s ta le press Vol. 70 No. 73 •Copyright, State Prese, I960 Arizona State University’s Morning Daily Thursday, January 2 1 ,1 9 8 8 Tempe, Arizona House hearings begin; Milstead — Mecham’s ers impeded justice By VICKIE CHACHERE and BEN McCONNELL v State Press photo Em battled Gov Evan Mecham , having already faced, a recal movement and possible Indictm ent, was th e subject o f Impeachm ent. The proceedings began W ednesday night a t the Phoenix Capital w here DPS ch ief Ralph M ilstead gave testim ony. State Press PH O E N IX — Departm ent of Public Safety D irector Ralph M ilstead told a House select com m ittee W ednesday that he considered Gov. Evan Mecham’s orders to not cooperate with an attorney general’s investigation “ obstruction o f justice.” Milstead, who told the 10-member panel that he did not tape record the seven to eight-minute conversation where Mecham ordered him to refusé helping Attorney General Rob Corbin, said it was the first tim e he disobeyed orders in his 28-year law enforcem ent career. The com m ittee is looking into allegations that Mecham told M ilstead not to cooperate with Corbin in an investigation into death threats allegedly made by L ee Watkins, a Mecham aide, against Donna Carlson. Watkins made the threats to P eggy G riffith, director o f the governor’s o ffice o f women. The threats w ere outlined to the House in a report issued by special counsel W illiam French Friday. Watkins w as the state’s form er prisons construction chief until last week. Carlson was Mecham’s legislative liaison until she quit last year. A t the tim e of the alleged threat, Carlson w as te s ify in g . b e fo re a gran d ju ry investigating Mecham’s campaign loan from Tem pe developer and law yer Barry Wolfson. Corbin said when he telephoned . the governor on Nov. 15, he had already talked with Carlson and G riffith and was already a witness to the incident. “ To interfere with me cooperating was tampering with a witness,” M ilstead said. Hours before M ilstead’s testimony before an audience of about 45 representatives and 100 spectators, Mecham denied that there was any threat against Carlson. During a noon appearance on KTSP-TV, Channel 10, M echam said that M ax H awkins, the go vern o r’ s d irecto r of administration, told him there was no threat but “ just a bunch o f hot a ir.” “ I don’t even know why he (M ilstead) called m e,” Mecham said. “ Nobody told me that there was any death threat or that there was an investigation. ” But Milstead said during his three hours of testimony Wednesday night the governor was aware of the threat and ordered Turn to Panot, page 9. H azin g case ag ain st F IJIs ‘very stro n g ,’ attorney says By SCOTT LUCK S tatoP rass The attorney representing ASU in its actions against the Ph i Gamma Delta (F IJ I) fratern ity said Wednesday the U niversity has a “ very strong” case because the F U Is have already conceded guilt to hazing violations. “ They’ve basically admitted to a ll o f our allegations in a deposition,” attoraey Laurie Shanks.said. Last October, Student L ife Dean Leon Shell recommended the F IJ Is’ status as a campus organization be revoked fo r two years beginning Dec. 19 fo r 13 alleged violations of the U niversity Code of Conduct. The F U Is allegedly physically and m entally hazed their pledges, according to Shell’s report and form er F IJ I members. T erry Davis, the F U Is ’ attorney, said, “ W e’re not saying the F U Is did not do some stupid things,” but he added that most students’ behaviors change when they leave home. He said most of the F IJ I actions were conducted in the interest o f innocent fun and did not w arrant expulsion. “ F or the U niversity to rem ove the F U I house from campus, I think, is wrong,” D avis said. Shanks said she was surprised at the extent o f alleged F U I hazing, and she w ill ask the U niversity Hearing Board for the sam e or m ore severe sanctions than Shell recommended. “ I am surprised that she would make any comments,” Davis said. “ The only w ay to respond to that (Shanks’ comments) is that the hearing is open so that the entire University can see for themselves what the evidence is and how it ought to be handled.” Davis said judgment should be left up to the board and not be speculated upon by lawyers. The F U Is have been allowed to move back into their house until the board reaches Turn to FUIs page 8. Sketch links suspect to fire in French’s office By M IKE BURGESS State Press ‘ PH O E N IX — F ire officials Wednesday released a composite sketch o f a man wanted fo r questioning in the Jan. 8 arson fire in the law offices o f House special counsel ^ W illia m French. The man was seen on the fourth floor o f the Storey Ross Legal Offices, 4742 N. 24th Street, prior to the fire, said Deputy Chief H arry Beck, who heads the Phoenix F ire Department’s arson investigation envision. Beck said the man gained access to the building by telling witnesses he was a computer repairman. H e refused to say how the fire was started, citing the department’s pending investigation. “ None of Mr. French’s files w ere involved in toe fire ,” Beck said, adding that there is no evidence that French’s files w ere the target in the blaze. French headed the impeachment investigation of Gov. Evan Mecham. The fire occurred exactly one week before he delivered his recommendation fo r Mecham’s possible impeachment to toe legislature. French’s investigation produced what he term ed a “ sm oking gun” in a presentation to the House o f Representatives, pointing to his conclusion that Mecham intentionally failed to item ize a $350,000 campaign loan from Tem pe developer and lawyej^Barry Wolfson. French also concluded that Mecham attempted to impede Attorney General Bob Corbin’s investigation o f alleged death threats made by form er prison construction chief Lee Watkins to form er legislative liaison Donna Carlson, after Carlson allegedly divulged information to the grand jury concerning the Wolfson loan. The early-evening blaze caused $20,000 in damages, mostly from an overhead sprinkler that extinguished toe fire. Beck said Phoenix P olice investigated toe possibility o f a burglary, but found no evidence of forced entry in toe building. ^ “ There w ere no broken windows or jim m ied locks,” he said. “ It was definitely an arson fire. “ W e’ve checked but about a dozen leads and this man is our investigative lead right now.” Beck said the man wanted fo r questioning is Caucasian, approxim ately 40 years old, 6 feet tall. He has a muscular build, thin waist and light brown to blond curly, shoulder length hair. He was last seen wearing blue jeans and a long-sleeved purple button-down shirt. in s id e K “¿ T v - - 'j ASU WEATHER Mostly sunny today with a high in the upper 50s. Tonight: clear and breezy with a low in the mid 30s. * , ASU vs. UCLA: The ASU Sun Devils basketball team plays UCLA at 7 p.m . at the Activity Center. Page 15. C lassified.............. 18 Gothics..... .......... .........1 4 In sig h t............... ................................... 5 O pinion,.......................... I................ . 4 S ports........................ 15 T o d a y .................................................... 3 State Prest Page 2 world/nation in brief Phoenix newlywed couple survives plane crash that killed at least 8 PH O E N IX (A P ) — A newlywed couple from Phoenix are among the survivors o f Tuesday night’s crash of a commuter plane near Durango, Colo. P ete Eaglin, 26, said he and his 23-year-old w ife, Karen, w ere m arried last Saturday and had been spending their honeymoon skiing in Colorado. Eaglin, in a telephone interview Wednesday, said he and his w ife w ere among those able to escape through one of the doors after the plane crashed in a snow-covered mountainous area. “ The plane bellied first and then a wing clipped some of the trees. A fter the plane flipped, it bellied again and nosed into the snow. It felt like it was landing,” Eaglin told K T A R Radio in Phoenix. “ I guess the main concern was juSt to get to the main road. We saw lights once we got a little bit to the top of the hill behind the b a ck o f the plane. W e just trudged through the snow and made it to the highway.” The couple flagged down a motorist, who then notified authorities. Eaglin and his w ife both are listed in good condition at Durango’s M ercy M edical Center, where they’re being treated for cuts and bruises. A t least eight of the 17 people aboard the commuter plane en route from Denver to Durango w ere killed, authorities said. A rizona state p riso ner says that "Deadly Intentions’ Dr. sold drugs M OBILE, Ala. (A P ) — An Arizona state prisoner testified Wednesday that Patrick Henry, the f(Miner doctor whose attempted murder conviction led to the T V m ovie “ Deadly Intentions,” was his marijuana supplier. Henry, 40, who served 6% years in an Arizona prison for the attempted murder o f his form er w ife, Christina, moved to M obile in an attempt to regain his m edical license. Last year, after he and his present w ife, l^ancy, watched a re-run o f “ D eadly Intentions,” Henry was charged with federal marijuana conspiracy and weapons charges. Convicted felons are prohibited from possessing firearm s. Ngncy Henry testified Wednesday that she discovered a locked ammunition box in their home that contained an assortment o f items, including books on marijuana, how to make phony IDs, marijuana seeds and an insurance policy bearing the name Mark Titschinger. According to testimony, the box also contained 72 bullets and a book titled, “ The Death D ealer’s Manual,” which informs readers about assassination philosophies and underworld killings. /Testimony .continues Thursday before U.S. District'Judge Em m ett Cox. Prosecutors introduced evidence showing that Henry maintained a rural route mailbox and a post office box in the Titschinger name and that he corresponded with his form er prison friends under the alias. One of them, Robert Dale Brozovich, serving 15 years for robbery, burglary and kidnapping, testified Wednesday that he w rote to Henry and arranged marijuana transactions through Brozovich’s girlfriend in Fort Payne, Ala. She was identified as Nicki Zanon. Hfe said Ms. Zanon, whom he m et through a classified ad in a newspaper, smuggled marijuana into the Arizona state prison at Florence, Ariz., by concealing it in balloons in her bra. Dukakis beats out Gore, Jackson with Georgia’s potential delegates A TL A N T A (A P ) — The Southern coordinator of M assachusetts G ov. M ich ael Dukakis’ presidential campaign said Wednesday that his strong showing among G eorgia’s potential Dem ocratic convention delegates indicates the South’s voteni are warming to Dukakis’ message. But a spokeswoman for form er Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt, who attracted low numbers of potential delegates in Georgia, said it’s more an indication of staff and campaign funds than popularity. “ This business o f delegate selection is money. Dukakis has the money to spend on it,’ ’ said Elaine Kamarck of the Babbitt campaign. The Georgia Dem ocratic Party on Wednesday released a summary of the estimated 1,250 people who want to be delegates to the Dem ocratic National Convention this summer in Atlanta. Only 86 of them — and 17 alternates — w ill be chosen, based on how w ell their candidates do in the March 8 prim ary. Dukakis was the preference o f the most potential delegates, edging two candidates considered strong in the South — Sen. Albert Gore Jr. of Tennessee and the Rev. Jesse Jackson. “ W e do think it is a very, very strong sign that we filed m ore delegates than Jackson or Gore,” said Debbie W illhite, Southern coordinator for the Dukakis campaign. “ Hus is the governor of Massachusetts, not a natural name fo r this region.” S hiite M oslem m ilitia w ithdraw s, ends siege o f cam ps In B eirut BEIRU T, Lebanon (A P ) — Shiite Moslem militiamen withdrew Wednesday from a ll positions ringing Palestinian refugee camps in Beirut, ending a nearly 3-year-old siege. Syrian troops im m ediately rolled into buffer zones around the Chatilla and Bourj el-Barajneh shantytowns to enforce ¡the newly established peace between guerrillas of Yasser A rafat’s Palestine Liberation Organization and m ilitiam en of Lebanese Justice M inister Nabih B ern’s Amal. ~ Reporters saw Am al irregulars pull aw ay in trucks and jeeps from sandbagged positions and earthmounds surrouding the two camps, home fo r an estim ated 30,000 refugees. V The move came to enforce a decision declared by Berri on Saturday, to lift the m ilitary blockade in what he called a unilateral initiative to end the so-called “ camps war” that had killed more than 1,600 people and wounded 3,600 by Lebanese police count. B erri said his m ove was a g ift to the “ heroic people” who have been protesting Israel’s occupation o f the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Oklahoma offers Texas help in bid for federal atom-smasher project OKLAHOMA C ITY (A P ) Oklahoma Gov. Henry Bellmon has offered a helping hand to Texas in that’s state’s bid to land a huge federal atom-smasher project. Bellmon sent a letter late Tuesday to fellow Republican Gov. B ill Clements of Texas suggesting that Texas could' benefit from an element o f Oklahoma’s application calling for a $2 billion bond ñnanping plan. The letter o f congratulations was sent to Clements after the Department of Energy inform ed Oklahoma officials that the state was nót on the list of seven finalists for the $4.4 billion project. “ As your neighbor, Oklahoma offers its full support for ypur proposal and looks forw ard to cooperating with you in any way possible to see this m ajor research facility is located in the Southwest,” Bellmon wrote. “ One element of the Oklahoma proposal which might be of benefit to Texas is the availability o f some $2 billion of private funds which could be invested on a lease-purchases basis to level out the capital cost fo the project over the next 20 years.” Bellmon urged Texas officials to contact Breene Kerr, chairman of the Oklahoma SSC Developm ent Authority, if they are interested in particulars o f the bond proposal. A M E N ITIE S T H E •-Washer and Dryer •-Color coordinated furnishings •-All Cookware, Tableware, Silverware •-M icrowave •-Dishwasher -Sand/Water Volleyball -1000 -1063 sq. ft. suites -Barbeques -Jacuzzi -Covered Parking Available -Walking Distance to Campus, downtown and Shopping -Walk in closets (L) -Ice Makers (L) -Town House Plan ^Available (L) -Large Interior Storage Room (A) -Redwood Sauna (A) -Study Loft (A) -Lounge/Kitchenette (A) Weight room/racquetball court/exercise bike/ row m achine/ free aerobic classes (A) C O M M O N S The L a s t W ord C) Included In each suite Exclusively Lemon (L) Exclusively A pache (A) c . L tfin u n 968-6 437 Outside A?- 1-800-247-6141 I 1I 1E. A pache 8 2 9 -0 9 3 3 State F re u Page 3 Thursday, January 8 1 ,1 9 8 8 today The Today section is a daily calendar o f events happening at ASU. Any campus club or organization can submit entries to the calendar fo r publication to the State Press, located In the basem ent of M atthews C enter, Room 15. Entries w ill not be taken over the phone. Deadline fo r the entries is 1 p.m . the previous business day. Entries may be edited due to content or space. M eetings Dora M arquez, secretary fo r th e director of th e Hispanic Research Center, stands in front o f a m ural painted b y M artin Moreno in th e Hispanic Research C enter. The painting is a sym bol fo r the freedom and liberty o f different ra c e s .. •B aptist Student Union will have free lunch and devotional from noon to 1 p.m . today at the Baptist Student Union Center, 1322 S. Milt Ave. •O vereaters Anonymous meets upstairs in the MU today at noon for a sharing m eeting. •Shotokun Karate Club at ASU meets tonight from 5:30 to 7:00 p.m. in Physical Sciences W est, Room 101 to accept new members and train in a traditional m artial art. •W om en’s Studies Program will have an open house, special events and a brownbag lunch today from noon to 2 p.m . in Social Sciences, Room 103. •M odel United Nations has an im portant organizational meeting today at 3 p.m . in the M U Coconino Room, •S tu d en t Alum ni Association board m eets today at 3:15 p.m . in Mariposa H all, Room 257 to discuss goals' and objectives. John Pees is their guest. , - ....... •A S U Rugby CJub practices today at 4 p.m . at Sahuaro Field. N ew /players are welcome. •L G A U m eets tonight at 7:30 p.m . in the M U. •Esperanto - ASU Will hold an open house Friday from 11 a.m . to 2 p.m . in the M U , Room 218. Drop by to say hi, and they will have you speaking this language in 15 minutes. For more inform ation, call Jay at 784-9633. Speeches and Lectures • “ Alcoholism and Fam ily Interaction” is the topic of a speech that Ted Jacob of the UA departm ent of psychology will give today at 3:40 p.m . in the Psychology Building, Room 102. •Frontiers in Chem istry Sem inar Series brings R. Turco of R & D Associates in Los Angeles to speak about “The Ozone Hole, N uclear W inter and Related Issues in Atmospheric Chem istry” today at 3:40 p.m ., PS D-106. hysics Colloquium speaker fo r today is A . J. Sievers o f Cornell University. He w ill speak on “ Infrared Electrodynamic Properties of High T Superconductors” at 4 p.m . in PS F-101. Announcem ents •D octoral Recital Series presents violinist W alter Tem m e at 7:30 tonight in Recital Hall. •Faculty Artist Concert Series offers a free concert by Robert Roux of the ASU faculty at 7:30 p.m . on Friday in the ASU Music Theatre. •G ra d u a te R ec ital S eries presen ts guitarist Hunt Becker at 7:30 p.m . on Friday in Recital Hall. •M odem Dance comes alive with New York-based Jennifer M uller and the Works at 8 p.m . Friday and Saturday at Gam m age Center. Jennifer M uller and The Works was created in 1974 and has performed in more than 30 countries on four continents during 16 international and 10 national tours. Tickets cost $12 and $10 and are available at Gam m age and all Dillard’s ticket offices. •A S U ’s M artin Luther King Jr. Steering Com m ittee will sponsor an open forum featuring Art Ham ilton, Minority Leader, Arizona House of Representatives, as m oderator and other state legislators in honor of the slain civil rights leader. The topic is the King state holiday. Everyone is inivited to attend tonight at 7:30 p.m . in the MU Arizona Room. PROFESSORS: W ake u p a n d s m e ll th e c o p y ! m Costs your students 3 A 1 0 per copy m Costs you and your department nothing _ mWe’ll pick-up arid return your originals m We’llgive you maps to help your students find us. 7T H S TR E E T CALL OR VISIT OUR CONVENIENT LOCATION J J N jF=F»irvi~i~ ' 7 \ W There was no o fficia l explanation for it; M eese said he was only collecting evidence (o r a federal case in New York, but nobody believed him, and it turned out that he somehow got the paintings from Adnan M. Khashoggi, the Iranian arm s dealer, who sa id ,“ the paintings w ere not so valuable, and not worth m ore than $2 m illion.” • • * '> Hermann Goering lives. I f the Buddhists are right and it is true that the Lords o f Karm a decide what high or low form w e w ill take in The N ext L ife, then Hermann’s ghost now lives in the fat-laden form and wretched low-rent spirit of U.S. Ed Meese, who is currently the target o f m ore criminal in v e s tig a tio n s than h is O ffic e has successfully prosecuted during his current five-year term as the attorney general. One of the oldest axioms in politics says that any new president’s first appointment must always be the attorney general, . perjury and other white trash crimes. And he was not alone in the dock. Deaver, fo r almost 20 years one of the- Reagan fam ily’s closest friends and most trusted advisers, was recently convicted on more felony charges than Charles Manson was sent away for. D eaver likely w ill spend the next three or four years in a federal prison cell, maybe next door to his old friend N ofziger, who is also on trial this week in the Wedtech case, which also includes B ig Ed, on felony charges that could keep him in prison fo r the next 12 years. There is also the case of Reagan’s wimpish vice president, George Bush, who w ill spend the next six weeks in Iowa and New Hampshire denying that he was lying a ll along about his role in the Iran-Contra arms deal. They are a ll erodes, even in the eyes of their own kind. Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kansas, last week compared Bush to form er Vice President Spiro Agnew, one o f the sleaziest criminals who ever walked through the back' door of the White House. * # Meese is already looking at almost as many felony charges as the current GOP governor of Arizona, E van Mecham, the car dealer from Phoenix who slithered into the govern or’s mansion a yea r ago and in s ta n tly m ade h im s e lf fam ou s by denouncing the birthday of M artin Luther King Jr. as unfit fo r a paid holiday for government workers in Arizona. But that is not enough to get him busted in Arizona; it is the new capital of unbridled bullet-brained free enterprise in our strange diseased crib o f the 1980s in Am erica, and Martin is not a real folk hero here. I f John Fitzgerald Kennedy tried to rent a house in Phoenix today, he would be arrested for disturbing the peace, or at least suspicion of i t . . . which would probably be true. And if the JFK people ever managed to sneak through a il tile Goebbles-style restrictions that norm ally apply in the high-rent, ranchstyle neighborhoods around Camelback Road that have produced the last two justices appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court, the whole Kennedy fam ily would have to post some kind o f unnatural performance bond that would a ll get them put in public Morm on-style stocks and pay huge fines the first tim e any one o f them played a Bob Dylan album after midnight or wore the wrong style Bermuda shorts in public. . Phoenix is a special case, a violent, money-mad zoo on the m iddle o f a desert fu ll o f born-again hustlers, and Evan Mecham is m ore — or m aybe less — than just another crooked, right-w ing Republican who would just as soon kill anybody who asks about those red spirts a ll over his hands when he goes to the bank on Fridays. Not even B a rry G o ld w a ter can tolera te Mecham. He is a very had advertisement fo r the GOP in what looks like a very mean election year. Washington is a long w ay from Phoenix, and it looks like a very different place, but in truth there is not much difference, and the distance is hot that far. They are just two towns fu ll o f law yers and thieves who got their hands in the till ea rly on, and they are getting very hard to pry off. H uhter S. Thompson’s colum n w ill appear weekly in the State Press. ------ R ITTER 1---------------------------- STATE PRESS \ '< s H A t é 0 N 'W ,O J c lft S '/ TRACY 8COTT Editor IfflTSIWr QUITECRICKET io s qasEflitA t e a r GREGORY ROBERT KRZOS Managing Editor ........ ..... ....... BOB E. HEILER Asst. City Editor.................. .............. MARTY SAUERZOPF .............. DARRIN HOSTETLER ....................... ED SCHUBERT ........... SUZANNE WESCHLER .............. *....... ........THUAN LE ......................... DAVE MILLER ..................... JOAN McKENNA ..................... . DAVE HODGES ............. ........... DAVE BIGOS Copy Chief......................... .......... .....MICHELLE ALLMAN REPORTERS: Victor Barajas, Mike Burgess, Vickie Chachere, Kristi Eilis, J. Michael Hoehn, Robie Kakonge, Dana Leonard, Scott Luck, Ben McConnell, Carri Mitchell, Kelly Pearce. ARTS REPORTERS: Jill Herbranson, Matthew Undenburg, Howell J. Matham Jr., Tod McCoy, Bruce Peterson, Scott C. Socket, Jessie Simon, Laurie Smith, Mish Tell. SPORTS REPORTERS: Chris Dorsey, Dean Gyorgy, Gary Jackson, Chris Pkkey. PHOTOGRAPHERS: Margie Babcock, Jack Beasley, Sundi Kjenstad, Stephen Mounteer. CO PY EDITORS: Raymond Brawn. Shewn Dahl, JUI Herbranson. ARTISTS: Mike Ritter, Steve Talkowskj. ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Veronica Alfaro, Danielle Carbone, Judy Crane, Van Dam, Ota Hasadlnratana, Connie Uoyd, Jim Lynde, Nek Midler, Mark Peterson, Patti Schmautz, Heidi Schneiderman, Rich Toltzman. PRODUCTION: Phil Delmont, Leighayn Green, Mark McKinney, Bruce Peterson, Michael Quinn, Denver Sasser, Lynne Senzek. The State Press is published Monday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center, Room 15, Arizona State University, Tempe AZ 85287. Newsroom: 965-2292. Advertising & Production: 965-7572 The State Press is the only newspaper exclusively published for and circulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are not necessarily those of the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. LETTER POLICY The State Press w elcom es and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. All letters must be typed, double-spaced and no longer than th ree pages in length to be eligible for publication. Please include your full nam e, class standing and m ajor (or other affiliation with the University) and phone num ber. Requests for anonym ity w ill be granted w ith ari appropriate reason. All letters are subject to editing at the discretion of the opinion page editor. Bring letters to the S tate Press front desk in the basem ent of M atthew s Center. Photo I.D . is required., Letters m ay also be addressed to: S tate Press, 15 M atthew s C enter, Arizona State University, Tem po, A Z 85287-1502. quotable “ It takes a wise man to handle a lie; a fool had better remain honest.0 — Norm an Douglas insight ____ - , _______________ / .................... ...........................................................................................................................................................— — — ■ _____________________ Pgge_5 Revolutionary Agnes Smedley: ASU alum na as radical socialist By ED SCHUBERT State Press As Sarah Lydia Smedley lay dying of hunger and tuberculosis in a grim , western mining town in the winter of 1910, her daughter initiated their first-ever em brace. Sarah responded by tenderly addressing Agnes as “ m y daughter,” which she had never before done because “ affection between parents and children was never shown among m y people.” When her mother died in Agnes’ arms, her father rifled Sarah’s trunk fo r money and went to get drunk. In a m asterfu l biography, “ Agnes Smedley: The L ife and Tim es of an Am erican Radical,” Janice and Stephan MacKinnon trace Sm edley’s life from the bitter poverty of the mining camps, through her tim e of international prominence as a w ar correspondent with China’s Red Arm y, to her death am id charges of espionage during the McCarthy Era. Smedley is easily ASU ’s most renown alumnus, having studied here in 1911-1912, when ASU was T e m p e N o rm a l S c h o o l; h e r fir s t publications w ere essays which appeared in what is now the State Press, at that tim e called the Tem pe N orm a l Student. S m ed le y’ s life w as an in c re d ib le adventure during which, at one stage or another, she was an intim ate friend of Em ma Goldman, P ea rl Buck, Chou En-lai, Mao Tse-tung and Joseph Stilwell. A t one point or another, she crossed swords with Chiang Kai-shek, Douglas MacArthur, J. Edgar Hoover and the Japanese Im perial Arm y (who had her listed fo r political execution). But h er life re v o lv e d around the degrading poverty of her childhood. It was the cause, fa r m ore than any ideology, of her radical commitment to the poor. In “ The Great Road,” one o f several books she w rote about the Chinese Revolution, Smedley told of being deeply moved when a C om m unist o ffic e r to ld h er o f his impoverished childhood: “ Sometimes, ” I would explain, “you seem to be describing m y own m other. We did not work fo r a feudal landlord, but m y m other washed clothing fo r rich people and worked in th eir kitchens during holidays. She would som etim es sneak out food fo r us children, g ive us each a bite, and te ll us o f the fine food in the hom e o f h e r em ployer. H er hands, too, were alm ost black from work, and she wore h e r h a ir in a knot a t the nape o f h e r neck. H e r h a ir was b la ck and disheveled.. . ” “ The poor o f the world are one big fam ily, ” be said in a hoarse voice, and we sat fo r a long tim e in silence. W h ile S m ed le y w as p a s s io n a te ly com m itted. to socialist revolution and worked closely with communists fo r most of her life, she never joined the Communist Party. In fact, she often held communists — particularly Am erican communists — in deep contempt for their dogmatism, and for what she perceived as their superficial, condescending commitment to the poor, based more on ideology than on compassion. In Moscow in 1921, Smedley m et U.S. communist leader E arl Browder, whom she described in a letter as “ an idiot . . . a young, dainty man of some 25 or 26 who h eigh t (and w ore) baby-blue silk Russian gmnrks in the m arket; and long black ribbons he w ore as belts. And then he, with his baby white skin and fa ir toothbrush moustache, posed in Moscow as the delegate from the Kansas m iners! So help m e gawd! ! It was awful! I was so disgusted I couldn’t even protest.” Although a supporter of the Soviet Union against its critics, she was privately alarm ed at the course the Bolshevik governm ent had taken by 1921. In a letter, Smedley wrote that “ much that w e read of Russia is imagination and desire only. And no person is safe from intrigues and the danger o f prison. The prisons are jammed with anarchists and syndicalists who fought in the revolution. . . . Any Communist who excuses such things is a scoundrel and blaggard. Y e t they do excuse it — and AGNES SM ED LEY defend i t . . . I f I ’m not expelled or locked up or something, I ’ll raise a sm all-sized hell. Everybody calls everybody a spy, secretly, in R u ssia, and everyb od y is under surveillance. You never feel safe.” It was at this tim e that she becam e a close fr ig id o f Emma Goldman, whom she courageously visited after Goldman had been put under house arrest. Sm edley in 1914, shortly after leaving Tempo Norm al School. S m e d le y ’ s p e r s o n a l b r a n d o f re v o lu tio n a ry s o c ia lis m ca n n ot be understood apart from her commitment to dem ocracy and feminism. She considered herself an old-time Jeffersonian democrat, and her socialism as sim ply an extension of those principles to economics. She also saw the liberation of the poor as inextricably bound with the liberation of women. She saw women as poverty’s most tra gic victim s, knowing her m other’s squalid life and death were a result of having no choice but to bear children, for whom she then slaved just to feed. During the 1920s, w hile livin g in Berlin, Smedley engaged in a “ revolutionary” common-law m arriage with a prominent Indian nationalist leader. Their home was a center o f em egre politics, where Muslim and Hindu holidays w ere often celebrated. Not only was Smedley expected to do all the cooking and cleaning, but she often went hungry because o f an Indian custom that all men must be fed before women could eat. Because of her experience, Smedley becam e comm itted to a complete revolution in sexual values and practices. She was opposed to m arriage as a m atter of principle, seeing it as a device by which men made “ sex slaves” of women. She saw birth control as essential to ending womens’ subservient position: “ Men always seem to think human beings should breed like lice as long as they can feed themselves. F or what purpose?. . . What’s the big idea?” Even her most radical friends were shocked by her attitudes and the casually promiscuous lifestyle she maintained after the end o f her m arriage. Thus in 1928, when Smedley left Germany for China as a correspondent for the Fran kfurter Zeitung, she was indépendant, non-ideological, but thoroughly radical. Sm edley’s years in China (1929-1941) seem to have been the happiest and most purposeful in her life. She was a war correspondent, and loved it. She covered the Japanese rape o f Shanghai in 1932, showing unusual courage in m oving through the ravaged city. She spent a year in the Red Arm y headquarters in Yanan, where she arou sed co n troversy by in trod u cin g western-style square-dancing. In 1937-1938, she traveled with the communist Eighth Route Arm y fighting the Japanese in northern China, often behind enemy lines. During this period, Smedley wrote or edited eight books on China. She also poured her energies into obtaining desperately needed m edical supplies fo r Chinese s o ld ie r s , K u o m in ta n g as w e ll as Communist. Questions have naturally been raised about Smedley’s objectivity as a journalist, given her widley-known political view s and her compulsive habit of combining politics and w riting. But though an advocate jou rn alist, she seem s to h ave been rem arkably open-minded and observant — a sort of Ernie P y le o f the Chinese Red Arm y, reporting in intim ate detail on the lives of the soldiers whose cause she supported passionately. It was probably inevitable that her sympathies — which she refused to tonedown or mute fo r personal or political expediency — would lead to her harassment and persecution when she returned to A m erica after the w ar. Friends and publishers turned their backs on her. Finally, on February 10, 1949, the Arm y publicly accused her of having been a member of a Soviet spy-ring while in Shangai, based on an unsubstantiated report from MacArthur’s headquarters in Tokyo. Smedley responded the same day in her typically feisty manner: “ General MacArthur proposed no action against me. He knows I am not guilty of the charges brought against me. He makes his charges while hiding behind the protection of a law which says that he, as a top Arm y official, cannot be sued for falsehood. I therefore call him a coward and a cad. I now say to him: w aive your immunity, and I w ill sue you for übel.” T h e A rm y b a c k e d dow n a lm o s t im m ediatley, publicly apologizing and retracting its charges. Nevertheless, in the poUticaUy paranoid atmosphere o f the tim e, the sm ear stuck and remains even today an article of faith of the fa r right. One of great strengths o f the MacKinnon biography is its carefuUy documented refutation of the spy charge. The accusations made Smedley feel increasingly isolated and vulnerable in the United States. In 1949, shortly after the communist triumph in China, she was sent $2,000 by the new government for the express purpose of returning to China. She died in London on May 6, 1950, while attempting to make her way back. A year later, her ashes were interred in B ejing’s C em etery fo r R e v o lu tio n a rie s . H er gravestone reads sim ply: “ In M em ory of Agnes Smedley, Am erican Revolutionary W riter and Friend of the Chinese People.” The MacKinnon’s biography of Smedley is obviously w ritten with great emphathy for their subject, nevertheless they are careful and objective, and w ell aware of her failings. In the end, she em erges not as a s a in t, bu t as a g e n u in e m a r ty r : “ Throughout her life, in her w ritings and her pubUc statements, Sm edley’s selfappointed task was to communicate the desperate, endless nightmare of poverty and ignorance. H er goal was the overthrow of these two dragons. H er life was a battle, without truce or compromise, to that end.” I f anything, this is an understatement. Agnes Smedley did m ore than w rite and make public statements. She marched with the communist Eighth Route Arm y behind Japanese lines, knowing the Japanese had her marked for execution. She defied Lenin’s secret police and visited Emma Goldman when ¿he was under house arrest in Moscow. A t any tim e, she could have exchanged her life of activism and danger for one of com fort and prosperity, but did not. She was truly a rem arkable person, who has remained to long in obscurity. One reads “ Agnes Smedley: The L ife and Tim es of an Am erican Radical” with a sense of gratitude that a truly great Am erican has finally been restored to her deserved place in history. VS/ Paseó Thursday, January 8 1 ,1 9 8 8 State Pres» __ _________ Services set for ASU exchange student By CARRI MITCHELL State Press M em orial services are scheduled fo r 5 p.m. today in Danforth Chapel for 21-yearold ASU student Carl Slates. Janet Mullen, the assistant director of student recruitment, who recruited States to ASU, said States died on Jan. 13 in Japan where he was an exchange student. Mullen said States, a junior international business m ajor, died after being in a Japanese hospital for a week. M arc Hauke, States’ roommate for two years, said States died of complications arising from parasitic pneumonia. States grew up in Phoenix, Mullen said, and graduated fifth in his high school class at Shadow Mountain High School. Hauke said States was the student body president and homecoming king in high school. “ i f you w ere feeling down, he would listen. I used to get upset about grades and he would help put it into perspective and cheer me up,” he said. f Hauke said States was very active in ASU’s International Business Club. States had been to Japan twice before, Mullen said — once as a United States Senate scholar and again as part of a musical tour. “ He was the most energetic person I ’ve ever m e t. . . I f you m et the guy you liked him. He never got into a fist fight even when he was little and it was hard to avoid,” Hauke said. Mullen said States had received many sch o la rsh ip s to ASU in clu d in g the Leadership Scholarship and the Regents Scholarship. H a u k e s a id S ta te s w a s a lw a y s encouraging others. Mullen said States had been in Japan since last August as part of an ASU exchange program. Vince Micone, ASASU’s campus affairs vice president and a friend of States, is organizing the m em orial service. Micone said the service w ill consist of readings, reflections and some instrumental music. Carl States Regents task force receives m anagem ent efficiency report By KRISTI ELLIS State Press The Arizona Board of Regents task force on Excellence, E fficien cy and Competitiveness received a briefing on Wednesday from a consulting firm auditing the management of the three state universities. Thé task force, which was form ed in March 1987, has been review ing seven policy issues, including management efficiency, that the universities w ill be facing over the next 10 years with the aim of providing a financial plan for the future of the state university system. The report, issued by the consulting firm of Coopers and Lybrand, focuses on the system atic organization, funding and selective processes of the three state universities. A representative fo r Coopers and Lybrand said the m ajor Reward total increased in Utah officer slayings message is that “ our (the, universities’ ) com petitive strengths are form idable because w e are our own worst enemy when w e exploit those strengths.” According to the report, autonomy is the hallmark of the Arizona university system, but there are also many weaknesses in organization and funding. Organizationally” the report said that the most significant weaknesses facing the university system are the lack of common goals, inadequate management information, vague roles and responsibilities and cumbersome decision-making structures. ^ The report said the funding process lacks an underlying vision and requires a strategic roadmap in both funding and organization. Coopers and Lybrand w ill present a final report on management in March. JVINDOW ROCK ( A P ) — The N avajo tribe w ill match the $5,000 rew ard offered by the F B I for information leading to an arrest and conviction in the brutal murders of two tribal police officers near Gouldings, Utah, Tribal Chairman P eter MacDonald said Wednesday. The bodies of officers Andy B egay and R oy Lee Stanley w ere found in their burned-out truck in a rem ote area of the sprawling N avajo Reservation in early December. “ When these men w ere killed, I vowed that w e would not let them die in vain,” MacDonald said at the N avajo Tribal Council’s w inter session Wednesday. “ Their murderers w ill be found, and they w ill be punished.” Investigators believe the officers w ere killed by participants in a beer party in a rem ote location near the , Utah border. Dozens of people have been questioned, but no arrests have been made. ¥ ) u r B a s ic P ro b le m : Currently, the task force is looking fo r six to eight more consultants to review strategic planning roles,, education quality, research, student access, social and economic trends and funding. The task force plans to issue a final report by early August. Dr. Ed Johnson, assistant to Robert M acvicar, the director of the task force, said, “ It’s enabling us to bring in international and national experts fo r an outside perspective o f Arizona and make critiques on on-going university processes.” * * :\,1 The task force thanked the Flinn Foundation fo r a grant of 179,820' which w ill be used to pay fo r consulting and dissemination of the final report. Navajo police have said that Begay, 36, o f M exican Hat, Utah, and Stanley, 27, of Oljato, apparently w ere beaten and shot after they responded to a reported disturbance the night of Dec. 4. The Tribal Council had been criticized for failin g to provide reward money in addition to the $5,000 offered by the FB I. lä b u r B A S IC S o h d io ii: Linear Algebra w¡ti i A p p k c itò o r: O E C IS IO N A N A LYS IS R neufs o f Econometrics The The B A SIC language programmable calculator from Texas Instruments. The mathematics and statistics cartridges are two o f five optional application software available. it Í-RM IIU j COLLEGE PHYSICS Advanced Engineering Mathematics The TI-74 B A S IC A L C “ is a B A S IC calculator that*s also an advanced scientific calculator. In effect, it’s two calculators in one. In its B A S IC mode, you have direct, two-keystroke access to 41 B A S IC com m ands, as w ell as 10 user-definable keys w hich can make doing your coursework a basic snap. Sw itch to its calculator m ode and you’re arm ed w ith 70 scientific functions to help you easily solve those tough technical problems. A n d the large, color-coded keys, Q W E R T Y keyboard and separate num eric keypad make it easier to use than any other programmable calculator. Your B A S IC A L C specs: • 8K R A M expandable to 16K R A M . • 113 B A S IC keyword set. • Optional software cartridges for chemical engineering, math, statistics and finance. • Optional P A S C A L language cartridge. • Optional printer and cassette interface. Stop by your bookstore and see both sides o f the T I-7 4 B A S IC A L C for yourself Either way, it’ll blow you away. Te x a s ^ In s t r u m e n t s ™ Trademark ot Texas Instruments Incorporated ©1988 T I. State Press Page 7 Thursday, January 2 1 ,1 9 8 8 Man kidnapped at gunpoint, robbed, left unconscious By MIKE BURGESS State Press A 29-year-old man was kidnapped at gunpoint in Tem pe and taken to a location in Phoenix where he was robbed and left unconscious, police said. W illiam P erry Bucey, of Mesa, was treated fo r head injuries at V alley Lutheran H ospital Sunday. Bucey w aited until Tuesday night to report the incident to police because the suspects stole his w allet, containing $40 in cash and. credit cards» and he feared that the Suspects would try to find him, police said. P olice said Bucey’s ordeal began Friday night when he was abducted by two men, one aim ed with a 9mm automatic handgun, while sitting inside his 1984 Buick parked in police report front of the Circle K store at 2189 E. University D rive. Bucey told police the men forced him to drive to an area near 40th -Street and Baseline Road in Phoenix. He said he was ordered out o f the car and forced to a “ h illy” area at the foot of South Mountain Park where he was pushed onto some rocks and knocked unconscious. Bucey said he awoke early Saturday and drove to a friend’s house in Mesa. He was taken to the hospital Sunday after he told his w ife about the incident. Police described one of the suspects as Caucasian, in his late 20s or early 30s, 5 feet 10 inches to 6 feet tall with a medium build. He had blond hair and was last seen wearing a blue jacket and jeans. The second suspect was described'only as Caucasian, 24 to 26 years old. In other incidents: P o lice described the suspect as a black man in his early 20s, 5 feet 10 inches, 162 pounds with a short afro. He was last seen wearing a gray sweatshirt, white jeans and white tennis shoes. •A knife-wielding bandit robbed a man of his w allet after he exited a store Tuesday, police said. •A man in a unknown make o f car pointed a rifle at two Chandler men while they w ere driving at the intersection of M ill Avenue and Curry Road, police said. T erry Hedgecoth, 21, of Tem pe, was robbed in the parking lot of the K-M art at 1330 W. Baseline Road when the bandit opened the door of his truck, pulled out a 6-inch steak knife and demanded his wallet. The men, who w ere driving in separate cars, said the man pointed the rifle at them after a tra ffic incident. The suspect fled west along the south side of the K-M art with the w allet, which •M ore than $1,600 in cash and merchandise was reported stolen from the Southland Corp., 1414 W. Broadway Road, police said. been set. ORACLE (A P ) — An O racle man was charged with three misdemeanor offenses Wednesday after his pit bull terrier reportedly attacked a 2-year-old g irl last week. Ronald Craig Knott, appeared in Oracle Justice Court and pleaded innocent to charges of failure to possess a kennel permit, failure to vaccinate animals and failure to report the attack. Justice o f the Peace E.M . Henderson said Knott faces a pre-trial hearing next m onth'although no exact date has Pit bull attacks infant; owner faces hearing contained $24, police said. Meanwhile, Tucson M edical Center spokeswoman Katie R iley said 2-year-old A licia Sandbak’s condition toerfe an unexpected turn for the w o r s e ^ r ly Tuesday morning. “ She suffered a stroke and is blind,” Ms. R iley said. “ We are still investigating, but w e assume at this tim e that the incident was related to her ea rlier injuries. We don’t know yet if the blindness is permanent.” $195 THURSDAYS: CHILI DOG W/CHIPS 4M. ta n rrn i » .. J a t R u ra l & A p a c h e $1 WELLS MARGS WINE L0NGNECKS $ 2 50 pitchers •I p a p ALL DRINKS ONLY a r a z z i s T A K E O U T • D IN E IN • D E L IV E R Y 967-070$ » 967-0843 201 W . Sou thern A v e . Tem pe 250 328 D a n d le Plaza Southwest C o m e r o f Southern & Mill H ours: M on.-Thu rs. 4 p .m .-10 p.m . Fri.-Sat. 4 p.m .-12 a.m . Sun. 4 p .m .-lO p.m . W E SERVE: •PIZZA 1 7 different toppings •LASAGNA with homemade sauce •SUBS 11 different choices «SICILIAN SANDWICH •SPAGHETTI 4 different sauces •MANHATTAN CALZONE •SOFT DRINKS »BEER AND WINE •f. p ap arazzi s TUES. W ED. THURS. F R I. O u tlaw N ig h t L a d ie s N ig h t It’ s o n ly a Q u a rter H a p p y H o u r 6-9 . too 1 p e n n y drin k s fo r la d ie s E v e ry dN nk in th e h p u s e C o o rs L ig h t 95C D o m e s tic $1.25 Im p o rts io o r e D raft F r e e b u ffe t N o c o v e r til 9 A ft e r H o u rs til 3 O n ly $2.00 W eek en d P a rty 75C d rin k s fo r la d ie s til 11 A ft e r H o u rs til 3 p .m . ^ O n ly $2.00 328 Danelle Plaza Southern & Mill L A R G E 1 6 ” P IZ Z A « 4 ,9 9 each item $1.00 D eep D ish o r Sicilian Style $1.50 extra EXPIRES 1-31-88. • I p ap arazzi s 328 Danelle Plaza Southern & M ill CHICKEN WINGS “NEW YORK STYLE” O NLY 15* 9 6 8 -2 4 4 6 1216 E. APACHE, TEMPE Served W ith H ot, M edium o r M ild Sauce (M inim um O rd er o f 10, Pick-up O rd er O n ly ) EXPIRES 1-31-88. Page 8 SW e Press 1938 FIJIs still attracting pledge prospects despite sanctions By SCOTT LUCK S tate Press Although the ASU Ph i Gamma Delta (F U I) fraternity may face expulsion for two years or m ore, the house president said Wednesday that its pledge Rush preparations are going w ell. “ Our rush is going w ell,” F IJ I president D avid M artin said. “ It ’s pretty much standard operating procedure — the same as the other houses.” The F IJ I tablé seemed to attract the most attention on Orange M all Wednesday morning, where many o f ASU’s fraternities set up to m eet Rush prospects. Greek L ife Coordinator Judi Biggs said, “ It (Rush W eek) gives them (pledges) the opportunity to look at a ll of the fraternities, instead o f just one or tw o.” Biggs said the pledges w ill be taken on a tour of each of the fraternities on Sunday and Monday evening. The purpose of Rush Week is for fraternities to recruit new members, Biggs said. Martin said the F U Is are inform ing prospective pledges that the O ffice of Student L ife has recommended they lose their house and recognition as a campus organization fo r two years. Phi Gamma Delta Executive Coordinator B ill M artin said Wednesday during a telephone interview from his Lexington, Ky., office, “ A t this point I am pleased with the attitude the chapter has taken with its pledge-education program .” Rush Week is from Jan. 24 to Jan. 29. FIJIs Continued from page 1. a decision. Shanks said the F U Is ’ current residence on campus should not affect the board’s ruling, despite the inconvenience of a possible mid-semester move. Phi Gamma Delta Executive D irector Bill Martin said from his Lexington, K y., office W ednesday, “ I am pleased that the U niversity allowed the chapter to continue in the house.” He term ed the U n iversity decision “ appropriate,” because the F IJ I case is still pending. H ie hearing was originally scheduled for just before the opening o f the spring sem ester after the F U Is appealed Shell’s recommendations to the board, but it was postponed until Jan. 28 and Jan. 29 upon Shanks’ request. Shanks, who is being paid $80 an hour by M ill Landing Jack Bamlay/State Prat» Form er ASU instructor, M ark Siegel, right, exam ines some literature presented by the members o f the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. Although th e FIJIs have been suspended from the University, they have been allowed to rem ain In th eir house pending an appeal hearing. Also pictured are F IJI members, from left, Peter Valenzuela; Larry K eartley, Doug Durr and Steve Livingston. the U niversity, according to the president’s office, said the postponement resulted because, “ Both sides needed to interview Davis said he accepted the postponement because, “ I really did, not have much choice.” 7 don’t know w hat she’s (Shanks) doing. I think it’s kind o f silly, b ut I have to go Board Chairmen Richard Nash said there m ay be subsequent hearings after Jan. 29th, if they are required. 'ASU President J. Russell Nelson may alter the board’s ruling in any way. along with a kind o f administration “ guilty until proven innocent” mentality. ’ — Terry Davis Nash said he has not received a written request for an open hearingJrom the F U I attorney, but he added that Davis has not had enough tim e to submit one yet. Nash said the request could come at any tim e before the hearing. witnesses.” However, D avis said, “ She (Shanks) was unable to com ply to the schedulingbecause her people (w itnesses) w ere out o f town” during the holidays. Shanks becam e ill and was unable to appear for a scheduled deposition hearing with the F U Is, Davis said. “ I don’t know what she’s (Shanks) doing. I think it’s kind o f silly, but I have to go In an open hearing, the press and campns officials would probably be allowed in, but Nash said there would not be enough room to accommodate the entire U niversity in an MU conference room. Your Lucky Number 398 S. Mill Are. Tempe • 966-1700 *■ Spi r it s along with a kind o f administration ‘guilty until proven innocent’ m entality.” State Press Classifieds H appy H our 9 6 5 -6 7 3 1 H Thurs. a n d Fri. 4 -8 p .m . Live Music by Dino M00 D om estic • M " W ell Drinks • * i " O ff Calls Passport Photos 2 for $6,57 Late Night Uve Music I BACK! TO THE ASU iA R TY TRADITION AT BANDERS Film Processing Fri. & Sat. 10 p.m. Rick Elias 2 for 1 or FREE FILM M onday & W ednesday on Develop & Print orders ILFORD L O W A IR FARES Photo Paper 25 — 8x10 100 — 8x10 TRAVEL “ 1 8 ” 7155 E. Thom as, Suite 106 Scottsdale, A Z 85251 SUNSET CAMERA 9 4 9 -8 8 8 8 829-0424 Open Daily 9 a.m.-6p.m. Open Saturday 9 a.m .-l p.m. W ELCOME BACK* •C red it cards accepted »Free ticket delivery •N o service charge fo r ticketing Rem em ber to purchase your spring break tickets early to g et the low est fares! * $10.47 $35.97 Round Trip Airfares: Chicago.: ../.:.|1 S 0 D ener................................$138 Kansas City................... ..$ 1 38 Minneapolis/St. Paul......... $198 New York $198 Los Angeles......................... $33 Certain restrictions do apply. Fates subject to change without notice. Tempe Center — Mill & Univ. C tU B ra ti S fta S B a t Friday, Jan 22nd Special presentation Following services by Dr. Petuchowskl "Helping God Become One-Legacy of Kabballah" Dinner 6:00p.m. Services 7:30p.m. • • 8 tu d cn W $ 4 , C h evra 96, O th er 9 1 0 @ HUlel Brunch Come by and enjoy bagels 8t cream cheese with C A M Sunday Jan. 24th @ 11:00am 1012 S. Mill Ave 967-7563 CRAWLING DISTANCE FROM SUN DEVIL STADIUM 5th & FO R E S T ACROSS FROM UNIVERSITY TOWERS State Press Page 9 Thursday, January 8 1 ,1 9 8 8 Panel Continued tram page 1. Milstead not to cooperate because Mecham wanted to protect Watkins. “ The threat that Lee Watkins made, or allegedly made, I consider very serious,” M ilstead said. “ Any threat to a witness, particularly a grand ju ry witness is a very serious m atter in m y mind. “ To me it’s akin going on a com m ercial airliner and joking that there’s á bomb on­ board. Even if it’s not true, it’s very, very serious.” According to Freneh’s report, Watkins reportedly told G riffith, “ Donna is talking too much” and “ she would be going on long boat ride and m ay never come back.” The next day, G riffith reported the alleged threat to one of Mecham’s DPS Security officers Frank M artinez who in turn advised DPS Lt. Beau Johnson of the threats. Later that day, Johnson, Richard Burke, the governor’s chief of staff and Fred Craft, th e g o v e r n o r ’ s r e p r e s e n t a t iv e in Washington, met with Mecham to discuss the alleged threats, French’s report said. “ Lt. Johnson noted that the governor showed little reaction except fo r nodding his head in understanding,” French’s report said. Craft suggested that the m atter be turned over to Hawkins. On Nov. 14, Steve Twist, who now is a prosecutor in the crim inal case against Mecham, was advised of the threat by DPS Deputy D irector G ary Phelps. M ilstead said he called die governor that day to tell him that the attorney general’s office was aware of the threats because “ we had a situation I knew he needed to be advised o f.” M ilstead said DPS has an unwritten policy ' that any incidents in the governor’s office be handled internally. But Milstead said he believed the threat was too serious to be handled internally. ‘ ‘I didn’t want him (M echam ) to be surprised or blind-sided in any w ay,” M ilstead said. “ I wanted him to know what was going on.” In a DPS report, M ilstead said the governor told him “ the attorney general is out to hang me, and I ’m not going to help him in any w ay.” Mecham reportedly added, “ I don’t want you help him get me. Don’t tell the attorney general anything.” “ I was com pletely taken aback by this,” M ilstead said. “ His anger toward the attorney general surprised m e.” M ilstead added tjiat he tried to explain to the go vern o r th at D PS has alw ays cooperated with the attorney general, but Mecham “ interrupted me in a very angry tone.” “ I wouldn’t say he was shouting and scream ing on the phone,” M ilstead said. “ But his voice level was raised. I would say he was very emphatic. “ I was almost speechless, disturbed by his comments and almost disbelieving in what I was hearing,” he added. Milstead also said he feared for his job if he did not comply with Mecham’s orders. “ Particu larly m yself, I felt that the governor wanted to dismiss m e,” he said. “ I tried to avoid a confrontation with the governor. I don’t want to be fired. “ I don’t want m y reputation to be damaged — he’s the governor, he’s the boss.” M ilstead is under a five-year contract that expires in 1990. He was hired in 1980, by then-Gov. Bruce Babbitt. The state grand ju ry that indicted Mecham on six felony counts earlier this month w ill reconvene Friday. State P re ti Classified Happy Hour 7-9 a.m. BEAT THE RUSH! G et aHEAD o f the rest Line r ads brought to M atthew s C en ter 1 /2 P R IC E S tate Press H appy H our 1/2 OFF Classified Ads 7-9 a.m. N. Basement Matthews Center SERVING ASU SINCE 1972 S a v e N O W ! o n B a l f o u r G o U e g e C l a s s R i n g s . HOURS Papa Jay’ s Pizza M on.-Thurs. 4-12 Friday 4-1 Saturday 12-1 Sunday 12-12 SAVE UP TO $60 ON GOLD RINGS Jan. 18 through Jan. 21 1 0 a .m .-3 p .m . FAST FREE DELIVERY (L im ite d Free D e liv e ry A re a ) S4.95 M in im u m F o o d O rd e r 804 South'Aih, Temp« (2 blocks West of Mill Avenue, south of University) 966-1003 o r 966-4292 SAVE! COUPON SAVE! 2 LARGE CHEESE PIZZAS 1 College memories can be yours for a lifetime, with a Balfour College Class Ring. Savings on rings can be yours, too, if you hurry! O FFER EXPIRES: JA N . 21, 1988. Save right now at: STU D EN T BO O K C EN TER 704 COLLEGE AVE. ONLY $7.99 & tax Balfour. T O P P IN G S $ 1 .0 0 EXTRA PER PIZZA ■ Nooneremembersinsomanyways. i. Reach your Prime Market State Press Classifieds 965-6731 Form No. 1770 • ,< s a ‘*Hl, D o y o u s e e y o u r s e l f ? MS. ating disorders show up in many ways, and aré not always obvious. This checklist cqn help determine if an eating disorder is controlling your life, or the life of someone you love. A fe sensing Thai Sheldon might have a slight edge in the xe>market, öff decides to BUY A ZENITH personal COMPUTER.. . II», • Is dieting the most important area of your life? • Has food become a power struggle between you and your family or friends? D is c o v e r h o w S h e ld o n —the C o m p u te r N e r d —g e t s the b ig bu c k s. • Are you unable to eat in a normal social setting with other people? Why does a Computer Nerd like Sheldon end up getting all the job offers? 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THE QUALITY GOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON* The Institute for Eating Disorders Baptist M etical Center—Scottsdale Ask about how you can qualify for easy monthly payments with a Zenith Data Systems Credit Card! their own use. - Special pricing offer good only on purchases through Zenith Contact(s) listed above by students, faculty and staff for I N o other discounts apply- Lim it one personal com puter and one monitor per individual in any 12-month period. P rices subject to 0 1^8 7, Zenith Data Systems change without notice V Page 10 S tate Press Thursday, January 21,1988 Hom e is w here the art is for university sculptors t B y J. MICHAEL HOEHN State Press ASU art students might get a chance to create a house sculpture — not a sculpture o f a house, but a sculpture made out o f a house.. The Tem pe City Council w ill consider a - request tonight made by an ASU art professor to allow art students to create ■sculptures out o f two condemned houses.. Lewis Alquist, associate professor o f art, stated in a letter to the city council that the project would allow his graduate sculpture students “ the freedom to ‘sculpt’ the structure o f the house — altering the floors, walls, doorways and adding additional m aterials — a ll without the burden of needing to return the house to its previous condition. “ W e want to use the houses as a sculptor’s m aterial,” Alquist said. “ In the same w ay a block o f wood is used, we want to carve the house. “ It gives the students the freedom to use the house as a sound object,” he said. “ Students don’t have to w orry about the problems o f cleaning up. “ If one wants to make a hole in the ceiling, he can do so. “ It kind of takes the w hole idea of destroying the houses and redevelops it, putting the houses to one last use instead o f m ercilessly bulldozing them.” The two houses, located at 104 and 106 W. University Dr., are owned by the city and are due for demolition. The city council w ill consider-Alquist’s request tonight in its pre-session meeting. The city’s Department of Development has already recommended the council approve the project and the ASU School of A rt has also given its approval. When his class could begin work on the project and how long the sculptures would rem ain up, Alquist said, would depend on the city. According to Alquist, he is ready to begin the project and is only awaiting the city’s approval to use the houses. He is also w aiting for the State O ffice of R isk M anagem ent to extend liability insurance to the sculpture sites, Alquist and his students completed a sim ilar project in Dec. 1985 when they created a sculpture out o f a condemned house at 226 S. Ash. The project was called H om e O f U n con ven tion a l Suburban Evolution, or HOUSE. Students each took a part o f the house or yard and used it in any w ay possible to create a sculpture. Some of the results w ere a 250 pound saw blade in the roof, a cannon in the livin g room and a lightning bolt in the yard. HOUSE was opened fo r public tours for one month. Alquist said the project was a success, and because of the publicity it received, it should be easy to gain approval to do the new sculptures. He said it would probably take six weeks to com plete the sculptures. 2 2 $ «$ T Margie Babcock/StatePress The two condemned houses under consideration are located in th e 100 block o f W est University Drive. T h e / are owned by the city and are due fo r dem olition. Tempe Fire Chief Hayes retires; new chief to be appointed By MIKE BURGESS State Press „ A fter 22 years with the Tem pe F ire Department, F ire Chief W illiam Hayes w U lretire on Feb. 29. “ I just feel it’s tim e to go,” Hayes said. “ I ’ve been thinking about it fo r two years and told the city manager I would leave when he left.” C ityM anager Jim Alexander, who w ill retire Feb. 26, said a new ch ief w ill be announced at tonight’s city council m eeting. Alexander said assistant chiefs C liff Jones and Jim Now w e have 124,” Hayes said. Gaintner are the only candidates who have applied for the The department’s param edic sta ff has also grown from six job. in 1978 to 33 and has added a fourth fire station. Hayes, 50, joinëd the department in 1966 as a firefigh ter A hazardous m aterials response team has also been added. and has held every position in the departm ent He has been, Hayes said one a i the things he is most proud about is the 36 chief for 10 years and is only the second chief the department percent decrease in structure fires in the city, has had since it was form ed in 1961. “ Tw elve months before I becam e chief, w e had 286 Under Hayes, the department has undergone many structure fires, and w e only had l81 in 1987,” he said, changes. * He attributes the decrease in structure fires to the city’s “ When I cam e on, the department only bad 25 firefighters. Arson Task Force and the Home Safety Program . BE CH O O SY Choose Domenics Cycling É g i ||i ''nty Bike Shop” STUDENTS .. . Don’t miss our 20-20 offer! Art, architecture, en gin eerin g & d esign students: F u ji B lvd. M t. B ike Shop for your art supplies from The V alley 's most com plete selection by J A N U A R Y 30, an d save a b ig 20%. Shop any other time and you'll receive our standard 10% STU D EN T D IS C O U N T . Fine arts m aterials Bike Tune-ups $1500 Benotto Triathlon Benotto 80 0 Includes: Shimano SIS w/Shimano 105 Brakes Aero Tubing w/Shimano SIS $299°° *3 5 Q o o Available 60 Day Layaway or ‘ K NO C anvas, paints, stretcher bars, brushes, frames, paper, etc. D rafting supplies P arallel rules, triangles, templates, leads, d raw in g boards, technical pens (a ll brands) and more. ALSO Airbrush-equipm ent & supplies, graph ic arts m aterials and books. Professional Sales & Services New & Used Models Parts, Clothing & Accessories (S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T A V A IL A B L E ) Shop Dem onic For Ail Your B iking Needs We Take Your Bike Seriously 1004 S. M ill, Tempe 967-7700 Open 7 Days A W eek 10th Street 8c Jefferson • 254-0840 • Lots of free parkin g Hours: M 6n.-Fii 8:30-5:30 Sat. 9-5 State Press Page 11 Thursday, January 2 1 ,1 9 8 8 ASU begins construction on classroom building By VICTOR BARAJAS State Praas As the ASU W est Campus Library nears completion, construction has begun for the $5.5 m illion classroom building that w ill form the western edge of the forecourt of the ASU W est Campus. The three-story building, 72,000 square-foot building is one o f fiv e buddings that w ill enclose the m ajor courtyard space of the campus. H ie building w ill include 14 seminar rooms and 30 classrooms. Future plans include a student service building, a classroom lab building and a faculty office building. “ W e have m ade significant progress in our first two-and-ahalf years, both in building physical facilities, accomodating the needs of 3,000 students, and laying the groundwork for the establishment o f new complementary academ ic program s,” said Gerald M cSheffrey, vice-president of the ASU West Campus. The copper-roofed library is about eight weeks behind schedule because the contractors, D .L. W ithers Construction Inc. of Tem pe, w ere having problems with deliveries. Thq construction that should have been completed in Novem ber w ill be completed next month. The contractors have agreed*' r to pay for any damages. About 300,000 volumes, or 10 percent o f the number of volumes at ASU’s main campus, are expected in the new library. A dedication ceremony fo r the new library Will be held in March. “ Our supreme goal is to provide a great library, defined by access and services, to support a great institution,” said Helen Gater, a librarian at the West Campus library. difficulties of accessibility become a barrier fo r students The 300-acre ASU West Campus is an upper level branch of wishing to pursue a degree,” M cSheffrey said. ASU’s main campus, offering junior, senior and graduate The west campus is being built initially for 5,000 students. level courses. Currently, m ore than 400 courses are offered at By the year 2000,10,000 students are expected. three temporary facilities. “ The likelihood of West Campus becoming a com petitor , o r . “ The decentralization o f ASU becomes necessary as as some fear, another university, depends very much on how student demand rises to a point where the physical facilities current and future administrators and faculty treat the new at ASU can no longer accommodate the demand or where kid on the block,” M cSheffrey said. ‘The likelihood o f West Campus becoming a com petitor depends very much on how current and future administrators and faculty treat the new kid on the block. ' — Gerald McSheffrey New law has dramatic positive effect on organ donations TUCSON ( A P ) — Organ bank officials say a dram atic increase in donor organs in Arizona still has failed to ease the critical shortage o f organs for lifesaving transplant operations. A new state law , which took effect last Oct. 1, requiring hospitals to ask fam ilies about donating organs has yielded 30 percent m ore hearts, livers, kidneys and other organs since it was passed m ore than a year ago, said Jim W agner, a spokesman fo r thé Arizona Organ Bank in Phoenix. W agner could not im m ediately provide exact figures or a breakdown of the organ transplants Wednesday. But he said demand for such organs has jumped m ore than 40 percent at the same time. Ironically, the high demand — and the resulting organ shortage — is occurring because transplant operations are now so successful in saving and im proving lives. “ As the success rates have gone up for transplants, people have become more w illin g to undergo these operations,” W agner told The Arizona D aily Star. “ F or exam ple, someone who sees survival rates of 90 percent for new kidneys and hearts w ill now see his chances as good and go for it. These operations are offering m ore hope to m ore people. “ So it’s kind o f a Catch-22. The m ore successful we get at this, the worse the shortage gets. In a way, w e’v e created our own problem .” When the law - known as the “ required request” law - was passed in 1986, officials predicted that solid organ donations would rise about 25 percent and tissue donations o f bone, connective tissue, skin and eyes would double or triple. Such increases w ere also predicted to considerably ease, though not end, the donor shortage. In fact, organ donations under the new law have exceeded expectations, with a 30 percent rise in organs offered for transplant and a 300 percent increase in tissue donations^ accord in g to organ bank statistics. for donation and a diagnosis of brain death has been made. As one o f the first states to pass such a law, Arizona’s lead has been follow ed by many other states. But, while new laws are producing significantly more organs in some states, the donor shortage is increasing nationwide as transplant acceptance and popularity rise. “ That’s a p retty good increase — d ra m a tic ,” sa id W agn er. “ But the frustrating thing is that it hasn’t affected the shortage at a ll.” “ We are getting farther and farther behind,” said L a rry Burnett, Tucson coordinator for the Arizona Organ Bank. “ It’s a phenomenon happening all over the country.” A rizo n a ’ s “ req u ired req u est” law mandates that a ll hospitals must appoint an official who w ill ask the fam ilies of deceased patients to consider donating tissues or organs for transplant if organs are suitable One o f the problems may liq in the slow acceptance o f the “ required request” policy among many hospital workers, who are at first reluctant to approach grieving fam ilies for their relatives’ organs. . 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M icroRel, 2343 W. 10th Place, Tempe, AZ 85281. ■ On-Cam pus Interview s ■ m February 1 6 ,1 9 8 8 ■ See your Placement Office today. . , An Equal Opportunity Employer Page 12 State Press Thursday, January 2 1 ,1 9 8 8 LEXUS HELP YOU LOSE WEIGHT FOR SPRING! O u f dieters* lose an average o f 17-25 pounds in six w eeks. D on ’t face w eigh t loss alone. W e 11 be w ith you every step o f the tveigb. D iC t a lB h C e n t e r comics • Books • Posters video sales & Rental 120-A East university Dt. 24 Hour INFOLINE: Tempe • 967-3551 U N I V E R S IT Y T O W E R S combines the best in dormitory and apartment style jiving. 10% O F F ÿour diet program w/ASU I.D. 3 968-0265 M cC lintock Garden O ffices 2246 S. M cC lintock N o. 3 9 6 7 -1 3 7 1 Flip : C har IT 'S A C H A IR IT ’S A SO FA $ 1 6 8 Other specials! *4 drawer chest * Becj. sale Twin set Full set Queen set Bean Bags S o fa S. Love S eat 5 Piece Û ak Finish Bedroom S et Also set at $ 1 6 8 $249 and $299 $158 fUBNITL *SPLUS Clearance C enter In Tem pe 9 6 6 -6 2 5 2 ASU 2077 E. U niversity N O W L E A S IN G F O R SU M M ER AND FALL Hundreds of Bicycles Discounted H H H HK ; ’ To Move! ! M i l “ «/ j § A cross The R ailroad Tracks, W est o f G entle Strength C o o p 1986-1987 Best Bike Shop New Times critics choice S tore Hours: 8-®M on.-Thurs 8-6 Fri.-Sat. • 11-5 Sun. UP TOm OFFONCTCLBCLOmm « THOUSANDSOFBKE9OFEVERTTYPEANDPRICE• SALEPOOS OHLOCKSANDACCESSORIES THE TEMPE B IK E SHOP 330 W. University • Phone 966-0896 State Press Page 13 Thursday, January 2 1 ,1988 BOSTON (A P ) — A new blood test can identify alcoholics, even when they haven’t had a drink fo r several years, researchers report. Experts say the test could become an important means of spotting alcoholism early so it can be treated before permanent damage occurs. It might even give doctors a way to spot children who are at high risk of becoming alcoholics When they grow up, t- But the researchers said further study is necessary to determine, whether the differences they found occur only after years o f alcohol abuse, or instead reflect some inherited difference in the biological makeup of alcoholics. The researchers said their test, which measures two blood chemicals, was about 75 percent accurate in distinguishing alcoholics from people Who don’t have drinking problems. “ The study m ay sim ply provide a means for distinguishing individuals who drink a lot,” said Dr. Boris Tabakoff. “ For physicians, it is im perative to know whether problems may be alcohol related. It’s aw fully difficult to get a very accurate consumption history from individuals.” “ On the other hand,” he continued, “ it m ay be more profound. It m ay indicate individuals who have an inherent predisposition to have problems with alcohol.” Alcoholism is sometimes passed from generation to generation. Tabakoff has begun studying children of alcoholics to see if they are more likely to have the abnormalities measured by the blood test. I f so, the test could be used to identify these children early so they could be taught to avoid alcohol. Tabakoff, a researcher at the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism , developed the test with colleagues from the University of Illinois at Chicago and the Westside Veterans Administration M edical Center in Chicago. A report on the work was published in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medicine. Between 8 percent and 10 percent o f all man and 1 percent and 2 percent of all women in the United States are estimated to abuse alcohol. The new test measures the activity of two chemicals produced by platelets, the blood cells responsible for clotting. The substances are enzymes called monoamine oxidase and adenylqtecyclase The researchers tested the blood o f 95 m ale alcoholics and a comparison group o f 33 people who did not have drinking problems. They found that the activity o f the two enzymes was significantly reduced id alcoholics. The differences w ere even apparent in 10 alcoholics who had not taken a drink fo r periods ranging from one to four years. In an editorial in the journal, Dr. Theodore Reich o f Jewish Hospital of St. Louis said that the measurements “ hold great promise” for detecting alcoholism. “ Taken together, these abnormalities have many o f the characteristics o f ideal biologic m arkers for alcoholism and certainly warrant extensive investigation,” he wrote. Experts have come up with other measurable differences that can distinguish alcoholics. However, none of them is good enough to be used alone, so they require a timeconsuming battery of tests. Those tests also m ay mistake other diseases for alcoholism. The new test correctly classified 75 percent of the alcoholics and 73 percent of the comparison group. CSU regulations fail to stop underage students from drinking B y C o lieg e P ress S erv ic e CSU’s Dr. David Nasatir said students seem to be drinking as much as they always have, despite intense campus efforts to restrict drinking, according to a survey he conducted at U niversity o f California at Berkeley. Most U-S. schools have cranked up “ alcohol awareness” policies since 1985, W hile anti-drinking rules cost Marquette U niversity cheerleaders their jobs during the holiday break and could land two North Carolina State students in ja il, a California S tate U n iversity at Dom inquez H ills professor concluded campus attitudes still encourage students to drink. when federal laws forced states to raise the legal drinking age from 18 to 21. To get liability insurance, colleges had to demonstrate to insurance companies they were keeping their underaged students from drinking liquor. But the Berkeley study suggested there has been no profound increase or decrease M in a Personal M to someone special. State Press«. Basament. Matthews Center NR. HERO &nUr IN THE ARCHES SHOPPING CENTER 1 8 0 0 E. A p a c h e S A L E S • R E N TA LS • R E P A IR S (Corner McClintock & Apache) • ELECTRONICS • 6" RoastBeef 16-oz. Pepsi 8-os. ColeSlaw G U IT A R LE S S O N S 9 6 8 -2 3 1 0 SPECIAL (WithThsAd) $2.10 .60 __ ¡70 $3.40 $2.00 122 E. University Dr., Tem pe 9 6 8 -5 7 4 0 Open 10 a.m . to 6 p.m . M on.-Fri. G o o d throu gh Feb. 18, 1988. Welcome Bock Great Names: Liz Claiborne, Calvin Klein, Guess, Polo and others at unbeatable savings. JU ST ARRIVED! 5000 New Fashions Com e early for best selections. O PEN: 225 W. University 7041 E. Indian School Sun.-Thurs. until 1 a.m. Fri. & Sat. until 3 a.m. (next to Buffalo Exchange) (opposite Im peccable Pig) 921-3535 947-3551 ASU GAYMEN’S RAP GROUP J u s t ic e S t u d ie s S t u d e n t s G R O U P MEETINGS HAVE BEEN CHANGED T O TUESDAY EVENINGS BEGINNING JAN. 26. FO R DETAILS. SEND SELF-ADDRESSED STAMPED ENVELOPE T O “ R A P G R O U P.” c/o DENISE HEAP, W O M EN 'S STUDIES; ASU. S O C IA L SCIENCE RM. SS-104, TEMPE. AZ 85281-1801. Get 1988 o ff to a great start! Attend A G A first m eeting o f the year. Sunday, Jan. 2 4 at 7 p.m . in the Yum a Room 211 o f the MU. 1 Si St 5 FOR 1 COUNTDOWN / 1 S C BEER S S T A R T IN G A T 7 P .M . 40$ 30$ 60$ i W ELL D R IN K S & W IN E M AR G A RITAS & SC H N A PP S LONG ISLAND IC E TEAS HAPPY HOUR DAILY 11-8 COMPLIMENTARY FOOD BUFFET MON.-PRI.4-7 if " DJ & DANCING NIGHTLY SATELLITE SPORTS ON 6 TV’S n i lO A l A A D A P M P R U R A L & .A K A O H fc — " ~ 968-0243 ‘ -7 ^ n y J 9 + * KITCHEN SPECIALS * DADS 1/3 lb. BURGER..................................... $2.00 CHICKEN WINGSMMd.BartaqueorExcructotingft.Hot.... $2.00 DELUXE “ DESTROYER” PIZZA i t « « » ...................$0.00 * fashionbargains 6 ft. E A T IN & D R IV E T H R U S E R V IC E Electric Guitars • Amps • Distortion Boxes • Etc. in student drinking habits since the new policies took effect. Nasatir said many schools “ are lax in observing violations o f the minimum drinking age.” Alcohol is often an integral part of social and athletic events, and the “ awareness” programs, by not recognizing alcohol’s role, are not effective. OPEN M-F 11:30-11 p.m. Sat.-Sun. 12-10 p.m. SEEYAr CITICORPO C IT IB A N K CAPEEB OPPORTUNITIES IN M A N A G EM EN T interested in learning th e consumer banking business and rapidly assuming a m anagem ent position w ith Citibank in Japan? if you are thoroughly flu e n t in w ritte n and spoken Japanese and w ould like to know m ore about th e exciting opportunities in Japan w ith Citibank, m eet w ith a Citibank representative on February 12,1988. interview s can be arranged by contacting Jean Eisel a t (602) 965-2350. CALL TODAY! CITICO RPO C ITIB A N tO r com ics SMc Press b y B e rk e B re a th e d B LO O M C O U N T Y Doonesbury th e FAR side By GARY LARSON BY öA R R Y TRUDEAU U m OUR. FOUNDER.OUTOFACTION, ITSUPTOUS TO(A R M ON. WB HAV5TOPUU. T06BTHBR UNTIL HËS UJBLL AGAINf uubfbs BeuEvue. rP sA M UXXB HOSPITAL THAT M U BOATOS RSPUTATÌONON TREATING I - m a m m a m- SO MB'S ABSOUJTBLY. TH&AU&WV oerrm setrrmA THBBB5T. / UTTISUAUST HBMAPB. 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