state press A rizona State U niversity T e m p e , A riz o n a . ®Copyright, State'Press, 1987 Voi. 12 No.13 Tuesday July 1 4 ,1987 Organizers push recall drive on campus By DARRIN HOSTETLER S ta ltP ra M Taking their cue from the state-wide recall movement, ASU recall organizers began their efforts Monday to help gather thé 216,746 signatures necessary, to force a recall election of Gov. Evan Mecham. ASÜ Mecham Recall. Comm ittee spokesperson Am y Rosenhaus said 105 people signed recall petitions during one hour at a table the com m ittee placed in front o f the MU Monday morning. “ The table w ill be out there Monday through Thursday, mornings and afternoons all summer,” Rosenhaus said. Rosenhaus said the campus com m ittee has set a goal of obtaining 10,000 signatures by the end o f August. . “ We have a lot o f potential here,” she said. “ I f w e can keep the tables going and get people to circulate petitions in buildiiigs and around campus, then we should have no trouble reaching our goal.” Workers plan to step up their efforts in the fall, with an eye toward gathering an additional 10,000 signatures by Novem ber, the cut-off fo r the petition drive. “ Once the fa ll sem ester starts, the table w ill be out there every day,” Rosenhaus said. The state-wide com m ittee began the signature gathering process this weekend. More than 2,500 people jam m ed into the Grand Ballroom at the Phoenix Hilton in downtown Phoenix Friday night to officially kickoff the recall drive. The crowd purchased anti-Mecham T-shirts, buttons and stickers while watching skits and the perform ance of Phoenix band M ajor Lingo. Thomas Murphy of Tem pe became the first Arizonan to sign the first petition when recall officials drew his name from among hundreds vying for the right to be listed as “ signature number one. ” “ It’s a good thing that the recall is going forw ard and I was proud and happy to be the first signature,” Murphy said. “ I am just one signature out of thousands. “ People have to realize how important their signature is — where it appears on the petition isn’t important. ’ ’ Recall organizer Ed Buck was the second person to sign the petition. “ I ’ve waited for this for a long tim e,” Buck said amid cheers as he inscribed his name on the over-sized petition. "Can you im agine the party w e w ill have when Evan Mecham is out of office?” Buck said. Buck told the crowd the recall movement is “ shooting for 350.000 signatures,” m ore than enough to reach the 216,746 milestone and compensate for “ bogus signatures from people not registered to vote or fo r those who sign the petitions tw ice.” Mecham R ecall Corporation President G arry Smith called the kickoff gala a ‘ ‘tremendous event. ” “ A lot o f people cam e to the door, signed the petitions and left,” Smith said. “ W e got about 3,000 (signatures) that night.” Sm ith rep orted that re c a ll personel obtained approxim ately 15,000 signatures Valley-wide over the weekend. “ We don’t have accurate figures form Tucson or F lagstaff yet, so the figure is probably a lot higher,” he said. “ W e’ve really had great support and reaction all weekend,” Smith said. “ With just six or seven people w e got 2.000 signatures from people at the circus (held at the Coliseum in Phoenix) Saturday and Sunday.” R ecall officials are scheduled to hold a planning session today to com pile up-to-date signature totals. Although ¿he final financial figures have not yet been compiled, Smith estim ated that the event raised nearly $20,000 for the recall effort. Sm ii L. M ohr/Slat* P ran Ed Buck, organizer of the Mecham Recall effort signs his name In the Recall petition Friday evening In the Phoenix Hilton Grand Ballroom . Supporters backing the movement took part in the kick off gala fo r the Recall at the hotel last week. Mecham’s press secretary, Ron Bellus, declined to comment on the recall movement or the 15,000 signatures gathered this weekend. A Tucson recall organization, Rockers for Recall, staged a six-band concert Saturday in a local park. Concert organizer Dawn Harward said 75 percent of the crowd of 6,500 signed a recall petition, registered to vote, or both during the day-long event. Rosenhaus said the ASU comm ittee plans to hold sim ilar events, including a concert by local band Dissonant Dissidents at 11:30 a.m. Thursday in the MU Pim a Room. “•We’re going to have several concerts in the fall, and w e’ll have deputy registrars there and tables with petitions for anybody who wants to sign,” she said. Coke's not it: Pepsi gains vending contract at ASU By M ICHAEL ROWELL S tate Press Beginning today, Coke machines w ill begin leaving campus, making w ay fo r a new herd of machines— Pepsi. The Pepsi Corporation recently out-bid Coke fo r the soda vending machine contract at ASU. The changeover is scheduled to be completed by August, Assistant D irector of Purchasing Ted Brown said. “ I don’t know if it a ll w ill happen at the sam e tim e,” Brown said, adding that coordination between the two companies has been asked for. Pepsi, in their winning bid, promised the U niversity a 57.5 percent commission on a ll sales, with a guaranteed minimum annual commission of $400,000. Coke offered to give the U niversity 50 percent of sales with a guaranteed minimum of $325,000. In the previous contract, Coke was giving the University j*5 percent of sales with a $200,000 minimum. Vice President fo r Business A ffairs Victor Zafra said the University puts a ll contracts machines grossed $661,331, of which the U niversity received $296,552. Gross sales, and U niversity commissions fo r the 82-83, 83-84 and 84-85 fiscal years w ere; $547,630/$246,479, $6l4,205/$276,124 and $665,606/$296,552. The contract is for soda vending machines only, Brown said. Other vendors and SAGA foods are covered by separate contracts and w ill not be affected. \ Brown said soda machine sales levels for Pepsi would probably remain at the current levels fo r Coke, because people usually buy whatever’s most convenient. “ The die-hards w ill go o ff campus,” he Brown said he thought Pepsi wanted the said, adding that most people don’ t feel that prestige o f having the ASU contract. strongly about which brand of soda they “ I frankly doubt if they’re making any buy. money oh it,” he said. Pepsi officials could not be reached for A t last count there w ere 98 Coke machines on campus. In the 1985-86 fiscal year, the comment. , “ You can’t just go with whether you like Coke or Pepsi better,” he said. An em ployee o f Coca Cola called the bid “ am azing,” and said there’s talk of the Pepsi bid in the industry “ from coast to coast.” ‘If both folks provide the same service, you have to pick the lowest bidder. You c a n iju s tg o with whether you like Pepsi or Coke better.’ — Victor Zafra up for bids “ periodically” to keep them co m p etitive, and said it w as his understanding th at P ep si “ had a phenomenal bid. ” “ I f both folks provide the same service, you have to pick the lowest bidder,” he said. A* t| • ASU W EATHER inside today Sunny skies with an expected high of 110 degrees. The expected low is 82. For the remainder of the week: continued hot with clear skies. “ REVENG E II” o #n%\ 4 “Revenge II,” Nerds in Paradise” hits the Valley but it doesn’t live up to the original movie. Review in Entertainment. Page 7. , Classified . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Comics . . . . . ........ 3 Entertainm ent., . . . . . . ...... . .............7 O pinion. . ................................ 4 Sports ..... 11 W e e k . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........ 2 Page 2 Tuesday, Ally U , 1967 the week •The Week section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU. Any campus club or organization can submit entries to the calendar for publication to the State Presa, located in the basement of Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries w ill not be taken over the phone. Deadline for the entries will be 1 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays. Meetings •T h e Woman’s Studies Program will hold a meeting entitled, “Surviving As A Single Mother,’’ at 1 p.m. today in the Social Science Building, Room 104. The meeting is presented by Elise Eastwood. •Sigma Tail Delta, Engligh Honor Society will hold an organizational meeting at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Yavapai Room in the MU. •The Amercian Federation of Teachers and University Employees will present the Dissonant Dissidents and Friends at noon Thursday in the MU Pima Room. The classical folk group will perform for an hour. Mecham recall petitions are available to sign, and deputy registrars are on hand to register people to vote. For more information, call 968-3447. Entertainment *Chicago brings its brand of rock ’n’ roll to the ASU Acitivity Center at 8 p.m. Thursday. Tickets for the concert can be purchased at all Dillard’s box offices. For more ticket information, call 267-1246. Civil Engineering lands PCI research fellowship The ASU C ivil Engineering Department has been awarded a Prestressed Concrete Institute Research Fellowship to test the strength o f embedded connector plates in concrete. Professor Apostólos F afitis, staff adviser, received die award from Ted Gutt, president of the PC I. The presentation was made at the structural Engineer’s Association Annual Convention in Tem pe last month. Stanley Structures, Division o f The Stanléy Works, and TPAC , Division of the Tanner Companies, are die Atizona members of the Institute. Blowin’ steam Senior Music Therapy m ajor Barb M cG ill rehearses on a Euphonium In a practice room In the Music budding. 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AMC FIESTA VILLAGE (A cro ss from Fiesta M all on S outhern in Mesa) Limited Seating — ___________ opinion____________ Page 4 Tuesday. July 14,1987 S tr t » The rep u b lic under fire : U ncle O llie know s b est revealed quite a bit about the kind o f' thinking that perm eates the Reagan Administration. B u ch anan rip p e d C o n gress fp r withholding funds from the Nicaraguan “ freedom fighters,” who without massive U.S. aid w ere unable to prevent the founding of a “ Soviet beachhead on the shores of North Am erica.” As the Iran-contra hearings drag on through the long, hot Washington summer, the battle lines between those who stand in defense o f our republican form o f governm ent and those who would destroy it are being clearly drawn. Ha t BRIM AMD FORR°WEPBRPW IfeSHADEEWSSFhW SEEING LIGHT oFUfiV. Ô g L . ' / " o l l ie s f w / MSNWCSl COMMIE RT 200VOB. "WEsrEfflWHM F/AfäE CAUSED BV KEPERTEDIX PHONING IN VELEMWb SOcKfiS%tyE'EM UELL,OLLIE'’ NO LESS TURN3 7 TIMESA DRV. Last week’ s USA Today headline, “ OHiemania sweeps USA,” says it all. As does the message “ O llie fo r President,” seen waving in the wind behind an airplane h ig h . above the capital. N orth has apparently com e out on top in the most important of political categories — public opinion. The prem ier flag-bearer fo r the pro-North fo r c e s , fo r m e r W h ite H ou se Com m unications D ire cto r P a tric k Buchanan, appeared on A B C -TV ’ s “ Nightline” last week in defense o f this very argument. In the process, Buchanan J p ^ TbREMflif/W TMEXfflBK/ ,/ . CRHSHELLA North has jack hammered through fiv e days o f questioning by a joint congressional committee, looking fatherly and sincere behind hijikhaki tie and rainbow assortment o f medals. His blunt, unabashed answers and references to fam ily, God and country have left his accusers on the committee stuck playing the role o f Pontius Pilate. Buchanan and other contra-backers seem to be ignoring the sim ple fact that the m ajority of the Am erican people are against getting involved in the conflict in Central Am erica. The bottom line is that North and the m ajor players in the Iran-contra mess felt Congress and the Am erican people did not know what was best fo r themselves. So they decided to subvert the w ill o f both, run an end-around the Boland Amendment, and get the job done anyway. Maybe you call that “ a constitutional crisis.” Or m aybe you call it “ pragm atic governing in difficu lt tim es.” Either way, you can’t ca ll it dem ocracy. And the thinking that brings about such abuses in the system represents an even larger threat to the nation than the alleged communist “ beachhead” south of the border. I F or the first tim e since* die' W atergate debacle of the previous decade, it has been revealed, most notably through the testimony of M arine Lt. Col. O liver North, that the executive branch again has overstepped its bounds and threatened the constitutional system of checks and balances. A ll of which is rather frightening. Because by sanctioning North’s actions, what w e really are doing is putting our stamp of approval on the idea that those who reside at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. can do whatever they like — providing they feel it is in “ the national interest.” , Buchanan admitted that North lied to Congress, subverted at least the “ spirit” of the Boland Amendment (which prohibited direct or indirect aid to the Nicaraguan contras by U.S. intelligence agencies), set up a “ sub-government” inside the White House to conduct covert operations and then shredded all evidence of im proprieties when the lid was blown o ff the whole affair. „ 'IT 'S THE S P IftlT OF THE LAW-” I "THE COHTRRSJRRE THE MoJUIL EQUALS OF 00%FOUNDING FR TH EW òJER H .Vm , BLE, DSlFLHBEL SHREDDED , d o c u m en ts W oR TTE PHRASES' m &ÍEEPJIDS-USEFUL FaR G&JUFLECriÁ/GÍ I i » u m HEHP Wo r s h ip THWTísny» "J believe tuM* SHIP*' M m Vi "DON'T T R U iT b M e ABOUT THE Ù W WE’RE TWINS TO ¡7 P RESERVEDEMOCftRflF ^ U S lCQNSTiTOTIDM (MUST'VE HISSED THESHREDDER,...') Om* ’sVtKmen’ Buchanan said: “ (N orth ) had to keep the (covert aid ) missions a s e c re t. . . and keep supplying his (contra) buddies with guns, food and ammo to keep the resistance alive while Congress w affled. “ OUie North is a man o f ch aracter: . . a great Am erican.” Y et, a ll that is just peachy with Pat. Why? Because, children, Uncle O llie knows what is best. And he was determined to do the “ right” thing on the nation’s behalf, no m atter what the Am erican people or their elected representatives thought about it. W hile clandestine operations have their place in a dangerous, com plex world, they must be conducted within the realm of law and under the guiding precepts of the constitution. Those who, regardless o f their intentions, take it upon themselves to ignore republican principles are not “ great Am ericans,” but arrogant totalitarians who have no concept of the meaning of the words “ government o f the people, by the people and fo r the people.” What is ironic about Buchanan’s classic “ the ends ju stify the means” defense of North is that, while he feels so strongly about saving Nicaragua from communism and aiding his beloved “ contras,” the methods he proposes using to accomplish this lofty goal are only appropriate in a totalitarian system, like that of the Soviet Union. Indeed, no one in the Krem lin ^questions the right of the governm ent to do what they wánt, without considering the w ill of the people. Buchanan and North would be at home there. No pesky congressional committees to answer to, no real elections or public opinion polls and most im portantly, no biased liberal press constantly asking questions. Only the “ freedom ” to do what they think is “ right.” letters Preserving the ‘freedom of the seas’ Editor: When the U.S.S. Stark was blindsided by two m issiles fired from an Ira qi jet, the people of the United States w ere shocked and outraged. The fact that 37 N avy men w ere killed in the attack only added to the disbelief that such an act could gounchaltenged. Some people cry fo r revenge, while others, such as Sen. James Sasser of Tennessee, believe that “ the United States (is ) being sucked into this violent w ar (between Iran and Ira q ).” However, the nation has a right to be in the Persian Gulf under the abiding principle that those men who sail the seas do so under the “ freedom of the seas.” Now one country is desperately trying to restrict that freedom and is indiscrim inately attacking ships. Since the United States and many of its a llies use the Gulf fo r the transport o f valuable and essential oil supplies, the withdrawal of Am erican m ilitary forces would allow a ll such tankers to be open gam e fo r any hostile country to attack, making it nearly impossible fo r any country to pursue its economic interests in that area. In the 1970s, the Am erican economy staggered under the hardships imposed by an oil em bargo that caused skyrocketing gasoline prices and long lines at the gas pumps. The United States must not be held an economic hostage once again by these pirates o f the seas! One proposed course of action would be to allow oil tankers to sail under the U.S. flag. Many Am ericans question what Would happen if these tankers, flyin g the Am erican flag, w ere attacked. However, most nations surely would have to carefully consider the serious m ilitary and economic consequences o f such an attack. In additimi to the oil interests in the Persian Gulf, the United States and its allies have critical strategic interests in the Middle East. Since the U.S.S.R. has no warm-water ports, the Straits of Hurmoz are critically important m ilitarily. The United States has the right, and some say duty, to protect itself and its allies in the area, as w ell as to provide for the continued m ilitary neutrality of the Straits. T o withdraw our m ilitary support in this volatile area of the Middle East would only open the floodgates fo r a massive Soviet influence in the whole Mediterranean area. On June 10,1987, Iran threatened to m ake the Persian Gulf area a “ graveyard of ships.” The tim e has com e for the United States to take a stand! L et the U.S. fly its fla g proudly over whatever ships it feels necessary in order to protect our m ilitary and economic interests and, by backing its actions with m ilitary force if necessary, proudly take a strong stand for freedom of the seas once again. Brian T. Brown Scottsdale S EDITORIAL BOARD LETTER POLICY 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: Letters should be typed, double-spaced and no longer than two pages. Any submissions not in adherence with letter policy will not be published. Letters are subject to editing on the basis of clarity, length or conformance to newspaper style. Gregory Robert Krzos EDITOR Amy Frischknecht MANAGING EDITOR Darrin Hostetler OPINÌON EDITOR Carolyn Nelson ARTS EDITOR STATE PRESS GREGORY ROBERT KRZOS Editor Managing Editor.................................... ... . . . . AMY FRISCHKNECHT Opinion Editor..................................... . .1. .....................DARRIN HOSTETLER Arts E d ito r............................................................................ CAROLYN NELSON Sports Editor........................................................................ . .. DAVID MILLER 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 ¡8 given. Bring letters to the newspaper's front desk in the basement of Matthews Center. Picture I.D. is required. REPORTERS: Mika Rowell. PRODUCTION: Leighayn Green, Merk McKinney. PHOTOGRAPHER: Sean L Mohr. STAFF ARTIST: Michael Ritter. FREE LANCE REPORTERS: Chuck Hadd. Bob Heller, Tod McCoy. Twyla Pumroy. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Danielle Carbone. Richard Tolteman, Tom Hutchison. Mark Peterson. Pr* ^ 14 puW I,h,d Tuesday end Thursday during the aummet.sessions at Matthews Center, Room 15 , Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ «5287. Newsroom: 965-2282. Advertising A Production: 965-7572. Slate Press Page 5 Tuesday, July 14,1987 Reagan and the A yatollah a c t out deadly Gulf s k it M ike Royko Tribune Media Services V ', w S The woman on the phone sounded frantic and said she had a suggestion fo r a column. She said: “ Something has to be done to keep us from getting involved in this madness between Iran and Iraq. “ M y God, w e could wind up in a stupid w ar over there. And for what? For somebody else’s oil? “ I’ ve written to m y congressman and senators and demanded that they do something. But I feel frustrated. There has to be something m ore I can do. “ I thought that m aybe if you wrote a column telling people that they should do what I d id — w rite to their congressmen and tell them how they feel — m aybe w e could get Reagan to com e to his senses. “ Or m aybe you coukt tell people to w rite to Reagan. Phone the White House. Something. I f they got enough calls and telegram s, m aybe they’d com e to their senses. Can you do something like that? ” I had to give her a discouraging answer. No, I wouldn’t urge people to w rite to their congressmen, since it wouldn’t accomplish anything. The leaders of Congress have already said they won’t do anything to interfere with Reagan, even though most of them think it’s a dangerous idea to stick Am erican flags on Kuwaiti ships and pretend they’re ours so we can zap Iran if the ships are attacked. As for w riting or phoning the White House, Reagan wouldn’t see your letter or get your phone call. Such things are handled way down the adm inistrative ladder. It’s not as if you’re a baseball announcer, returning to the broadcast booth from a m edical recuperation, or a winning football coach. Then you could not only speak directly to the President, but he’d phone you and pay for the call. There’s not much sense in wasting a stamp or a toll call. With Congress saying it "•C O U P O N """“ brazier infidels say that I ’m crazy? ” So when the showdown comes, w ill the ayatollah decide to shoot a m issile at one of the psuedo-American tankers or even one of our genuine Am erican warships? Or w ill he be content to send some terrorists to hijack a plane, toss a few tourists o ff a cruse ship, blow up an embassy or bomb a GI nightclub? can’t or won’t interfere, the rest of us can’t do anything except sit back and watch Ronald R ea gan ’ s grea test re a l-life adventure unfold. There’s no point in fretting, as the lady who called me is doing. Everything is being decided for us by Reagan and the Ayatollah Khomeini. Yes, let us not forget the crazed old ayatollah. A fter all, he has to decide how to respond to Reagan horning in on his war with Iraq. And even if you don’t like the ayatollah, which most of us don’t, you must concede that he might have cause for indignation. A fter all, it was Iraq that introduced the tactic of attacking Iran’s ships in the Persian Gulf, which is why Iran started attacking the ships of Kuwait, Iraq’s ally and bankroller. And Iraq is still fa r ahead on the ship-hitting scoreboard. The ayatollah also might be thinking: “ Hey, you sold m e weapons, remember? And Iraq blew up one of your ships and said, ‘Oops?’ And it was Iraq that started this ship-shooting business in the first place? And now you’re taking sides with them — a client state of the Russians? And you " " ! And what w ill Reagan do to retaliate? Bomb Iran? I f so, what w ill the ayatollah do? H it another one of our ships? Or just sneak some bomb-toting terrorist into downtown Washington? It ’s a fascinating drama, if you think about it. A ll those weapons poised while the world watches and waits. And there sits Ronald Reagan in his Oval O ffice and the Ayatollah Khomeini in his tent; and those two characters are calling the shots. 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Browse through our three floors of: •New & Used Books •A rt Prints & Posters •Calendars & Cards •Handbound Journals M - F 1 Q - 8 S A T 10.-6___ S U N 1 2 r 5 C h a n g in g H a n d s 414 M ill Avenue 966-0203 Old Town Tempe COMPUTERS FOR RENT IB M com patibles CALL T e m p e 9 2 1 -0 9 8 0 Phx. 3 7 1 -8 8 5 7 D ID Y O U K N O W ? YOUR ASU INSURANCE COVERS CHIROPRACTIC CARE!!! ► Whiplash ► Neck Pain ► Headaches ► Back Pain ► Shoulder Pain ► Accidental Injuries TEMPE Selling in the -classifieds. A P ie c e o f C ake State Press 965-6731 We will accept your insurance, provide a student discount, with little or no out-of-pocket expense to you. W h ip la sh ! SCOTTSDALE 966-1635 941-2909 Dr. D o n a ld N e ls o n 3910 S. Rural Rd. #E Dr. Steph en N ie ls o n 7333 E. Thomas Rd. Stiff N e c k & Back! Page 6 Slate P iw Tuesday, July 14,1967 Judge considers tape as evidence on killing Israeli girl recovers from transplant; Pope to visit South Africa next year By Th$ Associated Press FLAG STAFF — A F la gstaff city detective intim idated Jacob Wideman when Wideman was arrested fo r causing the death of another teen-ager and later sidestepped due process in taking Wideman’s confession over the telephone, a defense law yer claims. Th e allegations again st D etective M ich ael Cicchinelli surfaced last week during a hearing in Coconino County Superior Court. Judge H. J e ffre y C oker has taken under consideration the motion o f M ichael D. Kim erer, Wideman’s law yer, to keep a tape recording Cicchinelli made o f the Laram ie, W yo., youth’s confession from being introduced as evidence. Wideman, 17, the son of U niversity o f Wyoming professor and author John Edgar Wideman, is charged with first-degree murder in the Aug. 13,1986, stabbing death of E ric Andrew Kane, 16, New R iver, N .Y. O fficials said the two w ere roommates at a Flagstaff m otel during a tour. K im erer said a court had ruled that Wideman should not speak with police without counsel. On the tape, which was played fo r Coker, Wideman says he killed E ric Kane on August 13, 1986 fo r no apparent reason w hile the 16-year-old was sleeping in the m otel room. P olice believe Wideman fled from the murder scene in the rented car in which the group was traveling. During the next eight days, the youth used several thousand dollars worth of travelers checks to travel around the country. H e turned him self in Aug. 21. Meanwhile, the defense has appealed a Feb. 12 transfer-hearing ruling by Judge W illiam F . Garbarino stating Wideman be tried as an adult. Although the defense sought to delay the trial until the Arizona Court o f Appeals rule on the transfer-hearing appeal, Arizona Supreme Court Justice James D. Cameron recently directed that the tria l proceed before the appeals court makes a decision. By The A ssociated Prase JERUSALEM — Moran Kadosh, a 4-year-old Israeli g irl who received a liver transplant after passengers on her flight to London spontaneously donated $40,000, has recovered from her operation, her parents said Monday. The youngster returned to Israel on Sunday after spending four months at Addenbrookes Hospital in Cambridge, England. “ She is taking a lot of medication,” her father, Zion Kadosh, 29, told Israel television. “ But the doctors say she is com pletely healthy.” Moran was a healthy g irl until fiv e months ago when she contracted hepatitis and complications ensued. Traveling to London, the fam ily collected $40,000 fo r the operation when passengers learned that the couple didn’t have enough money to pay fo r the transplant. M BABANE, Swaziland — Pope John Paul I I w ill visit southern A frica in 1988, although a journey to South A frica was considered improbable, a religious official said. The Catholic Bishop o f Swaziland, Bishop Ncam iso Ndlovu, said Monday that the pope would visit Swaziland next year as part of his first tour of the region. The eight-day o fficia l tour, beginning Sept. 12, m il also include stops in Mozambique, Botswana, Lesotho, and Zimbabwe. A ll border on South A frica, but that country is not believed to be on his itinerary, Ndlovu said." LIV E RPO O L, England — An exhibit of Beatle m em orabilia, which wasn’t a big hit in Liverpool, has found a tem porary home in a Texas shopping m all, the show’s general manager said. ' • The Beatle City exhibit in Liverpool, w here the band got its start in the 1960s, w ill open at the W est End M arketplace in Dallas in early August, the general manager, M ike Byrne, said Monday. It w ill m ove bade to a new location in Liverpool next spring. The exhibit, the w orld’s only permanent collection of Beatle m em orabilia, contains about 1,000 items, including a Steinway piano— com plete with keyboard cigarette burns — on which die late John Lennon composed his songs. “ In the States there is still a very big interest in the Beatles,” Byrne said. “ Because w e’ve got them in England and w e grew up with them, Liverpool takes them a bit for granted.” D ETR O IT — Tony-award winner Uta Hagen says her goal in theater is a sim ple one: “ I want to see people, not actors, onstage.” Miss Hagen, who won Tonys fo r perform ances ip Edward Albee’s “ Who’s A fraid of Virginia W oolf?” and C lifford . Odets’ “ The Country G irl,” said recognizing the difference between acting as surface mannerism and acting as believable human behavior has been the theme o f her career as an actress and a teacher. Unfortunately, she had to learn by negative example. Miss Hagen told a D etroit acting class that when she studied acting 50 years ago, she was taught mannerism by rote. Grad student to deliver lecture on Wollstonecraft Graduate student Laurel Vasquez w ill discuss “ The L ife and Tim es o f M ary W ollstonecraft” on July 23 in a free public lecture from 1 to 2 p.m. in the Social Science Building room 104. W ollstonecraft was a philosophical thinker and educator who lived from 1759 to 1in . She was the author of “ The Vindication of the Rights of Men,” and “ th e Vindication of the Rights o f Women.” Susan B. Anthony re-published the latter work in a series of newsletters about a century later during the women’s suffrage movem ent in Am erica. H er daughter, M ary W ollstonecraft Shelley, was the author of the Gothic novel “ Frankenstein.” The ASU women’s studies program is sponsor of the lecture. Attendees are invited to bring a brown bag lunch. Coffee, tea and cookies w ill be provided. F or information call Carol Ann Valentine at 965-2358. 2 p a ir o f D a ily W e a r S oft C o n ta c ts * p lu s o n e p a ir o f eyeglasses (single vision o n ly ) $59 9 9 & FIVE CONVENIENT VALLEY LOCATIONS n o tto n a ic te PHOENIX 5130 N. 19th Ave. MESA 437 S. Gilbert Rd. GLENDALE 5030 W. Peoria #103 One block north of Camelback Rd Southeast comer of Broadway 6 Gilbert Rd. One block east of 5Jd 242-5292 8 4 4 -7 0 9 6 “A t Nationw ide Vision Centers The Cost o f Quality Eyecare Is n 't O u t o f Sight. . . ' J 9 3 7 -1 0 4 7 PHX/SCOTTSDALE 3620 E thomas Rd. Acrossfrom Target in Sunshine Square 956-2012 TWO PAIR i—-EYEGLASSES* EYEGLASSES ............... ..... .Two Fair $ 3 9 .9 9 Single vision only. BIFOCALS . ........................... 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Refund on contact lenses i f not com pletely satisfied within 50 days.* Specialty lenses exclu ded 1 COLORED EXTENDED WEAR CONTACTS . . . . . Two Pair $ 9 9 - 9 9 Open Mon.-Sat; ■ Most Contact Prescriptions Available The Same Day 'Some restrictions apply. One colored, one clear. OuMt COMMIn. ECWCTtyllM. wcfcooK «*k corned ■ i w n . m i ( « OdttrWmA. «wthM. a entertainment Stott Pies» Tuesday, July 14,1987 Pa3e 7 Full force Film coats Vietnam images with alienation By CAROLYN NELSON S tate Press Hints, délectables and other tangy tidbits from the cluttered flies of the entertainment . agit -•. desk. • Cool July Blues: •The Phoenix Art Museum has brought its "Jazz In July” series out of cold storage for a second year. Javina Magness and the Jaywalkers will start the series snowballing with some R&B from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday in the museum’s Singer Auditorium, 1625 N. Central Ave. In Phoenix. Admission — like the air conditioning — Is free. Art: •Arizona Women’s Caucus for Art goes “ Beyond Boundaries!' in its exhibition, which runs through July 31 at ASU’s MU Gallery. Mightier Than the Sword: The Arizona State Poetry Society announces its 20th annual poetry contest, which boasts over $900 in prizes. Deadline is Sept. 15. For rules, send a self-addressed stamped envelope to J.K. Evans, 7722 W. Devonshire Ave., Phoenix, 85033. Pop-ular Demand: •The Scottsdale Center for the Arts will present two films by the late Andy Warhol Thursday and Friday night. Trashy classics "Andy Warhol” and “Andy Warhol’s Bad” will delight avant-garde aficionados and purveyors of the disturbing alike. The screenings will begin at 7 each night. Tickets are $2.50, $2 for students, and are available at the SACA cinema box office, 7383' Scottsdale Mall. Box Office Bingo: •Hf-ho, hi-ho, Walt Disney’s first fulllength animated feature film, “Snow W hite and the Seven Dwarves,” Is 50 years old this year. By way of celebration, the G-rated favorite of several generations will open Friday in 4,000 theaters in 40 countries around the world. “ Full M etal Jacket” — * * * * Add to the ranks of com pelling Vietnam W ar pictures Stanley Kubrick’s latest project, “ Fu ll M etal Jacket.” It certainly packs as much firepow er as “ The D eer Hunter” or “ Platoon." It also m ay w ell be the best picture of the year. But anyone expecting a slight variation on the 1986 Oscar winner should prepare to be as shocked by the film ’s uniqueness as by its graphic spells. * Kubrick, who directed “ 2001: A Space Odyssey,” “ A Clockwork Orange” and “ The Shining,” has created a m ovie that bears little resemblence to recent w ar pictures other than its inexplicable excellence. Above all, “ Full M etal Jacket” is a study in alienation, an alarm ingly blunt portrayal from a wholly unemotional stance. W h ile it is m e tin g out its disturbing/dispassionate images, however, it also is making gentle jibes or m ild tribute — nothing is ever clean-cut certain when Kubrick is involved — to some of its predecessors. Based on Gustav Hasford’s novel “ The Short-Tim ers,” “ F u ll M etal Jacket” vaguely follow s a Marine recruit, played by Matthew Mondine, through his boot-camp training and onto the frontlines in Hue City during the 1968 T et offensive. Perhaps indicative of the attitude of the age, the recruit, nicknamed P vt. Joker by his drill instructor (L ee Erm ey, an actual ex-Marine drill instructor), is not seen as much of hero. Rather, he m erely is one of a squad of nameless, faceless boys headed to Asia, a convenient subject for the seem ingly casual gaze of the camera. In fact, a ll the view er knows about Pvt. Joker is that he has a penchant fo r John Wayne, that he doesn’t believe in the V ir^ n M ary when the d rill sergeant isn’t around and that he wrote fo r his high school newspaper. Kubrick has made it very difficult to muster much m ore than freakshow interest for the private. To compound the non-concern, Joker is Music: •Chicago will appear at 8 p.m. Thursday in the ASU Activity Center. Tickets are available at all Dillard’s outlets. •Following its successful return to vinyl, Boston -will again take th e stage in a sold-out show 7:30 Thursday night In Veterans’ Memorial Coliseum. •Already a sold-out show, The Cure is playing at the Mesa Amphitheatre at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. See related story, page 10. not made an infantryman upon completing basic training but a w riter for Stars and Stripes, the m ilitary newspaper. Except for sporadic occassions, he is not actively involved in the war. Things happen around him rather than to him. And those things are treated with the same relentless detatchment. That P vt. Joker is witnessing the pyschological down-turning point of the Vietnam W ar is given less consideration than the meaning o f the T et holiday. That he loses one o f his boot-camp “ brothers” to the sharp-shooting of a teen­ age sniper is of little notice. That a form erly benign squad-mate cracks under the pressure of basic training is sim ply p resen t«! with plenty o f blood but no sensation. Extensive boot-camp scenes echo more than the theme of pictures like “ An O fficer and a Gentleman,” but lack the sense of struggle and accomplishment. Sim ilarly, the film has neither the human im pact of “ Platoon” or the humanizing effect of “ Gardens of Stone.” “ Fu ll M etal Jacket” is, however, accute and thought-provoking in the slowly creeping, obtuse Kubrick tradition. W hile the dialogue and narrative styles belie numerous references to other wargenre pictures, the approach and effect of “ Full M etal Jacket” stand out as strangely captivating. And totally singular. H o lly w o o d u p d a te s re e l-ity of w a r Carolyn Nelson Arts E d ita She may not look a day ovar 12, but Snow W hite turns SO this year, or a t least W att Disney’s versión does, ss the firiM ength anim ated feature Is re-released In 40 coun­ tries Friday. Matthew M ordíne atare aa P v t Joker In “Full M etal Jacket,” produced and directed by Stanley Kubrick. Apparently, it has taken 20 years fo r the thorn in Am erica’s side that was the Vietnam W ar to com e to the surface where it can be treated. That is, if the recent spate o f m ovies about the United States’ involvem ent in Southeast Asia is any indication of what’s on the country’s mind. Twenty years m ay seem like a long tim e to live with that kind o f discom fort. . . until one considers that the latest crops of voterregistration cards — and selective service cards — have gone to people who w ere too sm all yet to reach the T V dials when the Vietnam conflict o fficia lly was over. Twenty years is just about the tim e required fo r long-range opinions to form . Naturally, film companies prefer to capture an issue while it’s still reasonably current. As such, the late 1970s saw a troop o f pictures in and about Vietnam. Some o f these maintain the status of classics in the genre even today. “ The D eer Hunter,” which won three of seven Academ y Awards nominations — including Best Picture — in 1978, is still an engaging, if brutal, portrait o f the war. The fo llo w in g y e a r, F ra n cis C oppola’ s “ Apocalypse Now” painted a black and surreal im age of Vietnam, garnering four Oscar nominations op its tortuous way,' But both o f these pictures have in common an innate oppressive despondency. The horror that Marlon Brando mumbles about in “ Apocalypse Now” embodied what audiences expected the experience to be. In fact, Coppola created a Vietd ram atization o f Joseph Conrad’ s thoroughly gloom y classic novel, “ H eart of Darkness,” which is about as socially acceptableas the s ilv e f screen gets. Then what’s so different about the newly arrived war-m ovie rear guard? In a word, humanity. In the 1986 Best P ictu re winner “ Platoon,” ChSrlie Sheen’s character is caught between two diam etric viewpoints from tw o sergeants, who b a sica lly represent the definitive forces of good and evil. However, the focus o f the m ovie is not on which character is right or what insidious factors drive each man to be what he is. Instead, the concern is with how the situation affects a boy who probably would never otherwise be subjected to such circumstances. Sim ilarly, Coppola’s return to Am erica’s least popular w ar with “ Gardens of Stone” looks at the effect of Vietnam on a crosssection of people on the homefront. B ig bad politicos and crazies in command are mentioned only in the character’s passing comments. They, like the m ovie, are contending with the w ar’s personal impact. The soldiers in these m ovies are portrayed as men rather than killing automatons worthy only of their country’s scorn. That m ay be the most important aspect of the post-facto film ic opinion of the Vietnam W ar: the humanizing of the men involved. None o f these film s say the w ar was right or even particularly necessary, but then neither is the Frankensteinian im age of the people who fought it. A fter W orld W ar H , film s like 1953 Oscar winner “ Stalag 17” and 1957 Best Picture “ The Bridge over the R iver Kw ai” celebrated the human im pact of the conflict. Not until the early 1976s were anti-war n ovels such as K u rt Vonnegut’ s ‘ ‘Slaughterhouse F iv e ” and Joseph H eller’s “ Catcb-22” adapted to the big screen. Interestingly, neither of those film s fared especially w ell with the critics — or the Academy. Perhaps the bizarre, hellish scenes did not correctly depict Am erica’s view of the Second W orld W ar. Or perhaps no one cared Then what's so different about the newly arrived war-movie rear guard? In a word, humanity.' to acknowledge their accuracy. But these are the days when it is acceptable to call the official “ police action” a war, and the subtle contentions of film s like “ Fu ll M etal Jacket” are recognized as via b le— and valid. Veterans o f the Vietnam W ar have cried through “ Platoon” ; kids to whom Ho Chi Minh m ay as w ell be Genghis Khan have cried right along with them. A fter 20 years, it seems Hollywood has shaken o ff its.post-traumatic blinders. Page 8 State R im Tuesday, July 14,1987 Re-maligned Can yo u afford to gam ble w ith the LSä T, GMÄT, GRE,or M CÄT? ‘Nerds II’ geek gang takes everything but T “ Revenge o f the Nerds I I ” — * * % Things haven’t changed much for the nerds of Adams College. The m isfit members of the Lambda Lambda Lambda fraternity are still battling blatant discrimination from the Probably not. Great grades alone may not be enough to impress the grad school o f your choice. Scores play a part. And that’s how Stanley H. Kaplan can help. The Kaplan course teaches test-taking techniques, reviews course subjects, and increases the odds that you'll do the best you can do. So if you’ve been out o f school for a while and need a refresher, or even if you’re fresh out o f college, do what over 1 million students have done. Take Kaplan. W hy take a chance with your career? pretty people, and they are still triumphing over the forces of superficiality by pooling their collective, uh, uniqueness. Actually, things — like, say, the p lo t— haven’t changed much at a ll since the first “ Revenge of the Nerds” picture, released in to s p S IA N IfY H K A n A N EDUCATIONAL CENTERCTO DONT COMPETE WITH A KAPLAN STUDENT-BE ONE ENROLL with a friertd and the both of you receive 10% discount 967-2967 Fresh from Tucson, the Adams College delegation of the Lambda Lambda Lambda, clockw lat from left Lam ar (L arry B. Scott), Lewis (Robert C arradlne), Poindexter (Tim othy Busfleld), Booger (C urtis Arm strong)and Wormte r (Andrew Cassese) take paradise by storm In “Revenge of the Nerds IL" 20% O FF (0K DRY CLEANING FOR STUDENTS d i r e c t o r s l a t i o n S requlrem ents:Prior|dorm it<^ liafngf j M ^ i n im u m ) , o n e ye a r of te ie n lto m m u n ic a tio n skills. f WITH ASU I.D. s ndividuai to fo r privately Need e n th u fi supervise resi owned d o rm it e x p e rie n c e as a résident McKellips and Scottsdale in the ABCO Shopping Center [<33^7SD3LLilübj|^ S A L A R Y D O E . E i ^ l i l | D | » ^ | ^ i t y p ? n p ^ m e ^ , m ale o r fem ale . A p p lic a tio n s a c c e p te d b S tw e e n 1 Augi Fo assei No Skob Unit« Bu are i stair Alph Dona Mun: On they mess givin ina t Na ¿KAPLAN W/This AD St t M o d a i l y a t U N IV E R S IT Y ASU SUMMER SESSIONS Presents At M O VE UP T O LUXU R Y LIVIN G ! GAMMAGE CENTER $200 OFF 1st Months Rent SÜMMERFÜN1987 A n exciting sum m ertim e lineup o f Gammage events discounted fo r ASU Sum m er Session students w ith fee card and fo r the ASCI facu lty and staff. Banu Gibson Large One Bedroom -wandthe New Orleans H ot Jazz Orchestra $390 Two Bedroom $470 . »s*----- —--------9 vvoocM N irvM ng » Instant Phone adeems •Assigned covered parking •Custom mini-blinds through-out >Large sparkling heated pools and jacuzzi •Cable TV available » Two racquetball courts •Sand VoBoybaH courts •Ramadas & Barbecue Areas •Single parent discounts •Designer arched windows •Private patios and balconies • Exercise facilities Friday, July 17 • 8 p.m. H e re * a group a$ m uch fun to watch as to listen to ...th e ir m aterial ranges from turn-o f-th e-century rag-a-jazz to B essie Sm ith; from B etty Boop to razzam atazz; from J elly R oll M orton to Fats W aller. Led by vocalist Banu Gibson, the group's enjoym ent of a perform ance is contagious so be prepared! • Club Room General Admission tickets for all Summer Series events are $6 Discount Price for ASU Summer Sessions students and ASU Faculty and Staff is fL3. For fu rth er inform ation about Gammage Center'events, call the Box Office at 965-3434. MAIN CORAL POINT VILLAGE APARTMENTS 2343 W. M AIN, MESA 844-4000 % tsedr* Slate Press Page 9 Tuesday, July 14,1967 Joanne Cantwell ■ M l W o rd E xecs 3 but Tucso n to paradise led much leased in I (Robert Revenge August 1984. F or whatever reasons, most of the original cast has re­ assembled fo r “ Revenge o f the Nerds II.” Now that Tucson has been made safe for geekery, Lewis Skolnick (R obert Carradine) and his polyester warriors intend to spread tolerance throughout the Greek system at the national United Fraternity Conference in scenic F t. Lauderdale, Fla. But, alas, the pastel-hued halls of the Hotel Royal Flam ingo are not so accepting of nerdom. Not only are the pools and stairwells craw ling with a whole new swarm of adversarial Alpha Betas (including prem ier geek-basher Ogre, played by Donald G ibb), but the hotel’s acting manager, E. “ Buzz” Munsinger, is an Alpha alumnus. Once again, the boys are pursued and humiliated. Once again, they organize a hi-tech music show to convey their pro-nerd message. Once again, they are tormented almost to the point of giving up. Once again, they clear the w ay for pocket-protectors inabigway. Naturally, there are a few differences from the first “ Nerds” movie. Ogre gets to do m ore than growl, slobber and holler “ NEEEEERRRRRRD SSSSS!” for com ic relief. W ormser has aged but the slightest bit. Oh, and Poindexter would appear to have improved his violin playing. Fresh from “ Top Gun,” Anthony Edwards, who played Lew is’ partner-in-sine G ilbert in the first picture, has chosen to sit this one out in a minor role. Of course, h e— like the audience— has seen this film before. PAPERS • RESUMES 7 COVER LETTERS ★ ★ ★ ★ Excellent; ★ * ★ Good; ★ * F a ir; * Flop. 271-4388 “ The Untouchables” — ★ ★ ★ % •Gore-master Brian de Palm a m asterfully directs this dramatization o f the vintage T V show. Straight-laced and straight-forward treasury agent E lliot Ness is still hot on the trail of gangster A1 Capone for bootlegging in prohibition-age Chicago. Kevin Costner’s Ness may. see a bit m ore blood than Robert Stack ever did, but he makes the transition to the big screen w ith arresting ease. The film , rated R, is playing at the Sun D evil 6. PARADISE PIZZA “ Adventures in Baby-sitting” — * * 1 4 •Elisabeth Shue stars in this surprisingly original look at the w orld’s third oldest profession. Just how much can go wrong before Mr. and Mrs. Anderson get home? Enough to fill a fa irly entertaining 90 minutes. Rated PG-13, the picture is playing at the AMC Lakes 6, on Baseline o ff RuralRoad. 5 0 OFF ON A LARGE 2 ITEM PIZZA “ The Squeeze” — •Billed as an action/adventure/comedy, “ The Squeeze” fails to live up to any of those adjective as M ichael Keaton and Rae Dawn Chong wander abijguously through the plot. I f the combination of John Davidson, M eat Loaf and “ Bonanza” sounds particularly appealing, you may be able to sit through it. “ The Squeeze” is rated PG-13 and is playing at the AMC Lakes 6. (w ith this coupon) Expires 8-30-87 Com ing Soon! Delivery Service July 20th PARADISE PIZZA 401 S. 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McClintock #3 967-t371 C ity. State, Z ip . M all to or call collect fo r Inform ation: (602) 966-1800 Los Prados Townhom es, 626 W. 14th SL Tem pe. A Z 85281 ASU UNIVERSITY Please send m e finan cing and sales Inform ation on Los Prados Townhomes. 139i ST. PRIEST forces of Q U A L IT Y W O R D PR O CESSING > o *LOS PRADOS (Open Daily) 3 BROADWAY MARICOPA FWN . Page 10 Tuesday, July 14,1987 Cure double LP smacks of pre-received notions The Cure— Kiss Me Kiss M e Kiss M e ★ * What do you do when you don’t have enough new ideas to put together an album? I f you’re the Cure, you put out a double album fu ll of recycled riffs from past discs. Okay, maybe that’s overstating the issue a bit. But the new Cure album does have that “ Jeez, I ’ve heard this before” effect. It ’s a Cure retrospective; everything Robert Smith and his minions have comm itted to vinyl in the last nine |M g § | V 1f t M 'JfUj .j H ¡1..nqjujj-;' Jfl » Æ .X , . - *• %; '_ ||||| The Cure, Laurence Tolhuret (le ft), Boris W illiam s, Robert Sm ith, Simon G allup and Port Thom pson, w ill appear at 7:30 p.m . Saturday In the Mesa Am phitheatre. ASU museum shows exhibit of landscapes Landscapes, a fertile art theme that has endured for centuries, w ill be the focus of a new exhibition at the ASU A rt Museum through Aug. 16. From the natu ralistic vision of Rembrandt to the impressionistic palette of C h ild e Hassam , the la n d s c a p e s on vie w represent a d iv e rs e chronology of styles and media. A ll the works are selected from the museum’s permanent holdings. “ The landscape m otif has stimulated the imagination of artists for at least four centuries,” said Lucinda Gedeon, museum curator and o rga n izer o f the exhibition. “ W ithin the context of Western art, fig u re s appear in subordinate roles to nature as e a rly as the 16th century.” Dutch artists of the 17th century, such as Rembrandt van Rijn, developed a strong tradition of natu ralistic landscape painting, which enjoys continued popularity today, according to Gedeon. Tw o etchings b y Rembrandt a re in clu d ed in the exhibition. Several late 19th-century landscapes by artists such as Ralph Blakelock and Albert Pinkhan Ryder also w ill be on d isp la y . “ B oth demonstrate a reverence for nature and a romantic vision common for that era,” Gedeon said. By the turn o f the century, many Am erican artists, in clu ding H assam and Ernest Lawson, followed their French counterparts in developing impressionistic statements. The property of light was the key elem ent of these early 20th-century paintings. Other landscapes include a 1940 modern abstraction by Arthur Dove, several George E lbert Burr etchings of pastoral Arizona and a Midwest farm scene by Grant Wood. The ASU A rt Museum is located on the second floor of M atthew s C enter. The gaitary is open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays and 1 to S p.m. on Sundays. There is no admission charge. p u t in y o u r r e s e r v a tio n years is represented in essence. Not that that’s gonna bother the legions of disaffected teenagers who w ill be at the band’s sold-out show at the Mesa Amphitheatre Saturday, or Lipstick Bob him self, fo r that matter. Because the Cure has made the big tim e in Am erica. Smith, a progenitor of the doom ’n’ gloom, big haircut mode that is so in vogue these days, hasn’t really changed much. He’s doing the sam e things he’s always done; the rest o f the world fin ally caught up with him. In an ironic twist of fate, the Cure, once fa r rem oved from the musical mainstream, have become arena rockers. The album begins promisingly enough; the first song, “ The K iss,” builds into a roaring monster, with Smith yelping schizophrenic love/hate lyrics. Then follow s “ Do Do Do,” a lazy pop song vaguely reminiscent o f early Bowie. But by the third song, “ Torture,” the m alaise begins to set in; it’s yet another big, booming, pulsing Cure song — liké som ething o ff the quintessential doom -dirge L P Pornography, only funkier. There are a few highlights buried in the record, but the band basically was sleepwalking when they m ade this one. Smith drew from his bank o f well-worn song fram eworks and tortured-soul lyrics, and with some help from the boys in the band regurgitated a generic, standard-issue Cure album. No new ground was broken, but hey, it’ s a double album; just put a sticker oh the record extolling the over 70 minutes o f music contained. I f you can’t give ‘em quality, give ‘em quantity . -M IC H A E L ROWELL n o w f o r 1 9 8 7 -8 8 UlilUERSITV TOWERS privately owned coeducational residence suites □ □ □ □ □ □ 24 hour security video surveilance monthly activities live-in resident advisors roommate selection process free utilities, local phone laundry facilities ;' □ pool, jacuzzi □ contemporary decor □ weight area □covered parking garage □ private balconies priority by deposit limited space available o u t o f a riz o n a , c a ll 894-2300 UNIVERSITY 1 T O WE R S -8 525 S. Forest, Tempe, AZ 85281 sports Stat» Press Rising Suns General manager works to return basketball team to limelight By DAVID M ILLER S tate Prose Phoenix Suns General Manager Jerry C o la n g elo h ates b e in g la b e le d “ insensitive.” Unfortunately there’s not much he can do about it. It’s become a common barb from his critics, and it’s also the kind of thing that goes with the territory of his position. He knows that. But he’d rather hear alm ost anything else. “ You know, people Say I ’m insensitive, but that’s totally inaccurate. There are so many stories about how little w e do for die players, and I can take these attacks because it goes along with the job, but ‘ in sen sitive’ is such an inaccurate portrayal. “ The people close to me know who I am and they wouldn’t say I ’m insensitive. The truth is that there are a lot of things we do for the players,” he said. And fo r the team. Colangelo worries about his team. And if Ü m 1 ever there was a tim e fo r him to w orry about the Phoenix Suns it’s now. Am id an ongoing drug investigation, a lackluster season and the firin g of a head coach, he’s had to sit and watch his team go through the grinder. And he’s still watching. “ Only tim e w ill tell if things have changed,” he said. “ I think the franchise has been damaged but I can’t speculate.” He is, however, optimistic. “ I f w e have a problem with team unity, w e’ll have to deal with it. But I think the people here have the necessary unity. If they don’t w e’ll have to see to it. “ P ro athletes have the ability to put aside these kinds of things when they hit the court.” And hopefully general managers follow suit. In Colangelo’s case, though, there’s no doubt as to how he’ll approach the coming season. He’s taken m ajor steps to insure a positive transition. decided on Arm on G illiam (the Suns first-round draft pick) because w e needed size and strength inside and someone who could score first and forem ost “ And Arman’s an exceptional person,” he said: “ He’s a person with a good work ethic and he has a lot o f potential. H e's a quality person and he’ll be good fo r the team .” He feels sim ilarly about newly obtained Eddie Johnson (acquired from Sacramento for Ed Pinckney). “ Ed hasn’t missed a gam e in four years,” he said. “ He’s an excellent perim eter player. H e’D bring a leadership role into the program .” But Johnson m ay have no other choice. The Sups may be in great need of that commodity. Form er team leaders like W alter D avis w ill have other issues to w orry about in the coming months. “ Legally, W alter w ill be able to play next season,’ ’ C olangelo said. “ He was readm itted to the drug clinic, and the league cleared him. “ But some people refer to W alter as a ‘two-time loser.’ The first tim e he went in (fo r drug treatm ent), those people were supportive. And they w ere let down when he went in again, but they should lode at where he is today. I f they did, they’d come to the conclusion that he’s on the right track. “ W e don’t condone drug usage, but we must encourage the individual to get help. W e encouraged him the first tim e he went in, and w e encouraged him the second time. “ It was the right thing to do. ” As fa r as the drug investigation goes (during which Davis has agreed to testify against a number of his team m ates) one has to look at the system which allows no choice but fo r him to talk. “ H e’ll play again. There’s no reason he wouldn’t,” he said. “We Wi US M i fi mu ||pj|P|j||^3 H P « * I IP: State Praia photo Colangelo on W alter D a v lr “O nohaa to look at the system which allows no choice but fo r Mm to talk. I believe the players w ill play with W alter Davis." m I HP m . Jerry Colangelo “ I believe the players w ill play with W alter Davis.” Colangelo believes the situation has convinced Davis to rid himse lf of his own drug problem once and for all. “ I ’ve spent tim e with W alter and he has made a committment. The difference between this tim e and the last is that it’s been a personal committment in faith, and to Jesus Christ as his savior,” he said. “ This tim e he wants it.” But Colangelo knows of one other Suns player who “ wanted it.” A player who had a taste of the lim elight and eventually let it poison him. Johnny High, a key figure in the drug case, had little future left with the Phoenix Suns prior to his death in an automobile wreck. Colangelo recalls their last meeting: “ Johnny was in m y office. I had tried to find him a job in basketball, which he wanted very badly. I told him he had to start looking at what he was going to do with the rest of his life. “ You know, a lot of players fa ll short in making the conyersion to the real world. In High’s case, he was a second-round pick from Reno and he was lacking certain skills. H e m a d e the clu b due to his competitiveness. “ W e gave him his shot, and when it was over he wasn’t ready fo r the transition,” he said. Colangelo received a phone call a few hours after High’s death. “ I got the call and I was shocked and hurt. I went to the funeral, and it was a sad and tragic thing. It was just a very tough, tough time. ” The incidents surrounding High’s death have added fuel to the claim s that Colangelo, and the Suns organization, is insensitive to the needs of the players. Turn to COLANGELO, pogo 13. F o o tb a ll, b aseb all: a fe w of B o’s fa vo rite th in g s ~ C an you believeit ?— " v.:;r . Bo Jackson, the Kansas City Royals outfielder, wants to play football. There’s no real surprise in that. A fter all, most Heisman Trophy winners do. Besides, according to Bo, football would only be a hobby, to pass tim e in the off-season. You know, a hobby. Like stamp collecting. W ell, despite Bo’s choice of an extracurricular activity, the real surprise in a ll this comes from the decision of Royals management to let him pursue it. Bo’s original contract stipulated that he play only baseball; however, he was free to abandon the sport altogether to return to the gridiron. But now Bo says that he wants to play both sports. And the Royals are going to let him. How’s that fo r enforcing contractual obligations? There are two sides to the Royals’ decision. F irst of aU, it’s good because it shows that the Royals have enough faith in Bo to let him do whatever he wants in the off-season. Second, it’s bad because the front office has now alienated itself from many of the other Royals players who don’t have such freedom in choosing their off-season activities. It’s also bad because if Bo does take up N F L football, he w ill most likely wind up dropping the horsehide to concentrate on running the pigskin. . I don’t mean to say that Bo couldn’t be a great baseball player. His stats so fa r this season include a batting average Marty Sauerzopf Guest Columnist of .254,18 home runs and 45 RB I. But given a choice, I ’d take the Heisman. Bo m ay be a great athlete, but playing football all winter and then playing baseball a ll summer requires a great deal of stamina. And after a couple of seasons, he’ll probably wind up having to choose one or the other. And it shouldn’t be too difficult fo r Bo to choose either a shot at the football hall of fam e or an assured membership in baseball m ediocrity. This scenario looks great fo r the Los Angeles Raiders, Bo’s prospective N F L club, but it would leave the Royals with Boken egg on their faces. The Royals can still hope that Bo w ill give up on playing a dual role, but he sounded pretty determined. The other hope for them is that Bq w ill endure one N FL-style hit and decide to return to running down fly balls instead o f being run down by 300-pound linemen. The flip side of that coin is that Bo may endure one NFLstyle hit and wind up in a hospital room instead o f a locker room, which would realty lea ve the Royals high and dry. ___ Of course, considering today’s troubles with beanballs and basebrawl, Bo is probably m ore likely to get hurt in the batter’s box than in the backfield. As fo r the rest of the. Royals’ players, they’re not all thrilled at the w ay the front office gave in so quickly to a hotshot rookie when veteran players remain obligated to lim iting their off-season lifestyles. W illie Wilson referred to the entire a ffa ir as “ horsemeat.” Frank White thinks that it’s a ll a moneymaking ploy. So now what’s to keep these players from pursuing some off-the-wall hobbies of their own? A fter all, everybody needs a hobby. But playing N F L football when you’re a baseball player? I roughly equate that to O liver North growing a heavy beard and becoming a Lebanese terrorist on weekends. Or even to Ron Bellus circulating Mecham-recall petitions. O f course, it should be noted that Bo is an Am erican and is therefore free to do whatever he wants when he’s not on the baseball diamond. But can he handle working fo r all but about two months out of the year? I f he can, m aybe he should consider signing on with an NBA club to fill the void. Howie Long, the L.A . Raiders’ tough-guy-personified team spokesman, compared Bo Jackson to Jack Nicholson in “ One Turn to BO, paga 13. 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C lassified liner ads b ro u g h t to M a tth e w s C e n te r CORNERSTONE SHOPPING CENTER (north basement) l b etw een 7 -9 a.m . 1 /2 P R IC E Lb 9 6 8 -8 0 0 8 Hours: M on.-Fri. 9-9 • Sat. 9-7 • Sun. 12-5 Designer Perm ~| *2 6 °° I Includes: •S h a m p o o a n d D e s ig n e r P erm • P e rfe c t C u t •S ty lin g Long h a ir s lig h tly hig h er 1981 No Appointments Family Hair Cullers I Ui J State Press Page 13 Colangelo. Continued Iron* page 11. “ Johnny High never gave up the hope that he was going to play. But w e’re em ployers and w e work in a system in which there just aren’t many 10-year-or-more players. A lot of athletes get a taste of it but then it’s a tremendous letdown,’ ’ he said. There w ere others, though, who w ere also in for a letdown following last season. Not the least among them was head coach John MacLeod. “ There was a big to-do about the fact that John was let go,” Colangelo said. “ But it was a respected job he’d done and he was here fo r a long time. “ Some say this was due years ago,” he said. “ John was a good coach and he needed a change. It ’s healthy fo r a coach to make a change of this kind every five ConUnuad fram pags 1 1 . State Preee photo On the firing of. John MacLeod: “There was a big to-do about the fact that John wee let go. But It was a respected Job he’d done and he was here a long Ome. Some aay this was due years ago.” Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest,” saying that Bo is crazy if he thinks^that he can do both. Howie did add, however, that if anybody could do it, it would be Bo. The man who comes out looking like a true genius in this base-Bo, foot-Bo controversy seems to be A1 Davis, the years or so. “ It’s not demeaning for anyone in those positions to be let go,” he said. “ In the sports business there’s tremendous change,” he continued. “ And that’s especially true in coaching. That’s the way it is. “ I ’ve been ripped for firin g John, but I gave him and other individuals a lot of tim e in those positions. And I think it’s the best thing that they’ve landed on their feet.” Not to mention the Suns. “ I think John (W etzel, the Suns new head coach) w ill do a great job. He had been here as an assistant coach and he was ready. It’ll be the greatest thing fo r John if the team gets o ff to a roll,” he said. And not just fo r John. Raiders’ front-office bigwig, who had the foresight to draft Bo in the seventh round of the N F L draft. Davis had nothing to lose, and a Heisman winner to gain. So fo r the next few days, the two teams w ill just have to keep fumbling Bo around until someone comes up with possession. It’s You, Only Better! HairCuts $ 11.00 • U n w a n ted H a ir R em o v ed P erm a n en tly b y E lectroly sis Reg. $15 'TWO Free Confidential Consultation In c lu d e s sh a m p o o , c o n d itio n e r & cut. W ith coup on. E xpires 8 -6 -8 7 . m im 829 -7 829 THfW Sharon V aught, CPE,{ $5.00 O ff Perm Reg. $40 Desert Electrolysis Center In c lu d e s s h a m p o o , c o n d itio n e r. 1050 E. S ou th ern A ven u e, C-tTj T em p e ( W ith co up on. E xpires 8 -& a 7 . Cellophane $ 22.00 Highlight $30.00 ASU * 0 0 ° * COOi C o, In c lu d e s c o n d itio n e r. W ith coup on. 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These 2 or 3 bedroom condos feature all the convenience of walking to campus and the fun of campus living with quality features. For what you pay in rent, move up and improve your lifestyle! W e can show you how—you can't afford not to profit! From The 510 West University, Tempe M odel Phone: 968-7173 SVi x 11 20 LB. White Single-Sided No Minimum Hermoea Piece University Sales By: (word processing avail) Tem p« I 894-9588 Tem p« II 894-1797 7 1 5 $ . Forest ASU Merrill Lynch 9 3 3 E. University <5>°6 ° R e a lt y Sat. night 7 p.m. to Midnight »V Expires 7-15-87 I *°' State Press Tuesday, July 14,1987 P a geJ K LOW AIR FARES TRAVEL “ 18” 7155 E. 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