s ta te p re s s * Copyright, State Press, 1987 Arizona State University’s M orning Daily T em pe, A riz o n a Thursday, Sèptem ber 10,1987 Audience asked to play presidential pretenders B y VICTO R B A R A JA S State P ress ~ Asking his audience to “ pretend you’re president,” syndicated columnist Jack Anderson described the scenarios President Reagan must face every day to 200 students in the MU Wednesday. Anderson, the first to break the story of diversion o f profits from Iranian arms sales to the Nicaraguan contras, spoke briefly about the Am erican presidential nomination race. He then told his audience the topic he really wanted to address : the Persian Gulf. He said the situation in the Persian Gulf is sim ilar to the Cuban m issile crisis, which thrust the United States and Cuba into turmoil in 1963. “ The Persian Gulf m ay determine if w e live o r die, if w e survive or not,” Anderson said. “ I don’t anticipate that the thing w ill blow up, but T think w e need to know what the stakes are.” Anderson said in 1963, the U.S. was the leading m ilitary power in the world. Today, the Soviet Union is the m ilitary leader. AndyMrozInaM/Stata Press Syndicated colum nist Ja ck A nderson addresses a crow d o f approxim ately 200 in the MU Arizona Room . “ If I w ere president today I would stay where w e are (in the G u lf),” Anderson said. Related editorial, page 4. “ If I were president at the. tim e (when the trouble started) 1 would have never gone in.” He denied that Japan would face the greatest loss if the Persian Gulf w ere closed to shipping, pointing out that the w orld’s oil supply affected all industrial nations. “ It w ill affect the United States as much as Japan,” he said. “ It w ill affect every nation in the western world.” . Anderson said advisers to Reagan warned the president not to intervene if he was not prepared to go to war. He said the Soviets have 26 divisions of arm ed troops on the Soviet-Iran border w aiting to invade if theU.S. attacks Iran, as per the treaty that Russia and Irdri share. To stop the Soviets, said Anderson, “ w e would have to drop 19 nuclear bombs,” to close o ff the 19 “ choke point” passages that the Soviet arm y would have to negotiate to invade Iran. - Anderson joked that the Soviets would be “ offended,” and retaliate with their own nuclear bombs. Turn to ANDERSON, page 10. Regents consider altering stadium alcohol policy B y'D A N A LEO N A R D State P ress “ ir * ** " * 'é U m ¡¡¡¡¡É A proposed change in Arizona’s university alcohol policy could usher in liquor fo r certain expensive seat holders at football gam es, but student leaders are decrying the proposal as a “ double standard.” The regents w ill m eet F riday to discuss proposed changes initiated by U o f A to sell alcohol in new ’ ‘scholarship suites” in Arizona Stadium. “ I feel it’s a double standard,” ASU Associated Students President Karrin Kunaseksaid. “ Ify o u have enough money (to lease a box seat) you can buy the right to drink. “ And if you want to get technical, people who own season tickets are leasing seats fo r the season.” She said the proposed policy would conflict with the universities’ anti-drinking and driving campaign. “ The people who w ill be using the boxes are m ore likely to be driving to the stadium, drinking, and then getting in their cars and driving home,” she said. ‘ ‘Many students live on campus and walk to and from the gam es, so they’re not “the ones likely to be drinking and driving.” j Kunasek said she expects students to “ adamantly oppose” the policy.. The current policy, adopted in Novem ber 1986, prohibits the sale and consumption o f alcoholic beverages on university Jcampuses except “ under certain enumerated circumstances and in accordance with specified limitations and conditions.” Alcohol is allowed in residence halls, fraternity houses and events designated specifically by university presidents. U o f A requested in July the policy be amended to allow consumption o f alcohol in proposed box seats in the stadium. The boxes would be leased to individuals or groups for an unspecified amount of money. P a rt of the revenue would be used to create scholarships. I f the policy is adopted, ASU, U o f A and NAU would fa ll under the new guidelines, ASU legal counsel Bruce Meyerson said. “ Should w e build a sim ilar (scholarship suite in Sun D evil Stadium), we would be included in the new guidelines,” he said. Meyerson said he has heard of plans for such an ASU structure but does not know when construction w ill take place. Alcohol would be allowed only in the box seats, Meyerson said. “ I think the logic is because ’they’re contained and controlled areas, less likely fo r alcohol misuse, as opposed to the whole stadium,” he said. M ick Dalrym ple, director of the Arizona Students Association, said U of A w ill fight the policy because the university has recently been successful with a campus-wide anti-alcohol program, and said it would be “ hypocritical” for them to accept the new policy. In its weekend meeting, the board also w ill discuss: •A proposed plan to add $5 to registration fees. •Raising admission standards for non-residents. •Changes in current registration and tuition policy. •Review of the 1987-88 A ffirm ative Action plan. A S A S U senate approves funding bill despite disagreement over its clarity B y A A R Y N KEM P State P ress A fter seven months o f controversy, the ^Associated Students’ Senate fin ally passed a campus funding bill, although debate continued over its clarity. ASASU has not had any funding guidelines since Feb.17 because of a lawsuit filed by the Lesbian and Gay Academ ic Union last semester. The senate deleted its funding rules last spring after the LG AU filed a lawsuit' claim ing the ASASU senate infringed Upon its Constitutional rights by denying it funding. The lawsuit was judged “ m oot" June 5 by U.S. D istrict Court Judge W illiam P. Copple. This sem ester’s bill passed through the g o v e rn m e n t o p e ra tio n s c o m m itte e unanimously last week, but met harsh criticism over its clarity in the senate Tuesday night, when it was passed. Engineering Sen. Yousef Hashimi made an unsuccessful attempt to amend the bill. He wanted to delete a section of the bill concerning funding programs by a twothirds vote of the senate. “ I have no problem with the intent o f the b ill,’ ’ he said, “ But I do have a problem with the guidelines that give funding (to a program ) by a two-thirds vote, instead of the normal (one-half) m ajority vote.” The provision Hashimi wanted to delete states: “ A ctivities which are not eligible for funding include those which . . . provide a service or program m ore appropriately perform ed by an ASASU department. “ I f such a service or program is denied fu n d in g b y th e m o re a p p r o p r ia te department, the senate may ; approve the funding by a two-thirds vote of the senate.” Fifteen o f the 22 available votes would have to be cast in favor Of a request for it to pass. Hashimi argued it is not fa ir that a m ajority vote by the senate w ill give an activity funding if it has not been previously denied funding by the appropriate ASASU department. Hashimi, a member o f the Israeli Action Committee, said this section o f the bill is open to “ severe abuse.” He said senators’ prejudices toward certain groups might cause them to deny funckng of services and programs requested by that particular group. - “ A two-thirds vote is not fa ir,” he said. “ I do not see the logic in such a large vote.” The b ill’s author, Engineering Sen. Kevin Anderson, explained the two-thirds vote by the senate is important because funding is basically decided upon by the director of the appropriate ASASU department. T h e b ill e n c o u r a g e s c lu b s and organizations to first request funding from the appropriate ASASU department before seeking funds from the senate. If the department feels the program is “ of potential interest to a broad segment o f the student population/’ they m ay fund it if they have adequate funds. But if the department does not have sufficient resources, they can request funds from the senate fo r the group. Anderson said if'a department director feels a program is worthy of funding, there is no reason why the senate would not be able to grant funding by a two-thirds vote. “ W e should respect the opinions of our directors,” he said. “ They have more expertise over their departments than we do. A two-thirds vote w ill express our support o f the people we trust.” Turn to ASASU, page 10. inside today ASU WEATHER Sunny and hot today with an expected PAPAL VISIT A special four-page com prehensive preview about Pope John Paul Il’s visit to Arizona Monday. Page 13, C la ssifie d ...... .......... 25 C o m ics............................................... 20 O pinion.... .......................................... 4 Sports.................................................21 Page g State Presa Thursday, September 10,1087 to d a y •T h e Upward Bound Club w ill be holding a m eeting today at 6:30 p.m. in the MU M ohave Room . Open to everyone. M eetings •The Real Estate Association w ill have an introductory m eeting today at 4:40 p.m. in B A 257. •The Student Chapter of the National Art Education Association w ill hold an orientation m eeting today at 4:30 p.m. in Art 226. •The Minority Affairs Board of ASASU is presenting a w orkshop on senate funding procedures today at 5 p.m. in thè M U Pinal South Room. •The Travel Club at ASU w ill m eet today at S id ’ s W areh ou se at F o re st and U niversity D rives at 6 p.m. to d iscu ss an upcom ing ski trip and other travel topics. •The National International Students Association w ill be planning for future events today at 6 p.m. in M U Room 221. •University Toastm asters, a group designed to teach public speaking skills, w ill m eet today at 5:15 p.m. in B A 341. •The Shotokan Karate Club w ill be practicing traditional Shotokan Karate and accepting new students today at 5:30 p.m. in P h ysical Education W est, Room 101. •Thei.os Diablos Alumni Association w ill host a reception for a ll Chicano/H ispànic scholarship recipients today at 5 p.m. in the M U Alum ni Lounge. •The American Indian Science and Engineering Society w ill be m eeting today at 6 p.m . in the M U, Room 214. •The Financial Management Association w ill be having its first m eeting today at 4:30 p.m. in B A 253. •The Wizard’s and Wargamer’s Guild w ill be holding an introductory m eeting for those interested in role-playing gam es today at 7 p.m. in the M U C oconino Room . •The ASU Rugby Club w ill practice today at 5 p.m. at Sahuaro Field. •Campus Crusade for Christ w ill be having “ Thursday N ight Live” tonight at 7:30 in P h ysical S cien ce B 100. Lectures •ASU Women’s Studies Brown Bag Lecture Series presents a lecture by Lucy M cD ow ell on “ Y oga for Women: Back to B a sics in tim es of S tress” today at 12:30 p.m. in S o cia l S cien ces Room 104. Announcem ents *The MUAB Him Series and Alpha Epsilon Pi are sponsoring a free showing of the m ovie “ H ellraiser” today at 1 p.m. and Saturday at 4 p.m. in the M U Cinem a, located in the M U lower level. •The Sun Devil Spark Yearbook w ill be taking residence hall group floor photos today from 2:30 to 5. R esidents should meet in their hall lobby 10 m inutes before the scheduled tim e. Tim es for today’s floors are: Sahuaro: C1 - 2:30; C 2 - 3; C 3 - 3:30; D1 *4; D2 - 4:30; D3 - 5. O cotillo: D E2 - 2:30; DE3 - 3; B C 2 - 4. M ariposa: 1 - 4; 2 - 4:30. Corrections The State Press incorrectly quoted from an article in Gov. Evan M echam ’s Report to the People o f Arizona W ednesday. In the article by Len M unsil reprinted from the D evil’s Advocate, A S U ’s law school newspaper, w as quoted as follows: “ T h e p re ss u n w ittin g ly a sso cia te s M echam in the m inds of its readers With c ra z ie s w ho w ear w hite sh e e ts or sw astikas.” > It should have read: “ The press wittingly associates M echam in the m inds of its readers with crazie s who w ear white sheets o r sw astikas.” The State Press regrets the error. To d d Graen/StatePress Blowing His Own Horn Sophom ore m usic education major Martin Glenn practices h is tuba beneath the clou ds with the A SU Marching Band. The band is putting the finishing touch es on its act fo r the fall season. W feVe given ou r b rain s to science* T h e T l-6 0 fun ction s include The !|||: hexadecimaUoctal conversions, TI-65 has a ll the T l-6 0 fu n ction s , plus a integration using Simpson's rule, Æ3H5G statistics (in clud ing lin ea r regres stopw atch!tim er fo r lab w ork, eight physical constants fo r use sion ), trend lin e analysis and m etric to Englishconversions. m therm odynam ics and You can program 84 steps. physics as w ell as D e cis io n oos » A nr fWS T I advanced scientifics have all the right engineering and science functions to help you function better in school. W h en w e set out to m ake our most advanced scien tific calculators, w e gave a lo t o f thought to w hat your ©1987 T L science^ m ath and en gin eerin g problem s ate. T h en w e designed our calculators around them . T h e result: th e T l-6 0 and th e new TI-6 5 are both packed w ith bu ilt-in functions. Plus, there ate program m ing steps to speed you through rep etitive calcula tion s. But1even though both can S8R s;r **T ; Ft • pg w* C ; r y* ce>c : * O FF Progra m m in g ca p a b ilities. j You can program 100 steps. -¿¡¡¡l ¿ ¡¡ l ^ ™ sW M handle the hardest problems, they re easy to use. Large, color-coded keys and sim ple keyboard layouts mean you spend less tim e figuring out the calculator and more tim e figuring out your problems. So if you’re the kind o f student who’ got science on the brain, get the calculators from the folks who’ve given their brains to science. T h e Advanced Scientifics from Texas Instruments. Texas^ In strum ents State Press Page 3 Thursday, S e p te m b e r 1 0 ,1 0 8 7 world/nation in brief Iraqi warplanes attack Iranian cities in retaliation for assaults on Kuwait M ANAM A, Bahrain (A P ) — Iraq said its warplanes attacked •Iranian cities, power plants, factories and oil centers Wednesday in retaliation for attacks on Kuwait and to force Iran to accept a U.N.-sponsored cease-fire. Iran said 105 civilians w ere killed or wounded and vowed to avenge them. The raids cam e two days before United Nations SecretaryGeneral Javier Perez de Cuellar is due to arrive in Tehran on a mission to end the 7-year-old war. , ^"an said it shot down three Iraqi jets and captured one pilot when groundfire hit his French-built M irage over the western city o f Arak. Iraq acknowledged losing one plane. Shipping executives w orried that Iranian commandos in speedboats might stage another round o f retaliatory raids on foreign merchant ships in the Persian Gulf, where U.S. warships have been guarding Kuwaiti tankers against attack by Iran. Philippine Cabinet members resign under pressure after coup attempt M A N ILA , Philippines (A P ) — The Cabinet resigned Wednesday under pressure from pro-business members seeking reorganization and stronger leadership after the coup attempt last month. President Corazon Aquino was grim -faced after an em ergency Cabinet meeting. She gave no indication of which resignations would be accepted or when she would announce a new government, and she snapped at reporters: “ You w ill know!” Presidential spokesman Teodoro Benigno said the 25 Cabinet members and three officials o f the Commission on Good Government handed in hurriedly w ritten letters of resignation during the 15-minute em ergency meeting. Among those resigning was Joker Arroyo, Mrs. Aquino’s executive secretary and closest adviser. Senior m ilitary officers, congressmen, prominent businessmen and church groups had sought his dism issal since the coup attempt by mutinous soldiers Aug. 28. Koop says dealing with AIDS raises moral, ethical issues W ASHINGTON (A P ) — The m oral and ethical issues confronting the nation in dealing with AIDS are as difficult as the scientific and m edical ones, Surgeon General C. E verett Koop told a presidential commission Wednesday. One of those problems, he told the opening session of President Reagan’s AID S commission, is the growing m inority o f doctors and dentists refusing to treat patients who have AIDS. “ The good conduct of the m ajority does not in any way release us from facing the unprofessional conduct of a fearful and irrational m inority,” declared Koop. Perhaps the most potentially serious social problem, he said, is related to the fact that AIDS “ is becoming the particular scourge of people who' are young, black and Hispanic.” Koop did not offer solutions, only questions for the commission to address. Ford recalls 4.3 million vehicles due to possibility of engine fires W ASHINGTON (A P ) — Ford Motor Co. on Wednesday announced a voluntary recall of 4.3 m illion 1986-88 cars, trucks and vans to correct problems that potentially could cause engine or fuel system fires.The recall" is the auto industry’s largest since 1981. It covers 2.3 m illion cars and 1.8 m illion light trucks with fuel-injected engines across Ford’s product linie, including the popular M ercury Sable and Ford Taurus models as well as Aerostar vans, company officials said. Another 200,000 Econoline vans w ere recalled in a separate action so that a heat shield can be installed to prevent the fuel tank from overheating, causing gasoline to spurt out when opened. The company said the recall follows 222 reports of engine fires caused by a failure o f couplings used to connect fuel lines. The government said it also has received nearly 100 complaints, including 16 fires, stemming from the tank overheating problem in the Econoline vans. Th ick sm oke, weather hinder efforts to contain remaining western fires (A P ) — Thick smoke and Changing weather hindered efforts Wednesday to contain the last big forest fires still burning in the West, where m ore than 1,000 square m iles are charred, and some fires w ere spreading again. A layer o f cool, humid a ir that had been holding dense smoke close to the ground and not fanning the flam es in northern California and southern Oregon appeared to be lifting, with temperatures clim bing, said California fire information officer Steve Smith. There was a chance of thunderstorms in Oregon, which would kick up wind, said Kathy Aplin of the Oregon Unified Coordinating Group. In California, 76 firefighters have been injured, dozens suffering from smoke inhalation, said A rt W irtz at the Sacramento fire command center. An additional 30 firefighters had been injured in Oregon. Three have died in vehicle accidents, two blamed on the dense smoke. 4 people killed; 74 injured in bus crash on expressway near London airport LONDON (A P ) — Two buses, one carrying Am erican tourists, crashed Wednesday in a six-vehicle pileup on an expressway near Heathrow Airport. Scotland Yard said four people w ere killed and 74 injured, 20 o f them seriously. A sm all truck and three cars w ere also involved in the crash, said Scotland Yard spokesman Nick Jordan. The accident occurred at 1:45 p.m. on the six-lane M4 Motorway. Witnesses blamed the crash on the sm all truck, which apparently tried to make a U-turn through a gap in the highway divider. The gap is for em ergency use only. The truck driver and his passenger w ere killed, along with a man in one of the buses and a woman in the other, Jordan said. Their identities w ere not im m ediately known. Debris blocked the expressway in both directions through the evening rush hour. Firem en had to cut several people free from the wreckage and police helicopters w ere used to get paramedics to the scene. Ten ambulances ferried casualties to four hospitals. Percentage of unmarried Am ericans in early 30’s doubles since 1970 W ASHINGTON (A P ) — The percentage of Am ericans in their early 30s who have never m arried has m ore than doubled since 1970, increasing the prospects that a growing m inority w ill stay single all their lives, the Census Bureau reported Wednesday. Among men between the ages of 30 and 34, those who had never m arried totaled 23.1 percent, according to estim ates made last March. That was up from 9.4 percent in a 1970 Census Bureau report. Among women in the 30-34 age group, 14.6 percent had never been m arried, according to the 1987 report, compared with 6.2 percent in 1970. “ The percentage that remains single throughout their lifetim e is likely to be higher than in the past in view of the increases in never-marrieds among today’s young adults,” the report said. “ The vast m ajority, however, eventually are likely to m arry.” PRANKSTER’S GAR&BRDLL 1024 E A S T B R O A D W A Y 967-8875 lO O D ft. FEVÉRÂQE IN TEMPE! ■orders to go- — ord ers to go- S ib A p a f lw e ir s & G p y WHEN: THURSDAY,SEPTEMBER 10 ALL DAY AND ALL NIGHT!!! Prankster’s will be open at 6 a m. Thursday, Septem ber 10 until 1 a.m. for its 5th year Anniversary Party. From 6 a.m. until 11 a.m. B R E A K F A S T with e g g s, w affles, sa u sa g e , b a co n , ro lls and fruit sala d fo r o n ly $1.50. A lso 50
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Pages
Statt Prca
Thursday, S e p te m b e r 1 0 ,1 0 8 7
B y VICKIE CH ACH ER E
State P ress
Dem ocratic presidential candidate Bruce Babbitt w ill
outline his views on education Friday during two days of
discussion and debates on issues on higher education that
begin today in Chapel Hills, N.C.
Babbitt to give outline
of view s on education
during 2-day debates
Secretary o f Education W illiam Bennett and Ernest
Boyer, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the
Advancement of Teaching, w ill begin the session with
speeches before U niversity of North Carolina faculty
members.
Form er Arizona Gov. Babbitt, along with six other
Dem ocratic hopefuls and two Republican contenders, w ill
present their education platforms Friday.
Babbitt also is expected to detail his plans for the
federal government to assume the Arizona’s $20 billion
Medicaid burden, said deputy press secretary Vada
Manager.
He also is proposing unlimited access to student loan
funds and a loan forgiveness program fo r graduates who
become teachers, join the Peace Corps or work in other
social service areas.
Babbitt, who was favored by seven to nine percent of
likely Iowa caucus participants, has failed to garner
support from organized labor, leaving some political
analysts \yondering if the campaign is faltering.
Manager denied there w ere serious problem s with the
campaign, but did admit the campaign was strained after
a debate in Houston several months ago.
New York Rep. Jack Kemp and form er Delaware Sen.
P ierre DuPont are the only Republicans confirmed to
appear at the session.
“ We are w ell back on track,” he said. “ W e’re in pretty
good shape around here.”
Also scheduled to appear are: Delaware Sen. Joseph
Biden, Massachussets Gov. Michael Dukakis, Missouri
Rep. Richard Gephardt, Tennesse Sen. Albert Gore, Jesse
Jackson and Illinois Sen. Paul Simon.
He said because only 16 percentage points separate
Babbitt and Iowa and New Hampshire front-runners
Dukakis and Gephardt, it is too soon to say how much
support there is for any o f the candidates.
H a d e n to o v e rs e e cam p u s w h ile N elson visits C h in a
By ROBIE KA K O N G E
State Prase
ASU Vice President fo r Academ ic A ffairs
C. Roland Haden w ill preside over ASU
while President J. Russell Nelson is in
China next week.
“ As vice president I w ill be following
normal procedures and doing things that the
president would norm ally do, such as
regents meetings, or signing things,” Haden
said. “ Although it’s a new experince, I ’ll
just be taking care o f ordinary business.”
Haden said he plans to be on campus
during most o f Nelson’s absence except for
the first week in October when he w ill be
aw ay fo r a two-day business meeting.
“ I f I ’m not here for some reason, like let’s
say I ’m sick (lik e) I was in the hospital last
week, then the next person in the chain of
command is Betty (Turner Asher, vice
president fo r Student A ffa irs ).”
Nelson w ill leave fo r the F a r East Sept. 17.
The 17-day trip is in response to repeated
requests from Chinese institutions with
which ASU is form ing exchange programs,
Nelson said.
“ The presidents from the Chinese
institutions have already visited ASU and so
w e are going to China to show them that we
are serious in promoting these exchange
program s with them,” he said.
Nelson w ill travel with Jack Pfister, past
president o f the Arizona Board o f Regents,
an d A S U h i s t o r y p r o f e s s o r S t e v e
MacKinnon who speaks Chinese and w ill
assist as an interm ediator. They are
scheduled to visit six Chinese institutions.
Although P fister is the past president of
the regents, he w ill represent Arizona’s
university governing body since thé trip Was
discussed w hile he was still president.
The trip w ill attem pt to im prove the
relationship between ASU and thè Chinese
institutions, P fister said.
“ The basic objective for our trip is to
dem onstrate ASU ’s support fo r thèse
exchange program s,” he said.
International Program s D irector Richard
L iq u o r B a r n
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Olson said, “ The protocol im pact of
Nelson’s visit is necessary to this program
because he w ill be reviewing the sister
institutions.”
Currently three Asian students are part of
a University-sponsored exchange program
and arrangements are being made for ASU
graduate students and faculty to attend the
Chinese institutions at later dates.
The non-profit ASU Foundation w ill pay
for the plane tickets at $3,600 each and the
institutions w ill provide accomodations.
Nelson and Pfister w ill pay for their wives to
accompany them.
Mackinnon said his w ife w ill not be going
with them.
“ M y husband is going on business and I
am just going for the fun of it,” Mrs. Nelson
said, who has been to Taiwan but not
mainland China.
“ M y husband and I have done a lot of
reading about China and talked to a lot of
people about it, so I expect to learn a lot on
this trip.”
YOUR CHOICE
R E G . O R L IG H T
B U D O R STRO H Í
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M IL L E R
we want you and
your friends to
talk about sex on a
television talk show
w e re searching fo r college w om en to parti
cipate In the studio audience, as hosts and
guests explore changing sexual attitu des on
campus. •
- —
The popular talk show pro du ced by w o m en
fo r the Playboy cable Netw ork will be
videotaped before a live audience Friday,
Septem ber 11 at 7:30 p.m. at th e Scottsdale
ce n te r fo r th e Arts. We il be picking a college
student to be part o f th e panel o n cam pus
sex the n ig h t o f the show.
F R E E T IC K E T S
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U P A T D IL L A R D S
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Sat. 8-10
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"Campus sex,"
Acquaintance Rape
and " Surviving an
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Relationship."
jo in us a n d snare
y o u r feelings on
sexual attitu d es.
Toshiba claims submarine technology
sold to Soviet Union by French company
u SHINGTON (A P ) — The Toshiba Corp., seeking to
queu U.S. anger over a subsidiary’s sale o f submarine
technology to the Soviet Union, issued a report Wednesday
suggesting that a French company may have sold sim ilar
equipment to the Soviets first.
The report, prepared by the U.S. accounting company
P rice Waterhouse and two law firm s, said the Soviets may
nave purchased as many as 10 advanced submarine
propeller m illing machines from the French company of
Forest Line in the mid-1970s.
A t least one of the Forest Line machines was seen by
employees o f Toshiba Machine in 1983 and 1984 when they
w ere installing their own equipment in a Baltic factory in the
soviet Union, according to the report.
U.S; officials have claim ed that the illegal sale by Toshiba
Machine o f eight of the sophisticated machines to the Soviet
Union in 1983-84 enabled the Soviets to.make quieter-running
submarine propellers, thus making it harder fo r the subs to
be detected electronically.
Disclosure o f the sale last spring prompted the resignation
o f Toshiba Machine’s president and resulted in criminal
charges against the company and two of its other officials. It
also prompted outcries in Congress and a near-unanimous
Senate vote to ban all Toshiba imports fo r Up to fiv e years.
Toshiba issued the report at news conferences in
Washington and Tokyo at the same tim e it annniiTim l new
procedures fo r keeping closer tabs on foreign sales of its
subsidiares and affiliates.
Toshiba Corp. is waging an ambitious lobbying campaign
to persuade Congress that it is taking care of the situation,
and that sanctions on a ll Toshiba products would be an over
reaction.
“ I f these had been in place then, w e wouldn’t be here
today,” said Donald Cameron, a partner in the New York law
firm o f Mudge, Rose, Guthrie, Alexander and Ferdon, which
helped conduct the investigation.
The report appeared to buttress the parent company’s
contention that it knew nothing about the dealings of its
subsidiary.
Relative of Jim Bakker faces eviction
from house built with P T L donations
COLUMBIA, S.C. (A P ) — A handicapped relative of
defrocked P T L founder Jim Bakker was ordered by a federal
bankruptcy judge Wednesday to leave the 11-room house
built at H eritage USA with contributions from Bakker’s
followers.
Judge Rufus Reynolds also told P T L chief attorney
Norman Roy Grutman that he might want to “ pack up his
marbles and go home,” taking with him the $300,000-plus he
has earned so fa r as P T L counsel.
Bakker’s attorneys are trying to have Grutman rem oved
as P T L attorney, alleging a conflict of interest.
Grutman said later he did not take the judge’s comment as
a suggestion that he should leave the case, and said he
intends to keep representing PTL.
The Rev. Jerry Falw ell took over the m inistry in March
after Bakker admitted he had sex with a church secretary in .
19«). P T L filed for protection from creditors four months
later, citing $68 m illion in debts.
Reynolds on Wednesday heard a series o f motions filed in
the case of the beleaguered television ministry.
One involved the Whittum fam ily, who had lived for a year
in what the m inistry called “ Kevin’s Home,” for 19-year-old
Kevin Whittum, victim of brittle-bone disease.
The house was built after a series o f appeals by Jim and
Tam m y Bakker. Some $3 m illion was raised, and the new
m inistry leadership is seeking an accounting.
Bakker said the 11-bedroom house would be a home for
handicapped children, but the Whittums are the only people:
who have occupied it.
P T L officials on Aug. 11 dismissed Whittum’s father,
David, who is Bakker’s cousin, as caretaker of the house and
ga ve the fam ily 30 days to leave.
Reynolds said Kevin Should m ove out until Reynolds rules
on a motion fo r the Whittums to retain the house.
“ Everyone can’t live in a castle,” the judge said.
Grutman said P T L is offering Whittum the use of a fourbedroom house now occupied by Bakker’s brother, Norman,
who is moving.
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Corp. and ex-White House political director Lyn N ofziger
unloaded $10 m illion o f stock in a possible insider trading
scheme, Wedtech’s recently hired outside legal counsel
testified Wednesday.
The scandal-plagued Bronx, N .Y., defense contractor’s
top officers, including founder John M ariotta, also
“ looted” the corporate treasury and set up a slush fund to
exploit a Small Business Administration program aimed
at helping m inority contractors, Martin Pollner told the
Senate Governmental A ffairs subcommittee on oversight
o f government management.
Relying on records supplied by Pollner, the panel said
N ofziger, his lobbying partner Mark Bragg, and five
Wedtech executives sold 1 m illion shares of Wedtech stock
fo r $10 m illion on March 26-27 and A pril 9-10,1986, before it
was announced SBA had fin ally cut the contractor out of
the so-called 8a program.
The revocation by SBA, because the company was no
longer owned by minorities, sent the company’s stock
prices plummeting. The SBA 8a m inority set-aside
program provided almost all of Wedtech’s business.
Under it, the company had been awarded some $250
m illion in government work without com petitive bidding.
“ Inside management was totally aware (o f the SBA’s
impending action to disqualify the company) and
unloaded their stock to the public,” testified Pollner.
Information about the trading is being referred to the
Securities and Exchange Commission 5 * investigation,
said subcommittee chairman Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich.
N ofziger and Bragg, who are under indictment for
alleged illegal lobbying of the White House on .behalf of
Wedtech, each sold their Wedtech stock in March 1986 for
$326,000, according to Pollner’s records.
“ W hile millions of dollars were bled from company
funds to line the pockets of company insiders and wellplaced consultants, Am erican taxpayers lost tens of
millions o f dollars paid for products that Wedtech would
never be able to deliver,” said Levin.
• Pollner said that when he and other attorneys w ere
called in to help bail out the firm last December “ we found
a looted treasury.” From 1983 to 1986, the company’s
form er management and other insiders and consultants
w ere selling their stock for $24 m illion, he said, adding:
“ A large portion of those sales took place in 1986 — the
year of Wedtech’s collapse.”
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Page 10
State Pi»««
Thursday, S e p te m b e r 1 0 ,1 0 8 7
ASASU
Continued from page 1.
The larger vote opens up the issue of
efficiency, not discrimination, said Liberal
Arts Sen. Adam Studnicki.
The amendment was voted down 13-8.
Denise Heap, LG AU co-chairwoman, said
she was disappointed the amendment did
not pass.
“ W e plan to w ait and see what is going to
happen now,” she said. “ W e’ll basically
monitor which groups receive funds and
which groups are denied funding before w e
take any (leg a l) action.”
Heap said LGAU w ill apply for program
funding from the senate because there is no
ASASU departm ent under which her
program falls.
The same section o f the bill was amended
to read “ . . . if such a service or program is
denied funding or partial funding by the
m ore appropriate department, the senate
m ay approve such funding by a two-thirds
vote.”
Fine Arts Sen. Warren Brown made the
amendment because programs might only
receive partial funding from a department.
He wanted it to be clear that the senate can
also give partial funds to a program.
In other business, a bill was passed to
transfer $16,437 out o f the fund balance.
$9,000 was transferred into the senate
contingency and $7,437 was transferred into
the executive contingency.
W ill D aly, ASASU executive vice
ByAAR YN K EM P
State P ress
ASASU supports plan
for Tempe mass transit
Associated Students is supporting a plan to
support extensive public transportation in
residential areas surrounding ASU.
Vince Micone, ASASU campus affairs vice
president, said an estimated 52 percent of ASU’s
student population lives within a six m ile radius
o f the campus.
“ A S A S U su pports m ore e x te n s iv e
transportation because traffic in the area
im m ediately surrounding campus is often
congested due to the frequently travelled roads
connecting Scottsdale and Mesa to Tem pe,” he
said.
ASU parking facilities are lim ited and it is
expected that enrollment w ill significantly
increase in the next 10 years, Micone said.
The Tenants and Commuter Association is
encouraging local transportation companies to
service the community surrounding the campus
because o f a high rate o f transportation-related
accidents.
president, said the money in the fund
balance was not spent last year and had to
be transferred to be used this year.
“ I f the money is not transferred, there is a
chance the Board o f Regents w ill cut it from
our budget next yea r,” he said. “ And we
don’t want that to happen.”
A b ill to approve the 1987-88 ASASU state
relations o ffice rules o f procedure passed as
w ell as a bill to approve the 1987-88 ASASU
rules o f order.
The resolution, adopted Tuesday night, has
been assigned to the ASASU university affairs
comm ittee for further discussion next week.
In other developments, engineering Sen.
Yousef Hashimi introduced a b ill to increase
campaign spending by an executive office
candidate from $500 to $600 and an increase from
$100 to $150 fo r senatorial candidates.
“ I want to raise the spending amounts because
the previous amounts w ere not adequate,” he
said.
The bill has been sent to the government
operations com m ittee fo r consideration.
A bill to include the president o f REACH as a
member o f the 10-member student programs
advisory network has been submitted. The bill
also includes a request fo r a representaive from
the yearbook to be a member.
The Advertising Club, the ASU Hispanics
Business Students Association, the Alpha Mu
Gamma Foreign Language Fraternity and the
Chinese Students Association of ASU have
requested funds for program funding
Anderson
Continued from page 1.
“ There are fiv e (levels o f) escalation before w ar breaks
out,” he said. “ Right now w e are in the fourth level.
“ Pretend for a moment — as preposterous as it m ay seem
— that you are President Reagan . . . What would you do?”
Anderson, an acknowledged expert on presidential politics,
speculated briefly on the current field o f contenders.
Calling the presidential race “ impossible” to predict,
Anderson said only activists, or 14 percent o f the population,
w ill vote in the presidential prim aries.
He said because the Dem ocratic party has a fem ale
candidate, P a t Schroeder, the candidates are being referred
to as “ snow white and the seven dw arves.”
“ That’s probably unfair, because the seven dwarves only
have one Dopey,” Anderson said.
^Ie said that on the Republican side, George Bush is the
strongest candidate with the most experience, organization
and credentials.
“ A ll he lacks is charism a,” Anderson said.
Anderson, no stranger to the White House, knew o f the
Iranicontna scandal as early as Decem ber o f 1985, but
, Reagan’s advisers asked him not to print the story at that
tim e because the hostages w ere on the brink o f being freed.
“ I ’dido a great deal for an exclusive story, but I don’t risk
other people’s lives,” he said.
Reagan, who was Anderson’s source after arm s had
already been sold to Iran, asked Anderson not to reveal his
name as the source. Also, Reagan’s administration denied
the story.
But Anderson maintains Reagan did not initiate arm s sales
to Iran.
“ I said from the beginning that Ronald Reagan did not
know, and he didn’t,” he said. “ There’s no w ay that anyone
w ill be able to prove that he did.”
He explained that Reagan gives directions and leaves it to
his subordinates to execute those directions. Therefore,
Reagan’s ignorance was not an act.
“ If you believe that (he was acting), you’ve forgotten what
a lousy actor he was,” Anderson said.
Anderson said that the Persian Gulf was “ the most
dangerous placé in the w orld,” partly be cause of the
presence of the Ayatollah Khomeini.
He described Ayatollah Khom eini as “ evil incarnate,” and
“ the most e v il person on the face o f the earth since H itler.”
Anderson said Khomeini is not “ crazy” enough to attack
the U.S.
“ But what he’s likely to do is start taking hostages,” he
said.
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Anderson said the United States is hesitant to attack Iran,
fearing Soviet intervention. But the U.S. did attack Libya for
“ just bombing a discoteque” in West Germany.
“ Quadafi would like to be the terrible man,” he said. “ H e’s
trying to be, but the problem is that he’s a goofball.”
Anderson recounted a personal m eeting with Quadafi,
describing him as the “ only man I ’ve ever seen who could
scowl and sm ile at the same tim e.”
Addressing U.S.-Soviet relations, Anderson said the U.S.
should not elim inate the Strategic Defense In itiative (S D I)
until the Soviet Union elim inates its Star Wars program,
which he claim s is fa r m ore advanced than our own.
“ The nation that leads in space w ill dominate the 21st
century,” Anderson said.
“ The arm y who dominates the mountain w ill dominate the
arm y in the valley.”
AKT
The right choice.
1
State Press
___________ _
Thursday, S e p te m b e r 1 0 ,1 0 8 7
Tem pe man hit, kilted by car while
By MIKE BU R G ESS
State P ress
A 23-year-old Tem pe m ail was killed late Tuesday when he
was struck by a car while attempting to cross a street near
his home, police said.
W illiam Dale Smith, of the 2000 block of East Apache
Boulevard, was hit by a westbound 1985 Volvo sedan when he
tried to cross at the intersection of Apache Boulevard and
R iver Road, Tem pe police spokesman R oger Austin said.
Smith was flown by helicopter to Scottsdale M em orial
Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival at 8:39
p.m.
The driver of the Volvo, 19-year-old G eri Gonzales of
Tempe, was uninjured.
pólice report
__
'■ .
■
■
Southern D rive in M esa, ca lled p olice and m ade
arrangements to talk to a detective. He was arrested when he
arrived at the station, Tempe police spokesman R oger Austin
said.
“ He tried to make it past her, but he didn’t quite make it,”
Austin said.
“ He didn’t call and just confess, but he did say he wanted to
talk to us,” Austin said.
Austin said the accident is under investigation and no
citations have been issued.
In other incidents:
Sabartinelli was booked into Tem pe City Jail and charged
with two counts of attempted murder and one count of
aggravated assault.
•A suspect wanted in connection with the shooting of a Tempe
man outside a bar last week turned him self in at Tem pe
police headquarters Tuesday, police said.
Robert W illiam Sabartinelli, 23, of the zero block of
Austin said Sabartenelli gave police a statem ent
im plicating him self in the Sept. 2 shooting outside the Tiny
Tavern at 2058 E. Apache Boulevard.
S e llin g in the
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dents, faculty arid staff around
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Page 12
State P reti
Thursday, S e p te m b e r 1 0 ,1 0 8 7
Information stations forced
into ‘musical tables’ gam e
B y ROBIE KAK O N G E
State P ress
A fter being forced o ff W est Lawn by
c o n s tr u c tio n , s tu d en ts m a n n in g
inform ational tables near the Cady M all
fou ntain a rea w ere asked to m ove
Wednesday because o f increased traffic
congestion.
In a memo to a ll student groups, Student
L ife representative Paul M. Biwan asked a ll
groups stationed between the MU and
Hayden Library to relocate south of the
fountain b etw een the M U and the
Adminstration building.
Students also advised groups to relocate
north of the construction area in front of
Matthews Center.
“ I realize the (H ayden) library expansion
is causing a number o f inconveniences,”
Biwan said. “ But when these groups
relocated in front o f the MU w e w ere getting
too much traffic and it was to some extent
restricting the handicap access door.
“ So w e’ve asked them to m ove.”
The H ayden L ib ra ry expansion is
expected to be completed in two and a half
years. During the summer, relocation was
discussed but no form al rules w ere
established on where clubs could set up
tables, Biwan said.
“ I spoke with ASASU members and
students from the REACH program in order
to identify with relocation spaces that would
be realistic for both the students and
groups,” he said.
S ta v a M o u n ta e r/S ta te P re ss
“ What we w ere looking for w ere areas
that would provide good traffic flow ; shade
because o f the warm weather, and a place
where the group tables would still be visible
to students.”
Pre-Veterinary Senior Cynthia Podolsld sign s a recall petition outside the MU w hile electrical
engineering senior Em ily Kim m ans the booth w hich w as forced to relocate .
which happens to be the (current) hotspot.
Or, (students can set up) south of Palm
w alk.”
Biwan said Old Main Park, located behind
the Language and Literature Building, w ill
be used for homecoming and other speaking
engagements.
“ We don’t know how w ell Old Main Park
Biwan said that although" setting up in
front o f the MU was probably the best
alternative to Cady M all, the tra ffic flow
created too many problem s.
“ The other ideal alternatives a r e south of
Cady M all in front of Matthews Center
w ill work out yet, m ainly because of the
tra ffic on U niversity D rive. So w e’re
waiting fo r the homecoming activities so we
can get a feeling fo r the park.”
The Snowdevil Ski Club’s Marketing and
Advertising D irector M att Bernstein said,
“ W e’ve been asked to m ove and for now
w e’ll try the Business Building.
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PAPAL VISIT 1987
Pope John Paul II: a portrait of the pontiff
mi .
' __
——-------------------------- —
The name Karol Joseph W ojtyla is not fam ilar to many
people, but most would recognize the face.
W ojtyla was elected the head of the Roman Catholic
Church Oct. 16, 1978, and is known as Pope John Paul II to
m ore than 700 m illion Catholics worldwide.
W ojtyla took the name as a gesture of respect for Pope
John Paul I, who served a short 34-day term before his
untimely natural death.
The Sacred College o f Cardinals, a 113-member advisery
group operating in Rome, chose W ojtyla, who was not a
m ajor contender in the race for the papacy.
The 67-year-old pontiff brought a few firsts to the Roman
Catholic Church: The Polish pope is the first non-Italian pope
in 455 years, the youngest pope in a cfentury, the first pope to
come from a country under Communist rule and the first to
be athletically inclined.
He also is the first pope whose life is portrayed in a comic
book, published in 1983 by M arvel Comics Group.
W ojtyla was born in Wadowice, Poland, on M ay 18, 1920,
and baptized June 20 of the same year.
During his youth, he played goalie for a school soccer
team, headed a religious society and acted in the local
theater. In 1937, W ojtyla starred in and helped direct a
drama club production o f Stainslaw Wyspianski’s “ Sygmunt
August,” which toured southeastern Poland.
Also in 1937, he enrolled in Jagiellonian University to study
philosopy. But the university was forced underground Sept.
1,1939, when the Germans invaded Poland, beginning W orld
W ar II.
W ojtyla’s activities during the w ar — such as participating
in secret Polish readings and performances as a part of
enemy resistance — put his name on the Nazi blacklist.
His study of the priesthood began in 1942. Fearing
discovery by the Nazis, he and other seminarians retreated
in 1944 to the house o f the Archbishop Adam Stefan Sapieha in
Poland,
He was ordained a priest Nov. 1, 1946. W ojtyla continued,
his education and earned a doctorate in philosophy from
Rom e’s Pontifical Angelicum U niversity. His second
doctorate, theology, was completed in 1949.
A fter his schooling, W ojtyla served as a professor of moral
theology in a sem inary in Crakow, Poland. He then became
an ethics professor at the Catholic U niversity o f Lublin in
Poland and went on to head the philosophy department there.
The 264th pope has maintained an extensive w riting career
of m ore than 200 articles and books, including poems written
when he was 19, “ Faster Vigils and Other Poem s,” which
sold 60,000 copies.
The pontiff is fluent in Latin, Italian, English, French,
German, Spanish and Polish.
He was named the auxiliary bishop o f Crakow in summer
1958, appointed head of the diocese four years later with the
title of vicar capitular and named Archbishop of Crakow in
1964.
John Paul IP s papacy, which began in 1978, almost ended
M ay 13,1981, when he was shot entering St. P eter’s Square in
Rome to address a general audience.
The pope spent m ore than two months in a hospital and
fully recovered despite the serious wounds to his abdomen,
arm and hand.
A Turkish terrorist and would-be assassin, Mehmet A li
Agca, was convicted of the crim e. More than two years later,
W ojtyla visited Agca in prison But kept the meeting
confidential.
The pope’s fam ily life has been the source of much tragedy.
His mother, Em ilia Kaczorowska W ojtyla, was plagued by a
kidney problem and eventually died when he was 9 years old.
Frim nnH, his older brother, died of scarlet fever in 1932. His
father, Karol, who was a retired adm inistrative officer and
recruiter for the Polish arm y, died when the younger Karol
was 21 years old.
Although Monday marks the pope’s first trip to the Valley,
it is not his first to the United States. As the Archbishop of
Crakow, he visited the States in September 1969 and July
1976. He toured as pope in 1979.
Pope Jofen Paul II
More than $1.5 million spent to bring pope to Valley
The Papal Visit Committee is spending
more than $1.5 m illion to bring Pope John
Paul I I to the Valley, and $100,000 still is
needed to m eet the budget, according to the
chairman o f the finance and budget
committee.
B ill Shover said he expects to raise the
additional funds through a special collection
this weekend in the Diocese of Phoenix
churches.
The $1.5 m illion is being contributed by
the Catholic community, individuals and the
corporate community, such as banks,
utilities and newspapers, Shover said.
In addition, inore than $180,000 of
taxpayers’ money w ill go toward police
security, m edical staffing and other special
requirements for the visit.
Phoenix is spending m ore than $89,000,
inrinHing $40,000 at the Phoenix Civic Plaza
to build structural supports to hold the
weight o f the crowds at the Symphony Hall
Plaza and on the bridge over Third Street
between Washington and Monroe streets.
The city w ill spend m ore than $44,000 for
police, fire and em ergency m edical services
on Sept. 14.
Carol Patton, a spokeswoman for the City
o f Phoenix, said police personnel w ill be
directing traffic and providing security and
crowd control.
She said the taxpayers’ funding does hot
vio la te the constitu tionally m andated
separation of church and state because the
city officially did not invite the pope to
Phoenix.
“ We are reacting like we would to any
event that would bring more than half a
m illion people to the city,” Patton said.
She said citizens’ health, safety and
wealth “ is part o f the City o f Phoenix’s
responsibility.”
Shover said, “ There w ill be no threat to
citizens’ lives, but you can have terrorism
with large crowds.”
Although the pope is visiting as a religious
leader, he also is recognized as a political
figure, Shover said.
“ He is a church leader, but also the head
of state,” he said. “ Our country recognizes
the Vatican as a separate state.”
The City of Tem pe, where the Mass w ill be
held, is spending m ore than $30,000 for
police personnel to provide security and
tra ffic control.
Randy Gross, assistant to Tem pe Mayor
H arry M itchell, said, “ We are not doing this
for the pope, but fo r the crowds in downtown
Tem pe, and we have to react to that.”
The State of Arizona w ill spend $60,000 to
bring in the Arizona National Guard.
M aj. Thomas Siler, a spokesman for the
state National Guard, said 700 men w ill help
with security for the pontiff, crowd control
and m edical support at the Phoenix Civic
Plaza and Sun D evil Stadium.
M elanie Johnston, spokeswoman fo rth e
Phoenix and Valley of the Sun Convention
and Visitors Bureau, said it is hard to
predict how much revenue the event w ill
bring in to offset costs because “ the life of
the event is so short; it is only 24 hours.”
But Johnston added, “ The average visitor
to Phoenix on the average day w ill spend $98
a day.”
ASU could gain m ore than $137,000 from
stadium rent and food and beverage sales,
said Jim O’Connell, ASU executive director
of public events.
The U niversity w ill receive 50 cents for
every ticket to thé Mass, or $37,000,
O’Connell said. He said it is standard
procedure for the University to receive 50
cents on every ticket less than $7.
“ The event is profitable in the same w ay
all large events are profitable fo r ASU,”
O’Connell said.
ASU made $150,000 on food and beverage
sales during the National Football League
exhibition gam e between the D enver
Broncos and the Green Bay Packers Aug.
15, he said.
“ Even if the U niversity just broke even, it
would be worth doing,” he said.
State Pré«
Page 14
PAPAL VISIT 1987
C o p p e r
C ro s s
7-ton steel structure to tower over papal Mass
It stands six stories high, weighs seven
tons and w ill be die center o f attention
during Pope John Paul IP s Mass at Sun
D evil Stadium Monday.
The white-painted steel, copper-trimmed
cross w ill stand in E iffel-tow er fashion on
the 25-yard line in die center erf the field.
The sides o f the cross are straight fo r 40
feet before the legs fla re out into an arch,
said Maureen McGuire, designer of the
cross and chairwoman o f the Diocese of
P h o e n ix ’ s a r t and e n v iro n m e n t
subcommittee.
The cross stands 65 feet high and its arms
span 16 feet.
“ W e wanted a really big strong symbol of
the cross,” McGuire said.
She said the dominating cross symbolizes
the pontiff’s theme for the Mass, “ The
Triumph o f d ie Holy Cross,” celebrating the
church’s feast day.
The cross w ill have a 40-foot circular base
with four legs to support its weight.
“ The main reason why it had to stand up
by itself was because w e couldn’t d rill a hole
in die m iddle of the field ,” McGuire said.
“ The weight had to be evenly distributed
among the four legs.”
A baptism al font w ill be placed under the
cross where the pontiff w ill anoint 25 people;
including Mesa P olice Chief Len Kotsur,
who was paralyzed by a March 28 traffic
accident.
The Diocese o f Phoenix asked McGuire
m ore than a year ago to design a cross. She
has been a litu rgical arts designer for 24
years and works m ainly with stain glass.
A fter d ie ASU Mass, the cross w ill be
m oved to St. Simon and Jude Cathedral,
6351 N . 27th Ave.
“ It w ill be a permanet monument to the
pope’s visit,” McGuire said.
The steel and copper cross was built by
Schuff Steel, 420 S. 19th Ave. in Phoenix.
Chuck Gossage, vice president fo r Schuff,
estim ated the cross’ value a t $100,000.
H e said S chu ff S teel donated the
manpower, steel and location to build the
cross, and Phelps Dodge donated the copper
to trim it.
Gossage said the cross took six weeks to
build with m ore than 100men working on the
project.
Originally, the cross was going to be
a irlifted into the stadium by helicopter, but
plans did not m eet a ir regulations. Gossage
said it w ill be transported b y trucks in
sections and then lifted into the stadium by a
40-ton crane on Sunday.
In addition to the cross, McGuire designed
a mural o f western mountains to be a
backdrop .fo r the 80-fopt-wide papal
platform .
In the crater o f the 80- by 40-foot mural
w ill be the Diocese’s Phoenix bird logo, she
said.
The papaf platform w ill be built ioto the
south stands, along with an altar, podium
and a throne fo r fo e pope made from oak
and copper.
“ Copper was chosen to represent foe
natural resources o f Arizona,” said the Rev,
D ale Fushek, planner o f the papal Mass and
pastor o f St. Tim othy’s Catholic Church,
1730 W. Guadalupe Road.
On the platform w ill be m ore than $30,000
in flow ers and 70 chairs for Catholic
dignataries.
Fushek added, “ The stadium is being
turned into an environment for prayer.”
W hile worshippers are filin g into the
s t a d i u m a nd f i n d i n g t h e i r s e a t s ,
entertainm ent w ill be provided from
3:30-5:30 p.m. The stadium gates open at 2
p in .
Eight groups w ill perform : the Ballet
F o lk lo ric o Guadalupano Dancers, a
45-m em ber d a n ce en sem b le fro m
Guadalupe; foe Original Phoenix Polka
Mass Choir and Band, a group perform ing
P o lish P olk a M ass m usic in Polibh
costumes; the Phoenix Boys Choir, a
30-member touring choir under the direction
o f Dr. H arvey Sm ith;.BiIlbob Brown and
Ginny M cKinley; liturgical dancers from
Franciscan Renewal Center; Phabulous
Phoenicians, an 80-member barbershop
chorus; Diablos del Sol,.the ASU mariachi
band; Our Lady o f Perpetual Help Sacred
Dance Group, a 12-member group from
Glendale; and Daniel Consiglio, a Catholic
recording artist.
Each group w ill perform for 15 minutes
from various locations in the stadium.
M ary Jo West, a Valley news media
p e rs o n a lity , w ill be the m a s te r o f
ceremonies fra entertainment.
Erm a Bombeck, nationally syndicated
S teve Mounteer/State Press
Leland Braw n, project m anager tor construction of the cro ss, stan ds next to the top portion,
w hich w ill stand 65 feat tall in Sun D evil Stadium during the papal M e w M onday.
colum nist and V a lley residen t, w ill
introduce foe pope.
There w ill be just 17 minutes for 600
priests and 500 la y people to serve
communion to 70,000 people.
M edical stations and rest stations
w ill be located throughout foe stadiumAnd worshippers attending foe Mass will
bring home souvenirs — a 32-page, color
program and their tickets, picturing the
pope surrounded by St. M ary’s Basilica and
the Phoenix skyline.
Erma Bom beck draws daunting task of introducing pontifl
It is a tough job
ioh to intrnrilire
thp head
hoad nf
om an
introduce the
o f Hu»
the RRoman
Catholic Church to a crowd o f70,000, but a woman known fra
her humorous approach to everyday experiences has been
chosen fra the honor.
Erm a Bombeck, Valley resident and nationally syndicated
humor columnist, w ill introduce Pope John Paul I I at foe Sun
D evil Stadium Mass Monday evening. .
“ I ’m flattered and honored to be chosen,” she said. “ I just
hope m y mouth works.”
Bombeck w ill introduce the pope in her own words before
he tours the stadium in the popemobile. But a script w ill be
provided when she takes the stage again to introduce fo e Call
to Worship.
She was chosen by the Diocese o f Phoenix because o f her
C o v e ra g e
o f th e
1987
p a p al v is it
w a s re p o rte d
fo r th e
State Press
by
wt
T ra c y S c o tt
.h h l„
i:t..
“ warm andh .bubbly
personality
that people know,” « diocese
spokeswoman Anthony Poerio said.
“ She w ill be a good representative o f foe Phoenix people
and the Southwest,” she said.
Poerio said the only criteria for introducing the pope was
being a member o f the Catholic church.
Bombeck is a member of St. Thomas the Apostle Church,
2312 E . Campbell A ve. in Phoenix.
“ Tom ie foe Catholic Church is a great big fam ily, and he is
the father,” she raid.
Poerio raid Bombeck also was chosen because she is a
woman, and foe Roman Catholic Church has becin criticized
in foe United States for unequal treatment o f women in the
church.
~
‘There are not many roles fo r women in the liturgy, and vv
made it a point to select one,” Poerio said.
_____
Bombeck said if she had not been asked to introduce th
pontiff, she would have gone to Mass at St. M ary’s Basicil«
She said she has not decided what to w ear for foe ho
event, but traditionally women who approach the pope we«
a dress with long sleeves, said the R ev. D ale Fushek, planni
of the papal Mass.
“ W hatever I ’m wearing, I w ill w ear Reeboks from the bi
to the stadium ," Bombeck said.
According to Fushek, the pope does not know Bombeck bi
w ill meet her after the Mass.
High temperatures predicted for papal visit
B y VICTO R B A R A JA S
State P ress
People attending the papal mass Monday
should prepare themselves for the worst
possible heat conditions, according to
clim atologists a t ASU.
Anthony Brazel, director of the ASU
laboratory of clim atology, said he has
measured seat temperatures at Sun D evil
Stadium as high as i n degrees where
stadium concrete and aluminum seats are
reflectin g the sun’s heat.
“ P eop le should prepare them selves
because stadium temperatures w ill be
w arm er than the o fficia l airport readings,”
Brazel said. “ Ground level temperatures on
asphalt pavement are even hotter than
that.”
Randy Cerveny, who specializes in
c lim a to lo g y in th e A SU geog ra p h y
department, said huge crowds càn block air
cau se m e d ica l p rob lem s,
especially for out-of-town visitors.
“ Not only do we have to worry about the
conditions, but a lot of people are going to be
waiting hours for foe pope to come in a given
area, and they’re going to be tightly
packed,” Cerveny said.
.
The highest temperature on Sept. 14 was
1 » degrees in 1971. Last year, the high
temperature was 99 degrees.
Although the Mass is in the evening
thousands are expected to arrive at foe
stadium as ea rly as 2 p.m.
B r a z e l u r g e s e v e r y o n e to w e a r
lightweight, light-colored clothing and hats
to help maintain normal bodytem perature.
He also said suncreens with ratings of
S P F 15 or greater w ill help prevent sunburn.
‘Your body is putting out temperatures of
98 to 100 degrees,” Cerveny said. “ With
crowds, you’re not letting foe heat that
you’re putting out escape from the area.”
Brazel raid cramps, exhaustion, and heat
stroke are heat-related illnesses that can be
prevented. Symptoms include headaches,
spasms, chills, faintness and decreased
sweating,
“ People experiencing these symptoms
should seek shade and im m ediate medical
attention,” Brazel said.
F ree w ater w ill be distributed throughout
the stadium.
C erven y said alcok ol and caffein e
coASuraption should be avoided because
fo ey can lead to dehydration.
“ W ater is by fa r the best Idling,” he said.
Page 15
Thursday, Sep te m b e r 1 0 ,1 0 6 7
SecondpapaHoitF o fA m e rica will visit 9 cities
Pope John Paul I I arrives in M iam i today to begin his
second U.S. tour with the national theme, “ Unity in the Work
o f Service, Building Up the Body o f Christ.”
He w ill be making nine stops in the states Sept. 10-19.
•He arrives at the M iam i International Airport from Rome at
2 p.m. today and w ill m eet with President and Mrs. Reagan
at 5:50 p m .
Ön Friday, the pontiff w ill m eet with 200 U.S. Jewish
leaders, a t Dade Gounty Cultural Center and celebrate the
Eucharist at Dade County Fairgrounds.
•He leaves M iam i at 1:30 p.m. Friday for Columbia, S.C.
In Columbia he w ill be greeted at St. P eter’s Church and
then m eet with 30 leaders of other Christian denominations at
the U niversity o f South Carolina. A Mass also w ill be held at
the university stadium.
•The pope w ill leaveColum bia fo r New Orleans International
Airport at 8:25 p.m . Friday.
On Saturday, he w ill be greeted at St. Louis Cathedral in
New Orleans and w ill m eet with Black Catholic lea d er,
Catholic Religious educators and youth in the Louisana
Superdome.
He w ill celebrate a late-aftem oon outdoor Mass at the
U niversity of New Orleans and deliver an evening address at
X avier U niversity to the Association of Catholic Colleges and
Universities,
•The pontiff w ill leave New Orleans at 8:30 a.m. Sunday for
K elly A ir F orce Base in San Antonio, Texas. There he w ill
conduct a morning outdoor M ass in W estover Hills, where
more than 500,000 people are expected to attend.
He also w ill parade past the Alam o, meet Catholic-charity
and sociat-action leaders, give an address in Spanishat Our
Lady of Guadalupe Parish and „meet with Texas PohshAmericans.
•The V alley of the Sun w ill m ark the pope’s fifth stop when he
arrives at Sky Harbor International Airport at 8:30 a.m.
Monday. The pontiff w ill visit St. Joseph’s Hospital, travel
down Central Avenue in the popemobile and then celebrate
Mass at Sun D evil Stadium at 6:30 p.m.
•He leaves Phoenix fo r Los Angeles International Airport at
8:45 a.m. Tuesday.
His two-day stay in Los Angeles w ill include a motorcade to
Sagt 10-11
St. Vibiana’s Cathedral, a m eeting with local and state
governm ent officials and a teleconference with Am erican
youths.
. He. w ill spend Wednesday morning w ith 300 U.S. bishops
and later visit' inner-city parochial schools with first lady
Nancy Reagan. He also is m eeting with Buddhist, Jewish,
Hindu and Moslem leaders on Wednesday and conducting an
evening Mass at Dodger Stadium.
•The pope w ill leave Los Angeles Thursday morning for
Monterey, Calif., where he w ill be greeted by local officials,
including Carmel M ayor Clint Eastwood. He w ill celebrate a
morning outdoor Mass at Laguna Seca Raceway, visit the
Carm el mission and then leave fo r San Francisco.
•He arrives in San Francisco a t Crissy F ield at 5 p.m.
Thursday. There he w ill visit the Golden Gate B ridge and
ride in his popem obile to Mission Dolores Basilica, where he
is m eeting with parisheners and AIDS patients.
On Friday, he w ill celebrate Mass at Candlestick Park and
then leave fo r the Detroit M etro Airport at 1:45 p.m.
•The Detroit stop concludes the pope’s tour of the United
States. On Saturday, he w ill address Polish-Am ericans in
Detroit, m eet with church deacons, d eliver a speech on social
justice issues at Hart Plaza and celebrate Mass in the
Silverdom e before leaving for Edmonton, Canada, at 8 p.m.
Pope John Paul II makes first appearance in Phoenix Monday
Pope John Paul II w ill come to Phoenix for the first tim e
next Monday with a full schedule including appearances,
speeches, tours and a Mass.
•The pontiff arrives at the A ir National Guard Term inal of
Phoenix’s Sky Harbor International Airport at 8:30 a.m. He
w ill fly in on a TW A 727 je t that has been nicknamed
“ Shepherd T” for the U.S. papal tour.
The pope w ill be greeted by the Rev. Thomas O’Brien,
coordinator of his V alley visit, Gov. Evan Mecham, Sen.
Dennis Deconcini, D-Ariz., Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
Phoenix M ayor Terry Goddard and Tem pe M ayor H arry
M itchell.
P a p a l m o to rc a d e
r o a d c lo s u re s
Monday, Sept. 14
Closed at or before 6 a.m\
Streets within this area
leading to Central Ave.
closed at or before 6 a.m.
H e w ill leave the airport at 8:40 a.m.
•Tire pope’s first stop w ill be at 9 a.m . at the St. Joseph’s
Hospital and M edical Center, 350 W. Thomas Road. There he
w ill visit three patients in the pediatric w ard and 10 children
in the hospital playroom.
•The pope’s 9:40 a.m. Central Avenue motorcade route w ill
begin at Thomas Road and Third Avenue. He w ill travel in a
“ popemobile,” a Mercedes Benz designed fo r crowd
visibility and the pope’s protection, at 9 mph toward St.
M ary’s Basilica, 231N. 3rd St.
The motorcade route w ill be the best place for follow ers to
see the pope, and a crowd o f more than 350,000 people is
expected.
•The pope w ill enter St. M ary’s Basilica for private prayer at
10:10 a.m. and then address crowds at the Phoenix Civic
Plaza from the upper balcony. He w ill be introduced by
O’Brien.
•The pontiff w ill m ove inside the C ivic Plaza at 10:50 a.m. to
meek with Catholic Health Association officials. He is
expected to spend more than an hour at the meeting, where
CHA officials w ill discuss U.S. health concerns.
•At Phoenix’s St. Simon and Jude Cathedral, 6351 N. 27th
A ve., the pope w ill make a short speech to 1,200 Diocese of
Phoenix clergy and la y people at 12:30 p.m.
•He arrives, a t O’Brien’s residence in north central Phoenix
at 1:20 p.m. to have lunch and rest.
•The pontiff w ill join 16,000 N ative Am ericans at the 48th
annual Tekakwitha Conference at 4:30 p.m. at Arizona
Veterans M em orial Coliseum. The m eeting continues until 6
p.m.
•Finally, the pope w ill head for Sun D evil Stadium fo r the
Eucharistic celebration. He w ill arrive at 6:30 p.m. and tour
the stadium in his popemobile fo r 15 minutes. The Mass
begins at 6:50 p.m. and ends at 9:35 p.m.
•The pontiff w ill retire for the night at O’Brien’s residence
and leave for the airport at 8 the next morning.
•He w ill leave the V alley at 8:45 a.m. fo r Los Angeles after a
short speech thanking people fo r their help in the event.
Protection for pontiff no joke for Secret Service in Arizona
B y MIKE B U R G ESS
State P ress
Donald Tucker, special agent in charge of
the Secret Service operation in Arizona, said
he probably has heard a ll the jokes when it
comes to protecting the Pope.
H e’s heard the one about greased
fla gp oles and agents shooting people
observed on rooftops. He also has beard
rumors about darin g the airport and
freew ays when the Pope visits the Valley
next. Monday.
Tucker says they are a ll false.
“ We are treating this as w e would treat a
presidential visit,” Tucker said.
And he said that’s going to keep Secret
Service agents and more than 1,000 police
officers from around the state busy.
Tucker said agents may have a hard tim e
protecting the pope because o f his friendly
nature.
“ Anytim e you-have a situation where the
protectee exposes him setf„ t o the public it is
a potential threat,” he said.
Tucker said agents are trained to spot
anything unusual in crowds.
“ W e try to lode fo r something unusual in
the crowd that would lead us to believe
something Wasn’t normal, something that is
different, like if it is 100 'degrees out and
someone has an overcoat on,” he said.
Tucker said the Secret Service w ill take
the follow ing precautions to ensure the
Pope’s safety:
•Agents w ill conduct security surveys at
Sky H arbor International A irport, St.
Joseph’s Hospital and buildings along the
m otor route before the pontiff’s visit.
•Business owners are being warned to
monitor whom they allow in their buildings.
•Surveillance helicopters w ill be used to
patrol from the air.
•A bullet-proof shield w ill protect the pope
when he speaks from St, M ary’s Basilica.
•Dogs trained to sn iff and detect explosives
w ill search buildings the pope w ill enter.
•Police w ill check overpasses and man-hole
covers along the route.
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Page 16
State P ro»
Thursday, S e p te m b e r 1 0 ,1 0 8 7
PAPA L V IS IT 1987
ASM*ites to see ‘once-in-a-lifetime’ papal Mass in Tempe
ASU student Stephanie Soto w ill be one of
only 100 people to receive communion
directly from Pope John Paul II when he
delivers Mass at Sun D evil Stadium
Monday.
The junior psychology m ajor said, “ I
thought I would be going to Europe to see
him, but he is coming here to see m e.”
Soto has been a m em ber o f the A ll Saints
Catholic Newman Center, at U niversity
D rive and College Avenue, for three years.
She now serves as president of the center’s
Student Association.
“ I am the only person from the Newman
Center (receivin g communion from the
pope) representing the Catholics and
representin g the students from ASU
because the Newman Center represents
ASU,” she said.
Soto said she feels com fortable meeting
the pontiff face-to-face.
“ I cried when I found out because I
couldn’t believe it,” she said. “ I feel so
honored. It’s like going to m eet someone
I ’ve known forever. I feel close to him .”
Soto said the United States needs this
papal visit because it is “ spiritually
starving.”
The media has not over-touted the papal
event, she said, adding, “ I think the
attention he is getting is appropriate. He is
m ore popular than President Reagan. ”
Soto said the pope is coming to the United
States, not only fo r Catholics, but fo r all
denominations.
“ I think he is coming here out o f lgve for
us, and this w ill change us forever,” she
said. “ Hopefully it w ill bring Catholics into
a fu lle r aw aren ess o f the re lig io n ,
sacraments, and true meaning of being a
Christian.”
Other ASU students w ill attend the
pontiff’s Mass only if they have tickets
through their parishes.
The Newman Center has 700 tickets to
distribute to a parish that is 2,000 members
la rg e and com prised m ostly o f ASU
students.
Newman Center parishoner and ASU
student Julie Douglas has a ticket to the
event.
“ Thisis.a once-in-a-lifetime chance to see
the pope, and I ’m glad I have a chance to be
involved when he com es,” the sophomore
interior design m ajor said.
Douglas, also social director of the
Newman Center Students Association, said
Monday may be her only opportunity to see
the pontiff in the United States, but she
eventually w ill visit Europe to see him
there.
Douglas said the m ore than $1.5 m illion
dollars being spent to bring the pope to the
V alley is “ money well-spent.”
“ Seeing him on T V is not as effective as
seeing him in person,” she said. “ People
would rather see him in person.”
„„
Douglas said the pope’s visit w ill cause
Catholics to analyze their faith.
“ There is a sense o f unity within Catholics
all over the state,” she said. “ I think he w ill
also touch people and bring them closer to
the faith.”
Tickets w ere distributed among the
diocese parishes and allocated to members
who devoted the most tim e and energy to
their parishes.
John Nehrbass, a two-year member o f the
Newman Center, also received a ticket to
the Mass.
But the ASU junior electrical engineering
m ajor said the event has become too
comm ercial.
“ I don’t like that it is com m ercialized;
everyone is trying to make a buck o ff it,”
said Nehrbass, who is vice president of the
Students Association.
But he said the pope’s second visit to the
United States has brought attention to the
church. “ The Catholic faith is under a
m icroscope,” he said. “ People are looking
at it.”
Nehrbass said the tickets should have
been given to people who want to see the
pope fo r religious reasons.
“ The people who are regular Catholics
should have a better chance to see the pope
as opposed to those that are going to see the
pope as a famous person,” he said.
Associated Students o f ASU President
Karrin Kunasek w ill attend the Mass with a
ticket from her Mesa parish, Holy Cross
Catholic Church, 1244 S. Pow er Road.
“ I ’m very fortunate because there is a
lim ited number o f tickets,” she said.
Although Kunasek, a senior history and
political science m ajor, has seen the pope on
two previous occasions in Rom e, she said,
“ The opportunity to see the pope is once in a
lifetim e.”
Kunasek said the taxpayers’ money being
spent to bring the pontiff to the Valley is a
part of the governm ent’s responsibility.
“ The Catholic Church is picking up the
m ajor part of the expenses,” she said.
“ Most of the money spent by Phoenix and
Tem pe is fo r security. And the role o f thé
governm ent is to take care o f the public’s
w elfare.”
Kunasek added, “ The pope’s visit w ill
generate money fo r the state by the great
influx of people coming to the state to see
him .”
F o r m e r A S A S U P r e s i d e n t C h ris
Cummiskey w ill be attending the Mass with
his 9-year-old sister. Cummiskey received
his tickets through St. Theresa Catholic
Church, 5045 E. Thomas Road in Phoenix.
“ It is an important event fo r Catholics and
non-Catholics,” Cummiskey said. “ The
pope is a recognized world leader.
“ When you think o f his position as a w orld
figure, there are only two others that come
to mind — Reagan and G orbachev.” .
C u m m i s k e y , an A S U s e n io r
communications m ajor, said he thinks
Diocese officials have avoided references to
the “ Sun D evil” mascot.
O fficials from the Diocese o f Phoenix
claim there has not been an attem pt to cover
up the impish Sparky at the stadium and to
avoid the use o f “ Sun D evil Stadium,” but
Cummiskey said, “ There has been a
concerted effort to avoid the use o f ‘Sun
D evil Stadium’ and to call it the ‘ASU
Stadium’ on the tickets.”
A l t h o u g h t h e r e has, b e e n s o m e
controversy surrounding the U.S. papal
tour, Cummiskey said he hopes people w ill
not view it as a solely Catholic activity.
“ Many people have taken a negative
viewpoint to the pope’s, visit,” he said. “ I
hope people w ill participate in some way
and look a t it in a positive ligh t.”
ASU geology professor M ichael Sheridan
also received tickets from the Newman
Center, where he has been a m em ber for 21years.
Sheridan saw the pope in St. Peter’s
Square, but he has never been to a Mass
given by the pontiff.
“ One o f the positive aspects is the
emphasis on the Hispanic population in the
United States,” he said.
The pope w ill d eliver an all-Spanish
address Sunday in San Antonio, Texas, and
his visits to M iam i, Los Angeles and
Ph oen ix rep resen t h ea vily H ispanicpopulated communities.
Sheridan said the papal Mass tickets
Stephanie Soto
Chris Cummiskey
Michael Sheridan
John Nehrbass
Jude Douglas
should have been distributed to people who
would benefit most, without excluding nonCatholics.
“ I didn’t lik e the w ay they w ere
distributed but don’t know o f a better w av ”
he said.
The theme o f the pope’s V alley visit is
Catholic health care, but Sheridan said
there are more important issues that the
pope w ill not be addressing, such as women
in the clergy, m arried priests and birth
control.
“ He is not in touch, in accordance, with
the spiritual movement in the United
States,
Sheridan said. “ The Am erican
viewpoint is different from the College of
Cardinals.”
Catholic Health Care named theme of pontiffs visit to Valley
Catholic Health Care w ill be the continuing theme o f Pope
John Paul I I ’s visit to the V alley Monday as he meets with
hospitalized children, Catholic health care officials and
ailing Valley residents.
The pontiff w ill spend 30 minutes at St. Joseph’s Hospital
and M edical Center, 350 W. Thomas Road, to visit young
patients. Later, he w ill m eet with leaders of the Catholic
Health Association at the Phoenix C ivic Plaza, and he w ill
anoint 25 sick people at (he evening Sun D evil Stadium Mass.
“ Phoenix has been known as an area where health is a
concern,” said Monica Bayer Heaton, a spokeswoman for the
Catholic Health Association in St. Louis.
Heaton said the Phoenix theme w ai^hosen because many
people come to Arizona fo r health-related reasons.
“ The church is growing and health care is a growing
concern in A m erica,” she said.
Debra Morton, a spokeswoman for St. Joseph’s Hospital,
said, “ St. Joseph’s is a high-profile fa cility and was chosen
because of its visiblity in Arizona and the nation.”
Barrow Neurological Institute and neo-natal research and
care brought notoriety to the hospital, she said.
/Morton said Barrows is a fa cility dedicated to research and
treatment of neurological and spinal diseases and injuries
and is one o f few that is not attached to a university and
operates autonomous from the hospital.
The pope w ill visit three child patents and their parents
and visit the hospital playroom, Where he w ill m eet 10
children, ages 10 months to 10 years, Morton said.
The ward was chosen because the pope happens to care a
great deal about children,” she said.
Morton said the pontiff also w ill speak to 6,000 employees,
m edical sta ff and special guests in front of the hospital about
the Catholic health care mission, the importance of
alleviating suffering and humanity in m edical care.
Thehospital will beclosedtonewpatientsfrom5:30a.m. to
said.
noon While the pope is in Phoenix, she
We can’t take the risk that someone trying to get care w ill
not be able to get through the tra ffic,” Morton said.
St. Joseph’s Hospital is the second largest hospital in
Phoenix and ranks 105th 11 the nation ini size. It was founded
m 1895 by the Sisters o f M ercy.
S tr te P iw
Page 17
Thursday, September 10,1087
A S U W est solving perpetual funding difficulties
By SC O TT LUCK
S ta te P r e s s
Despite perpetual funding struggles, the
central ASU W est campus should be fully
operational for the spring 1989 semester,
according to the campus vice president.
“ We are very pleased with our progress,
especially considering that w e are in
d i f f i c u l t f i n a n c i a l t i m e s , ” G e r a ld
M cSheffrey said.
Construction on a $6.6 m illion classroom
com plex w ill begin in Novem ber or
December, M cSheffrey said, while a fourlevel library, costing about $8 million,
should open in January.
The 72,000 square-foot classroom building
w ill include several 60-person and 30-person
general purpose rooms, seminar rooms and
a lecture hall fo r 100 to 120 students. It is
scheduled to be completed in December
1988.
In addition to housing 200,000 books and
the computer center, which w ill be moved
from the tem porary Alhambra campus, the
95,000 square-foot library w ill house classes
while the classroom building is constructed,
M cSheffrey said.
An 11,000 square-foot central plant for
power distribution, telecommunication and
chilled w ater already has been completed,
said West campus project m anager Steve
Venker.
Other short-range construction plans
include a laboratory and computer center,
phase two work on the central plant and
infrastructure a n d s i t e im provem ent,
including landscaping and roadway paving.
Long-range plans include a student
services building, a faculty office and an
administration building.
In March, the Arizona Legislature Budget
Com m ittee proposed a 20-year leasepurchase plan to keep the $71.6 m illion
campus construction project on schedule.
Under the lease-purchase plan, the
buildings would have been im m ediately
funded by Se lliq g c e r t i f i c a t e s of
participation on W all Street. ASU would
then have leased the buildings back for 20
years, until the funds w ere paid back with
interest.
But the campus presently is being
expanded on a “ pay as we can” plan
because the proposal was nixed by Arizona
Gov. Evan Mecham.
While Mecham has said he approves of
ASU West, he personally is opposed to bonds
and lease-purchase agreements and w ill not
approve such funding fo r ASU West,
M cSheffrey said.
Th e L eg isla tu re has attem pted to
appropriate $10 m illion per yea r to
accommodate construction needs, but has
not been able to reach this m ark for the past
two years.
Lawmakers allocated $9.5 m illion in 1986,
while $8 m illion originally was appropriated
for 1987, but was cut by $2 m illion by form er
Gov. Bruce Babbitt because o f a $60 m illion
state budget deficit.
M cSheffrey said ASU West w ill ask the
A riz o n a B o a rd of R e g e n t s for
approxim ately $16 m illion for 1988, but the
board w ill probably cut that amount before
submitting a proposal to the Legislature.
ASU W est’s history goes back to 1976 when
an Arizona legislative com m ittee decided
an ASU branch campus was needed to cater
to the needs of students on the west side of
M aricopa County.
ASU began leasing land at Metrocenter
and Alhambra Elem entary School in 1978 to
serve the west V alley in the future.
The 1982 the Legislature designated a
300-acre tract of land in Glendale, between
43rd and 51st Avenues and Sweetwater
Avenue and Thunderbird Road, as the
permanent site of ASU West.
ASU W est becam e an o fficia l ASU
satellite “ campus” on.Aug. 3,1984 when the
L eg isla tu re sign ed it o ffic ia lly into
existence.
O fficial groundbreaking ceremonies took
place in February 1986.
A SU W est p r e s e n t ly o p e ra t e s in
tem porary sites at ASU West-Alhambra,
4510 N. 37th A ve.; ASU-West Montbello
School, 2636 W. M ontbello A ve.; the
Am erican Graduate School of International
Management, Greenway Road and 59th
Avenue; and Glendale Community College,
O live Avenue and 59th Avenue.
Gerald McSheffrey
M cSheffrey said the construction projects
should affect student enrollment.
“ We expect that student enrollment w ill
rise when the library opens,” M cSheffrey
said.
I
He added that attendance figures w ere not
available for the 1987 school year, but said
enrollment had risen dram atically since
last year. Initial 1984 enrollment was 2,246,
increased to 2,529 in 1985, then decreased to
2,142 in 1986.
ASU officials have projected the west
campus w ill accommodate up to 12,000
students by the late 1990s.
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Page 18
Stale Press
Thursday, S e p te m b e r 1 0 ,1 0 8 7
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Frankenberg house bid in works
B y TERRI S E A B E R T
State P ress
T h e c o n s t r u c t i o n c o m p a n y that
dismantled the historic Frankenberg house
thusfar appears to be the only firm working
on a bid to resurrect the house with several
o th er h is t o r ic houses in a T e m p e
redevelopm ent plan.
Gary Rouho, o f Budding Rem odelers Inc.
in Tem pe, said he is form ulating plans to
m eet the Oct. 31 deadline of a request for
bids issued by Tem pe.
“ There has been little activity with thè
project right now,” said David Facklèr,
Tem pé’s deputy director of Community
Development. “ But (w e ) usually don’t start
(receivin g) proposals until one month
before the proposal deadline.”
The Fraiikenberg house, which was listed
on the National R egister of Historic Places,
was dismantled this summer to make room
for the $11.5 m illion expansion o f the College
o f Architecture.
T h e p r o p o s e d 1.6 a c r e T e m p e
redevelopm ent site is bounded by Ash
Avenue, First Street and Second Street near
the Southern P a cific Railroad station and
would be a com m ercial tract housing the
historical Long, Cole and Frankenburg
houses.
The concept was presented,at a Tem pe
City Council meeting this summer by Stu
Setter of Seifer and Associates. Seifer said
he is interested in the Frankenberg house
because “ it happens to be one o f the most
historic houses in the downtown area.”
I f ultim ately approved by the City
Council, money fo r the project w ill be
solicited from private parties and the
developer who receives the bid for the
project, he said.
“ Sometimes it costs more to m ove a house
than to build one from ‘scratch,’ ” Seifer
said.
Last year, ASU solicited bids to m ove the
house o ff U niversity property.
ALTA
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Ruoho received title to the house and
$15,000 fo r the demolition. The company
com pleted the p ro jec t and assumed
ownership of the house.
“ ASU dumped the Frankenberg house,”
says Susan Harter, a community activist
and the great-grandaughter of one of the
house’s builders who spearheaded a drive to
save the house from demolition. “ There’s no
question about it.”
“ I would like to see them make something
distintive, not some sorry, pale and totally
artificia l im itation of Heritage Square,”
H arter said. “ (O therw ise) it’ll ju st be a
concentration block fo r unwanted houses.
“ Everybody likes the old house and wants
it to be saved, but they don’t know what a
backbreaking, heartaching, thankless job it
is.”
Susan Schuman/State Press
H arter said she would like to see the
houses combined into a “ bed and breakfast
inn” fo r the proposed site.
Susan Harter, great-granddaughter of on e o f
the builders of the Frankenberg house, show s
a photo o f the house w hich w as relocated off
cam pus last year.
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S e p te m b e r 1 5 th th r o u g h th e 1 8 th
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L o ca te d in T ra iler # 2 o n P a lm W alk
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SEPT: 10-18
Date
1987 ArtCarved Class Rings
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Page 20
State Press
Thursday, S e p te m b e r 1 0 ,1 0 8 7
D o o n e sb u ry
B Y G A R R Y T R U D EA U
BU T T H & EA R H A LSO R EPU B LI
CANS. IN FACT, THE RECALL M OVE
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BER O F THE GOVERNORS PAR TY!
WHOIS SIGNING THE RECALL PETI
TION? THEfPTTNOEASfDESCRIPTION.
THEKEARB DEMOCRATS,OFCOURSE.
I THEREAR E BLACKS, H ISFW IICS.
* THERE A R E WOMEN AN D GATS.
SO W HAT 1
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IN A W O RP,
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By G A R Y LA R S O N
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by Jeff MacNelly
QUIPS
OH. NUTS!NOT AOAIKl
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RW OUTTDTUECAR,
by Steve T a Ikowski
1
MIU, SOU, S K Y L E R . AND
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Ivory Towers
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Page 21
Thursday, S e p te m b e r 1 0 ,1 0 8 7
C o o p er says Sun Devil
debut tougher this year
S ta ff and w ire reports
A ll of the burning questions concerning
the Sun. D evil football team that have
circulated for the past few weeks w ill finally
be answered Saturday as ASU travels to
Champaign, 111., to m eet Illinois for its
season opener.
ASU head coach John Cooper, who enters
the season opener with a career winning
percentage of .677, said die Sun D evils are
going to have to be better than ever.
“ I think they are a pretty physical,
defensive football team ,” he said. “ I think
w e w ill have to play better at this opener
than we did last year against Michigan
State.”
The Sun D evils beat the Spartans 20-17.
ASU has yet to face the Fighting m ini, but
the Sun D evils are 7-2 against teams in the
B ig 10 conference.
Illinois head football coach Mike White
said the m ini could have an advantage over
ASU because the Sun D evils have not played
yet this season. The Illin i have rid
themselves of their opening gam e jitters
and “ know where we have to go,” White
said.
Last weekend, North Carolina defeated
the Fighting Illin i 34-17.
White noted that the Rose Bowl champion
Sun D evils have a lot of experience on
defense, and a strong offensive line.
“ It’s one of the most versatile teams w e’ll
play,” White said.
“ W e’re not going to throw up our hands
and change what w e’re doing,” White said
..........
John Cooper
Tuesday of his basic gam e plan. “ We have
the ability to play with Arizona State.”
White, who had a career percentage of
.550 before his loss to the Tar Heels, said
that once his players fe ll behind on
Saturday, there was little intensity, urgency
and enthusiasm, and “ there weren’t enough
tears.”
White said he hoped it was not a
continuation of a mental attitude that led to
a disappointing 4-7 record in 1986, including
a 69-13 loss against Michigan and a 59-14 loss
to Nebraska.
. Kent Bostrom, Aaron Cox and Shawn
Patterson w ill be co- captains for the gam e.
“ The thing that puts us in a bind is the fact
that they have several new staff members,
particularly the offensive and defensive
co o rd in a to rs,” C ooper said. “ W e ’ re
guessing a bit about what those coordinators
did at their previous schools.”
D w a in P a i n t e r is th e o f f e n s i v e
coordinator and Howard Tippett is the
defensive coordinator.
Illinois is likely to run the offense out o f a
wishbone form ation, a form ation ASU
rarely sees.
“ They ran the ball a lot m ore than I
thought,” Cooper said after watching the
Illin i fa ll to North Carolina last Saturday.
White said the Illin i must throw the ball
more effectively.
“ W e’re not a good passing team when we
have to pass,” White said.
Illinois has 15 starting seniors, eight on
Turn to DEVILS, page 25.
New coach, big names produce optimism for men of Troy
PREVIEW
PACIFIC
T R O
JA
N S
v CONFERENCE y
Today: USC (1986 7-4-0)
E d ito r’s n ote: This is the seventh o f a nine-part series
preview ing each football team in the Pac-10 Conference.
B y CH RIS D O R SEY
State P ress
Form er Arizona coach Larry Smith begins a new era as
head coach at Southern California after seven successful
years in Tucson.
„
But can Smith continue his success, which includes five
straight victories over ASU, with the tradition-laden
Trojans?
This season, he inherits a program that returns 14 starters,
seven on both offense and defense. Such names as Rodney
Peete, Ken Henry, Marcus Cotton and Cleveland Colter w ill
be looking to claim the Pac-10 crown and a Rose Bowl berth.
USC’s season-opener against Michigan State did not go
.w ell. The Trojans lost to the Big Ten school, 27-13 in East
Lansing, Mich.
“ I Hrfnir w e’ll be a good team ,” Smith said. “ On paper, we
look like w e have good experience returning, particulary at
linebacker, quarterback, wide receiver, running backen d
defensive line.”
Returning as signal-caller w ill be Peete. A junior with two
years o f experience at the helm, he is expected to give the
Trojans a multi-dimensional offense.
“ First, w e must run the football and control the line^of
scrim m age with a strong running gam e,” Smith said. “ I ’m
talking 200-plus yards a gam e on the ground.
“ I f w e do that, w e can have a successful passing g a m e one that averages 200-plus yards too, and that w ill create the
big play. That’s our goal on offense — creating and executing
the big play.”
But the Trojans did not execute the big play Monday. The
Spartans held the men o f Troy to 61 yards on 33 rushes, and
forced USC to pass a school-record 47 times. The Trojans also
com m itted fiv e turnovers and w ere assessed eight penalties
in the gam e.
Ryan Knight w ill return in the USC backfield. He has been
file leading rusher for the past two seasons for the Trojans.
Stata Prats photo
A n unidentified U S C ball carrier la tackled by Sun D evils B obby Boyd (26) and G reg Clark (36) last season. T h is year, under form er
U A coach Larry Sm ith, the Troian s are hoping for
a trip to the R ose Bow l
But he w ill be challenged by junior Steve Webster, who has
played only one gam e fo r the Trojans because of an ankle
injury.
“ Steven has the speed and attitude to be a great player,”
Smith said. “ I ’m excited about him. He’s in great physical
condition and had a healthy and outstanding spring. His
development w ill be a real key to our success.”
USC w ill be without Aaron Emmanuel, who rushed for 495
yards last season. Emmanuel was suspended fo r the season
because o f disciplinary reasons. Sophomore Leroy Holt w ill
tackle the fullback chores.
Peete w ill have experienced receivers hauling in his
passes'.
The split end position is manned by Ken Henry. He proved
to be USC’s big-play receiver, finishing second in the Pac-10
in receiving yardage with 807 yards last season.
In the starting lineup again at flanker is Randy Tanner.
Tanner is a triple threat fo r the Trojans: he throws, runs and
receives.
The offensive line is without consensus All-Am erican Jeff
Bregal, although three starters return. The top man is Dave
Cadigan (6-5,280) who was second-team All-Pac-10 and is in
the running for All-Am erican honors, Cadigan is one o f the
quickest linemen in the country, running a 4.7 in the 40-yard
dash.
“ D ave is just a superb offensive lineman and (is ) worthy of
All-Am erican honors,” Smith said. “ He has excellent
blocking skills, has the size and speed the pros look for and is
a real team leader.”
PaHigan is joined by returning starters Brent Parkinson
(6-6, 250) at guard and John Katnik (6-1, 250) at center.
“ Quickness and speed w ill be a trademark o f the USC
defense,” Smith said. “ And w e have the defensive personnel
here to do that.”
The Trojans have a ll three linebackers back from last
year, including Cotton, a Butkus Award and All-Am erican
candidate. T o join him w ill be Rex M oore and Keith Davis.
The three w ere also USC’s leading tacklers last season.
Moore led the squad with 206 stops, second in the Pac-10,
while Davis collected 155 tackles.
The Trojans have two defensive linemen returning. Tim
Ryan (6-5, 250) was named a Freshman All-Am erican after
making 102 tackles. His companion, Dan Owens (6-4, 235),
tallied 84 tackles and 10 pass deflections.
Smith’s concern is with the secondary. It loses three
Turn to USC, pago 24.
Page 22
State Press
Thursday, S e p te m b e r 1 0 ,1 0 8 7
Strike
Inability to negotiate hurts fans more than NFL
it**
Opening weekend of the 1987 N F L football season is
drawing near, and fans a ll over the country are stocking up
on Budweiser and potato chips in preparation for a different
type o f religious experience on Sunday.
But the N F L is givin g them the finger.
You see, both the players and management have decided
that the very institution that pays their bills in the long run
isn’ t worth as much consideration as protection fo r player
representatives or free-agency compensation.
In addition, the m ajority of those Am ericans who spend
their entire work week with the anticipation of going down to
the stadium, or turning on the tube, have only a slight
understanding of what those concepts really are.
But they are the ones who suffer, and who must eventually
pay out o f their pockets in the form o f ticket price increases.
Sure, both sides of the table say they are w illing to bargain.
Gene Upshaw called the management’s last proposal on
Monday “ garbage,” and Jack Donlan said there are fa r too
many issues to be settled; about 300 o r so.
Those statements do not give much reason for optimism.
N or does the fact that the last four tim es the two have
negotiated there has been a strike.
Blam e can be placed on either side for this m ess: with the
owners fo r being a bunch o f tightwads and not givin g the
players an inkling of what they are asking for, or with the
players fo r making a big deal out of things that they have
m o n n T fV
« ■
a
ser™843-4593
o n d B R I RO AD
V.
the fans; the people Who pay for tickets, which in turn pays
for the players’ salaries.
Steve Brennan
Sports Editor
It seems rather ironic that, buried among the strike stories
in Wednesday’s sports section, was a sm all w ire story about
Chicago Bears linebacker M ike Singletary’s view o f the
whole thing.
gone without until now, and have done just fine.
But they both should take joint blame if a strike occurs.
Singletary decided to forgo a players association m eeting
Tuesday because his team’s season opener against the New
York Giants was m ore important to him.
The last tim e the players struck, the owners lost $200
m illion, the players lost seven weeks worth o f checks, and
there was no professional football for 57 days.
“ This gam e is very important to m e,” he said. “ The Bears
are very important to me. Right now m y focus is on the
Giants gam e.”
Not to mention it left a bitter taste ip the mouths of a ll of
those involved.
N F L Commissioner P ete Rozelle has said he w ill intervene
if no settlem ent can be reached. This is a good idea and
gesture on his part, but let’s face it: He is no Peter
Ueberroth.
The answer to the looming strike must com e from the
players and management, with the fans in mind.
The N F L P A must realize the consequences o f a strike on
the fans. A fter all, it is the fans, that gave them die
opportunity to play professional football in the first {dace.
The management must bargain from the point of view of
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