL BANKING CARO AND FIRST INTERSTATE BANK OF ARIZONA'S GOLD BANCARD. Offer ends 3/1/87. I 1 opinion S ite Preti Lack of direction hampers search for excellence It’s calculator time. Let us count thè ways that ASU students are being screwed over. First, let us see how the quality of our education is suffering. The money-making capacity of this University has never been higher. With the influx of dollars coming in, we should be getting a reasonably-priced, quality education. Instead, we’re getting proposed budget cuts and threats of another tuition increase. Thanks, Ev Mecham, but that is not our idea of academic excellence. . Emphasis does need to be placed on classroom learning, but at the same time research serves a valuable function. A national reputation is built on discoveries derived from research. If a professor can bring real-world experiences to his class, the students’ education is enriched. With no funds, there is no research. With tto research, the students are subject to archaic textbook-only instruction. The College of Business seems to be having some problems of its own (like several other colleges here at ASU). They are in jeopardy of losing accreditation due to inadequate staff numbers. & i A . M a r c u s B m o v ic h Columnist If any department needs funding for research and faculty it’s surely the College of Business. The next problem “drives” me crazy: on-campus parking. It seems parking tickets are given out freely for the most frivolous of violations. I’m not going to list all the wide variety of parking offenses, courtesy of the ASU Police, as we have all been “stung” before. But, one amusing situation does pop into mind. Last week, a friend of mine was given an $18 ticket. The “crime” was having-an improperly displayed parking decal. The point I am trying to make so far is that if we want to establish “excellence for a new century” we need direction, a set of priorities. We are at crossroads. We need to make the dream of “academic excellence” a reality or at least stop kidding ourselves any further. Instead of letting Gov. Mecham cut money from the University’s operating and faculty budgets, more students need to let their voices be heard. We need to speak now, or suffer the consequences of an inferior college education. I would suggest the same methodology of speaking up and addressing the inequities in the parking and ticketing situation. However, I feel this would not work. Too many of the parking attendants are caught in the “Miami Vice” syndrome — tickets have become another form of forced parking structure revenue. I knew I was in trouble when the guy giving me a ticket was on a deluxe “Miami Vice” cruiser. While we are on the subject of unexplained stupidity, why do we need the police patroling the campus on horseback. There is a far greater danger of being hurt by a mounted cop “in hot pursuit” of a suspect, then being run over by a skateboarder. In reality, the greatest perversion of all doesn’t hang around Hayden Library exposing himself. It is the student who believes the administration when it says, “Don’t worry. Excellence will come in time. ” A. Marcus Brnovich is a junior majoring in political science. r''*s,sVA'*s" letters Out of context Editor: In the Feb. 18 State Press, you published a story on my final report submitted to the National Science Foundation of a story titled, “Industry-University Technology Transfer in Microelectronics.” Your reporter spent about five minutes with me discussing this 1% year-long project and took some casual notes. He was provided with an eight-page-long executive summary, as well as a 22-page-long article based on this study in order that he Would not have to wade through the 180 plus pages of die full report. I am sorry to say that I find little resemblance whatsoever between the published story and the written and oral information provided to your reporter. As a matter of fact, I am quoted to have said things I never said or ever would have reason to say. Several items are clearly out of context. I feel quite convinced that the reporter does not understand what the study on technology transfer and the underlying issues as they may pertain to ASU and the state of Arizona are all about. I also wonder who writes your headlines. Given the information provided to your .reporter, there is no reason to ever conceive of a headline that reads, “ASU technology studies inadequate, prof says.” The story states that “how to use evolving technology (at ASU) is woefully inadequate.” It is insulting in that I never said or wrote such a thing. The reporter must have read the written information provided as it points out quite clearly and as stated to him verbally that technology transfer was working quite well at ASU, even though there may be some potential problem areas when it comes to incentives, patents and related matters. hr "FATHER, I CAN NOT TELL A LIE... I REALLY JUST DONT In my opinion, the real news is this study is actually how well the technology transfer process seems to work at ASU, not a few actually minor problem areas. These minor problems unfortunately were given an undue overemphasis and are reflected in y o u r e x a g g e ra te d h e a d lin e and misquotations. In my opinion, the State Press owes an apology — if not a retraction — to the faculty, staff and students in the various technology-related disciplines at ASU. It is unfortunate such journalistic blunders do occur. Based oh stories I hear from colleagues, this is not an isolated event, but appears to occur quite frequently with the State Press. One would wish a little more journalistic rigor and professionalism could be expected from student reporters and it would be highly desirable that some of them would not lower themselves to the standards and practices of the National Enquirer. ,R E M E M B E R ! 1' w M ñ IRAN m m Rolf T. Wigland Soviets not only ones guilty Editor: Gassings, maim ings, bombings of innocent civilians*.. . human rights abuses . . . disinformation . . . hidden objectives . . . chemical warfare . . . the quest for military superiority . . . expansionism . . . stretching treaties and agreements to the brink of violation and beyond. A. Marcus Bmovich and Jam es Jarrett accuse the Soviets of engaging in these activités and rightly so. But, reading the list, I am struck by its applicability to activities of the U.S. government as well, particu larly those th at have been u n d e rta k e n d u rin g th e R eag an Administration. Consider the following examples. Gassings. On July 2, 1986, 34 civilians, including 12 children, died when their truck passed over a contra land mine (supplied by the U.S. government), in El Cedro, Nicaragua. The victims are 34 among thousands of innocent civilians who have been maimed or killed by U.S.-supplied contra weapons. Disinformation. On Aug. 25,1986, the Wall Street Journal published a story describing a plan to attack Libya with U.S. bombers. On Oct. 2, the Washington Post unmasked the “plan” as a Reagan Administration campaign of deception designed to intim idate Libyan leader M oammar Kaddafi. Stretching treaties. The R eagan Administration “stretched” and may well have broken the federal law which requires congressional notification of arrangements such as the Iran arm s deals. The point is this. For every Sovietperpetrated injustice, it is possible to cite one perpetrated by the U.S. government that is, to some degree, equivalent. So, who is right and who is wrong? And can we really afford to engage in such dichotomous, ethnocentric thinking? While our leaders threaten and accuse one another, and we debate and disagree about the “issues,” it is incredibly easy to forget the one guaranteed result of oppression and injustice: people suffer. Some lose their homes, some their families. And many, too many, innocent people lose their lives. Our beloved rallying cry, “peace through strength,” seems to me to be a slick euphemism for “peace through violence” (including the violence that could potentially be unleashed with nuclear weaponry). How ironic, and how sad. Can any of us, in good conscience, really justify using violence to “preserve peace? ” Judi Quatrani Graduate student, Speech Pathology --A/K J, •1 7 . s' 0! LETTER POLICY Letters should be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages. Any sub missions not in adherence with letter policy will not bepublished. Letters are subject to editing on the basis of clarity, length or conform ance to newspaper style. Include your full name, class standing and major, or other affiliation with the University, along with your phone number. Requests for anonymity are granted if a reason is given. Send letters to: Letters, State Press, Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tempe, A Z 85287. O r bring them to the newspaper's front desk in the basem ent of Matthews Center. EDITORIAL BOARD Unsigned editorials reflect the views of the editorial board. Individual members of the board write editorials and the board decides on their merit The editorials do not reflect the opinion of the State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: T om acg« AMrMHan „ M AN AGING EDITOR 1 _________ OPINION EDITOR Amy Frischknecht A SST. M AN AGING EDITOR analysis S tate P ro » Thursday, February 96,1987 Page 5 Mecham Polls show support declining am ong Republicans Palumbo said he is surprised that Mecham’s negative rating is only 44 percent. He said the 46 percent who are at least content with the governor’s performance is low compared with other political figures whose favorable ratings are usually about 60 percent. By VICKIE C H A C H E R E State Press Evan Mecham may have the lowest opinion rating among the past four Arizona governors, but the director of a Phoenix-based research organization says that’s no indication that the newly elected governor might find himself recalled by the end of the year. E arl de Berge, research director for the Behavior Research Center, said Mecham’s 44 percent negative rating among Maricopa County voters only indicates that the Republican governor has created a poor image among voters, not that his administration is in danger. “There is no way to make a direct correlation between people’s evaluation of his job performance and their willingness to sign a recall petition,” de Berge said. In a poll released Monday, 25 percent said the governor was doing a “fair” job, while another 21 percent rated Mecham’s performance as “excellent.” But what de Berge says is the troubling result from the polls is Mecham’s negative rating compared to the past three governors. Former Govs. Bruce Babbitt, Raul Castro and Jack Williams had negative evaluations totaling only 15 percent to 18 percent. Mecham apparently has lost the “honeymoon” period of at least a year that those governors had enjoyed, de Berge said. Mecham’s redsion of the Martin Luther King holiday has cost him most of his support since Election Day, de Berge said. A report issued with the poll said Mecham has created the image that he is intolerant toward minorities and people whose ideas, lifestyles and beliefs are different from his own. The Report said the disappointment of those polled were summed up by a Leisure World resident who had supported Mecham in his race against Democrat Carolyn Warner and Independent Bill Schulz. “Evan Mecham seemed like a nice enough fellow. I like what he said about taxes. But now, well, he doesn’t know a thing about compromise or the separation of church and state. I’m sad and I’m sorry I voted for him,” the man said. Mecham had no comment on the poll or his slipping public support. Ron Bellus, Mecham’s press secretary, discounted some of the findings, saying de Berge had worked as a pollster for Warner in the 1986 election. “The governor is on solid ground, ” Bellus said. “Forty-four percent tends to be getting down at the lower range,” he said. “Given the time constraints and everything that has happened, it’s surprisingly low.” But Palumbo said the poll is no indication that Mecham’s administration will continue to anger voters or that the governor will face a serious challenge in six months when a recall drive could be started. “He’s got a long way to go,” Palumbo said. “He needs one or two major legislative victories. “He needs to pull a few hot potatoes out of the fire.” Palumbo said that may be difficult for Mecham, considering strained relations with Republican legislative leadership over the governor’s appointments, 1986-87 budget cuts and next year’s budget proposals. De Berge said Mecham’s “hard-line” approach to government has surprised voters, especially his attempts to cut out fiscal waste in state agencies. “They are hearing all these hard-line messages that don’t relate to reality as they see it,” de Berge said. “All I am saying about Ev Mecham is that he has touched some very sensitive nerves.” Mecham has blasted the media for portraying him in a negative light, and has gone as far as to call the two Phoenix daily newspapers “left wing.” De Berge and Palumbo agreed that media attention may have contributed to Mecham’s poor rating, but both doubt it was biased reporting that turned some voters against Mecham. De Berge denies having an affiliation with the Warner campaign. Dennis Palumbo, an ASU public affairs professor and an expert on public policy, said the poll is sending a message to Mecham, but the governor most likely will discount the findings.. “I see a very close similarity with Ronald Reagan in that he wants to interpret things as he sees them and doesn’t concern himself with what other people think,” Palumbo said. “The press has been very inclined to report everything he is saying because it’s colorful and it’s news,” de Berge said. Mecham most likely will ignore the poll, Palumbo said, just as he has discounted criticisms from minority groups over the King holiday issue, or from university students protesting budget cuts and proposed tuition increases. “I am sure he is getting the message,” Palumbo said. “How he reacts to that is hard to say. “It simply might make him hunker up more.” The conservative odyssey of Matthew Scully By b e n M c C o n S tate Press n ell McGowan the Rat. Reader the Peacenik. McGaw the Activist. All of these indicting titles came from the sharp-tipped quill of former State Press columnist Matthew Scully, now a research aide in Gov. Evan Mecham’s office. Scully left the paper after a year, and hitched up with the fledgling Washington D.C. group, Accuracy in Academia, an arm of the conservative watchdog, Accuracy in Media. After four months with AIA, he was disillusioned. He said the writing styles of the group did not match his. He came back to Phoenix, looking for a newspaper job. In September, longshot gubernatorial candidate Ev Mecham hired him as a researcher. Now, Scully is an aide’s aide in the Mecham administration. He works for Mecham aides Sam Steiger, Ray Russell and Donna Carlson as a researcher and writer. While at the State Press, Scully was part of the “God Squad,” a title allegedly coined by KFYI’s Tom Leykis to describe him and editors Len Munsil and Jay Heiler. As part of the conservative team, Scully focused on criticizing professors he claimed did not differentiate between scholarly propriety ánd political activism in the classroom. The pigeonholed political science professors — Patrick McGowan, Mark Reader and Dickinson McGaw — in turn met with President J. Russell Nelson and called for more faculty input and, some claim, some restraints on the 1983-84 State Press editorial board. The combatants of both sides, easily recalled those turbulent nine months, as if the flames have died down but the heat of the coals lingers. Scully’s most notorious column (April 6, ‘If I were running the political science department, I would take to heart a real love and respect for our country and respect for its institutions.’ — Matthew Scully 1985) described his Psychology 212 rat, McGowan — a veiled reference to Patrick McGowan. “Poor McGowan isn’t articulate enough to argue his points effectively,” Scully wrote. “So he is reduced to showing his disapproval in little acts of protest — much like your typical liberal activist, but less scruffy.” McGowan, the rat, “loafs on the job. ” McGowan, the professor, said the rat column was in poor taste and a prime example of shabby journalism using fallacious arguments. Scully's arguments were ad hominem, McGowan said. They attacked the person holding the belief, rather than the belief itself. In short, it’s like political mudslinging for an extra edge. “Scully picked on the political science department because he thought we should instruct that the U.S. Constitution was the best in the world and was threatened by communism,” McGowan, said. Scully claimed the column was “all in fun,” agreeing the American way is the best way, and should be profoundly taught in all political science classes. “If I were running th e political science department, I would take to heart a real love and resphct for our country and respect for its institutions,” Scully said. “I think there’s a real ingratitude of that by these professors.” Scully’s admiration for the United States is admirable, but his argument goes against the grain of what America is about: the ■freedom to question the practices of government, even if the question casts a foul light on government leaders or calls government practices onto the carpet. Thomas Jefferson, John Adams and George Washington were liberal activists. They were radicals against the hierarchy of Great Britain. Scully argued that freedom is to be preferred over tyranny and “ the great ailment of modern intellectuals is they don’t believe that anything is held true. They say it’s all theory.” McGaw, a 19-year veteran of ASU’s political science department, said Scully’s columns sought to attack whomever he was writing about. “He wasn’t interested in the truth. His device was basically attack and ridicule,” McGaw said. Scully didn’t argue that point as much as he agreed with it. He claimed his columns poked fu n at the professors while attacking their classroom politics. He said the professors were too serious, humorless. The professors didn’t get the joke and consulted lawyers about filing a libel suit. But because they are public figures more than private citizens, their cases were not strong enough. But how much did Scully attack their politics in relation to his punch-on-the-arm kidding? In one particularly biting column against Reader (April 25, 1985), Scully wrote, “Leave aside the fact that what Professor Reader teaches simply isn’t true.” Essentially, Scully left out the text of R eader’s argum ent against nuclear annihilation and focused on the professor as a peace activist. Did Scully’s attacks with the “God Squad” hurt the reputation of the paper and its circulation? Talking to those who were at ASU during Scully’s tenure at the State Press, one hears the paper described as: Ultraconservative. Biased and unbalanced. Editor Munsil, in a State Press interview last semester, admitted to censorship. He argued that editors inevitably have to make subjective value judgments about what constitutes legitimate news, but insisted the editorial page was balanced under his editorship. But the professors interviewed stressed the State Press is stronger now: It is more balanced. More fair. Bruce Mason, professor of political science, said although Scully was “excessively zealous . . . and grinded personal axes, ’’ he faulted the professors for their reactions. “I would have ignored (Scully) or made fun of him,” Mason said. “Their reaction was excessive.” With Scully working for Mecham, McGaw said he fears future Scully zeal from the governor’s office. “A staff position in the governor’s office is more powerful than most state legislators,” McGaw said. “If you were shaping the thoughts and words of the governor, that’s pretty powerful. ’’ Page 6 Slate Presi Thursday, February 26,1987 Weather service says bad weather to continue By M IKE B U R G E SS State Press This winter’s heaviest storm has left two inches of rain in the Valley and closed northbound lanes of Mill Avenue, and the rain is expected to continue today. Paul Crimmins, U.S. Weather Service meteorological technician, said sunny weather should return to the Valley by Saturday, but partly cloudy skies and unusually cold weather will continue. He said 1.46 inches of rain fell Tuesday and snow fell in Cavecreek and Carefree areas. Tempe police spokesman Roger Clay said northbound Mill Avenue has been closed and traffic has been rerouted to the Mill Avenue Bridge. Clay said the closure will cause some delays in getting to the downtown Tempe area. He also said police are seeing an increased number of “fender benders” and stranded motorists. There have been 58 accidents in the past two days, most without injuries, police said. Richard Landreth, assistant director of Parking and Transit, said the storm caused between two and three inches of flooding in campus parking structures. “We had some minor flooding, but it was more of an inconvienance than damage,” he said. “We got lucky this time.” Landreth also said there was minor street flooding on McAllister Avenue and Apache Boulevard. ASU Physical Plant officials said it would take two or three days to estimate damage to campus buildings caused by the storm. Andy Mrozinaki/Stata Prat* Traffic d o g g e d the streets of Tem pe as water rushed over curbs during heavy rains, closing one lane of Rural R oad northbound Wednesday. Mill Avenue northbound was also d o sed due to heavy flooding under the bridge. A W O RD FR O M IH É M M m i A B O U T MILLER U T E THERE’S ONLYONE LITEBEER ♦ TRANSLATION: A SUPERBLY BREWED, FINE TASTING PILSNER BEER. 0» m State Press Thursday, February 86,1987 Page 7 A SU graduate helps high school students learn By ALISA W ABNIK State Press ASU graduate Jam es R. Chavez said he is “almost a school within a school” a t Gilbert High School, where he teaches all classes in a re-entry and dropout prevention program he designed in January 1982. The Personally Accelerated Computerized Education program, or PACE, provides individually-paced, hands-on instruction to students having trouble in high school. Chavez said computers and simplified texts are the main tools of the program. “The computers are far more patient than we teachers sometimes are,” he said. “The computer can become a friend.” He said PACE began in March 1982 with five students and three subjects, but 24 subjects are taught to 30 students this year. Chavez said students are recruited or referred to the program on the basis of PACE eligibility criteria, but their parents must also be committed to their children’s success. “This (home support system) is a real key to the success of our system,” he said. “We get everybody going to acknowledge the problems and begin working on forgetting them.” After initial home meetings with students’ families to establish this support, students are evaluated by a PACE selection committee. Chavez said only students who are unanimously approved are accepted to prevent PACE from becoming a “dumping ground.” But once students are chosen, Chavez said he tries to discourage them. “I’ve been told that’s a little strange,” he said. First, Chavez said he tells students about the three or four days they will spend taking PACE pre-tests, hoping this will sort out students who don’t want to work. “The real committed ones are the ones who survive the testing,” he said. Chavez said he then tells the students that if they are caught on campus after school hours, he will have them arrested for trespassing. He said their reactions indicate how they respond to authority. Chavez said students who stick with the program still face strict procedures. Each PACE student must complete all computer assignments without error and all written work with a maximum 10 percent error margin. In addition, students who earn a C minus grade or below at the end of a term are placed on academic probation for three to .Andy Mrozlnskl/State Press P A C E coordinator James Chavez works with Susie Quintero, 17, on a computer project at Gilbert High School Wednesday morning. Chavez started thé Personally Accelerated Computerized Education program tor kids who have trouble making It through school. to get off probation. “I’m very hard grade-wise,” Chavez said, because “no challenges were ever thrown at them that they were willing to accept.” He said students meet his expectations when he sets his standards high. But students do get help meeting Chavez’s expectations. Chavez is at school from about 6:30 a.m. until after midnight without a break. “I’m always there,” he said. “It’s more than just being a teacher.” Chavez said the success rate of the PACE) program is high. After one semester, 80 percent to 90 percent of his students re-enter at least one regular class. But about 30 percent of the students never finish the program. Chavez said some students change schools, while others are kicked out of the program for failing to follow Chavez’s basic ground rules, such as trust and honesty. “I can put my wallet on the podium and walk out and come back and it’s still there,” he said. “It’s one thing we really build is that honesty figure. . . A little thing like that gets the ball rolling.” If students don’t finish the PACE program or are not accepted, Chavez said he tries to help by providing GED materials or referring them to other programs. State Pret« Thursday, February 26,1987 N I J u st G F or H T T he C Fun L U Of B It! IN CONJUNCTION WITH O % r CA AT L EP INV ID A R S PRESENTS SURPRIZES 2nd ANNUAL CALENDAR CONTE ONE CALENDAR FOR WOME& ONE CALENDAR FOR MEN! STARTS THURSDAY LOO K FOR THESE G R E A T DRINK SPECIALS! l^ tiE N T S WINE, W ELL & DRAFTS! p L p p T T S LONG ISLAND ICE TEAS! $1.25 CO RO NA’S! REGISTER TODAY! 19 E. A P A C H E E M P E 9 6 BLVD. A R I Z O N A 6 - 7 7 7 0 State Press Page 9 Thursday, February 26,1987 Prof publishes book on religion, terrorism BLOOM COUNTY b y B erk e B re a th e d ir s / w m ie r / a o & r , p h p ... w hy, ho w very THEY'RE 60tN& FRONOCATNE! lOfiRMOVT / M B A S I'U , fi€ TWENTY 4 ^ * ) 4 YEARS FROM ‘ By KEITH O LBR IC H T State Press An ASU professor of religious studies has completed a book for the “religiously illiterate” American public that focuses on terrorists who operate in the name of religion. Professor Richard Wentz, author of “Why Do People Do Bad Things in the Name of Religion,” said his book provides an academic alternative to asking religious questions of clergymen and church officials. “I wanted to get the study of religion into the marketplace,” he said, because most Americans consider themselves religious experts but actually know very little. He said the book, which will be available this spring, is written for the general public, not just for scholars or the religious. Wentz said too often people question uninformed clergymen and church officials about religious-related violence and “holy war.” “The scholar of religion has a contribution to make to this kind of discussion,” he said, and can offer more insight. Wentz said terrorism has been the key topic for recent religious discussions. But he said religious-related violence has existed forever and is ignited by humans, not specific religions. “People like to point to someone,” he said. “Recently, Islam and Muslims have been under fire. “One can’t blame Islam at all times for violent acts done by Muslims, just like one cannot blame all of Christianity for Northern Ireland’s conflicts between Protestantism and Catholicism. “People tend to come to the conclusion that religion is at fault.” Wentz said people will not understand violent acts until they understand violent tendencies within themselves. “Every religion emerged because someone felt that they found an answer to the human inclination to do something we know we shouldn’t do,” he said. “All human beings are created of violence.” Wentz said too many people confuse true “holy w ar” with unrelated terrorist acts. “True holy war only occurs when more injustices are done without the war,” he said. He said those who take credit for terrorist acts are not true followers of the Islamic religion and therefore are not participating in holy war. W T YOU'LL THINKOF IM TERRffiCY SOMETHING, ANXIOUS. I PONT SON. KNOWWHAT / I I I ASK H IM . '7 P WHAT WOVLP YO U ASK A 3 0 -HEAR-O LP j T P ASK HIAI IF YOURS STILL LOOPY A S A COON. MET ® £j|/|, NOW. Ivory Towers "rn P s o by Michael Ritter "ESSENTIAL ROAD-TRIPPARA- tSS PHERNAUANASACQUIRED... th e fu s t le g o f th e MAZATIANSPRINGBREAKBEGINS WAN THE m oN LE DRH/E TO THE ÛCWWGE tosir in \ m/CUNBORDER." *(fORTHEsam a CONSCIOUS,THE PRIVERWILLPRINK ONUPALLHRTURpL SUGARFREE PRPffVR NECTOR.) VP THE BACK? . Shoe by Jeff MacNelly n rS A N E te T O L v b tr m iw M EkT’l'LÊ. km . “ IN V O LV E M E N T ” — it strengthens you — | ( A S A S U needs volunteers in the follow ing areas: { Department: Duties Needed: |B ike C o -o p Help out increased workload & help put on workshops planned for spring. | B ook Exchange |E lectio n s Com m ittee l Man the polling booths on election days. ( Help with posters. l Safety Escort Service Escorts, dispatchers. |Tenants/Com m uters Navaho Room M em orial Union MEET WITH THE EXPERTS •NELSON MITCHELL S a lt R iv e r P r o je c t OKATHLEEN BOYD ( G raduate Student | A sso ciatio n | Student C o u n c il & | C onsultation A d vo ca cy j Com m ittee R E L A T IO N S Tuesday, M arch 3 1:30-3=30 p.m. Recording information from potential buyers & sellers. •Proofreading of The Course Source on March 2-5. •Delivery of The Course Source on March 26. FCEP | | J o h n G a r d in e r 's T e n n i s R a n c h o n c a m e l b a c k OFRANCINE HARDAWAY F r a n c in e H a r d a w a y , In c . •HOWARD GREENLEE Membership drive. •General office work on Tues. & Thurs. 10:30-11:30 a.m. •Deliver flyers in area apartments & classrooms. •Put up posters on campus for residence info. ( •DR. MARY-LOU GALICIAN J o u r n a lis m & T e le c o m m u n ic a tio n , A S U | Call 965-3161 Located on the 2nd floo r of the MU, Room 208 & see the D irector of Volunteer Services. M e s a c o m m u n i t y C o lle g e ( ‘ •Cost: $3 in advance $5 a t th e d o o r Presented by: contact for Adult Re-Entry 965-6547 S t u d e n t L ife , Lower Level, Memorial union State Erti« Public television host brings program to Phoenix By b e n M c C o n S tate Press n ell Bob Vila, host of public television’s “This Old House,” drinks a lot of coffee like most journalists, and graciously poured himself and his visitor a cupful. Vila’s popular 8-year-old show, which is a layman’s guide to house remodeling, has been documenting the renovation of a Phoenix home since January. The first of the six-part Phoenix series airs tonight at 7:30 on KAET/Channel 8. A journalism major from the University of Florida, Vila probably has one or two cups of coffee before leaving for work at his Boston-based show. The program has brought him here to renovate the Encanto-neighborhood home of Tom and Ellen Sawyer. The house is listed on the National Register of Historical Places. Then, figure on two or three cupfuls to be gulped down while he discusses the day’s filming schedule with director Russell Morash, who envisioned the show nearly a decade ago while remodeling his 1851 Lexington farmhouse. Morash, a PBS producer and director, needed a host for his show idea and, from the article, knew Vila was exactly the friendly, ordinary host the show required. “I think there’s no reason why ordinariness can’t be equated with excellence,” Vila said, sipping on a hot cup of Mr. Coffee-brewed Folgers. “It’s part of the success of the show.” “This Old House” is a PBS fixture with a weekly national viewing audience of 8 million. KAET spokeswoman Lucia Madrid said at least 54,000 Phoenicians watch Vila’s weekly affable and informative tour. To those who have never seen the show, it’s like peeking into homes of “Lifestyles of the Middle Class and Ordinary.” During detailed filming, which sometimes requires 14 takes per shot and one or two coffee breaks, Vila said the show accumulates its share of material for “Bloopers and Practical Jokes.” “One time, not too long ago, on this other project we’re working on, I was standing at the top of these stairs with a (model home) manager saying how safe these stairs were,” he said, hinting at the blooper . “No sooner had I said that, and the manager tumbles down the stairs. “So we did it again, and I said the same thing, that this was a nice, seemingly safe staircase. Then, boom, the guy falls down the stairs again. Vila has not risked mortal injury on the show but said he feared for his life during his first newspaper job. He was appointed Germany bureau chief for a Florida tabloid in the early 1970s but quit almost a month later. “I spent three weeks with a reporter (I was replacing),” he said. “He carried a gun, but I did not want to carry a gun, be an investigative reporter and maybe get killed. ” Vila said he was not drafted to Vietnam but his “ tough years” in Germany didn’t prevent him from seeing a “horrible” American army. All that is behind Vila now. He has a wife and three kids that he said demand quality parent time. (A crossbow project with his 10-year-old son, that should have been completed in an afternoon, has taken more than three weeks, he said.) Vila’s reputation as a “handyman” even applies to sewing. He showed off a shirt button he had sewn on that morning. Toward the end of the interview, Vila’s neighborly friendliness clearly was cooling. The crew was discussing the day’s work, being hampered by the incessant rain, and he was eager to work. With another cup of coffee in hand before 9 a.m., maybe. Vila gets too much caffeine. Bob Vila, the host of public telovialon’s “T his O ld House,” has been documenting the renovation of a Phoenix home since January. "WEEKEND SPECIAL C H IC K E N B U Y S A N D W IC H 1 G E T T H E 2 N D V2 P R IC E C H IC K E N P L A T E S WOLFF SPRING BREAK SPECIALS ^ 50
SUNDAY 12-8
Limit one per customer. Expires 3-31-87.
TWILIGHT SHOW S2.50
N o m in a te d F b r 8 A c a d e m y A w a rd s
w
Reg. V4 C hicken $ 3 .7 5
lh C hicken $ 4 .7 5
C o m e lb o c k Bd west o l Scons Bd. /
CO M IN G SO O N
•E L A M O R B R U J O
m a r e ® \ d o w n si
e Cm s t r e e t 3 I TWISTED
'o n
C O M IN G S O O N
D U ET FO R O N E -
UooiI Se.ni A».nl,ililt
Is' All Pciloinwncn!
C o u n cil m e e tin g T h u rsd a y , F e b ru a ry 26 ,1987
5:30 p.m . N ursin g B u ild in g Room 101
State Press
Page 11
Thursday, February 26,1987
SALE STARTS:
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 7AM-10PM
s
H r *
100%
C O T T O N
D EN IM
&
TW ILL
JE A N S
(Juniors 5-13) VALUES $30-35
10-BUTTON RAMIE/COTTON
SWEATERS (S-M-L) VALUE $42
NOW
FORENZA
O ir n iA C K
COTTON ft RAYON SKIRTS
(Misses 6-14) VALUES $32-44
WÎ
S u xi
D RAW STRIN G W A IST
SH O RTS (S-M-L) VALUE $18
76” . 9 "
tz m m *
RELATED ACTIVE
SEPARATES (S-M-L) VALUES
$13-20
THRU SATURDAY ONLY!
$1199
I I
PALMETTO'S*
100% COTTON
GARMENTWASHED PANTS
(Juniors 5-13) VALUES $28-34
THRU SATURDAY ONLY!
$ 0 0 9 9 PEABODY
-Ä i M
HOUSE*
FULLY-LINED
* °™ ERS
LINEN-LOOK SUITS
(Junior & Misses 5-14) VALUES $90-110
F A S H IO N G A L
EVERYDAY SAVINGS OF UP TO 70% ON FIRST QUALITY NAME BRAND FASHIONS FOR JUNIORS & MISSES
PHOENIX 19th Ave & Thunderbird, 866-1690; 35th Ave. & Northern, 841-2951; 7th Ave. & Bethany Home, 265-4760; 28th St. 8 Indian School, 955-7804; 32nd & s I»«. 8672964; TEMPE %mpe East Shp. Ctr,
PHOEN ^SMi^A Bra^Th 966-4987; MESA Fiesta Village Shp. Ctr, (Alma School & Southern) 835-9089; SCOTTSDALE McDowell Plaza, 7750 E. McDowell, 949-8067. HOURS. NFFpM0am-9pm;
Sat 9 30am-7pm; Sun, 12noon-5pm. Advertised styles representative of stock— occasionally, specific styles may not be available. Layawaytexchange. ¿ 2 0
LIMITED TIME SPECIALS AVAILABLE WHILE QUANTITIES LAST.
E Szl
,.,J
Page 12
Slate Pies»
Thursday, February 26,1987
Free-lance sexologist declares National O rgasm W eek
By KER R Y FE H R
State Press
partly to his Swedish grandparents. But he said he now
faces a puritanical mentality because he lives in
M assachusetts.
“There’s a fear of pleasure and intimacy,” he said. “I
have never understood the taboo on pleasure in this
society. It puts a block between people caring for and
loving each other. ”
Unlike Dr. Ruth Westheimer, who is well-known for
her talk show and “promotes chastity and celibacy,”
Libby said he promotes open relationships and rejects
monogamy.
When Roger Libby’s parents told him to pursue a
career in whatever interested him most, they had no
idea he would choose sex.
Libby, a free-lance sexologist and doctor of sociology,
has declared the first week of spring, March 21-28,
National Orgasm Week. He suggests college students
celebrate the week with a fantasy ball during which
students could dress up as their favorite fantasy.
A former sociology professor at the University of
Massachusetts, Libby was denied tenure because of his
liberal viewpoints on sex.
“They said I was too liberal,” he said. “I got canned
about the time (Accuracy in Academia, the conservative
watchdog group) came into power.”
Libby filed a $165,000 suit against the university and
won an undisclosed amount, which he described as
small, last summer .
As a traveling college campus lecturer, Libby, 44, said
his 5-foot-4 stuffed frog, Boxanne Ribbit, has made him a
hit with students.
Foxy Roxy, as Libby affectionately calls his
occasional dance partner, was created last August by a
soft-sculpture artist.
“She’s a liberated, lusty frog who calls her own
shots,” he said. “ (Audiences) can identify with frogs.”
Libby said Roxy was created because women were
consistently giving him “horny toad” gifts, including a
green G-string, a frog with an erection and a phone,
shaped as a frog, that ribbits instead of ringing.
“ I’m an impulsive guy, and I ’m,into humor,” he said.
“You can’t take Roxy seriously. She’s a symbol.”
Libby lectures at college campuses across the nation
for $2,100, plus expenses.
“At a real conservative school, the faculty and staff
are shocked,” he said. “So I try to tailor the message. I
usually meet with the student leaders before speaking to
feel them out.”
Libby attributes his liberal philosophies about sex
“For some people, (multiple sex partners) suits
them,” he said.
“I believe in establishing an identity of your own. The
whole couple front needs to be taken apart. ’’
Libby does stress the importance of safe-sex
techniques, including contraceptives, which he said
makes sexual freedom easier.
But Libby isn’t always flippant about sex.
He was the director of the Institute for Research on
Sexual Behavior and Sex Roles at the University of
Massachusetts-Amherst. He is the founder of the journal
Alternative Lifestyles and co-author of the book “Sexual
Choices.”
Libby, who is divorced, said he was too young — 26 —
when he married his wife. He suggests men wait until
they are 28 years old and women until they are 26.
“That way, they’ll know themselves better,” he said.
Libby said people place too much emphasis on
romance and falling in love.
“We ought-to take marriage and people more
seriously,” he said.. “There needs to be an emphasis on
friendship.”
Libby said he would like to conduct a pre-sex survey
with Teri Garr if he ever gets on the “David Letterman
Show.”
He said he would ask Garr, “What positions can you
choreograph without first obtaining special permission
of your chiropractor?
‘T see humor as a way to relax people, ” Libby said.
Or. Roger Libby, a free-lance sexologist and college cam pus lecturer,
frollcks with his Solt-sculpture frog, Foxy Roxy. Libby has declared March
21-28 National Orgasm Week.
Due to the inconvenience of the construction,
we will take an additional 10% off.
[
w
I Ü I1
Applications are now being accepted
for the U niversity of Pittsburghsponsored Sem ester at Sea.
Each fall or spring 100-day odysse
aboard the A m erican-built S.S. Univers
literally offers you the world.
You can earn 12-15 transferable units
from your choice of more than 50 lower and
upper division courses, w hile calling upon
places as culturally diverse as Japan, H ong Konj
India,Turkey, the Soviet U nion, Yugoslavia
and Spain.
y
It is a learning adventure designed to
transform students of every color, race and
creed info true citizens and scholars of
the world.
FINE JEWELRY
DIAMONDS DIAMONDS DIAMONDS
♦
MOST SIZES!
+ M O S T SHAPES!
^ V A R IE T Y OF
QUALITIES!
Fbr full information, including a catalog and application,
call 1-800-854-0195. Or w rite Semester at Sea,
Institute for Shipboard Education,
University o f Pittsburgh,
2E Forbes Quadrangle,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
15260.
A "OUR ULTIMATE GUARANTEE” OF LOWEST
PRICES FOR COMPARABLE QUAUTY A R B VALUE
ON EVERY PURCHASE)
" ' V y
V
♦
T hen prepare for the
learning adventure of
your life.
LONDON GOLD SPY SAYS: “ IF YOU DIDN'T
BUY FROM US, YOU PAID TOO MUCH!”
the
936 w. Camelback
PHOENIX
N.W. PHOENIX 4925 W. Bell Rd.
west of McDonald's Camelback village Square
51st Ave &Bèli
Bell Tower village
TEMPE
2 / / ”7 0 8 0
SLIDE SHOWS/INFORMATION MEETINGS
8 4 3 - 2 2 9 3
1814 E. Southern
Southern at McClintock Behind Jewelry Exchange
8 2 0 -3 9 0 9
8320 N. Hayden Rd.
Mercado Del lago Shopping certpr
9 9 1 - 4 8 1 4
WED., FEB. 25 • 7 P.M. • MU 217
THURS., FEB. 26 • 3 P.M. • MU 217
INFORMATIONTABLEONCADYMALL 10A.M.-2 P.M.
.
Stete Press
Page 13
Thursday, February 26,1987
Mecham forms Suicide Prevention Week
to educate Arizona of adolescent deaths
By JU D IEG A ILLA R D
State Press
Gov. Evan Mecham has declared Feb. 23-27 Suicide
Prevention Week in an effort to educate Arizonans about the
large number of adolescent suicides in the state.
Recent statistics from the Arizona Department of Health
and Human services set Arizona’s adolescent suicide rate at
70 percent higher than the national average — an increase of
15 percent since 1985.
But ASU student suicide numbers have decreased since
1984, according to statistics from the Office of Residence
Life.
One suicide has been reported in the 1986-87 school year.
Four students took their own lives in 1984-85, and one student
committed suicide in 1985-86.
Dr. M. Dudley Weems, psychiatrist at the Student Health
Center, said, “Suicide is a terrible problem in the sense that
it is the leading cause of death among adolescents. ”
“There is a lot of social pressure that make the suicide
statistics lower than the actual rate,” he said.
Weems said suicides are not always called suicides for
legal and family reasons even when authorities are sure the
death was intentional.
Official national reports of death rates for adolescents
typically cover ages 15 to 24, according to statistics from the
Arizona Department of Health Services.
Adolescent suicide was declared a national epidemic in the
1980s. Arizona ranked sixth nationally in adolescent suicides
in 1983.
But Weems said the adolescent suicide age range should be
broken down into two categories: the teenage years, 15 to 19,
and the young adult years, 20 to 24.
“The years show a change in attitudes and growing,” he
said.
The Arizona Department of Health Services said teen
agers face major developmental changes in their lives, such
as independence, finding out who they are, and coping with
sexuality.
Young adults are faced with developing interpersonal
relationships, following career goals and assuming roles of
spouses and parents..
Factors that may add to the probability of adolescent
suicide include alcohol and drug use, psychological illness,
depression, loss of a parent, social outcasting and physical
illness.
“Adolescent Suicide: Assessment and Intervention,” a
training seminar for professional counselors and school
officials from throughout the state will be tomorrow at the
Camelback Inn, 5402 E . Lincoln Drive, Scottsdale.
The seminar will feature experts in the field of adolescent
suicide prevention.
A N ig h t o f C o m e d y
With
JERRY SEINFELD
DENNIS MILLER
BILL MAHER
You’ve seen them o n ...
FAMILY PLANNING
INSTITUTE
TEM PE:
2525 S. Rural *4
P H O E N IX :
9100 N. 2nd St.
968-7471
997-7493
T H E LOVE LINE
Want some romance & excitement!
The easiest & most exciting way
to meet someone new.
•A ll new ads each
tim e you caU.
•Free record your
own ad after
listening to others.
•CaU anytime
24 hours.
1-976-6000
the Tonight Show, Late
Night With David Letterman,
Benson...
Saturday N ight Live, Late
Night With David
Letterm an...
Steve A llen’s Music Room,
Tonight Show, and in the
movie, D.C. Cab.
Monday, March 2 «8 p.m.
Gammage Center
Spend a laugh-filled evening with three very funny stand-up
comedians when Gammage presents a night of comedy that will
leave you laughing for a long, long time!
55« per minute
Tickets are $12.50 and $10.50 and are on sale
at the Gammage and Dillard’s Box Offices.
Irvformation/Order By Phone: 965-3434
F alling in L o v e . . .
J u st a p h o n e c a ll aw ay
P • A • L • M
• S
\C ® y
95.5FM -5 5 A M
Page 14
State P i» «
Thursday, February 96,1987
PF
Organizations direct students
toward available financial aid
I I 843-45Q3
nortSBLPQAQ_> |
l if t
1.00.3:1
naw n
7:00.9:00
PLATOON AD
11:45,2:15,4:45,7:15,9:45
1 1ndefinite
num ber
4 B a ckbo n e
9 R ecede
12 Native m etal
13 Singing voice
14 T yp e o f c ro ss
15 Clim bing palm
17 O n e w ho shirks
duty
19 En cou rage
21 S ym bo l for tin
22 Lean
25 C o ver
27 Sharpen
31 S len der shoot
32 Argum ents in
writing
34 A cco rd in g to
35 By way of
36 Parcel of land
37 A ncient R om an '
weight
38
41
42
43
44
45
47
49
53
57
58
60
61
62
63
Fo rced delay
Halil
Verve
S h a d e tree
W inter
vehicle
Article
Anim ation
Posted
A nn ou n cem e
Lubricate
D eep sleep
B eam
Inquire
Plague
Fem ale sheep
■ O'«D C m
aMlErS AHA T 102P
l g - J i | 0UTHME0US
miTIlSMIHFORTORE
CMTII«|R
inJ
fW tA
^ BJ5-WU4 wes Y s OUTHERN J
PLATOON |R|
k 1200.2:30,500.7:30.10:00
MIDNIGHT
SHOWS
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
DOW N
1 1n honor of
2 Period of time
3 Dam p
4 Pierce
5 Enter into
6 Surrounded by
7 Negative
8
9
10
11
Tran sgresses
G reek letter
Prohibit
However
STAR TREK |P8|
11:45.2:15.4:45,7:30.10:00
OVER THE TOT(PS)
100.3:10.5:20.7:30.9:40
OEABTHNE STORY |A|
1:45.3:45.5:45.7:45.9:45
OVER TRE TOP (PB
12:30.2:45.5:00.7:30.9:45
s V
_j_ o
H
i 3
3. a
1
i V
1 EE y
NM, 0 i
8m
V
V y
i my 0
S EBE
16 M ake into
leather
18 Insufficiently
adapted
20 Pedal digit
22 Barter
23 Hostelry
24 T h e sam e: Latin
26 C ream -colored
Arabian horses
28
29
30
32
33
35
39
40
41
44
46
48
49
50
51
52
54
55
56
59
Exists
Depart
Ancient chariot
Metal
M easu re of
weight
O pen to bribery
Sym bol for
tantalum
S ick
Indian m ulberry
Deposit
B ird 's hom e
G o lf cry
Extinct flightless
bird
Three-toed
sloths
Kind
Fem ale deer
A nger
C ry of crow
Organ of sight
Parent: colloq.
0EA0TIME ST0RT |R|
1:15,3:15.5:15.7:15.9:15
HOURS
Mon.-Thurs. 4-12
Friday 4-1
Saturday 12-1
Sunday 12-12
FAST FREE DELIVERY (Limited fre e Delivery Area) $4.95 M inim um Food Order
804 South Ash, Tempe (2 blocks West of M ill Avenue, south of University)
I
9 6 6 -1 0 0 3 o r 9 6 6 -4 2 9 2
Ls5T5™"s"T5
SAVE!
COUPON
(ktdudM eholea of up to 4 topping«)
I
SMALL
MEDIUM
I
• 5 .5 0
* 6 .5 0
LARGE
* 7 .5 0 I
PLUS TAX
Ai Wees tuhfsct is ChengsWhhout Notice
O N L Y * 6 . 5 0 p»
i E
DEATH SEF0RE DISHONOR(R)
12:15.2:30,4:45.700.9:15
Papa Jay’s
Pizza
tu
(•Mhthiscoupon)
AMPrlceeSuhjocttoChangeWNhoul Notice
L A R Q ^ C S ä m b o i!
a
S
SAVE!
i]
2 litres of Pepsi |
I
a
*»•*«.—w.w e
"
2-MEATBALL OR SAUSAGE SUBS I ^
w/ciimm
|
2-24 OZ. PEPSIS
S
S ■ I
3 h lT
N□
NV
Nj l l
12:30,2:45,5:00,700.9:45
DEATH BEFORE DISHONOR |S|
12:30.2:45.500.7:15,9:30
HOOKERS IPO)
1200.2:20.4:40.7:00.9:30
2
larg e"
(Mon.-Ffl. btaw—n 10 p.m. a 12 p.m.) | A U C I T C U
B E !E 3 S V 3
A0 B
0 O dO
3 {0U\ 1. 0
E
3 à J_ 2
a 3. 2 S H 2 2
3 A V
N O 12
J. O 2
V
S V
sj s± 1V 3 y
3 1 1à
dG J
NB
13
1N V ny i
N
nV 1 y O N 3
8 a 3 3 N 1d
eBEBuEEBm E
I 249-2943 57C7NQ19THAVE „
OUTRAGEOUS |R|
1:45,3:45.5:45.7:46.9:45
*3
« M B «1 usa m a 1130445. «15
THE WiaOR (PS-13Ï2 00,7:30
ITM TREK fPt)
11:45.2:15.4:45.7:15.10:00
CROCODILE DUNDEE |PS|
L 12:45.300. 5:15. 7:30.9:45
/
H
CMCQONi OUNOEE IPO-131
too. 300,500.7:00.8:00
OMTH BEFORE DISH0H0R |R|
12:30,2:45.5:30,7:45.10:00
1
ATSO L0NGM0RE
6 SUPERSTITION
j
RMN MTS IPS
1150.1:30.3:30,530.7:45.10:00
HMHM RR01ER MOTERS (PS-13)
11:45 M S. 4:45 7:15 9:45
OUTIAOEOUS FORTORE (RJ
1:15.3:155:15.7:150:15
0EA0T1ME STORY (I
12:30,2:15.4:00.6 0.8.00.10:00
IT M T K K im
12.00,2:15,400.7:00,900
00
vonssa, j
STAR TREK IPH123X1.500.10:00
MMM9M WIR00W |R| 2:30.7:30
H00SIESS
12:00,2:15.430.7:00. 930
F "
SUPERSTITION 0 1
FROM TRE RIP (P9-Tl)
12:15.2:30.4:45.7:00.9:15
•OOOVnFElAI
12:30.2:45.590.7:30.9:45
'" u i E l I S T s T i i w " J
ACROSS
. 829-0344
1:15, Ì7IS. 5:15.7:159:15
The Puzzle
a r g a in p r ic
ÉB31TJTF(artïllBfS\
ByAAR YN KEM P
State Pres«
‘Practically all students
Despite federal cuts in student aid, ASU
undergraduate and graduate students can
can, and do, qualify
still apply for millions worth of unused
financial aid still available from private
for student aid, regardless
s o u rc e s , a s c h o la rs h ip re s o u rc e
o f academic achievement
representative said.
Rick Sheridan, of the Boston-based Great
or financial need.’
Potentials Resource Center, said over $3
— Ann Hemphill
billion in private grants and scholarships
was offered last year, and $145 million of it
went unused.
T h ese
s c h o la rs h ip s
are
o ften
student aid sources.
unpublicized, and students are usually not
“Practically all students can, and do,
aware of them, Sheridan said.
qualify for student aid, regardless of
“The majority of these are not based upon
academic achievement or financial need,”
financial need or even academic ability,” he .she said.
said. “Over 100,000 sources of aid are
Hemphill added that students’ real
offered through foundations, professional
problem is locating the aid.
associations, churches, labor unions,,
“That’s why over $100 million in student
companies, etc.”
aid goes unclaimed each year,” she said.
But he said most of these private
“ Most people, including guidance
scholarships have unique “qualifiers” that
counselors, just don’t know where to find the
pertain to a particular field of study,
geographic location,’ religion, parente’ thousands of grants, scholarships and
aw ards—many of which are free—that are
employment or hobby.
lost each year.”
Sheridan said the Great Potentials
Resource Center has developed a computer
Hemphill’s service guarantees to find any
system to link students with private
student a minimum of five (and as many as
scholarships, grants, loans and awards for
25) student aid sources based on
which they could qualify.
information the student supplies on a data
“The computerized search is able to sort
form.
through all erf this,” he said.
She said the service, which costs $39,
Students must complete an application
matches students and
specific aid
profile to be put on the computer list, he
opportunities for which the student
said.
qualifies.
Applications can be obtained by writing
Great Potentials Resource Center, Box 397,
Within three to four weeks, the student
Lawrence, KS 66044.
receives a computer readout of the
A $35 processing fee is required when the
matching sources, complete with addresses,
profile is completed, Sheridan said, but the
contacts and requirements, Hemphill said.
Center guarantees sources or the money
If the minimum five sources are not
will be fully refunded.
found, Hemphill will refund the required fee
College freshmen and sophomores are
and give the student other sources at no
eligible for another nationwide scholarship
charge.
matching service based in Boston.
Ann Hemphill, vice president of Student
Students can call SAF’s toll-free number,
Aid Finders, said her organization has
1-800-AID-FUND, to receive more
computer access to more than $4 billion in information.
"b
ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 P.M. MON. THRU FBI.
SAT- SUN. * HOLIDAYS FIRST SHOW ONLY
ame-**".....
" " |
D I7 7 A C
■ 1!
2-24 OZ. P EPS«
A8PvtceeSuhfcl toChengsWfwl NoSce
(Mon.-Frl. b«4w»»n 0 p.m. 1 8 p.m.)
2-LASAGNA DINNERS
2-SALADS • 2-24 OZ. PEPSIS
O N L Y < 8 .9 5 S u
(Meatballs Additional)
Prices Subset toChengs Without Notice
R fl O F F
■
N* I ■W W
|
ONLY*11.00* Pb.n« ■s
(with this oouponl ’ O n R tg ulsr. not SteShan Styls
DINNER SPECIAL
-
I
Vw I
ANY LARGE
Sicilian Stylo Pizza*
Xtra TMofc Crust waoMhoOM
(whhMs coupon)
Al Prtcos Subject toChongs Without NoMos
1
State Presi
Thursday, February g 6 ,1987
Page 15
By The A ssociated Press
Additional smoking bans
turned down for airlines
WASHINGTON — The Transportation Department, not
swayed by a National Academy of Sciences study, has
decided against imposing additional curbs on smoking
aboard airliners, department sources said Wednesday.
Instead, the department plans to call for further studies
on the health effects of drifting tobacco smoke in aircraft
cabins, saying the conclusions drawn after an 18-month
study by the National Academy of Sciences are
unconvincing.
The academy’s National Research Council, in a report
released last August, concluded that tobacco smoke
aboard airliners posed “a clear health risk” and that
smoking on domestic commercial flights should be
banned by the government.
The study had been requested by Congress as part of an
overall examination of air quality in crowded aircraft
cabiiis.
The Transportation Department, which has jurisdiction
over smoking regulations in the airline industry, is
expected to send its formal response to the academy’s
study to Congress within the next few days, officials said,
declining to comment on what the document will say.
Sources familiar with the DOT report said, however,
that it rules out any new restrictions on smoking aboard
airliners until further studies can be conducted.
Warrant issued
for archbishop
in bank dealing
By The A ssociated Press
MILAN, Italy — An arrest
warrant has been issued for
Archbishop Paul Marcinkus,
the American who heads the
Vatican bank, in connection
with Italy’s worst financial
scandal since World War II,
authorities said Wednesday.
The 1982 collapse of Banco
Ambrosiano has cost the
Vatican $250 million.
A judge investigating the
Ambrosiano case told The
A sso c ia te d P r e s s th e
warrant charges Marcinkus,
who also has served as
bodyguard for Pope John
Paid II, a s “an accessory to
fraudulent bankruptcy” in
the case.
M arcinkus, who has
d e n ie d
w ro n g d o in g
repeatedly during the
lengthy investigation, could
not be reached for comment
by the AP- The Italian news
agency ANSA and state-run
RAI television quoted him as
saying Wednesday evening:
“Up to this moment, I have
not received anything. ”
The judge, who spoke on
condition of anonymity, said
police could not serve the
warrant on the 65-year-old
native of Cicero, 111., unless
he leaves Vatican City,
which has the status of an
in d e p e n d e n t
s ta te .
Marcinkus usually resides at
the Vatican.
Italy has no extradition
treaty with the Vatican, and
court sources said there
probably would be no official
announcement about the
w arrant unless Marcinkus
was arrested.
Milan judges Antonio Pizzi
and Renato Bricchetti, long
involved in the investigation,
would not comment on the
case publicly. V atican
spokesman Joaquin Navarro
said he had heard reports,
but “I know nothing about
it.”
M arcinkus heads the
In stitu te for Religious
Works, the formal name of
the Vatican bank. Court
sources said two other senior
officials of the bank, Luigi
Mennini and Pellegrino De
Strobel, also were charged
as accessories to fraudulent
bankruptcy.
Mennini, a m anaging
director, and De Strobel,
chief accountant, are Italian
citizens but also live at the
Vatican.
Scandal is not new to the
bank or to those who have
run its sometimes tangled
finances.
In 1984, an Italian court
c o n v ic te d M ennini of
involvement in the failure of
Banca P rivata, run by
Michele Sindona, a financier
who once advised the
Vatican on finances. Sindona
later was convicted of fraud
in a string of bank collapses
that included the Franklin
National Bank in the United
States.
f Í A lí
C/
\
DEVIL HOUSE
ó t h c y k m iv e ís a r y ^
♦ ^
• ♦
*
M
• • •
Thursday
G et your togas ready for the
a
. COUNTDOWN T O G A PARTY • #
Weara toga &get infree!
•I
* * $100 for the Sexiest Male & Female Togas \
*
•
V
BUILD a BURGER HAPPY HOUR
♦}
■^
2pm ~7pm enjoy $1.°° l/3lb burgers, $1P° Monster Beers,
2 for $l.°°Comdogs&Tacos,$lP°Teas& $2.oo Jungle Juices
•
N ICKEL B EER S
•*.
•*
5C beers 7pm~10pm plus get in free w/your ASU ID! m
S atu rd ay
w
♦
+
•
COUNTDOW N E X T R A
We've added another hour!
7pm -8 pm 6 fori drinks &drafts
get in free v/your ASU ID before 9pm
C ountdow n d rin k prices done by percentage
Page 16
Thursday, February 26,1987
State Press
Renowned psychologist speaks on ‘homophobia’
Lecturer urges people
to reveal sexual identities
BySH ELLY SCH AFFER
State Press
People do not choose their sexual identity and should not be
afraid to reveal it, whether they are homosexual or
heterosexual, a renowned psychologist and lecturer said.
Laura Brown, Ph.D., president-elect of the Society for
Psychological Study of Lesbian and Gay Issues, said
Tuesday night in the MU that research proves a person’s
gender identity is determined between the ages of 18 months
and 3 years.
“It chooses us, we do not choose it,” she said.
Brown spoke about what she calls “homophobia” at a
lecture sponsored by Arizona’s National Organization for
Women, the Women’s Studies Student Association and the
Lesbian and Gay Academic Union.
Homophobia is characterized by homosexuals’ insecurity
with their identity, she said.
“The price each of us pays for allowing homophobia in our
lives is enormous,” she said. “It’s like if (others) know me
too well, or if the fact that I am gay or lesbian is discovered,
I’ll lose everything that I have.”
Brown said homophobia patients she works with come
from dysfunctional families. She said rigidity and denial are
the two main characteristics of these families.
“Denial is a psychological defense mechanism by which
we attempt to vanish that which creates discomfort for us,”
she said. “Denial is the persistence of saying what you feel is
not real and what you see is not there. ”
Brown said such actions cause pain and confusion, not
understanding. She said homophobia keeps lesbians and gays
from realizing ‘‘who we really are. ”
“Homophobia takes a number of forms — external,
“It causes one to say, ‘My parents live in Iowa; I’m moving
to New York,’ ’’she said.
Those who are not lesbian or gay can play a role in the
dysfunctional family, she said, advising family members to
ask themselves why they have isolated lesbians and gays
solely on the basis of “how they love and who they love. ”
Brown said overcoming homophobia requires selfevaluation.
“We should ask family members how they maintain their
family system,” she said. “We should ask ourselves to take
control and evaluate how I see what is within m e.”
In the course of her counseling, Brown said clients want to
know how long treatments will take.
“It’s going to take some time, and it can be odd, but right
when you feel the pain is never going to go away, you’re right
on the edge of coming out on the other side,” she said.
The fear of AIDS has forced lesbian and gays “ to mature
and clean up our act,” Brown said. “The disease has taught
us we must be responsible to one another.
“At a terrible, terrible, terrible price, we are gaining some
Andy Mrozlnskl/Stnte Prat*
good things; people are responding with honesty and
Laura Brown, president-elect of the Society of Psychological
openness, and more people a re adm itting their
Studies of Lesbian-Gay Issues, speaks to students In the MU
homophobia.”
Arizona Room Tuesday night about what she calls “homo
phobia.”
Brown also commented on bisexuality.
/
“Being bisexual is like being hard of hearing — you’re not
internal and cultural,” Brown said. “Culturally, we each quite into one world and not quite into another, ” she said. “To
grow up in a sexist, racist world which teaches us that to b e ,. be bisexual is a very hard place to be in, because it is not
or to appear to be, lesbian or gay is bad. ”
politically correct.”
Brown said today’s society forces a negative outlook on the
Brown said bisexuals are an “invisible group” that
lesbian and gay communities: 27 states have declared challenges the definition of sexuality.
lesbian or gay sexual affection illegal.
She also said it is possible to be a lesbian or gay parent.
“We can’t even serve as we choose in the military or (get)
“There is a baby boom happening in the lesbian and gay
the mortgage on our home, and we risk the loss of our community right now thanks to artificial insemination,”
family,” she said. “I know because I lost (my family), but it Brown said. “We want our children to be happy and healthy
was their loss.’v
human beings.”
She said lesbians and gays cannot raise their children to be
Homophobia is a social controller, Brown said. Those who
suffer from it lose relationships with their families and co straight or gay because sexual identity is determined shortly
workers.
after birth.
D ollars has m ore than just the
m ost interesting earrings in the
Valley. It has the low est prices.
liranda’S f,
CIN N AM & N R
BELTS $1.00 EA. OR BUY 5 GET ONE FREE
EARRINGS <1.00 PR. 0R3 PAIR FOR $2.50
LACE & SATIN BOW 8ABRETTES
A Variety of Great Tasting Cinnamon Rolls
Using Natural and Nutritional Ingredients:
•Zucchini Wheat
•Carrot Coconut
•Peanut Butter and Jelly
«Original
SUNGLASSES $3.00
E v e ry th in g w e sell lo o k s lik e it c o s t
lots m ore, b u t y o u p a y a lot less.
414 S. M ill #207 Tempe (above Spaghetti C o )829-1127
BUY ONE GET ONE FREE W /STUDENT I.D.
215 E. 7 th S t , S u ite 112
8 9 4 -0 1 2 3
Special Events or
Promotions? Call Us!
University
DOLLARS
FASHION ACCESSORIES
Dollar#. It's not just our name, it's our prices!
Stott Pro«
Page 17
Thursday, February 26,1987
for All O f You
3:00 A M
WhoAre Rooming With A
Tuba Player This Semester
C O M E S E E T H E N EW 7W AY
A M E R I C A ’S G O I N G T O C O L L E G E
W orthington Place
H as It A ll
T here’s M ore
O f Everything
Save A Fortune
O n C ollege Expenses
Elim inate hassles, yearly m oving cramped
substandard living and 3:00 A .M . tuba players.
A t new W orthington Place, you’ll choose your
ow n roommate, m eet interesting people, join
in our year-round social activities and parties,
make lifetim e friendships. N ew W orthington
Place is designed for students—for living, relax
ing and studying. C lose to campus and all o f
Tempe’s activities.
W t offer m ore activities and am enities than
W orthington Place is a fabulous deal for you
and your parents. \o u ’ll be in th e best place in
Tempe and your parents can benefit from incredi
ble savings. In fact, there may be more benefits
in owning a student condom inium residence
than there are in owning their own hom e. It
may even be possible to substantially reduce the
costs o f your college lodging expenses through
our W orthington Place program.
anyone else in Tempe. Swim m ing pool,
jacuzzi, lush courtyards, lighted sand volleyball
court, barbecue and party area. Clubhouse
w ith large screen television, weight training
and exercise equipm ent.
Even studying is a pleasure. W orthington
Place is designed w ith individual study centers
in each residence so that even w ith a full house
you have privacy and a place to hit the books
effectively.
L - A - C - E
STUDENT RESIDENCES
C o m e a n d S e e T h e O n l y W a y 1 b L iv e , S tu d y a n d P la y I n T e m p e
Models & Sales Office: 616 So. Hardy»Apt. 148, Tempe, AZ 85281
Open 9-5 daily; weekends 10-6. (6 0 2 ) 9 6 8 -9 9 2 3 (If out-of-town, call collect for complete information).
A Development of Rolarid University Properties, Inc.
Page 18
State Prow
Thursday, February 26,1987
A S U p o lic e
L iq u o r B a r n
University police reported the following incidents in the 24hour period ending 7 a.m. Wednesday:
•Police stopped two men not affiliated with the University for
skateboarding between the Business Administration Center
and Lot 18 and advised them that they were trespassing.
When police checked their identification, one man, Ruben
Saul DeClay, had an outstanding warrant from Maricopa
County Sheriff’s Office.
DeClay was arrested and brought to the Mesa police
station for violating his probation, police said. The Phoenix
man was on probation for criminal damage charges.
•Police arrested, cited and released a 22-year-old finance
major on assault charges.
Jeffrey J. Trusiak was arrested in the Dash Inn parking
lot, 731 E. Apache Blvd., for aggravating an assault on
another customer.
•A 1987 Toyota car sustained $500 in damage to the rear
quarter panel after someone hit it while it was parked either
in Lot 57 or at the owner’s workplace, police said.
•A $300 Puch Marco 12-speed bicycle was stolen from an
unlocked storage room in the Engineering Building B-wing,
police said.
•A student’s unattended daypack was stolen from a table in
Hayden Library, police said.
The pack was red with yellow, orange and black stripes. It
contained a dictionary, textbook, and a prune-colored ski
jacket, police said.
Estimated loss is $126.
•A transient who police warned not to trespass on University
property several weeks ago was seen sleeping in Hayden
Library, police said.
Police told the man the next time he was found on campus
he would be arrested.
ANHEUSER-BUSCH’S
12-pk. can
IMPORT SPECIAL
W H ITE
M O U N T A IN
CO O LERS
— LA U R EN M ILLETTE
Tem pe p o lic e
M OLSO N ’S
CANADIAN BEER
$149
Tempe police reported the following incidents ending noon
Wednesday:
•Two men entered Mi Amigos restaurant, 1701E. Guadalupe
Road, and robbed the cashier of $512 in cash, police said.
Police said one man approached the cashier and demanded
money while the other stood by the front door.
•An unknown person stole $260 from a locked safe at
Whataburger, 22 W. University Drive, police said.
•An unknown person exposed his genitals to a woman
sunbather at Fox Tree Apartments, 620 E. McKellips Road,
police said.
Police said the man drove off, and the woman phoned
police to tell them the license plate number.
The case is still under investigation.
•An unknown person stole $500 in work tools from a Tempe
business, police said.
The tools were taken from a fenced workyard at Layne
Western Co., 9002 S. Hardy Drive.
•An unknown person stole an engine, valued at $1,500, from
the generator room of a Tempe apartment complex, police
said.
Police said the engine was removed through a roof vent at
929 E. Vista Del Cerro Drive.
•An unknown person stole a $5,000 1980 Ford Mustang from
2191E. Balboa Drive.
$2^9
4-pack
6-pack
C IT R U S O N LY
C A N A D IA N O N LY
N
Q
<
O
as
A SAFEWAY
• LIQUOR BARN
TEM PE
BROADW AY ROAD
930 E. Broadway
Î
SOUTHERN
894-1067
— MIKE B U R G E SS
W IT H T H IS A D O R A S U I.D .
Y o u c a n s ta y o n to p o f th e
new s b ecau se w e do.
STATE PRESS
CURRENT LEADERS FOR TH E WEEK FEBRUARY 16-22,1987
FIRST P LA C E
S E C O N D P LA C E
Manzanita (2 winners)
6th floor
10th floor
THIRD P LA C E
11th floor
Palo Verde West
3rd floor
6th floor
5th floor
Palo Verde East
3rd & 5th tied
Palo Verde Main
D-3
A-1
Sahuaro
B-2
D-3
D-1
Ocotillo + Mariposa (2 winners)
A-3
M A R ?nd
B-2
C O N T ESTAN T S
1st & 2nd tied .
.
A-2 & C-2 tied
*
Irish-C
Irish-B
2nd floor
1st floo r
3rd floor
Best
C-5
C-1
C-4
Chotla (2 winners)
A-4
F-3
C-6
Pi Kappa Alpha
Phi Sigm a Kappa
Delta S igm a Phi
Fraternities (2 winners)
Q
S
Ò
Z 4
I n
Û Q.
O N
Dom ino’s
4-Drauuer
-BCD SfilC-
Chest
■
Twin Set
*69
Full Set
*79
Queen Set *119
$29
Pizza
Delivers"..
Fast...
Free.
FURNITURE
PLUS ^
968-5555
2077 E. U niversity
T em pe • 9 6 6 -6 2 5 2
University
Domino’s Pizza will award free, 25 large pizzas and 650.00 cash for liquid
refreshments to the group purchasing the most pizzas during February 9 to 903 S. R ural
March 22. All floors in each group listed above compete with each other. HOURS:
11:00am-1:30am Sun.-Thurs.
Watch the State Press for weekly updates.
§ ¡p
S
Rura
A8U
Hayden
Hayden 1st
Hayden + Irish
McClintock
Sofa, love seat, coffee
table, tuio end tobies,
and lamp
0)
DORM WARS SCOREBOARD
o
Financing Available
F
i
11:00am-2:30am Fri. & Sat.
•
s
M
Ò
z«
IN
OÜ
Qt
SALE!
PEAN UT
BUSTER
$1 .00 OFF any 16* extra
large p izza
O ne coupon per pizza.
E x p ires: 3-15-87.
PARFAIT
Fast, Free Delivery™
968-5555
903 S. Rural Rd.
SP2-4
Expires 5-15-87.
We're having a real sate on a real
treat. Three thick layers of real
hot fudge and crisp, crunchy
psanuts. With cool and creamy
DAIRY QUEEN* soft serve in
between. The Peanut Buster*
Parfait. Now only $1.19 at your
participating DAIRY QUEEN*
store.
$.50 O F F any 12*.
medium pizza.
O ne coupon per pizza.
E x p ire s: 3-15-87.
Fast, Free Delivery'"
w i Tatar v o u
968-5555
903 S. Rural Rd.
Our drivers carry less than $20.00 Limited delivery area.
*1987 Domino's Pizza, Inc.
mont
950 S. MILLM e r o s: from
SP2-4J
,
966-1957
sports
SM cM m
Pase 19
Thursday, February 26,1987
Andy Mrozlnskl/Stote Press
Sun Davll forward Alex Auatln looks to drive against Washington’s Ron Caldwell. Austin had 10 rebounds and 5 assists in ASU's fourth win In a row over Washington State.
Cagers to finish regular season at Cal, Stanford
By S T E V E B R E N N A N
State Press .
The* ASU basketball team will pack its
four-game win streak into a suitcase and
travel to the Bay area this week, as the Sun
Devils take on California tonight and
Stanford Saturday afternoon.
The Sun Devils, 6-10 in the Pac-10 and 1014 overall, are the hottest team in the
conference going into the final two games
of the regular season, after sweeping both
of the southern California schools and the
Washington schools.
ASU coach Steve Patterson said he is
more optimistic about this trip than any
other this season.
“I feel as good about this road trip as I
have about any of them,” he said. “Not
because we are winning but because of the
way we are playing.
“We were able to win Saturday (66-62
over Washington State) and not play very
well. I think that’s a milestone, we’re
becoming a pretty good team,” he said.
Patterson said the key to the Devils’
success has been a balanced scoring
attack.
“We haven’t been relying on (guard)
Steve Beck as much,” he said. “We’ve had
balanced scoring from Arthur (Thomas)
and Bobby (Thompson), and Tarre Isiah
has picked up his shooting.
“Steve Beck got hot in the second half of
the WSU game. When he has a good night
and we get balanced scoring from
everybody, I think we can beat anyone.”
ASU has met California (16-12,9-7) once
this season, a 61-53 Devil victory in the
Activity Center Jan. 24.
California fell to Stanford last Sunday,
88-80, but the Cardinal had run dp a 53-20
halftime lead. Patterson said this was a
surprise, but he is cautiously optimistic.
“They haven’t fully recovered from the
loss of Leonard Taylor, their leading
scorer,” he said. But (guard) Kevin
Johnson is one of the best in the league. We
can’t afford to let him run. But I think we
will do well.”
Stanford (13-Í2, 7-9) beat the Sun Devils
in the two teams’ last meeting, a 69-65
Cardinal win in the UAC Jan 22.
“Stanford is a pretty good team,”
Patterson said. “But they are a team we
could beat. We should have beat them last
time.”
Stanford forward Eric Reveno scored 16
points and grabbed 13 rebounds in the last
meeting.
“Eric Revenó did a really good job
against us last time,” Patterson said.
Todd Lichti leads the Cardinal on the
season, averaging 17,7 points per game,
and scored 20 points against ASU
previously.
Patterson said he is pleased with the
way the Devils have kept a good attitude
throughout the season.
“Even in the throes of losing I was
encouraged by the way they acted,” he
said. “Their attitude was outstanding.
They continued to practice hard and play
hard, I knew if they did we would start
beating people. It is a tribute to their
character.”
Concluding the season will be the Pac-10
tournament in Pauley Pavillion at UCLA,
March 5-8. The winner of the tournament
will win the conference.
Turn to BASKETBALL, page 21.
Suns fans learn to adapt to bad basketball team
Billy Joel must be psychic, and he must have had a dream
about the Phoenix Suns program.
The first cut off Joel’s latest album is titled “Running on
Ice.” Imagine, if you will, a Suns 1986-87 season lowlight film
playing as you listen to these lyrics:
There’s a lot of tension in this town, I know it's building up
inside of me;
I’ve got all the symptoms and the side effects of city life
anxiety.
I could never understand why the urbffn attitude is so
superior;
In a world of high-rise ambition, most people's motives are
ulterior.
Sometimes I feel as though I ’m running on ice,
Paying the price too long.
Kind of get the feeling that I’m running on ice,
Where did my life go wrong?
I ’m a cosmopolitan •sophisticate of culture and
intelligence;
The culmination of technology and civilized experience.
But I ’m carrying the weight of all the useless junk a modern
man accumulates;
I ’m a statistic in a system that a civil servant dominates.
And all that mea^s is that I’m running on ice,
Caught in a vise so strong—
I’m slippin’ and slidin’ ’cause I’m running on ice,
Where did my life go wrong?
you’ve got to run, run, run, run, run, ooohhhh
Y m
B o b H e lle r
Sports Editor
V* / '
You’ve got to run, run, run, run, run, ooohhhh
As fast as I can climb a new disaster every time I turn
around,
As soon as I get one fire put out there’s another building
burning down.
They say this highway’s going my way, but I don’t know
where it’s taking me.
It’s a bad waste, a sad case, a rat race, it’s breakin' me. . .
And I get no traction ’cause I’m running on ice, it’s taking
me twice as long,
Get a bad reaction, ’cause I ’m running on ice— where did my
life go wrong?
You’ve got to run, run,
run, run, run, ooohhhh
You’ve got to run, run, run, run, run, ooohhhh
Running on ice. . .
Running on ice. . . slippin’and slidin’,
R unning on ice. . .
Maybe we could talk John MacLeod and Jerry Colangelo
into cutting a video. That part about the buildings burning
down has definite possibilities.
The Suns played host to the Lakers Tuesday, something
which I’m sure they look forward to doing every season.
There’s really nothing quite as much fun as playing host to
someone with three times as much talent as you have.
Only the other night, the Lakers only had just over twice as
much talent. Magic Johnson was on the bench.
Johnson has supplied over 51 percent of the Lakers’ offense
in the four preceding games, between his points and assists.
That statistic had to almost make the Suns think they had a
shot at winning.
But no. Even sans Magic, the Lakers were too much. The
Suns got beat 97-93, and the Arizona Republic had all sorts of
good things to say about the Suns’ effort.
You know, the human capacity to adapt and adjust is one of
the most amazing concepts on earth, and one of the most
difficult to grasp.
Case in point: I’m certain that the average city likes to see
its sports teams win. People like it so much, in fact, that they
tend to demand the removal of coaches — and even,
eventually, to quit going to the games — when a team loses
consistently.
Not here in Phoenix. According to the Republic, the “12,686
in attendance left feeling good about the home team for the
first time in a long time.”
Now believe me, no one knows the truth of the old adage
Turn to HEILER, page 23.
Page 20
State Press
Thursday, February 26,1987
Weather may postpone Devil softball invitational
By CH R IS D O RSEY
State Press
The sixth annual ASU Invitational Softball
Tournament, bringing in fifth-ranked Cal
Poly-Pomona, Pacific, University of
Minnesota, is slated to begin today a t Sun
Devil field.
If the weather permits the tournament
will start as originally planned, but the rain
could set it back a day.
If the team is not able to sta rt on time, it
will play games Friday and Saturday
morning.
Due to inclement weather, the Sun Devils
have had only Monday to practice.
ASU is coming off a second-place finish at
the Arizona Invitational last weekend.
“We haven’t really had a chance to work
is catcher Dina Buccola, hitting .444 in three
Sun Devil games. Second baseman Karen
Fifield is batting .429 and Cheryl Persinger,
third base, is hitting .318.
on anything. ” Coach Mary Littlewood said.
The Invitational will be a round-robin
tournament.
Cal Poly has won three of the last five
Invitationals; ASU has claimed wins in the
other two contests.
With a record of 5-2, ASU boasts three
players batting over .300. Leading the team
The starting pitcher for the opening game
is undecided.’
“I may not make that decision until five
minutes before the game,” Littlewood said.
Mustangs banned in 1987, restricted to 7 road games in ’88
history, and SMU officials accepted it
without rancor or plans to appeal. The
NCAA may have softened the blow because
the school had cooperated fully to uncover
recruiting violations and a slush fund for
players.
By The A ssociated Press
DALLAS — Southern Methodist became
the first school punished under the NCAA’s
“death penalty” when it was banned from
playing football in 1987 and limited to a
restricted 1988 schedule, but the Mustangs
escaped the maximum complete two-year
shutdown.
The punishment announced Wednesday
was'the harshest football penalty in NCAA
SMU, the most penalized school in NCAA
history and currently on the second year of a
three-year probation, has announced it will
not appeal the decision. The Mustangs is the
first school to be eligible for the “death
penalty” — a two-year suspension of an
athletic program involved in repeated
violations of NCAA rules. The latest
allegations rules violations took place while
the Mustangs were on probation.
Wichita State has been put on probation
the most times by the NCAA — seven. SMU
By The A ssociated Press
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Donald Royal scored a gamehigh 22 points, including 10 of 11 free throws, to lead
unranked Notre Dame to a 73-62 upset of No. 4 DePaul in
college basketball Wednesday night.
Rod Strickland led DePaul, 25-2, with 17 points and
Dallas Comegys added 16.
It was the third upset victory for Notre Dame, 18-7, on
Unranked Irish upset
No. 4 DePaul, 73-62
has six probations, but has suffered the
most sanctions.
The school had no scholarships to give in
1986 and was barred from television and
bowl games. SMU had 15 scholarships to
grant Feb. 11 on national signing day, but
did not offer them.
There are only 52 scholarship football
players left on campus.
its home court this season. The Irish earlier defeated
North Carolina, then ranked No. 1, and Duke, ranked No.
15.
The Irish hit 10 of 11 free throws in the final five minutes
after the Blue Demons had pulled with three points.
David Rivers added 14 points for the Irish, including six
in the final three minutes. Mark Stevenson and Scott
Hicks had 15 apiece for the Irish.
Spring Break
Film
MEDICAL RESEARCH
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED
The John E. Fetzer Energy Medicine Re
search Institute invites you to participate in a
very important medical research project.
SALE!!
Your time will be spent in a relaxing and
enjoyable home atmosphere on MARCH
10 or M ARCH 3 1 as a volunteer for the
Study of Oil Packs on the Immune System.
Lunch will be provided.
Sw 5
P ic tu if e P la c e
M e m o ria l
U n io n
O ur purpose is to document a natural^
external hea. ■»g method which has been in
use for centuries.
You will n .reive information about the
status of your own health at no cost to you
and copies of the laboratory analysis of your
T-Lymphocyte activity if you desire. (The
tests cost over $2,000 if you have them done
by your physician.)
•T ee Times 838-0488
•Located in the Heart o f Tem pe
f o r 2 p e o p le
Includes Electric Cart,
H ot Dog a n d Beer
2032 Golf Ave.
Clubhouse Restaurant
Weddings / Private Parties
With this coupon
Southern
$17.50
N O T M C L U K m O C tS M M
w evew il eou* m w n w w owe
T e rra ce Road
A p a rtm e n ts
A GREAT LITTLE GOLF COURSE!
$ 2 8
« 9 2 !^
Showtimes 7:00 p.m. & 9:30 p.m. Adm . $2.50 w/pass $1.00
C O U V T IIT C L U B
Weekdays
M onday through F riday
A LL POPULAR
SIZE CAMERAS
110-126 -135 -DISC
M U A B Film presents
Mem orial U n ion Cinem a
CALLJOYCE957-1533
*9 H o le s. . . Challenging & Fun!
•Practice Green and Driving Range
LOWER LEVEL
T H E 19th INTERNATIONAL TOURNEE OF
831-1244
WALK TO SCHOOL!
1/2 b lo ck from C am pus. H u g e w e ll-furnished 1-bedroom
1-bath, and 2-bedroom 2-baths, all u tilitie s in clud ed, p lu s
large heated pool, s p a c io u s la u n d ry fa c ilitie s and ca b le TV.
9 5 0 S. Terrace Rd.
ü
9 6 6 -8 5 4 0
LAD IES NIGHT
FAST. FREE DELIVERY • FOR ASU LOCATION CALL
16” 1 T op pin g
Shepherds
*6.99 ».-
Rural & Apache • 968-0243
829-1717
'L a rg e 16”
, P izza s w/one topping
2:
On« coupon per pizze. Good at
One coupon per p la t. Good êl ASU location only. Expire» 3-15*7.
12” 1 T op pin g J 12” 2 T o p p in g s
*5.35».- ! *6.15».-
One coupon per pizze Good et
ASU iocetion only. Expiree 3-15*7.
I
One coupon per pizze Good et
| , ASU locetion only. Expiree 3-15*7.
(EVERYTHURS.
7 P.M.-CLOSE)
ASU location only. Expiree 3-15-87.
16” 2 T o p p in g s
*7.99
One coupon per pizza. Good et
ASU locetion only. Expiree 3-16-87.
O pen e v e r y d a y a t 11 a m .
500 Well Drinks, Wine and Draft fo r Ladies
$1 Bottled. Domestic Beerfo r Everyone
LADIES BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL Mon.-Thurs. 7 to 9 • WELL, WIHE AND DRAFT 500
COCKTAILS • POOL • GAMES • OJ • DANCING l ROMANCING
933 E. University X
| 8 2 M
7 1 i ^
^
4415 S. Rural
J 3 ^
2 2 7
IN. MESA
"
\
635 N. Country Club
X
\
827-1999
X
s
. MESA
; W. Baseline
745
926-1100
EVERYD AY H APPY H O U R PRICES 11-7
FREE HOT & C O LD H O RS D’O EUVRES 4-7 M-F
SATELLITE SPO R TS O N BIG 12-FT. SCR EEN
NEVERA
COVER CHARGE
i f f
ft— »
Page 21
Thursday, February 26,1987
Basketball.
Continued from page 19.
Patterson said if the Sun
Devils win their final two
games this week, they could
be a force in the tournament.
“I think our chances are
pretty good,” he said. “But
the first thing we have to do
is get into the field of eight
(the top eight seeded
teams). That will put us to
our toughest test. ”
Patterson said the idea of
a conference tournament is a
good one.
“ It (the tournam ent)
makes it interesting,” he
said. “It keeps everybody
alive right up to the end. It
puts us in a situation where
we can really be a factor.
I’m sure (first place)
UCLA isn’t too happy about
it right now, but what is good
for the group as a whole is
usually good for the
individual teams.”
When asked if he would
have liked the idea of a
conference championship
when he was playing (he
played for UCLA), Patterson
said things have changed.
“The NCAA tournament
was different back when I
was playing,” he said.
“There were only 16 teams
that went, so realistically
only the winner of the
conference should go. But
now that there are 64 teams,
they should open it up. This
way good teams don’t get
pushed to the side. ”
TIME
TO
EAT?
Look For
Specials In
STATE
PRESS
n o n rv u czo K j r . / a i a ie K re s s
A S U forward Tarre Isiah lips In a basket against Washington State. The Sun Devils finish their regular season this week against California and Stanford.
COMPUTERS
FOR
M azatlan E x p re ss
March 7-14, 1987 +0 R
REN T
IBM Compatibles
Lowest Prices
$ 19 9 0 0
CALL 371-8857
T r ip
B U Y • S EL L• 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 & Used Books
•Art Prints & Posters
•Calendars & Cards
•Handbound Journals
M-F 10-9
C
SAT 10-6
h a n g in g
H ands
BUNDLE’S
. LIQUORS S MKT.
730 S. MILL
Corner Mill &
University Ave.
$ 2 .4 !
;DO* Q GOLD RUM 500*1
$3.91
i PEARL BEER 24-cancase
$5.91
PLAYBOY Used Magazines
$ .9<
Haagen Dazs Natural IceCream,
Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice,
Wines, over 40 Imported Beers.
9 6 7 -9 0 7 9
C o C*
s' //
I n c lu d e s :
★ 5 N ights Lodging at the Los Sab alos
Hotel & Resort. A Five Star Resort
right on the beach in Mazatlan.
★ Round T rip Train Transportation
Nogales-M azatlan.
S ig n
★ Mazatlan Express T-Shirt.
★ Private Party at El C id D isco
& J o e ’s O yster Bar.
★ Nightly C o ck ta il Party.
★ Beach Events & M uch M uch More.
U p
N o w !
SUN 12-5
414 Mill Avenue
966-0203
Old Town Tempo
^WHITE MUOOLERS 4 *
RI ,
For more information contact your campus representative or call:
Group Travel Specialists • 957-4400
YOUR CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE:
David Usem . . . .
---- - *. 968-3233
Debbie Olshefsky ................... .......784-8146
Gary Bald us .......... ........................... 784-8247
Nick Miliotis
....... ............. ........ 784-0433
Chris Cooke ......... ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 784-0509
Bob Enright
............. 784-0662
Frank B u r n s .......................
.. 784-9555
B. J. C a rls o n ......... ........
. . . . . . 784-9269
Matt G a a l....
784-0249
Brad Golich ...........
967-2369
Al iciaVickonoff. . . . . . ____
898-8143
Debi S p ie le r.............
784-8727
Jeff W o lf, .. ............... .............. ....... 784-0155
Andrew Nenninger . . . . ’.Ï .
........ 784-8491
Page 22
State Press
Thursday, February 26,1987
Slipping
Women cagers in need of
improved offensive attack
teams has ASU leading California, 4-1.
A major obstacle to the Sun Devils getting
back in the win column takes the form of
Golden Bear center Jennifer Bennett.
Bennett, a three-time Pac-10 player of the
week, is the No. 1 scorer in the conference
and ranks tyo. 28 nationally, averaging 21.2
points per game. She also is No. 3 in
rebounds, pulling down 9.7 per game.
“She is definitely a threat, but we have to
block her out and beat her to the boards if
we want to prevent her from getting the
ball,” Simpson said.
As a team, California currently ranks
second in the conference in scoring and freethrow percentage, averaging 79.5 points per
game and shooting 72.1 percent from the
line.
The Bears also lead the Pac-10 in assists,
dishing out 19 per game, and rank no lower
than fifth in four other categories.
“We want no pressure on our team, and to
let the seniors have some of their best
possible performances,” Simpson said.
“Hopefully, this will get us back in the win
column.”
On Saturday, the Devils will tip-off
against the Cardinal, who fly into Tempe for
a7:30p,m. game.
Stanford is currently tied for sixth place
with California in the conference, boasting a
record of 6-8 in the Pac-10 and 12-12 overall.
The Cardinal is coming off a disappointing
loss to rival California, 84-68, and has now
extended its losing streak to two games.
“Neither team is going to have any real
distinct momentum in (his game, but since
we will have the home-court advantage, we
will have that benefiting us,” Simpson said.
Jan. 24 was the last time the two teams
squared off in Maples Pavilion, with
Stanford walking over the Devils, 92-77,
despite the 16-point performance of Robin
Connolly.
By S T E V E A D A M S
State Press
Ron K u c z e k Jr./3tate Pros«
Sun Devil Sherry Poole drives against a Washington opponent. The A S U women’s basketball team
(aces California and Stanford this week.
Some much-improved offense and a win is
what coach Juliene Simpson is looking for as
the ASU women’s basketball team gears up
to take on California tonight and Stanford oh
Saturday at the University Activity Center.
The Sun Devils (3-12 in the Pac-10 and 9-15
overall) are in die midst of a seven-game
losing streak, coming off road losses at the
hands of first-place Washington and lastplace Washington State.
These two losses have pushed the Devils
out of Pac-10 contention and into a tie for
hist place with intra-state rival UA.
“We need to rebound from these games
and get our momentum going again so we
Can get our positive attitude back,” Simpson
said.
The Devils will have the opportunity to
rebound tonight, when the Golden Bears of
California come to the UAC.
California (6-8 in the Pac-10 and 15-9
overall) is currently tied for sixth place with
the Stanford Cardinal in the Pac-10,6 games
behind the division-leading Huskies. .
The Golden Bears are coming off two
impressive victories last weekend. The first
was an 83-82 non-conference win over San
Francisco, followed by a 84-68 pounding of
conference rival Stanford. California
extended its winning streak to four with
these victories.
“California is always a threat to any team
and have many opportunities to break a
game wide open,” Simpson said,
The last time the two teams met was Jan.
24, when the Devils defeated the Bears in
Berkeley, 86-80, with Sherry Poole leading
all scorers with 28 points.
“We really need to get Sherry back on the
track, production- wise, a fte r last
weekend’s games,” Simpson said. “She is
one key to getting the offense going. ”
The career records between the two
Turn to WOMEN, pago 24.
ISRAELI DANCING
Friday, February 20
8:45
T h e M oroccan Restaurant
p.m .
...
SHABBAT
SERVICES
965-5225
Ritter Bldg A121B
• Copyw ork • Slide Duplication
• Title Slides • B & W Processing a n d Printing
7:30 p.m.
H IL L E L • 1 0 1 2 S. MiU
i
o
P h o to S e r v i c e s
o
o
FISHING
FOR
BARBAIIIS7
C h eck Our
C la s s ifie d s !!
STATE
PRESS
O p e n t o F a c u lty , S ta ff & S tu d e n ts
1:00 - 5:00 PM M-F
the only one in Arizona
. . . le t y o u r fingers w a lk you th ro u g h an
e x o tic 5 co u rse feast fit fo r a s h e ik . . .
U ve Music
Belly Dancing
.
. 4.
947-9590
_
Open 11:30 a.m .-10:30 p.m.
Seven Days A Week
4228 N. Scottsdale Rd.
) 9 (M O fi. south o f Stb Am .)
^
10% O IF w /th is ad.
3
j u Ôa __
University ID Required
G O FROM COLLEGE TO THE ARM Y
WITHOUT MISSING A BEAT
The hardest thing about break
ing into professional
music is—well, break
ing into professional
music. So if you’re
looking for an opportunity to turn your
musical talent into
a full-time perform
ing career, take a
good look at the
Army.
It’s not
all parades
and John Philip
Sousa. Army
bands rock,
waltz and boogie
4s well as march,
and they perform
before concert au
diences as well
as spectators.
With an average
of 40 performances a month, there’s
also the opportunity for travel—
not only across America, but possibly
abroad.
Most important, you can
expect a first-rate pro
fessional environment
from your instructors,
facilities and fellow
musicians. The Army
has educational
programs that
can help you
pay for offduty instruc
tion, and if
you qual
ify, even elp you
repay
your
federally-insured
student loans.
If you can sight-
read music, performing in the Army
could be your big break. Write:
Chief, Army Bands Office, Fort
Benjamin Fiarrison, IN 46216-5005.
Or call toll free 1-800-USA-ARMY.
ARMY BAND.
BEALLYOUCANBE.
tote Pre-
Thursday, February 86,1987
-Eää!
eiler
Continued from peg* M-
about believing everything you read in the papers better than
someone who works for one. I don’t believe anything I see in
print—I’m not even sure I believe everything I put in print.
But Lee Shappell — the Republic’s Suns writer — has been
to a lot of basketball games, and listened to a lot of fans. If he
says the crowd was pleased with the Suns’ performance, the
crowd must have been pretty pleased.
And this is where the human ability to adapt comes in. The
ISuns had just lost—again — to a team whose leading scorer,
who also just happens to be the NBA’s assist leader, rode the
bench. And the fans were happy about it.
Unfortunately, this amazing human capacity for
adaptation has certain lousy side effects. As soon as people
become accustomed to losing — assuming a coach can tough
it out to that point—his job becomes secure.
Worse than secure, it becomes cast in stone. If I had a
dollar for every time I’ve heard or seen Jerry Colangelo and
John MacLeod referred to as the Suns’ “cerebral”
leadership, I’d be able to pay rent for a month. The Suns
continue to lose, the front office continues to make trades like
Rick Robey for Dennis Johnson and pass up trades like Larry
Nance for James Worthy, and the fans continue to let
MacLeod and Colangelo live.
It just goes to show you — you can keep a coaching job a
long time when no one expects you to win.
D
DISCOUNT
Electrolysis P erm an en t H air Rem oval
BIKINI WAXING
$ 1 5 .0 0
O ffe r exp ires 3-31-87.
Appts. Recommended • Walk-ins Welcome
ABOUT FACE & HAIR DESIGN
Full Service Salon
S h o p th e
b a rg a in s.
1 1 3 3 S. D ob son • 969-2667
read the
20%
STATE PRESS
O FF
everyday
D RY C LE A N IN G
^
•
v\
•
FO R S T U D E N T S
WITH A S U I.D.
BE A PART OF UNIVERSITY TOWERS
f McKellips and Scottsdale 1
M
i¿
WE ARE ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS
FOR RESIDENT ADVISORS 1 9 8 7 - 8 8
AND
l
in the
ABCO Shopping Center
J
RESIDENT ADVISORS ALTERNATES
FOR FALL ’87
T o q u a lify you m ust have one y e a r residence in a d o rm i
to ry , m inim um 2.5 G P A . M ore in fo , and a pp licatio n s
a v a ila b le in person o r b y m a il at U n iv e rsity T o w e rs
o ffice , 525 8. Fo rest. H ours o f a p p lica tio n 9 a.m.-12 p.m.
In te rv ie w s w ill be s c h e d u le d f ir s t w e e k o f A p r il.
“ No phone c a lls , please.“
UNIVERSITY
TOWERS
Th« M ost P op ular, Fast a n d Fun W a y
fo r G a y M «n a n d W o m a n to M o o t S o m eo n e N ow ...
Dial
1-976-4 MEN
That is, 1-976-4636
First Minute 558, Ea Add'l Minute 458
Recorded P ersonal G ay Ads
In 24 hours she's been chased,
kidnapped, and shot at
NO 'C O P E P APS
*
ALL PHONE NUMBERS
*
FR EE -RECORP YOUR OW N
A P AFTER LISTEN IN G
TO OTHERSI
g
NEW A P S
EACH TIME
YOU C A LL BACK!
H EAR A L L
OINvn
m
A LITTLE R O M A N C E .
Staying alive was never this fun.
THE CANNON GROUP, INC.. m m
»GOLAN’GLUBUSmxucrm
^ALBERT PYUNfmDOWN TWISTEO
rn m C m u m - CHARLES POCKET
TRUOIOOCHTERMANN •THOM MATHEWS
NORBERT WEISSER-LINDA KERRIOGE
man«
mrnn/m WALT LLOYD mM I N GAME S IKAREN KOCH
m TOM KARNOWSKI7 ALBERT PYUN
SXlMff
IfrGENE O'NEILL ÆREEN TOBIN
mow
WMENAHEM GOLANJO RAM GLOBUS mew
¿mmsm/wnc
w a m m w m tr
§
CALL :
24 HRS!:
There's got to be an easier way
to fall in love.
m
*
HSSTWCTSO ’gg>
UMtai>MUilMSACC80M*'
MU*IMMIX?tUMSM«
O p en s Friday, February 27th
P e rson al T e le p h o n e A d s for S in g le s
PHOENIX • MESA • TEMPE • SCOTTSDALE
'EASIEST AN P M OST FUN W AY TO M EET SOMEONE NEW
NO /MEMBERSHIP FEES
NO 'OOPEP APS
ALL PHONE NUMBERS!
1
-a n *
CALL ANYTIM E
2 9 HOURSI
HEAR ALL NEW APS
EACH TIM E YOU CALL
BACKI
FREE ANSWERING
SERVICE FOR LAPIES
1-976-4000
First Minute 558
Ea Additional Minute 458
J?
Page 24
State Press
Thursday, February 86,1987
Senior guard Thompson
wins athlete of the week
Basketball guard Bobby Thompson has
been chosen as the State Press Athlete of
The Week for his performances in the
games against Washington and Washington
State this past weekend.
In addition to canning a three-point shot
that made the difference with 17 seconds
remaining against Washington, Thompson
has pulled within four passes of breaking
Lafayette Lever’s all-time ASU assist
record (445).
Thompson, a senior, also ranks fourth on
the all-time steals list with 127, just three
behind classmate Steve Beck, and pulls up
sixth in the all-time free-throw percentage
category with 84.9 percent.
Thompson had 18 points against
Washington, and pitched in six points
against the Cougars of Washington State. He
also dished out five assists in each game.
Thompson’s big play of the week, the
three-point goal that buried the Huskies,
was set up by a steal by forward Mark
Carlino. Down by two points, Thompson
declined to wait for a last shot and dropped a
21-foot jump shot from the right wing to put
the Devils up by one point, a lead that held
when A1 Moscatel missed a six-foot hook
shot and Beck pulled down the board to
dribble out the clock.
The Devils take on.Cal-Berkeley on the
road tonight, and Stanford in Palo Alto
B o b b y T h o m p so n
Saturday. See story, page 19.
The only other nominee for the award was
designated hitter Tony Mattia, who hit a
game-winning three-run homer in the ninth
inning against top-ranked Texas Saturday.
tc
press
stal
AD'VERTISING
We Give You A Bigg erSlic