I ttatepaess Arizona State University's Summer Weekly Thursday, June 3 0 ,1 9 8 8 •C opyrigh t 3tate P n w , 1988 Tam p*. Arizona Voi. 13 No. 5 Coach praises support given to track squad B y G ARY JACKSON State P ress Acting ASU head track and field coach Ed Gorman praised the Sun D evil administration Wednesday for saving toe program during a recent Pacific-10 Conference investigation . which resulted in probation fo r the teams. “ There are people who have worked very hard fo r the program ; that’s why w e still have it,” Gorman said. “ They didn’t sit back and say, ‘w e w ere wrong, giv e us toe penalty. ’ They fought fo r the student-athletes.” The ASU track1and field program was placed on two-year probation after being cited few 11 rule violations Tuesday by the Conference presidents and chancellors. “ It ’s a harsh penalty — I t ’s hot one w e plan to contest in any w ay,” ASU athletic director Charles H arris said. “ It’s frustrating. It is a setback and creates a setback for toe track program .” Term s of the track and field probation include lim iting ASU to on-campus collegiate meets with no postseason competition in 1988-89, restrictions on the number o f grantsin-aid fo r 1988-89 and 1989-90, a prohibition against offcampus recruiting fo r 1988, and the elim ination o f all expenses-paid recruiting visits in 1988-89. Gorman said everyone should look on the bright side. Jack W . B en toy/S tate P ress Spinniri’ in the rain Scattom d clouds covered the cam pus thm usbout the w eek with som e areas o f the Valley receiving light rain. The sculpture "DevH Dual” In front o f the MU w a » even seen to spin In the wind on occasion. Turn to Track, p a g 8 13. Hurwitz brings enthusiasm for Arizona politics i Wall preparing i to battle storms f o n state Horizon By ben Mc Co n n e l l Stole P ress By On the telephone from Flagstaff, Douglas W all, one o f three new members o f the Arizona Board o f Regents beginning work this week, sounds just like the captain o f an airliner. “ There’s a little ’ •Temps Arts Center will display contemporary and traditional works in the traveling "Native American invitational” exhibit through July 31. The Tempo Arts Center is on Mill Avenue arid First Street arid Is open from noon to 5 p.m. every day except Monday. •The Groove Merchants will perform at Chuy’s Thursday at 9 'p.m. 9£ Mkhilght Oil will pèrtarm Friday at 7 p.nl. at Studio W est. Friday •Midnight (Ml. wHj| perform at Studio W est with House of Freaks Friday at 7 p.m. *Gregg Allman Band will perform at the Celebrity Theatre with Robin Trower Friday at 8 p.m. • •W alt Richardson and the Morning Star Band will perform at Chuy’s Friday at 10:30 p.m., Saturday at 9 p.m . and Tuesday at 9 p.m. ■ Wednesday •Campus Alcoholics Anonymous will meet Wednesday at Saturday noon in MU 209. •S alt River Recreation offers inner tube rental and aH-day shuttle service for $6 per person, from 9 a.m. to 7 p m . daily though September, Salt River Recreation is at Bush and Usery highways, nine miles north of Mesa. GlaSscontainers are not allowed in the river. •Christian Students Fellowship will discuss "Satan, AntiChrist and the Rapture” Wednesday from 12:40 to 1:30 p.m. in MU 217. Everyone is welcome and drinks will be provided. Sunday •A rizona Animal W elfare League has dogs for adoption for $35 and cats for $25 on the first, third and fifth Sundays of every month at 30 N. 40th Place (near 40th and Washington Streets), Phoenix. The tax-deductable adoption donation covers spaying or neutering, shots and a two-week health guarantee. For more information, call 273-6850. •A rizona Humane Society has dogs for adoption for $40 and cats for $30 from 11 a m . to 5:30 p.m. daily at 9226 N. 13th Avenue. The adoption donation includes spaying or neutering, shots and a 10-day trial period. For more information, call 997-7585. •W .C . Clark and the Blues Review and Big Pete Pearson will perform at Chuy’s Sunday at 8:30 p.m. There will be a $5 cover charge at the door. Monday W alt Richardson and the Morning Star band w ill perform at Chuy’s Friday at 10:30 p.m ., Saturday at 9 p.m. and Tuesday at 9 p.m. •D esert Botanical Garden, featuring desert plants from around the world in a natural setting and a new "Plants and People of the Sonoran Desert” exhibit, will lower adult admission to one dollar every Monday in July and August. Located in Papago Park at 1201 N. Galvin Parkway, the garden is open from 7 a m . to sunset daily. Pets are available for adoption at the Arizona Animal W elfare League and the Arizona Humane Society. COOL COMPUTERS - HOT PRICES Avantage X T Avantage 286 * = = . $999 Get the 286 $549 E ra machine that’s priced right. Includes 5T2K. . standard \ keyboard, Macintosh Plus $1247 The popular Avantage XT Is now mors affordable than ever, includes .floppy drive, keyboard, m d monitor. 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Southern & 838-1236 West Valley 35th Ava. & Northern 838-1236 W N 91 o p in io n StMcPress Mouth runnethnief Johnson incident drives home reality of upcoming contest Darrin Hostetler Editor You can hear the minds snapping. M aybe it’s the heat. Or the fact that they’ve a ll been locked up together in those twin sarcophaguses w e call the House and the Senate since January, buried a live in the big stone tombs, the only opening sealed by a boulder with “ Mecham” chisled in the side. Or m aybe it’s as Phoenix Gazette columnist John Kolbe suggested Monday — that sim ple lack o f interest united with incompetence are keeping the 38th Arizona Legislature from fin ally ending this longest-ever capital nightmare. But whatever the reason, they are s till there, as of 3 p.m. Wednesday anyway, and the length and intensity o f the session is beginning to show. It’s bad enough that instead of passing a budget measure necessary to keep the state from shutting down, several members spent a little tim e tossing a rubber chicken (yes, a rubber chicken) around the House o f Representatives on Tuesday. But the legislator who experienced the b ig personality disintegration of the week — and the m ember exhibiting the most visible signs of stress and claustrophobia — is Republican Rep. Leslie Johnson, an ultra-conservative housewife-tumed-legislator from Mesa. Johnson, an old-line Mecham supporter and fellow crim ebuster, blew like Old Faithful into a wide-eyed sermon of rage Monday morning on the floor o f the House, calling for embarrassed and apologetic after Johnson m ade her «m m w iis — one saying that “ Leslie just was very u pset.. .we’re a ll under a great strain.” No, there’s little reason to take her comments seriously, or lay awake nights w orrying that DPS is going to start lining up suspected child molesters and m owing them down with machine guns. Nothing to he concerned about. But what is interesting (o r perhaps frightening) about Johnson’s remarks is that they serve as a rem inder that although the man who made it fashionable to disconnect one’s mouth from one’s brain is no longer governor, many of his “ good people” are still in o ffice — or plan to seek one. And they are going to have a chance to elevate the art of brainless rhetoric to new heightsthis fa ll in the upcoming elections. In light o f the acquital o f Evan Mecham and his brother of a ll crim inal charges stemming from an im properly reported loan from Tem pe developer B arry Wolfson, the legislators who voted to impeach the governor on other charges in April are going to be hard-pressed by right-wing com petitors.to defend their actions. Revenge is going to be the main goal of the Mechamites, and in pursuit o f high o ffice and control o f state government they are going to treat us to widespread examples of distortion, exaggeration and just plain lunacy — the hallmarks of Mecham and Company campaigns. This election promises to be the most pivotal legislative contest in decades, and w ill go a long w ay to determ ining the state’s future. But the battle is going to be ugly. Look at Johnson’s comments as just a prologue to a very loud, emotional, vulgar, lie-infested book. And hope that those legislators who are slated to oppose such comments and candidates are thinking about their campaigns, and not just tossing around rubber chickens. the death penalty fo r child molesters and urging her colleagues to pass such legislation — even if by doing so they condemn a few innocents to execution. Johnson, evidently blinded with g rie f over the discovery the day before o f the body o f 9-year-old Jennifer Wilson in Flagstaff, didn’t seem to be concerned about minor constitutional and m oral details t - like the right to a fa ir trial or the sheer repugnance o f the state putting to death an innocent man — just as long, damnit, as we make sure children are safe. “ I ’d vote fo r the death penalty if you’re convicted o f a sex crim e,” against a child, Johqson said. “ I f you get a few innocent people — fine and dandy. I ’m w illing to take the risk.” ‘Several members spent a little time tossing a rubber chicken around th e H o u se o f R e p re s e n ta tiv e s Tuesday.’ How com forting, Leslie, that your conscience allows you to play roulette with human lives like that. I ’m sure Ms. Johnson was very distressed when she made her remarks, as w e a ll w ere when the news of Wilson’s murder was announced. And in any event, there isn’t much chance of the brand o f vigilante justice Johnson proposes catching on. A fter all, Arizona already has a tough “ dangerous crimes against children law ” (providing for life imprisonment for convicted offenders), and most senators just seemed to be RITTER- letters Running the race E ditor: I am a black graduate o f the ASU College o f Law , and I found the cartoon by M ike R itter in the June 23 State Press to be quite offensive. It is hard to believe that in 1988 Americans are still growing up so ignorant. What a shame! Isn’t it bad enough that the people im plem enting our a ffirm a tiv e action programs have lost sight o f what the objective is, but now we add insult to injury by allowing the false perception, that minorities are getting something for nothing to fester. ASU students should spend more tim e learning the history o f these United States. Minorities in this country have never been treated fa irly across the board and what justice we have received has come with a very dear price attached. We have had to fight for every opportunity that w e have ever been given and even then justice had to be legislated. Otherwise, justice would not have been done, m erely because it was the right thing to do. If m inorities were perceived as equal human beings and treated with respect and dignity hundreds o f years ago, we would not have the need fo r affirm ative action today. A ffirm ative action’s purpose is to right the wrongs that continue to be perpetrated a ga in st m in o rities tod ay. S till, the “ wronged” continue to endure the painful rejection o f a society that does not wish to rem edy the harm it continues to commit. Society must open its eyes to the fact that affirm ative action program s do not give m inorities anything they do not deserve. Rather, affirm ative action programs give m inorities what they have worked damned hard fo r and what traditionally has been denied to them. When you are running the r§pe for equality, you cannot expect anyone to compete successfully when obstacles along the w ay keep tripping them up and somewhere along the w ay you must give them back those lost m iles. That is the only w ay they w ill have a chance to compete on an equal footing. T ry to rem em ber that a few years of putting bandages on the scars won’t make up for the wounds that took over 100 years to inflict. Boni Cherelle-Caruth Graduate « B » m EDITORIAL BOARD L E TTE R P O LIC Y The State Press welcom es and encourages written response from our readers on any topic. Unsigned editorials reflect the view s o f the editorial board. Individual members o f the board write editorials and the board AH letters must b e typed, double-spaced and no longer than three pages in length to be eligible for publication. decides on their merit. The editorials do not reflect the opinion o f thè State Press staff as a whole. Board members include: Please include your full name, class standing and major (or other affiliation with the University) and phone number. Requests for anonymity will be granted with an appropriate reason. All letters are subject to editing at the discretion of the opinion page editor. Bring letters to the State Press front desk in the basement o f Matthews Center. Photo I.D. is required. Letters may also be addressed to: State Press, 15 Matthews Center, Arizona State University, Tem pe, AZ 85287-1502. N ew s E ditor...... ........... Darrin Hostetler Marty Sauerzopf EDITOR Suzanne Weschler MANAGINO EDITOR NEWS EDITOR ARTS EDITOR ....................;... SU ZAN N E W E SC H LER ^ Dave Miller EOTISING REPRESENTATIVES: Leslie Dillon, Paul Lee, Debbie Moriock, Patti Schmautz, Rich Toltzman, R ay Zlckel. STATE PRESS Arts E ditor........................ ............................ ............... DAVE MILLER DARRIN HOSTETLER Editor Artist ................................................... ......... .........,...... . MIKE RITTER M A R TY SAUERZOPF Managing Editor Photo E ditor.................................................. .........JACK BEASLEY CO NTRIBUTING W RITERS: Vickie Chachere, Chris Dorsey, Dave H odges, Gary Jackson, Ben McConnell, Howell J. Malham Jr., Carrt Mitchell, Scott Seckel, Ed Schubert, Laurie Smith. PRO D UCTIO N: Leighayn Green CREATIVE CONSULTANT: Rich Toltzman. Th e State Press is published on Thursday during the Summer * * * * » • « Ma^ ! ? ?® nter' Room 15, Arizona State University, (602) 9652292 Advwttein» a" d a nrttH r f ! w S ,^ this nMisnnnar i8A e?,0n,y n®W8PaP « r exclusively published tor campus. The news and view s published in lacu ltyTa«^ Z Z ° ',h# ASU admini«rtra',on’ Thursday, June 30,1988 State Press Just joking •¿aft, NOBOW P » t Voicing complaints wrapped in a smile Carolyn Nelson foreign Correspondent T u b in g e n , w e s t Ge r m a n y Q: Wbat is a quartet? A : A Polish symphony orchestra a fter a tour in the West. It’s clea rlyn o Am erican joke. Political humor seems never to have reached big-laughs status in the United States. Of course, the joke-telling public lives in the subtle but solid security o f Am erica’s constitutional tradition. On the other hand, politics in Socialist Eastern Europe is, so to speak, strictly a laughing m atter. The topic comes up in polite company — even at the dinner ta b le— in infinite tim ely variations. Citizens of the socialist states are by and large acutely politically aware, but political discussions tend to stay w ell within the bounds of jocularity. A t least on the surface. Im agine hearing the joke above in broken German from a Polish asylant who had arrived in West Germany by means that m ay not have been especially, legal. It adds thè proper flavor to the joke — a touch bitter. Joking as a means o f politically oriented spleen-venting is a fa irly universal phenomenon in the East Bloc. H ow ever, the d iverse situations in the assorted Communist countries also shape the features of the indigenous jokes. An East Germain explained: Two dogs m eet a t .the border between Poland the the German D em ocratic Republic. The E ast German dog asks the Polish dog why he wants to com e to the GDR. ‘F o r once I want to eat u ntil I ’m fu ll replies thé Polish dog. “ Wbat do you want in Poland?” The E ast German dog answers, “T o be able to bark freely. ” The average East German w ill prom ptly maintain that he has enough bread on the table, which isn’t always the case elsewhere in the socialist lands. But he also chafes under the rein o f the System, which keeps personal freedoms chokingly restricted, even by East Bloc standards. Although there are plenty o f Soviet soldiers stationed in the German Dem ocratic Republic to remind East Germans o f the history behind their political present, there aren’t many jokes aim ed at the Russians. Instead, East Germans reserve the sharpest o f their barbs for their own People’s Police, perhaps because they so visibly — and humorlessly — represent the System. The Soviets them selves prefer jokes about the Hhignitopg — if fictitious — Radio Arm enia to raise w ry questions about ideological and practical inequities, both Eastern and Western. The jokes tend to get m eaner as the livin g conditions do. F ot many Rumanians, fo r example, food shortages and rationed w ater are just part o f a dreary litany o f everyday problems. As « i d i , they don’t always dilute their gentim ent« with grinning allusions. Their feelings are m arked rather pointedly in this one, im parted by a re ç o it Rumanian imm igrant tn a W est German acquaintance: A tourist is walking in the Rumanian capital o f Bucarest when be sees a huge crow d gathered on the M arket square.; curious, b e asks a lo cid in the crow d what has happened. “Haven’t you beard?” responds the native. “A man doused h im self with gasoline this m orning. We’re taking up a collection fo r bis survivors.” rugg ing in to his pockets, the h orrified tourist asks, “How m uch have you been aide to co lle ct? ” The loca l answers, “Tw enty-five gallons. ” Another fa irly re ç o it one from East Germany is m ore apt to elicit a grim ace than a grin : R onald Reagan, M ik h a il G orbachev and E rich Honecker bave a ll died and gone to Heaven. Because o f the status they enjoyed on earth, they have been allowed to pose one last question each about the realm they have a ll ju s t le ft. Gorbachev steps up and asks the Heavenly Father, “Lord, wbat w ill becom e o f the Soviet U nion?" God answers, “ The Soviet Union w ill b ecom es capitalist nation, ” and Gorbachev turns away weeping. “ W ell,” says Reagan next, “ Wbat w ill happen in the United States, L ord ?” The Heavenly F a th er 'answers, “A m erica w ill becom e a com m unist country,” and Reagan turns away weeping. Finally, Honecker steps up and asks, “ Wbat about the German D em ocratic R epublic?” And the Heavenly Father turns away weeping. The form at of the joke and the ability to find humor in the current situation is very dear to the typical Eastern European. A w itticism m ay be his best chance to voice his complaints or his fears, albeit wrapped in a smile. The tears in his eyes, he w ill say, are surely from laughter. M Carolyn Nelson is a State Press staffer attending school in West Germany. 'jRBBSki Curriculum reform ASU should develop religious courses to increase relevance for minorities A couple o f years ago, I covered the Miss Black ASU Pageant for the State Press. It was a great event, and the many blacks and handful o f whites who crowded into the MU Pim a Room seemed to thoroughly enjoy the program. A good tim e was had by all. But one event of that night stood out with special vividness. A t the very beginning o f the program , the m aster of ceremonies said: “ L et Us a ll stand and recite the Lord’s P rayer.” And without m issing a beat, everyone stood and recited the prayer from m em ory — “ O ur Father, which a rt in Heaven, hallowed be thy nam e. . . ” — as if starting a program with the Lord’s P rayer was the most natural thing in the world. I wondered how many whites, these days, could identify the Lord’s P rayer — let alone recite it. Could it be that Am erican Macks have retained within their subculture the reverence and affection fo r the B ible that had once been characteristic o f Aiherican culture as a whole? Dr. M artin Luther K ing, after a ll, used im ages from the Book o f Exodus to describe his vision o f racial justice and equality. When he proclaim ed: “ I have been to the mountain top. I have seen the prom ised land.. he was alluding to the ‘The m ost telling argument o f the Stanford “ reform ers” is that the traditional “ great books” are out o f the ken o f m inority students. ’ story of Moses’ death in the final chapter o f Deuteronomy. And indeed, Exodus tells the story o f blacks in the United States just, as much as it tells the stray of Jews in bondage 4,000 y e a n ago. Perhaps in this w e m ay find a clue as to how the college curriculum can be made m ore “ relevant” to minorities. Recently, Stanford University abolished most o f its core curriculum in Western civilization — works by Homer, Plato and Locke are to be replaced by books w ritten by “ women, m inorities and persons o f color.” This was a tragic and stupid response to a real problem. The most telling argument o f the Stanford “ reform ers” is that the traditional “ great books” are out of the ken of m inority students. They don’t speak their language or touch their experience. q u o t a b le • l y True, to a point. White high school students in Paradise V alley w ill be m ore likely to have read a play or two by Shakespeare than their Hispanic or black counterparts in south Phoenix, and consequently those white students w ill have an advantage over m inority students once they arrive at college. 7 To correct this, the curriculum must be refram ed —■but not in the clumsy, brutal w ay in which this was accomplished at Stanford. Fra Stanford recruiters w ill now be saying to bright, m inority high school seniors: “ Crane to Stanford. 7 wondered how m any whites, these days, could identify the Lord’s Prayer — le t alone recite it. ' W e’ve lowered our standards — just fra you !” No. One doesn’t relieve the disadvantages o f m inority students by patronizing them. But what do w e have to o ffer that’s better — here at A verage State University? W ell, w e have a fine English department — but one that exhiMts an irony common to almost all public universities. In our Milton classes, fo r exam ple, students read “ Paradise Lost,” which is based on the first.four chapters of Genesis, and they read “ Paradise Regained,” which is based on exactly 14 verses in the New Testament. Y e t seldom is the Bible read. This paradox results partly from a fanatically narrow reading o f the F irst Amendment, and partly from an assumption on the part o f college administrators .that students arrive here with a solid knowledge of the Bible im parted to them by their churches and synagogues — an assumption that would have been valid a generation ago, but not today. And yet it is the Bible which has the greatest relevance for m inority students, blacks especially. Obviously a proper course on the Bible would take some work: (te e sem ester fra the Hebrew Scriptures, with some introductory explorations o f the Talmud. Another sem ester fra the Apocrypha and the New Testam ent, with a look at some early Christian w riters. And it wouldn’t hurt at all to develop a course on that other pillar o f ethical monotheism, the Koran. Besides its obvious importance in the w orld today, the Koran is often found interesting by Mack students as the source o f an authentically “ A frican” religion. A good course on the Koran would probably require the reading o f “ The Autobiography of M alcolm X .” Thus it m ay be possible to sim ultaneously raise our academ ic standards and make the curriculum m ore interesting ami relevant to m inority students. Like killing two birds with one stone, as it were. j ll l i “ Our emotions cry for vengeance in the w ake of a horrible crim e, but we know that killing the criminal cannot undo the crim e, wilt not prevent similar crimes by others, does not benefit the victim, destroys human life, and brutalizes society. 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H acienda D r., #107 • Tempe C A L L 967-7282 CN 15 Hours: Mon.-Fri.,7:3i> a.m.-5:30 p.m. • Tues. & Thuis. ’til 8 • Sat., 9-1 (Tues. Ac Thurs. by Appointment Only), Page 7 SMePiesa 1320 LBROADWAY ÎÉMPE, ARIZONA (at Broadway ft Doaey) 894-0636 M C C U N TO C K DORSEY RURAL THURSDSYIÂDlËSTilEffT 100 Well, Wine, Draft (7 pm to Close) Everyone Receives *3.00 in Beverly Bucks Redeem: Saturday Night wKm FOR: $100’s in Prizes Island Sundays Bodacious 390 Coronas Fashion m m I Auction Chuckie & Nate Show! This Week: July 3rd (From Chuckie & Thè Ailstars) Wed-Sat. Chuckle Baby The Allstars Saturday 1 7 PM 12-3pm h ™ pm S ta te s analysis Hot politics H Mexico elections show case south of the border changes By SCO TT C . SECK EL State P ress and many lower jobs in the govemmment are occupied by PR I members. M exico w ill be having its presidential elections on July 6, and changes in the political clim ate are drifting with the hot wind over the deserts, jungles and sierras of the vast country on the tip o f Latin Am erica. The outcome o f the election, seen as a foregone conclusion hy almost a ll observers in the United States, is not in itself as much of an issue as it is in Am erican contests. The big stray in federal politics south of the border is that the opposition, previously mute fo r a ll practical purposes, is becoming very vocal, and that the candidate o f the m ajority party seems to welcom e the challenge. For M exico watchers, this year’s election is offering a very unusual assortment of dishes on a slightly m odified menu. The son o f a previous president is heading a new coalition composed of every opposition party except two against the powerful ruling p a rty’ s candidate and a flam boyan t m illionaire. M exico’s dominating federal government is th e h om e o f th e In s titu tio n a l R evolu tion ary P a rty (P R I - Spanish acronym ), the ruling party in M exico since 1929. It has never lost either a presidential or a gubernatorial election in any of M exico’s 31 states. Alm ost all top positions But this season’s presidential cam p aign s causing the P R I to feel that its absolute grip on Mexican politics is becoming tenuous. The party, with a history o f domination of Mexican politics by strength alone, has respon ded to c r itic s b y o ffe r in g a reform —minded candidate. That candidate, M inister o f Budget and Planning Carlos Salinas de G ortari — who earned a doctorate in political economy in 1978 from the John F . Kennedy School o f Government at H arvard — has been stressing the importance o f com petitive governm ent and credible elections. As m inister o f the budget, Salinas is largely regarded as one o f the main causes o f M exico’s financial woes. He played a large part in the design o f current President M iguel de la M adrid’s unpopular economic austerity program. Traditionally, the president ends bis sixyear term by openly picking a successor; no convention, no prim aries, no baby-kissing. The choice has never been disputed by M exico’s alm ost 40 m illion registered voters and, in concert with an overwhelm ing wave o f publicity, has never faded to gain die presidency. But due to protest and upheavals within Turn to M EXICO , pag* ip . P h oto b y S cott C . S*ckel M inister of Budget and Planning C arlos Salinas de G ortari, the leading presidential candidate, is pictured on a typical M exican cam paign poster. Salinas is under lire from opposition parties who claim he is to blame for the country's econom ic woes. EYEGLASSES AND CONTACTS Soft Contacts* Sam e Designer Frames and Sunglasses Available at Discount Prices D ay S e rv ic e M ost Prescriptions ‘N E W ” M A K E Y O U R B R O W N EYES BLUE G R EEN Y O U R C H O IC E AQUA $159.99* One Pair HAZEL PLU S EYEGLASSES—_________ ________________ Two Pair $39.99 One Pair of Clear Contacts or Eyeglasses Stek VWoaOWr FREE* n v .F n r.A ix . — Two Pair $79.99 (FT 2® D A IL Y W EAR CO NTACTS Both Pair $39.99 EXTENDED W EAR CO NTACTS Dr. Mark A . Hechtman • Dr. Neal A . 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T » n Pair $99.99 One colored, one dear Outside contact lens prescriptions welcome with corneal measunnents (K Readings) i Ov*id 996-3629 I 5130 N. 19th Aw. Oneblocknorth of CamelbackRd 242-5292 GLENDALE N.W. comerof AkmSchooUWamer 3620 E. Ihomas Rd. AcrossfromTarget inSunshineSquare 9 5 6 -2 0 1 2 437 $. Gilbert Rd, 5030 V. Peoria #10; Oneblockeastof 51st 786-1074 Southeastcomerof boaduqyfi (àlberiRd 844-7096 9 5 7 -1 0 4 7 ■ES£¿ Thursday, June 30,1988 State Press 33 33 S. R ural Rd. (corner of Rural & Southern) 7 3 0-8 19 4 Fajita Prim a, where hist and fresh make the difference. 50$ OFF TEZ f A N Y M A IN FEATURE IT E M F a jit a F rim a i (Y o u r ch o ic e o f eleven ite m s !) C o rn e rs to n e M a ll U M I T O N E C O U P O N P E R C U S TO M E R EX PIRE S JUEY 3 0 ,1 9 8 8 r e L u n c h e '’’ AT DICK’S/^ OF COURSE!! j 10% OFF ALL UNIFORMS (Except Heavyweight) Expires 7-13-88 on/i c n o | B URGERONLY Supply center SE Corner of Rural t University, next to D in n e r N o t valid w ith a n y o th e r coupon. O ffe r g o o d u p to 6 people. Good th ro u gh 7 3-88. KARATE-MART 831 s. Rural Rd. o r Buy any o f th e follow ing a t regular price and g e t a second one o f equal o r lesser value FREE: TortiUlni Alfredo • Fettuccini A lfredo • Spaghetti • Chicken Parmigiana • veal Parmigiana • M anicotti • Ravioli • I - HOURS: Mon-Sat w é s ¡ ééésíééééb (Lim it three per customer) TE M PE BICYCLE AT DICK'S, OF COURSE!! '» » a s Bring this coupon In for 10% off flit price on any Item. Excludes sale Items 330 W. University •966-6896 e*p.t/3i /m B j 8 5 5 Rura| Rd size order. Valid oniy with coupon (Lim it three per customer) Tempe. AZ (So. of University Dr.) FRESH CUT FWES. FREE?! $7.50 OFF FASHION SHORTS C A T C H -IT , S T U B B IE S , O ’ N E IL L , B IT C H IN , S P E E D O Not valid on sale items or with any other oiler. Expires 7-15-88. llC K ’S B R I Y E Ï N ee ^ nBoo Rural &«i ho. Wiin «»if • purch3S8 OF COURSE! If lif ifuiniiiy lt f % V oa lili T am ne $ 7 • (So. of University Dr.) ; Good on regular sizeortter Not valid with any other coupon 1038 S. M ILL AVE. TEMPE • 968-7725 B [ i v e r l l t y s jp o r tin g g o o d s $3.00 OFF ANY TANK TOP COOL OFF Ï w lt h Æ 1 FROZEN FOR I YOGURT C LU B S PO R TW EAR , C A TC H -IT, V U A R N E T O R A N Y A SU T A N K Not valid on sale items or with any other offer. FRO M THE S M A R T C O O K IE Expires 7-15-88. 1038 S. M ILL AVE. TEMPE « 968-7725 l l i y v e i ^ i t g s p o r t in g g o o d s 50% OFF A N Y A S U S W E A T S H IR T ! Not valid on sale items or with any other offer. Expires 7-15-88. S S. M IL L A V E . TEM PE • $68-7725 T IR E » P R O D U N LO P M IC H E L IN ■ f FOOT-LONG $ SUB OR | 1 SALAD % J I » f P I ANY FOOT-LONG SUB (H I SALAD He ASU 4 E. 10th St Tempe 829-7213 1495 N. Hayden Scottsdale 990-7571 O f f e r E x p ire * 8-15-88 1 FREE TIR E REPAIR Passenger Car Only « B .F . G O O D R IC H P IR E L L I 2408 E. Apache Blvd. Tempe, AZ 85281 a n y U n ive rs ity & M c C lin to c k W H O LE S A LE A L L M A JO R B R A N D S G OODYEAR 9 2 1 -9 9 8 8 8-6 Mon-Frl 8-1 Sat r . \ Free Tire Mounting/Belanclng with Tire Purchase Expiree August 31,1988 Offer not valid on sale items. 2nd suit b of equal or lesser value. E xpiree 7 -8 -8 8 . 219 E. Baseline, Suita 5 • 839-9600 MEXICO ConUnuad Irom paga 0. the P R I, a prominent labor leader, instead of President de la Madrid, made the announcement o f Salinas’ - nomination in early October 1987. What happened to the president’s traditional announcement? Why is such a m inor detail so significant? Back in mid-August o f last year, two dissident P R I leaders cam e forth and capped months of speeches deviating from the austere, elitist party line with a threat to carry their battle against the status quo into court if an open convention was not held to pick a candidate. Form er P R I president P o rfirio Munoz Ledo and the ex-governor o f Michoacan, Cuauhtemoc Cardenas, made speeches to special interest groups saying that the best w ay to stream line and “ modernize” the party would be to elect a president with a “ grass-roots” political origin. Cardenas and Ledo form ed a splinter party called the Dem ocratic Current, which was ousted from the P R I. The elite of the party publicly displayed discontent with mainstream policy; action that would have been unheard o f a few decades ago. The D em ocratic Current has since m erged with the Dem ocratic National ‘This season’s presidential campaign is causing the PRI to feel that its absolute grip on Mexican politics is becoming tenuous.’ Front, which has nominated Cardenas for the presidency. Teresa Leal, spokeswoman for the FD N (D em ocratic National Fron t), explained why the expulsion occured: “ (Cardenas and Ledo) did not discipline themselves when the candidate (Salinas) was announced. They tried to project Cardenas as the sole candidate fo r the P R I that would veer theparty aw ay from the right. I f they couldn’t be in agreem ent with Salinas de G ortari, then they had to be in disagreement. “ You can’t be a dissident within the party because the party doesn’t allow this,” said Leal. “ That’s why they (the opposition) call them ‘borregos’ — sheep.” But, in a recent article published in The New R epublic, Salinas said, “ Opposition has a role to play in a democratic system. , Coming from a solid believer in the party, thfe is a significant comment on thé subtle w orld o f M exican politics. A fter the nomination is made, the P R I is supposed to solidify around the candidate and give the appearance of a solid front by never uttering another word about being in dissent with the party, according to LealThere are two ways that is accomplished: the party first attempts to entice the opposition leaders into accepting roles w ithin the platform which has been constructed around the president-to-be. “ B they refuse, if they continue to be dissidents, then they are harassed and pressured,” said Leal. “ Either they buckle under o r they get out.” Cardenas and Ledo w ere expelled but mànaged to hold on to their political status as an outside branch of the P R I. They brought the Dem ocratic Current together with the Authentic Party o f f i » Mexican Revolution, the Socialist Popular Party, and the P a rty of the Carderiista Front for National Reconstruction to form the FDN coalition. Heberto Castillo, the candidate of the M exican Socialist Party, dropped out o f the race on June 3 and threw his support to Cardends under certain conditions, among them that the governm ent be restructured and a halt be m ade on paym ents on the $105 billion foreign debt until m ore favorable term s can be negotiated w ifi) creditors. The moderate left, never very popular in M exico, displayed its support fo r Cardenas on M ay 26 at a rally, a t the National Autouonomous U n iversity o f M exico, traditionally a stronghold o f the old left. A vote fo r Castillo w ill count as a vote for Cardenas on the ballots that have already been printed. The FD N has continued to consolidate its strength in the north by convincing voters that their candidate is not sim ply a plant by the P R I designed to bolster an illusion of a com petitive election. Cardenas, in second place, has a strong base of support in rural areas due to the popularity o f his father (Lazaro Cardenas, who, as president from 1934 to 1940, nationalized the o il industry by th row in g out A m erica n and B ritish companies and led a m ajor land reform still remem bered by peasants) and his platform o f lower taxes coupled with the stabilization o f the peso. Turn to MEXICO, p e g « 11. BUY • SELL • TRADE Your books at Changing Hands. For quality doth and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) w e pay 30% o f our re­ sale price in cash or 50% in trade-in credit which may be used to purchase anything in the store. (Sorry, no tradeins on Sat. or Sun.) Browse through our three floors of: •N ew & Used Books •Art Prints & Posters •Calenders & Cards •Handbound Journals M-F 10-9 SAT 10-6 SON 12-5 THE C hanging Han d s 414 M ill Avenue 9064203 Old Town Tem pe D e s k to p P u b lis h in g — b y th e h o u r! Rent time on our Macintosh™ & LaserWriter system. ¡o n to f the copy center on a n v n U i 933 E. University/894-1797 Special Student and Youth Fares W O R L D W I D AS A MEMBER o f T|HE C O M M O N S Y ou ll be entitled to a full array o f ameni­ ties. T h e grounds are loaded with special features such as sand vol­ leyball, barbeques, heated pool witha jacuzzi. There's evenan activities director who plans a variety o f social a c tiv itie s for the 'Com m oners". E tom e completely with everything mclu cookware, s iW e r w a r , even a washer and 1 e s p e c ia lly when y o u y nd compare them is s n s ? nd linens. T h e r e . .d is h w a s h e r , e x t « jw a v e in e a c h s u U e . The dorms- See fo m vourselfl B S B FROM ’ LOS ANGELES ON SCHEDULED AIRLINES LONDON PARIS SYDNEY AUCKLAND COSTA RICA GUYAQUIL TOKYO HONG KONG from from from from from from from from $549 $598 $745 $699 $350 $579 $599 $699 University Blvd. MULTI STOP FLIGHTS LOS ANGELES /TO K YO / KUALA LUMPUR / B A U / J A K A R T A / HONOLULU / LO S ANGELES from $999 Terrace Arizona State ^ University — • Lemon St. LOS ANGELES / C A R A C A S /. G U AYAQUIL / LOS ANGELES from $685 LOS ANGELES / MADRID / ROME / LO S ANGELES from $784 • FUGHTS AVAILABLE FROM PHOENIX, AND ALL MAJOR U.S. CITIES. • LOW COST TRAVEL INSURANCE AVAILABLE. . CALL FOR A FREE COPY OF THE STUDENT TRAVEL HANDBOOK . EQUALLY LOW ONE WAY FARES • ADVICE FROM THE EXPERTS S t a r t in g as L o w as $ 2 6 5 /m o n th (includes utilities) . ' T H E " . “Limits Apply THE STUDENT TRAVEL NETWORK 1-800-777-0112 SM WUMRE UVD SUITE «S07 LOS ASEELES. CA 90057 Outside AZ: 1-800-247-6141 J21S E. Lemon 968-6437 a U n t n ■SSSJLL Thursday, June 30,1988 f t l MEXICO. Continued tram paga 10. Northern M exico has a tradition o I dissent with M exico C ity and tends to lode a t politicians from the federal district much the w ay a resident of Tennesee might look at someone from Washington D.C. Cities lik e Monterrey, Ciudad Obregon and Ciudad Juarez usually vote against the P R I. A young bus driver in Guadalajara, Jorge, said in a Decem ber, 1967 conversation that “ people from the north, they have relatives livin g in the States, they have jobs in the States. They always go back and forth.’’ “ They see how things work in the States and they thipk it should work here.” That desire fo r Am erican-style politics was reflected last summer in a series o f breakfast interviews with candidates broadcast over radio and television to the entire country. The interviews, conducted by P R I leaders, asked candidates to project their plans fo r the next six years. W hile some critics denounced the campaign program as unsubstantial, it Was in razor-sharp contrast to the long­ standing tradition o f candidates politely denying any desire fo r the o ffice in Los Pinos (the Mexican White House) prim* to their nomination. Currently Salinas has a solid lead. The P R I has been mounting an enormous campaign in the north. Over ten billion pesos ($4.5 m illion, U .S.) was spent on a rally in Chihuahua, according to Jerry Hammer, a correspondent for the Arizona R epublic and the Phoenix Gazette. Salinas has Turn to MEXICO, pago 1 * .. An Institutional Revolutionary Party (P R I) cam paign advertisement decorates a wall In Jocotepec, Jalisco, central M exico. PRI la the dominant force hi Mexican politica. N H O M E P R I N T S f it O IL S ‘Stimulate your wilUÆMcorate »our m om s" Touch EK TBO m C harbroiler BBQ Chicken Sandw ich All natural breast of chicken Charbroiler C hicken Club. A ll natural breast of chicken The Player’s Choice Racquets from $29.99 to $139.99 Stringing from $7.99 to $17.99 Racquets, Balls, Gloves, Luggage, Stringing BÇTEIDNé A vailable at: At Jr imp take tender natural breasts o f chicken w ithout the skin, chaibrod them, put them on delicious honey wheat buns and create tw o great chicken sandwiches. The Charbrdkr Chicken d u b w ith bacon, swiss cheeseand sprouts. And our original Charbitaler BBQ Chicken Sandwich with Carl’s own hickory barbecue sauce. Carls Jr. r Buy One— tssT Buy One . 1®*1 I Charbroiler Chicken Club Sandwich™ i Charbroiler BBQ Chicken Sandwich™ | I Get v One Free. Get One Free, ■ vm im n w. ■ Present this coupon when you purchase any Charbroiler Chicken | receive a second Charbroiler Chicken Club * Sandwich™ o f equal or lesser value free. Ipine Ski & Sports 1753 E. Broadway • 958-9056 M-F 9:30-9 • Sat 9:30-6 • Sun 12-5 Enterprises. Ir>c 1987. V W»|V« T |8 / ~ \ U BBQ | BBQ _ Otter valid through-July 14,1988 at the University and Rural location. Otter »add through July 14,1988 at the University and Rural leeaMon. One ¿¿upon per customer per Visit. wyoMrXordOceunt. Present this coupon w hen you purchase any Charbroiler Chicken Sandw ich** and receive a secon d Charbroiler Chicken Sandwich5*4 o f equal or lesser value free. l S - One coupon per customer per visit. One discount per coupon. Not vsU w»h any v oltar or discount iwc«»«nm e oihr um enm If j" m« Carl Archer Enterprises. Inc 1987 U O W — IV S l i J ™ ■> i »y\ a i T /> W e b f N ) | | 1 Page 12 State Preti Thursday, June 30,1988 Keep in step with the comings and goings in town with the STATE PRESS Classifieds. ASU’s one-step marketplace! a The M onsters are out to n ig h t! TUBING DOWN THE SALT RIVER /usten to « ^ r i 'L n d p l c k into at a« jocattons oi •O i A ll N e w Rida a Tube Down the Salt River TUBE RENTAL AND SHUTTLE BUS SERVICE ALL-DAY RATES $6.00 per day per person group rates available Or Shuttle Bus ticket only $3 all day •4,000 tubas for rent •open 7 days a week, 9 am-7 pm Located 9 miles north of MESA at the junction of Bush and Usery Highways. For more Information, phone „ (602) 984-3305 or write for your free brochure and river map. Authorized by U.8. Forest Service. ¡Bring this ad with you for ! $ 1 0 0 H E P TUBE RENTAL ^ 1 ■ 1 M onday thru Friday SPJj -v t! it ™— H M t o G e r F fto m p h o &J/k t o F O r f U TH URSDAY H uge H uge p a rty 8p m -11pm m ;_ AD 3 E 3 2 o z .W e ll D r in k s $ «Ä ? P.O. Box 6568 Mesa, AZ 65216 SHOW US YOUR STUDENT I.D. YOU’LL GET A DINNER 1.95 -Long Island IceTeasJungle Juices‘Torn Collins Seabreezes •Rum & Cokes Screwdrivers - etc. F r e e A d m is s io n \ F R ID A Y “ Hallelujah Happy Hour 3p m ~8p m 50C Square D e a l1 /llb . Burger 25C Chili Rellenos,Tacos, Gom dogs&Pizza SBoes This year w e’re doing it again! Every Sunday (but O NLY on Sunday), Mike Pulos o f d ie Spaghetti Company will give you one FREE dinner* for each dinner you order! it's our 2 for 1 SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL. And it’s good for the whole school year at both our Tem po and Phoenix locations. Any day o f the week, for lunch or dinner, The Spaghetti Company is known for a great meal at an affordable price. But the SUNDAY STUDENT SPECIAL makes our already terrific prices even better!Our dinners include a full course meal with all the trimmings - from salad to dessert. So, dollar for dollar, when you’re hungry and you need a break, you can’t beat The Spaghetti Company! ESPECIALLY ON SUNDAYS! With 2 dinners for the price o f 1! But you MUST have your student I D. card with you to take advan­ tage of this offer. $2.99 Pitchers o f B eer & Lon g Island Iced Teas 9 pm -3:30 a m = Dancing for those 188tolder — Nowservbig alcohol for those 218Colder to lam 1 2 :3 0 - 3 :3 0 * “ AFTERHOURS 18£toIder SATURDAY« CO UNTDO W N Open at 11:60 a.m. to 11 p.m. Sundays 5 fori drink prices 8pm-9pm Sccounting down every hour A F T E R H O UR S I:15am -3:30 _________ for those 18Scolder or w / valid n ^geip Restaurant Phoenix South on Central Just Pasta McDowell 257-0380 Chicken Cordon Blue, Steak Di Jon, Stuffed Filet of Sole, Tenderloin, Chicken Picatta, Veal Marsala ARE NOT INCLUDED in the 2-fbr-1 special. in Old Town Tempe 4th Street and Mill 966-3848 Sun D evil House Page 13 Thursday, June 30,1988 T rack. ASU doctoral candidate subject of state inquiry C on ttn m tf front paga 1. Although the probation was severe, the conditions could have been worse, he said. ASU was not given the “ death penalty,” which would have elim inated the track program for a year. Under that condition, track meets and organized practice would not have been allowed, and the athletes would have been given the option o f transfering to other schools to compete. . H ie death penalty is norm ally given when an institution has two m ajor violations within a five-year peroid. The ASU baseball team was placed on probation four years ago. The track and field probation was imposed fo r violations involving the provision o f extra benefits to student-athletes including a cash paym ent, im proper transportation, provision o f an interest-free loan fo r travel expenses, providing expenses to ineligible student-athletes and falsifying a 1987 NCAA Championship qualifying form. The 1989 Pac-10 Championships w ere scheduled to be held at Sun Angel Stadium. Instead, ASU has switched dates with Stanford and w ill play host to the 1991 conference meet. < “ W e can’t duplicate the Pac-10 and NCAA Championships, but w e can have good collegiate competition here,” Gorman said. “ W e have a great facility here ami people always want to come here. “ In the past w e had to turn down teams who wanted to compete here.” H arris said he intends to maintain the level o f competition at ASU despite the restrictions made by the Pac-10 Committee. “ We intend to give the folks within the program as much, within reason, quality competition,” he said. “ We w ill extend our home m eet schedule next season to include m ore competitions than we norm ally have.” The amount o f dual meets w ill be increased and other possibilities can be acted upon depending on decisions by the new head coach, who should be hired by mid-August, Harris said. Pac-10 Commissioner Thomas C. Hansen announced the By MARTY SAUERZOPF State Press Victor H eller, director o f the state O ffice of Tourism ami a doctoral candidate at ASU, is the subject o f an inquiry into his use of state tim e and a state computer to work on his dissertation. H eller has said that his dissertation, titled “ The Use of Public Monies fo r Tourism Prom otion; a Cost-Benefit Analysis,” would be beneficial to the state, but said if he found him self in the same position again he would get perm ission from a supervisor before using state equipment. Alleen Nilsen. assistant dean o f the Graduate College, said she was not aware that H eller was doing his doctoral work at ASU. She said she was uncertain of any actions the University could take against H eller if it is determined he had outside help in producing his dissertation. Turn to Track, page 17. Let M e Get Right To The P o in t * 0 0 ° * C° O i c ... STUDIOS TO 3 BEDROOMS 3 MILES FROM ASU LARGE SODA & CHIPS W I T H P U R C H A S E O F A N Y 6” S U B NOT GOOD WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. COUPON EXPIRES 7-31-88. CORNER OF LEMON & RURAL • 967-1114 B O TH C O R A L P O IN T A N D LA G U N A OFFER Furnished & Unfurnished Units C able T.V . Available Custom M in i M inds Throughout APACHE BLVD./MAIN STREET Washers / Dryers in select units W oodburning Fireplaces in select units Large Sparkling H eated Pools And Jacuzzi Sand V olleyball C ourt M l O a. BUY ONE SNO AND GET THE 2&D ONE OF EQUAL OR LESSOR VALUE FREEH CORAL POINT LAGUNA POINT O (M e n tio n th is ad fo r A d d itio n a l S avin gs) Private Patios / Balconies • SAP Service o M o u n ta in Bell Telephone Service FR EE SNO! * Z o s O Student Discounts 2343 W e st M a in Street, M e s a NOT GOOD WITH ANY OTHER OFFER. COUPON EXPIRES 7-31-88. Rich with Amenities and Activities Laguna & Coral Point offer • C lub Room s • Tennis Courts • In d o o r raquetball • Exercise Facilities • Ramadas & Barbeque areas O C overed Parking 9 P u b lic Transit to ASU 150 S. R oosevelt, M e sa MAKE IT A PO IN T TO SEE THEM BOTH! CORNER OF LEMON & RURAL • 967-1114 ' NOU1 THROUGH SUNDRY' COOF FAMOUS-MAKER SRl€ - SAVE UP TO 25% Mmmr deals Classified CARRERA from •Famous for (sug. ret. from *5 6 ) comfort & fit •€ xcdlen t protection •Austrian craftsmanship PORSCHE •O ptical $124 S€R€NG€TI *68 •100% u.v. quality interchangeable lenses •€xdusive European styling protection •O p tica l qua lity glass lens •M ade expressly for driving from from (s u g . r e t from *8 5 ) Chrlstown Moll Tower Plata westrldge Mall Tampa Cornar 19th Ave. B 38th Street a 75th Avenue 8 stone ctr. Bethany Home Thomas Thomas 725 s. Rural Rd. 433-2949 244-8118 . 873*2807 988-3360 Call 965-6731 pgge 14 _____________________________________ » M Thursday, June 30,1988______________ FRE8T TAN N IN G SESSION w/purchase of session* Buy one bicycle tire or tube at our low list price and get one FREE SUN DEVIL TANNING SALON Located ft the A rches M a i • C om er o f Forest & University [N ex t t o th e W arehou se D a i) 968-4611 *Not valid with any other offer. Expires 7-14-88. $5 OFF 1 0 SESSION PACKAGE* SUN DEVIL TANNING SALON Located in the Arches M e l • C om er o f Forest & University [N e x t t o the W arehou se D ei) Exp. 7/31/88 ''Not including parts 9 0 9 f.4 4 M W b » ^ 966Behind © , East of Rural & 1 block N. of Apache 968-4611 •Some Restrictions Apply. Expires 7-14-88. SAVE ONE DOLLAR H A PPY HOUR on the Premiere Issue of HAYDEN’S FERRY REVIEW Contalnins w ork b y Pulitzer Prize W inner, RHa Dove. SAVE 56« on th e 1987 Hayden's Ferry Review II $ 3 .0 0 M -TH 6 - 8 p .m . o -/ p .m . A SINGLE VISIT SUN DEVIL TANNING SALON Located in the Arches M e l • C om er o f Forest & University (N ex t to th e W arehou se D ei) 968-4611 Coupon sood while supplies last Stop by Room 133 Matthews Center HAYDEN’S FERRY F a |ita P rim a , where hist and fresh make the difference. N E W FAJITA LITES | Beef or Chicken Fajita Prima Buy T w o, G et O n e FREE C o rn e rs to n e M all l im it o n e c o u p o n p e r c u s t o m e r EXPIRES J U L Y 30, 1968 $ 1 .9 9 BIG CLASSIC & SMALL FRY Valid only at Wendy’s, 1314 S. Rural, Tempe. Please present coupon when ordering. One coupon per customer, per visit. Not valid with any other offers. Tax extra. Offer expires 7-31-88. pa Jay's Pizza CHICAGO STYLE VIENNA BEEF HOT DOG HEAVEN Buy any H ot D og w ith large fries & medium drink and get a H ot D og (o f equal or lesser value) HANDMADE NEW YORK ___ STYLE PIZZA ABSO LUTELY FREE! Expires 7-6-88 (w ith coupon) ■ SUMMER HOURS Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Sunday 903 S. Rural Rd. Cinnamon T ree Center Between Cholla & Dick’s SERVING ASU SINCE 1972 STORE HOURS N Q W OPEN FOR LUNCH M o n -T h u n M M Sunday I t A M -M rM 11 A M -12 PM 11 A M -11 PM FAST-FREE DELIVERY r f t l M T 4 h n iih ' l " “TU* Authentic T u tte o f Home Here in Tempe" Ib i dogreave Special 2 LARGE PIZZAS ONLY 954 H O T D O G 100% Beef on Steamed Poppy Seed Bun w/Condiments. $ 10*95 966-1003 o r 966-4292 Expires 7-6-88 (w ith coupon) 903 S. Rural Rd. Cinnamon Tree Center Between Cholla A Dick's 0511 SUM M ER HOURS M on.-Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Iiziyirt t ■EH M E»SBSWW«£S w a & m t. S trte P rtM P a g e 15 Thursday, June 30,1988 This coupon good for tlitiversity sporting goods H I M 50% OFF J P ANY ASU SWEAT SHIRT! uwr9 Not valid on sale items or with any other offer. O N E FREE A R IZ O N A S T A T E U N IV E R S IT Y STUDENT HANDBO O K and CALENDAR Expires 7-15-88. 1Q38 S. MILL AVE. TEMPE • 9 6 *7 7 2 5 O ffer good while supply la sts OPick up a t S ta ts P ress. Student Publications, M atthew s C enter Basem ent CHICAGO STYLE VIENNA BEEF HOT DOG HEAVEN BIG CLASSIC & SMALL FRY Buy any Hot D og with large fries fit medium drink and get a H ot D og (o f equal or lesser value) AB SO LUTELY FREE! Expires 7-6-88 (w ith coupon) Valid only at Wendy’s, 1314 S. Rural, Tempe. Please present coupon when ordering. One coupon per customer, per visit. Not valid with any other offers. Tax extra. Offer expires 7-31-88. v OLD P A S R IO ITID [ HAMBPBOERS., WANTED Classified ads in the STATE PRESS! Cash ads receive 25$ bounty on 1st ad. Rope ’em in! Drag ’em in! Bring a friend and Round ’em in! Matthews Center south basement Bring in this ad for redemption SUMM ER HOURS .Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m. 903 S. Rural Rd. Cinnamon T ree Center Between Chnlla 3s Dick’s as? % 2':FREE TAN N IN G SESSION w/purchase of session* SUN DEVIL TANNING SALON Located ir t h e A rches M e l • C om er o f Forest & University (N e x t t o the W arehou se Deli} 968-4611 *N ot valid with any («h er offer. Expires 7-14-88. GREASY TONY'S $5.00 OFF TV RENTALS REGULAR $25 PER MONTH FOR COLOR T V . W ITH TH IS COUPON ONLY, EXPIRES JULY 15. 500 A SLICE CHEESE PIZZA Cinnamon Tree Center 903 S. Rural, #106 WE DÉLIVËR! WITH MIN. ORDER 829-1899 EXPIRES 12-27-88 • ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER 894-8868 • 921- 3611 ■C AM E RA SAVE 50C ON Reg. 189.98 198 8 ISSUE LENSES • VIDEO • TELESCOPES • BINOCULARS M A Y D .N '* F B R R V R .W I .W Sale 169.95 specTR um Featuring an in te rvie w w ith John Updike Bring ASU id and receive 30-E Catadioptr ic Reflector additional discount Coupon good white supplies last, stop by Room 133, M atthews center HAYDEN’S FERRY Exp. 7/28/88 W /C oupon 204 E. University • 8 9 4 - 8 3 3 7 ¡C A M E R A Falita Prim s, where fast and fresh make the difference. LENSES • VIDEO • TELESCOPES • BINOCULARS FREE TACO fT with the purchase o f a BEEF BURRTTO Cornerstone Mall j Fajita Prima | U M I t O N E C O U P O N PER C U S TO M E R , . IL FO R D 8 x 1 0 (1 0 0 S h eet B o x) P earl F in ish P h o to P ap er # R eg . $47.62 S A L E $34.99 L im ited S u pply - N o o th e r discou n ts apply W /C oupon 204 E. U niversity • 894-8337 Exp. 7/28/88 EXPIRES J U LY 3 0 ,1 9 8 8 ¡C A M E R A Honey Treat Yogurt Shop (AKA Polar Bear Yogurt) S m ith -V ic to r F lo o d lig h ts LENSES • VID EO • TELESCOPES « BINOCULARS C o u p o n w o r t h ad d itio n a l B u y an y size y o g u rt and get on e o f the 5% O FF sam e size free! W ith this coupon. Close out prices (Limited supply) fixp, 7-15-88 907 S. Mill Avenue Tempe Center Exp. 7/28/88 204 E. University • 894-8337 State Prm Thursday, June 30,196» 16 Educators learn about technology in 3-week workshop held at ASU By SUZAN N E WESCHLER State P ress Educators from three Arizona high school d is tric ts h a ve been lea rn in g about technology in a three-week first-of-its-kind workshop coordinated by an ASU professor in conjuction with the Arizona Department of Education. T h e 24 p a rtic ip a n ts in th e H igh Technology Summer Workshop, which ends Friday, often worked with “ a lot of enthusiasm” from 8 a.m. to midnight w riting computer programs that control robots, building model cranes and learning how to present their work, coordinator Jack M ichie said. Counselors and teachers of English, home e c o n o m ic s , in d u s tria l ed u ca tio n , mathematics and. science from the Casa Grande Union, Tucson Unified and Yuma Union high school districts attended the workshop. “ Some of these teachers have had very little scientific background,” said B illy Wood, an ASU technology professor and one ;WÊÊmmï :5*m > ■ o f the workshop’s four instructors, adding that educators who do not teach technology benefit from fam iliarity with it. ASU industrial technology professor Rennee Horowitz said someone must show students how to w rite and speak about technology intelligently. And someone must foster student interest in tech n olgy, said Conrad Lu jan, a counselor at Yum a’s new Cibola High School. Lujan, who came to the workshop with “ lim ited experience in computers” s a id his n e w ly a c q u ire d hands-on experience makes him better qualified to advise students about computer education. “ I wish w e could get m ore teachers involved in work like this,” Lujan said. State Superintendent of Public Instruction C. Diane Bishop agreed. “ Tins should be a program that should continue,” she said. “ This is the educational future.” Vocational education should incorporate the latest technological advances and should no longer take a “ back seat” to academ ic education as traditionally has been the case, Bishop said. 1 * ÌNÉP Jack W . P i— ley/fttate P ress Charles Stasis, left, and A l C obb, teachers In the C ssa Grande school district, dem onstrate the robot they can control with their own com puter program . 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Expires 7 /1 5 /8 8 W E ’VE M O VED! But we're not hard to find! Look for us at the south end of the Matthews Center Basement, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon-Fri /¿ross'The Railroad Tracks, W e s t of Gentle Strength Co-op 1 9 8 6 - 1 9 8 7 B e s t B ik e S h o p ^re H ou^S ^M on-T hurs. • 11-5 sun. UP TO 50# OFF ON CYCLE CLOTHNIG • THOUSANDS OF BN(ES OFEVERY TYPEANDPRKE • SALE PRIC& ON LOCKSANDACCESSORIES New Tim es erttk* choice 8-6 Fh.sat. THE T E M P E BIKE SHOP 330 W. U niversity • P hene 966-6896 Thursday, June 30,1988 Track Continuad Iron » p eg s 1 *. A - appropriate to suspend portions o f the original penalties.” H arris said that although the conditions w ere harsh, the restrictions w ere not as devestating as they could have been. “ The severity of the probation was significantly reduced “ Fourteen All-Am erican certificates w ere given to the during the past few months because o f the fact that w e athletes and 13 outdoor school records w ere set this year,” cooperated with a ll facets of the investigation, and because Gorman said. ‘ ‘Under the circumstances — the shadow from the conference recognized this particular case was one that was lim ited to the actions o f one person, which by their the cloud o f investigations — w e had a very good year.” nature w ere largely undiscoverable,” he said. The following restrictions w ere made by the com m ittee: Final action and recommended penalties by the Pac-10 for the infractions w ere postponed on March 16 until further •No Sun D evil track member m ay participate in any review , which was completed during the June 25-26 Pac-10 competition, while representing ASU, except fo r meets held at and sponsored by the University. hearings. “ The Conference considered this a most serious case, •ASU track members w ill not be eligible for any postseason particularly in ligh t o f the.fact this was the third tim e since competition, including Pac-10 and NCAA Championships, 1981 violations had been found in the Arizona State track and during the 1988-89 season. field program ,” Hansen said. “ The severity o f the penalties •Financial or adm inistrative support cannot be provided for reflects the Conference’s concerns over the history of student-athletes to participate in competition other than that violations in the conduct o f the program .” identified above. The probation requires a periodic in-person monitoring •AH initial grants-in-aid, after M ay l l , 1988, have been program by the Pac-10 Conference and an annual written elim inated for the 1988-89 academ ic year. institutional report. The probation w ill be effective beginning •As a result of the cooperation, corrective action and at the tim e the report is ratified or amended by Pac-10 Chief compliance efforts by ASU, the Pac-10 Committee allowed l l grants-in-aid fo r the men’s program and 11.5 fo r the women’s Executive Officers. “ However, the U niversity administration has made strong during the 1969-90 season, provided the Sun D evil track efforts to take corrective steps and was most cooperative program remains in compliance during the period of during all phases of the investigation,” Hansen said. “ In probation. This results in a loss of three men’s and two-and-arecognition of those efforts, the Conference found it h alf women’s scholarships fo r 1989-90. Gorman said the ASU track record speaks fo r itself. The women’s team finished fourth during die June 1-4 NCAA Championships in Eugene, Ore. probation, which resulted from the 10-month investigation of form a* ASU head brack coach Clyde Duncan and the Sun D evil track and field program. Duncan, who was named the head coach on Aug. 6,1985, was suspended without pay on dan. 26 o f this year and then was fired on March 6. Í th at th e circu m stan ces s u r r o u n d i n g the ■ d e c is io n not to re n ew Duncan’s contract. Since announcing the available H position for a new head c o a c h , H a r r is sa id he J 9 received 70 responses before last week’s deadline. “ In general term s the quality we have to work with is good,” Harris said. “ This is still, obviously, a good track school.” ASU has a successful track program and e x c e l l e n t w e a t h e r conditions for the outdoor season, Harris added. H H k ' o® ''d 'm K Ík - : ML ra Hk C ly d e D u n ca n GREASY TONY'S Buy-Sell Trade Keep your cool all summer in cottons from Buffalo Exchange We buy, sell and trade fashionable clothing in natural fibers. Just what you need for summer. ,< o -/^ C h e e s e Pizzo -r University Towers 525 S ¡.forest, Ste. U Tempe - 921-36:11 WE DELIVER ! 227 W. University Or. Tempe • 968-2557 One cou pon per customer <©v E x p ir e s 7-6-88. RUNDLE’S LIQUORS & MKT. N ew Location I flxxxjl 1324 W. vM gpr University Oust east o f Priest) ■ G eo rg e Dickel #8 200ml... .$2.82 Andre Cham pagnes..: Milwaukee« Best 6 pk......$1.88 U sed Playboy M agazines ! omuYienc. FdlYllLY HdIR CUTTERS' .$2.88 FREE SHAMPOO .94 Haagen Daze Natural Ice Cream, Adult Magazines, Groceries, Ice, Wines, over 40 imported Beers. 967-9079 A Perfect Cut Every Time No appointm ent necessary ever! Bring th e w hole fam ily Designer Perm Passport Photos DOUBLE PRINTS M l ■ F4IYHIY H4IR CUTTERS U n iv e rs ity & R u ra l R d. CORNERSTONE SHOPPING CENTER M onday ^ W ednesday on Develop & P rin t orders SUNSET CAMERA Tempe Center — Mill & Univ. 829-0424 9 6 8 -8 0 0 8 H o u rs: Mon.-Fru.9-9 * Sat. 9-7 • Sun. 12-5 $ 2 5 5 I 0 Includes: •S h am p o o and Designer Perm •P e rfe c t Cut •S ty lin g L o n g hair slightly higher 1981 No Appointments Family Hair Cutters. f; » HP U* ItBWMWPmwiifm ASU golfer swings to championship in U.S. Women’s Amateur tournament By CHRIS DORSEY State Proas ASU golfer P ea rl Sinn has just pulled o ff a feat that most women golfers dream about — winning the U.S. Women’s Amateur Public l inks Championship in Tulsa, Okla., continuing the Sun D evils’ domination in the tournament. Sinn reached the finals fo r the second consecutive year in the annual tournament, and this year she accomplished what four previous ASU golfers had m astered — the honor of winning the prestigious event. The senior from Bellflow er, C alif., defeated Tam i Jo Henningsen, 2 and 1, adding her name to the list o f the greatest amateur golfers. Sinn birdied three o f the last five h o i « « to {H ill out a victory in the 12th annual tournament. P rior to Sinn’s accomplishments, form er Sun D evils Danielle Ammaccapane, Heather Farr, Nancy Taylor and K elly Fuiks all earned the trophy. Currently the quartet is playing on the LP G A tour. ASU coach Linda Vollstedt drew a close comparison between Sinn and another Sue D evil golfer, B illy M ayfair, before the 1988 season began. M ayfair won the men’s Public Links Championship in 1986 and went on to became one o f the best amateur golfers in history. In 1987, Sinn won the Trans National Tournament while earning honorable mention all-Am erica accolades. This season she vaulted to first-team all-Am erica and was firstteam all-Pac 10. She placed in the top 10 finishers in seven o f 11 tournaments. The Sun D evil’s best finish cam e in the USA Yam aha Invitational. She placed third in the Pac-10 tournament before crum bling to a tie fo r 35th in the NCAA meet. J * ‘ || 2 Sinn is not finished competing fra: the summer. She w ill be » playing in the Broadm or Invitational Friday in Colorado springs. B efore the summer is over, Sinn also w ill play in the Trans-National, U.S. Women’ s Open and U.S. Amateur. H urw itz____ W all Corftinuad from page 1. W all joins Phoenix attorney Andy Hurwitz and student regent Patrick McWhortor, an ASU senior, as the regents’ newest members. V ada M an ager, M o ffo rd ’ s press spokesman, said the governor liked W all’s legal experience coupled with his ties to university education. W all was a 19-year associate business law professor at NAU, “ I ’ve enjoyed teaching m ore than anything else in m y life ,” W all said. But a fter his nomination, W all’s busin ess re la t io n s h ip w ith N A U President Eugene Hughes faced queries. The two own interests in farm s in F la g s ta ff and N ebraska and have recommended each other fo r various posts. W all’s regent confirm ation easily flew through the Arizona Senate this month on a unanimous voice vote. Once a busy attorney and behind-thescenes worker with the Republican Party, W all said he now spends much of his tim e hunting, fishing and tooling around in his m otor home with his w ife. He has worked on the campaigns of form er Sen. B arry Goldwater, current Sen. John McCain, U.S. Rep. Bob Stump and f o r m e r A r iz o n a H ou se o f Representatives m ajority leader Burton Stepping in as her tem porary and gratis chief o f staff, Hurwitz said he was am azed at what he found in Mecham’s wake. “ An absolute p aralysis o f state governm ent,” he sajd. “ The normal m achinery o f state governm ent wasn’t w orking.” Hurwitz, a technician in public affairs, said he and a volunteer crew began a series o f basic repairs “ like returning legislators’ phone calls. Some legislators said they hadn’t been up on the ninth flo o r (th e govern or’s o ffic e ) since Babbitt left.” Hurwitz, bom jn N ew York and reared D orr ** SPECIAL STUDENT FARES Round trip from Phoenix HONOLULU................... $375 DENVER.........................$148 SALT LAKE CITY........... $158 DES MOINES................. $198 DALLAS.......................... $218 PHILADELPHIA..............$318 TULSA............................ $180 SEATTLE........................$228 Continued tram p a ge 1. CHICAGO....................,.$160 PORTLAND................. ..$188 BOSTON.... ............ $228 SAN FRANCISCO..........$110 PITTSBURGH............... ,$288 CLEVELAND..... ........„,$ 2 4 8 PEORIA.™.......................$228 HOUSTON.................... $158 OTHER CITIES AVAILABLE MILL AVENUE, TRAVEL Turn to W ill, page 19. in New Jersey, hadn’t plunged into die thickness of Arizona politics until he first prim ed him self and set what he called “ the w orld’s longest record fo r judicial clerkships,” Over a period o f four years, Hurwitz was a law clerk fo r six different firm s and judges, including a yearlong stint as law cleric fo r form er U.S. Supreme Court Justice P otter Stewart. During his collegiate career, he sat on the board of editors fo r the Yale Law Journal and was a member of the U.S. Arm y Reserve. W hile some m ay say his is a perfect resum e fo r a Congressional seat, Hurwitz says he has “ no personal political plans. 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C O M E IN A N D P IC K U P YO U R 10% S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T CA RD S N OW O PEN FO R LUN CH & D IN N ER D A ILY Q fie g a s i e h r i i i i D elivers Free! F ifth St. & Forest 966-4438 894-1234 KMs under s e a t f r ie «A ges S-10 only SOC p er year o f age 1 i i i i i TEMPE CENTER ■i i TEMPE • 94 5 S. MILL (A t 10th) r £ - fïV 10TH DELIVERY COUPON $2.00 OFF $1.00 OFF ANY LARGE PIZZA ANY MEDIUM PIZZA j Good for eat-in, carry-out, delivery Limited Delivery Area 6*egcvt% * p iz z a Present this coupon when ordering. O ne coupon per customer. Not good w ith any other offer. CO UPO N EXPIRES 7-14-88. j "imjiift Page 19 MEXICO. Continued from P®9* 11; been campaigning 15 to 16 hours a day, seven days a week — an unusual amount o f work for a candidate whose victory is almost im iversallly taken fo r granted. Local bus lines w ere hired to bring P R I supporters into Ciudad Juarez from as fa r as 250 miles away, Ram m er said. In spite of this outlay o f resources, the physically and oratorically unprepossessing Salinas was booed in that city. Packing rallies with supporters from distant regional districts is a P R I tactic that allegedly has been used many timpg in the past. A letter was reportedly sent from the P R I to the M onterrey m ilk producer’s union (p art of the n i l ’s Mexican Labor Federation) requiring union members to attend the closing ra lly o f Salinas ’ M onterrey campaign last Monday night in his n ative northern state. “ There w ill be no f x^ p Hnns o f any sort,” the letter said. “ The person who doesn’t attend w ill be sanctioned accordingly.” ggiirmn hopes to attract as many as one m illion people to his final ra lly on Saturday in the vast Zocalo Plaza of Mexico one o f the mainstays o f Manuel Clouthier’s campaign. Clouthier, a m illionaire tomato exporter and candidate o f the National Action P a rty (P A N ), a m oderately conservative force in the north with ties to the Catholic Church, is running on a reform platform targeting the budget m inister as the main cause behind the astronomical inflation rate. Out o f the four parties in the race, P A N is the only other organization beside the FD N that could possibly give the P R I a challenge. The party currently is in third place. “ P A N ’s central strength clearly is as a protest party. Their leader projects m oral power and m oral outrage,” said Ram m er. Clouthier, wearing a handlebar moustache and .goatee, peppers his dram atic speeches with slang. He added that P A N taps the thick vein o f Mexican cynicism. Many voters feel that there is no hope fo r the opposition. “ The people see (Salinas) on the road (billboards), on the TV , on the radio. Salinas. Salinas. Salinas, a ll day long,” said Jorge. City. Salinas’s perform ance as M inister o f the Budget provides “ It’s like Coca-cola-they hear Coca-cola. Coca-cola. Cocacola. and they buy it. ~ W all— _ KRISTI’S Continued from p » g » IS . He was S general-practice attorney in Arizona’s high country fo r 33 years with M a n g u m , W a l l , S toops & W a r d e n b e fo r e retiring in Decem ber. W all g r a d u a te d fr o m the U niversity o f Kansas with an undergraduate d egree in physical education and a degree from the university’s law school in 1955. Before college, W all was a Navy hospital corpsman for two years in various ports around the country. W orld W ar II was nearly over when he enlisted. Now, as a regent, he w ill face budget battles with a financially strapped Arizona Legislature along with a flack jacket-foil of already e x p lo sive s o c ia l issu es. M inority recruitm ent and retention is the most heated issue pressing the regents. “ M inority recruitm ent is one o f the big problem s,” W all said. “ Long and shortrange m inority enrollm ent is going to be a problem. ! don’t know the s ta tistics the r e g e n t s h a v e in accomplishing their goals in this, tu t the perception is that this is going to be an issue th at needs to be tackled. “ T h e r e ’ s c o n c e r n on behalf of a lot o f people in education and business that this problem is going to be increased!” Tuition, which has been an annual sq u a ll th e last several years because of sig n ific a n t u n iv ersity growth and a belt-tightening Legislature, is a “ tough one” for W all. “ The toughest part is e s ta b lis h in g a b a la n c e between what the taxpayer pays and what the student pays,” W all said, adding that he does not want to make up his mind on an issue before he’s seen statistics. From his experience as a professor, W all said he a lr e a d y know s that university growth should not squeeze m ore students into a 1r e a d y - c r o w d e d classrooms. “ Qians size should not be so la rg e that you lose personal contact with the students. Th e im portant professors are the ones who have communication with the students and give the Students the fu ll benefit of their subjects,” W all said. Having 150 students in a cla ssroom is “ w a y too many,” he said. “ Th irty or 40, you can deal with that.” Like passengers airplane. on an “ They don’t have an education. They don’t care who wins the election. You give them food and a house and they are happy. I f they have that, they are happy.” Jorge said. “ Salinas w ill win.” Leon Ffrench, M inister fo r Press and Public A ffairs at the M exican Embassy in Washington, D.C., said that a federal electoral tribunal, form ed of “ private citizens not rejected by any party” w ill judge any disputes arising within elections. Leal said the citizens on the tribunal “ are people that are picked by the government. One of the problems within these tribunals is that each opposition party has representatives according to the number o f their constituents, which w ill allow fo r proportional representation. “ Since P R I has always won apparently many m ore votes — w e won’t argue on how they won them —, they always have a m ajority. Within the tribunal, the officia l head is always picked by the government and can settle a tie.” Leal said that the opposition parties w ill correlate with each other to defend each other’s vote count and “ to protect from violence, because violence would only provoke the government and would be a good excuse to squelch anything at a ll that could be possible.” MODELING & TALENT INC. Arizona's newest and most exclusive talent agency Model & Talent Search 5705 N. Scottsdale Suite 125 Scottsdale, AZ 85253 Call for your auditionl 946-9000 Starr Dum DID YOU KNOW? 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FREE DELIVERY Page 21 Stott Prow Foit New, issu e co n scio u s rockers ra ise the roof on m usical sub stance By DAVE MILLER State P ress In the w orld erf pop music, filled with bopping Jennifers and deep, dish necklines, spike bed s and LEGS supporting the teenybop talents o f Debbie, Samantha and B elinda, th ere isn ’t: much room fo r consciousness-raising. In du s medium, only hemlines and voices seem to go up. But now, enter file purveyors erf rock with a hook and a conscience, fem ale rockers with looks that don’t necessarily kill, but who succeed nonetheless in capturing attention, by singing o f gritty, seam ier sides erf life; Fin* these queens of asphalt rock, music is to be shrouded in darker, less cheerful tones. Anything hut frilly pink. The names m ay not be that fam iliar: Tracy Chapman, a solo singer and Natalie Merchant, who fronts the band 10,000 Maniacs, carry the mantle (o r the cross, if you judge from most radio airplay) handed over from the delicate Suzanne Vega via her album “ Solitude Standing,” and her hit song, “ Luka.” Each sings distinctive messages; “ Luka” dealt with battered children, Chapman’ s, “ A Cam pfire Song” is about capitalist greed. But each of these women trade o ff sim ilar messages;: of desperate people trying to make life work. Chapman, 24, who w ill appear at Tem pe’s A fter the Gold Rush, Thursday, July 14, Was raised in a m ostly black, working class Boston neighborhood and now pulls m aterial from those childhood experiences. ‘T w a s very aw are of a ll the struggles my mother w as going through, being a single parent and a black woman trying to raise two kids,” she told R ollin g Stone. “ I guess there’s sem e people who can take a ll that in and not really lode at the bigger picture, not see that there are a ll these forces in society making things m ore difficult than they ought to be.” One particular force she addresses is racism, still a significant factor in the music industry, bafflin gly enough. “ I haven’t had any head-on confrontations with it making this record o r d e a lin g w ith record c o m p a n ie s ,” she sa id ' i n M u s icia n magazine* “ but it shows up in subtle ways (Hi the Boston folk scene. “ I ’m one o f the only black perform ers working on that scene and I ’ll often find that people want m e on the toll as the token black.” These signs of stupidity help boost her playlist, however, giving her issues to address and, alth ou gh in freq u en tly, individuals to dress down. “ I address these things in m y songs, some of winch are highly political,” she said, “ but I ’m not p erso n a lly in vo lv ed in any sp e c ific m ovem ent” A march last A pril, commmemorafing Dr. M artin Luther King, did catch her attention, and she appeared in honor o f the civil rights leader, and what he stood to r. Singer Tracy Chapman: ‘I gu ess there’s som e people Who don’t see that there are all these forces in society making things m ore difficult than they ought to b e .” Chapman casts a dim view o f equality’s progress since K in g’s death. “ C learly some things have changed fo r black people in Am erica,” she said, “ but whether they’ve changed fast enough or as much as they should is debatable. “ A l l th ese y e a r s o f the R e a g a n administration certainly haven’t helped black people in this counfry,” she said. Merchant, whose Maniacs visited the V alley last February fronting fo r Squeeze, and have since graduated to running with R.E.M ., likew ise pulls m aterial from w orld events. Shé recalled in Newsweek memories o f footage she saw of a mining calam ity in W est Germany. As a crowd gathered at the disaster site, “ one little boy started crying and beating his head against a car,” said. “ You can’t help but be affected 10,000 Maniacs, who have been most successful oh the college airw av es, and who are not always understood ( “ It’s been extra work for us, not to be identified as a heavy m etal band,” Merchant said), o ffer m ore raw perform ance energy than Chapman or Vega. TTiey still, however, boast the same folkish influences* A favorite cover song is Cat Steven’s “ Peace Train,” which appears in com m ercialized form on their latest L P , “ In M y Tribe,” fo r a distinct purpose, and not com pletely their own. “ W e wish that the industry had enough confidence in our own songs,” keyboardist Dennis Drew told the State Press. “ But it hit with someone else’s h it,” Drew said. 'P eace Train,’ nevertheless, rem ains in their set, and raising a bit o f consciousness rem ains their goal. The nervous systems of today’s audience, glazed from rock, schlock and rap assaults, is now ready fo r a little 10,000 M aniacs: Dennis Drew, third from left, Natalie Merchant, right. didn’t surprise us. W e didn’t put it on the record fo r a purpose. ‘Peace Train’ was to introduce us to mainstream. The m inim al success o f the cut was almost a blessing. “ A t least w e don’t have a and perhaps a dose o f ppoign o ign aancy, n cy , and constructive criti« criticism . “ People of m y constructive generation grew up listening to pop,” Merchant, 24, says. says, “ I think now they want something different different.” something Heavy metal: What is it, why are we afraid of it? By DAVE MILLER S ta tsP re ss On the “ Monsters o f Hard Rock” priority list, there are a few basic things to rem em ber: ¡day fast (but do it creatively — use your toes if necessary), play hard (rem em ber the garage band days, keeping the Bublitzes next door up late with aerial arpeggio assaults) and dress the part (H artz makes some lovely designer chokers and spikey flea collars). A ll these tips are important fo r building chord-ripping, teeth gnashing, staccato whiz kids, or heavy m etal maniacs in the making. A bove, art horn speed-rocking Flotsam and Jetsam ’s latest LP, titled "N o Place For D isgrace." Says lead singer Erte A .K ., “ (H eavy metal lets fan s) g o out and thrash st a show, and gat their ag­ gression s out,” But if there are only basic ideas behind the fashioning o f these Godzilla kings, then what’s the reason fo r the vast, complex w ave o f national, and even international, hard-core heavy m etal loyalty? You’d think, since it likely can’t be done any better than Zeppelin did it, and now they’re gone, that everybody would’ve shifted attention to Spandau Ballet fo r a few years, then resorted to genocide and/or a m ove to central Panama. N ot lik e ly . M eta l m ania, boasting truckloads o f tattooed twinks and haircuts only a mother could love, is flourishing like never before. Monster-sized stadiums are currently being packed with girls in skimpy leathers and guys whose mothers thought they told them not to go out tonight. What’s the attraction? And who’s the audience? T o begin with, despite a general rebuffing o f the genre by critics, thousands of m etal albums are being picked up every month in cities across the country. Phoenix, in p a rtic u la r, seem s to h ave a tigh t, f actionalized arm y o f lovers o f the spandex. “ Groups like D ef Leppard, Aerosm ith, Guns N ’ R o ses . . . h a v e a l l been consistently in our top ten for a long tim e,” s a i d M i k e W e in m a n , m a n a g e r o f Wherehouse Records, Tem pe. “ (H eavy m etal) is one o f the biggest slices o f the m arket.” 125. Tum tol N an n e i f ) a t Toon Noir-busting with the sensational adventures of Roger Rabbit T h e sets for the liv e scenes w ere litera lly alive with robotic arm s and poppetiers’ strings manipulating props, wMch would later be m ade to look like the Toons’ doings. B y m m s H it t e r State Press Anim ation, a form o f film making long thought to be wrung dry o f potential and too expensive to carry its own weight at the box office, has witnessed a rebirth — a floppy­ eared Phoenix by the name of Roger Rabbit. “ W ho FTam ed R oger R abbit,” the progeny o f a Hollywood m arriage between W alt Disney studios and Steven Spielberg’s A m b ito E n tertainm en t, is ea sily the greatest innovation in animated film since “ Fantasia.” This latest release o f Disney’s alter ego, Touch tone Pictures, is a dazzling blend o f breath-taking animation and liveaction footage. The picture combines a skewed vision at 1940’s Hollywood, where cartoon actors (known as “ Toons” ) liv e and breathe and flub their lines while making m ovies for an insatiable human public. Bob Hoskins leads the human cast as a washed-up gumshoe named Eddie Valiant, hired to do a “ snoop job” fo r the head o f Maroon Cartoon Studios. 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