A rizo n a S tate U n iv e rs ity ’s M o rn in g D a ily Vol. 71 No. 14 •Copyright, State Prass, 1968 Monday, September 12, 1988 Tempe, Arizona Regents psss paid holiday to honor King By SHERI JOHNSON State Press Sundi Kjenstad/Stotc Pro: Where’s Yoda? ASU students Owen K err and Louis Rodriguez, tw o members of the Society fo r Creative Anachronism , known fo r its recreations of m edieval battles, act out a sword figh t on the University Bridge. G am m age repairs to double budget By KAMILUE NIXON State Press The Grady Gammage Center for the Arts is undergoing a face lift to repair the work of a company that didn’t get it right the first time — and ASU will ¡Jay nearly double for the spruce-up than it had planned. Four years ago, Gammage, the circular building off Mill Avenue that was designed by celebrated architect Frank Lloyd Wright, needed to have badly-weathered plaster along the tops of its walls and eaves repaired. “That part of Gammage has ehips of marble pushed into the plaster, which eventually gets a lot of weather,” said Arnold Roy of Taliesin Associated Architects. “He (the original contractor) put a sealer over the plaster, a mistake, and he apparently used an improper product that caused it to turn dark.” That mistake spurred the University to file a $63,000 lawsuit against the contractor, Empire 1 Manufacturing, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy before completing the job. ASU won the suit two years ago and officials said the award would be sufficient to complete the work. But when architects went to the drawing board to have the project match surrounding buildings, they realized the cost would be much higher. “When we redesigned the project, the lowest bid came in at $104,000,” said Jason Eslamieh, acting assistant director of project management for ASU planning and construction. “I think it is worthwhile to come up with the additional money and do it right,” Eslamieh said. However, he expressed disappointment that ASU would have to pay anything to complete the face-lift. “The bonding company should pay to complete the job to our satisfaction, but that is not the way thé case was settled, ’’ Eslamieh said. The additional $41,000 to complete the current repair work will come from Gammage Center funds, Eslamieh said. The current contractor, Daw Inc. of Salt Lake City, was the only bidder for the job, Roy said, adding that he is satisfied with its work. “So far, they’re doing a very good job,” he said. The repairs should be completed by Sept. 26, in time for the Center’s 1988-89 season. FLAGSTAFF — The Arizona Board of Regents has unanimously approved Jan. 16,1989, as a paid Martin Luther King holiday for the state’s three universities. But the approval came amid opposition from ASU’s classified staff association, whose day-after-Christmas holiday was eliminated to make room for the King holiday. “We are in favor of a King holiday, but not at such a high price,” said Joy Cain, chair of ASU’s classified staff committee. Since the state’s three universities are allowed only 10 holidays each year, ASU had to eliminate an existing holiday to accomodate the King day. No extra funds will be spent for the holiday. The three universities are allowed to change their holiday schedules upon approval by the regents. Cain, who said she represented 3,000 ASU classified staff employees, told the regents that President J. Russell Nelson’s plan to eliminate Dec. 26 as a staff holiday discrim inates against the University’s non-teaching employees. “This is a time to visit with family and for religious observation,“ she said. “Thus, President Nelson’s petition robs people of what they need as the two most important things in their lives: their family and their faith.” Cain said that since students and faculty will already be on a semester break, only classified staff will be affected by the holiday change. “Dr. King fought for equality for all people,“ she said. “A day honoring Dr. King should be celebrated by all, and the cost for such a holiday should be shared by all.” Cain’s statements, made during the regents’ “call to the audience,” prompted Regent Jack Pfister to request a discussion on the issue before putting it to a vote. “This is the first I’ve heard of this,” he said. Regent Donald Pitt said he understood the staff’s concern and suggested eliminating the holiday after Thanksgiving. Selection o f ASU president, page 6. “Perhaps it would be easier if it were the day after Thanksgiving because Thanksgiving always falls on a Thursday,” he said. “This sort of came up cold turkey.” Nelson told the board he chose Dec. 26 because it seemed less disruptive to the University. But he added that if NAU and UofA would have eliminated the day after Thanksgiving, ASU would have done the same. “We would have been happy if all three institutions would have agreed to give up the day after Thanksgiving,” Nelson cqjH Mayor stresses City Council offers Cardinals minority needs parking lot in return for cash By VICTOR BARAJAS State Press San Antonio Mayor Henry Cisneros said ASU and other Arizona schools must improve their recruitment of Hispanics and other minorities or the state will suffer economically in the future. Cisneros’ comments came during an interview after he addressed about 200 listeners in the MU Arizona Room Friday. As one of the country’s most visible Hispanics, Cisneros received an honorary doctorate from ASU in 1985 for his work as mayor and his contributions to American cities and politics. “ If Arizona’s future is going to be characterized by a large Hispanic population that is poor and unproductive, then Arizona suffers,” Cisneros said during the interview. “ If this institution (ASU) with public money has part of the responsibility to Turn to Cisnoroo. page 3. By KRISTI ELLIS S tate Proas The Phoenix Cardinals are expected to OK Tempe’s request that the team pay cash to use a parking lot west of Sun Devil Stadium — a move Tempe officials hope will quell controversy over a previous illegal deal. Hie Tempe City Council pitched the idea in a letter Friday. The letter said the council was returning 20 season tickets worth $9,600 the team had given them in August for use of the lo t But the Arizona attorney general voided the deal last week because it was conducted behind closed doors. Attorney general in v e stig a to r J e s s ic a F u n k h äu ser is expected to finish her investigation of the deal this week. With the controversy that has surrounded the city’s method of conducting the deal, city officials seem to have humbled themselves to the Cardinals. “Until we sit down and talk, it would be presumptuous to think they still want the lot,” City Manager Terry Zerkle said. Cardinals’ Ticket Manager Steve Walsh said Friday he hadn’t yet seen the letter, but he said the team still plans to use the lot. “ We ju st have to m ake different arrangements with the council now,” he said. The council also requested that the team pay cash when it uses the lot tonight. The Cardinals take on the Dallas Cowboys in a game that will be nationally televised. Before deciding to return the tickets, the council devised a plan to have the non-profit Tempe Community Council distribute the tickets. That idea, apparently, has been squashed. “ My personal feeling is th at the community lost out because the tickets Turn to Council, page 3. Turn to Regents, page 6. inside Look for sunny skies and a slight breeze today as high tem peratures reach around 99. The lows are ex­ pected to fail to the high 70s. C lassified............................................... 26 Com ics....................................................20 Entertainm ent........................................13 O pinion.................................................. 4 Police Report......................................... 11 S ports..................................................... 21 Today...... ............................................... 2 Monday, September 12,1988 U lt f t « « « world/nation in brief Thousands of Iraqis protest in front of U.S. embassy BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — Tens of thousands of Iraqis paraded past the U.S. Embassy on Sunday to denounce a U.S. Senate call for sanctions in response to Iraq’s alleged use of poison gas against Kurdish rebels. “U.S.A., Shame, Shame,” the protesters chanted in English as they marched past the embassy. Members of the ruling Arab Baath Socialist P arty exhorted them through loudspeakers. “We will never forget U.S. evil,” read one banner. “No to intervention in our affairs,” read another in both Arabic and English. “Down with the U.S. Knesset,” said another banner, referring to close U.S. ties with Israel, whose parliament is called the Knesset. Up to 10,000 marchers an hour filed past the embassy, and officials said the procession would continue into the night. The crowd was orderly, even cheerful, and there was no apparent threat to the embassy. One ranking U.S. diplomat stood on the sidewalk a few feet from the march and watched it move by. Bangladesh floods receding; $236 million in aid received DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) — Flood waters began to recede Sunday, and the government said it has received $236 million in aid to fight the destruction and disease caused by the worst floods in memory. Thousands of lives were threatened by diarrhea caused by drinking water contaminated with sewage and garbage washed up by raging flood waters, health officials said. More than 200,000 people have contracted the disease and at least 123 have died from it, said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity. The disease kills by dehydration. As river levels began to fall after two weeks of flooding, many residents returned to their homes, said officials at the Flood Control Center. They said they expect the water level to drop quicky starting Monday. The floods covered three-quarters of the nation and 53 of the country’s 64 districts, with a population of 30 million, said Information Minister Mahbubur Rahman. He said 866 people have died of drowning, snakebites and disease. The government figure is considered low, and newspapers estimate at least 1,532 people have died. week, Voles said. Dukakis campaign chairman Paul Brountas and adviser Thomas Donilon and Bush campaign chairman James A Baker and media adviser Roger Ailes also agreed that the candidates will make closing statements instead of opening statements and that the candidates will be allowed to take notes. However, Bush and Dukakis will not be able to bring prepared notes to the debates. M e eting s organizational meeting with the video “ T h e W orld Without Nuclear W eapons” at 4 p.m . in the M U Yavapai Room. •N ative American Student Association will have a newsletter committee meeting at 5 p.m . in the Multi-cultural Lounge in the Student Services Building. •Messianic Fellowship at ASU will hold a Bible study and fellowship at the Saguaro Hall cafeteria from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Intellectuals urge Walesa to legalize Solidarity GDANSK, Poland (AP) — A group of intellectuals and artists met Sunday with Lech Walesa to endorse his participation in upcoming talks, with the government and called for immediate legalization of Solidarity. Walesa, the leader of the banned independent union Agreement reached on format, movement, convened the Council on Poland, a group of length of presidential debates about 60 advisers, in preparation for talks between representatives of the union and the government. WASHINGTON (AP) — Negotiators for George Bush and “The most important condition for the beginning of a Michael Dukakis have agreed on the length and format of * true dialogue between the civil opposition and the the presidential debates between the two candidates, a authorities (is) the legalization of Solidarity and the spokesman for the Dukakis campaign said Sunday. immediate implementation of pluralism,” said a resolution The debates, scheduled for Sept. 25 in Winston-Salem, N.C., and Oct. 13 or 14 in Los Angeles, each will last 90 adopted by the group. A wave of Solidarity-led strikes at Polish enterprises that minutes and feature one moderator and a panel of three began in mid-August posed the most serious threat to the questioners, said Lorraine Voles, a spokeswoman for the government since Solidarity was suppressed in 1981. Democratic nominee. Walesa called an end to the strikes after the government The two sides, who worked out an agreement on the format and length by telephone on Saturday, failed to on Aug. 31 promised to discuss the country’s future with resolve the question of whether the candidates will sit or workers’ representatives, who demanded higher pay as stand during the debates. The Dukakis campaign would well as free and legal trade unions. “We are extending our full support in negotiations prefer to have the candidates stand while the Bush concerning this issue to the founder of Solidarity,” campaign wants the two to sit. Negotiators will continue discussions on the subject this Sunday’s resolution said, referring to Walesa. today The Today section is a daily calendar of events happening at ASU that is presented as a service to the University com m unity. Any campus club or organization can submit entries fo r publication to the State Press, located in th e basem ent o f Matthews Center, Room 15. Entries must be legible, are subject to editing for content, space and clarity, and w ill not be taken over the phone. Due to space restrictions, the State Press cannot guarantee publication. Deadline fo r the entries is 1 p.m . the previous business day. •Interdisciplinary Intelligence Perspectives will meet at 4:30 p.m . in ERC 493. Dan Montello from the University of M innesota will speak on the “ Perception and Cognition of Environmental Distance. •Cam pus Ambassadors will discuss the Book of Daniel at 7 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. •C .A .R .p /w ill m eet at 12:40 p.m. in Danforth Chapel for a Bible study on “ Why did God create the cosmos?” •U n ited Campuses to Prevent Nuclear War will hold an •Young Communist League will m eet at noon in the MU Navajo Room for a discussion on equality and the YCL fall program. BUMP€RZ~_ The fantastic rubber-like fram e sunglass! $1 R 0 0 ■ (orlg. *18 A *21) • i ° ° * U V- Protection •Polycarbonate lens •flexible, tujistable. »Solids & neon blights almost unbreakable «Perfect for sports (W ith coupon only thru 9 - 18 -8 8 ) R f e pacific eyes &Ts ' » Mall C hrlstow nnM all Tower Plaza d i. . . 1SihA''lt &Bethanv 58th street &Thomas Ä , 2448118 ___ _________ W estrldge Mall 75th Avenue I Thomas 873*2607 _______ _ ... Tempe cornerstone Ctr. 725 S. Rural Rd 966*5560 Stele Pit«» Paæ 3 Monday, September 19,1 9 8 8 C isnero s___ Continued from page 1. build the future of Arizona, then attracting minority students is part of the mission; not out of some sense of social justice, but because it’s dealing with the future of Arizona, and this is part of the equation.” ASU has been continually criticized by Valley Hispanic leaders for its failure to attract enough minority students. In 1984, the Arizona Board of Regents ordered the state’s three universities to begin active minority recruitment programs, but since then no ethnic group has seen increases of more than three-tenths of one percent. Last fall, there were 4,529 full and parttime minority students at ASU, or 11 percent of the 42,968 enrollment. The University developed a 21-point plan recently in hopes of improving its record. Another mihority recruitment program, “Project Prim e,” will begin by the summer of 1989. P art of Project Prime is a replication of a San Antonio program that reportedly is responsible for 700 percent increases in the number of Hispanic high school graduates going to college between 1981 and 1984. The program is a supplement to admission and achievement tests, with which Hispanics and other minorities have historically had difficulties. Cisneros, San Antonio’s mayor since 1982, is helping to develop a plan in his city that would guarantee high school students a four-year college education if they have a “B” average and a 95 percent attendance rate. Continued from page 1. would have gone to charitable organizations (through the Tempe Community Council),” councilman Frank Plencner said. “But with so much negative publicity that what we had done was illegal, we decided to just return the tickets and cut off all discussion. “ I hope it’s a dead issue now.” He told ASU students that higher education is the key to economic prosperity, an inclusive society and a person’s self­ esteem. “It is unacceptable in our society to perpetuate an environment in which failure is not only accepted but expected,” Cisneros said. “And that is unfortunately what exists in too many minority schools today.” Cisneros acknowledged that problems w ith m in o rity r e c r u itm e n t “ e x is t everywhere,” including San Antonio. But he said the problem could be rectified with an increase of state education funds, more scholarships for minorities and heavy recruitment on high school campuses. “It is very important for our state institutions to understand that these goals are to help build the state," Cisneros said. “You can’t look at the process of building a state narrowly. You have to look at it on a broad gauge. ” Cisneros told the audience that by the year 2000, 46 percent of California’s population will be minority. He also said 92 percent of the U.S. population will live in towns with at least 30 percent minorities. If the large minority population is uneducated, “it has a potential of being a very tough situation in the future,” he said. “ You see, America cannot survive carrying on her back a perm anent underclass of 10,15 or 20 million people who are undereducated,” Cisneros said. “It’s no longer a question of minorities Vice Mayor Don Cassano said returning the tickets was the only way to “satisfy the public.” “Based on the calls and the conversations I had with other people, I felt the only way to correct the negative perception was to give the tickets back and to negotiate in dollars for the use of the lot,” he said. Sundi Kjenstad/State Press San Antonio Mayor Henry Cisneros em phasizes the im portance of m inority recruitm ent during his lecture Friday to listeners in the MU Arizona Room. alone. It’s a new day, it’s a new reality.” Cisneros, who urged students in the audience to learn other languages, criticized the “English Only” proposal that will appear on the Arizona ballots in November. “I think it is unnecessary. It poses the possibility of Hispanics being put into a Meanwhile, five council members and two city managers have reimbursed the city for personal use of the tickets. Mayor Harry Mitchell wrote a check to the city for $360 and Vice Mayor Don C assan o p a id $200. P le n c n e r and councilwoman B arbara Sherman both wrote checks for $200. different class by virtue of their attack on their heritage, not just language,” Cisneros said. “ It is unnecessary in the function of the society. English is the de facto language, and anyone who wants to progress will learn English and master it well. ‘English Only’ is superfluous.” Zerkle paid $100 for his tickets and Deputy City Manager Jerry Geiger, who negotiated the ticket swap, paid the city $160. Zerkle said the reimbursements will go to the city treasury. “I think we can put it behind us now and get on with business,” Cassano said. FA C U L T Y /S T A F F Q U E S TIO N N A IR E : WOULD YOU RATHER HAVE: FR EE TRO LLEY R ID E S T o C ard inals vs C ow boys Gam e T o n ig h t! *250 PITCHERS 50* DRAFTS «150 CARDINAL KAMIKAZIS $150 BURGERS & BRATS OPEN AT NOON TROLLEY STARTS APPROXIMATELY90 MINUTES BEFORE GAME A pay cut and no job growth -OR* Full funding for the university system? DOUG TODD m ade sure th a t the 1988-89 state b u d g e t p ro vid e d fo r m ax­ im um p o ssib le s u p p o rt fo r th e u n ive r­ sity. T he M echam b u d g e t c u t u n iv e rs ity fu n d in g . D o u g ’s o p p o n e n t s u p p o rts the M echam agenda. Don’t let happen to Tempe what happened to Arizona two years ago. V O TE TO R E -E L E C T DO UG TODD O N SEPT. 13 S TA TE S E N A T O R /D IS T R IC T 27 Paid for by Todd for State Senate Committee, John Faccone, Treasurer 'onoa «od 3ioA s si « s m s n v loauuoo 3 h ± Try State Press Classified Advertising... • ^ b e f o r e you reach the end of your rope. IT 965-6731 or 965-6735 t op in ion editorial Elections B Primary picks No matter what your partisan preference, the positions th a t s ta te leg islativ e candidates have taken on matters of importance to all students ought to be of great concern as you go to the polls Tuesday to vote in the state primary election. The rising cost of education, the need for a vote for the student representative to the Arizona Board of Regents, the lack of equity in funding am ong th e th re e s ta te universities, the need for a comprehensive state financial aid package, the explosive growth of the universities and the resulting declin in g q u a lity of u n d e rg ra d u a te education; all these things make the selection of legislators who will serve students well more vital than ever before. In the districts containing the largest number of ASU students — Tempe District 27 and District 21 (Tempe north of University Drive) — there are a few candidates who deserve your support on Tuesday: In the District 27 Senate race, incumbent Republican Doug Todd is the clear choice. Todd, who says he first went to the legislature in 1979 with the object of “kicking a few shins’’ for ASU, has served the University community well. He will continue to do so. Since there are no Democrats running for the Senate seat, the Republican primary will decide the race. The District 27 Republican House of Representatives primary contest presents a problem —but a pleasant problem. All three of the Republican candidates, two of whom will advance to fight it out with two Democrats who are automatically eligible for the November general election, are pro- student and would make fine University advocates. Incumbents Bev Hermon and Jenny Norton have done much for ASU, and challenger Gary Richardson also seems to be an energetic new supporter of university interests. Although Hermon does not support voting privileges for the student regent, she has a great deal of clout at the legislature and is an instrumental weapon in ASU’s battle for equity among state universities and an adequate financial aid program. Norton and Richardson are vigorously supportive of student needs in nearly every area. In the District 21 House race, the opposite is true. Only incumbent Republican Bob Broughton is sincerely, concerned about student issues. The other three Republican candididates have either left their stance on university matters undefined or thinly disguised their opposition to student input and their desire to freeze or reduce funding for universities — thus choking the schools at the most vital spot, their legislative lifeline. Carl Kunasek, the incumbent Senate president from District 21, deserves the nod over his competition for the right to compete against his D em ocratic opponent in November because of his long-time university involvement and experience as a lawmaker. At a glance: «District 27 Senate — Doug Todd •District 27 House — Bev Hermon, Jenny Norton, Gary Richardson •District 21 Senate — Carl Kunasek •District 21 House — Bob Broughton King Holiday Regents take strong stand Martin Luther King, Jr. had a dream that one day the state of Mississippi, a state that in his time was “sweltering with the heat of injustice and oppression,’’ would be transformed into “an oasis of freedom and justice.” A place where all men and women would be judged on their character alone — and not their skin color. A place where people honor achievement, not light skin pigmentation. A place like Arizona State University. Thanks to the recommendation of the President’s Council, made up of the presidents of ASU, UofA and NAU, the Arizona Board of Regents this weekend approved a university holiday in the name of Martin Luther King, Jr. And by doing so, they have made ASU an oasis in the Arizona political desert. While Arizona has not joined the ranks of 44 other states and the federal government in declaring a holiday memorializing King’s efforts, the presidents and regents have taken the lead in letting all know that our institutions of higher learning recognize the value of the symbol of a King Day — as a demonstration of our commitment to the continuing civil rights battle and the idea of true equality for all. It's a stand that was long overdue. ' kno w um eabu man OFGOVCRNWWKr. omaKNCio nmwir o f T W H o n i, souwtstmsMMi m a n s nwRwr, I MREKBCROFTW PUDGE I «ALLEGIANCE, I MORE-AMERtCAN-THWTHOUANDALL-ROUND GOOD-GUYCANDIDATE, HERE HE IS, YOUR 1 PRESIDENTANDMIN^ iH WSSfOff VVtrRliS.»«* M .fffN NU otici V MICHAELBUSH letters Reckless cyclists deserve tickets Editor: Vicki Foster’s letter of Sept. 9 inclines me to respond. She related that she was issued an $18 ticket for breaking a bicycle safety rule on campus. To let off steam, she wrote you a letter. Of the officer she wrote, “You want to hurt him . . . ” and, “What fool gave this person a job?” She suggested that a concern for the safety of life and limb is behind the times — that because of it we have lost our rights and are sitting in the back of the bus. Vicki’s attitude is most extraordinary. I think we can all be sure that if Vicki were a campus p ed estrian who becam e in ju re d by a sp eeding bicyclist her outrage would be vented in the other direction. I have very nearly been hit by bicyclists on campus more than once. Every time I see a bicyclist getting a ticket I feel a little safer. If it were up to me (and I openly admit to being reactionary) I would like to see re c k le s s bicyclists expelled from school and fined. Should Vicki get sued by One of her potential victims she would find that $18 is nothing whatsoever. Vicki identified herself as a junior, but her attitudes are sophomoric. It would be hoped that she will not always be impervious to the e d u c a tio n a l ex p erien ce available to all of us. Larry Mann Staff, College of Education Survey says... Editor: I am writing in response to the article in the State Press concerning losing Dec. 26 for the Martin Luther King holiday (Sept. 8). In your article you conducted an unscientific survey of students and their opinions about losing the Dec. 26. My reaction to this survey is that most students won’t even be here. Classes recess Dec. 17 and resume Jan. 16, which leads me to my point that we’d be given a paid holiday Jan. 16 — the first day of class! I felt that a survey of classified staff should be conducted since they are the people most affected by this change. My survey is unscientific too. The results of the survey are as follows: Forty-three percent would trade Veterans’ Day to keep Dec. 26, 29 percent Presidents Day, 8 percent wouldn’t trade any of their holidays and 4 percent New Year’s Day. Sixteen percent were unavailable for at the time of the survey. Some of the suggestions and/or comments were as follows: •Why do we have to give up a day? Why can’t we keep what we have and just be given an extra day? •WE DO NOT want to lose our extra day at Christmas. •If Martin Luther King stands for freedom of choices, then why don’t we . have the choice to work or not to work? •It STINKS! •Make it a swing holiday giving us the option of working that day or not. If we choose not to work then we can take that day later in the year. As a classified staff member I felt that more students, faculty and staff members should be aware of one department’s opinions. Thank you. Denise Wilgenbusch Credentials Evaluator I Undergraduate Admissions STATE PRESS MARTY SAUERZOPF Editor JOAN McKENNA Managing Editor 9 * * ED,TORS: Troy BaoNngor. M att Borriman. * * Edltor................ .............................................LAURIE SMITH ASSt Arts Editor..........................................MATT LINDENBURG Sports Editor......................................................... OAVE HODGES _ Hack8,V A sst, ?pprts Editor........................................... ....... JEFFSHAIN Copy Chief...... ........................................................ SHAWN DAHL Photo Editor....................................................SUSAN SCHUMAN PRODUCTION: Leighayn Groan, Janies Hill. Steve Krieun, Nancy Ness. Lynn Senxek, Edward Weidle. rIMPORTERS: Michelle Allman, Victor Barajas Mike Buraess Kristi Ellis, Sheri Johnson. Robie Kakonge, Lynn KiHnrtnrn Teresa Owen, Kelly Pearce, Ken Walsh ’ ollton’ Mane Guerrero, Charles' Kyler, Paul Lee, Carey O'Bannon, Hoidi Schneiderman, RayZtakei. , A D V E R T IS IN G R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S : L e s lie ACCT. MGR. DOW NTOW N TEMPE: Patti Schmautz ^ e f r 5 ^ RTERS JIU Herbranson. Howell J. Malham Jr., Scott Seckel. ACCT MGR. TEMPE CENTER: Don Cantona EdEtehulw^S: Caf0lyn HOfi9, Darrin Hosle,ler' David Jordan. CREATIVE CONSULTANT: Rich Tottzman. ' *’*'H '? SPORTS REPORTERS: Garv Jacksnn n ^ ine Pirkev y JacKson- Dean Qyorgy, ChristD u n m r D iD u c o o . ' « PHOTOGRAPHERS: Irwin Daugherty, Sundi Kienstad phen Mounteer, James Mumaugh. e The State Press is published Monday thru Friday during I i e.a?cder!i!c * ear **cept holidays and exam periods, at Matthews Center. Room 15, Arizona State University. Tempe, Arizona 85287. Newsroom: (602) 965-2292. Advertising and Production: (602) 965-7572. * The State Press is th e t^ o e is a p i^ 'e x c tu s iv e ly p u b lis h e d ,or and c,r?ulated on the ASU campus. The news and views published in this newspaper are hot necessarily those o f the ASU administration, faculty, staff or student body. State Press Monday, September 1% 1988 Terror-vision The high cost of modern living comes to Woody Creek hunter S. Thompson North American Syndicate The TV business is uglier than most things.'It is normally perceived as some kind of cruel and shallow money trench through the heart of the journalism industry, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free and good men die like dogs for no good reason. Which is more or less true. For the most part, they are dirty little animals with huge brains and no pulse. Every once in a while, they will toss up a human token like Ed Bradley or Edwin Newman or Hugh Rudd . . . and there are others, no doubt like Stud Terkel in Chicago and the twisted Rev. Gene Scott, who works like a sleepless feret in the maniac bowels of Southern California . . But these are only the exceptions that prove the hideous rule. Mainly we are dealing with a profoundly degenerate world, a living ebb of foulness, greed and treachery . . . which is also the biggest business around and impossible to ignore, you can’t get away from TV. It is everywhere. The hog is in the tunnel. I was reminded of all these things, once and again when I finally limped back home after 15 days in the eerie confines of an airless cubicle in a high-rise on Market Street to find the TV business working overtime in my front yard. It was 9 o’clock at night, with a full moon, when we came up the driveway in weird John’s cab from the airport, and I felt the chill of winter. Daylight Savings Time was over, the football season was half gone and there was frost on all the windshields. The Jeep and the Volvo were almost hidden in a maze of frozen weeds and a big blue peacock was squatting nervously on the trunk of the Baveria. There was no sign of the Range Rover, which meant that Jay had probably gone off to Texas with the Nazis. Years ago I made the decision to keep the whole place looking like an abandoned sawmill which has worked out well for the trapping and disciplining of trespassers, but it is not a natural context for high-tech machinery. So it was a serious shock to see THE DISH, a huge white saucer that seemed suspended in midair and tilted up at the moon like a NASA receptor on Mars. It was the tallest thing on the ranch, a 16-foot electric white Birdview dish antenna, perched on a jagged grassy knoll about 100 yards back from the main house and blocking my view of the mule pasture. Motorcycle tracks led back through the snow in the direction of the cistern, then veered off sharply toward the raw mud and concrete base of the new installation which was in fact the full-bore of all-channels 19, a satellite Earth Station that I’d ordered from the electric people, before I went to San Francisco. I am after all, the media critic, and TV falls into that category, so I thought I should have all the channels, including Spanish Reuters and in the morning news from Bermuda, which is far across the E arth’s curvature as our commercial satellites can see. This had been my problem all along. I was living too far up in the Rockies, with atavistic technology. The local cable ‘M ainly we are dealing with a profoundly degenerate world, a living ebb o f foulness, greed and treachery . . . which is also the biggest business around and impossible to ignore. You can’t get away from TV. ’ company had refused to even talk about running a line up Woody Creek as a “special favor” they said, “for you or anyone else.” My two closest neighbors are Don Henly the musician and ABC sportscaster Bob B eattie. . . and we have our own professional reasons for needing total TV at all times, and especially on weekends for games. But the cable company said “No.” “Never,” the man told Beattie. “You people are too far away, and there’s not enough of you. We need a hundred hook-ups for every two miles of line. You only have seven. Forget it, you will never qualify. Which was true. The cable had passed us by; the dish was the only hope, and eventually we were all forced to turn to it. By the summer of ’85 the valley had more satellite dishes per capita than an Eskimo village on the north slope of Alaska. Mine was one of the last to go in. I had been nervous from the start about the hazards of too much input, which was a very real problem with these things. Watching TV becomes a full-time job when you can scan 200 channels all day and all night and still have the option of punching Night Dreams into the video machine if the rest of the world seems dull. This was the situation I found at my house when I got back from San Francisco. My friend Cromwell had installed a whole galaxy of wires and motors and screens and stainless steal TVRO with red lights and green lights and baffling digital readouts to compute things like spatial polarity and the up-link angle from London. I had all the latest equipment to watch any channel I wanted. “Not quite,” said Cromwell, when he stopped back later that night to drink whiskey and give me his bill. “There’s one more thing — the descrambler. It’s going to run you about $500, plus at least $100 a month for the rest of your life.” “That’s ridiculous,” I said. “How can they charge me for signals I pick out of the sky with this fantastic new equipment?” “It’s easy,” he said. “They’ll scramble their signals beginning on Jan. 15 of next year, and you’ll need a special decoding machine to see anything that matters. The channels will cost you $12.95 a month each and you will naturally want at least 10 or maybe 30 or 40, for a man with a job like yours. “What are you saying?” I screamed a t him. “That all this overpriced junk that you’ve installed in my house is useless?” “Of course not. There’s a whole raft of things that you’ll still be able to get — 700 club, the vast Brokers TV auction,” he said as he smiled in the manner of a racoon. “And Jimmy Swaggart and the big-time wrestling specials.” I smacked him on the side of the head with a rolled-up thick, wet towel from the Communications Club, on Turk Street, where I had recently been involved in a wedding. It would have croaked a weaker man, but Cromwell was still laughing as he staggered down the driveway to his power wagon. “Call me when you get sm art,” he yelled. “I could get all the machinery you need from Bon Arum.” Hunter S. Thompson is on vacation. The preceeding was a reprint of a previous column. FITNESS & FU N FOR STUDENTS Join today! For a limited time you can enjoy our STUDENT MEMBERSHIP DISCOUNT of the award-winning Western Reserve Club. Merttipn this ad to receive a membership of fun and fitness at 30% OFF the current initiation fee plus two m onths FREE dues. A great student m embership opportunity at great savings! GET G R EA T LO O K S! "W E ’RE AZ’S #1 VOLUME SCOOTER DEALER!” ESTABUSHED OVER 2 5 YEARS fro m $ 6 9 9 . • • • • • • • Tennis Racquetball/Wallyball Basketball Olympic Swimming Pool Sand Volleyball Indoor Volleyball Naufilus/CAM II • Free Weights • Lifecycles ' • Steam/Sauna * Co-ed Spa • Suntan Beds ,• Locker Rooms * Aerobics 968-9231 1 Ç 3D 0 e S — Broadway Southern Superstition Fwy. ft Ô- 1 i i . O pen 7 Days a Week Spend your free time toning up in the weight room or burning calories in Aerobic Exercise classes. Don't wait! Call o r visit before Septem ber 30,1988 and you can save more than $120. C) WESTERN RESERVE CLUB A W A R D -W IN N IN G S P O R T S C E N T E R BY D A V E B R O W N Broadway West of Price •Tempe, AZ • 968-9231 Keep in step with the com ings and goings in tow n w ith the STATE PRESS Classifieds. ASU’s one-step m arketplace! Ä ? d p •Great on Gas •Low Insurance •Easy Maintenance •Easy Parking •Bring in your ASU I.D. for Discounts "Bring us your best deal £ we’ll beat it’ SAME DAY FINANCE M on.-Fri S a t........ Sun........ “ A S U 's C losest D ealer" w e s te rn Honda of S co ttsd ale 'VNLY 6 7 1 7 E. McDowell Rd. 994-8400 5 MIN. AWAYr MCDOWELL 5 8 < OÍ P221S _________________________________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ld m m m ^ J S 2 * £ j u » F ees to a s k fo r 2 s tu d e n t slots on search c o m m itte e By SHERI JOHNSON State Press FLAGSTAFF — Associated Students President John Fees said he . will push to have two students serve on a committee that will find a r e p l a c e m e n t for ASU President J. Russell Nelson. The Arizona Board of R e g e n t s ' o u t l i n e for m e m b e r s h i p on t h e p resid en tial search committee currently allows for one ASU student. John F ees Regent President Herman Chanen presented his outline of the committee to the regents Friday and named himself as the 10-member group’s chairman. Nelson, who has announced his plans to resign at the end of the academic year and return to the faculty, may have a minor advisory role in the process. The committee will recommend a new president by late spring. Regents Jack Pfister and Esther Capin also will serve on the committee. Molly Broad, the regents’ executive director, will be an ex-officio committee member. The student representative will be chosen from a field of three students nominated by ASASU. “ I’ll be making those nominations,” said Fees, who also wants to serve on the committee. He was at the regents meeting to lobby for his two-student proposal. “I’m really disappointed they’re not having two students." he said. “I think we need a graduate student as well as an undergraduate .” Chanen said Fees has not approached him about the proposal. “Until I get all the nominations from the groups, I can’t go any further,” Chanen said. “I think it’s going to depend on who’s nominated. ” The committee also will include three faculty members, a college dean and two ASU alumni. Chanen asked to have two members-at-large, if needed. Fees said he will push to have one member-at-large be an ASU student. “Students are going to be valuable,” he said. “We have g re a t faculty re p re s e n ta tio n an d a d m in istra tiv e r e p r e s e n t a t i o n , an d now we h a v e two a lumni representatives. It makes sense to have another student. “If you look at Christmas in 1989 . . . they would have Saturday, Sunday and Monday,“ Shropshire said. “1 don’t find that an unreasonable approach.“ Regent Edith Ausländer said she approved the proposal because it only represents a one-year schedule that can be changed next year. “The important thing is that the Martin Luther King holiday has been established,” she said. NAU and UofA also had their holiday schedules approved : NAU eliminated its March 10 mid-semester break, while UofA eliminated President’s day. Pfister proposed that UofA eliminate its Dec. 26 holiday instead of President’s day but received no support from the other regents. “Obviously you can see where the priorities are.” The committee’s faculty members will be nominated by the Faculty Senate. The regents requested that six other faculty be nominated. Two will be chosen to serve. The ASU Council of Deans will be asked to recommend three deans from whom one will be chosen. The two alumni members of the committee will be chosen from three nominations by the alumni organization and three from the ASU Foundation Board. Chanen said the committee first will recommend qualifications needed for the presidential position. Then it will recruit, screen, interview and evaluate candidates for the job. Candidates’ identities will be kept secret because the regents will hold closed, executive sessions when discussing applicants. R egents_____ ___ Continued from page 1. Student regent Patrick McWhortor suggested eliminating Veteran’s Day, which is on Nov. 11. After consulting with his staff, Nelson supported the idea. Regent Donald Shropshire supported ASU’s proposed schedule. He said that because Christmas falls on a Monday in 1989, the classified staff will have three days to be with their families. DISCOVER OLD TOWN TEM D E enjoy the small town charm of these fine Old Town Tempe businesses CHANGING Ö HANDS BOOKSTORE ~L N E W g? USED BOOKS E S EE 4 1 4 M ilL ,T e m p e A rito n a 8 5 Z 8 l 9 6 6 -0 2 0 3 w e raised th e shade and low ered th e price on o u r best selling w atch. FREE P A IR O F SUNG LASSES w ith a n y p u rc h a s e choose from special selection iib b b s ÌL : g A < * *O t»»T 501 S. Mill Ave. 968-2610 "Stuck on You” Garfield $18.50 Expires 9-15-88 Ifrs FUN! 414 MW A ve. Sie. 105 9 2 1 -1 5 5 9 unique sportsw ear & sw im w ear CHIEF DODGE salelsale! 2 0 % -5 0 % Name Brand o ff s e le c te d m e r c h a n d is e S ta rts S e p t. 2 -2 6 Ita lia n F o o tw e a r and A c ce sso rie s fo r M o n and W om an HAYDEN SOUARE 3 5 0 S. M ill A mo. Suite 1 04 3 5 0 S. MILL AVE. H A Y D E N SQ U A R E TEM PE FREE ACA Visors Polo Shirts at 1/2 PRICE slightly irregular with $5 0 purchases OPEN 7 DAYS INDIAN JEWELRY STORE When you want Chinese food, you go to a Chinese Restaurant. So, when you want Indian Jewelry, go directly to the Indians at Chief Dodge...AND SAVE! Stop by & view American Indian Artists creating beautiful jewelry! FREE PAIR OF TURQUOISE EARRINGS W ith th is e d ________ L im it o n * p e r cu stom er 601 S. M ILL e 967-9365 3 East 5th, Tempe 894-1520 (2 Blocks N. of University) Open: 10 to 5:30 Mon-Fri 10 to 4 Sat State M m » Page Monday, September 1g, 1988 M illions take part in global race for starving kids LONDON (AP) — From remote ocean outposts to an African rally for Pope John Paul II, the world put on its running shoes Sunday to raise money for starving children in the second annual Sport Aid “Race Against Time.” Reports indicated up to 50 million people worldwide took part in the series of six-mile marathons that organizers called “a petition of blistered feet.” It has been billed as the largest participation event in history. “This is the people’s Olympics, when everybody around the world can be a champion,” race spokesman Nick Cater said. “For many, this is as near as they’re ever going to make it to saving lives.” He said it may be weeks before Sport Aid knows how much money was raised. The race began at dawn local time Monday in the South Pacific island of Tonga — “the land where time begins” — and continued Sunday as the sun set over the Great Pyramids in Egypt, Cater said. Police riding camels supervised the race near Cairo where about 8,000 men, women and children ran a course past the 4,500-year-old Sphinx and the pyramids. Balloons and fireworks marked the start of the run by some 50,000 people in London’s Hyde Park. In the United States, official races took place in 15 major cities. The first Sport Aid race flopped in the United States because it coincided with a nationwide “ Hands Across Classifieds 965-6731 America" campaign to raise funds for the poor and homeless. Young and old donned “ I Changed The World” T-shirts Sunday in an enlarged rerun of Sport Aid, which on May 25, 1986, attracted nearly 20 million runners in 89 countries and raised $35 million for African famine victims. In New York, about 220 boys and girls from more than 100 participating nations jogged up New York’s First Avenue to the United Nations headquarters with Sudanese athlete Omar Khalifa, who lighted an Olympic-style flame to start the race. In Harare, Zimbabwe, the pope sent off dozens of young runners with words of advice during a rally at Glamis Stadium. The pope arrived in Zimbabwe Saturday to start a five-nation, 10-day tour of southern Africa. “Continue always to live in the love of God and to love one another from the heart. Then the race against time shall be for our world not only a race against hunger and disease but also a race for goodness and right, a race of love that gives us all new hope and joy,” the pope said. Broadcast live in six languages to a potential audience of 1.5 billion people, with satellite TV and radio link-ups to 23 cities, Sport Aid raised money from sponsors of runners, from ticket sales to races and from sideline events for charities in mainly underdeveloped nations. One-fifth of the funds raised in each developed country will go to poor and disabled children in that country. The rest goes to Third World countries. The United Nations Children’s Fund estimates nearly 15 million children die each year from hunger and easily preventable diseases. Two Soviet cosmonauts orbiting the Earth in the Mir space station broadcast a message of support, and six hours of TV coverage worldwide included excerpts of carnivals and concerts from Trinidad to Dubai and Rio de Janeiro. All 58 residents of Pitcairn Island in the South Pacific pledged to run, as did 2 million people in China. Other fund-raising events included a cross-country ski by British marines in the South'Atlantic island of South Georgia, and ship-deck runs by passengers on the ocean liner Canberra in the Mediterranean and by oil workers on tankers in the Gulf of Oman. Malaysian Prime Minister Dr. Mahathir Mohamed lit a flame in a Kuala Lumpur field to begin a relay race by government ministers. At dusk, a dozen free-fall army parachutists -heralded the start of the race in Oman by descending into Muscat’s Sultan Qaboos Stadium. In Bahrain, about 600 people coursed mainly through desert, starting an hour earlier in 100-degree Fahrenheit temperatures to finish before nightfall. Tired of the hike? Buy a bike! Through the State Press Bicycles for Sale! A d v e rtis in g 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 “T h e M a n w ith all th e S h o rts ” Our first stop on Mill Avenue is Arizona Shorts and Sports. It’s located at 425 South Mill Avenue, next to Stan’s Metro Deli. Even before you enter Arizona Shorts and Sports, you get a feel­ ing that it’s going to be an interesting adventure. In front of the store, there’s a greeting committee of Pedro and Shorty the prospector. (Store owner Gil Schmidt refuses to pay them because they don’t work hard enough!) Be sure to say hello when Shorty holds the door open or when Pedro flashes his sleepy smile. With wail to wall shorts of all sorts for all sports, one of a kind t-shirts, ASU and Cardinal gear, you’ll also find a unique decor of antique sports equipment. Now that you know how distinctive Arizona Sports and Shorts really is, you’re probably wondering how in the world it was conceived. A few years back, an energetic young man named Gil Schmidt, played professional racquetball for Sports Illustrated which required much interstate travel from the frosty midwest to the tepid breezes of the Valley of the Sun. When traveling from the Midwest to Phoenix during winter, he would forget to bring shorts simply because it was so cold in Michigan that he couldn’t imagine “shorts weather” in Arizona. Trying to find shorts during winter in Phoenix was difficult because retailers followed national buying patterns and only stocked "winter” clothes. When Schmidt’s Michigan based sporting goods store began to fall off with the sagging economy, he moved to Arizona and opened Arizona Sports and Shorts in downtown Tempe so that shorts of all sorts could be accessible all year long! He selected the Mill Avenue location mainly because of the small town charm offered by the newly renovated area and the bond among progressive Mill Avenue merchants to develop the serendip­ ity of retail stores and restaurants. Schmidt feels that his merchandise variety and competitive prices draw the best of both worlds . . . the college market and valley residents. Schmidt attributes much of his success to the Mill Avenue Mer­ chants Association (MAMA), which is a group of progressive busi­ ness owners who promote the downtown area as a whole. I’m sure you’ve been to or heard of the art fairs, shows, New Year’s Party and football celebrations. These are carefully planned func­ tions by MAMA, designed to acquaint the valley with the small town charm of Mill Avenue. Next time you’re strolling down Mill Avenue, stop in and meet the people at Arizona Shorts and Sports. Don’t forget to say hello to Pedro and Shorty! F u l l tl* lC A ^ U s t u d e n t e A n a ij Footprint Sandals p u rc h a se iff” ! ||É ® m m . c fiv id u a lc K W tic k e ts a t ¿ S f ha I t p r ic e . &AM M AG6 : « r v t e r - 2 0% OFF ALL SERVICES A with participating stylists Also offering: Manicures & Pedicures 829-1267 414 S. M ill Ste. 214 "Your sore feet solution" Footworks Plus Expires 9-15-88 » Ik 398 S. Mill, Ste. 100 966-3139 FR EE "S p arky" key ch ain w ith *20°° purch ase E x p . 1 0 / 1 /8 8 ( B r in g C o u p o n ) Bö k o p Ç K t e yT S Page 8 Mwjdaj^Se^embeM^JÇM U m » Pm a Arizona’s ‘dirtiest cam paign’ to be decided this Tuesday T H E S H O P FINAL PHOENIX (AP) — Nervous candidates are entering the home stretch for Tuesday’s primary election in a campaign that some are calling the dirtiest in recent Arizona history. “Am I nervous? Yes,” said Senate President Carl Kunasek, R-Mesa, who faces a challenge from Jerry Gillespie, a supporter of former Gov. Evan Mecham. “I’m running scared,” Kunasek said. “ I have never campaigned as hard as I have this time. I’ve never seen an election year with this kind of what I consider to be dirty campaign tactics.” Rep. Chris Herstam, R-Phoenix, said: “There has never been a campaign like this one.. . . I have never seen so many negative mailings and statements made.” The campaigns in most districts are centering on two major issues — taxes and Evan Mecham. Many GOP challengers are criticizing incumbents for enacting a major tax hike package to balance this year’s $2.9 billion budget, an increase the incumbents said was necessary to keep essential state services running. The election is viewed in some districts as a referendum on Mecham, his impeachment and removal from office. All but four senators and 46 of the 60 House members voted to impeach or convict him, and many have found themselves repeatedly asked to •explain why. Some areas have seen strong negative campaigning, with attacks in the Arizona Free Press tabloid against GOP incumbents who were viewed as being anti-Mecham. The newspapers are not published by M echam ’s Forw ard Arizona Political Action Committee, but FAZPAC has distributed them at its office. Some Mecham backers also have been the targets of negative campaigning by a group calling itself the Mainstream Majority. Trent Franks, a Mecham appointee who is seeking to return to the House in northcentral Phoenix’s District 18, was attacked as a “carpetbagger” for moving into the district shortly before the filing deadline. Sen. John Hays, R-Yarnell, said he is convinced his opposition is based on his vote to convict Mecham, although he said opponents usually raise other issues. House Speaker Joe Lane, R-Willcox, said F r i d a y he b e l i ev e s v o t e r s in his southeastern District 8 are starting to come around. “Every day that I go out and campaign it looks better,” said Lane shortly after Mecham predicted Friday he will be defeated. “As they go out the door a lot of them have the thumbs-up sign,” Lane said. However, he said this campaign is different from his past ones: “I’m fighting my own party. It’s not that I’m fighting Democrats, I’m fighting some Republicans.” Mecham predicted Friday there will be a “revolutionary step at the ballot box” when voters go to the polls Tuesday. “I think we can be certain that the state will never be the same again,” the former governor said. “I think we’ll see a bigger change than we’ve ever seen before.” Mecham endorsed Republicans Dean Ellsworth and Greg Roberds to defeat incumbent House Republicans Mark Killian and Bill Mundell in the East Valley's District 30. Mundell said the endorsement shows that “Governor Mecham is out for revenge. If you voted for impeachment he is out to get you no m atter how conservative you are on other issues.” Mecham’s only other endorsement has been of Democrat Marge Ollson, who is running in the GOP Senate primary against Rep. Gus Arzberger in District 8. One Senate contender, former Mecham press secretary Ron Bellus, said he feels confident he’ll defeat form er Senate President Leo Corbet, with whom he is battling for the GOP nomination in northcentral Phoenix’s District 18. Bellus said his and Corbet’s campaign has remained issue-oriented. “There are enough differences between us that I think there’s a clear choice,” Bellus said. “With Leo they get business-as-usual; with me they get a change.” Corbet, meanwhile, has stressed his longtime experience as a lawmaker. Although most of the attention in the primary has been centered on legislative races, voters will be choosing party nominees in other races, including those for county sheriff. In Congressional District 1 in the East Valley, Democrats 'J o h n Fillmore and Thane Read are battling for the chance to oppose first-term Rep. Jay Rhodes in the Nov. 8 general election. Two-term Congressman Jim Kolbe faces f o r m e r M ec ham ap p oi n te e Alberto Rodriguez and Walt Weber in District 5 in southern Arizona. Also, Democrats Bert Romero and Tony Stoks are seeking the nomination for state mine inspector. Controversy forces recent appointment to Republican committee to resign post m aro o n g o ld/ / W H IT E Arizona State Tri-C o lo r C rew Neck Reg. *1995 SALE * 9 ®# AT THE CORNERSTONE A L L S A L E S F IN A L • N O R E T U R N S o r E X C H A N G E S WASHINGTON (AP) — Frederic V. Malek, George Bush’s recent choice as deputy chairman of the Republican National Committee, resigned Sunday as a result of a report that he compiled figures on the number of Jews in the Bureau of Labor Statistics under orders from then-President Richard Nixon. Malek announced his resignation in a statement, calling the story in Sunday’s editions of The Washington Post “offensive and incorrect,” but he said he didn’t want the campaign to be distracted by the controversy. Malek had been picked by Bush to m a n a g e the Republican National Convention in August. He later moved to the deputy c h a ir’s slot with day-to-day responsibility for the party’s fall campaign. His resignation was effective immediately. Bush issued a simultaneous statement, saying: “Fred Malek made this decision to step aside because he did not want this campaign to be caught up in allegations about something that happened many years ago and that some might try to use against me.” The Post reported Sunday that former President Nixon had ordered Malek in 197i to investigate what was described in notes as a “Jewish cabal” at the agency. At the time, Malek was Nixon’s White House personnel chief and had been assigned to evaluate the BLS staff because Nixon thought the bureau was interpreting unemployment data in an unfavorable light On July 27, 1971, Malek reported to H R “Bob” Haldeman, Nixon’s chief of staff' that 13 of 35 top BLS officials were Jewish. Post reporters found the memo last week in the archives of Nixon’s presidency. Less than two months after Malek’s memo to Haldeman, two senior officials who were Jewish were ousted from their posts and moved to less visible positions in the Labor Department. They were Peter Henle, then chief economist for BLS, and Harold G oldstein, then d ire c to r of current employment analysis. Malek said in his statement: “This is an extremely difficult decision for me because of my instincts to stay on and defend myself against these false and outrageous charges. However, my desire to see the campaign continue to focus on the issues, and my strong and unwavering support for the vice president, have moved me to take this action.” ~ Bush said of Malek: “ I know him to be a most honorable man without a trace of bigotry in his makeup.” Malek, who graduated from Harvard Business School and became a millionaire before age 30, came to Washington with the Nixon administration. He recently worked as a senior executive for the Marriott Corp. The Bush campaign was criticized last week because of revelations in the Washington Jewish Week newspaper that several members of an ethnic advisory panel for the Bush campaign had links with anti-Semitic or fascist organizations. One of them, Jerome Brentar, resigned as co-chairman of the Bush ’88 Coalition of American Nationalities, for his active defense of retired Ohio autoworker John Demjanjuk, convicted in Israel as a Nazi war criminal. State Frets Monday, September ig , 1988 ________________________________________________ Pagc9 K R I S T I ’S MODELING&TALENTINC. SELL YOUR CAMERA w it h Arizona's newest and most exclusive talent agency a Model Search c la s s if ie d ad! STATE PRESS 5705 N. Scottsdale Suite 125 Scottsdale, AZ 85253 15 Matthews Center Basement Call for your audition! 965-7572 VISA•MASTERCARD CASH «CHECK 9 4 6 -9 0 0 0 J V A lO l Freshm an O rien tation Did you HARE the news. Classified Ads Work. 9656731 North Basement Matthews Center State Press Nothing could have prepared me for the first few moments with my roommate.‘Anique”—nothing more, just ‘Anique’—was her name. Change the ‘A5to a U” and you’ve got a description. When they asked what type of roommate I wanted, I didn’t know that I needed to be more specific than nonsmoker. I could swear I saw a picture of Anique on a postcard I got from London. Within five minutes, I foundd out that she was an Art History stuinto the Psychedelic Furs, and totally, totally against the domesti­ cation of animals. I was just about ready to put in for a room transfer when she reached into her leather backpack, pulled out a can of Suisse Mocha and offered me a cup. Okay I decided I’d keep an open mind. As we sipped our cups, I found out that Anique and I share the same fondness tor Cary Grant movies, the same disdain for wine coolers, and the same ex-boyfriend. That gave us plenty to talk about. Foods'* In te rn a tio n a l C offees. S h are th e feelin g. mom Q 1986 General Foods Corp. | •' H I M ■..» - Mondaj^cptc»nb « M ^9 M Page 10 Low assessments of commercial property result in many appeals PHOENIX (AP) — Tax appeals and the number of consultants filing them with the Maricopa County Assessor’s Office nearly doubled this year over 1987, according to a new study done for the Board of Supervisors. The valuations of all commercial property were raised last year after the state Revenue Department discovered that commercial property was underassessed by 15 to 50 percent. The state Board of Tax Appeals agreed with the findings and ordered the assessor’s office to raise the valuations. Consultants said the bulk of their business is representing owners of commercial property, whose real estate taxes are much higher than those paid by taxpayers for the average home. The county is overwhelmed with paper work and has been approving the petitions just to get them out of the way, according to investigators for the county attorney’s office. The study was conducted by Cherie Pennington, clerk of the Board of Supervisors. It found that nearly 80 percent of the tax appeals are now coming through consultants. The study was conducted because of controversy and an ongoing investigation by the Maricopa County attorney into the relationship between a number of consultants and officials in the county assessor’s office. Compounding the problem was a last-minute flurry of petitions, she said, noting that nearly half of the petitions were filed within two days of the Feb. 25 deadline. “When you have a deadline to meet, what are your chances of reviewing each and every one of them to challenge what the consultants are alleging?” she asked. “Keep in mind, many of these consultants are former employees of the county assessor’s office. They know the system, the ins and outs of it, how to manipulate it and how to abuse it, while the average taxpayer does not,” said Robert Noble, an administrator for assessments with the State Department of Revenue. Consultants contend that filings are made just before the deadline because taxpayers don’t receive notices of the valuation of their property from the assessor’s office until late January, leaving only a month to investigate any inequities and prepare an appeal. Investigators in the county attorney’s probe found that the assessor’s employees were at times so overwhelmed with the volume of petitions that they agreed to reduce or remove valuation hikes on several parcels at the same time. “It’s like plea bargaining,” said a source close to the county attorney’s probe of the assessor’s office. But Jim Wilson, systems and research-development manager for the assessor’s office, said he is unaware of any cases in which consultants received automatic reductions because of the sheer volume of cases they presented to the assessor’s office. County Assessor Milt Novkov, attending an assessors conference in Nashville, Tenn., was unavailable for comment. The county attorney has been investigating Novkov’s office for five months, but thus far has not disclosed any evidence of criminal wrongdoing. The probe is focusing on allegations that employees in the assessor’s office falsified the land values of hundreds of parcels, resulting in tax breaks to clients of certain tax consultants. A L L DAY S P E C IA L! $2.99 TA K E O U T O N L Y , C O M B IN A T IO N PLA TE O F T R IE D R IC E A N D C H O W M E IN PLU S C H O IC E OF T W O O T H E R IT E M S Grand Opening *JiZ6t RESTAURANT Hituidtnut & SgecfctuiK C m m ALA CARTE FOOD TO GO 829-1222 O PEN 7 DAYS M on-Fri 11 a m .-9.30 p.m. Sat & Sun N oon -9:30 p.m. 20% OFF PIZZA&PUB Different Varieties Daily BUFFETrLunch $3.95 Dinner $4.75 839 W. University Tempe, 85281 Free Refills on Soft Drinks Expires 9 -3 0 -8 8 A LL Y O U C AN EAT BU FFET Read the STATE PRESS for n Introducing" MONDAY M ADNESS savings with a punch dally 16" 1 Item P IZZA & 2 Lg. Drinks only... Ski Chib By jo in in g the ASU Powder Hounds, you can be one of tw o lucky m em bers to win a ski trip to T ellu rid e, C olorado over Thanksgiving W eekend. 12" Ì Item P IZZA & 2 Lg. Drinks only... $055 8 P Q A Trip Includes: Transportation on video coach busses, three nights lodging in condos, four days of lift tickets. Good on Dine In or Delivery (additional toppings available upon request) $215 value/per trip • Membership fee $15/per year i oc For inform ation: Joe, 275-7721 e Barney, 275-1107 e Brian 878-7004 Sponsored toy PjMKHEI )B Panama Jack University HOURS: 1 968-6666 5 Ü 5 1301 E. University Tem ps, Arizona (n ext to B eauvais) c S U N -TH U R S 11 u n .-1 a.m. f r i- s a t 11 «.m .-2 a,m. FREE DELIVERY ASU AREA Page 11 Monday. September Ig . 1988 Worker ‘stable’ after 30-foot fall inside scoreboard By MIKE BURGESS State Press A construction worker who fell 30 feet inside a scoreboard at Sun Devil Stadium this weekend is listed in stable condition at a Scottsdale hospital. Daniel Custeau, age unknown, was found at about 9:35 a.m. Saturday lying on his back inside the scoreboard at the south­ east end of Sun Devil Stadium, police said. He was conscious but was bleeding from his head and back. He was flown by helicopter to Scottsdalé Memorial Hospital-Osborn. Police said Custeau, an employee of D.C. Electronics of Marlboro, Mass., was not wearing a safety harness. He was checking electronic circuits while on the fourth level of the 54-foot scoreboard. He took a wrong step and fell through an access hole to a steel graté 30 feet below, police said. ASU police also reported: •A construction worker was injured Saturday when he fell 12 feet from a crane inside the Hayden Library expansion pit, policesaid. Gerald F. Lamm, 19, of Buckeye, suffered a severe cut to his right arm and complained about pain in one of his legs. He was taken to Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital where he was treated and released. •Someone stole $15,000 worth of computer equipment from the Business Adniinistration Building, police said. Police said the burglary occurred sometime after 5:30 p.m. Friday in two rooms on the third floor of the building. There were no signs of forced entry. •Three people were assaulted with paint pellets as they left Sun Devil Stadium Saturday night, police said. No one was injured, but $180 damage to the victims’ clothing was reported, police said. There are no suspects or leads. Tempe police reported the following incidents: •A Tempe woman was sexually assaulted early Sunday by a man she met on a blind date, police said. The 27-year-old woman was attacked in the front seat of the suspect’s car at about 12:01 a.m. when the pair returned to the woman’s trailer park in the 2300 block of East University Drive, Tempe police Sgt. Vem Hull said. They had met at a Tempe restaurant earlier that evening. The suspect was described by police as Hispanic, 28 to 30 years old, 5 feet 11 inches tall weighing 170 pounds with black hair and brown eyes. He was clean-shaven and drove an older model, tan two-door Chrysler Newport. •Two men robbed a Tempe restaurant of $2,500 at gunpoint Friday night, police said. The suspects entered Ricardo’s restaurant, 1402 S. Priest Dr., at about 9:50 p.m., Tempe police Sgt. Vern Hull said. One suspect pulled a nickel-plated revolver on the 23-year-old D isp la y A d v e rtisin g : 965-7572 RESU M ES •SAME DAY SERVICE •WRITING & CONSULTING •CLOSEST TO ASU •LAYOUT & DESIGN •LASER PRINTING U n iv e rs ity cashier while the second suspect went around the counter and emptied the cash register. They fled the restaurant and were last seen in the 1500 block of South Priest Drive, Hull said. Police described the gunman as Hispanic, in his 20s, 5 feet 7 inches tall with a thin build and medium length black hair. The other suspect also was Hispanic, in his 20s, 5 feet 11 inches tall, with a thin build, black hair and brown pants. police report •A Tempe police officer was assaulted with a light fixture Friday after he chased a man hiding in the bushes at a Tempe apartment complex, police said. Officer Joe Bathken spotted a man at about 10:41 p.m. hiding in the bushes at the Lemon Spruce Apartments, 1206 E. Lemon St., police siad. When Bathken approached, the man took off running. During the chase the suspect threw a light fixture and hit Bathken in the head. Bathken was not injured and two other officers arrived at the scene and arrested a 22-year-old man who would not provide identification. C la ssifie d A d v e rtisin g : 965-6731 661 don’t want a lot of hype. Ijust want something I can count on.}} "CORPORATE RESUME" KOLLS WELLS BUSINESS COMPLEX N .E . C O R N E R U N IV E R S IT Y & 4 8 t h S T . S U IT E 1 0 8 . B U IL D IN G 4 5 5 TEL: 9 6 6 -0 4 5 1 Some long distance companies promise you the moon, but what you really want is dependable, high-quality service. That’s just what you’ll get when you choose AT&T Long Distance Service, at a cost that’s a lot less than you think. You can expect low long distance rates, 24-hour operator assistance, clear connections and immediate credit for wrong numbers. And the assurance that virtually all of your calls will go through the first time. That’s the genius of the AI&TVtbrldwide Intelligent Network. When it’s time to choose, forget the gimmicks and make the intelligent choice—AT&T. Ifyoud like to know more about our products or services, like International Calling and the AT&T Card, call us at 1800 222-0300. Sun of a Beach 8 LARGE WOLFF ksrcitn 2 W eek U n lim ited , U nlim ited T enn In g S in g le S e s s lo n ^ /T . HOURS: « T H STU D EN T I.D . 930 W. B roadw ay, N o . 5 (B etw een B eck & H ardy) 966-3894 Mon.-Frl. Saturday Sunday 8 a.m.-10 p.m. 8 a.m .-e p.m. Noon-8 p.m. Wz your order of C H IC K E N W INGS every SUNDAY and MONDAY nights >0 20 30 #6 15 30 45 60 w ings-2 :9 5 wings - 5 .3 6 wings w ings-9 .4 5 Greg Riley University o f N orth Carolina-Class o f 1989 W O O DSHED 4M J ? // ' Mill & BaseBhe J W OODSHED l l \ Dobson A University 844-SHED \ w - ART The right choice. Health expert: AIDS to enter state via drug users PHOENIX (AP) — AIDS experts said drug users, the door by which the AIDS virus will enter the general population in Arizona, is wide open and unguarded. Public health officials warned that thousands of Arizona drug users are already infected with the virus that causes acquired immune deficiency syndrome but said there aren’t many countermeasures in place to slow the spread of the virus. “This needs a hell of a lot more attention,” said Dr. Ernest Feigenbaum, public health director for Maricopa County. Between 1986 and 1987, the percentage of AIDS cases contracted by drug users jumped from 16 percent to 26 percent in Maricopa County, he said. Most of those drug users are thought to have been infected through the use of needles contaminated with AIDS-infected blood, although some may also have been infected through heterosexual or homosexual intercourse with someone already infected. Contributing to the problem are cocaine users, who come from all classes in society, said Rich Christensen, director of medical services for the Valle Del Sol drug treatment program in south Phoenix. ‘‘We’ve got to get over this notion that we re talking about street junkies,” said Christensen, who has worked with addicts in Phoenix for 13 years. He said middle class cocaine users crash and burn in 18 months, losing the house, the cars, everything. “ But in the meantime, they can get frantic sexually. They’re very active in the single-bars scene. “And guess who they’re dating? Your daughter.” Nationally, 19 percent of the 70,000 diagnosed AIDS cases have been among heterosexual drug users, 7 percent among homosexual or bisexual drug users and 1 percent among the newborn children of drug users. Most intravenous drug users have nondrug-using heterosexual partners, 10 to 60 percent of whom are also infected, according to several studies. Public health experts also worry that drug-using prostitutes will help spread the virus to the general population. The best guess is that there are about 20,000 needle-using addicts in Maricopa County, and about 10,000 elsewhere in Arizona. Five to 10 percent of those are infected with the AIDS virus, according to the limited studies that have been done, Christensen said. “ It’s the perfect time to do something in Arizona,” said Dr. Mervyn Silverman, director of the American Foundation for AIDS Research and a former San Francisco public health director. Currently, Arizona has about 500 diagnosed AIDS cases, most of which are among homosexuals. A total of 2,000 Arizonans are known to have been infected with the virus, and federal estimates suggest that an additional 15,000 are unknowingly infected. “We can’t afford to waste any more tim e,” said Allen Flory, director of CODAMA, a coalition of most of the major drug and alcoholism treatment programs in the state. But Flory said Arizona spends less on combating drug addiction than any state in the country. “Right now, there’s a six month waiting list” for free or subsidized addictiontreatment programs, he said. Some experts already see ominous signs that the AIDS virus will be able to spread rapidly in Arizona once it gets well rooted in the drug-using community. One controversial approach being tried elsewhere is to give addicts anti-AIDS packets, offering sterile needles, bottles of bleach to clean dirty needles, condoms and information, including graphic comic books. STATE PRESS Kew* 965-2292 Düptai) AimUm: 965-7572 Qmtwu Catt 965-7572 ! W BO DY W R A P 4 to 15 Inches Lost Each Wrap!!! A R E P R E S E N TA TIV E FRO M ALOE VERA an d OSCO DRUG IN C, I S iG N -U P FOR INTERVIEW A T CAREER P LA N N IN G & PLAC EM EN T ROOM 108, ACADEMIC SERVICES BLDG. I 9 3 S S . D o b s o n (D o b s o n S h o r e P in z o ) M e s o O I ’R D E S IG N T E A M F E A T U R E S A W A R D W IN N IN G H A I R S T Y L I S T S 8 9 7 -9 2 7 2 G ET A C Q U A IN T E D O FFER fio FU LL STYLE CUT W it h T h U A d tA P fin HERBS / $2500/ sess,on REG. *35 WILL BE ON CAMPUS FRIDAY, SEPT. 30TH TO INTERVIEW FOR MANAGEMENT TRAINEE POSITIONS. PRE-INFORM ATION SESSION THURSDAY, SEPT. 15TH FROM 7-8 PM, MU CO CO NINO ROOM #217. 965-6731 Tgxaettwg: 965-2097 Æ>~~~m~NMKFRFfi almi Sbulad PuUiealitm? EFFECTIVE FOR: Cellulite Sagging Skin P A IN L E S S H a ir R e m o v a l • Staffed only by t r a i n e d t e c h n ic ia n s . •Free consultation - no obligation. Come in for a 30-minute appointment, and we’ll give you an additional 15 minutes fr e e ! (New patrons only, please.) •W e promise...you won’t feel pain because Removatron uses no needles. L — Opponents to such programs believe it’s immoral to help drug addicts take drugs or to encourage extram arital sex by handing o u t c o nd o ms . Such p r o g r a m s ar e controversial in the United States. In Maricopa County, health officials are preparing a few, small-scale efforts to persuade addicts to clean their needles after use, minimize their number of sexual partners and always use condoms. Project WARN is using a federal grant to carry the AIDS-prevention message to Valley prostitutes. CODAMA, Valle Del Sol and a program in Tucson are attempting to reach intravenous drug users. Maricopa County has obtained a two-year, $1.5 million grant to set up AIDS education and treatment programs, some of which will be directed at intravenous drug users. All of this may prove to be too little, too late, AIDS experts said. “In a sense,” Silverman said, “we’re at war. And when you’re a t war, you do things you wouldn’t do in peacetime. “We can argue about the specifics, but the most immoral thing is to have our youth dying out of ignorance. In the name of someone’s moral position, we’re just going to let people die.” -------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------- S S s é iw **W » m ¿5$Í£5?* « .a S g s ïS « * arts & entertainment Bums Monday, September 18,1988 d u n e p re s s Page 13 Valley stage New production provides rewarding theatre excursion Musical reproduces mood of ‘gay Paris’ By JILL HERBRANSON State Press ’ \ V M Í1 W / v . - s v \ \ ' »]JA- s V v Where do you turn when the silver screen turns dull and the weekend cries out for something original, something different? In the Valley, you turn to the stage — and there are p len ty of entertaining theater performances ju st waiting to be seen. The following is your guide to finding “something different: ” •Barefoot in the Park The Metro Playhouse dinner theatre sets the appetizing stage for Neil Simon’s famous comedy about two newlyweds trying to adapt to their first apartment. Performances are hosted by the Club at Bellair Golf Course, 17233 N. 45th Ave., W ednesday, F rid ay and Saturday evenings through Oct. 1. Dinner is served from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., and the show begins at 8 p.m. The whole shebang costs $15.95. For reservations call 843-0909. •Six Women With Brain Death or Expiring Minds Want to Know Actors Lab Arizona, 7624 E. Indian School in Scottsdale, presents this continuously successful musical based on supermarket tabloids and TV soap operas. Performances are at 8 p.m. Wednesdays through Fridays, 6 p.m. and 9 p.m. Saturdays and 7 p.m. Sundays through (tentatively) Oct. 30. Tickets are $12.50 and $15. For information call 990-1731. •P.S. Your Cat is Dead The N or t h w e s t Studio for the Performing Arts, 12418 N. 28th Drive, presents Jam es Kirkwood’s darkly comical play about surviving and growing through new experiences and relationships. Performances are at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and at 2 p.m. Sundays through Sept. 25. Tickets are $6 for students and $7 for adults. For more information call 866-1510. •The Nerd The Stone Soup Players host this farce by Larry Shue about a yuppie who can’t get rid of an obnoxious houseguest. The play is held in Shadow Rock Fellowship Hall, 12861 N. Eighth Ave., at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays through Sept. 24. Tickets are $5 for students and $6 for adults. For information call 993-0050. •The Lion in Winter Scottsdale’s Stagebrush Theatre, 7020 E. Second St., sets the stage for James Goldman’s earthy comedic drama about England’s King Henry II and his relationship with his wife, Eleanor of Aquitane. The Scottsdale Community Players will perform at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays through Sept. 25. For ticket prices and information call 990-7405. •Blithe Spirit ASU’s Lyceum Theatre is gearing up for its production of this Noel Coward play about a novelist who, through the help of a lady medium, finds himself face to face with his long-departed wife. The play will begin Sept. 21 and will continue through Oct. 2. Tickets are $5 for students and $7 for adults and are available at Gammage box office. For more information call 965-5359. Jean-Michel devises a plan to deceive the Dindons about his family. This drastic scheme includes the complete refurbishing of Georges’ and Albin’s home (in attempts to eradicate the pink marble and velvet motif), a new line of work for Dad (now a retired French Legionnaire instead of a notorious night club owner) . . . and the acquisition of a new mother. Albin, according to Jean-M ichel’s intricate strategy, is to disappear from the picture entirely for the duration of the facade, to be replaced by special request by his natural mother — a woman he hasn’t seen for 20 years. “It’s just for one day,’’ Jean-Michel reasons. But Albin, having been as much a mother to him as any woman could, reacts just as any mother would to such a suggestion. Hurt beyond belief, Albin does not hold back his feelings on the subject. Poor Georges is caught in the middle of all this. He wants his son to be happy and realizes the difficulties Jean-Michel has endured due to theh^w cially^rcceptable ¡lifestyle. But h e a l|Q P ^ a M p f a ir n e s s to U b j g g ^ h < y p ! ^ E ^ ^ p B ^ n m g for his F fa v ^ ? y ^ E B s V ^ a y s ''~ p u t their needs Ladies and gentlemen, madames et monsieurs, open your eyes and yoiir minds. Put yourselves into a sense arena — though what you think you see m ight confuse you. Ladies and gentlemen, prepare to witness La Cage Aux Folies. . . . But take heed: management cannot be held responsible for the w ild. . . and dangerous. . . Cagelles. So, for your own safety, please remain in your seats. Fear not: the audience is never in any real physical danger, though one might be wary of taking Grandpa Harry with the weak heart to the show. La Cage tells the humorous, controversyarousing tale of a male couple, Georges (Jerome C. Hansen) and Albin (Craig A. Loucks), and their St. Tropez nightclub, La Cage aux Folies. The attraction of the club is a n e r o t i c e n s e m b l é ' of f e m a l e impersonators, who perform lavishlystaged floor shows reminiscent of the height of transsexualism in Gay Paris. Albin, better known as Zaza, the club^j star attraction, pouts and preen» and st his/her way through life with more and style than even the most narcissistic and s^fcuous of won >repair it Georges, lim y masculine‘t [es’ and Albin’s 'Mean the club, whic ie show, as they say, person] is, causes d go on it does, as the must/ tear than thfj igelles flounce and kick in rqg( Albin. lish garb, with just a subtle hint of male SomehowJ9kgP§fT the deep, undej 'musculature giving them away. Les love theyslfPR&r'one another, the < Cagelles are fantastically fascinating, their relationship' fías endured in rW ifive genderlessness intriguing. Mercedes (Neil tranquility for 20 years. This tranquility is Cohen), an incredibly striking creature and shattered when Georges’ son Jean-Michel Albin’s arch rival, is undoubtedly the most (Tony Vedda), product of an inexplicable womanly woman a man could be. Or a one-night stand with a (shudder) woman, woman, for that matter. announces his plans to marry the daughter Catty, vain and oozing self-assured of a renowned morality-preaching judge. sexuality, Mercedes complains that she Georges and Albin, who have raised Jeanshould be the star of the show, instead of Michel as their own, accept the proposed that “cow” Albin. When asked why she marriage, though they wonder where they doesn’t quit in retaliation to being placed went wrong. “He wants to m arry a girP.V' second to Albin’s celebrity status, Mercedes Albin cries out in shock and dismay. But replies, “I’ve got a wife and kids to Jean-Michel is more concerned with gaining support.” the acceptance of his fiancee’s father, the Other Cagelles include Phaedra (Camuel ‘respectable’ Edouard Dindon (Kent R. B. Torres), whose Egyptian looks and Stanger), which he feels would be an impossible task if M. Dindon learned of h is, seductive tongue motions have earned her the alias of “the Enigma” , and Hanna bizzare parentage and their affiliation with ( D a n n y B l a n c o ) , t he l e a t h e r - c l a d the infamous Cage aux Folies. sadomasochist of the Parisienne scene. When Francis (Greg Lutz), the club’s equivalent of a stage manager, begins acquiring physical injuries on a daily basis, Georges asks inquisitively, “So, what the hell’s been happening to you?” “I’ve been dating Hanna,” comes the love-stricken reply. For long-time patrons of the ASU Lyceum productions, some familiar faces will appear: Julia Fordtner, of “The Secret Aifairs of Mildred Wild” and “The Venetian Twins” , plays Paulette, a townsperson, and Scott Withers, who also has “Venetian Twins” as well as “Snoopy!!! ” to his credit, plays Tabarro, another resident of St. Tropez. An inevitable scene-stealer was the character of Jacob (Ramon P ratt), Albin’s outrageous “black and beautiful” butlerturned-maid, whose one desire is a shot at stardom at La Cage. His wardrobe is to be envied by any fashion-conscious female, even though some of it is borrowed from his mistress. Standing by Albin to the end, Jacob does everything he can to make the Dindons uncomfortable upon their arrival, by haughtily snubbing the lot of them, dressing up in full Shakespearean costume — purple velvet, no less — and generally acting bizarre. His antics are some of the many highlights of this play. La Cage aux Folles has something to offer to everyone with an open mind and a sense of humor — young or old, male or female — or both, as the case may be. So come to La Cage, where “you’ll meet your mistress and your boyfriend and your wife” , and you can all sit back together and have a laugh. Baseball in the square: let’s hear it for the fans By MATTHEW LINDENBURG State Press The Chicago Cub fan is no ordinary grandstand-sitter. A Cub fan is forever solid, steady, determined and unshakably faithful. There is no other option for this fan: root for the Cubs or don’t root at all. One may either be a fan or a non-fan — there is no in-between. “Bleacher Bums,” an essentially-funny comedy by Joe Mantegna and the Organic Theatre Co. playing in the Hayden Square Ampitheatre through Sept. 18, is about the people who come nearly every day to Wrigley Field in order to demonstrate their undying devotion and support. They also come to bet. A good deal of the action in “Bleacher Bums,” in fact, revolves around betting and reasons to bet. Any proper Cubs’ fan would, of course, never imagine betting against his team; any of their bets won are therefore of doublefold worth — the teams wins, the bettor wins. But their are some professional gamblers at Wrigley who really can’t concern themselves with who wins, as long as they’ve put their money on the right marker. Marvin (Mark Howan) is one such non-fan. When the odds are good, he’s more than happy to wager against the Cubs. The man is patently insensitive (the play seems to suggest that anyone who doesn’t care about the Cubs is unable to care for anyone) and inappropriately coarse. When the young and socially-unskilled Ritchie (John David Michael) shares his delight over catching a game ball with Marvin, the older man tells him that he’s an asshole and brutishly reveals that no one really likes Ritchie. Marvin is not, however, typical. Decker (Steve Brown) and Zig (Karl Milbauer), for .instance, gamble with their hearts. They bet when the spirit of Cub pride moves them — when a won bet will expound the worth of their team — not necessarily when they’re spurned by hope of extreme financial gain. And there are some fans who come only to cheer. Bryn Pryer plays the blind Greg who receives play-by-plays via his transistor radio and spouts them back out in his own colorful fashion. Greg’s love for the game and the Cubs is not bound by his handicap. He is, in fact, a prime example of the enduring, obstacle-overcoming quality of Cubs’ fans. Among any group of fans, though, there is always a person or two who is thoroughly fanatical. Jon Gentry plays the endearingly manic and wild-eyed cheerleader. The man leaps around tirelessly, fuelled by his Cub passion and aided by the cries of the crowd. Dressed to demonstrate loyalty without a doubt, the cheerleader unfurls signs that are unkind to the opposing team ; he beats up effigies in the likeness of unpopular otherteam outfielders; he even risks his life to draw attention from atop the Wrigley scoreboard. All of this for his team, the Cubs; and a0 of this, especially following the outcome of the game, for nothing. Melody (Mary Ellen Pascoe) would probably say that the cheerleader’s actions were wasted. She comes to the game to darken her tan and read Cosmopolitan. She, unlike the money-minded Marvin, is a detached non-fan, unconcerned with any aspect of the game. “Bleacher Bums” makes a fair study of these people, each of them is inspected according to their attitudes about the Chicago Cubs. The focus and situation of the play is therefore narrow in scope. We are not directly privy to the personal lives of these characters, we know only what they do in the stands a t Wrigley. The play takes a mildly bold and inventive concept and runs well with it. Decker, Marvin, Zig, Greg, Melody and Ritchie are, at best, modern archetypes of human beings disguised as baseball fans; at worst, they are somewhat shallow and underdeveloped. The play is funny, though, and anyone who has ever been to a baseball game in America will find themselves at, the very least, smiling knowingly at “Bleacher Bums.” Page 14 -fi!SSä9i£SSS!£SLiäJ2£. YOUR CHOICE of a 16 oz. fountain prink or dry topping with this coupon and purchase of small or larger yogurt. HONEY TREAT (aka Polar Bear) Yogurt Shop FANTASTIC SELECTION OF ATHLETIC SHOES ON SALE NOW Cool off with frozen yogurt, toppings and cold drinks in the friendliest shop In town! In Tempe Center • M ill ft University Call OM N i l for our flavors of the day Expires 11-30-88 One coupon per customer Tampa Cantor BUY 1 CONE, GET ONE FREE! (equal value with this OFFER ENDS 10-13-88 BASKIN M A G A ZIN ES? SUN-THURS 11am—11:30pm FR I-SAT 11am—Mldnlte ROBBINS BOOKS, E T C , (in,sida ra m p a Cantar) 9 0 1 S . Mill Ava,, Tampa ¡ _y v " M ùfìS at9~8 Ö V ER 25M Ö 1 Sun 10-4 d iffo rp n t book# . 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Tempe Center, 18 E. 10th St. iS c h lo iz s k y ’s ) Four High Bias S O N Y UX-90’s and a London Tow er R ecord’s T-Shirt •Perms & •Haircuts, etc ACRYLIC NAILS •M anicures VALID WITH COUPON •Pedicures Jam ’s R estau ran t JUST G O O D FOOD Breakfast and Lunch Served All Day 25% OFF any meal over *2*° with coupon BEFORE 10 a.m. • H AIR S TYLIN G • H AIR C U TS MON.-FRI. 7 a.m.-2:30 p.m. SAT. 7 a.m.-1:30 p.m., SUN 7:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE Expires 9-26-88 23 E. 9TH ST WIN Two Tickets to the Next Phoenix Cardinal’s Home Game! Ask for details. MARg E T P LÀfcà J X ARIZONA SUB DEVIL la \ RESTAURANT Please enjoy the convenience of a full service market next to ASU. H y \ K 7 e /- ASU DISCOUNT COUPON m A~A FIESTA CLEANERS I I o ff a ll A Full Service Dry Cleaner and Laundromat FfcbiPier '' ™ b u y in g A fine selection of quality used clothing, antiques, collectibles & jewelry M on-S at RARE DEALS AT ROARING GOOD PRICES ' ^ m&S*W ZZA*HAU8URGEBS i l11 l l i¥l jr ITALIAN DtNNEfi$*$ALAOS»BeeR ^ ■ J I Breakfast• Lunch • D in ner G ARFIELD ■ » - ----------j M in i Stuck-on You *8°° w ith coupon D E A N N ’S \ Vi i / Lim ited to stock on hand (Reg, *12V») Expires 9^20-88 966-3062 Expires 10-13-8» University U niversity & M itt Eatfa »C arry O a t* Ofaim)? w a r o tE A w m Z A tm & M & tm * p I Present studenti» otj iBOomlBgoidarsiwt^ ™ not valid with any other thscount. excWBee ■ SELLING TRADING ' |£ J SW / IN TEMPE CENTER 967-2083 tm Best Shakes in the Valley 10 am - 6 pm 968-6074] » ii<9* ^ » " T Page 16 Monda^J^ Off-off-Broadway: N.Y.-s not the only place for great theatre In its? 400-seat Space theater, the Denver Génter Theater NEW YORK (AP) — Right across the Hudson River begins a world of theater that Broadway rarely sees. Company has come up-with a female version of “Godot,” For every “Crimes of the Heart,” “ ’night, Mother,” “Big sta rrin g Ann Guilbert and Sandra Ellis Lafferty. River” or “Roza,” there are scores of new plays, musicals Performances will be Sept. 26 through Nov. 5. 4. “ On the Waterfront” and revivals that rarely travel to New York. Another great novel, this time by Budd Schulberg, will be The following is a highly selective and subjective list of 10 promising theater productions that audiences beyond the put on stage by the Cleveland Play House, now under the Great White Way will see during the 1988-89 theater season. supervision of a new artistic director, Josephine Abady. Miss Abady will also direct the play which Schulberg and A few of them might make it to New York, but the name of the game is to provide lively local theater rather than ready­ Stan Silverman have adapted for stage. Grant Show, best known from the television soap opera “Ryan’s Hope,” plays made exports to Broadway. Terry Malloy, the young ex-prizefighter who takes a stand The listings are in order of opening dates. «gainst a corrupt waterfront union. Performances will be 1. “The Grapes of Wrath” Steppenwolf Theater Company, the superstar of Chicago Oct. 18 through Nov. 20. 5. “Stone Wedding” theater troupes, has come up with a version of John Another world premiere will be at the Los Angeles Theater Steinbeck’s memorable novel of the Depression. Frank Center, an enterprising theater complex in the city’s Galati has adapted the book for the stage and also directs. The cast includes such Steppenwolf regulars as Gary Sinise downtown area. The play by Milcha Sanchez-Scott is set in a small town in and Terry Kinney as well as guest artist Lois Smith. the A m erican Southwest where black m agic and Performances will be Sept. 18 through Oct. 30. supernatural forces collide. “ Stone Wedding” was 2. “The Habitation of Dragons” The Pittsburgh Public Theater has snared the world commissioned by the center’s Latino Theater Lab. premiere of the latest work by Horton Foote, playwright and Performances will be Nov. 23 through Jan. 22, 1989. 6. “Pravda” screewriter of such works as “To Kill a Mockingbird,” Anthony Hopkins scored a huge personal success two years “Tender Mercies” and “The Trip to Bountiful.” Foote has made a career of chronicling the lives of Texas families in ago in England in this savage satire by Howard Brenton and David Haire. He offered a scathing portrait of a South such plays as “The Widow Claire” and “Lily Dale.” His latest effort is also set in the Lone Star State and deals African press baron who rules London’s Fleet Street. Now the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis will present the with loss, divided loyalities and forgiveness. Performances play’s American premiere. No word yet on who will play will be Sept. 20 through Oct. 23. Hopkins’ role in Minnesota. Performances will be Jan. 7,1989 3. “Waiting for Godot” If you can’t get tickets to the Robin Williams-Steve Martin through Feb. 5,1989. 7. “Alfred Stieglitz Loves O’Keeffe” version of Samuel Beckett’s absurdist comedy opening this The relationship between two of this century’s greatest fall at Lincoln Center in New York, then try Denver. Grand Opening ELEC TR O N IC S PLUS Share a cup of coffee with the State Press every morning 2120 E. 6th St., Suite 4 Tempe, AZ 894-5487 ^feona State Complete Stock • IC ’s •Resisters •Capacitors U n i v e r s i t y ’s ^ 0rning »Connectors «Test Equipment »Computer Hardware paity 10% OFF WITH THIS AD Good until 10-1-88 artists — photographer Alfred Stieglitz and painter Georgia O’Keeffe — is explored in a play by Lanie Robertson, author of “Lady Day at Emerson’s Bar and Grill,” which examined the life of Billie Holiday . Robertson’s new play will be done at San Diego’s Old Globe Theater. Performances'will be Jan. 7, 1989 through Feb. 19,1989. 8. “Golden Boy” In 1964, Sammy Davis starred on Broadway in a musical version of Clifford Odets’ play about a boxer and his conflicts with fame and fortune. The unappreciated score is one of the best by Charles Strouse and Lee Adams, the men behind the music for “Bye Bye Birdie.” Now “Golden Boy” will be revived with a reworked book by Leslie Lee. No word yet on who will play the leading role, but the musical will be done at the Coconut Grove Playhouse in Coconut Grove, Fla. Performances will be Jan. 17,1989 through Feb. 12,1989. 9. “Accomplice” Rupert Holmes scored on Broadway with his musical version of Charles Dickens’ “The Mystery of Edwin Drood.” Now he has written what is being billed as “ a tantalizing thriller.” The director is Art Wolff; The play will be done at the newly revitalized Pasadena Playhouse in California. Performances will be Jan. 30,1989 through March 1,1989. 10. “Peer Gynt” Calling all Ibsen groupies to Connecticut. The Hartford Stage Company plans a two-part, six-hour version of the playwright’s poetic parable of redemption through love. Richard Thomas stars as Ibsen’s egocentric hero. The director is Mark Lamos, the theater’s artistic director. The two men worked together last season at Hartford on an imaginative version of “Hamlet.” The new Ibsen translation is by Gerry Bamman and Irene Berman. O N E -O N -O N E That s what ive do best at Arizona Bnd\ Si nipt in tint H e shape, lone and build your body oh a one-on-one'basis. •PR O FESSIO N AL T R A IN tR S • N U T R I T I O N C O L N S t l INC. • p r i \ \ it : M i l N I ION I OR Ml N AND WOMEN •BY A P P O IN T M E N T O N L Y So fj you re serious about your body, call us at 96H-H05 or visit its at I-too S McCUnlock iMcClintock ( enter). Student Rates Available 1 « » .A r t h u r A n d ersen & & A N O R E X IA ,iÆ Ë m mm :„ mm -- — D f l, 0 D D Behind these doors you will find people from all walks of life who have selected our firm to begin their careers in the public accounting profession. If you are motivated, self-confident and eager to use your business skills, we would like to speak with you. till Arthur Andersen S Co. will be on campus interviewing Accounting and other Business majors on Monday. October 3rd and Tuesday, October 4th, 19B8. There are times when a pea looks like a full meal. We know some anorexics who would understand why. Fortunately, before their self-imposed starvation caused permanent damage, they regained control with our help. We're Arizona's only facility dedicated exclusively to the diagnosis and treatment of eating disorders. Talk to us free about anorexia, bulimia or compulsive overeating. Call 941-8002 today. Ask for Donna. CALL 941-8002 The Institute for Eating Disorders Baptist M edical Center-Scottsdale 8435 East McDowell Road •Scottsdale, AZ 85257 This interview could provide you with the key for opening the doors to an exciting career in audit or tax. O n e R e n a is s a n c e S o u ab e 8 No r t h Ce n t r a l S u r e io o o P h o e n ix , A r iz o n a a s 0 0 4 (6 0 8 ) S 3 7 - 9 8 3 4 « a te Pies» Monday, September 1% 1988 Leading-m an Collins lands long-sought character role Night soap star takes to the stage in ‘Driving Miss Daisy’ NEW YORK (AP) — For Stephen Collins, who aspires to be a character actor but finds himself in a leading man’s body, Nick Tattinger might just be the perfect role. N i c k , t h e h e r o of N B C ’s new “Tattinger’s,” is a two-fisted, up-from-thestreets entrepreneur who has become one of the swells by virtue of owning an exclusive Manhattan restaurant. He’s a good-looking, charming guy, but he’s also quite a character. The show, filmed on location in New York, premieres Oct. 26. Over lunch at a midtown Indian restaurant, Collins, 41, said that until recently he would not have been the man for the part. In fact, he said, unbeknownst to him, he was rejected for it when the show’s co-creator, Bruce Paltrow, was first kicking around the idea a few years ago. “Evidently at the time, I had no idea, my name came up, and he said, ‘No, he’s too young and he’s not right for it, he’s not what we’re looking for at all,’ ” Collins said. But more recently, after attending a cocktail party at the home of his friend Blythe Danner, who happens to be Paltrow’s wife, Collins got a call from Paltrow. “He said, ‘I’m sending you this script because my wife thinks that you can play the central character.’ Blythe had not said a word to me. . . . What Blythe had, I guess, said to him was, ‘He’s a little older and he’s a little rougher around the edges, and I think he’d be interested in playing this part.’ I read it and.immediately knew.” Danner co-stars in Hie series as Nick’s socialite ex-wife, Hillary. “I’ve done a few things I’m proud of —not enough — but I’ve done a few things I’m proud of,” Collins said, “and the common denominator of all of them is that when I read the script, it’s like I can visualize the character,. . . but I don’t get all involved in the image of what the character is. And it’s usually a character part. Nick is really a NEW YORK (AP) — Julie Harris, who has spent much of the last seven years in television, has come home to the theater and a yearlong tour in “Driving Miss Daisy.” Not that she had deserted the stage completely while toiling on the CBS nighttime soap opera “Knots Landing.” Between seasons as the vulnerable, often silly and very southern Lilimae Clements on television, Harris found time for short theater engagements, particularly in her one-woman shows based on the lives of ’'Emily Dickinson and Charlotte Bronte. But “Knots Landing” occupied most of her career until she was written out of the show last fall. When last seen on the program, she and Red Buttons were riding off into the sunset in a motor home. Now the actress is on the road for real, this time in a tour that began in Detroit after Labor Day and will end next summer in Los Angeles. Why submit to the rigors of touring? “ It’s a perfect play,” Harris said in describing “Driving Miss Daisy,” which chronicles the 25-year relationship between an elderly Atlanta widow and her black chauffeur. “There’s an absolute truth about it,” she said. “ I t ’s well-conceived and wellconstructed. It’s like when you look in one of those small boxes and there are colors changing all the time. That’s the way working on something like this is. It’s neverending: The little feelings that eddy out from all the scenes go into the next scene.” Playwright Uhry modeled the Miss Daisy after his grandmother, an elementary school teacher. He and Harris talked at length about the woman who died in 1973 at the age of 95. He relayed bits and pieces of the woman’s life to give the actress a better understanding of her character. Miss Daisy is only the latest in a long parade of characters that the actress has brought to life on stage. She has won five character part. It won’t look like that to a lot of people because I’m playing it, and people have me tagged.” To illustrate the kind of guy Nick is, Collins opened a script and turned to a scene between Nick and Norman (Simon Jones), Hillary’s lover. Nick says Norman is a better father than he is, a good person. “Nick doesn’t see himself as a very good person,” Collins said, “and he’s not in a lot of ways. Norman says: ‘That’s not enough.’ Nick says: ‘It’s gotta be.’ Norm says: ‘Oh, sure, you can say that looking like you do but what about the rest of us with thinning hai r and baggy e y e s? ’ Nick says: ‘Everybody thinks my life is so fabulous. Let me tell you something, being back in New York, surrounded by the facts . . . all I see is what I lost, what I threw away. Getting it back in tiny pieces here and there stinks.’ Then he says: ‘You hear violins?’ “That’s the way he feels about his life. It’s like he’s really come to a crisis point in this life. It’s really fun to play someone who doesn’t have all the answers.” Collins, who was born in Iowa but grew up in and around New York City, has always been pegged as a leading-man type. He works often on the stage and has just written his first play. His film credits can almost be divided down the line between small parts in good pictures, such as “All the President’s Men” and “Between the Lines,” and bigger parts in sillier, if commercially-successful movies like “Star Trek: The Motion Picture” and “Brewster’s Millions.” He is a frequent presence in TV movies and miniseries and got a 1987 Emmy nomination for his supporting role as AnnMargret’s cad husband in “The Two Mrs. Grenvilles.” Collins, occasionally brushing back his longish blond hair, says when he considers it objectively, he has to conclude that his looks have helped as much as hurt his career. By Choice. . . Not By Chance ANNA’S CAFE $5 O FF w ith th is coupon Regular Price Men $14 • Women $16 829-1402 9 E. 5th St. 968-5946 709 S. Forest Ave. Mon-Fri 9-9 FAMILYPLANNINGINSTITUTE Lunch: M on-Fri D in n er Tues & Thurs North of University Ave. Open Evenings: •Abortion Services •Free pap smear with birth control exam •Birth control exam includes free package o f pills •Free pregnancy testing and early detection pregnancy test fo r $12 •Affordably gyn, STD and infection treatment For people who care about what they eat (Participating Stylists Only) Phx. 9 9 7 -7 4 9 3 [—-c— *j Tempe 9 6 8 -7 4 7 1 9 1 0 0 N . 2nd St. •Qgm 4 2 4 W. Broadway Sat 9-5 HISPANIC BUSINESS STUDENTS ASSOCIATION A cad em ic L u n ch eo n Tony awards for her efforts. She found small jobs in the theater when she first moved to New York in the mid-1940s. “I was sort of a young character actress so there was a niche for me — the oddball girl,” she recalls. Harris astonished Broadway in 1950 when she played the lonely 12-year-old tomboy Frankie Addams in Carson McCullers’ “The Member of the Wedding.” She was 24 at the time. The next year she won her first Tony award as the amoral hedonist Sally Bowles in “I Am a Camera,” adapted from Christopher Isherwood’s “Berlin Stories.” Other Tonys arrived for her portrayals of Joan of Ark in “The Lark,” a 40-year-old divorcee falling for a younger man in “Forty Carats,” Mary Todd Lincoln in “The Last of Mrs. Lincoln” and poet Emily Dickinson in “The Belle of Amherst.” “I guess nothing could intimidate me anymore because I did ‘The Belle of Amherst’ for so long in huge barns, in tiny theaters, in middle-size theaters and on basketball floors,” she said. “I even did six weeks of one-night stands,” Harris adds. “There was no time to adjust. You just slap the makeup on and do it. Some antenna tells you: ‘too much voice’ or ‘too little voice.’ ” “I once heard an interview with Laurence Olivier who said both his parents loved the theater and so he ‘inherited the wish,’ ” she said. “That was his expression. I think I did, too, because both my parents adored the theater and took us to the theater and talked about the theater.” By the time she was 14, she knew she wanted to be an actress. “My parents were very tolerant,” she said. “I don’t think they took it seriously, although I did.” Harris still does, even after more than four decades of acting. GRAND O P E N IN G W ORLD CYCLE Tuesday, September 13 from 12:00-1:30 Memorial Union Gold Room TÏ 903 S. Rural #108 (next to Dick's) 894-8644 e SPOKE SHOP 937 E. Broadway #5 G^eSt. (next to Whorehouse) m 921-3466 V* o * Nt *Ps A ll S tu d e n ts ROAD BIKES W ORLD CYCLE Starting at 1660 W. Southern #A1 (across from M CC) $149» 461-1875 W e lc o m e For more information call Lina Alvarez (Target 4.0 Chair) at 730-1151 M ountain Bikes WAS S A L E ^ \ U.S. Express *325 M95 Montreal Express *425 »275 Orient Express *525 *395 Canyon Express *595 *500 S A LE \ \ 1 G ood th ro u g h Sept. 30th s Page 18 Monday, September 19,1988 ‘The Penetration’ evokes visions with art in motion Gillingwater of ASU creates a metaphor for the human eye in his current sight-specific work BUY • SELL • TRADE By SCOTT C. SECKEL State Press You’re coming back into the city after a trip out to the desert. After a few days of exploring the middle of nowhere, you’re either appalled by mile after mile of garish billboards and traffic, or surprised at how many things there are to look at. It’s like you’ve been reborn and have new eyes to see the world with. This whole experience of traveling from a state of being in a void to finally gaining a fresh perspective on the reality that sometimes relentlessly surrounds us, is the substance of Denis Gillingwater’s sculpture “The Penetration,” on exhibit through Nov. 13 at the Phoenix Art Museum. Gillingwater, an associate professor in the School of Art, said of his work that unlike “traditional sculpture hanging on a wall, this is sight-specific. In other words, it’s not going anywhere after this show. "My sculptural form wanted to play up the dimensions and the sense of that space. •It’s a very wall-like form. In a sense, it pays homage to walls. For thousands of years, they’ve been providing a sense of security.” The sculpture is a 21 foot wide and a little over six feet tall black wall pierced with small windows. Peering into the windows reveals multi­ colored kinetic spheres and shapes passing by the viewer, like oil in water. When reminded of Robert Frost’s poem “Mending Wall,” and its theme of walls as barriers between people, Gillingwater responded that yes,' “there’s good and bad contained in a sense within them, yet we place windows within those walls so we can look out.” “ The P e ne tr a ti on " challenges the perspective. Does the viewer look out through the wall onto these strange vistas, or somewhere else? Perhaps the eye turns inward? This is a work that strives to effect a strange mood change within viewers, as opposed to being more intrinsically thoughtprovoking. “The wall becomes a metaphor for the human eye, the eye being the place, the point of intercourse between inner and outer worlds. It’s kind of a micro/macro,” Gillingwater said. “I’ve heard people say that it (the sculpture) is a way of being forced within themselves.” The 42-year-old artist and sculptor was born in Los Angeles but was brought up in Scarborough, New York. The son of artists, Gillingwater’s work reveals the influence of the crowded, lush, industrial E ast Coast as well as the vast emptiness of the Southwest. He explains that what the deserts re a ll/ do is force people in upon themselves. Without the enormous amount of printed and electronic media pouring in or other external stimuli, the individual must look to their character and thoughts to find preoccupation. “There’s too many expectations; there’s not too much thought taking place,” he said. “Little or nothing interests me. The reductive sort of state interests me. We live in a world of excess and don’t hone things down.” So, perhaps the main object of “The Penetration” is an attempt to eliminate the extraneous clutter from life. Viewer involvement with the piece is also an important aim of the artist’s effort. “One of the things I’ve been working toward is not only to integrate the art into the space, but to make the viewer become part of the space. The viewers will see themselves in the window/mirrors.” “The Penetration” took about a year to complete, Gillingwater said. He started the physical work last December and finished eight months later. Raising money and drawing prior to that added more time. The exhibit was funded by an ASH (Arts, Sciences, Humanities) Grant from ASU. Your books at Changing Hands. For quality cloth and paperbacks (no text­ books, please) we pay 30% of 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 •C alendars & Cards •Handbound Journals M-F 10-9 SAT 10-6 SUN 12-5 Candies Moccasin Reg. $ 1 6 Reg $ 2 4 Now Swimwear Pink or Ice Vv Starting at sgs9 S9 M N0WS12M C h a n g in g H a n d s 580 S. C ollege, Tem pe • 968-4940 414 MHI Avenue 966-0203 O kl Town Tem pe (University Towers Center across from Sun Devil Stadium) M-F: 10-7 Sat: 10-6 _________Sun: 12-4 CATERING TO -YOUR MUSIC NEEDS m ,u v k ,cC IN THE ARCHES S Ì n i.. f f iN G CENTER AIRS T A R LESSONS SALES RENTALS Balloon Y our Savings __ _ _ _ ;. *Electric Guitars • Amps E L E C T R U f lH g g H B r •Distortion Boxes • Electronic Metronomes • Etc. S e ll in the C lassifieds 9 vS-2 i l O Matthews Center N. Basement Gillingwater is the third artist to show in the “Matrix” series at the Phoenix Art Museum. The exhibits are devoted to upcoming and mid-career artists. 122 E. University Dr., Tempe • Open 6 days 10 am -6pm i m TECHNICAL PEN SAVINGS 3> s m e o t l e r p lu s fr ee a n t t e T N SCHOOL SUPPLIES ‘The wall becomes a metaphor for the human eye, the eye being the place, the point o f intercourse between inner and outer worlds. I ’ve heard people say that it is a way o f being forced within themselves. ’ — Denis Gillingwater His last exhibit at the Phoenix Art Museum was in the 1981 Four States Biennial. He has also shown at the Center for Contemporary Arts in Santa Fe, the Scottsdale Center for the Arts and the New Museum in New York City. The Phoenix Art Museum is located at 1625 N. Central Ave., and is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday (until 9 p.m. on Wednesday) and from 1p.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday. Admission is $1 for students. Stretch Strap Sendai Get this FREE Value Pack of Staedtler school supplies and reuseable CacheCase worth $12, when you buy a specially-priced Marsmatic technical pen set with 7 pens plus ink. Available now at your college store. 700 S7 $1300 M o re Than C o p ies ■ • • • • • • Collating & Binding FAX Service Resumes Office Supplies Specialty Papers Instant Passport Photos Laser Typesetting Haircuts Reg. $17.00 SAVE $5.00 {Includes Shampoo (Conditioner & Cut (With Coupon) Perms $ 5 . 0 0 Off Regular $ 1 0 . 0 0 O ff Spiral Wraps Inclu des Shampoo. C onditio ner & Cut With Coupon for First Time Customers Only Cellophane Highlights . One Coupon $ 2 2 .0 0 $40.00 With Coupon for First Time Customers Only One Coupon kjnko*f the copy center Tampa 715 S. Forest/894-9588* 933 E. University/894-1797* University &Hardy/921-0168 Mesa C a ll F o r A p p o in tm e n t 1840 W Southem/969-3326 *Open 2 4 Hours! 966-6111 933 E. University M on.-Sat. 9:30-8:30 Sun. 11:30-4:00 SECorna Rural &University Page 19 Monday, September 1% 1988 Mezcal Drug-induced sex and madness: author assembles 60’s memories By LAURIE B. SMITH State Press “The women behind the counter are angry. Their plain middle-aged faces contort with contempt for this bonanza of new customers. In part, the crowd has ruined the dead calm of the graveyard shift. But there is more to their reaction than that, They hate us, hate our hairy faces, hate the women with long hair and granny dresses, hate our army-surplus garb. They hate the fact that we exist in the sam e nation as they. T har Midwestern faces, properly lipsticked and rouged, hair in permanents, wedding ring and one small diamond on the left hand — their entire bearing is a m irror of the world that raised m e and taught m e the few values I know and believe. I have faced this contempt a hundred times, but the pain never ebbs, the truckers eye us like lice, and the sweet sm oke o f marijuana drifts across the formica tables like incense at a mass. We drive on and rejoin the transcontinental conga line." Charles Bowden’s latest book, “Mezcal,” may remind a lot of people of things the yuppy trend has been striving for the past few years to slowly erase. He has, as so many artists have attempted to do, unearthed seductive gifts from the 60s — drug-induced sex and madness, the continually invading sense of lostness that sent “well-bred” people running into the arm s of naked rebellion, artful cynicism that echoes from that troubled era into today. Bowden, a native of Tucson, uses the rapidly-changing southwest as a metaphor for the progressive and destructive trends toward world power that grew out of the 60s. To him, the land is a place of reflection and it is through it that man can perceive the world as it truly is and should be. But in the 60s, the land was silent while people existed in personal and political turmoil. And, like the title of this autobiographical work suggests, Bowden captures the essence of confusion and internal struggle through a prose style that seems almost to hallucinate on the page, recalling memories that are sharp in emotion but move along the page in a seemingly random assortment of details. The story focuses on Bowden’s life from the late 60s into the early 70s. It progresses from his disturbing journey into Mexico immediately following his graduation (an event for which he felt very little enthusiasm) to his career as a teacher and on into the introspection of middle-age and the struggle to assemble all of his experiences into something meaningful. He writes as if under the influence of the mind-altering liquid in his title. Moods and events weave in and out of the story with a sense of drug-inflicted numbness and powerful but unassuming insight. “For an hour we m ove carefully across the Mall while sirens shriek. Somewhere in the White House, I suppose, the president turns o ff his football game. We drive non-stop back to Madison, the tar strips between the cem ent slabs o f the turnpikes going slup, slup, slup for hours. I know this will be m y last march, action, demonstration. ” This relaxed voice lends to Bowden’s expression a feeling of intensely-complex poetry that reads easily even though it challenges the mind and the perception of the reader. For example, his paragraphs often serve as continuous happenings on an invisible timeline. In the following excerpt, he moves abruptly from one event to another — one paragraph a t a time. “I am drinking with a friend in a campus bar. He is in his late thirties, going through an angry divorce, and over-head we hear helicopters as they hunt people in the night.. . . “I am on State Street, the capitol glowing white a few blocks away, and people stop traffic. ‘Street Fighting M an’ by the Stones blares from speakers in the apartment windows. . . . “I a m building a barricade by m y favorite watering hole, ‘The 602 Club, ’ while across the street a superm arket bums. Cops descend. I am flat mi m y face on the sidewalk, m y nose and cheek grinding into the cem en t.. . . “We are sitting in the student union cafeteria and T.inrla Anne, a wonderful southern h it to her voice, worries about the population explosion, ecology, the fate o f trees and sm all beasts. We all crush her with lectures on the vast em ptiness o f America, the wastefulness o f capitalism, the brilliant future available in a properly managed socialist economy where the nation will be able to absorb tens o f millions of additional human beings, absorb them with ease. ” The characters in “Mezcal” seem more symbolic than real. Bowden gives them lives that are full of conflict and addiction — to drugs or to other, iqore nebulous, things. Charles Bowden W ÊÈÊÊM p He gives them shape through a language that is blatantly sexual and revealing. They are people that are easily recognized, and, although Bowden provides them with dimension, he never burdens them with intimidating analysis. At the end of the book, Bowden has brought his reader fullcircle. He has covered all of the major subjects — life and death and the forces that motivate each. But he has also covered the small subjects, the intricacies of human need and emotion. About himself, he writes in the last section of the book: “I read a lot. When I was a boy, I would find m y father sitting in the kitchen late at night, smoke curling up from a hand-rolled cigarette, his m ind working through a pile of books. The titles would reveal no particular interest, ju st a jum ble o f trophies from the adventures of the human race. Maybe this hunger runs in the blood. ” It’s time to add “Mezcal” to that collection of trophies. It is a book that should easily endure. 1Ì»lPÌÉÉ Just imagine a restaurant where fresh ingredients and fast service can be had at great prices... r Fajita Prima iiS B liill FE A TU R IN G G R EA T FAJITAS B eef o r C hicken You’ll experience a taste above all rest Cornerstone Mall » Applications for scholarships are now available in academic department offices throughout the College of Business. Comer of Rural and University We serve beer & wine coolers! Take Out Available 921-1230 Fajita Prima where fast and fresh make die difference! DEADLINE: DECEMBER 13, 1988 DONT MISS OUT! COLLEGE of BUSINESS ¡ » S comics Page 20 B L O O M State Pro» Monda£j>eptemb«!j2( 1988 C O U N T Y fis tu e /m m a s ra&w eep FOUJBH. THESEASON'S FIRST REAL CONTROVERSYPESCENPEP UPON THE MEAPOWCRRTS... b y THE PRESS HAP PtSCONEREP WHAT THEIR CANPtPATE HAP PONE PURIN6 THE PARK YEARS OF VIETNAM... B e rk e U n to B re a th e d THE F A R SID E By GARY LARSON ^ fü fiC û y *ne M p iïr s . I w is p ....... 2 /j a m J/ÏK9 “W eil, th e Sullivans a re o u t on th e ir tire a g a in .” Doonesbury B Y G A R R Y TR U D E A U TP UKE TO BRINE SOMEONE UPHERE NOW. LAMES ANP 6ENTLEMEN... THE NEXT ^ VICE PRES-¿k ¡PENT OF THEUNRIW STATES! Shoe THE FA R SIDE By GARY LARSON sports SW» Prm It Page 21 Monday, September 12,1988 w a s n ’t e a s y Devils escape opener with 21 -16 victory over filini By GARY JACKSON State Press The inexperience of the young Sun Devil team was demonstrated during Saturday’s 21-16 ASU victory over Illinois, head coach Larry Marmie said. ‘“They took advantage of our inexperience,” Marmie said. “There are things we can control and correct just through experience and repetition.” The ASU offensive line is one area that needs a little work, Marmie said. The Fighting Illini used a lot of twists and stunts that the Sun Devils did not block well enough, he said. “I was concerned that we weren’t able to move the ball on the ground,” he said. “There wasn’t a whole lot to run through.” Despite the unexpected Illini style in some situations, ASU tailback Vic Cahoon said the Sun Devils were able to get the job done. Related stories, page 23 Box score, page 22 “They threw a lot of wrinkles at us, but we picked up the yards when we needed them,” Cahoon said. “It was a big game for us — we had to get the win. We made a lot of mistakes, and we have to get better.” ASU began its offensive attack with running plays from Cahoon and fullback Kirk Wendorf. But passes from Daniel Ford to Cahoon (10 yards) and receivers Tony Johnson (15 yards) and Chris Garrett (16 yards) put ASU on the Illini 17-yard line. Cahoon carried the ball three times before running up the middle for a four-yard score. Although he fumbled in the end zone, the touchdown was good because it happened after Cahoon crossed the goal line plane. Alan Zendejas made the extra point to put ASU ahead, 7-0. Illinois responded by moving the ball 81 yards in 10 plays to tie the score. Greg Turner initiated the drive, returning the Zendejas kickoff to the Illini 19-yard line. The series was highlighted by Illinois quarterback Jeff George tossing 21- and 19-yard strikes to flanker Steven Williams. George connected with tight end Jeff Finke, who found an opening in the comer of the end zone, for a 4-yard score. Doug Higgins made the extra point to even the score, 7-7. ASU nickel back Floyd Fields did not play in the game, Sundf Kjenstad/State Press Sun Devils Fedei Underwood (No. 64) and Doug Larson (No. 71) try to keep Illino is' Brian W illiam s away from quarterback Daniel Ford during Saturday's 21-16 season-opening victory over the Illini at Sun Devil Stadium . having returned to Markham, 111., because his mother, Edna, suffered a stroke. Jeff Mahlstede stepped in for Nathan LaDuke, who took Fields’ position in the nickel defense. Senior Jeff Joseph returned at comerback after medically redshirting last season. “On the first couple of series I was a little scared,” Joseph said. “After some contact and backpeddling I felt good. Once you learn it (the position) it’s kind of habit. I’m just as quick as I was in the past.” Following a 13-yard fumbled snap by George, LaDuke returned a Brian Menkhausen punt to the Illini 49-yard line late in the first quarter. Ford threw 23 yards to Garrett to put ASU on the Illini 11-yard line and slithered a 13-yard pass up the middle to Tony Johnson for a quick Sun Devil score. Zendejas’ kick lifted ASU to a 14-7 lead. The ball changed hands four times during the remainder of the second quarter. The ASU defense kept Illinois from entering Sun Devil territory, maintaining the lead throughout the half. Turn to FOOTBALL, page 24. Spikers win Texas tournament; run record to 6-0 By JOAN McKENNA State Press Talk about a good weekend . . . The ASU volleyball team not only won the Texas A&M Reebok Invitational, in College Station, Texas, extending its undefeated record to 6-0, but setter Noelle Fridrich garnered all-tournament honors, and team captain Christy Nore was named most valuable player. . . . All of this while acting head coach Steve Schlick said the Sim Devils have yet to hit full stride. “ I think we’re still not playing at an extremely high level,” he said. “But it’s nice to win some matches knowing you’re not at your best.” ASU posted 3-0 victories over Ohio State Friday night and Colorado State Saturday afte rn o o n , b efo re c lin ch in g the championship by defeating Texas A&M, 3-2, that evening. Colorado State was ranked 10th nationally going into the tournament, while ASU was unranked. Schlick said he noticed several areas of ASU’s game needing improvement, but the end result highlighted at least one thing — the Sun Devils’ mental strength. “ I think I personally felt best about the fact that in the third game against Colorado State, it was a pressure situation, we were in the hole and were still able to respond and pull it out,” he said. ASU saved game three, 18-16, after having taken games one and two, 15-7,15-10. “ Against T exas A&M, we had a horrendous first game,” Schlick said. “But we had the willpower to say, ‘We can come Turn to CHAMPS, page 24. Marmie’s army struggles through boot camp; jitters present Dave Hodges Sports Editor Marmie’s army survived basic training Saturday — but just barely. ASU won its season-opener at Sun Devil Stadium against Illinois to give head coach Larry Marmie his first career victory, but after the game some fans were left shaking their heads about the shaky play of the Sun Devils. Could it be that ASU has lost its offensive punch? Are the Sun Devils simply bad? Was ASU looking past Illinois to powerhouse Colorado State (0-2) next week? Although these questions were on the minds of fans, they are not mindless questions. The Sun Devils won the game. Plain and simple, that was all that had to be done. ASU is 1-0. Undefeated. The streak of ASU victories during stadium expansion dedication games was not snapped. But Marmie said there still is a lot of work to be done, ASU did not run the ball well against Illinois, a team that gave up 373 yards on the ground last week to Washington State. The Sun Devils also had some trouble containing Illini receivers, allowing 227 passing yards. In fact, the victory was clinched only with 1:30 remaining when Terence Johnson sacked Illinois backup quarterback Peter Freund on fourth down a t the ASU 27-yard line. But there were some bright spots. Quarterback Daniel Ford was impressive, completing 17 of 25 for 180 yards and one touchdown. Ford was sterling in the first half, hitting 12 of 15 for 128 yards with four big third-down conversions. Punter Mike Schuh also had a great game. Schuh booted seven punts for an average of 46.6 yards, including a couple over 50 yards, with one 54. Some Illini fans said after the game that Illinois played much better this week. They said it was more a case of the Illini being greatly improved than the Sun Devils being bad. It could also be that Washington State may just be good. The Cougars destroyed Minnesota Saturday at the Metrodome, 41-9. Saturday’s performance by the Sun Devils should simply be chalked up to opening-game jitters. The Devils wanted to win for Marmie so bad that they may have tried too hard. ASU does need improvement on defense and the running game, but just he thankful the Devils play host to Colorado State Saturday before meeting Nebraska Sept. 24 at Lincoln. ♦** Some opinions on Saturday’s game: •Sparky added a nice touch to the game when, before doing his traditional push-ups after each score by Marmie’s army, he donned a military hat and saluted the crowd. •The new video replay board, which was in use for the first time Saturday, has good picture quality and is a good addition to the stadium. Sun Devil Stadium is the only oncampus stadium in the country to have such a replay board. •Saturday’s attendance was 70,091, close to a sellout. Who knows, that crowd might be bigger than any the Phoenix Cardinals draw all year. •Finally, a message to the students who sat in the lower deck of the student section. It has been a tradition at ASU for the student section to stand and cheer for the Sun Devils during the entire game. Saturday, once some fans in the back began to get bored, standing students were pelted with cups, ice and other items from students who wanted to sit. Now although the Devils did not play exciting football to get the crowd pumped up, the students sat for almost the entire second half, and the Devils only scored one touchdown and almost let the game slip away. Crowds usually do not win or lose games but are worth at least a touchdown per game, maybe even two at ASU, Washington and Arizona. If students want to sit a t the games, they should either sit in the upper deck or stay at home and watch it on television. Last season there was somewhat of a controversy because the general public did not want to stand behind the students. Now some students (notice that the ones complaining were the late-arriving fans) are complaining. Maybe ASU is losing the home-field advantage that was once so intimidating and boasted one the loudest crowds in the nation. Perhaps there is a truth to the saying that ASU has a country-club atmosphere. State Press Monday, September 1g, 1988 Page 22 asu volleyball WEEKEND RESULTS ASSOCIATED ■ STUDENTS TEXAS A&M REEBOK INVITATIONAL at College Station, Texas or ARIZONA STATE 3 OHIO STATE 0 Arizona State 15 15 15 - 3 5 10 6 - 0 15 15 18 - 3 7 10 16 ~ 0 15 10 15 - 3 6 15 8 - 2 Ohio State AR I Z ON A Arizona State Colorado Staté ARIZONA STATE 3 TEXAS A&M 2 3 15 15 11 u n i o n » STATE 208 « • T E .U P E UNI VE RS I T Y A R I Z O N A 85287 Attention Campus Clubs and Organizations ARIZONA STATE 3 COLORADO STATE 0 Arizona State Texas A&M » M E M O R I A L Associated Students will give a presentation explaining how to use your present funding and how you can obtain more for this semester and next, if you have received funding for this semester it is essential that you be present. Arizona State wins tournament 'A S U F O O T B A L L ARIZONA STATE 21, ILLINOIS 16__________________________ Illinois 7 0 7 2 -- 16 Arizona State_________________________ 7 7 7 0 - ASU ill — ASU ASU III — T h u rsd ay , S eptem ber 15, 1988 4:00 p.m .-6:00 p.m. M em orial U nion, Pima Room DATE: TIME: PLACE: 21 — Cahoon 4 rush (Zendejas kick) Finke 4 pass from George (Higgins kick) — Tony Johnson 13 pass from Ford (Zendejas kick) — Claypoole fumble recovery in end zone (Zendejas kick) Steve Williams 24 pass from Jones (Higgins kick) III — Safety. Ford ran out of end zone Attendance — 70,091 GAME STATISTICS 42-88 227 101 23-36-0 8-41 2-0 6-54 33:25 • ALL CLUBS WELCOME ASU 16 34-60 180 118 17-25-0 7-47 lit 24 First clowns Rushes-yards Passing Return yards Comp-att-int Punts Fumbles-lost Penalties-yards Time of possession If you have any questions 1-0 7-54 C A L L 965-3161 26:35 INDIVIDUAL STATS Rushing — III: Jones 17-78. Griffith 12-40. McLellan 4-24 Turner 2-10. George 3-0 ASU Cahoon 19-65. Wendorf 8-11, W insley 2-10. Ford 2-0 Passing — III: George 19-31-0 — 178 yards Freund 3-4-0 — 25 yards Jones 1-1-0 — 24 yards. ASU: Ford 17-25-0 — 180 yards Receiving — III: W illiams 7-101, Fmke 4-40. Jones 2-16, McGarry 1 15 Wax 2-14 Donovan 2-10, Bellamy >-10, Griffith 3-6. Amaya 1-5 ASU: T Johnson 4-59, Garrett 3-49, Perkins 2-18. Wendorf 2-15, Cahoon 2-12. Knudson 1-12 Winsley 2-9. McReynolds 1-6 Kickoff returns — III: Turner 2-38. W illiams 2-39 ASU: W insley 3-92 Punt returns — III 5-31 ASU is THIS YOU? LaDuke 3-26 Third-Down Conversions — III 7-16 ASU' 5-13 • Strong self-confidence • Demonstrated leadership skills • Ability to focus on long-term objectives * Commitment to information systems-based consulting career • Eager to accept responsibility * High energy level • Fun to work with PAC-10 STANDINGS PAC-10 GAMES Pts Opp W L T Pet 1 0 0 1 000 24 13 1 0 0 1.000 24 20 0 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 0 0 .000 0 0 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 0 0 000 0 1I 0 000 13 24 0 1I 0 .000 20 24 Arizona Southern Cal UCLA Washington State Arizona State California Oregon Washington Oregon State Stanford ALL GAMES W L T Pet. Pts Opp 2 0 0 1 000 59 32 2 0 0 1.000 58 27 2 0 0 1.000 100 34 2 0 0 1.000 85 16 1 0 0 1.000 21 16 7 1 0 0 1.000 30 0 1 0 0 1.000 49 6 1 0 0 1.000 20 500 54 51 1 1 0 0 1 0 000 20 24 This describes the person we want in our MANAGEMENT INFORMATION CONSULTING DIVISION. SATURDAY’S RESULTS ARIZONA STATE 21. Illinois 16 California 30, Pacific 0 Oregon State 41. San Jose State 27 UCLA 41, Nebraska 28 Washington State 41. Minnesota 9 Arizona 35, Texas Tech 19 Oregon 49, Long Beach State 0 Southern Cal 24, Stanford 20 Washington 20, Purdue 6 As an Arthur Andersen Information Consultant, you’ll be able to put your business and technical knowledge to work as you develop creative approaches to meeting information needs in a variety of companies and industries. We will be conducting interview s a t C areer S ervices on O ctob er 10th and 11th , 1 9 8 8 . pro scoreboard Students with undergraduate and graduate degrees in the following fields are encouraged to schedule interviews: AMERICAN LEAGUE SUNDAY’S RESULTS Cleveland 4, Boston 2 New York 5, Detroit 4, 18 innings COMPUTER INFORMATION SYSTEMS ENGINEERING MATH FINANCE Baltimore 4, Toronto 2 Chicago 3, Minnesota 2 Oakland 8, Kansas City 7,11 innings Milwaukee 5, Seattle 3 Texas 8, California 3 MONDAY’S SCHEDULE Baltimore (Schilling 0-0) at Boston (Hurst 6-5), 4:35 p m. New York (John 9-7) at Cleveland (Swindell 15-13). 4:35 pm Detroit (Tanana 14-91 at Toronto (Key 10-4), 4:35 p.m. Milwaukee (Birkbeck 10-7) at Chicago (Reuss 11-8), 5:30 p.m. Minnesota (Anderson 13-8) at Seattle (M.Moore 7-14), 7:05 p.m. Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE SUNDAY’S RESULTS Philadelphia 7, Pittsburgh 4 St. Louis 3, Chicago 2 New York 3, Montreal 0 San Diego 8. Atlanta 2 Los Angeles 5. Cincinnati 3 Houston 4, San Francisco 1 .A A n r t h u r d e r s e n &COi MANAGEMENT INFORMATION CONSULTING . MONDAY’S SCHEDULE St. Louis (Magrane 4-8) at Montreal (Smith 10-9), 4:35 p.m. Pittsburgh (Drabek 14-6) at New York (Darling 14-9), 4:35 p.m. Chicago (Moyer 7-14) at Philadelphia (Carman 9-11), 4:35 p.m. San Francisco (LaCoss 7-7 or Cook 0-0) at San Diego (Hawkins 14-10), 7:05 p.m Atlanta (Glavine 6-15) at Los Angeles (Leary 16-9), 7:35 p.m. Only games scheduled NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE SUNDAY’S RESULTS Chicago 17, Indianapolis 13 Buffalo 9, Miami 6 New Orleans 29, Atlanta 21 Washington 30, Pittsburgh 29 San Francisco 20, New York Giants 17 Tampa Bay 13, Green Bay 10 Denver 34, San Diego 3 New York Jets 23, Cleveland 3 Minnesota 36. New England 6 Houston 38, Los Angeles Raiders 35 Los Angeles Rams 17, Detroit 10 Seattle 31. Kansas City 10 Cincinnati 28, Philadelphia 24 MONDAY’S SCHEDULE Dallas at Phoenix, 5 p.m. . mm COMPUTER SCIENCES OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING MBA state Pr«» Page 2 3 Marmie ecstatic after 1st head coaching victory By DEAN GYORGY State Press Larry Marmie was talkative, excited, almost boyishly giddy after ASU’s season­ opening victory Saturday night. His first game as a head coach will go down as a win. “It feels fantastic,” Marmie said. “It was a hard-fought game. I want to say this up front. I am so proud of our players. We know we have a lot of improvement to make. I know it, our staff knows it and our players know it. But they fought hard in some situations where if they hadn’t, we could have lost the ballgame.” True, it was not a textbook football exhibition, but the Sun Devils did what they 7 told our players before the game that I ’d been waiting 20 years to talk to a football team as a head coach before the first game, and then I didn’t have anything to say to them. ’ — Larry Marmie had to do to win and bring Marmie’s record to a perfect 1-0. The emotion and respect is mutual. “I think it means a lot to us,” ASU quarterback Daniel Ford said, “not only for the team, but to do it for Coach Marmie. I don’t think people can really understand the genuine feeling this team has for him. How great he is as a man, he kind of inspires you to want to do things for him. We’re happy for him, we’re happy for us because this is something we feel we should have won.” After 20 years as an assistant coach, Marmie has finally entered the elite ranks of his profession. There are a very limited number of head coaching jobs at the major college level. Was he nervous? During the week proceeding the game, Marmie said it felt like a regular practice week, situation normal. But when Friday and Saturday approached, he said he “didn’t know if the kickoff was ever going to get here.” “I told our players before the game," Marmie said, “that I’d been waiting 20 years to talk to a football team as a head coach before the first game, and then I didn’t have anything to say to them. When the time came I didn’t have any big words of wisdom for them.” None were needed. All agreed there were some pieces missing: the lack of a running game and consistent pass rush, avoidable penalties and overall, tackling was not “crisp” enough, Marmie said. One bright spot was the play of Ford. With a 14-7 ASU halftime lead, he was 12-for-15 for 128 yards and one touchdown. Without the running game in the second half, Illinois was able to key on the pass, and Ford finished 17-for-25 for 180 yards. He was not intercepted. Tony Johnson, who had four catches for 59 yards, caught a 14-yard touchdown strike from Ford to put ASU ahead, 14-7. “ It was in there, right where it needed to be,” Johnson said. “He got some pressure at some points . . . but when he had time to throw, the ball was where it needed to be. I think he’ll have a good year.” What a difference a year makes. The Daniel Ford of last season would have been hard pressed to complete six third-down passes. The confidence level is up. “You build off all the experience that you got, and now you just go out and play,” Ford said. “Things just seem to flow and fall together. You see everything now. “ It feels solid, I think we’re on our way." James Mumaugh/State Press ASU head coach Larry Marmie talks to Nathan LaDuke during Saturday’s victory over Illinois. The win was the first fo r Marm ie, who took over coaching duties in January after serving 20 years as an assistant coach. Illinois coach says team played better this week than last By CHRIS NACKINO State Press hate Press Illinois w ide receiver Steve M ueller runs toward ASU’s Mark Tlngstad during Saturday's 21-16 Sun Devil victory over th e M in i. Illinois coach John M ackovic said this loss was much different than the rout th e lllln i suffered to W ashington State last week. A T T E N T IO N PERIMETER DECAL HOLDERS On Monday, September 12, at 5 p.m., the Phoenix Cardinals will play the Dallas Cowboys. If you have a night class, please be sure to come early as heavy traffic is expected. At 1 p.m. the gate arms will be raised in Structures 1, 2, and 3 and Lots 3, and 46, to allow all decal holders access to these lots. Lot 17, 35,38 will also be available. Tram service to Lot 59 will not be available after 3 p.m., due-to heavy traffic expected for the game. IF YOU WILL BE ON CAMPUS AFTER 3 P.M. PLEASE MOVE YOUR CAR TO ONE OF THE ABOVE LOTS BETWEEN 1 P.M. AND 3 P.M. Tram service to Lots 40/42 will remain until 10 p.m. Illinois coach John Mackovic, who in his first season as head coach now sports an 0-2 record, said Saturday’s 21-16 loss to ASU was much different from their 44-7 loss to Washington State last week. “We had a better game (Saturday), but we didn’t play well enough to win," Mackovic said. “Overall I am proud of our performance." Mackovic emphasized that there were opportunities to score, but several penalties and key injuries to the Illini’s offensive line hindered their ability to produce a winning game. “We were in the position to score many times," Mackovic said. “But we had some costly penalt ies and the injury to (quarterback) Jeff George came at a crucial point in the game.” George, who had completed 19 of 31 for 178 yards, was injured late in the fourth quarter after a quarterback sack by ASU devil back Rodney Dillard. After the sack, Mackovic said that there was no consideration as to whether George would go back in and play. “He felt he could go back in and play," Mackovic said. “But we held him (out) as a precautionary measure." Filling in for George was junior Peter Freund, who has a 76 percent completion rate With no interceptions when coming in for a starting quarterback. Freund attempted to salvage the game with a victory, but even the strength of a fresh quarterback couldn’t save the Fighting Illini. “Quarterbacks are unusual creatures, . . .” Mackovic said. "Great quarterbacks believe they can do anything and sometimes they can’t.” Freund passed for 25 yards completing 3 of 4, but in the final two plays in a long drive, he failed to gain yardage and was sacked by the ASU defensive line. Other key players for Illinois were running back Howard Griffith and wide receiver Steven Williams. “Keith played very well,” Mackovic said. “But then again, all of the players played a part. “This was not a patty-cake game. Both teams played hard, but only one can win.” CARDINAL’S PIZZA Monday Night Special ! ! $2oo OFF 1 1 1 a 16" Pizza 1 Notgoodwithanyotheroffer1 !1 1 1— l wOTX' ' _____ I $100 OFF 1 1 ! ! a 12" Pizza | Notgoodwithanyotherofferj ____ 1 1_ 829-0064 1340 E. Apache Cardinal’s Pizza accepts ALL COMPETI­ TORS’ COUPONS*. So give us a try and use those coupons! "Except 2 for 1 coupons. Page 24 ¡14* M onday, September I t 1988 Landry dreads facing Cardinals in regular-season home opener TEMPE (AP) — After watching his Cowboys knock St. Louis out of a playoff berth last season, Dallas coach Tom Landry says he’s dreading the thought of facing the Cardinals now that they’ve moved to Phoenix. The two teams meet here Monday night in the first NFL regular-season game ever played in this state. “I would rather not be playing this game with it being their first game in Phoenix and on a Monday night and all,” Landry said. “ I ’m s u r e t he ir incent ive will be tremendous. We’re expecting a great game from the Cardinals, and we’ll have to fight to stay with them.” The Cardinals finished 7-8 last year and missed the playoffs after losing 21-16 at Dallas in the regular-season finale. “In order to make the playoffs, which is our main goal this year, we’ve got to at least split with the teams in the (NFC) East. This is one of those games,” Phoenix coach Gene Stallings said. “There’s 16 games left and they’re all important. But after you lose one, it makes the next one doubly important. We had a chance to win one last week at Cincinnati and didn’t do it.” In a season-opening 21-14 loss to the Bengals, the Cardinals failed to score twice on first and goal situations at the beginning and end of the game. They have since revamped their goal-line offense and also shuffled their secondary after giving up three touchdown passes, including a 61-yard bomb. A sellout crowd is expected at 72,168-seat Sun Devil Stadium as well as 105-degree C ow boys vs. C ard inals K IC K O FF; 5 p.m., Sun Devil Stadium. W E A TH E R : Mostly sunny skies with temperatures around 100. TIC K E T S : A near-sellout crowd of around 72,0 00 is expected. There will be some tickets available up 110.126,35mm o r Disc Color Print Film (C-41). E-6 35mm Slides. Coupon must accompany order. Not good with any other coupon/offer/discount. until gam e time. R A D IO /T V : KTAR (620 AM ) begins coverage at 2 T h e C ornerstone M all 9 14 E. U niversity.........968-0027 p.m.; KTVK (Channel 3) will show the gam e live at 5 p.m. as part of A B C ’s M onday Night Football m 3228 S. M i l l ............ 930 W. Broadway . coverage. L A T E S T LINE: Phoenix by 2V4. m m m m m David Winsley returned the second-half kickoff for 54 yards, moving the Sun Devils to the Illini 44-yard line to start the half. Cahoon made several ca rrie s and Wendorf caught a 10-yard pass in setting up a Scott Claypoole touchdown. Cahoon ran 14 yards but fumbled the ball into the end zone where the junior guard recovered it for the score. The Zendejas kick boosted ASU to a 21-7 lead. After a quick series on defense, ASU soon regained the ball but suffered a devastating loss. Senior tight end Gary Knudson, who caught a Ford pass for a first down, broke his leg on the play and wiii be out for the season. “His feet were in the air. He was hit coming down,” Marmie said. “The loss will definitely hurt our football team .” On the next Illini series, George completed passes to Shawn Wax (18 yards), Williams (12 yards) and Keith Jones (seven yards) to set up a 24-yard score. Jones took a pitchout to the right side and threw a halfback pass to Williams who was open in the end zone. “We’re young. This is the first game we’ve played together,” ASU’s Jeff Joseph said. “ I think we have a good basis to build on.” Marmie said the young defensive backs The Sun Devils had a negative hitting percentage (-.037) in game one against the Aggies and lost it, 15-3. The match went five games (3-15, 15-11, 15-6, 10-15,15-8.) “We feel like we’re progressing with each match,” Schlick said. “We’re showing some internal strengths. And I think that’s a requirement to be a quality team .” ASU also showed its share of physical strengths in Texas. Nore had a .585 hitting percentage against the Aggies (27 kills out of 41 sets with three errors). She also dug a team-high number of balls each match for a total of 45. Fridrich set all three matches and yielded 134 assists, while backup setter Bobbi Bloom played back row defensively and dug 22 balls. The Sun Devils hit above 1300 in their first two matches, but none of their three opponents made it over .256. Colorado State finished second in the tournament, with a 2-1 record, followed by Texas A&M (1-2) and Ohio State (0-3). 5110 S. Ru ral-----1840 E. Warner . . Coupon Good Thru 12-31-88 ■ 839-6834 . . 820-7154 _ Sp | ■ m m m m the gam e with 0-1 records. This is the first regularseason home gam e for the Cardinals as a Phoenix franchise. Both team s had opportunities to tie last w eek’s gam es with about a minute left. Neil Lomax will start at quarterback for the Cardinals while Steve Peltuer will start for the Cowboys. Backup Danny W hite was an All-America a t ASU in 1973. conditions for the 5 p.m. kickoff. “This is Phoenix, Arizona, and it’s hot in Phoenix,” Stallings said. “If this was Alaska, it would be cold. It was 110 degrees here not long ago. We practice in it. I like it.” “ It’s going to be warm, but I love warm weather,” said Cowboys running back Herschel Walker, who had the first 100-yard game of his pro career here with the New Jersey Generals in 1983. “ Phoenix was always a great place to play when I was in the USFL.” played well, but the inexperience showed on the play. “Obviously we had a major breakdown on the halfback pass,” Marmie said. Higgins’ extra point pulled the Illini within a touchdown of ASU, 21-14. In the fourth quarter George led the Illini to a 15-play series, which was the last he played during the game. Devil backs Terence Johnson and Rodney Dillard pressured the quarterback and Dillard sacked George for a 15-yard loss. George was hurt on the play, which ended the Illini drive. Junior Peter Freund started the next series and finished the game at quarterback. Freund moved the Illini from their own 30-yard line to the Sun Devil 19. Although Illinois was within field-goal range, three points would not cover the deficit. On fourth down and four, Freund hoped for a first down but instead was sacked by Johnson, ending the Illini drive. Johnson said Marmie wanted to use the nickel defense, which consists of a contained blitz and requires speed to move in from the outside. “We don’t have the size to bull rush them, so we used our speed to get around them,” Johnson said. ASU had to run 1; 30 off of the clock for the win. With three seconds to go, on fourth and 11, Ford took the snap and ran into the end zone for a safety. C h am p s------Continued from page 21 I E 9 1739 E. Broadway . . .9 6 7 -7 5 9 0 1709 E. Guadalupe . . 897-7679 G A M E P R E V IE W : Dallas and Phoenix both enter *1 S H O T S LEROUX W ILD BERRIES SCHNAPPS *2 PITC H ER S ALL N IG H TI F o o tb all____ Continued from page 21. . 966-6836 . 968-8593 Schlick and assistant coach Sue Woodstra have been directing ASU’s team while sixthyear head coach Debbie Brown continues assistant coaching duties with the U.S. Olympic team. The national squad is playing exhibition matches in Japan. The Sun Devils said they planned to call Brown in Tokyo to update her on their progress. ASU hits the road again Friday for the team ’s Pac-10 opener against Washington State followed by a match with Washington Saturday. Schlick declined to make predictions about conference matchups saying this season’s 1988 Pac-10 race would be too close to call. “There are going to be a lot of teams really even,” he said. “The teams that are fourth through ninth — anybody can beat anybody on a given day — which is a cliche, but it’s just that simple.” The Sun Devils return home next Monday night to play host to Montana State in the University Activity Center. BIG SCREEN TV HALF-TI ME GIVEAWAYS BEACH B LA NK ETS. T -S H IR T S , CAPS 1 1 2 0 E . A P A C H E • 9 6 7 -1 1 2 9 MULTIPLE CHOICE STUDENT POP QUIZ WOULD YOU RATHER SEE YOUR TUITIO N INCREASES: ■ Co to building prisons -OR- supporting your college education? DOUG TODD made sure th a t your 1988 tuition increase went into your college education. The Mecham budget planned to use your tuition to build prisons. Doug’s opponent supports the Mecham agenda. Don’t let happen to Tempe what happened to Arizona tw o years ago. VOTE TO RE-ELECT DOUG TODD ON SEPT. 13 STATE SENATOR/DISTRICT 27 Paid fo r by Todd fo r state senate committee, John Faccone, Treasurer o n o a a o d 3 io a a si ¿b m s n v iD a a a o D s h i state Pro» Monday, Page 25 13,1988 Wilander ends Lendl’s streak, wins U.S. Open in 4:54 match NEW YORK (AP) - Mats Wilander ended Ivan Lendl’s three-year reign as U.S. Open champion and took over his No. 1 ranking with a dramatic five-set victory Sunday in the longest final in Open history. The 24-year-old Swede, who won the 1988 Australian and French Opens, became the first man since Jimmy Connors in 1974 to win three Grand Slam events in one year by beating Lendl 6-4,4-6,6-3,5-7,6-4. The match lasted 4 hours and 54 minutes. Wilander also halted Lendl’s bid for a record fourth straight Open title and prevented him from breaking Connors’ mark for the longest stretch at the top of the computer rankings. Wilander, the first Swede to win the U.S. Open, will replace Lendl as the No. 1 player when the new rankings are released Monday. Lendl needed to remain at the top until Oct. 3 to break Connors’ record of 159 straight weeks a t No. 1. Last year, Lendl and Wilander played 4:47 in another Open final that featured long and grueling baseline rallies. Wilander had lost six straight matches to Lendl, five of their eight Grand Slam meetings and 13 of their 19 matches overall. But Sunday he forgot the past and concentrated on the present against Lendl, who lives just down the road from him in Greenwich, Conn. It was the first five-set Open final since John McEnroe’s victory over Bjorn Borg in their 1980 classic. Wilander was also the champion of the French and Australian Opens this year. The 62-minute first set was typical of the match, featuring long baseline rallies that sometimes lasted more than 20 strokes. Lendl saved a break point in the eighth game when Wilander netted an easy forehand volley and held serve to make it 4-4. But Wilander broke in the 10th game to win the set when Lendl made two straight backhand errors. Lendl had saved a set point earlier in the game when Wilander hit a backhand inches wide. Wilander broke Lendl in the second game of the second set on a lunging stab volley and moved out to a 4-1 lead. But Lendl regained his form and won the next five games to even the match. After squandering six break points in the second set, Lendl finally broke Wilander in the seventh game with a forehand winner to pull within 4-3. Wilander appeared to be thrown off stride at 30-all when chair umpire Jay Snyder gave him a warning for stalling on his serve. Lendl won the next two points with a forehand volley and a forehand winner. Wilander took a 30-15 lead in his next service game, but Lendl hit backhand on the next point that nicked the net and skipped past Wilander for a winner. After Wilander made two forehand errors to lose the game, Lendl served out the 58-minute set at love. There was only break in the 46-minute third set, and it belonged to Wilander. He broke Lendl at 15 in the second game on a crisp forehand volley. Wilander, not known as a powerful server, lost only four points on his serve the rest of the set. One of the key points in the set was a muffed overhead by Lendl in the fifth game. He could have taken a 30-15 lead with a successful smash and moved into position to break Wilander back, But Lendl hit the ball straight down on his side of the court, then missed two backhands to drop the game and fall behind 4-1. Some say Graf may complete Grand Slam again next year NEW YORK (AP) — It took 18 years for tennis to get another Grand Slam winner. The next wait could be much shorter. Minutes after Steffi Graf completed the Slam with a victory over Gabriela Sabatini at the U.S. Open Saturday, some people were predicting the 19-year-old West German might sweep the four major tournaments again next year. “It’s a tough assignment, but she’s such a good player, and she’s so strong and determined that it’s definitely possible,” said CBS commentator Tony Trabert, who won five Grand Slam tournament singles titles in the 1950s. “I think her biggest potential threat is Wimbledon. Grass is her least favorite surface because she takes such a big swing and because of the bad footing.” Billie Jean King, who won 12 Grand Slam tournament singles titles, also thinks Graf can become the first player to win consecutive Grand Slams. “She has the determination to be a great champion, the potential to be one of the best ever,” King said. “Steffi beat all the top players in all four tournaments. And she looks like she might be able to do it some more.” King said Graf’s feat was more difficult than the first five Slams: Don Budge in 1938, Maureen Connolly in 1953, Rod Laver in 1962 and 1969, and Margaret Court in 1970. “It’s more impressive now because all the best players go to all the Grand Slams,” King said. “When I was playing, you would skip the Australian a lot and not even go to the French all the time. The clay courts were so different for us, and Australia meant going away for three months.” Graf only lost two sets while sweeping the big four tournaments — the first set to Martina Navratilova in the Wimbledon final and the second set to Sabatini, at the U.S. Open. Traveling’s easier w ith STATE PRESS Classifieds! I SPECIAL OF THE WEEK 0 GYROS ONLY fi D 1 fi CATCH TH E D EV ILS D A ILY i 1 I NOW $045 "Quality Sandwiches For Nearly Three Decades" WITH THIS AD (up to 4 sandwiches) OFFER GOOD THROUGH SEPTEMBER 18,1988 Hours: M o n .-F l1 .10-9 • S at. 10-6 BOJO 829 S. Rural Rd. 966-5543 AVAILABLE H A Y D EN ’S FERRY REVIEW 3 ASU’s literary magazine fe a tu rin g ... •A rt »P oetry » F ictio n »In tervie w w ith John U pdike available at Student Publications, Matthews Center ASU Bookstore • Changing Hands Bookstore Books Etc. • Shakespeare Beethoven in The Borgata for sale s p e c ia ls auto track motorcycle classifieds Yankees beat Tigers in 18 innings NEW Y O R K CAP) — C l a u d e l l Washington’s two-run homer in the bottom of the 18th inning gave New York a 5-4 victory over Detroit Sunday and enabled the Yankees to complete a four-game sweep of the Tigers. The Yankees moved into second place in the American League East, one percentage point ahead of the Tigers and 3>/2 games behind the first-place Boston Red Sox. The game lasted 6 hours and 1 minute, the longest game by time in the American League this season. The 18 innings were also an American League-high. The Tigers, who led the AL East by four games Aug. 21, have lost 17 out of 20. Rickey Henderson led off the 18th with a walk against Guillermo Hernandez, 5-5, the Tigers’ third pitcher. Washington .then connected on an 0-1 pitch for his ninth homer of the season and second game-winning shot in the series. Steve Shields, 4-4, the ■Yankees’ sixth pitcher, was the winner despite allowing the Tigers to take a 4-3 lead in the top of the 18th. Matt Nokes reached on a fielding error by Yankees’ first baseman Don Mattingly, took second on Tom Brookens’ sacrifice and sewed on rookie Tory Lovullo’s single to center. Detroit starter Doyle Alexander, winless in seven starts since Aug. 6, allowed six hits in eight innings, striking out four. Mike Henneman blanked the Yankees on five hits over the next seven innings. New York relievers Hipolito Pena, Dale Mohorcic and Dave Righetti combined to blank the Tigers on three hits over 8 V6 innings. Alan Trammell tied the score in the seventh inning with a one-out homer, his 15th, off Neil Allen, who relieved Al Leiter in the fifth with the Yankees leading 3-1. Allen allowed Brookens’ triple and Fred Lynn’s single in the sixth. Jack Clark gave New York a 2-1 lead in the second with his 24th home run, his second since Aug. 9. Consecutive doubles by Mattingly and Dave Winfield in the fourth made it 3-1. special 10 days fo r o n ly $1000 •ads must be 15 words or less •all ads must be prepaid, no refunds Come in person Send it in Phone it in (w ith Visa o r M astercard) OFFER EXPIRES SEPTEMBER 30 State Press M atthew s C enter Room 15 Tem pe, A rizona 85287-1502 965-6711 Page 2 6