Full text of ""
XCLAMATION POINT
1)72. a mark or sign in written or
printed matter, used with an in-
terjection or exclamation to indi-
cate forcefulness, strong emo-
tion, or suprise. 2)n. the vitality
of our lifestyles; the effort we
expressed in academics; the en-
ergy of our Sun Devil teams; the
active role we took in campus
clubs; the liveliness found in res-
idence halls; the spirit of the
Greek system; the dynamic stu-
dent body of 40,000-plus; the
fresh and out-going attitudes of
our grads.
Yeah, that's cool, but what does
it really mean
LIFE
8 (jlubs
144 UALLERY
37'
Magazine
32 Halls
214 Ads
38'
Academics
48 UREEKS
248 URADUATES
41!
Sports
82 OTUDENTS
302 Index
43!
ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY
Student Publications
Tempe, Arizona 85287-1502
1989-90, Volume 63
IFE
Whether we spent our free time at a
Doobie Brothers concert, a racial pro-
test, or Max's 919, we made the most
of every opportunity. Among our
40,000 there were high school gradu-
ates, re-entry, part-time, and com-
muter students. But whatever cate-
gory we fit into, we stayed VITAL.
tDEMICS
Homework wasn't novels and papers,
it was also real life experiences. Stu-
dents helped the homeless and
worked on a solar car. People every-
where made an EFFORT.
So we lost to those guys from Tucson in football again, it
didn't mean we weren't hot. We sizzled as national champs in
archery and badminton and earned second place in wres-
tling: solid proof of our talent and ENERGY.
E
Ghosted and colorized photos done b\ WB Cooling down, a. student uses the
Mike Lewis, T.J. Sokol and Tammy Vret- W Aquatic Center pool. Average stu-
tos. Copy by Kay Olson. • dents as well as athletes used the
pool. Photo by T.J. Sokol
Exclamation point. It meant ener-
gy. Excitement. Enthusiasm. It
was a self-assured perception
about who we were, what we
did, and what we would be.
It was more than being a
number at the fifth
largest university. It
was about being
part of the action
and making
things happen.
r Brightening the sky over Sun
Devil Stadium, a rainbow high-
1 lights one of the better memories
om the Oct. 21 game against the Ore-
m Ducks. Arizona wasn't sunny, but
arents Weekend was a success, as fans
heered despite an afternoon downpour
nd a soggy 7-27 loss.
W Cooling off in the Cady Mall
fountain, Doug Carlson, Justin
# Turner, Ben Good,&nA Jose Torres
practice for the upcoming marching
band season. It was a tradition for Sun
Devil tuba players to practice in the
fountain during summer band camp.
Opening
1
I
That was us protesting tuition in-
creases, racism, the Chinese govern-
ment. That was us in the March
for Unity and that was us boy-
cotting the March for Unity.
That was us standing in the
rain to cheer on a losing
team in the game against
Oregon. We may not
have always won, but
we still believed we
were the best.
Opening
\
W Students exit Hayden Library
by way of its new underground
entrance, located in a courtyard
area below Cady Mall. The center of
campus had a new look since the library
expansion was completed and grass was
put back on the mall.
c
LUBS
There was a place for everyone in one of the many campus
organizations at ASU. Whether it was planning the McGov-
ern-Meese debate or fighting to establish a film school, stu-
dents got involved. For those who lived for originality, there
was Americans for Bozo. No matter what club we joined, we
put things in motion, we were ACTIVE.
1
ALLS
Hey, it's not just a dorm.. .it's a residence hall. For better or
for worse, late night chats, newly painted rooms and fees for
the hall under construction, the halls were more than just a
place to sleep. They were a place to live. Yeah, hall life was,
S well, LIVELY.
W Sparky, Curt Ritter and Rick
Hecht welcome Mrs. Beth Hecht
♦ to Parents Weekend. Sponsored
annually by Parents Association, Parent
Weekend was an opportunity for stu-
dents to introduce their parents to col-
lege life in the 1980s. The football game
capped a weekend of planned events de-
signed to familiarize parents with the
spirit of Arizona State.
W Adding color to the entrance of
the new architecture building,
# sophomore industrial design stu-
dio kites were displayed. Students were
given several weeks to complete the pro-
ject, making sure the kite could actually
fly.
G
REEKS
Wherever you went on campus, there
was no avoiding Greek life. Every-
day, we had a Greek event or gather-
ing of somekind going on somewhere. Noteworthy events
such as Watermelon Bust, Sigma Nu Relays, Anchor Splash
and Trick or Treat were abundant as we raised money for a
variety of philanthropies. Greeks knew how to show and
promote school SPIRIT.
s
TUDENTS
Our faces were red, black, yellow,
white and we came from all over the
world. We received awards and broke
records. Whether it be success or fail-
ure, our lives were DYNAMIC.
RADUATES
Some of us were four-year honor students and others were
six-year, uh honor students. We'd been the driving force at
ASU, and were ready to make a difference. We were FRESH.
W Pausing to autograph a poster for a
fan, noseguard Rich Davis participates
in Sun Devil Media Day. Media Day
brought many ASU fans to the stadium.
W Watermelon Mania seems eontal
gious, as Christy Reiehelt, Jessica Lim
kon, Jennifer Bidenkap,ai\(iTiffan\
Lee feel the spirit of competition. Photo bjj
T.I Snlrnl
Okay. So what exactly did it mean? It
was a feeling. It was being more
than a face in the crowd. It was
being a happy or determined
face in that crowd. It was
dancing all night and acing
the economics exam any-
way. It was a caffeine-
high, only better. It was
being active. Spirited.
Unified It was an at-
titude. It was ASU.
Kay Olson
W Peace, harmony, and brother-
hood brought students together
• in the March for Unity. Students
| Against Racism organized the event.
Opening
\tV Aj
f)%fi'* « v*S -
WmfcVttnlf
Taking full advantage of
the Arizona sun, sopho-
more Michelle Smith and
freshman Julie Ryan utilize
the new rec center facilities.
The rec center exemplified
the growth at ASU while ca-
tering to the students athletic
needs.
LlALj W)a. necessary to or con-
Py necessary. 2) v.t. to give
■ vigor. 3)/7. the energetic
prce expressed by ASU stu-
their daily lives,
ust Orientation to spring,
d fall graduations, classic
ed campus with a Sun Devil
itional scenes like a maroon
students section at football
the not so traditional, like an
ght parade and street festival
omecoming added a twist to stu-
dents du
From
summer
even
flare
and
game
electr
durin
dent
Ac
cl
emics shined during the day as
fit neatly into those ever-present
ute intervals. But when the sun
down the real Sun Devil came out.
nightowls partied into the wee
s at Tempe hot spots like Max's 919
and McDuffy's to let off a little academic
steam.
Campus events and a night on the
pwn not only shaped lifestyles but so did
day-to-day routine. Ranging from a
ty-five year-old mother of two to a
t-eyed freshman, student lifestyles
as diverse the people.
om traditional events to the daily
vital ASU lifestyles made a state-
t with out exclaiming a word.
SECTION
EDITOR
David
Kexel
Treking down palm walk
students head towards
class. Palm walk was a central
corridor of campus.
Student Life
1
IG ROLLER
etting it all on a
roll of the dice,
Sanders Alisky
shakes hands with
Lady Luck at Casino
Night on Aug. 23. Spon-
sored by the Memorial
Union Activities Board,
the night of craps,
blackjack, slot ma-
chines, dice and poker
was held in the Mari-
copa Room.
Layout by David Kexel
LUB MUD
overed from head
to toe, a deter-
mined oozeball
participant dives for
the ball while his team-
mate looks on in hope.
The Mud Suckers de-
feated the PV Power at
the Second Annual Oo-
zeball Tournament on
Aug. 26; the Student
Alumni Association
hosted the forty-team
competition.
HOW TIME
rowds of people
covered the Uni-
versity Activity
Center lawn, setting
the scene for the Aug.
20 Welcome Barbecue.
ASU newcomers re-
laxed and made new
friendships for the
coming year.
fELCOME
ith an opening hel-
lo, interim Presi-
dent Richard Peck
welcomes students at
the Opening Convoca-
tion. Orientation Week
helped students get ac-
quainted with ASU.
NEWCOMERS GET
for many incoming students, it was easy to get lost in the
shuffle at ASU, where an ID number could seem more
important than a name.
This was why the Orientation Office, under the direction of
Bob Francis and in cooperation with ASASU, the Memorial
Union Activities Board, REACH, Devils' Advocates, and many
other branches of the ASU community, planned activities
for the week of Aug. 20 to help familiarize new students
with ASU.
Student Orientation Services offered a mentor program
that matched up new students with volunteers, who would
help the student get acquainted with all aspects of the
campus. There were 78 mentors and between 300 to 550
students involved with the program.
The SOS office was also in charge of the "ASK ME"
button campaign. Approximately 2,200 "ASK ME" buttons
were printed and distributed to faculty, staff and student
leaders.
Devils' Advocates manned "ASK ME" booths on campus
and gave campus tours throughout Orientation Week.
There were also 11 student summer orientation assis-
tants who were each in charge of a small group of stu-
dents. The assistants took their groups on tours, to advise-
ment, to get the students' photo IDs taken and to register.
"They (the assistants) were kind of like a big brother or
sister to the incoming students, they made sure they got to
where they needed to be," said Marsha Hoffman, assistant
to Bob Francis.
Fall orientation started with the brochure "The Bridge"
that was sent out to all new students. The brochure contained
the entire agenda for Orientation Week. Students were able to
pick and choose the events that they wanted to attend. There
were meetings about how to receive financial aid to succeeding
in the classroom.
"Orientation was helpful to me because I attended a great
workshop called 'How to Become a Leader' where I was able to
meet and talk to some influential people such as the ASASU
president," said freshman secondary education major Leroy
Jerry Del Chappel. "The activity explained the differences
between high school student government positions and some
ASU leadership positions."
Besides informational seminars, there were also evening acti-
vites such as a beach party dance at the Oasis in the Maricopa
Room of the Memorial Union, and Casino Night the next night.
Both were sponsored by MUAB.
As Orientation Week came to a close, new students, a little
more comfortable with their surroundings, got ready for the
first day of classes.
HELPS TO MAKE
THE CAMPUS FEEL
LIKE IT IS A LITTLE
SMALLER.
LORI GARRETT
SENIOR
ORGANIZATIONAL
COMMUNICATION
YOll CANAA.
ed WE iff
- ONTO!/ 7
Orientation 1
I
ROYALTY
iding down Stadi-
um Drive, senior
Business Adminis-
tration major Shelley
Traw and junior Liber-
al Arts major Matt Or-
tega head the Home-
coming festivities as
queen and king. The
couple was crowned at
the Homecoming Ball
on Nov. 9.
I UX & TAILS
J aking in the atmo-
sphere, Sparky
fires up the pa-
rade crowd on Oct. 10.
Sparky, the official
school mascot, also
helped cheer the foot-
ball team on to a 30-22
victory over the Stan-
ford Cardinal in front
of a crowd of about
65,000.
IC-TAC-TOE
raveling down the
parade route, a
game show float
plays off the Homecom-
ing theme, "Premiere
'89." Homecoming orga-
nizers switched to an
evening electric-light
parade and street festi-
val with games and
food to try and appeal
to the diverse student
population of more
than 40,000. Photo by
Scott Troyanos
Layout by David Kexel
I
2 Homecoming
A TRADITIONAL
TWIST
iights! Cameras! Action! Homecoming week was condensed
into fewer days, but "Premiere 89'..a Homecoming Produc-
tion" combined the traditional Saturday football game
with new events like an evening parade and a street festival.
Kicking off this week of Hollywood hype, a spirit and athletic
day was held on Wednesday. There were appearances by the
men and womens gymnastic teams, the football team and head
football coach Larry Marmie, who announced the Homecoming
court finalists.
Later in the evening Sigma Pi fraternity and ASASU
presented Mock Rock, a lip-sync contest where students
impersonated rock stars on stage.
"Mock Rock went really well," said Homecoming Direc-
tor Kevin Connell. "All in all, we had about 1000 people on
PV Beach. All of the proceeds went to Multiple Sclerosis."
On Thursday, the Homecoming Jam was presented,
which featured a variety of music types including jazz,
bag pipes, mariachi bands, and a steel drum band.
| "The Homecoming Jam was really successful," said
3 Connell. "Students other than student leaders came out to
| see it. It was a really fun day."
I That evening, the Homecoming Ball was held at Tempe
Mission Palms with the announcement of the Homecoming
King and Queen, Matt Ortega and Shelly Traw.
"The Homecoming Ball was very well-attended, espe-
cially for a Thursday night," said Connell. "The Student
Alumni Association sponsored it and did a really nice job
with it."
On Friday night, the first annual Homecoming street
festival was held, which included game booths, food, and
concerts.
"We kicked off the festival with an evening parade," said
Connell. "It was the best parade attendance in about 10 years,
because it's so hard to get people out to see it on a Saturday
morning."
Connell said that the Homecoming Committee tried to appeal
to the non-traditional students with jobs and children, who did
not usually have time to participate in Homecoming activities.
Reactions to the changes were encouraging.
"I didn't like the short parade route," said Cheryl Fortier, a
sophomore music education major and marching band member.
"But it was better to march in the parade at night. It wasn't as
hot and we didn't get so tired."
it
WAS KIND OF FUN
TO 60 OUT AND
SEE PEOPLE MAKE
FOOLS OF THEM-
SELVES AT MOCK
ROCK.
HEATHER ALLEN
FRESHMAN
BUSINESS
Y01 CAMA
W Mil
11 iff
ONTMT!//
0, TEAM!
'
F
I etting the crowd
VJ fired up, Kalani
Gutierrez cheers at the
first basketball game.
The basketball squad
played the Australian
National team on the
night of Homecoming
festivities and posted
an 84-78 loss.
Homecoming 1
1
Sure, you had an opinion about every
bar and club you had ever ventured into
around ASU. But what did the people
working there think of you?
On Oct. 6 Reporter Mary
Cullen hit the Tempe bar scene to find
out what waitresses, bouncers and bar-
tenders were really saying about the
ASU crowd.
For a different atmosphere, students
crowded into McDuffy's, a sports bar.
They found plenty of televisions to
watch their favorite sporting events.
Judy Vallenari, a waitress at
McDuffy's, previously worked at Her-
man's, a bar catering to an older, more
affluent crowd.
"My tips are good. They surprised
me," Valleneri said. "I thought college
students would be less likely to tip."
"It's casual people, it's cool, it's
sports, and it's fun!" (Continued on
page 17)
1'hot.o by Susan Cleere
m*
r
ARDED
I I hecking the birth-
\s date of an ASU
student, Bouncer
Chris Mennillo works
the door at The Dash
Inn. Bouncers worked
to keep general order
and kick out any rowdy
guests.
HOT SHOTS
elping a customer,
a Planet Earth
bartender mixes a
rum and Coke. Planet
Earth, the latest club to
open, offered a variety
of music and featured a
neon-splattered dance
floor.
Layout by David Kexel
DANCE HALL
ecked with wall-
to-wall people,
Max's 919 caters
to a variety of people.
On Friday nights Max's
offered a jazz happy
hour, while on Wednes-
days it appealed to the
new wave crowd with
alternative music.
Layout by David Kexel
I
6 Night Life
10 P.M.
11:30 P.M.
fci
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W ■
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Dan Wilson, an undeclared liberal arts
major and a deejay at Club UM in Old
Town Tempe, said the club attracted the
trendy types.
"It has always been an alternative club, but now the manage-
ment wants a more mainstream crowd," Wilson said. "They are
pre-yuppies, or whatever that group will be called in 10 years."
Wilson said he enjoys his job and believes he possesses
insight into other clubs.
For instance, Wilson said that many people didn't realize the
deejay helps sell drinks also.
"I'll play four or five songs I know will pack the floor. Then
I'll play something so no one wants to dance, and drink sales
will increase," Wilson said.
Art Bascomb, an advertising student at ASU and also a
Club UM bouncer, called the crowd "well-dressed, carefree
and looking for a good time after a hard week of school."
The club called Asylum at-
tracted a crowd characterized
as "extremely progressive" by
bouncer/doorman Phil Ag-
new, an ASU business market-
ing management student.
"The men look like Robert Smith of the Cure-hair dyed
black, black eyeliner, black shirts buttoned up to the neck,
and black pants," he said. "The women have platinum
white or dyed black hair, wear fishnet or black stockings
with black skirts or cutoff jeans. And lots of makeup. I
mean, you could dig it off with a butter knife."
But Agnew emphasized approaching the people rather
than stereotyping. "They're all beautiful people on the
inside, no matter how they're dressed or what they look
like," he said.
A long-standing favorite,
the Sun Devil House, attracted
a more diverse crowd than
Asylum.
Debbie Raycoske, a physical
therapy major and bartender at the Devil House, said that
the crowd was hard to classify, except that most were
college students.
The Devil House also helped contribute to the diversity
of the crowd by offering a teen night on Sundays and Tuesdays,
Over and Under Night on Fridays, and over 21 on Saturdays.
Different nights also attracted different
crowds at Max's 919 at 919 E. Apache.
"The crowd is not typical," said barback
Gavin Borowiak. "It depends on what night
it is and what specials are offered."
On Friday nights, Max's offered a jazz happy hour with
Diana Lee singing until 9:30 p.m. Then Max's deejay Jerry
Moran spun Top 40 dance records until 3 a.m.
"Classy people come here on weekends, especially for the live
jazz," said waitress Mimi Crowder. "The weird people come in
on Wednesday nights."
Wednesday nights, Max's was transformed into Six Feet
Under, with canvas cloths painted in neon draped from the
upper floor and over the walls. Alternative music added to the
underground feel.
No matter how they were perceived from the other side of
the bar, students forgot about their academic lives and got
caught up in the rush of night life.
12:30 A.M.
,
■
IS NO TYPICAL PER-
SON WHO COMES
TO THE DEVIL
HOUSE. I THINK THE
VARIETY OF MUSIC
ATTRACTS PEOPLE
WHO ARE NOT INTO
ONE SPECIFIC KIND
OF MUSIC.
ROSE HABISCH
BARTENDER
SUN DEVIL HOUSE
VIII MA*
111 Iff
fMI/7
J
2 A.M.
Night Life 1
1
LIKE TO STUDY IN
THE M.U. BY MC-
DONALDS. THERE'S
ENOUGH COMMO-
TION TO KEEP ME
AWAKE. I CAN'T
STUDY IN THE LI-
BRARY AT ALL. IT'S
JUST TOO QUIET!
HOSKIE LARGO
JUNIOR
PSYCHOLOGY
QUE iff
i in//
THAT EIGHT-LETTER
WORD
/t's that dreaded word that kept you up late at night,
prohibited you from taking that new job, and cut into your
free time on the weekends. Yes, almost every college
student had to face up to that word at one time in their
academic lives - studying.
Three studying "hotspots" at ASU were the Hayden Library,
Noble Science Library, and the Memorial Union.
The Hayden Library contained 18 rooms for individual study,
plus various private cubicles and six different floors with study
tables. Group study rooms were also under construction.
Sophomore journalism major Tina Parisi, a library employee,
said that the busiest days for room reservations were
"early in the week because students want to get their
stuff done."
For students who preferred to study in groups, the
Noble Science Library contained 20 rooms available by
reservation. Rules required at least two students per room
and only one day advance reservations. Even with these
restrictions, business was great, according to Circulating
Reservations Stack Supervisor Betty Dong.
"We get about 4,500 rooms reserved in two hour slots
per month," she said.
Still, libraries were not the answer for everyone. Me-
chanical engineering junior Dave Anderson said that he
enjoyed studying in the Memorial Union.
"I study in the Montgomery Lounge area of the M.U.
because there are beautiful women to gaze upon," Ander-
son said.
In addition to the Montgomery Lounge, the M.U. con-
tained rooms upstairs which were sometimes accessible
for studying.
Although many places offered study rooms for groups,
Parisi said that studying alone worked best for her.
"I just make sure that everything I need is right there
in front of me so I don't get sidetracked," she said. "I just
sit down and start.. .and I don't watch the clock."
On the other hand, Anderson followed a study ritual.
"I spend the first five minutes before I sit down to study
and think about why I'm studying, and I usually come to
the conclusion that I'm an idiot and this is what we're
supposed to do. I pick a particular course, and I study it for
about 15-20 minutes. Then I take a five minute break.
After the break, I pick up another class' material and repeat the
process and so on. I find that I retain more," Anderson said.
Anderson also offered a more general suggestion.
"My advice for those people in the world who are not fortu-
nate enough to know how to budget their time properly to learn
efffectively: learn to", she said.
|ft£^tfpp*llll
** v%
•ssr
w
■ ■.:■■.
Studying
P IGHTHOUSE
I ooking over some
I I lecture notes, En-
■" glish Freshman
Jody Halverson finds a
quiet study spot on the
Hayden Library rotun-
da. The rotunda, a pop-
ular study spot, was
frequently referred to
as the Lighthouse or
the Nipple of Knowl-
edge. Photo by Eric
Scudder.
^1 -z-z-z-z-z-z
I oning out after
I studying a chapter
I in Spanish 101, Ju-
nior Political Science
Major Scott Vuonarati
snoozes on a couch in
the Hayden Library.
The library offered 18
rooms for study and
various carrels and ta-
bles throughout the
building's six levels.
I
COOL IT
atching up on
some reading, Ju-
nior Anthropology
Major Nathan Lazar
soaks his feet in Cady
Mall fountain. Students
found several outdoor
study spots and enjoyed
the Arizona climate
while hitting the books.
Layout by David Kexel
A MATTER OF
MUX
w
JOB INTERFERES
WITH HOMEWORK,
BUT IF I DIDN'T
WORK I WOULDN'T
BE ABLE TO GO TO
SCHOOL ANYWAY.
LISA ENGELHARDT
FRESHMAN
BROADCAST
JOURNALISM
(J
W
ith the rising costs of college tuition, it was not surprising
that more students were spending their free time working
as well as studying.
nationwide study done this year by the American Council
on Education found that in the college-age group (16-24),
54 percent were in the labor force in 1988 as compared to
42 percent in 1972.
At ASU, with an older average student age (26), these
percentages were probably even higher. The ACE study
noted that of students age 25 and up, 74 percent had jobs
and were more likely to work full-time.
As more students took on jobs as well as school, the 24
hours of each day became more valuable, and efficiency
was the key to survival.
"I learn to manage time better, and I am more orga-
nized than last year," said sophomore Tina Krycho who
worked in the new Student Recreation Complex.
Assisting with the job craze, the ASU Student Employ-
ment office employed 5,000 students on campus alone,
according to Assistant Director of Student Employment
Richard Cons.
Of those, 800 to 1,000 were under the Work-Study Pro-
gram, which was federally funded and available to those
who qualified for financial-aid.
While skeptics may have thought the rising trend of
students in the work force would lower the grade point
average, Cons referred to a recent study of the Washing-
ton State Higher Education Board which concluded that
working students had even better grades than unem-
ployed students, as long as they did not work more than 20
hours a week.
jRDER, PLEASE
n a typical after-
noon, sophomore
Bryan Teglia
takes order after order
at College Street Deli
on Sept. 12. Besides be-
ing one of the hottest
places for lunch, the
deli employed several
students and was a con-
venient location for
students who chose to
work there.
I
Jobs
I'^JQW
UNCLF BUC
v*f 'T^iBfcfc "* V^ #% Em
IHAIRRY K
BIGH RISE
anging letters, ju-
nior Brian Lewis
updates the Sun
Devil 6 Theatres' sign.
Although some jobs re-
quired a keen sense of
equilibrium, all stu-
dent-workers had to
learn how to balance
jobs and school. Photo
by Scott Troyanos.
Layout by David Kexel
ONE-AND-TWO
n top of getting in
shape, Senior Ac-
counting Major
Katha Jacoby instructs
aerobics at the new
Student Recreation
Complex. A job became
a necessity for the ma-
jority of students, and
Student Employment
helped by employing
5,000 students.
Jobs 2
I
•Ill
CONTROVERSIES IGNITE
■ EWS BRIEF
j\ egotiating with
ll demonstrators,
■L " former President
J.Russell Nelson works
with student leaders on
a twelve-point anti-rac-
ism plan as local re-
porters circle. The
April 21 sit-in was the
largest civil protest in
ASU's history. Photo by
Michelle Conway.
Layout by David Kexel
/t was a time of emotions. It was a
time of action. It was a time of
change.
APRIL 12: Two Hundred students
protested proposed budget cuts in front
of the Memorial Union in hopes to grab
the attention of state lawmakers . . .
APRIL 21: 600 students, faculty, staff
and administrators protested campus
racism during an eight-hour rally and
sit-in outside the MU . . . JUNE 5: Over
250 demonstrators gathered to show
their support for the thousands of Chi-
nese students murdered in the Tianan-
men Square protests . . .
As student protests exploded across
campus for different reasons and at dif-
ferent times, a common thread - change
- linked them all together. Average stu-
dents left behind their daily routines
and took up arms in their voices.
Whether to combat racism or show
their support for Chinese students on
the other side of the earth, protestors
united under a single cause and gener-
ated change. (Continued on page 24)
*m '
•
stitm
A
■4
22 Student Protests
Student Protests 2l
HANGER
eading past Cady
Mall, student Ken
Hazlett checks out
the giant hanger erec-
terd by Pro-Choice sup-
porters who predicted
dangerous abortions if
Roe vs. Wade is over-
turned. Pro-Life as well
as Pro-Choice groups
used various methods
to inform students
about the controversy.
Layout by David Kexel
EACE
rotesting the June
4 Tiananmen
Square massacre
Beijing, a Chinese
student expresses hope
for his counterparts on
the other side of the
earth. In order to end
the peaceful, pro-de-
mocracy demonstra-
tions, the Chinese gov-
ernment ordered the
killings and shocked
the entire world. Photo
by Kraig Hayden
If IT-IN
V* topping traffic in
i^ and out of the Me-
*J morial Union,
about 250 protestors
stage an eight hour sit-
in to denounce racism
on April 23. The non-
violent demonstration
was sparked by an at-
tack on three black stu-
dents on fraternity row
and the way the inci-
dent was handled by
the University Police.
URROUNDED
peaking to report-
ers and protestors,
former President
J. Russell Nelson nego-
tiates a 12-point plan
with student and facul-
ty protestors to fight
campus racism. The
protest was in response
to a fight between
three black men and
members of Sigma Al-
pha Epsilon fraternity.
Photo by Kraig Hayden
A Student Protests
r i%Jt
CONTROVERSIES IGNITE While continuous efforts
T- -tt\ 1 TATT were Dem 8 made to curb stu-
II 1 I J I dent expenses, actual protests
lc 111 began when 200 students ral-
III I J lied outside the MU on April 12
^ Allllv A-U t denounce proposed budget
3uts for the state's three universities.
Students were still stinging from the $84 increase approved
iuring the previous semester. The students were now upset over
.he Arizona Senate Appropriations Subcommittee's recommen-
dation for only a 1.3 percent increase to the three universities
general fund.
The plan would provide $610 million to be divided among all
three state universities. Of the revenue in the fund, $478 million
would come from the state while $132 million would have to be
raised through student tuition.
A little further away from the pocketbook, but closer to the
heart were protests that erupted over racial tensions.
On April 21, a mixture of approximately 600 students, faculty
ind staff members protested campus racism with a one mile
march from Cady Mall to Alpha Drive.
Upon arriving back at Cady Mall, approximately 250 protes-
tors staged a sit-in at the North entrance to the MU.
The protest, the largest civil rights demonstration in the
University's history, was made up largely of a newly-formed
group, Students Against Racism.
"It wasn't hard to get students out here," said Tanya Holmes,
president of the ASU chapter of the NAACP. "It doesn't take
much when there is something so wrong."
The protest was sparked by a fight between three black men
and members of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
The three black students, James Lindell, Rob Rucker and
Darren Viner, were on Alpha Drive while returning from a
party when they were mistaken for suspects in an earlier
assault on a SAE member. The men were allegedly surrounded
by fraternity members and called racially demeaning terms.
Two of the men also claimed that the ASU police department
was unfair in their treatment of the situation. Investigations
were made into the ASU Department of Public Safety and the
SAE house.
"There is still so much racism, it's just covered up," Viner
said. "When people get mad, it comes out."
The sit-in ended when the presidents of ASU and the Arizona
Board of Regents agreed to support a 12-point anti-racism plan
proposed by Students Against Racism.
The plan called for an investigation into the Alpha Drive
fight, it mandates that ASU take an active role in denouncing
racism, general studies courses be expanded to included cultur-
al awareness and that fraternity members participate in an
anti-racism program.
Later, a 13th point was added which required that Associated
Students sponsor events designed to fight racism.
"We, as students don't want racial violence to be a part of our
social atmosphere," Holmes said.
As tensions arose over events on campus, actions thousands
of miles away created another emotional demonstration.
On the weekend of June 4, thousands of Chinese students
were massacred while staging peaceful pro-democracy demon-
strations in Beijing's Tianamen Square. On June 5 over 250
mourners gathered to remember their
brave counterparts in China.
The issue was far from over.
Several rallies were staged by vari-
ous Chinese student groups in the fol-
lowing weeks to keep the incident
fresh in the minds of the campus
community.
The Chinese Student Network, a
group formed by Americans to aid the
Chinese, held a protest on Sept. 12 to
mark 100 days since the killings.
"I think students were affected by
the protests," Mark Frederick, CSN or-
ganizer said. "Publicizing the issue lets
the public know the issue is not dead."
While students united over racial
and Chinese issues, they were sharply
divided over abortion.
Silent, yet continual protests were
held on campus daily as Pro-Life and
Pro-choice groups manned booths on
Cady Mall to educate students on the
abortion issue.
Students for life displayed posters
depicting dead fetuses while Pro-
Choice groups erected a giant hanger
with the slogan, "Warning-this is not a
surgical instrument."
On Nov. 12, University's for Choice
held a pro-choice rally to coincide with
the national march in Washington,
D.C.
Protestors gathered to oppose three cases
that were being heard in the U.S. Supreme
Court. The cases involved placing restrictions
on abortion clinics and a minor's right to an abortion.
University's for Choice President Angie Barone said that the
abortion issue brought out the armchair activist.
" A lot of people who never got involved with anything before
are now getting involved," Barones said.
Sit-ins at the MU, rallies through Tempe streets and gather-
ings of protestors over moral and social issues signified more
than just anguish over the issue at hand. Students and faculty,
Republicans and Democrats, and students of every race and
religion joined forces in a show of unparalled strength.
It was a time of change.
AN INSTITUTION OF
HIGHER LEARNING
WE SHOULD DI-
VORCE OURSELVES
FROM SOCIETY'S
VIEW ON RACISM.
IT'S 1989 AND THIS
STUFF IS STILL HAP-
PENING. IT'S A
THROWBACK TO
THE '60'S!
TIM WOODS
GRADUATE STUDENT
!9
Student Protests
OING UP
rowing again, con-
struction is under
way for another
addition to the Physical
Science Building. Slated
to open in May 1990,
the new building was
only one of the several
projects which was
aimed at "Building for
Excellence."
ELL BLOCK
I
I I osting $16.4 mil-
1 I lion, the Fine Arts
Complex provides
126,000 square feet for
the College of Fine
Arts. The controversial
building, often com-
pared to a prision,
opened Aug. 15 while
plans were made for
Fine Arts Center II.
00L SIDE
laying in the new
Student Recrea-
tion Complex pool,
students enjoy the sun
and water aerobics.
The 135,000 square foot
complex features sever-
al gymnasiums, rac-
quetball courts, weight
rooms and a $20 million
price tag.
Layout by David Kexel
26
Expansion
GROWTH FOR THE
FUTURE
I J#ith the explosive growth of the student population, the
UU Arizona State University campus became synonymous
» ■ with construction.
In the most recent cycle of construction ASU gained
seven new buildings with three more in the works.
But regardless of whether or not they were complaining
about the hassel of construction or praising the new build-
ings, the students had something to say.
The Hayden Library addition had students searching
for new ways across campus in the early stages of build-
ing, but once it was completed, the students had a new
place to study.
"I like the way they put it underground and saved the
grassy area," said senior finance major Mark Knatoonian.
While the library was generally well received by the
university, the Fine Arts Complex brought a varied
response.
"I hated it when it first went up," said sophomore
mechanical engineering major Val Hammer. "But I think
it was needed."
While the Fine Arts Complex was a matter of aesthetic
pleasure, the Student Recreation Complex became one of
money.
Students had voted in 1986 to tack on an additional $25
to student tuitions for the next 25 years to pay for the $20
million structure. Only 4,000 people voted in that election.
Many students said that the fee was unfair.
"I think we needed one," Knatoonian said, "but I don't
§ like the way it was handled. I think you should have paid as it
I was used."
THINK IF THEY
KNEW THEY WERE
NOT GOING TO HAVE
THE MONEY TO RUN
THE REC CENTER,
THEY SHOULDN'T
HAVE BUILT IT.
MIRIAM EBEN
SOPHOMORE
MICROBIOLOGY
II iff
ON THAI!/ 7
d&UU^C£*i£U*s<yr^
RID WORK
I
J I aining an extra
II 110,000 square
^ feet, the College of
Architecture's expan-
sion added space for
studios, offices, class-
rooms, a woodshop and
„ a new library. The $22
-million post-modern
> building featured aerial
swalkways and tur-
(Squoise grid work.
Expansion 2
AN PATROL
I I verlooking park-
I I ing in Palo Verde
\s parking lots, a
parking services atten-
dant looks for a parking
decal. About 62 percent
of all students lived
two or more miles away
from campus, which
made parking a major
necessity.
Layout by David Kexel
I
EOPLE POWER
1 arked in Structure
4, several students
head from the
structure down Orange
Street. While 11 per-
cent of students lived
on campus, 36 percent
lived six or more miles
away. Photo by Mi-
chelle Conway
TTNLOAD
1^ sing his truck for
I the first part of
\J the commute, Ju-
nior Engineering stu-
dent Stephen Marquez
bikes the second half.
Many commuters toted
bikes to school for
quick transportation.
8 Commuters
GETTING FROM HERE TO
THERE
rhe alarm buzzed at 6 a.m. as a weary hand searched
the nightstand and silenced the piercing ring. As the
sleepy student rolled out of bed and staggered to the
shower, the day of a commuter student had just begun.
"Getting up at 4 a.m. to make my 7:40 class is the
biggest disadvantage of being a commuter student," said
Pre-law Freshman Laura Repak who commuted from
Northwest Phoenix.
Of the approximately 43,000 ASU students, 88% or
38,000 commuted to campus everyday. With such a large
number of students taking to the road on foot, by bus,
cycle or car, ASU had to expand the programs available to
commuters.
One newly introduced program included "I'm Commuter
Friendly" buttons. Developed by the Office for Off-Campus
Student Services and the Commuter Program, initiators
hoped fellow commuters, identified by the button, would
get to know each other.
This was one of several steps taken to get commuters
involved on campus. According to Commuter Devils Presi-
dent Diane Arnott, a lack of involvement was the biggest
problem commuters faced.
In response to this, the Commuter Devils were working
toward involving commuters in ASU's happenings such as
Homecoming, concerts, rallies and lectures.
With such a large student population it was easy to get
lost in the shuffle. Most commuters, however, found it
even easier to get lost in the transportation shuffle when
just trying to get from here tho there.
vW-f-Tdifaur
1
COMMUTERS DON'T
GET INVOLVED IN
ON-CAMPUS
ACTIVITIES. BUT
THEN THEY ALSO
DON'T FEEL LIKE
THEY ARE A PART
OF EVERYTHING
GOING ON AROUND
CAMPUS.
DIANE ARNOTT
PRESIDENT
COMMUTER DEVILS
mm
n
STICKS
huttling students
to Lot 59, a tram
heads for campus'
furthest and least ex-
pensive lot. Trams
moved students daily
from several of the
parking lots and struc-
tures to a central tram
stop near the Memorial
Union.
Commuters 21
DIPLOMAS WITH
WAS JUST ME. IT
WAS AMAZING! I
HAVE BEEN INTRO-
DUCED AS SOME-
ONE'S WIFE OR
SOMEONE'S MOTH-
ER FOR THE PAST
20 YEARS.
DOLORES HAUPTMAN
JUNIOR
COMMUNICATIONS
ON THAT!/ 7 S
I
fX athy Ignatowski remembers the day her son was born. It
M was the day before she received her acceptance letter
* ■ from ASU.
She had left college in Florida to follow her husband to
Michigan. Taking a job as a medical secretary, she supported
him while he got his masters. Now it was her turn.
"A degree means more to me now, and my grades are doing so
much better," said 26-year-old junior marketing major Kathy
Ignatowski. Junior communcations major Doloris Haupt-
man said that she agreed.
"I've always wanted to finish school," she said. "I don't
want to be somebody's secretary for the rest of my life."
Hauptman and Ignatowski were just two of approxi-
mately 10,000 re-entry students at ASU. A re-entry stu-
dent is defined as someone who is over 25.
"A lot of the students come back because they found
themselves at the head of the household or making a
career change," said Marilyn Mason, a counselor for
AWARE, a student support group for re-entry students.
Hauptman has seven children and felt that she had to
do something, both as an example and to help prepare
herself financially for the future.
"I've got to do something," Hauptman said. "I have
seven kids that we will have to put through college. I
always tell my kids that they can do anything. It was just
time for me to go ahead and do it. I wanted to set an
example for my kids."
However, balancing school and family can get pretty
hectic sometimes.
"Sometimes I feel guilty that I should be a housewife,"
Ignatowski said, "but I think I spend good quality time
with my son."
Hauptman said that her family life has suffered,
somewhat.
"My whole family decided they were going to do this
together," Hauptman said. "It is hard. I'm not running to PTA
meetings anymore. The kids are becoming more independent."
Both women experienced their own lesson of independence
when they started school again. The transition of being around
students that are years younger can be rough, at first.
"I felt old. I didn't know anyone," Ignatowski said. "I seek out
people who are married and older."
Hauptman also said that she felt strange at first.
"I felt funny," she said. "I was really intimidated."
But both said that because they were re-entry students, their
drive was increased and getting a degree was more meaningful.
"I enjoy it. I'm going to do cartwheels on the stage when I get
my degree, it means so much to me," Ignatowski said.
Re-entry
OUBLE UP
iscussing their
homework, re-en-
try students Bias
Castellon and Sandy
Vrettos work for their
masters in Archaelogy.
Roughly 10,600 adults
over the age of 25 were
included in the re-entry
population, and 600 of
these were over the age
of 50.
IGGY BACK
ausing to take in
the surroundings,
Randy Despain's
daughter Stacy gets a
ride to the daycare. Re-
entry students had a
variety of programs
available to them to
help them reach their
J goals including semi-
s nars covering math,
|.writing skills and
| speaking with confi-
e dence.
STAND OUT
urrounded by the
typical student,
re-entry student
Susan N. Rhodes at-
tends a Botany 108 lec-
ture. Re-entry students,
however, were not so
atypical; they made up
almost one quarter of
the student population.
Layout by Amy Bowling
'*
1 i
^Ufjrt
c
leaning up a massive oil
spill off the coast of
Alaska workers attempt to the
protect water flow. This spill
was the worst in U.S. history.
Proving glasnost really
works, Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev initiates
sweeping reforms. Gorbachev
allowed free enterprise into
the U.S.S.R. and proposed to
the Central Committee that
the Communist party give up
their guarantee of power to
allow other factions to com-
pete for leadership and power.
QUESTION MARK i )n . a
mark used in writing and printing at the
conclusion of a sentence to indicate a
direct question. 2)n. the news of 1989
that fostered questions.
From start to finish, 1989 was a year
noteworthy as more than just the de-
cade's end. Nationally and locally, the
news was startling and extraordinary.
Most exciting the fall of the Berlin Wall
reunited Germany and suggested an end
to the Cold War, while in Arizona, Rose
Mofford's announcement of retirement
raised questions about the future of the
state.
Over a million Chinese demonstrated
for democracy at Tiananmen Square in
Beijing while in the United States Hurri-
canne Hugo ripped up the east coast as
one of the most ferocious storms of the
decade.
Music in Moscow, and the 49er's vic-
tory in the Super Bowl kept the general
public entertained, while ASU issues
over the cross on Danforth Chapel were
hotly debated. Speakers on campus in-
cluded author Carlos Fuentes and a de-
bate between George McGovern and Ed
Meese.
Events unfolding in 1989 continued
into the '90s as court decisions regarding
the fates of Panama's General Manuel
Noriega, the captain of the Exxon oil
tanker Valdez, Charles Keating of the
Lincoln Savings scandal, and the cross on
Danforth Chapel were awaited. These is-
sues raised questions without exclaiming
a word.
Magazine 32
News in review highlights major
events that occurred in 1989. From
Beijing to Berlin, Pete Rose to Ma-
nuel Noriega, 1989 was filled with
memorable happenings that shaped
the world now and for years to come.
JANUARY:
4.. .U.S. Navy F-14s shoot down two
Libyan Migs over Mediterranean.
7.. .Emperor Hirohito of Japan dies
after a 62-year reign.
16.. .Motorcyclist shot by policeman
in Miami, sparking rioting by blacks.
Policeman later convicted on man-
slaughter charges.
17.. .Disturbed gunman opens fire on
Stockton, Calif., schoolyard dilling
five children and wounding 30 other
pupils and teachers.
20. ..George Bush inaugurated 41st
president of United States.
22. ..San Francisco 49ers defeat Cin-
cinnati Bengals 20-16 during final
minute of Super Bowl XXIII.
24 . . . Serial killer Ted Bundy exe-
cuted in Florida.
27... Political extremist Lyndon La-
Rouche sentenced to 15 years in pris-
on for conspiracy and mail fraud.
FEBRUARY:
3. ..Strongman Alfredo Stroessner
ousted as Paraguayan leader.
11. ..Barbara Harris consecrated first
female bishop of Episcopal Church.
14. ..Union Carbide agrees to pay $470
million settlement in deadly gas leak
at Bhopal, India. Ayatollah Khomeini
orders assassination of author Sal-
man Rushdie as riots in India and
Pakistan over Rushdie's Satanic
Verses kill 19.
15. ..Soviets complete withdrawal
from Afghanistan.
24.. .Nine passengers aboard United
Flight 811 killed when large hole
opens in Boeing 747 after takeoff
from Honolulu.
27.. .Four days of rioting begins in
Venezuela, touched off by price in-
creases. More than 300 die.
Compiled by The Arizona Republic
9
B News In Review
Curtain Crumbles
In 1989, the Berlin Wall, which
served as a barrier between East
and West Germany for years,
transformed into a symbol of
freedom and change.
On Nov. 9, East Germany lifted
travel restrictions and opened
gateways through the Berlin
Wall. East Germans flooded the
borders to get to West Germany.
Both East and West Germans re-
joiced and reveled in the new-
found leniency.
"The wall is broken," said
Lothar Hoffmann, 33, in an arti-
cle in Newsweek. Lothar came to
West Berlin by foot.
"Hey, babe, it's beautiful," he
said.
As citizens traveled to either
side to visit friends and families,
boarder guards did not bother to
check for identity papers. Most
of the East Germans who left,
returned with a brighter outlook
for the future.
"It was wonderful," said a 22-
year-old East German student in
a Newsweek article. "It's amaz-
ing how warmly we were greeted.
We were applauded. They cried.
They were just as happy as we
were."
Despite the sudden freedom,
Berliners on both sides of the
wall kept up the pressure for
reform.
"Knock the wall down," they
shouted. "Come on over."
melissa difiore
Protesting in favor of governmental re-
forms, more than a million Chinese
fight for democracy. Although thou-
sands of students stood up for their be-
liefs, many died in the military attack.
Chinese Fight
For Democracy
In one explosive day more
than a million Chinese ignited
the desire for democracy in their
country when they stormed Tian-
anmen Square in Beijing.
On May 17, students and citi-
zens alike moved into the square.
They demanded the resignation
of Deng Xiaoping and the adop-
tion of democratic principles.
Despite their fervant cry for
freedom, the people's efforts
were squelched by the govern-
ment when martial law was de-
clared on May 20 and troops en-
tered the city. By the morning of
June 5, the square was cleared
with only a handful of protestors
remaining and the only sign of
the protest being a few smolder-
ing piles of debris.
Sympathy for the Chinese stu-
a dents and protestors reached all
I the way to ASU where students
1 gathered in front of the MU on
* June 5 to mourn the Chinese stu-
1 dents killed in the Chinese mili-
tary attack.
"You don't know how angry
we are," said Mingshu Yao, an
ASU physics graduate student.
The rally was held by the ASU
Chinese Student Association. Stu-
dents at ASU also raised over
$9,000 for Chinese students
through the Friendship Associa-
tion of Students and Scholars,
the Chinese Students Association
and the Hong Kong Student
Association.
One ASU student, Tao Wu,
who was in Tiananmen Square
during the protests called the ex-
perience "very, very scary".
Wu said that it was easy for
Americans to feel angry about
what happend in China, but that
they could not know how fright-
ening it was to be in the square.
"The atmosphere in Tianamen
Square was very tense," Wu said.
melissa difiore
U.S. Troops Invade Panama;
General Noriega Captured
The United States government
won a battle in the war on drugs
when it drove Manuel Noriega
out of Panama and into a Florida
jail cell.
On Dec. 20, an American mili-
tary invasion force attacked Pan-
amanian military bases in a bid
to oust and capture Noriega. Nor-
iega, who felt the pressure of al-
most 20,000 invading troops, fled
to the Vatican Embassy on Dec.
24. At first the Vatican Embassy
refused to turn Noriega over. But
after an 11 -day standoff outside
| the embassy in Panama City,
■ Noriega realized that the senti-
1 ment of his countrymen had
a turned against him, and he sur-
rendered. He was flown to Home-
stead Air Force Base near Miami
and taken to a federal
courthouse.
"The Attorney General as-
sures me that our case is strong,
our resolve is firm and our legal
representations are sound," Pres-
ident Bush said.
Noriega was accused of provid-
ing a safe haven in Panama for
international drug smugglers, ar-
ranging the shipment of cocaine
processing chemicals, and at-
tempting to smuggle more than
1.4 million pounds of cocaine into
the U.S.
Noriega was replaced by Guil-
lermo Endara. Despite all of the
damage endured in Panama,
most Panamanians supported the
Unites States' actions.
Many citizens lost their homes
during the invasion and were
willing to accept any U.S. offer to
help rebuild. The Bush admin-
stration tried to help jump-start
the stalled Panamanian economy
and rebuild the shattered police
department.
"It was the only solution," said
Adriano Cruz, who lost his home
in the working-class Chorrillo
neighborhood during the attack.
"We need their help."
melissa difiore
World News 32
Q\
MARCH:
4. ..Machinists strike eastern Airlines.
Pilots and flight attendants honor
picket lines.
8.. .Daily artillery bar rages between
Christian and Syrian forces and their
militia allies begin in Beirut. At least
930 die before the cease-fire takes
hold Sept. 22.
9.. .President Bush's nominee for de-
fense secretary, John Tower, loses
Senate ratification vote.
24. ..Tanker Exxon Valdez spills more
than 10 million gallons of oil in Alas-
ka's Prince William Sound.
26. ..Soviet Union holds first nation-
wide multicandidate elections in 70
years.
APRIL:
5.. .Solidarity legalized in Poland.
7.. .Soviet nuclear sub sinks in Norwe-
gian Sea, killing 42 sailors.
11. ..Bodies found near Mexican-Tex-
as border, in ritualistic sacrifice-drug
slayings. Fifteen bodies eventually
found and several captured.
14. ..Seven people killed in California
winery rampage; suspect Ramon Sal-
cido captured five days later.
15. ..Crowd crush at soccer match in
Sheffield, England, kills 95.
19.. .Gun turret explodes on USS
Iowa, killing 47 sailors.
25. ..Japan's Prime Minister Take-
shita announces he will resign in on-
going political bribery scandal.
Compiled by The Arizona Republic
*>
D Disasters
Earthquake
Jars Bay Area
On Oct. 17, when the nation's
mind was turned to baseball, the
peaceful Bay area was shaken to
attention and devastated by the
strongest quake in the U.S. since
1964.
The quake registered 6.9 on
the Richter scale and it was de-
termined that it was the third
most lethal one in U.S. history.
Unlike hurricanes, which can be
tracked, earthquakes give no
warning that they are coming.
The tremor was felt in a much
larger area than just around San
Francisco. The quake's effect ex-
tended as far east as Reno and as
far south as Los Angeles.
The quake happened just 21
minutes before the third game of
the World Series. The fact that
the quake was happening was re-
vealed to at least 60 million base-
ball fans in the U.S. and even
more around the world when the
picture of the telecast started to
jiggle. The 58,000 spectators were
taken aback when the stadium
started to rumble right after the
Oakland A's and the San Francis-
co Giants finished batting
practice.
"It sounded like rolling thun-
der," said Peter Rubens, a spec-
tator in the stadium.
When the rumbling stopped,
the fans burst into cheers, the
stadium was then evacuated for
fear that severe damage was
done to the stadium.
By far the most devastating
effect of the quake took place in
West Oakland where Interstate
880 was destroyed due to the
force of the shock. Screams and
smoke issued from the crumbled
concrete of 1-880 where some
cars were flattened to a height of
six inches.
"We couldn't do a damn thing
at first because we didn't have
any equipment," said William
McElroy, an unemployed boiler-
maker who returned to the free-
way following the disaster. "We
broke into a factory yard and got
ladders. Then two kids came
with forklifts from another fac-
tory. We put pallets on them, lift-
ed them up like stretchers and
brought people down."
Early estimates of casualties
were as high as 250, but by Sat-
urday it was determined that
they would not exceed 85.
Buck Helm, a 57-year-old ship-
ping clerk, was discovered under-
neath the debris after 90 hours.
It took paramedics five hours to
extract Helm from the freeway.
Luckily, Helm survived.
By Wednesday, most of San
Francisco returned to normal de-
spite the extensive damage done
to buildings and homes in the
city. But, the knowledge that
someday an even greater quake
could completely destroy the city
and California remained preva-
lent in people's minds for several
months to come.
melissa difiore
Helpless against Hugo's wrath, a har-
bor in Charleston, S.C. reveals the
strength of the hurricane's extreme
winds. 1989 saw many organizations and
businesses pull together to raise money
for the victims of natural disasters. Pho-
to by RM Photo Service
Surveying the wreckage, rescue work-
ers search through the aftermath for
survivors. Although the 1989 San Fran-
cisco earthquake was the third most le-
thal in U.S. history, it was not consid-
ered the "big one."
Hugo Destroys Carolina Coast
The 135 mph winds that sent
12 to 17 foot waves crashing onto
Charleston wrecking people's
homes and lives has long since
faded, but the memory of hurri-
cane Hugo will live on long after
the torn town is mended.
Hugo, which hit South Caroli-
na on Sept. 21, was one of the 10
worst hurricanes that the U.S.
mainland experienced in this
century. It will go down as one of
the 1989's most devasting natu-
ral disasters.
"This is the worst storm, the
worst disaster, I've ever seen,"
said South Carolina Gov. Carroll
Campbell in an interview with
Newsweek in October.
Hugo left at least 21 people
dead in the Carolinas and Virgin-
ia, as well as causing millions of
dollars in property damage.
Chic beachfront property was
destroyed and Fort Sumter,
where the Civil War began,
looked like it had once again
been bombarded. Downtown
Charleston had 30 office build-
ings damaged.
This damage, as horrible as it
seemed, was mild compared to
the storm destroyed earlier in
the Caribbean.
Hugo's birth was a quiet one, it
started as an area of low pres-
sure off the west coast of Africa.
It's tremendous strength, howev-
er, grew as tropical air fed it and
made Hugo a force to fear.
Hugo screamed through the
Leeward islands on Sept. 17,
leaving 21 dead before hitting its
next victim.
The Virgin Islands was in ru-
ins. Nearly every home was dam-
aged or destroyed leaving most
islanders without shelter.
In St. Croix, a state of emer-
gency was called when an out-
break of looting and rioting by
armed gangs of local residents
started. President Bush dis-
patched 1,200 military police,
U.S. marshals and FBI agents to
try to restore order.
The chaos was of no concern
to Hugo as he flew past St. Croix
to Puerto Rico. The storm clipped
the northeast side of the island
leaving 30,000 homeless and
causing $300 million in damage.
After taking a small breather,
Hugo's reign of terro continued
tot he Carolinas, leaving Charles-
ton worse for the wear.
Then with the same suddeness
with which the storm began,
Hugo quieted, used his last bit of
strength to shower on the Appa-
lachians and Canada. The rain
ended with Hugo's death.
Hugo has long since gone and
the process to pick up the pieces
of the aftermath and mourn the
dead has started. The Caribbean
and the Carolinas won't quickly
forget Hugo's stay, but for that
matter neither will the rest of
the nation. Hugo will go down in
history as a killer in the winds of
chaos.
amara fotenos
Disasters 32
! eJ
Savings Scandal
Arizona was touched by scan-
dal once again last year when
the federal government charged
Charles Keating with fraudulent-
ly running Lincoln Savings and
its parent company, American
Continental Corporation, into the
ground, embezzling $34 million
and ultimately costing taxpayers
as much as $2.5 billion.
In a report for the Federal
Home Loan Bank Board, the ac-
counting firm Kenneth Le-
venthal said, "Seldom in our ex-
perience as accountants have we
experienced a more egregious ex-
ample of the misapplication of
generally accepted accounting
principles."
In 1977, Keating took control
of American Continental, a Phoe-
nix based home-building opera-
tion and allegedly began hiking
reported earnings. This type of
business allowed American Con-
tinental to post a net income of
$3.7 million in 1981, even though
its home building operations lost
$2.6 million. In 1984 Keating
bought Lincoln Savings, a Cali-
fornia thrift. He then jumped
into speculative businesses like
the $280 million Phoenician re-
sort hotel, and put funds into
land development and stocks.
Government regulators became
suspicious of Keating's activities
at Lincoln in early 1987, but al-
legedly were restrained from act-
ing, in part because of the influ-
ence of five U.S. Senators to
At a dedication ceremony, Rose Mof-
ford visits ASU West. Mofford raised
many questions about Arizona's political
future when she retired.
whom Keating made campaign
contributions.
"He plastered money all over,"
said former Arizona Governor
Bruce Babbitt, in an article from
U.S. News and World Report.
The five senators in question
were John McCain (R-Ariz.),
John Glenn (D-Ohio), Don Reigle
(D-Mich.), Dennis DeConcini (D-
Ariz.), and Alan Cranston (D-
Calif.). Keating contributed to
the campaigns of Democrats and
Republicans alike, allegedly to
receive special treatment from
politicians.
Federal bank regulators have
filed a $1.1 billion suit against
Keating, asserting that he direct-
ed a racketeering scheme that
destroyed Lincoln. The Justice
Department was looking into his
$1.36 million in campaign contri-
butions to the senators. The FBI
was investigating his purchases
of stock and real estate. Agents
seized the Phoenician resort in
the middle of the night. The Se-
curities and Exchange Commis-
sion was looking into the failure
of $200 million in bonds held by
22,000 investors. Even the Senate
Ethics Committee hired an out-
side counsel to investigate Keat-
ing and his Senate spending
spree. Keating finally got the
special treatment that he had
hoped for.
marlene e. naubert
Protesting abortion, thousands of pro-
lifers converge on downtown Phoenix.
Abortion was an issue that created con-
troversy during
o
\ FOR LIFE
VIVORS
OF THE
AE I ION HOLOCAUS:
F State News
\ ' .-'•
rt
Grand Prix
Lacks Support
Phoenix got a taste of life on
the fast lane last year when the
Formula One Constructors Asso-
ciation (FOCA) brought Grand
Prix Racing to the Valley of the
Sun.
Phoenix had been pursuing
the possibility of a Grand Prix in
Arizona since 1986, but when
Formula One's contract with De-
troit ended in 1988, Phoenix fi-
nally got the go-ahead from Ber-
nie Ecclestone, the president of
FOCA.
Some Arizonans were not
thrilled with paying $8 million in
taxes to finance the race, but
Duane Pell, chairman of the
Phoenix City Council's subcom-
mittee on sports, said in an arti-
cle in Sports Illustrated that he
believed that the benefits would
outweigh the costs.
"The city's role is clearly de-
fined," he said. "We build and
maintain the circuit and that's it.
No city money goes to Ecclestone,
and all the profits and losses are
his."
The Iceberg Phoenix Grand
Prix, held in June, didn't quite
live up to its chilly title. Al-
though the drivers liked the 2.36
mile, 14-turn circuit through
downtown Phoenix, many poten-
tial spectators stayed away.
Research firms projected that
as many as 260,000 fans might
attend the Grand Prix, but three
days of racing brought only
about 100,000 to downtown Phoe-
nix. This number was still
enough to bring extra business to
downtown merchants.
In an article from The Arizona
Republic, Michael Pascal, owner
of Bankers Cafe and Grill in
Phoenix, said that the Grand
Prix was so profitable for his res-
taurant.
"It was a very lucrative event
for me," he said.
marlene e. naubert
No' To Re-election
>i *
Arizona's Governor Rose Mof-
ford shocked the state when she
announced that she would not
seek re-election in 1990. Her deci-
sion not to run again closed an
historic chapter in Arizona
history.
Elected Secretary of State
Mofford took over as governor af-
ter the impeachment of Evan Me-
cham in 1988. Mecham was con-
victed of violating state laws by
concealing a $350,000 campaign
loan, obstructing justice, and
lending $80,000 from a special
fund to his car dealership.
Mofford's tenure as the 18th
Governor of Arizona had been
plagued by health problems and
political criticism ever since she
took office.
"Being governor is indeed a
challenge, because there is never
enough money or finances avail-
able to accomplish all that you
would to do for the citizenry,"
said Mofford in an article from
the State Press.
In 1988, Mofford asked the Ar-
izona Board of Regents to come
up with proposals to cut the bud-
gets of the three state universi-
ties from 1-5 percent, then in
1989, she cut 1 percent of the
universities' budget to help alle-
viate the state's $53 million reve-
nue shortfall.
In 1988, Mofford tried to bring
constructors of a supercollider to
the state, a project that would
have created thousands of jobs.
In 1989, she gave voting power to
the student regent, and through-
out her tenure, she always en-
couraged minority recruitment
and retention at ASU, UofA and
NAU.
In late 1989, Mofford under-
went gall bladder surgery and
decided, while she was recuper-
ating, not to seek re-election.
marlene e. naubert
MAY:
3. ..Yasser Arafat says call for de-
struction of Israel in PLO charter
"null and void."
4. ..Oliver North convicted on three
counts in Iran-contra affair, acquit-
ted on nine.
10.. .Then-Panamanian leader, Gen.
Manuel Antonio Noriega, annuls elec-
tions after opppostion wins by 3-1
ratio.
17.. .More than a million Chinese pro-
democracy demonstrators take to
Beijing's streets. Hijacker Moham-
med Ali Hamadi convicted and sen-
tenced to life for TWA hijacking and
killing of U.S. Navy diver.
31. ..Speaker of the House Jim Wright
announces his resignation in face of
ethics problems. Thomas Foley later
succeeds him.
JUNE:
3. ..Chinese troops, firing indiscrimi-
nately, march on crowds in Beijing,
killing hundreds, possibly thousands.
Revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ru-
hollah Khomeini dies in Iran.
4. ..Gas explosion in Soviet Union en-
gulfs two passing trains, killing 645.
Solidarity overwhelmingly defeats
Communist Party in Polish parlia-
mentary elections.
24-25. ..Oil spills in Texas, Delaware,
and Rhode Island.
Compiled by The Arizona Republic
News Tn Review 32
O 1
JULY:
3. ..U.S. Supreme Court grants broad
authority to states to restrict wom-
en's rights to terminate pregnancies
but leaves intact its 1973 decision
legalizing abortion.
17.. .Maiden flight of B-2 "stealth"
bomber.
18.. .Actress Rebecca Schaeffer, co-
star of My Sister Sam, age 21, shot to
death by obsessive fan.
19.. .United DC-10 crashes while at-
tempting emergency landing in Sioux
City, Iowa - 112 dead, 184 survivors.
31. ..Lebanese kidnappers claim they
hanged U.S. hostage William Higgins,
a Marine lieutenant colonel.
AUGUST:
3. ..Hashemi Rafsanjani sworn in as
Iran's new president.
5.. .Congress passes landmark $159
billion bill to bail out savings and
loan industry; President Bush signs it
into law four days later.
7. ..Communications workers strike
three regional phone companies. U.S.
Congressman Mickey Leland killed in
plane crash in Ethiopia.
14...P.W. Botha resigns as president
of South Africa. F.W. de Klerk for-
mally succeeds him a month later.
18. ..Assassination of Colombian pres-
idential candidate touches off drug
war in Colombia.
18-19.. .Polish leader, Gen. Wojciech
Jaruzelski, approves first non-Com-
munist government in Poland since
World War II, nominating Solidarity
activist Tadeusz Mazowiecki as
prime minister.
20.. .Barge rams pleasure boat in Lon-
don's Thames River, 57 die.
24. ..Pete Rose banned from baseball
for life. Unmanned exploratory
spacecraft Voyager 2 passes within
3,000 miles of planet Neptune.
30. ..Hotel queen Leona Helmsley con-
victed on tax-evasion charges, later
sentenced to four years in prison and
fined $8.8 million.
Compiled by The Arizona Republic
Cancer Drug Remedy
During 1989, three ASU scien-
tists received a patent for a po-
tent anti-cancer drug. Organic
chemist G. Robert Pettit, director
of ASU's Cancer Research Insti-
tute and one of the three, was
distinguished even further from
this group by receiving a presti-
gous grant from the National
Cancer Institute.
Pettit was the first Arizona
scientist to receive an "Outstand-
ing Investor Grant," said Flor-
ence Antoine, a spokeswoman for
the National Cancer Institute in
Bethesda, Md.
The $4 million grant was allot-
ed over seven years, with the
university's research facility re-
ceiving $329,000 in 1989 and an-
nual increments that increased
over each of the remaining six
years.
Pettit and his colleagues stud-
ied several anit-cancer com-
pounds found in sea animals
such as mollusks, corals and sea
urchins.
Pettit said that the drugs have
been highly successful in killing
cancer cells in laboratory ani-
mals and test tubes. Pettit and
ASU cancer researchers Cherry
Herald and Yoshiaki Kamano
also received a patent for one of
the drugs, dolostatin 10. Dolosta-
tin 10 is one of the most potent
anti-cancer drugs ever discov-
ered. The drug was produced by
Dolabella auricularia, a sea hare
that was found in the Indian
Ocean.
Pettit said that he first
thought about the anti-cancer
abilities of sea creatures 35 years
ago and has been analyzing Ma-
rine animals and plants since
1965.
"Some of the animals that
were here about 500 million
years ago had reached such a
high level of evolutionary devel-
opment that for practical pur-
poses they haven't really
changed much in the last 500
million years," Pettit said.
The complex anti-cancer com-
pounds are produced in animals
that simply don't get cancer.
Pettit said that the compounds
were present in sea creatures
"because of this long evolution-
ary period, where you've had just
trillions of chemical reactions
taking place, each of these organ-
isms designing better and better
protective agents."
melissa difiore
32 H News In Review
Club Stirs Concern
In an effort to promote better
faculty and staff relations, uni-
versity officials pushed for the
development of a faculty club in
the historic fine arts annex near
Old Main.
The club's purpose was to
house a meeting and socializing
area for the faculty and staff of
the university. The club was ex-
pected to be self-supporting
through membership fees. Facul-
ty were required to pay a $25
initiation fee and a $300 contri-
bution fee. Non-faculty members
were required to pay a $200 initi-
ation fee and a $300 contribution
fee.
ASASU President Paul Larson
said that he was worried that the
club wouldn't be able to support
itself and pay ASU for the lease
agreement.
Lonnie Ostrom, ASU's director
of development and president of
the club board, said that the suc-
cess of the club was important to
him as well.
"I'm really excited that we
have generated over 500 mem-
bers, but I am concerned about a
lot of facets," he said. "There are
still a lot of questions that have
to be answered."
Student support for the club
was practically non-existent, but
mostly because the majority of
them were unaware that it exist-
ed. In an unscientific poll con-
ducted by the State Press, 68 per-
cent of the students surveyed
had never heard of the faculty
club before. Of those students
who did know about it, some did
think it was a good idea.
"I think it's a good way to
bring the faculty together," a
student said.
melissa difiore
Cross Dispute
> _
mk
m
In 1948, Arizona State College
had 4,000 students, a dress code
on Sundays and a large contro-
versy over a little chapel on the
edge of campus. Today, the issue
of whether the cross should re-
main atop Danforth Chapel, will
have its day in court because of a
suit filed by the American Civil
Liberties Union.
On Feb. 1, 1945, William Dan-
forth, founder and chairman of
the board of the Ralston Purina
company, was asked by his
friend to donate money to start a
college chapel fund.
On March 13, he made an offer
of $5,000 to then President Grady
Gammage to establish a nonde-
nominational campus chapel. A
Phoenix building firm, Lescher
and Mahoney, presented blue-
prints-which included a copper-
covered wooden cross-to the
committee, on Dec. 12, 1946.
Not until May 5, 1947, did any-
one bring up the idea that the
cross discriminated against non-
Christians. According to Ronald
Wyllys, Relgious Council presi-
dent at the time, a representative
from the Hillel Jewish Center
asked that the cross not be
placed on the chapel. Wyllys said
the council overwhelmingly ap-
proved the suggestion.
ASC Comptroller Gilbert Cady
was then in charge of coordinat-
ing the development of the build-
ing.
"When the building was near-
ing completion, there was a cross
on top," Wyllys said. "We peti-
tioned the administration of the
University to have the cross
removed.
"Nothing happened for several
months. We got more and more
concerned over it."
According to a letter sent by
Gammage to a disgruntled alum-
nus, William Daws, the cross was
never taken out of the original
blueprints even though the Reli-
gious Council had voted its
; removal.
j. A week before the formal dedi-
| cation of the chapel, the symbol
r had still not been removed.
I "We felt it would be innappro-
priate for the chapel to be dedi-
cated with a cross," Wyllys said.
The 17-year-old math student
decided to do something about it.
"One Saturday morning about
10 a.m., I borrowed a tall ladder
from the maitenance depart-
ment," Wyllys said. "I climbed up
on top of the building with a
hacksaw and cut the cross off."
Wyllys said that with only
four days to go until the dedica-
tion ceremonies, the campus ad-
ministration was frantic. After
the dedication, the cross issue
was ignored for almost five
years.
In the fall of 1952, Cady
formed a committee to refurbish
the chapel. On Nov. 13, he held a
meeting to go over the redecorat-
ing plans. They included re-es-
tablishing the cross.
Very quietly the cross was
placed on Danforth's cupola. It
seemed as though no one noticed
the new symbol on campus.
Except for Dean J.O. Grimes.
Grimes was the dean of the
correspondence school for ASC.
He championed a one-man fight
to remove the cross-but it was
only on paper.
"To me the answer is clear,"
Grimes said in the letter. "Put no
symbol on top of or on the exteri-
or of the chapel."
Cady's wish was granted, and
the cross remained until the is-
sue grew cold.
It was 36 years later before
the issue was formally raised
again.
In the spring of 1989, ASU Pro-
fessor Randell Helms introduced
a measure into the Faculty Sen-
ate asking for the removal of the
cross. The faculty approved the
motion.
The ASU administration chose
to leave the cross up and let the
courts decide the issue.
A lawsuit filed by the Arizona
Civil Liberties Union against the
University asking for the remov-
al of the symbol made sure the
issue was heard by the legal
system.
nicole carroll
ASU News 32
O
Discussing one of his works, Carlos Fu-
entes addresses his literary style. Fuen-
tes spoke about a variety of topics dur-
ing his lecture series at Galvin
Playhouse on Sept. 25-29.
Leaders Debate Opposing Ideas
On Oct. 17, amidst a frequently
vocal crowd, Sen. George McGov-
ern and former Attorney General
Edwin Meese debated the differ-
ence between the conservative
and liberal point of view.
Meese began the debate by
identifying what he considered to
be conservative points of view.
"The role of government
should be one that is limited and
that leaves people to make their
own decisions," Meese said.
Meese said that the parame-
ters of the conservative approach
were commitment to a free mar-
ket economy, national security
and government restraint.
"These points have brought
this country to unprecidented
leadership," he said.
7
McGovern said that the United
States desperately needed a
strong and vital liberalism.
"Most people believe in initia-
tives that are liberal and then
accepted by conservatives," he
said.
McGovern also likened the
Reagan administration to
Nixon's.
"The Reagan administration
has been one of the most costly
and damaging administrations in
U.S. history," he said.
McGovern and Meese also de-
bated how they saw Oliver
North.
"He was an authentic combat
officer hero," Meese said. "He
just made some serious mistakes
in the White House."
McGovern said that he didn't
doubt that North's exploits in
battle were heroic.
"What North did was done
with the knowledge of a lot of
people," he said.
The only topic on which the
two agreed was on whether or
not sanctions should be imposed
against apartheid.
"That is a solution that could
continue to keep economic pres-
sure on," McGovern said.
After covering these three top-
ics, McGovern and Meese then
entertained questions from the
audience concerning the Bork no-
minqation, normalization of rela-
tions with Cuba, Flag desicration,
Russia and arms control.
The debate ended with a sum-
mation from both participants.
McGovern concluded by discuss-
ing how a watchdog government
can protect consumers.
"A free market is kept by a
goernment watchdog," he said.
Meese said that he was
pleased with his opponents per-
formance. He also said thai
strong law enforcement helps t(
protect people from those whc
prey upon them.
"The government should b(
ableto protect society in a rea-
sonable manner," Meese said. "It
can be done best in the kind I
governments that we've enjoyecj
lately."
melissa difiore
J Lecture Series
■J_^
Fuentes Shares
Cultural Experience
In 1989, Carlos Fuentes came
to ASU to enlighten peoples
minds and speak about the cul-
ture that influenced both his
writing and his life.
Fuentes, 60, is Mexico's best-
known writer. Ten of his novels
have been published in the Unit-
ed States, including the "Old
Gringo" which was produced as a
major film starring Jane Fonda
and Gregory Peck.
Fuentes was Mexico's ambas-
sador to France during 1975-77.
He was also a mediator at the
Arias Plan Peace talks. Fuentes
spoke at ASU in the Galvin Play-
house on Sept. 25-29. The topics
covered included art, politics and
the culture crisis in Latin Ameri-
ca. He also read from his works
in English and Spanish. Fuentes
said that he came to ASU be-
cause he didn't know Arizona
well.
"I try to arrange my speaking
tours by geographic regions," Fu-
i entes said in an interview with
the Arizona Republic. "Last year,
Kansas and Iowa. This year two
states I have always wanted to
know - Colorado, which I know a
little, and Arizona - which I
don't know at all."
Fuentes was asked to speak at
ASU by the Honors College for
the Inaugural Centennial lecture
series.
"He was clearly our first
choice," said Ted Humphrey,
dean of the Honors College, in an
interview with the Arizona Re-
public. "We went after him. We
held out to the last minute."
In Fuentes' lecture on bringing
cultures together, he discussed
many topics including economic
development, social justice, and
world consciousness.
"We are constantly reminded,"
Fuentes said, "that if perfectable
we are also, certainly,
perishable."
melissa difiore
ldressing abortion, Democrat George
cGovern expresses his pro-choice opin-
i. McGovern and Meese discussed
iny controversial issues at the Oct. 17
bate.
j\nrpwry7(3
uc Wito)
SEPTEMBER:
6.. .South African elections; about 25
die in rioting.
10.. .Hungary drops requirement for
East Germans to have exit permis-
sion from East Berlin government.
Exodus of East Germans that began
in summer increases.
17-21. ..Hurricane Hugo sweeps
through Caribbean and into Charles-
ton, S.C., with 135 mph winds, killing
62.
20. ..De Klerk inaugurated as South
Africa president.
21. ..Soviet Union reports 292 people
killed in ethnic violence in various
republics since January 1988.
22. ..Irish Republican Army bomb
blast at military barracks in Deal,
England, kills 11.
26.. .Vietnam declares troop with-
drawal from Cambodia completed.
29...Zsa Zsa Gabor convicted and lat-
er sentenced to three days in jail for
slapping policeman.
OCTOBER:
3. ..Military coup against Noriega in
Panama fails.
7. ..Hungarian communist Party for-
mally disbands, reconstituting itself
as Hungarian Socialist Party. Parlia-
ment later rewrites constitution and
adopts laws allowing several parties
to contest free elections.
13...Stock market plunges 190.58
points, its second-biggest drop ever,
four days after hitting record closing
high of 2,791.41.
17.. .Earthquake measuring 7.1 on
Richter scale rocks San Francisco
Bay Area, killing 67 and causing $7
billion damage.
18. ..Amid large demonstrations, East
German Communist Party chief
Erich Honecker ousted and replaced
by Egon Krenz. Space shuttle Atlan-
tis launched on mission to send Gali-
leo probe on six-year journey to
Jupiter.
28.. .Oakland Athletics sweep San
Francisco Giants to win quake-de-
layed World Series. Aloha commuter
plane crashes in Hawaii, killing 20.
Compiled by The Arizona Republic
News In Review 32
O
A Golden Era Ends
In 1989, the entertainment in-
dustry lost three of the brightest
stars of the "Golden age of Holly-
wood:" Lucille Ball, Laurence
Olivier and Bette Davis.
When Lucille Ball's first tele-
vision series debuted in 1951, she
was already a veteran of nearly
two decades in show business,
but was hardly a superstar. Her
first venture into television be-
gan an immortal love affair with
the American public.
Her great creation was 'Lucy,'
a stubborn redhead who always
tried to break out of the kitchen
and into independence, yet failed
more often than she succeeded.
Off the air, however, Ball was
the success that the Lucy charac-
ter always strived to be.
Ball said she saw herself "not
as an idea girl but as a doer." She
commanded respect by insisting
on co-starring her husband, ob-
scure cuban bandleader Desi Ar-
naz, in / Love Lucy, then later
became the first woman to head
a studio, Desilu Productions.
From 1951 to 1974, Ball's
shows were a staple of American
television, and / Love Lucy was
seen in more than 80 countries
and in perpetual reruns in the
U.S.
Sir Laurence Olivier was "the
actor's actor." His peers idolized
him, calling Olivier "the greatest
actor of the century," or even
further, "perhaps the greatest
man of the theater ever."
"The only time I ever feel
alive," he once confessed, "is
when I'm acting. If I stopped act-
ing, I'd cut my throat. I have to
act to breathe."
And act he did, playing roles
from The Entertainers Archie
Rice to Oedipus to Hamlet, a mov-
ie that won four Oscars, includ-
ing one for Best Picture and one
for Olivier as Best Actor.
"Olivier played men who were
handsome, nasty, noble, whily,
treachersou, sleazy, awesome,
whining, crippled and mean,"
wrote Megan Rosenfeld in the
Washington Post "He played
fops, kings, soldiers, gods and
lovers, and, once or twice, wom-
en. But he never lost his dignity—
unless it was deliberate."
Even though Olivier lived his
life on the stage as a gifted actor,
he still believed that his family
was the greatest gift of all.
"I know of nothing more beau-
tiful," he said, "than to set off
from home and to look back and
see your young held to a window
and being made to wave at you.
It's better than genius, better
than money."
When Bette Davis died in Octo-
ber of cancer, it marked the pass-
ing of what one critic called "a
force of nature who would have
been burned as a witch in an
earlier time."
In 1937, Davis played a clip-
joint hostess in Marked Woman,
a movie in which she delivered
one of the most famous lines of
her career: "I know all the an-
gles, and I'm smart enough to
keep one step ahead of them."
This was a line that Davis lived
her life by.
After growing up in boarding
schools, a product of her parents'
dissolved marriage, Davis was
subjected to the superficiality of
the Hollywood studio system; her
unconventional looks dismayed
movie moguls. Samuel Goldwyn
took one look at her screen test
and bellowed, " Whom did this to
me?" She was later hired and
fired from Universal by Carl
Laemmle who groaned, "Can you
picture some poor guy going
through hell and high water and
ending up with her at the fade
out?"
Davis fought iike a cat to have
her way and act as she saw fit. In
101 feature films and TV movies,
she created Hollywood's first and
finest portrait of the thoroughly
modern woman.
Davis won two Oscars, the
first in 1936 for her portrayal of
a tart waitress in Dangerous, and
the second for Jezebel in 1938.
She had finally become the boss,
and was not ashamed of praising
herself.
"I was a legendary terror.. .in-
sufferably rude and ill-mannered
in the cultivation of my career,"
she said. "I have been uncompro-
mising, peppery, intractable,
monomaniacal, volatile, tactless
and often-times disagreeable. I
suppose I'm larger than life."
Davis spent her last years in a
brick apartment house in West
Hollywood, and talked unabash-
edly about the prospect of her
death.
"It should be something sud-
den," she said. "I don't want any-
one sending money to any little
charity instead of flowers. I want
millions of flowers... I want every-
one to weep. Copiously."
mariene e. naubert
In "Casualties of War," Michael J. Fox
portrays Eriksson with Sean Penn as
Meserve in this Vietnam War drama.
Fox was ranked no.6 in TV Guide's top
20 personalities listing.
7
L Entertainment
As a freelance undercover man, Bill
Cosby stars in "Leonard Part 6." Cosby
was best known for his sitcom The Cosby
Show. Photo by Columbia Pictures
TV's Top 10 Personalities
In the 1980's, television re-
:orded major events that influ-
nced our lives. History-making
faces like Mikhail Gorbachev be-
came as recognizable as enter-
tainers like Bill Cosby. TV Guide
looked back on the 80's top 10
television personalities.
At number 10 was Tom Sel-
eck, who became famous for his
•ole of Thomas Magnum in CBS'
Magnum P.I.. Selleck epitomized
the ideal male for millions of
American women.
At number nine was Michael
J. Fox, who portrayed Alex P.
Keaton on Family Ties and later
went on to motion picture suc-
cess in Back to the Future.
In eighth place was late
nighter David Letterman, who
brought insomnia and top-10 lists
into vogue on his weeknight
show, NBC's Late Night With Da-
vid Letterman.
If a Barbie doll came to life
she'd want to be number seven,
Vanna White, America's favorite
letter turner from Wheel of
Fortune.
At number six was Ted Kop-
pel, another night owl. He first
came into the public eye in the
late 70's when he hosted "The
Iran Crisis: America Held Hos-
tage." He stayed on the air as the
host of Nightline after the hos-
tages were released.
Before Leona Helmsley, there
was number five Joan Collins. As
vixenish career woman Alexis
Carrington on ABC's Dynasty.
She capitalized on her fame by
launching a line of cosmetics and
writing a best-selling autobiogra-
phy and novel.
In fourth place was 40th Presi-
dent Ronald Reagan. Even
though his presidency saw its
share of scandal, nothing could
mar his squeaky-clean image.
Number three was talk show
host Oprah Winfrey. Oprah was a
late-eighties phenomenon whose
gift of intimacy made audiences
feel as if they had a friend on the
other side of the screen.
Larry Hagman came in at
number two for his portrayal of
J.R. Ewing from CBS' Dallas. He
played the villain so well that
millions of viewers became
hooked on what became TV's
greatest cliffhanger: Who shot
J.R.?
At number one was Bill Cosby.
Near the top of the Nielsens
since its debut in 1984, NBC's
The Cosby Show became a Thurs-
day night staple. Whether in
books, TV, or comedy albums,
"Cos" relied on gentle, feel-good
family humor.
marlene e. naubert
KfirPWW 17 (c 3
in, m/iM)
NOVEMBER:
4. ..Thailand's worst typhoon in 35
years ravages gulf of Thailand and
Unocal oil rig Seacrest capsizes. At
least 200 die in storm, 447 more
missing.
9.. .East Germany lifts travel restric-
tions and opens gateways through
Berlin Wall.
14.. .Czechoslovakia announces it will
open borders.
16.. .South African government an-
nounces it will repeal law allowing
segregated public facilities.
17. ..Hundreds of demonstrators
clubbed and tear-gassed as riot police
crush peaceful demonstration in
Prague, Czechoslovakia.
29.. .Czechoslovak Parliament deletes
leading role of Communist Party
from constitution after massive pro-
tests force resignations of Commu-
nist hard-liners.
DECEMBER:
1-9. ..Dissident elements in Philippine
military launch unsuccessful coup at-
tempt against Corazon Aquino's
government.
3. ..East German Communist leader
Krenz and ruling party Politburo re-
sign two days after Parliament votes
to eliminate party's constitutional
guarantee of power.
10.. .Czechoslovakia's hard-line Com-
munist President Gustav Husak re-
signs after swearing in Cabinet domi-
nated by non-communists.
20.. .American military invasion force
attacks Panamanian military bases
in bid to oust and capture Noriega.
24.. .Deposed Panamanian strongman
Noriega takes refuge in the Vatican
Embassy in Panama City and asks
for asylum. The U.S. demands that he
be turned over to face drug-traffick-
ing charges in Florida, creating a
stalemate.
30...The U.S. Embassy calls a deci-
sion to expel 20 diplomats from Nica-
ragua "drastic and unjustified" after
U.S. troops in Panama search what
they believe to be the Nicaraguan
ambassador's residence.
Compiled by The Arizona Republic
News In Review 32 M
PLAYERS OF THE YEAR:
Major Leagues. ..Kevin Mitchell, out-
fielder, San Francisco Giants
NFL.. .Joe Montana, quarterback, San
Francisco 49ers
NBA.. .Michael Jordan, guard, Chica-
go Bulls
NHL.. .Mario Lemieux, center, Pitts-
burg Penguins
WINNERS OF 1989-90:
1989 World Series . . . Oakland
Athletics
1990 Super Bowl . . . San Francisco
49ers
1989 NBA Champions . . . Detroit
Pistons
1989 NHL Champions . . . Calgary
Flames
7
N News In Review
Not So Rosy
Everything was coming up
Rose's, Pete Rose's that is, when
a 225-page report was released in
1989 that told of his unaccept-
able gambling habits.
One of the most well known
rules is "Rule 21(d)" that clearly
states:
"Any player, umpire or club or
league official or employee, who
shall bet any sum whatsoever
upon any baseball game in con-
nection with which the bettor
has no duty to perform, shall be
declared ineligible for one year.
Any player, umpire or club or
league official or employee, who
shall bet any sum whatsoever
upon any baseball game in con-
nection with which the bettor
has a duty to perform shall be
declared permanently ineligible."
Rose had a problem because
sources had leaked to the former
baseball commissioner Peter Ue-
berroth that Rose was participat-
ing is such bets. When Ueberroth
was replaced by Bart Giamatti
the investigation continued.
John Dowd, baseball's special
council was asked to investigate.
Some key witnesses came for-
ward and their testimony started
to imply Rose's guilt even
further.
Ron Peters, one of Rose's for-
mer bookies supplied the most
damaging testimony in the case.
He said that Rose started to bet
on baseball games. Many times,
he added, Rose would bet on his
own team to win.
In addition, Peters submitted
some betting slips that he had
saved that allegedly were Rose's.
He said he had kept those for
protection because Rose was not
always prompt in paying off his
debts.
Another witness, Paul Janzen,
who also accepted bets from
Rose, delivered more damaging
testimony.
In the report outline, Janzen
said that Rose had run up huge
gambling debts that had forced
him to sell cars and repeatedly
take out bank loans. He added
that in a three-month period
Rose got $400,000 in debt.
Rose publicly denied having
bet on any baseball game and
said the same in a sworn deposi-
tion to Dowds before the pending
trial Rose also denied having
been in debt because of
gambling.
Judge Norbert Nadel of the
Hamilton County Commons Pleas
Court challenged Giamatti's au-
thority over the matter and
granted Rose a temporary re-
straining order to block Rose's
hearing with Giamatti in the
commissioner's office.
The restraining order was
sought by Rose's lawyers because
they felt that both Dowd and
Giamatti were prejudiced against
Rose and had already found him
guilty.
Rose's lawyers also questioned
the credibility of Dowd's witness-
es. Both Janzen and Peters were
convicted felons.
Dowd countered that both of
their testimonies had been cor-
roborated by other witnesses,
tape recordings of Rose's tele-
phone calls and the betting
sheets that a retired FBI expert
identified as Rose's handwriting.
In a TIME/CNN opinion poll
taken at the beginning of July
only 30 percent of the 504 people
questioned thought that Rose
should be suspended from base-
ball for life if the accusations
were correct; 40 percent said he
should only be suspended for a
year; 20 percent were against
any type of suspension at all.
When the case was finally
heard, despite the protest of
many onlookers, Rose was sus-
pended from baseball indefinite-
ly. Russ Nixon replaced Rose as
manager of the Cincinnati Reds.
This case most likely will not
quickly fade from sight. After a
year's time Rose will be allowed
to appeal the decision to see if
baseball will ever be back in his
cards.
amara fotenos
Banned from baseball for life, Cincin-
nati Reds manager Pete Rose experi-
ences one last game in uniform. Rose
was found guilty of placing bets on ma-
Looking for an open receiver, Sar
Francisco 49ers quaterback Joe Montam
carries the ball during the NFC division
al playoff game. Later that month, Mon
tana led his team to a Superbowl win
Photo by Wide World Photos
Super Bowl Blowout
Forget the commercials, the
Super Bowl proved that it was
oe who really knew football.
Joe Montana set eight Super
3owl game and career records as
le led San Francisco to a re-
funding 55-10 victory over the
Denver Broncos in the twenty-
fourth renewal of the football
lassie.
The 49ers used the same com-
plete arsenal in New Orleans
hat leveled their NFC playoff
opponents. Roger Craig, Brent
Jones, Bill Rathman, Jerry Rice,
and John Taylor all found their
way into the endzone as Montana
distributed the wealth equally.
Montana's counterpart John
Elway, often considered the most
physically talented quarterback
in football, lost for the third time
- super style.
The San Francisco defense
kept Elway from finding his
rhythm during the game. He
completed his first pass to a wide
receiver just prior to the first
half's two - minute warning.
In comparison, Montana com-
pleted 22 of 29 pass atttempts for
297 yards and five touchdowns.
As a result, the 49ers had posses-
sion of the ball for two-thirds of
the game.
The victory was San Francis-
co's fourth Super Bowl win in
eight years. Meanwhile, the
Broncos cuffered their fourth
setback in as many NFL
appearances.
But true to competitive nature,
the quarterbacks both vowed to
return to compete in the Super
Spectacle.
erik leverson
Garvey Taints
Pristine Image
When it came to women, for-
mer baseball player Steve Gar-
vey had all bases loaded, but in
1989 this team play lead to major
league woman trouble.
In 1981, Garvey struck out in
love and divorced his college
sweetheart Cyndy Truman. They
had been married for 10 years.
Despite their rocky break-up
Gavey remained popular among
fans for his all-American image.
For years sports commentators
and writers had nothing but good
words to describe Garvey.
"He's so clean, he squeaks,"
one writer was reported to have
written.
Despite all this positive public-
ity, Garvey bcame the center of
scandal in 1989 when he made
his second trip down the aisle
with 30-year-old Candace
Thomas.
The first strike against Garvey
came less than a week after his
second wedding when Judith
Ross, a former girlfriend of Gar-
vey's, announced that she had
just given birth to his child. Gar-
vey promptly replied that he
would pay child support should a
test prove that the child was his.
Unfortunately for Garvey an-
other curve ball was thrown at
him. A former fiancee, Rebecka
Mendenhall, 33, went public with
her own story of Garvey
heartbreak.
After a 2 1/2 year relation-
ship, Garvey and Mendhall had
planned to marry. They met in
1986 and by 1988 they were talk-
ing about marriage and children.
During this entire time, how-
ever, Garvey was also busy mak-
ing similar promises to Judith
Ross. In November 1987, Ross
said she found out about Gar-
vey's "other woman" and refused
to see him. Garvey continued to
push her to marry him.
Garvey's juggling act became
even more difficult as both Ross
and Mendenhall found out that
they were pregnant and gave
him the news. At this point, Men-
denhall knew about Garvey's re-
lations with Ross and Ross was
aware of Garvey's relationship
with Mendenhall. Both women,
however, were shocked to find
out that yeat another woman had
entered the picture.
Garvey broke the news to both
Ross and Mendenhall that his
new love was Thomas. After a
whirlwind courtship, they mar-
ried on Feb. 20.
Garvey's "other women" were
left dumbfounded, and decided to
go public with their stories.
"I don't want to crucify him,"
said Mendenhall in an interview.
"I just want the truth to come
out."
Through the midst of the scan-
dal breaking, Thomas remained
at Garvey's side. She said she has
forgiven him and thinks it is un-
fortunate that these two women
will have to become single
parents.
Thomas added that she and
Garvey would be willing to adopt
the two children whould the
mothers want that. As of yet, nei-
ther Ross nor Mendenhall has
jumped at the offer.
Through the entire uncovering
of the stories, Garvey has main-
tained his innocence but said he
will take care of the two
children.
Garvey said in an interview
with : "I'm doing the right thing.
With my Roman Catholic up-
bringing, I have a set of princi-
ples that serve me well in good
times and bad."
amara fotenos
Sports News 32
<3
Western Rockers Convey
Drug Message To Russia
Western rock went to Russia
in a major way at the Moscow
Music and Peace Festival, a two-
day event designed to raise mon-
ey for drug programs on both
sides of the slowly crumbling
Iron Curtain. The stars of the
two day-long shows were Bon
Jovi, Motley Crue, Ozzy Os-
bourne, Skid Row, Cinderella,
Gorky Park and the Scorpions.
They drew a sold-out crowd of
150,000 people to Moscow's Lenin
Stadium for an unprecedented
dose of noisy Western decadence.
Proceeds from the shows were
donated to the Make a Difference
Foundation, the non-profit anti-
drug organization that artists'
manager Doc McGhee was or-
dered to establish after he plead-
ed guilty to importing 40,000
pounds of marijuana into the
United States.
"The money will go to clinics
here (in the Soviet Union) for
supplies and to allow them to
purchase these things in hard
currency," said Jon Bon Jovi,
who along with McGhee and So-
viet musical pioneer Stas Namin,
was one of the festival's major
organizers.
McGhee also added that some
of the money would go toward
education.
"The ruble side of it, as much
as is left, will be put into educa-
tion for doctors to be brought to
the West and doctors from the
West brought to the Soviet Union
in order to show them how they
treat and prevent alcohol and
drug abuse," he said.
The bands flew to the Soviet
Union aboard the "Magic Bus", a
chartered 757. On the flight, no
alcohol was served and passen-
gers wore buttons proclaiming
"Just Say Nyet".
"Basically, I think the mes-
sage is peace and understanding
through music," said Bon Jovi
guitarist Richie Sambora. "A C
chord in America is the same
thing as a C chord in Russia or
anywhere else, so this is a mes-
sage from youth to youth."
Each band played a set that
lasted about 45 minutes. All of
the performers contributed a
song to a benefit album entitled
"Stairway to Heaven, Highway to
Hell". The only criterion for the
choice of song was that the song
had to come from an artist who
died from alcohol or drug abuse.
The all-star jam from the end of
the Moscow concert was also in-
cluded on the album.
In the past, Russian audiences
were restrained in how they
could act at concerts. However,
after perestroika, the Soviet gov-
ernment lightened up.
"They react as crazy as any
audience in the world," said the
Scorpions' Matthias Jabs.
"They're really hungry for it and
they haven't seen so much-but
it's a great feeling playing for
them because everything is so
new over here."
Alexei Belov, of the Russian
group Gorky Park, said that Sovi-
et kids had been excited about
the concert since it had been
announced.
The Western bands were full
aware of the impact that their
participation had on Soviet
youth. Sambora called the event
"an investment in the future of
the world", while Cinderella's
Fred Coury said that it was "a
great way to help show kids that
drugs and alcohol aren't what
you need to have fun".
"It was an experience I'll nev-
er forget," said Bon Jovi, in a
Rolling Stone interview. "It was
like nothing you'd ever been led
to believe~I had always thought
it would be like Red Dawn, and
guys with Olympic medals, and
all that stuff. But people are peo-
ple wherever you go, and a lot of
people enjoy rock and roll."
marlene e. naubert
7
P Music News
At a press conference, Jon Bon Jovi,
Tommy Lee and Jan Ianenkov release
plans for the Moscow Festival. The event
drew 150,000. Photo by RM Photo Ser-
vice
Singing songs of peace, Tracy Chapman
brings Amnesty International's message
of human rights. Sting, Peter Gabriel,
and Bruce Springsteen also participated.
Human Rights On Tour
Of the popular causes of the
late 80's, few were as celebrat-
ed as Amnesty International's
worldwide rock'n'roll crusade
entitled Human Right's Now.
Big-name entertainers Peter
Gabriel, Sting, Bruce Spring-
steen, Tracy Chapman, and Sen-
egalese musician Youssou
N'Dour carried Amnesty's mes-
sage to 19 cities on five conti-
nents in six weeks, beginning in
London and concluding in South
America.
Amnesty International was
an organization that tried to
protect human rights and pro-
test, when necessary, in the
form of letter-writing cam-
paigns. Its criteria was based on
the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, which was
adopted by the United Nations
General Assembly in 1948.
In an article from The New
Republic, Bruce Springsteen
said, "When I was a kid I got a
sense of many things from rock
music. I got a sense of good
times, of what living could be
about, a sense of sex, a sense of
human possibility. Most of all I
got a sense of freedom.. .When
you grow up, the problem is
finding a way of holding on to
your idealism after you lose
your innocence. I think Amnes-
ty International is an organiza-
tion that allows you to do that."
High ticket prices ($35) in
Europe and Japan subsidized
the immense logistical costs
and low ticket prices (a dollar
or two) in impoverished areas
of Africa, India and Latin
America.
"We've all read articles
about the phenomenon of peo-
ple becoming 'aided-out,' over-
loaded by worthy causes. It is
easy for young people to feel
cynical. Amnesty offers them a
kind of activity in which simple
individual action can make a
difference. It tells them that by
taking a few minutes and writ-
ing a letter you can be the per-
son who pulls someone out of
torture and prison half a world
away," Peter Gabriel said.
marlene e. naubert
OSCAR WINNERS:
PICTURE: Driving Miss Daisy
DIRECTOR: Oliver Stone, Born on the
Fourth of July
ACTOR: Daniel Day-Lewis, My Left
Foot
ACTRESS: Jessica Tandy, Driving
Miss Daisy
SUPPORTING ACTRESS: Brenda
Fricker, My Left Foot
SUPPORTING ACTOR: Denzel Wash-
ington, Glory
ART DIRECTOR: Batman
ORIGINAL MUSICAL SCORE: Alan
Menken, The Little Mermaid
MAKE-UP: Driving Miss Daisy
BEST FOREIGN FILM: Cinema Para-
diso (Italy)
News In Review 33,
<T\
, I ERENADE
H inging to a sold-
11 out crowd at the
University Activi-
ty Center, Neil Dia-
mond performs "You
Don't Bring Me Flow-
ers." Initially sched-
uled for one night,
concert promoters ex-
tended Diamond's en-
gagement for two
nights, April 21 and 22.
Layout by David Kexel
I
4 Concerts
MUSIC FOR THE
HEP*
/
*
m
•lovering the crowd like a blanket,
1/ darkness enveloped the auditorium
as the crowd's murmur anticipated his
entrance. Suddenly, red laser lights
flashed across the ceiling's black back-
ground and the crowd's applause cres-
cendoed as Neil Diamond appeared
through the smoke that swept across
the stage.
Bringing his tour to the University
Activity Center on April 21 and 22, Dia-
mond promoted his new album "The
Best Years of Our Lives." Diamond also
entertained die-hard fans with old fa-
vorites like "Sweet Caroline" during the
two-hour, no-intermission concert.
This scene repeated itself several
times but with different acts and audi-
ences as the UAC and Gammage Audito-
rium played host to other performers
such as Debbie Gibson, the Doobie
Brothers and the Fine Young Cannibals.
ASU Public Events, with publicity
help from Associated Students, lured
these performers to the Valley for some
of the hottest music around. (Continued
I on page 36)
Concerts 31
MUSIC FOR THE
MASSES
the
SHOW WAS EXCEL-
LENT. SHE COVERED
EVERYTHING, EVEN
A MEDLEY OF MO-
TOWN OLDIES. DEB-
BIE GIBSON IS A
VERY TALENTED
YOUNG LADY.
LARRY KISNER
SENIOR
AEROSPACE
ENGINEERING
ff
Filling the arena with his
own special blend of rock, roll,
and rebellion, Tom Petty infect-
ed the audience with his "Full
Moon Fever" tour. The two-
hour set included such hits as
"Free Falling" and "I Won't Back Down", as well as Petty
standards as "Refugee" and "Don't Do Me Like That".
"He played what the crowd wanted to hear and not just what
he wanted to play. There was an up attitude and a lot of
excitement," said senior Neil Rosen.
In contrast, Petty's opening act, the Replacements, was
not as well received.
"Some sections of the crowd got to the point of asking
them to get off the stage," Rosen said.
In October, Fine Young Cannibals came to Grady Gam-
mage Memorial Auditorium with the Mint Juleps, and Tom
Tom Club filling in for ailing opener Neneh Cherry.
"Tom Tom Club was very good. They got the audience
into it and were very energetic. They were probably better
than Fine Young Cannibals," said freshman Nicole
Conway.
She also added that the crowd seemed to enjoy the a
cappella opening act, the Mint Juleps.
On Oct. 12, Debbie Gibson brought her "Electric Youth"
tour to the UAC, drawing a diverse audience from grade
school children escorted by their parents to ASU students.
Gibson, a 19-year-old musical prodigy, literally pulled
the audience into her act by bringing members of the
audience onto the stage with her to sing her last encore,
"Electric Youth". The song left the audience dancing in
their seats.
Coming together for a reunion, The Doobie Brothers
played the UAC on Sept. 27 despite the absence of Michael
McDonald. Henry Lee Summer opened for the group with
hits like "Wish I Had a Girl Like That."
The Doobies mixed sets with old hits and songs from
their latest LP, Cycles.
From the mellow sounds of Neil Diamond to the modern vibes
of Fine Young Cannibals, campus concerts had a sound for any
listner. It was a season of music for the masses.
TQaxkn t £.-fV3^
I ANNIBALS
H ranking out hits
W like "She Drives
" Me Crazy," the
Fine Young Cannibals
perform at Gammage
Auditorium on Oct. 3.
The Tom Tom Club and
Mint Juleps opened for
F.Y.C. in front of a
near-capacity crowd.
Photo by Tom Hershey
P6 Concerts
H EARTBREAKER
H eating up the Uni-
J | versity Activity
Center, Tom Petty
and the Heartbreakers
publicize their latest al-
bum, Full Moon Fever.
Petty's stage set fea-
tured medieval banners
and knights'armors.
SEUNION
euniting for a new
album, The Doobie
Brothers rocked at
the University Activity
Center on Sept. 27. The
group performed clas-
sics like "Blackwater"
and new releases from
their current album,
Cycles.
(EEN QUEEN
aking the stage at
the University Ac-
tivity Center, Deb-
bie Gibson tours to pro-
mote her second LP,
Electric Youth Gibson
performed on Oct. 12
singing top hits like
"Lost in Your Eyes."
Layout by David Kexel
Concerts 3
1
CAST CRUSADE
ike father like son,
tempers flare in
Indiana Jones and
the Last Crusade, with
Harrison Ford in the ti-
tle role and Sean Con-
nery as his father. In-
tense planning went
into the action-packed
film, the final install-
ment of the series.
Layout by Tina Amodio
BAT-MOBILIA
ringing in the
bucks with every-
thing from Bat-
man dolls to Joker
watches, the summer
blockbuster, Batman,
recreated the comic
book craze and was the
biggest hit of the year.
Jack Nicholson starred
as the Joker, opposite
Michael Keaton as the
Caped Crusader.
I
8 Movies
FLICKS BOMBARD BOX
-v;.'.
A
Ouh nuh nuh nuh nuh nuh nuh nuh nuh nuh nuh nuh nuh
nuh nuh nuh BATMAN! 1989 was the year of the Caped
Crusader (sans Robin) and his archenemy, the Joker. This
long-awaited film sparked a craze of Bat-mobilia and
merchandising.
Some, however, thought that the movie did not live up
to all of the hype surrounding its release.
"I thought it was boring. I expected much more from all
the buildup," sophomore Joy Bell said.
Although Batman was unarguably the most-publicized
movie of the year, it did not seem to overshadow other
popular movies of the Summer of 1989.
Dead Poets' Society, starring Robin Williams brought
critical acclaim and big box office dollars, as well as kudos
from the movie-going public.
"I thought his [Williams'] acting was superb, and he
played the part extremely well. He makes you feel as if he
is his character and not just an actor," said freshman
architecture major Mike Carson.
Another summer blockbuster was The Abyss, starring
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio. This adventure film used
underwater special effects to dramatize a journey into the
unknown.
Yet even with all the original movies released in the
summer of 1989, it could still be called, "A Summer of
Sequels."
Harrison Ford reprised his role as Indiana Jones in
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, as did the entire cast
of Ghostbusters II. Mel Gibson and Danny Glover returned
to battle corrupt South African nationals in Lethal Weapon II.
"He [Gibson] made the movie," senior political science major
Beth Welling said. "He was pretty sensational. I don't think the
movie would have been as successful without him."
WASN'T WHAT I EX-
PECTED. THE BEST
PART WAS JACK
NICHOLSON. HE DID
AN INCREDIBLE JOB.
I REALLY THOUGHT
HE WAS PSYCHO.
AMY MALIGA
SENIOR
BROADCASTING
ON THAU
n
iTj0xhn«-L^> l AS^ ,
I
EEP SEA
ivers work on an
oil-drilling habitat
in The Abyss, but
1 the mission becomes an
£ unexpected journey.
■2 The Abyss featured ex-
•gtensive underwater
* photography.
I ANG, BANG
1 1 ack on the beat in
1 1 Lethal Weapon 2,
Mel Gibson and
Danny Glover battle
corrupt South African
nationals. Lethal Weap-
on 2 was one of the
summer blockbusters.
Movies
1
GAMMAGE SEES
SILVER
M o party hats, streamers or birthday
I w cake here, just a lot of anniversary
hoopla.
Sept. 18 marked the 25th Anniversa-
ry season of the Grady Gammage Me-
morial Auditorium, a season filled with
musicals like the award-winning CATS
to special-interest performances like
Warren Miller's "Salute to Skiing."
Gammage Auditorium, named after
founder and former President Grady
Gammage, was designed by architect
Frank Lloyd Wright. The two men, how-
ever, died before the project was com-
pleted, so Lewis J. Ruskin and William
Wesley Peters completed the final
details.
On Sept. 16, 1964, after 25 months of
construction and $2.4 million, Gammage
opened with a formal dedication. The
structure enclosed 75,000 square feet,
stood 80 feet high and featured two
sloping bridges which stretched 200
feet on each side of the auditorium.
Twenty-five years and two face-lifts
later, Gammage still stood as an ASU
landmark and symbol of Arizona's per-
forming arts. (Continued on page 42)
Gammage
D
IZZY
uring an Oct. 29
concert, trumpet
legend Dizzy Gil-
lespie performs at
Gammage in "Dizzy
and Mr. B Salute the
Count." The one-night
performance featured
the Progressive Jazz of
SGillespie, Billy Eckstine
|and the Count Basie Or-
chestra conducted by
sFrank Foster.
Layout by David Kexel
Gammage 41
GAMMAGE SEES
SILVER
THOUGHT CATS
WAS GREAT. IT WAS
THE FIRST TIME I
EVER SAW IT, AND I
WAS REALLY EXCIT-
ED.
TRACY NELSON
SOPHOMORE
FINE ARTS
QUI! iff
ON THAT!/ 7
In order to get the season off
to an electric start, the Broad-
way hit CATS opened the the-
ater series. All eight perfor-
mances were sold out for the
Tony Award-winning musical
based on T.S. Eliot's group of poems, Old Possum's Book Of
Practical Cats.
"It was really professional," said Katie Burton, who saw
CATS for the first time at Gammage. "I thought it was outstand-
ing how the actors and actresses could sing and dance so well
without seeming to get tired."
As publicized as it was, CATS v/as not the only well-received
performance in the 25th Anniversary season. Itzhak
Perhlman, the world-famous violinist, accompanied by pi-
anist Janet Guggenheim, performed pieces from Beetho-
ven, Bach and Faurde. The audience applauded Perlman
to three encore presentations.
Other musicians featured in Gammage's anniversary
season included Billy Eckstine, Dizzy Gillespie and the
Count Basie Orchestra. These performers struck up their
special brand of jazz for a single concert on Oct. 29.
"The Count Basie concert was really fun," Beth Ryan, a
gammage employee and ASU student, said. "They played
all of the old hits."
Eckstine's smooth baritone voice brought back memo-
ries with old-time favorites such as "All of Me" and "Blue
Moon," while Gillespie and his famous trumpet played
songs such as "Lorraine" and "I Remember Clifford."
Although CATS y/ as the high-light of Gammage's 25th
Anniversary theater series, Me and My Girl and West Side
Story, two more musicals, were also included in the sea-
son. Me and My Girl, starring Adam Graham and Evy
O'Rourke, ran for two shows. The musical, about a young
cockney who suddenly finds himself an earl but remains
true to his unaristocratic girlfriend, Sally, was produced
by Musical Theatre Group in conjuction with Musical
Theatre Associates.
West Side Story, presented by Musical Theatre of Arizona,
was billed for four evening performances and two matinees. The
plot of this modern musical was reminiscent of Shakespeare's
Romeo and Juliet. Similar to the classic play, the musical ended
the tragic death.
In the end this hit season of musicals and concerts helped
Gammage shine as bright as silver during it's 25th Anniversary.
UET
Iuring his Oct. 18
concert, world-
? famous violinist
Itzhak Perlman per-
forms with pianist Ja-
net Guggenheim. Perl-
man played pieces from
Beethoven, Bach and
Faurde and returned to
the stage for three en-
cores. Photo by T.J. So-
kol
Layout by David Kexel
YMM
I
2 Gammage
»«r
' ^,
n AR POOL
I raising the Gam-
I J mage stage, the
" cast of Me and My
Girl pile aboard a
make-shift car. Adam
Graham and Eva
O'Rourke starred in
this musical. Photo by
T.J. Sokol
UMBLE
eady to take on
the Sharks, mem-
bers of the Jets
prepare to fight their
rival gang in West Side
Story. The musical re-
§ created Shakespeare's
| Romeo and Juliet on
| the streets of New
jYork.
o
Gammage 4
I
I
AND SHAKE
elping relax the
atmosphere, DEX
Vice President Ke-
vin Schaeffer and Resi-
dent Assistant Carlos
Galdino-Elvira perform
a skit. October was
named GO MAD month,
Go Out and Make A Dif-
ference.
4 GO MAD
I MALL TALK
H itting around dis-
l | cussing the semi-
*J nar are REACH'S
Karen Handwerker, Ac-
tivities Vice President
J'lein Leise and Engi-
neering and Applied
Sciences PresidentLu^e
Maze. The retreat unit-
ed campus leaders.
Layout by Tina Amodio
■ HMO
<?
Ho'ku:
CAMPUS LEADERS
GO MAD
Crazy! Insane! GO MAD!
GO MAD stood for "Go Out and Make A Difference,"
which was a month long series of leadership activities and
seminars held in October. It was organized by the Associated
Students Leadership Institute.
The whole month of events started on Oct. 3 with an
opening reception in the M.U.
"The opening reception succeeded in offering all cam-
pus clubs the opportunity for networking throughout the
month of GO MAD events," said Director of the Leader-
ship Institute John Giuliano.
The month continued with events focusing on refining
leadership skills. Some of the seminars were "Marketing
Yourself for Leadership," "Scruples and Leadership," and
the "Campus-wide Organizations Retreat".
This retreat was held at ASU's Camp Tontozona. Giu-
liano said that sessions on self-discovery, exploration in
values, risk-taking, and effective communication skills
were held.
"What I thought was best about the All-Campus Retreat
was that I knew about three people going in, but then I
met about 60 other people," said sophomore Jennie Stark.
Another highlight of the month was the much-publi-
cized Ed Meese/George McGovern debate, which was part
of ASASU's Lecture Series.
The closing ceremonies were held on Oct. 27 in the M.U.
"The closing was fun because you got to see a lot of
people you met on the retreat," Stark said. "It was a time
to touch base again."
The title of GO MAD was established through a joint
effort between the Student Foundation and the Leader-
ship Institute to bring a few already established events
and several new ones together under one name for a
month filled with activities, Giuliano said.
"Each organization planned, promoted, and facilitated
their own event. We just brought everything together," he
added.
He also said that after this first year of GO MAD, it would
hopefully continue each year around October or November.
"GO MAD brought about more awareness for these leader-
ship activities, invited all clubs to attend, and brought in more
participants," Giuliano said.
SO MANY SEMINARS
OFFERING LEADER-
SHIP DEVELOPMENT
WERE PLANNED FOR
OCTOBER, WE DE-
CIDED TO ADD A
FEW MORE EVENTS
AND HAVE A COM-
PLETE MONTH DEDI-
CATED TO LEADER-
SHIP ENHANCE-
MENT.
JOHN GULIANO
DIRECTOR
LEADERSHIP INSTITUTE
ff
H-W^^ UjU^l
II
EAD HONCHO
olding a session on
communication is
John Guliano, Di-
rector of Leadership In-
stitute. Guliano spent
many hours putting to-
gether GO MAD.
45 GO MA 1
1
AY TOGO!
ith a look of pure
satisfaction, engi-
neering students
let loose after the sum-
mer graduation ceremo-
ny. Six hundred of the
estimated 1,400 gradua-
tion candidates attend-
ed the Aug. 11 sumer
graduation.
HELPING HANDS
elping the hearing
impaired partici-
pate in The Pledge
of Allegiance, inter-
preter Janet Barrett
uses sign language.
Summer graduation
was held August 11 in
the UAC.
J] AMILY AFFAIR
L ormally present-
I 1 ing William Ka-
■*• jika wa with a hon-
orary Doctor of Laws
Degree, interm Presi-
dent Richard Peck ac-
knowledges Kajikawa's
50-plus years of service.
Acting Vice President
of Student Affairs
Christine Wilkinson
supports her father
during the summer
commencement.
Layout by Amy Bowling
B6 Graduation
GRADUATES TURN
it fter thousands of dollars and years of study, approximate-
MM ly 2,800 students gathered to celebrate with their families
* ■ and friends at the 1989 Spring Graduation in the
University Activity Center.
Because of the large number of students participating
in the graduation ceremonies, the traditional commence-
ment program was split into two ceremonies, at 9:30 a.m.
and 1:30 p.m. on May 12. Approximately 3,480 candidates
graduated in the spring.
One of the highlights of the spring ceremony was the
appearance of distinguished journalist and CBS correspon-
dent Walter Cronkite, who received an honorary doctoral
degree at the ceremony.
Raising the volume level, Master of Ceremonies Eldean
Bennett honored all the parents in the audience by having
them stand admidst the cheering and whistling of the
graduates, who offered thanks for making it all possible.
"I wanted my parents to see me graduate," said eco-
nomics major Jerry Iuliano when asked by he had partici-
pated in the graduation ceremony.
Approximately 650 of the estimated 1400 summer grad-
uate candidates attended the ceremony on Aug. 11 at the
UAC.
t£rson
TTENDED THE
GRADUATION CERE-
MONY BECAUSE I
WANTED TO FEEL A
SENSE OF COMPLE-
TION AT ASU.
MARK VIROSTEK
SENIOR
PSYCHOLOGY
*
i\ MIGOS
I lready celebrat-
I ing, graduates
I \ Carlos Lujan,
Thomas Rief and Rob-
ert Mendez wear their
g- sombreros proudly. The
1 spring graduation was
„ split into two ceremo-
| nies to accomodate the
| 2,800 candidates.
Graduation
1
»S"^^$S
Getting a closer look
mechanical engineering
student David Kezell
adjusts the solar tracker. The
College of Engineering made
strides in solar research. Pho-
to by Tammy Vrettos
I b FORT; l) n. total work done to
achieve a particular end. 2) n. the devo-
tion to achieve academic excellence by
balancing book learning and community
service.
On any given night, the lights of Hay-
den Library illuminated Cady Mall, re-
vealing cubicle after cubicle full of stu-
dents with noses buried in various
textbooks. When it came to academics,
students got an "A + " for effort.
Putting books aside, the ASU Law Clin-
ic gave future lawyers the opportunity to
handle real-life legalities. Student attor-
neys represented AIDS patients and oth-
ers who were unable to afford profession-
^p legal services.
Psychiatric nursing students also ben-
ited from hands-on experience. Under-
rads and graduate students worked with
patients to dispel the myths associated
with mental illness.
Graduate students in the College of
usiness beefed up their education when
.dministrators cut the fat from the MBA
and PhD programs. The new program
made ASU more competitive with other
top business schools around the nation.
Faculty and students continued to im-
ove the world as they improved their
inds; their outstanding effort made a
statement without exclaiming a word.
Carving a gothic style
pumpkin, architecture
graduate student Sandy
Cousins participates in the
carving contest sponsored by
Women in Architecture. Other
architecture and environmen-
tal design students also joined
in the Halloween festivities.
SECTION
EDITOR:
Craig
Valenzuela
Academics 49
^^ reaking through the doors of the newly con-
^^ structed architecture building, students carry
black and silver balloons. Students, faculty and staff
joined in on the dedication ceremonies.
ft ohn Meunier, Dean of The College of Archi-
w tecture, opens Silver Jubliee Week with the
dedication of the new architecture building. The Sil-
ver Jubliee marked the college's 25th birthday.
I
Architecture
1.
SILVER JUBILEE
s4*c6itecUtne manfo
TOttt, ce£eSraCc<m
A
25-year anniversary could
only come once in a a life-
time. When ASU's College
of Architecture and Envi-
ronmental Design turned
25, there were two reasons
to celebrate: the depart-
ment's 25th year as a college and the
opening of the new architecture building.
A month of festivities was planned and
called the Silver Jubilee.
Laurel Kimball, department officer for
the college, headed the committee which
organized the Silver Jubilee. One of the
first events on the agenda was to dedi-
cate the building, which is called the Ar-
chitecture and Environmental Design
Building North.
"We just dedicated it to the use of the
college, the students, the faculty, and the
staff," she said. "The students were in-
volved in the dedication."
According to Kimball, the new archi-
tecture building drew rave reviews from
the students, faculty and designers of the
college.
"The architects and designers of the
college are very enthusiastic about the
building. We are seeing a difference in
tt& 25t6 yea*
dedication
the students. The students are all in one
area, when they used to be scattered
around campus," Kimball said.
The building, however, sometimes
drew less than rave reviews from the
public.
"I think the general public is hesitant
when they see the outside. Sometimes
they're not sure they like the bright col-
ors or the bars on the windows. Almost
always when they get inside, they're
amazed at what a beautiful building it
is," Kimball said.
The activities following the dedication
included an array of keynote speakers,
exhibits of various works by faculty and
students alike, and tours of ASU and Old
Town Tempe.
Although Kimball said at least half of
the time over the last six to eight months
was spent organizing the celebration, she
felt that her time was well-spent.
"We've had good response. We hope
that some of the people in the community
will be enthusiastic by what they learn
about us," Kimball said.
^^ isplaying masks of creativity, students take
■^ part in the festivities. Students applied skills
learned in class to make the masks. Photo by Tammy
Vrettos i
Architecture 51
^^ n the roof of the Engineering Research Cen-
CX ler, graduate student Hamza Habib crouches
under the reflector. Mechanical engineering graduate
students spent many research hours determining the
sun's utilization. Photo hy Tammy Vrettos
^£ djusting the solar tracker,graduate mechan-
y *" ical engineering students David Kezell and
Tim Ameel angle the system towards the sun. This
tracking system has been used in research for 15
years to concentrate light on to small solar cells.
^Q osing with a prototype, George Ettenhelm is
r^ part of the team of ASU students who took
part in building the solar car. The finished car com-
peted against teams from 31 universities in the 1,800
mile General Motors Sunrayce. Photo by ASU Media
Production.
K
2 Engineering
MAKING WAVES
/4ctvcutce*ne«tt fat ^ccUc%e yettenati&tA
A
SU's Engineering Research
Center was chosen along
with 31 other colleges to
compete in a contest which
involved designing, build-
ing, and then racing a solar
powered car from Disney
World in Florida to Warren, Michigan,
location of the General Motors Technical
Center.
The contest, which was sponsored by
General Motors, was titled "GM Sunrayce
USA," and was the second of such races
GM had participated in. GM had previ-
ously won by a large margin with their
"Sunraycer" solor car in a challenge
which stretched across Australia.
At ASU's Engineering Research Center,
a team of 25 students met weekly to de-
cide how to design, build, and pay for the
the project.
"The obvious goal is to maximize pow-
er and minimize weight," said Professor
Byard Wood, director of Solar Research at
ASU.
According to Wood, the solar car ASU
built was expected to cruise the 1,800
race at 40 MPH on 3-5 horsepower.
Although the project would hover close
to $100,000, its value upon completion
would be $100 million, Wood said.
In the World Solar Challenge that GM
participated in across Australia, their
Sunraycer won the race by a two and one-
half day, 620 mile margin. The Sunraycer
also averaged 41.6 miles per hour during
its five and one-half day sprint.
Professor Wood placed a high value on
projects such as the solar car because of
the advantages created by solar-
technology.
"A solar car provides a future strategy
because it involves renewable energy,"
Wood said. "With it, there is not a deple-
tion of resources or a deterioration of the
environment."
Wood explained that studying solar en-
ergy has become more exciting in recent
years due to the maturing of technology
on the subject.
"We have a good understanding of the
potential now," he said.
^^ oaking in the sun, graduate student Weiguo
*^ Chen examines the solar cells for mechanical
problems. The cells were used in many solar experi-
ments and harnassed the sun's energy. Photo by
Tammy Vrettos
Engineering!
MUSIC MASTER
W M
y goal is to make ASU the
best place in the nation to
get good orchestral train-
ing, and to make this the
finest university orchestra
in the country," said Henry
Charles Smith, the new
of the ASU Symphony
conductor
Orchestra.
Smith spent 19 years as the resident
conductor of the Minnesota Orchestra in
Minneapolis and was a solo trombonist
with the Philadelphia Orchestra when he
played at the dedication of Grady Gam-
mage Memorial Auditorium.
As the conductor of ASU's Symphony
Orchestra, he helped celebrate the 25th
Anniversary of the auditorium with the
world premiere of Devices and Desires,
composed by ASU faculty member Ran-
dall Shinn.
On the orchestra's calendar were com-
positions featuring two of ASU's School of
Music faculty members. On Nov. 3 the
Symphony Orchestra performed Shosta-
kovich's Cello Concerto in E Flat with
cellist Takayori P. Atsumi and on March
14 clarinetist Robert Spring performed
Debussy's Premier Rhapsody.
Traditions were kept under the new
director as well. The Christmas portion of
Handel's Messiah was performed with
ASU's choirs during the holiday season,
while February brought the Concert of
Soloists. This gave students from the
Symphony Orchestra an opportunity to
showcase their talents.
"These are all masterpieces; these are
pieces that these young musicians will be
playing all of their lives," Smith said.
"Part of the fun of working in this setting
is that they're playing these pieces for
the first time, so that makes the experi-
ence rather special."
Orchestral students were pleased with
the addition of Smith to the faculty.
"I really think that the addition of
Henry Charles Smith as Symphony con-
ductor is a really big plus for ASU's
School of Music," said Alan LaFave, a
first-year Doctor of Musical Arts student
and co-principal clarinetist of the ASU
Symphony Orchestra.
These feelings seemed to have taken
hold from the musicians' first experi-
ences with Smith.
"From the moment he took the podium
at his audition, he really impressed ev-
eryone," said sophomore french horn per-
formance major Bill Bonnell. "He's in-
credible... he's the greatest person you
could bring to the school."
J& larinetist 'Alan LaFave practices during a re-
\y hearsal of Korsakov's Scheherazade with the
orchestra. Students practiced many hours on the piece
to prepare the orchestra for the performance.
L . ■. Fine Arts
<^^ irector Henry Charles Smith displays his mu-
^y sical skills during an ASU orchestra perfor-
mance. The ASU orchestra performed frequently at
the Gammage Auditorium for classical music lovers.
Photo by Scott Troyanos
^* agerly awaiting his cue is senior Matt Watias.
^t Members of the ASU orchestra were also in-
volved with concert and symphonic band.
Layout by Craig Valenzuela
Fine Arts 5
1
LEGAL AID
alley residents who could
Vnot afford the legal counsel
that they needed were the
same clients that ASU law
students could not afford to
turn away.
At ASU's Law College,
both the Law School clinic and the Prose-
cutor clinic were classes that gave law
students the opportunity to help members
of the community and get practical law
experience.
"This program is unique," said Profes-
sor Doug Blaze of the Law School clinic.
"It exposes students to actual law
practice."
After completing the civical and evi-
dence law courses, a student was eligible
to apply to the law clinic classes, said
Bonnie Cotter,the clinic coordinator.
"Many students apply, more than can
actually be accepted into the program,"
Cotter said.
There was a seperate lottery for the
Law School Clinic and the Prosecutor
clinic. Students had to pre-register for
one of the two.
The Law School clinic gave students an
opportunity to work with practicing at-
torneys on cases. In addition, the Law
School clinic had two other branches that
a student could specialize in. These were
the Human Immune Deficiency Virus
Clinic and the Interest on Lawyers Trust
Accounts.
The HIV clinic specialized in cases that
dealt with people who tested positive for
the AIDS virus. The IOLTA clinic helped
fund the student attorney program.
The Prosecutor clinic gave students
the opportunity to work on misdemeanor
cases. Hugo Zettler, of the County Attor-
ney's Office, assigned students to cases in
the Valley area.
"This class shows the real practical
side of law," said Chris Rapp, a student of
the Prosecutor clinic. "Suddenly what
has been learned in class is put to test in
front of a judge."
Blaze said that the class was important
because it could make or break a lawyer.
"The students learn an incredible
amount," he added.
Rapp said that the time spent in court
taught a student that there was a lot
more to trials.
"It was enlightening to see that the
difference between the good guy and the
bad guy is not really that clear," he said.
O^VvoL^^-T&fe
feG>
jfo uring a mock interview, Guy Wolf and Ruth
^r Ann Moore talk with sophomore Jacque Yous-
sefmir to determine if they will represent him as a
client. Many of these interviews helped establish the
clients' case before a trial date was set. Photo by
David Haneke.
%
0^^ emostrating her court room tactics, Deborah
(S Owen, an intern in Tempe, questions the jury to
determine her client's guilt. Mock trials prepared stu-
dents for real courtroom battles.
^P efore a trial, acting judge Doug Blaze swears in
^? Eric Messinger in front of a group of assembled
jurors. A mock trial showed the experience and the
legal capabilities of the students.
Layout by Craig Valenzuela
Law 5
1
Layout by Craig Valenzuela
^^ reparing for an English exam is freshman
/^ Matt Kruse, a resident of McClintock honors
hall and a member of the Honors College. Students
found the Honors College to be a quiet, relaxing place.
*JUJ orkers complete the move of the Honors Col-
wf/ lege into its new home. The Honors College was
established a year ago and was put into McClintock
which became the Honors Hall.
fi Honors College
CHALLENGES
emanding coursework. Crit-
ical thinking. Rigorous
study. Worthwhile effort.
Being enrolled in the
Honors College required a
lot of extra time and work
for a student, according to
junior humanities major Jennifer Scou-
ten. "I'm learning an incredible amount
of material not found in regular classes."
An honors class required serious dedi-
cation from the student, according to
Dr. Ted Humphrey, Dean of the Universi-
ty Honors College. The requirements for
entry into the college were one of the
following: graduation from the top five
percent of one's high school class, an ACT
composite score of 29 or above, or an SAT
composite score of 1,250 or above.
After acceptance, a student had to
maintain at least a 3.4 cummulative GPA
at ASU and obtain a grade of "B" or
better in honors courses in order to re-
ceive recognition as an Honors College
participant or graduate.
It has only been a little over one year
since the honors program at ASU was
converted into a separate college on cam-
pus. According to Humphrey, becoming a
full-fledged college presented the "oppor-
tunity to create what people agree to be a
unique living and learning experience."
According to Humphrey, the small hon-
ors class size allowed for more open dis-
cussion and required that a student be
prepared for class and ready to assert his
or her opinion when called upon.
"The honors setting is more frighten-
ing in some ways because it forces the
student to perform," Dr. Humphrey said.
When it came time for graduation, an
honors student must have met the re-
quirements of both the Honors College
and his respective field of study. Both Lee
and Scouten felt that they received a
better education as a result of participat-
ing in the Honors College. The extra time
a professor donated, the world-class ex-
perts a student might have worked with,
or simply the intellectual stimulus was
enough of an incentive for these two stu-
dents to put in the extra time and effort.
"I feel I am receiving the same educa-
tion as being in a small, private college,"
Scouten said.
HXiu^JL, ^MJ^XL
^^ ('viewing for midterms, Noelle Kerr-Almeida
J*^ and Vicki Wetherby realize the importance of
grades. Honor students were required to maintain a
3.4 GPA.
Honors College 5i
^P esearching a case of tax fraud, MBA student
/t^ Carol Rucker looks through the asiles for a
recent edition. Rucker, who has a bachelors
degree in accounting, has emphasied her studies to-
wards tax planning. Photo by Tammy Vrettos
prjjg
4^ illing the hours while working on her disser-
y tation, Lori Fuller spends much of her time on
her thesis. Many PhD students spent several
sleepless nights in order to earn a doctorate in
business.
Layout by Tina Amodio
6G
Business
SHORT CUT
t used to be that business
students had to have a mas-
ter's degree before going on
to pursue a PhD, but no
more. Changes were made
in the MBA and PhD pro-
grams that made it possible
for students to receive their doctorate
without first obtaining a master's.
Judy Heilala, coordinator of the gradu-
ate program, said this was not a reduc-
tion of hours needed to obtain the degree.
"They [the students] don't have to
have the degree, just the hours. The mas-
ter's classes are now incorporated [into
the PhD program)," she said.
The College of Business believed that
this program allowed for more flexibility
within each student's individual program
of study.
"The students have more choice be-
cause they can have another area of con-
centration," she said.
According to Gladys Dejarnatt, secre-
tary for the office of graduate programs
said that a reduction in hours in the basic
doctoral program was possible due to the
elimination of some prerequisites.
"Before, we had prerequisites in each
area of business, now our only prerequi-
sites are calculus and computers," she
said.
Students liked the program because it
cut down the time that they would spend
in obtaining a PhD, said Todd Aaron, a
doctoral student in accounting.
"It made it easier for what I wanted to
do. Although I already have my master's,
I think it's going to help a lot of the
students who don't," he said.
A lock-step program was also added, in
which students were admitted in the fall
only, went through the same classes each
semester, and graduated together as a
class.
"There's more of a sense of camarade-
rie," Heilala said.
The changes in the MBA and PhD pro-
grams were put into action after depart-
mental research into trends in graduate
education.
"It (the program) let me take more
statistics courses for research purposes,
which fit my program better, rather than
a teaching methods or an economics
course," Aaron said.
IMC
"■xiuwil
^* ucceding in today's business world requires
«^ the necessary ability to perform well and to be
flexible to changes in one's given profession.
The College of Business' MBA program was designed
to ensure that students developed these skills.
Business
yf sking one of his students to describe the skele-
fC tons, Mark Van Dyke encourages the child to
notice the difference. Van Dyke worked with excep-
tional children while pursuing his Masters degree in
secondary education. Photo by Cheryl Evans
^2/ wiping her son Georgio with his daily exercises
f^T Martha Rodriguez enjoys the time spent with her
son. One of Georgio's daily exercises included the use
of a ball for his physical therapy program.
■2 Education
Quietly raising her hand Molly Fitz pa-
£ tiently awaits to be called on. Many of the
tudents were eager to express their questions
n certain subjects. Photo by Cheryl Evans
SPECIAL KIDS
^eavtttttf <fy teac4&tp, &tcute*tt& devote
Ume edetcaUtty excefitiotuuC c/U£dne*t
pecial children need special
S teachers and the College of
Education's special educa-
tion program made sure
that students gained both
the experience and the edu-
cation necessary to under-
stand the needs of mildly handicapped
children.
"The special education program is a
little more demanding as far as time and
commitment," said Dr. Thomas Roberts,
director of the program.
Roberts said that enrollment in the
special education classes was limited to
25 students each semester so that a bet-
ter quality program could be offered. He
added that the undergraduate level class-
es trained teachers to work with children
who were mildly handicapped individ-
uals, such as retarded and emotionally
handicapped children. The curriculum
also included extensive field study
through student teaching.
"Working out in the field is the best
experience that I've encountered at
ASU," said Angie Denning, a senior edu-
cation major. "You're not just hypothesiz-
ing about things. You're actually doing
the activity."
"Students need to become familiar
with the schools and what goes on there,"
Roberts said. "It reinforces and further
expands on what they learn in class."
Dr. John Nelson, a professor of educa-
tion said that both the courses and the
student teaching helped weed out stu-
dents who thought that they wanted to go
into the field.
"Some people just aren't willing to put
out the intensive effort that is neces-
sary," Nelson said. Nelson added that he
tried to handle a variety of topics such as
how children handle death and even had
handicapped guest speakers address his
classes.
"Sometimes I can tell if a student will
be able to handle it just by how they
react in my classes," Nelson said.
Denning said that the student teaching
helped prepare her for the job market.
"This has been challenging," she said.
"I mean seeing the different ranges of
children. It really lets you see where you
want to work after you graduate."
Vnjdd*^. B)j^<.
7aking time out from a lesson, exceptional stu-
dents prepare for the second half of class. Stu-
dents had to endure over two-hours of lab
assignments.
Education 6
I
*^^ uring an interview, Amy Bloomberg composes
•^ her notes for a class story. Journalism 301
students were required to write stories which focused
on activities around the campus and the community.
<^^ eciding on which sentences to cut, Seth Sulka
£S revises a class story. Students found that typ-
ing stories on the computer saved time and was easier
for editing.
*QjfJ riting a story, Trinette Kays refers to her
•" notes and research material. In journalism
classes, students were required to meet deadlines for
articles.
Layout by Craig Valenzuela
.
4 Public Programs
REPORTING
I ournalism 301, reporting,
J had a reputation of being a
"killer class."
"I probably wouldn't
have taken the class if it
had been optional," said se-
nior Kelly Jain. "It
would've been a mistake, but I would've
been scared off by what my friends said."
The class syllabus consisted of stories
including one in-depth and one group sto-
ry. Weekly stories were written in the
four hour lab. The class period before the
lab, the students were expected to turn in
three researched story ideas and be ready
to write on any of the three during the
lab. The students did not know which
story the instructor was going to pick.
"The story ideas are hard because I
don't know what she (Sharon Bramlett-
Soloman) is going to like or not," Jain
said. But Bramlett-Soloman said that it
wasn't as hard as the students think it is.
"I think a lot of kids are scared by
what they hear and then they get in here
and its a piece of cake," she said.
The class strength was its practicality,
according to Bramlett-Soloman and the
students.
"When you get done with this class you
should be able to write for the Mesa Tri-
bune," said journalism student Tina Ar-
rick. "We had a guy in here that writes
for the Tribune and gets C's on his
papers."
Jain, who also worked for the State
Press, said that she agreed.
"Journalism students definitely need
it," she said. "It's a good chance for prac-
tical experience."
But all the practical experience doesn't
make it any easier for the students. Ar-
rick said that she spends 4-5 hours out of
class researching stories in addition to
her class work.
"You should get more than three hours
(of credit) for this class," Arrick said. "I
knew it was going to be a lot of story
writing, so that wasn't so bad. I wasn't
expecting this much out of class
preparation."
But even with the extra out of class
work, most students said that it is worth
it.
"Its kind of hard on the nerves," said
sophomore David Connor, "but once I
handed in a story at the end of class I felt
like I really accomplished something."
Public Programs 61
DOWN UNDER
hen Harrison Ford
played the character In-
diana Jones, he por-
trayed the life of an ar-
chaeologist as fast-paced
and dangerous. Two An-
thropology graduate stu-
dents put the so-called 'glamorous' life of
those pursuing the archaeological field in
a different perspective.
Anthropology graduate student Mike
Neeley, who had archaeology as a sub-
discipline, said that one of the unwritten
requirements in the graduate program
was that a student should have some sort
of field experience.
Neeley participated in an excavation
in the Middle East for two years. Al-
though he said that he enjoyed working
there, he missed the creature comforts
from home.
"It's not fast work," he said. "It's hard
work. You will often be crouching in a
small area for hours. You can stretch, but
you can't put a chair down."
Neeley, whose ultimate goal was to be-
come a professor, said that the graduate
program expected students to have good
writing and communication skills.
"One of the things you're evaluated on
[when trying to get a job] is what you've
had published," he said.
Another Graduate student, Jennifer
Jones, said that in the Archaeological
profession one must be able to synthesize
ideas onto paper because people judge
you on the quality of your papers.
In addition to an emphasis on writing,
Anthropology graduate students were re-
quired to give numerous one hour oral
presentations, which Jones referred to as
"mini-dry runs" of speeches a profession-
al would give.
Although Jones said that she would get
her first gray hairs while pursuing her
degree, she said that she had enjoyed the
program.
"I love it. I love the topic," she said. "I
think ASU has a good program."
The only loophole that Neeley found in
graduate school was the financial
setback.
"It's not fun being poor," he said.
"There was a certain amount of sacrifice
in choosing anthropology [as a degree]
because I won't make the same money a
medical doctor makes.
"But," he added, "I think it's worth it."
^Q uzzling together the broken pieces of a ceram-
/"^ ic pot, Mike Neeley arranges them by the mark-
ing tags. Marked tags made identification
eaiser to match pieces. Photo by Craig Valenzuela
Layout by Tina Amodio
-#
t*i
: '■': ;' : ■:*
V : :: :
M elving into a clay Indian pot, graduate student
fcX Mike Neeley observes the delicate, fragile open-
ings. This pot, found along the Shoofly village
near Payson was used either for food or water storage.
Photo by Craig Valenzuela
^^ rocessing data on various types of animal
r^ remains, graduate student Homer Thiel catego-
rizes them by species. The computer played a
valuable role as an analytical tool for the contempo-
rary archeologist.
Graduate College 6
■
i
f) nvolving herself in a group discussion, nursing
/ major Sandy Ushman addresses patient problems
with Ken Jackman and Ana Ziegler. Many of these
group gatherings were helpful to keep current updates
on patients.
7aking a patient's blood pressure, nursing major
Ana Ziegler carefully reads the dial. Students
also had to work with mental health patients 'in
valley hospitals.
Layout by Craig Valenzuela
Nursing
NURTURERS
Student vucn4e& ytUa exfi&U&tee
hile other students received
W their education in a class-
room, the College of Nurs-
ing tried to put their stu-
dents into real-life nursing
situations by having them
work with mental health
patients in clinics and hospitals around
the Valley.
"Working with the patients was diffi-
cult at times," said junior nursing major
Ken Jackman, "but it was a really good
experience."
Jackman and several other undergrad-
uate nursing students spent the fall se-
mester working with patients at Phoenix
Camelback Hospital.
Jacqueline Taylor, divison chair of psy-
cho-social nursing at the College of Nurs-
ing, said that the field experience was
required for both graduate and under-
graduate students. Graduate students
had to work six to 10 hours a week at a
clinic for two semesters, and undergradu-
ate students had to work at a clinic for
one day a week for one semester.
"When the student nurses worked in
the field, it really helped them to inte-
grate into the nursing profession," Taylor
said.
Taylor added that the experience
helped students with their personal de-
velopment as well as their development
as nurses.
"This program helps students with
their own identity," she said. "It causes
introspection."
Patti Rachels, a junior nursing major,
said that she found working with the
patients beneficial.
"It helped us to learn how to interact
with the patients," she said.
The undergraduate students also spent
a day at the Maricopa Day Treatment
Center for the chronically mentally ill.
"I got more out of that one day then
out of the entire semester," Rachels said.
Taylor said that the process of working
with patients in a clinical setting helped
to make students more aware and helped
to acquaint students with crisis
situations.
Taylor added that the field experience
was important because health care is
changing so rapidly.
"I know that there was a lot of value in
this experience," Rachels said.
^D eviewing patients' records, both Joyce White
^^ and Julie Marshall point out discrepancies. The
curriculum included working with patients and the
evaluation of their files.
Nursing 61
Layout by Craig Valenzuela
^P assing time, residents Leon Spellman, Becky
f^ Johnson, and Albert Britt talk with counselor
Jim Clark. Much of Clark's day was spent lis-
tening to the residents of Ozanam Manor. Photo by
T.J. Sokol
7 alkinj; with a counselor, residents Quitman
Knight and Leon Spellman discuss their day
with Jim Clark. Clark stole all opportunities to
visit with the residents and to listen to what was on
their minds.
L '
HELPING HAND
&y 6eCfi£*t$ (Ac (Aoiieefd needy.
S
tudents who pursued a
graduate degree in social
work had to master the art
of handling the sensitive
and often disturbing issues
that face society every day.
"All master of social
work students have to participate in an
internship," said Elanore Yepez, director
of field education in the school of social
work. "They deal with almost every possi-
ble scenario, from the homeless to the
mentally handicapped."
Yepez said that the internship was di-
vided into two years, which included 960
hours. She also said that students had
their internships at hospitals around the
Valley.
Jim Clark, a graduate student in the
school, said that his internship helped
acquaint him with certain problems that
he had never encountered before.
"I've gotten experience working with
the mentally ill, people with drug and
alcohol problems and displaced people,"
he said.
Students typically worked as counsel-
ors for both adults and children. They
how to read and understand cases.
"Our curriculum is geared towards
helping students dispel myths about the
social work field," Yepez said. "Some-
times there can be bizzare behavior in
state hospitals and students need to learn
how to handle this."
Melody Winting, a graduate student in
social work who had her internship at the
Maricopa County Medical Center, said
that it helped her to learn how to handle
people.
"You really have to be careful because
the issues that you deal with are sensi-
tive," Winting said. "You'd be in trouble
without the hands-on experience."
Yepez said that very often students
worked with neglected or abused children
and deal with cases of sexual abuse.
Clark said that the program helped to
make him more aware of the condition of
the social work field.
"It made me more aware of how a
community coordinates their efforts to
help the needy," he said. "After working
in the field for a while, I really think that
they don't do a good enough job."
uio iui uuui auuiua auu ciuiuicn. nicy .y
also learned how to interview clients and //ULLo, CU-^*.
I
7 alking to a prospective contributor, Jim Clark
reaffirms a scheduled appointment. Besides
caring for residents, financial concerns and
business contacts were also Clark's responsibilities.
Social Work 7l
MFF-i
ENCY
kmM
^» rowsing through the numerous periodicals is
£> pre-med student Baukje Wiersma during her
LIA 100 tour of the library. The tours were an attempt
to familiarize the students with the library.
tf nstructing students in critical thinking is Dr.
/ Nancy Matte. Students benefitted from these
instructions by building strong academic skills.
■2 Liberal Arts
ADJUSTMENTS
cuuC adapt fo c&C£eye c&ct*4e&.
t's not a bird. It's not a
(plane. But it could save
your failing GPA faster
than a speeding bullet. LIA
100 to the rescue.
LIA 100, University Ad-
justment and Survival, cre-
ated by Roger Swanson and Christine Wil-
kinson in 1972, was designed to help
incoming freshman blend in, adjust and
survive at the nation's fifth largest uni-
versity. Although the course was de-
signed for new students, it was not limit-
ed to freshmen; seniors and juniors may
have taken the course with prior
approval.
In 1976, Dr. Nancy Matte taught the
only section with 25 students enrolled.
Last year 51 sections were available, in
which the instructors were responsible to
teach note and test taking skills, library
orientation, goal setting, decision making,
career planning, right brain versus left
brain thinking, and time and stress
management.
In each section a tour of Hayden Li-
brary was arranged. The main purpose
was to familiarize students with the li-
brary. Students were educated in all fac-
ets of library use, from policies and proce-
dures to "CARL," the library's
computerized card catalog system.
An area of interest was in goal setting.
There are two types of goal setting that
were covered in the course. One kind was
attached to a career and career related
choices, the other was associated in dealing
with one's problems and immediate short-
term goals.
"Goal setting and decision making may
not help you in your history class this week,
but if you don't know how to do it, eventual-
ly it can cause you some problems and it will
make your life easier," Matte said.
Dr. Matte said that time management was
the most important topic covered in LIA 100.
"I think for most students it's the most
important thing. But if you have good aca-
demic skills and poor time management, I
think you'd have more problems than if you
had weak academic skills and great time
management," Matte said. "Freshmen were
most afraid of failing."
"First-year students are afraid to make
the wrong choices. In LIA 100 we try to give
them a variety of paths for success," Matte
said.
>T#£&ftiGUN
^* canning through one of many books of vari-
«^ ous topics is, William McAndle, on a LIA 100
tour of the library. Students were grouped into sec-
tions and tested in areas from note taking skills to
library orientation.
Layout by Craig Valenzuela
Liberal Arts 71
^» earching for a file at the ASU West Fletcher
^^ Library, Tammy Trent compiles a paper for her
marketing class. Trent, a marketing major, entered
ASU West as a returning senior.
JO lapping to the beat, Jay Buseh lectures to
^y students during a Jazz in America class. Jazz in
America was a popular class that was held at ASU
West on Monday nights.
Layout by Craig Valenzuela
I
4 ASU West
WESTWARD
s4& C4unfoa4, c&tUacce& exfieutAlott
Expansion. Enrollment in-
crease. Consolidation.
These described the en-
during situation at ASU
West- a rapidly growing
^_____ campus in and of itself, ac-
cording to the Director of
Institutional Planning and Research at
ASU West, Dr. Sheila Ainlay.
"Enrollment has held steady on an av-
erage between 12-15 percent growth over
the last three to four years," Ainlay said.
Although enrollment has increased,
ASU West began going through many
changes to prepare them for the influx of
students.
"These changes have been planned
ahead of time in anticipation of increas-
ing enrollment," Ainlay said.
Enrollment figures for the summer of
1988 included 804 students while the
summer of '89 figures increased 45 per-
cent to 1,171. Fall of 1988 recorded 3,330
students enrolled, white fall of '89 had a
figure of 3,799, a 14 percent growth, Ain-
lay said.
Three new buildings were slated to be-
gin construction in October 1989, with a
completion date of January 1991, said
ASU West Information Specialist Asha
Nathan. The buildings will include a
76,800 square foot classroom and comput-
er laboratory, a 146,900 square foot Uni-
versity Center Building, and a 10,000
square foot multipurpose instructional
room which will be part of the University
Center Building, according to Nathan.
"The new buildings will be adding
classroom and permanent office space,"
Ainlay said.
Campus offices and about one-third of
classes were being held in temporary
sites, according to Nathan.
Ainlay also stated that the University
Center would provide ASU West with a
facility much like a combination of the
MU and the Student Services Buildings.
"The University Center will house eat-
ing facilities, student and faculty services
and lounge space," Ainlay said.
The new buildings will be greatly ap-
preciated when they are done, consider-
ing that enrollment for the fall of 1990
has been projected to be between 4,300-
4,400 students," Ainlay said. "The com-
pleted buildings will really consolidate
ASU West into a campus."
^mz^z**-^
-
_ 0^J orming the centerpiece of the ASU West cam-
■I ^ pus,Fletcher Library is located at the rear of
2 the clustered buildings. This aerial photograph
^of the campus, overlaid with an artist's rendering,
shows what the campus will look like ir> January 1991.
ASU West 71
4^ njoying his visit to ASU, Lattie Coot takes
Git the time to feel the surrounding of his new
home. Coor, an Arizona native, was the president of
the University of Vermont for 13 years.
76 New President
X
A NEW DECADE
Tteca frt&Udeat cv&ctid Cc6e fo dee
s4S1t a& €i finetPtier te&ecincA tn^tcUcte
n Jan. 1,1990, Lattie F. Coor
O became the new president
of ASU with the hope of
propelling the university
into the next decade as one
of the premier research in-
stitutes in the country.
"I have watched ASU from afar for a
long time, and this is a particularly prom-
ising moment for the school," Coor said.
On June 6, 1989 the Arizona Board of
Regents voted unanimously for Coor to
become ASU's 14th president. Coor, who
is 52 and an Arizona Native, was the
president of the University of Vermont
for 13 years before coming to ASU.
"It was difficult to leave Vermont,"
Coor said. "But I was intrigued with the
stage of development here."
Coor said that he was interested in
encouraging ASU's growth as a research
facility. He also said that he wanted to
increase racial diversity at ASU, improve
relationships between that students and
the university by coping better with its
growth, and harnass ASU to the economic
expansion of the Phoenix area.
"In order for any college to emerge as
an important research institution, there
has to be a tight bond between it and the
major modern economic areas," Coor said.
Coor added that research meant ad-
vanced study in everything, not only ar-
eas like science and engineering.
Edith Auslander, a member of the
Board of Regents, said that she was hope-
ful about Coor's ability to guide ASU into
national recognition.
"I was taken with his breadth of
knowledge and his reputation for effec-
tive leadership," she added.
Jack Pfister, also a member of the
Board of Regents, said that he was also
impressed with Coor's outstanding record
in Vermont.
"I know that he will build a solid fu-
ture for this university," he said.
Coor said that he sensed a lot of prom-
ise at ASU.
"This school is becoming one of the
most dynamic universities in the coun-
try," he said. "I saw coming here as a
challenge."
^rf fter eight months of reviewing applications,
• * the Arizona Board of Regents nominated Lat-
tie Coor as the 14th president of ASL'. Over 240 appli-
cants applied.
New President 7'
I
8 Awards
AWARDS
*?no*pt metric to- dcteace, &tctde#ite a*ut
^acuity neceive toft 6a*to>i& fa* evon£
SU's growth not only ex-
tended to its population,
but also to its academic
and its artistic talent.
Several members of both
the faculty and the stu-
dent body were honored
for their achievements, whether they
were monumental or miniscule.
Musicians served the purpose of pro-
viding enjoyment through their talent.
This talent was frequently noticed
through both composition and
performance.
Chinary Ung, an associate professor of
music, won the 1989 Grawemeyer Award
for Music Composition. Sponsored by the
University of Louisville, the international
award included a $150,000 prize. It was
the largest prize that was given in the
field. Ung received the award for his or-
chestral piece "Inner Voices." He was the
first American citizen to every receive it
and the youngest. Ung also received the
prestigous Kennedy Center Friedheim
Award for his chamber music composi-
tion "Spiral."
Pianst Kelly Kathleen was the rece-
pient of a Fullbright Full Grant to study
in Germany. Robert Best , a baritone, won
the Voice Auditions of the Music Teach-
ers National Association Wurlitzer Colle-
giate Artist competition.
There were three recepients of the
American Society of Composers, Authors
and Publishers award. Glenn Hachbarth,
Randall Shinn and James DeMars were
Honors were not only given to those
who were musically talented, but who
were professionally talented as well.
Three professors received Burlington
Northern Foundation Faculty Acheive-
ment Awards. Gary Lowenthal, a profes-
sor of law, Deborah Losse, an associate
professor of foriegn languages, and Maria
Candelle-Elawar, an assistant professor
of educational psychology all received the
honor. They were selected on the basis of
the unusual efforts that they devoted to
the quality of the student's experience.
They were also considered because of in-
formation and nominations submitted by
students.
Scientific fields were honored as well.
Four students received the National Sci-
ence Foundation Graduate Fellowships.
Out of a total of only five awards, four
were given to students in Arizona. Steph-
anie Harkins, who had a bachelors degree
in anthropology, Kathy LaRoler Moyer,
who had a bachelors degree in microbiol-
ogy, Kenneth Walsh, who was a civil engi-
neering graduate, and Nathan Watson,
who was a computer science graduate all
received the fellowship.
In the area of research, Dr. Robert
Pettit, director of ASU's Cancer Research
Institute, was awarded an Outstanding
Investigation grant that was worth more
than $4 million over seven years. It was
the first such grant to go to a researcher
in Arizona.
Continued on page 80
I
^n resenting the Award for Excellence in Journal-
f^ ism and Telecommunication to Malcolm Forbes of
Forbes magazine is Walter Cronkite. The awards
luncheon was held at the Arizona Biltmore in
November.
Awards 7!
AWARDS
Awards that were nationally recog-
nized were not the only kinds that ASU
students and faculty received. Many were
given awards directly from the university
itself.
One such award was ASU's oldest con-
tinuous honor for outstanding undergrad-
uate academic acheivement, the Moeur
award. Suchitra Krishnan, an electrical
engineering student and Chou Liu and
Brian Mirtich, computer systems stu-
dents, all received the Moeur.
In the area of honoring teachers for
their accomplishments, the Alumni Asso-
ciation gave its Faculty Achievement
Award to marketing professor Stephen
Brown.
The Walter Cronkite School of Journal-
ism and Telecommunications gave the
1989 Walter Cronkite Award for excel-
lence in journalism and telecommunica-
tions to Malcolm Forbes. Forbes was the
chairman and editor in chief of Forbes
Magazine.
Other awards included the Soviet
Union's Spendiarov Prize which was giv-
en to geology professor Susan Kieffer. She
became the first woman to win the award
and the second American winner. In De-
cember of 1988, J. Jefferies McWhirter
was named Diplomat in Counseling Psy-
chology. This is the highest professional
distinction that could be given to a li-
censed psychologist. Dr. McWhirter also
received a Distinguished Teacher Award
in 1989 by the Alumni Association.
ASU's Department of Construction was
awarded thhe 1989 Thomas C. Jellinger
award by the Associated General Con-
tractors of America. The award was
meant to honor those who invented pro-
grams that improved construction educa-
tion on the national level.
Not all of those who received awards
for their achievements could be listed,
but their accomplishemnts are realized
and felt through the improvement of the
educational system and of the student
life.
i~ &f^
1
I - -
'^^A| P
P' v \
Top Right: CM/?a/y Ung, associate professor of music. Photo by Craig Valenzuela. Left: Jeffries McWhirter,
professor of counseling. Above: James DeMars, composer. Photo by Craig Valenzuela. Opposite page: De-
borah Losse, professor of foreign languages. Photo by ASU New Bureau.
Layout by Craig Valenzuela
(JO Awards
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Taking control of the
point, Debbie Penney
spikes the ball past two
USC blockers. Sun Devil vol-
leyball has produced eight Ail-
Americans in the last six
years.
.LIN rjKlJ 1 1 \)adj. marked by vigor
and power. 2)n. the determination to ex-
cel with intensity both in training and in
competition.
Sun Devil energy culminated when
both athletes and fans alike joined in
competition. Whether at a national bad-
minton or archery competition that re-
ceived little recognition or at the annual
ASU-U of A game that commanded state-
wide attention, Sun Devil spirit was al-
ways present.
This spirit was also the same force
that demanded excellence for coaches as
well as players. The volleyball team saw
changes with the addition of Coach Patti
Snyder. The men's basketball team expe-
rienced the same with the controversial
signing of Coach Bill Frieder. Frieder
took Michigan State to the Final Four in
1989 before signing to become the high-
est paid ASU employee.
Fan scrutiny did not stop at team and
coaching performances. An increased in-
terest in athletic moral issues such as
following NCAA recruitment rules, moni-
toring academic standards for athletics
and the concern of steroid use entered
into play.
All of these aspects of Sun Devil ath-
letic energy clearly made a statement
without exclaiming a word.
SECTION
EDITOR:
Erik
Leverson
Cu
Uc^ACC-
i^r&\£>bc
b£fa
Rising above the oppo-
nent, Mark Becker sends
one to the hoop. ASU bas-
ketball began a new era with
new Head Coach Bill Frieder.
Photo by T.J. Sokol
Sports
1
What's the Score?
ASU TEAM FINISHES
AND RECORDS FOR
1988-89
ARCHERY:
3 national team championships,
1 individual title
BADMINTON:
3 national team championships,
5 individual titles
BASEBALL:
42-19 overall, 19-11 Pac-10 (2nd),
3rd NCAA Northeast regional
MEN'S BASKETBALL:
12-16 overall, 5-13 Pac-10 (7th),
lost first round Pac-10
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL:
9-19 overall, 3-15 Pac-10 (10th)
MEN'S CROSS COUNTRY:
9th Pac-10
WOMEN'S CROSS COUNTRY:
8th Pac-10
FOOTBALL:
6-4-1 overall, 3-3-1 Pac-10 (5th)
MEN'S GOLF:
4 wins; 1st Pac-10, 2nd NCAA West
Regional, 5th NCAA's
WOMEN'S GOLF:
2 wins; 2nd Pac-10, 6th NCAA's
MEN'S GYMNASTICS:
17-8, 3rd Pac-10, 8th NCAA's
WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS:
7-13, 3rd Pac-10, 7th NCAA's
SOFTBALL:
34-26 overall, 7-13 Pac-10 (5th),
lost in NCAA regional
MEN'S SWIMMING/DIVING:
5-4 overall, 1-4 Pac-10 (6th),
27th NCAA's
WOMEN'S SWIMMING/DIVING:
7-3 overall, 2-3 Pac-10 (5th),
8th NCAA's
MEN'S TENNIS:
10-14 overall, 1-9 Pac-10 (6th)
WOMEN'S TENNIS:
19-11 overall, 2-8 Pac-10 (5th),
lost second round NCAA's
TRACK AND FIELD:
0-2 triangulars, 1-3 quadrangulars
VOLLEYBALL:
13-21 overall, 4-14 Pac-10 (8th)
WRESTLING:
16-4-2 overall, 5-0 Pac-10 (1st),
2nd in NCAA's
Freestyling her way through the pool, a
lady swimmer strokes towards the finsh
line. The women's swimming team fin-
ished eighth at the NCAA's.
Standing over a fallen quarterback,
Shane Collins celebrates another sack.
The Devils experienced another winning
season on the gridiron. Photo by T.J.
Sokol
(4 Year in Sports
OLD AND NEW
The Year in Sports
^^ un Devil sports saw some
^^ old friends succeed, met a
^^ few new faces, and had
another season of memorable
moments in 1989.
Both the archery and badmin-
ton squads recaptured national
titles they have held over the
last few years. ASU wrestling fol-
lowed up on their championship
season with another Pac-10 title
and a second place finish at the
NCAA's.
Men's and women's golf
capped successful seasons with
high finishes at the national
tournament. The swimming and
diving teams fought through the
tough Pac-10 conference to do
battle in the NCAA's. Both gym-
's nasties squads capitalized on
1 strong individual performances
2 to place highly on the national
level.
Sun Devil basketball greeted a
new head coach as Bill Frieder
took the reigns of the cagers
program.
New facilities were construct-
ed throughout the program in-
cluding the opening of the $7.3
million Karsten Golf Course.
Many Sun Devil student ath-
letes were honored as titles and
awards filled trophy cases
throughout campus. ASU ath-
letes collected eight individual
national championships and four
team conference titles.
The 1988-89 season for Sun
Devil sports was filled with many
moments and stories, individual
struggles and triumphs, but most
of all the year was filled with
Poised for another high score, gymnast
Tracy Butler prepares for her dismount.
The ladies gymnastic squad capped their
season with an appearence in the NCAA
tournament.
Delivering another strike, pitcher Kip
Yaughn keeps a hitter at bat. The base-
ball team captured a second place finish
in their division.
Year in Sports 85
Setting the score straight, the referee
awards Sun Devil wrestler Travis Fagen
two points. ASU scored well all season as
they took their fifth consecutive Pac-10
title.
PIN UP BOYS
Wrestling with Success
There was a time that colle-
giate wrestling was domi-
nated by schools from the
Midwest, but over the last few
years a power surge has been felt
from the great Southwest.
During the 1989 season, the
ASU wrestling program contin-
ued climbing the ladder of excel-
lence to the rung of the elite. The
Devils followed their 1988 nation-
al championship campaign with
a 1989 Pac-10 title and a second
place finish at the national meet.
"This was an exceptional team
that had a great season," Head
Coach Bobby Douglas said.
The Devils started the year
with nine successive dual meet
victories including a win over na-
tional power Oklahoma. ASU
then entered a rugged stretch of
their schedule, but managed
wins over Boise State and Mis-
souri before dropping a close de-
cision to top-ranked Oklahoma
State.
In early February, ASU's grap-
plers gained a slice of revenge as
Oklahoma State, the eventual na-
tional champion, visited Tempe.
A record crowd of 5,330 specta-
tors watched as the Devils de-
feated the Cowboys 20-15 at the
University Activity Center.
"We've gotten great support
from our fans, the school, and
the administration," Douglas
said.
Junior Saunders, Dan St. John,
Jim Gressley, and John Ginther
all captured their respective
weight classes as the Devils
pinned down a fifth consecutive
Pac-10 chamionship.
Eight Devil wrestlers qualified
for the NCAA Championships
and Dan St. John claimed an in-
dividual title in the 158 pound
weight class leading ASU to its
runner-up position at the meet
held in Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma.
Under coach Douglas' leader-
ship, the Sun Devil wrestling pro-
gram has recorded 196 victories
and 12 top twenty finishes in his
fifteen seasons.
"A great tradition was started
hear in 1973, and it's climaxing
now," Douglas said. "This season
we broke into the elite of wres-
tling programs."
W hat's the Score?
ASU
WRESTLING
OPP
32
CS Fullerton
3
26
Fresno St.
10
22
Clemson
12
37
CP San Luis Obispo
9
32
Portland St.
9
24
Oklahoma
17
34
West Virginia
6
28
North Carolina
13
29
Bloomsburg St.
29
19
Perm St.
19
13
Oklahoma St.
22
34
Cleveland St.
8
34
Illinios St.
6
19
Oklahoma
19
35
Boise St.
12
34
Missouri
9
10
Oklahoma St.
23
20
Oklahoma St.
15
19
Iowa St.
15
14
Iowa
20
17
Oklahoma St.
18
27
CS Bakersfield
PAC 10 CHAMPIONSHIPS
8
1.
Arizona State
88.75
2.
Oregon
70.50
3.
Boise State
45.00
4.
Cal Poly S.L.O.
42.75
5.
CS Bakersfield
NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS
41.00
1.
Oklahoma State
91.25
2.
Arizona State
70.50
3.
Iowa State
63.00
4.
Oklahoma
61.00
5.
Michigan
INDIVIDUAL
53.25
1181b
Zeke Jones
4th
1421b
Junior Saunders
2nd
1501b
Thorn Ortiz
7th
1581b
Dan St. John
1st
1901b
John Ginther
5th
lipping out of a hold, G.T. Taylor turns
^hings in his favor. Taylor was one of
ight Devils that qualified for the NCAA
Ihampionships. Photo by Cheryl Evans
Rolling over a Oklahoma St. wrestler,
Marco Sanchez reverses the situation on
his opponent. ASU defeated the top-
ranked Cowboys, 20-15.
Wrestling 8
1
What's the Score?
UCLA 33, ARIZONA ST. 14
ASU
20
27-87
272
25
UCLA
20
46-182
165
125
27-48-3 16-30-1
1-1 0-0
4-40.2 4-43.2
5-48 6-56
28:57 31:03
00 07 00 07 -14
00 17 03 13 -33
8yd pass from
First downs
Rushes-yards
Pass yards
Return yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles#-lost
Punts-avg yds
Penal ties-yds
Possesion time
ARIZONA STATE
UCLA
UCLA - Miller
Johnson
(Velasco kick)
UCLA - Austin 3yd pass from
Johnson
(Velasco kick)
ASU - Veach 3yd pass from Justin
(Richey kick)
UCLA - FG Velasco 31yd
UCLA - FG Velasco 21yd
ASU - Simoneau 2yd run(Richey
kick)
UCLA
UCLA
UCLA
FG Velasco 33yd
FG Velasco 42yd
Argo 48yd interception
return(Velasco kick)
ARIZONA ST. 30, STANFORD 22
STAN ASU
26 21
38-153 33-42
317 296
5 76
31-47-3 20-33-1
1-1 0-0
3-36.3 5-34.2
6-54 7-40
32:61 27:09
00 12 07 03 -22
07 14 00 09 -30
First downs
Rushes-yards
Pass yards
Return yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles#-lost
Punts-avg yds
Penalties-yds
Possesion time
STANFORD
ARIZONA STATE
ASU - Fisher 7yd pass from
Justin(Richey kick)
ASU - Stanley 70yd interception
return(Richey kick)
STAN - Pinchney 41yd pass from
Johnson(Hopkins kick)
STAN - Justin tackled in end zone
ASU - Guliford 20yd pass from
Justin(Richey kick)
STAN - FG Hopkins 32yd
STAN - Pinchney 83yd pass from
Johnson(Hopkins kick)
STAN - FG Hopkins 50yd
ASU - Fisher 14yd pass from
Justin(Pass failed)
ASU - FG Richey 43yd
Escaping a Bruin, tackier David Wins-
ley gallops for extra yardage. The Devils
were defeated by UCLA, 33-14.
Following his blocker, Vic Cahoon re-
turns a Stanford kickoff. The Devils
opened up their offensive attack in de-
feating the Cardinal. Photo by Cheryl
Evans
18 UCLA/Stanford
EVOLUTION
Team reaches maturity
Early in October, ASU trav-
eled to Los Angeles to play
UCLA. In mid-November,
the Stanford Cardinal visited Sun
Devil Stadium to do battle on
ASU's Homecoming. Both games
were with conference opponents,
but that's where the similarities
ended. The contest with the Bru-
ins was the beginning of a slump
which would send the ASU foot-
ball program to an all-time low.
In defeating the Cardinal, the
Devils capped what seemed to be
an evolutionary process from a
group of individuals into a foot-
ball team.
On Oct. 8, a mistake-prone Sun
Devil squad self-destructed and
losts its' conference opener to
UCLA 33-14.
After completely outplaying
the Bruins in the early stages of
the contest, the Devils exploded.
ASU missed two makeable field
goal attempts, allowed UCLA to
sustain a lengthy scoring drive,
and turned the ball over deep in
their own territory.
"We didn't take advantage of
_ things when we had a chance
| to," Head Coach Larry Marmie
2 said.
One play summarized the flow
of the entire game. With seconds
left, UCLA linebacker Stacy Argo
intercepted a deflected Paul Jus-
tin pass and returned it 48 yards
for the Bruins Final score.
"I don't think the true ASU
football team showed up to-
night," defensive tackle Shane
Collins said.
On ASU's homecoming week-
end, they hosted Stanford in
Tempe. Behind a revamped of-
fensive attack and an opportunis-
tic defense, the Devils prevailed
30-22.
Fullback Kelvin Fisher caught
two touchdown passes, including
the game winner, and freshman-
Mike Richey added a 43-yard
field goal for insurance as ASU
won its third consecutive game.
As it had in the previous two
weeks, the Devil defense contin-
ued to force turnovers and hand
the ball over to the offense in
good field position.
"The defense set the tempo
early in the second half," Mar-
mie said.'This was a great win
for our football team."
V
^^^y^^rvyU
Carrying a Cardinal Ryan McReynolds
picks up a first down. The offense to-
taled 338 yards in the win over Stanford.
Stuffing the run Brett Wallerstedt tack-
les the Cardinal ball carrier. ASU beat
Stanford 30-22. Photo by Cheryl Evans
What's the Score?
ARIZONA ST.31 KANSAS ST.O
First downs
Rushes-yards
Pass yards
Return yards
Comp-att-int
Punts-avg yds
Fumbles#-lost
Penalties-yds
Possession time
KSU
8
30-27
80
17
1 1-24-1
9-37.6
3-0
5-59
26:03
ASU
23
49-207
224
45
19-26-1
4-39
0-0
10-83
33:57
KANSAS STATE 00 00 00 00 -00
ARIZONA STATE 14 03 07 07 -31
ASU - Veach 7yd pass from Justin
(Zendejas kick)
ASU - McReynolds 10yd pass from
Justin (Zendejas kick)
ASU - FG Zendejas 22yd
ASU - Fisher 33yd run (Zendejas
kick)
ASU - Simoneau 1yd run (Zendejas
kick)
ARIZONA ST.28, SAN JOSE ST.21
First downs
Rushes-yards
Pass yards
Return yards
Comp-att-int
Punts-avg yds
Fumbles#-lost
Penalties-yds
Possession time
SJS
16
33-83
258
28
28-52-1
4-39.5
2-1
5-40
33:08
ASU
20
43-147
271
100
12-28-2
6-37.6
1-0
8-48
26:52
SAN JOSE STATE 07 07 00 07 -21
ARIZONA STATE 14 00 07 07 -28
ASU - James 80yd pass from Justin
(Zendejas kick)
ASU - Veach 1yd pass from Justin
(Zendejas kick)
SJS - Canley 7yd run (Kirk kick)
SJS - Canley 1yd run (Kirk kick)
ASU - Winsley 12yd pass from
Lasher (Zendejas kick)
ASU - Winsley 36yd run (Zendejas
kick)
SJS - Martini 3yd run (Kirk kick)
10 Kansas State/San
KICK0FF
Devils start victorious
The wake up call for ASU
football came fifteen sec-
onds into their season
opening contest with Kansas
State. On the initial play from
scrimmage, Quarterback Paul
Justin's pass was intercepted by
the Wildcats William Price. The
Devils then woke up, playing
sound football the rest of the
way to post a 31-0 victory.
Offensively, the Devils used an
arsenal of nine different receiv-
ers, as the passing attack ac-
counted for 224 yards and two
touchdowns.
"We were in tune," Paul Jus-
tin said." We knew how we were
all going to do."
If the offense was in tune,
then the Sun Devil defense was
deafening. Kansas State's offense
was held to 107 total yards as
crossed over into Devil territory
only twice.
"Overall, I thought it was a
good, solid win," Coach Larry
Marmie said.
Sprinting around a Spartan defender,
Devil tailback Bruce Perkins collects
yardage as ASU drives down the field.
The Sun Devil offense netted over 400
yards in their victory over San Jose
State. Photo by Scott Troyanos
On Sept. 16, the Devils hosted
the San Jose State team. ASU
outlasted the Spartans for a hard
fought 28-21 win.
"It was a real good win for our
team," Marmie said. "We had to
make some plays in the fourth
quarter, and we came through."
Included in those plays was a
defensive stand on the Spartan's
final possession. After moving
the ball to the ASU 11 -yard line,
the Devil defense stuffed two
sweep attempts and swatted
away two pass offerings to
thwart the drive.
The Sun Devil offense moved
the ball well, totaling 418 yards.
ASU provided the big play when
Paul Justin hit receiver Lynn
James over the middle for an 80-
yard touchdown pass.
"It was just another day at the
office, I guess," Marmie said.
Pressuring the quarterback, stong safe-
ty Phillipi Sparks dives for Kansas
State's Carl Straw. ASU reached the
Wildcats' quarterback several times,
while recording three sacks.
ie State
Bursting through the Spartan line, Sun
Devil running back Kelvin Fisher closes
in on the endzone. ASU's running game
led the way as the Devils beat San Jose
State 28-21.
Surveying the Kansas State defense,
flanker Lynn James glides down the line
of scrimmage. Nine different receivers
caught passes as the Devil offense tal-
lied 31 points in their shutout victory
over the Wildcats.
Sandwiching a Spartan ball carrier are
Mark Tingstad and Nathan LaDuke.
ASU"s defense held San Jose St. to un-
der 90-yards rushing in preserving the
victory. Photo by Scott Troyanos
Kansas State/San Jose State 9
1
Escaping from a Husky, fullback Kel-
vin Fisher gets outside for a gain. Fisher
led ASU with 89 yards against
Washington.
Throwing the ball on line, Paul Justin
completes a pass. Justin passed for over
900 yards in the two Washington games.
W hat's the Score?
ARIZONA ST. 44, WASH. ST. 39
WSU ASU
First downs
Rushes-yards
Pass yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles#-lost
Penalties-yds
Possesion time
19 33
28-147 43-117
419 534
24-31-1 33-47-0
4-2 1-1
7-35 4-36
24:44 35:16
ASU - James 11yd pass from Justin
WSU - Olson 38yd pass from Gossen
WSU - Broussard 1yd run
WSU - FG Hanson 33yd
ASU - Fair 16yd pass from Justin
ASU - Simoneau 1yd run
WSU - Broussard 98yd return
ASU - FG Richey 24yd
WSU - Young 8yd pass from Garcia
ASU - Fair 18yd pass from Justin
ASU - Fair 4yd pass from Justin
WSU - Broussard 1yd run
ASU - Fisher 2yd rush
ARIZONA ST. 34, WASH. 82
ASU UW
First downs
Rushes-yards
Pass yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles#-lost
Penalties-yds
Possession time
22
45-154 35-99
339 428
18-36-1 28-42-3
1-1 3-8
7-75 6-37
30:48 29:12
ASU - Fair 13yd pass from Justin
UW - Riley 69yd pass from Conklin
ASU - Veach 16yd pass from Justin
ASU - James 17yd pass from Justin
UW - McKay 6yd pass from Conklin
ASU - FG Richey 23yd
UW - FG McCallum 24yd
UW - Lewis 5yd run
ASU - FG Richey 23yd
ASU - Winsley 1yd run
UW - Riley 36yd pass from Conklin
Diving for yardage, freshman
Jeff Simoneau gets another
first down. The offense pro-
duced over 750 yards in total
offense in their victory over
the Cougars.
m2 0NA SJHt
AIR FORCE
Pass attack takes off
In 1988, a disgruntled ASU
football team traveled to
play a resurgent Washing-
ton State club. An aerial assualt
by Paul Justin and a late inter-
ception by Nathan LaDuke led
the way as the Devils upset the
Cougars. There was a significant
difference in this past years
game, it was played in Tempe.
Paul Justin set a Sun Devil
single game passing record with
534 yards and Nathan LaDuke
picked off a Brad Gossen throw
with 33 seconds left in the game
to insure the 44-39 victory. Senior
split end Ron Fair caught 19
passes to break the Pac-10 re-
cord. Fair gained 277 yards on
his receptions and scored three
touchdowns.
The win boosted more than
ASU's record, it lifted their confi-
dence to new heights.
"This win does a lot for our
team's confidence," said Fair.
"Once we get going, we can't be
stopped."
I That level of confidence would
be evident as ASU traveled to
Seattle to play the highly favored
Washington Huskies. The Devils
outlasted U.W. for a surprising
34-32 triumph. Once again, ASU
moved the ball through the air as
Justin completed 18 passes for
339 yards and three touchdowns.
The defense caused six Husky
turnovers and stiffened in the
second half when they had to.
Unfortunately, the biggest sto-
ry on the defensive side of the
ball was the permanent loss of
their leader, Mark Tingstad. The
senior linebacker collided head
first with Washington's Cary
Conklin, reinjuring his neck.
Tingstad was kept overnight in a
Seattle hospital. Diagnosis was
that there was no severe damage,
but that his football career was
over.
"It just came too close this
time," said Head Coach Larry
Marm.
The coach left the stadium to
present his fallen warrior with
the victorious game ball.
Chasing a loose ball, Darren Woodson
and Richard Davis cause a Washington
turnover. ASU's defense caused six total
turnovers by the Huskies offensive unit.
*
Returning a kick, Eric Guliford sets
ASU up in good field position. The fresh-
man also caught five passes for 102
yards in a 44-39 victory over Washington
State.
Washington St./Washington 9™
1
What's the Score?
HOUSTON 36, ASH 7
UH
ASU
First downs 26
15
Rushes-yards 18-118
43-55
Pass yards 626
90
Return yards 227
47
Comp-att-yds 46-78-4
7-26-5
Punts-avg yds 1-42
0-38.5
Fumbles#-lost 5-2
4-2
Penalties-yds 23-236
5-36
Possession time 30:33
29:27
HOUSTON 07 12 00 17 -36
ARIZONA ST 07 00 00 00 - 7
UH - Brown 2yd pass from Ware
(Anderson kick)
ASU - Veach 3yd pass from Lasher
(Zendejas kick)
UH - Hazard 8yd pass from Ware
(kick failed)
UH - Weatherspoon 32yd run
(pass failed)
UH - Weatherspoon 58yd
punt
return
(Anderson kick)
UH - Smith,P. 77yd pass
from
Klingler
(Anderson kick)
UH - F.G Anderson 36yd
ASU 19, MISSOURI 3
MIZZOU
ASU
First downs 13
22
Rushes-yards 38-100
56-272
Pass yards 93
125
Return yds 43
28
Comp-att-int 12-26-1
12-20-2
Punts-avg 8-40
6-39.3
Fumbles#-lost 3-2
2-1
Penalty yds 5-55
5-59
Possession time 28:34
31:26
MISSOURI 00 03 00 00 - 3
ARIZONA ST. 02 00 03 12 -19
ASU - Plunkett's punt blocked
out of end zone
MU - FG Baker 22yds
ASU - FG Zendejas 36yds
ASU - Simoneau 4yd run
(Zendejas kick)
ASU - Simoneau 1yd run
(Zendejas kick)
Avoiding the sack, Huston quarterback
Andre Ware is rushed by Devil lineback-
er Isreal Stamey. The devils suffered
their first defeat of the season, losing to
Houston
Ganging up on Houston running back
Chuck Weatherspoon, the Devil defen-
sive surge holds the Cougars without a
gain. This was an uncommon sight as
Houston totaled a record 744 yards on
offense.
94 Houston/Missouri
UNDAUNTED
ASU battles cats
The explosive Houston Cou-
gars offense, labled " the
run and shoot," dis-
charged nearly as many back-
fires as they did bullets in de-
feating the Sun Devils 36-7, on
Sept. 23.
Houston quarterback Andre
Ware led the way as the 17th-
ranked Cougars riddled the Devil
defense for a record breaking to-
tal of 744 yards. The most yard-
age previously given up by ASU
was 715 yards by Harden Sim-
mons in 1950.
"Andre Ware is a very talent-
ed athlete," said Head Coach
Larry Marmie. "When we did put
pressure on him, he was able to
escape and roll out."
The whole game was frustrating
because of the opportunities that
Houston gave the Devils," said
junior defensive safety Nathan
LaDuke.
Despite impressive offensive
numbers, the Cougars were pe-
nalized for 234 yards and they
turned the ball over eight times.
"Any loss is hard to come back
Jarring the ball loose, Devil linebackers
Drew Metcalf{il) and Terence Johnson
(45) prepare to recover another Mis-
souri turnover. The Devil defense kept
the Tigers out of the endzone during a
19-3 victory.
High stepping his way to long yardage,
senior running back David Winsley
chalks up another first down. "Scooter"
as he is nicknamed, led the Devils with
134 yards rushing against the University
of Missouri. Photo by T.J. Sokol
from," said Devil defensive line-
man Richard Davis. "But if we
win as a team, we die as one."
On Sept. 30, at Sun Devil Stadi-
um, the Missouri Tigers were the
victims as the Sun Devils re-
leased a swarming defense and
an impressive running attack en
route to a 19-3 victory.
The Devil defense caused four
Tiger turnovers, sacked the quar-
terback four times, and blocked a
punt for a safety. Eddie Stokes
broke through the line to swat
Mark Plunkett's kick out of the
end zone.
Offensively, David Winsley
carried the load for the Devils by
rushing for 134 yards. The Devils
ran for 252 yards, their highest
ground total for the season.
Freshman Jeff Simoneau scored
on a 4-yard drive and later on a
1-yard plunge to seal the victory
for the Devils. The win was the
first for ASU over Missouri dur-
ing regular season play.
Houston/Missouri 9
1
Losing control of the football, ASU tail-
back Bruce Perkins can only watch as
Oregon's Andre Williams recovers the
fumble. The Sun Devil offense was
washed out during a downpour as the
Ducks prevailed 27-7.
Layout by Erik Leverson
Holding back the Duck rushing attack,
ASU's Tim Landers wrestles Oregon's
Derek LoviHe to the ground. Oregon's
halfback was the first runner to gain
over 200 yards on a Devil defense in six
seasons.
Chasing down the quarterback, ASU
linebacker Terence Johnson pursues the
Duck's Bill Musgrave. The Oregon field
general proved elusive as he threw for
211 yards. Photo by T.J. Sokol
I
6 Oregon St./Oregon
SNAPPED
ASU winning streak ends
Strong defense an opportu-
nistic offense, fan support
and victories over Oregon
had become ASU traditions.
On Oct. 14, the Devils traveled
to Corvallis, Oregon to take on
the Oregon State Beavers, and
the tradition ended.
After providing OSU with ear-
ly scoring chances and squander-
ing their own, ASU found itself
behind 10-0 at halftime. A David
Winsley fumble led to the Bea-
vers only touchdown in the half.
All three of ASU's second quarter
possessions resulted in Brad Wil-
liams' punts.
The Devils, behind two Paul
Justin touchdown passes, rallied
to take the lead. But, late in the
fourth quarter, the Beavers
marched down field 71 yards to
score what would be the game's
final points.
ASU and OSU finished the
game tied at 17-17. This was the
first time in the last 12 meetings
that the Devils were unable to
earn a victory.
On Oct. 21, the normally cloud-
less Arizona skies filled with an
eerie gray matter which pro-
duced a rainstorm only ducks
could love. These fowls were
from the University of Oregon,
and on this day, they would slice
through a melting ASU football
team for a 27-7 victory.
The story for this game would
not be found in the weather re-
port or the playbook. The truth
simply lay in the statistics. The
Devil defense allowed 478 total
yards and a running back to gain
over 200 yards for the first time
in six seasons. In fact, Derek Lo-
ville's 218 yards exceeded ASU's
output by 69 yards.
"It's embarrassing," said line-
backer Drew Metcalf after the
loss.
It was the first time since the
series began in 1966 that the
Ducks beat ASU.
"This is the lowest point for
ASU football since I've been
here," Coach Larry Marmie said.
Faking out the defender, fullback Kel-
vin Fisher gets ready to turn up field for
an ASU gain. The Devils' offense netted
only 149 yards against the Ducks.
Faking out the defender, fullback Kel-
vin Fisher gets ready to turn up field for
an ASU gain. The Devils' offense netted
only 149 yards against the Ducks.
What's the Score
ARIZONA ST. 17, OREGON ST. 17
First downs
Rushes-yards
Pass yards
Return yards
Comp-att-int
Punts-avg yds
Fumbles#-lost
Penalties-yds
Possession time
ASU
17
29-105
249
20
20-36-0
6-37
2-1
2-20
24:37
OSU
18
44-157
179
2
22-29-2
4-49
2-0
8-70
35:23
ARIZONA STATE 00 00 10 07 -17
OREGON STATE 07 03 00 07 -17
OSU - Chaffey 3yd run (Bussanich
kick)
OSU - FG Bussanich 30yd
ASU - FG Richey 27yd
ASU - Fisher 4yd pass from Justin
(Richey kick)
ASU - James 28yd pass from Justin
(Richey kick)
OSU - Chaffey 8yd run (Bussanich
kick)
OREGON 27, ARIZONA ST. 7
First downs
Rushes-yards
Pass yards
Return yards
Comp-att-int
Punts-avg yds
Fumbles#-lost
Penalties-yds
Possession time
ORE
25
55-267
211
82
20-33-1
2-39.5
2-0
7-90
40:58
ASU
7
21-24
125
35
14-29-1
7-38.4
3-1
9-95
19:02
OREGON 03 21 00 03 -27
ARIZONA STATE 07 00 00 00 - 7
ORE - FG McCallum 32yd
ASU - Justin 4yd pass from Perkins
(Richey kick)
ORE - Loville 1yd run (McCallum
kick)
ORE - Loville 2yd run (McCallum
kick)
ORE - Loville 68yd run (McCallum
kick)
ORE - FG McCallum 24yd
Oregon St./Oregon 9
Burying the ball carrier, the Sun Devil
defensive line holds their ground. ASU
couldn't break the Wildcat's jinx as the
'Cats prevailed for the eighth straight
year.
Po Arizona
Going for a first down Robert Kierstead Teaming up to tackle the runner, M
shields the ball from a Wildcat. ASU lost than Laduke and Drew Metcalf brinj
to UofA, 28-10. Photo by T.J. Sokol down a Wildcat. ASU donned gold jer
seys for the battle with U of A.
THE GAME
Rivals continue streak
or the last seven seasons,
ASU football had been
looking for the one intan-
gible factor that would allow
them to defeat their rivals from
Tucson.
The 1989 Sun Devil squad de-
cided to go for the gold.
On Nov. 25th, ASU hosted the
Wildcats in the final game of the
season. While honorary team
captain Mark Tingstad met at
midfield with Wildcat captains,
the Devils remained absent from
the sideline. When Tingstad
headed back towards the bench
he was greeted by a sea of golden
jersied Devils streaming onto the
field. The uniforms had been se-
cretly ordered by Head Coach
arry Marmie last October.
The energized Devils were the
recipients of the games first
break as ASU linebacker Darren
Woodson intercepted the 'Cats
initial pass at midfield. The Dev-
ils took only three plays to push
the ball into the endzone seizing
the early advantage. ASU held a
10-7 lead at halftime.
The 'Cats first series of the
second half was indicitive of how
the remianing 30 minutes was
played. UofA drove 71 yards in
nine plays to take a 14-10 lead.
The difference quickly grew as
on the Devils first play of the
half Paul Justin was sacked and
UofA recovered the quarter-
back's fumble at the ASU 10
yardline. Three plays later, half-
back David Eldridge had scored
his second touchdown in an 83
second span.
When David Winsley was se-
perated from the ball at the 'Cats
10 yardline, a decade full of hor-
rifying memories began echoing
in Sun Devil helmets.
"In the back of some guys
heads they were probably think-
ing 'Oh no, is it happening
again?' " Nathan Laduke said.
The Devils were unable to
make another threat as the 'Cats
ran through ASU for a 28-10 tri-
umph. The UofA win was the
eighth straight game in this se-
ries which left ASU without a
victory.
"I hate to have the year end
like this and to keep saying the
same old cliche," linebacker
Drew Metcalf said. "Wait 'til
next year."
What's the Score?
ARIZONA 28,
ARIZONA ST. 10
UofA ASU
First downs 22 13
Rushes-yards 71-285 24-43
Pass yards 81 307
Return yards 4 23
Comp-att-int 7-11-2 17-34-0
Fumbles#-lost 0-0 2-2
Punts-avg yds 2-48.5 4-41.8
Penalties-yds 1-5 2-9
Possession time 40:41 19:19
ARIZONA 00 07 14 07 -28
ARIZONA STATE 07 03 00 00 -10
ASU - Fisher 1yd run (Richey kick)
UofA - Griffith 2yd pass from Veal
(Pfaff kick)
ASU - FG Richey 44yd
UofA - Eldridge 1yd run (Coston
kick)
UofA - Eldridge 1yd run (Coston
kick)
UofA - Bates 3yd run(Coston kick)
"THE STREAK"
1982
Arizona 28, Arizona St. 18
1983
Arizona 17, Arizona St. 15
1984
Arizona 16, Arizona St. 10
1985
Arizona 16, Arizona St. 13
1986
Arizona 34, Arizona St. 17
1987
Arizona 24, Arizona St. 24
1988
Arizona 28, Arizona St. 18
1989
Arizona 28, Arizona St. 10
Arizona 9
.
GET PHYSICAL
Cheer more than spirit
At ASU sporting events,
there was a surface des-
ignated for the players.
Students were given their own
domain slightly away from the
field. Appropriately, in between
these two locations, was an area
patrolled by the other student
athletes. Cheerleaders bridged
the gap between the fans and the
players.
The role of cheerleaders was
always changing. They served as
entertainment when action was
stopped, but while the game was
played, they were there to sup-
port the team. They served as
inspiration to both the crowd and
the players when a momentum
switch was needed. Through all
these character changes, one
constant prevailed: they had to
be athletic.
Squad members spent 20 hours
per week practicing formations
Cheering on the Devils, the junior varsi-
ty squad celebrates an ASU victory.
Eight members of the varsity graduated
as new spirit leaders took over in Decem-
ber.
I
Counting out Devil points,Sparky gets a
workout during the ASU-San Jose game.
For every point the Sun Devils scored
during the season, the mascot would
match with an equal number of push
ups. Photo by Michelle Conway.
and routines in addition to spend-
ing 10-15 hours a week on physi-
cal conditioning.
Although they assumed the
part of student athletes, no
scholarships or compensation
was awarded to squad members.
Both male and female members
had strict height and weight reg-
ulations as well as academic
requirements.
Perhaps the most difficult as-
pect of the sport was the injury
risk factor. Broken bones, pulled
muscles, and bumps and bruises
were common place on the cheer
line.
Being a spirit leader for the
Sun Devils took more than a
smile and some pom-poms. Sports
were not limited to the playing
surface, they extended to the
athletes on the other side of the
boundries.
OOCheerleading
Standing high above the field, Monet
Valdez completes the pyramid. ASU
cheer members worked over 20 hours a
week on their routines.
Performing a vertical lift, Kristi Howell
receives a boost from Ralph Shiel. Stunts
and physical requirements kept cheer-
leaders in the weight room three days a
week.
Layout by Erik Leverson
hen we Score!
ASU FIGHT SONG
Fight Devils down the field
Fight with all your might
and don 't ever yield.
Long may our colors
outshine all others.
Echo from the Buttes
"Give 'em Hell Devils!"
Cheer! Cheer! For ASU
Fight for the old marron
For it's Hail! Hail!
The gang's all here
and it's onward to victory!
Cheerleading 101
Intent on nailing a bull's-eye, archer
Chris Castner prepares for Nationals.
Castner, placed fourth at Nationals and
helped the men's team earn its 10th
successive crown.
j^^^H
'.-jfl # *
^^JJ ~_j
jf -<v ^
s~
^B
BKk
^^^^ W r '"
■
"*f \
t .,» « >
■
Eyeing the target, All-American Kris
Maskrey pulls the bow taut. Maskrey
placed third individually at nationals
while the women's squad took its sev-
enth consecutive national crown.
Practicing her release, Janet Schaffer
refines her skills under the direction of
Head Coach Sheri Rhodes. During
Rhodes' 13 years at ASU, she has guided
the squad to 34 out of a possible 39
national team titles.
I
02 Archery
CARBON COPY
Another winning season
It was a team with few
fans and few big head-
lines, but it was a team
with a long-standing tradition of
success. No matter how many
trophies or National titles were
under their belts, the Sun Devil
Archers stayed on target as a na-
tional leader.
Although students may have
been surprised to learn that ASU
even had an archery team, there
were plenty of other people who
were aware of it.
"I came from a Tucson com-
munity college to ASU because of
the archery team here," said se-
nior Ail-American Danny Crain,
"ASU is known nationally for its
top-ranked program.
Not only was the team known
nationally, but its coach was too.
Sheri Rhodes was the 1988 U.S.
Olympic Archery Coach. So why
were the very noteworthy Sun
Devil Archers relatively un-
known?
"Archery isn't really a specta-
tor sport," Crain said. "It's more
of a mental challenge than a
physical one."
"Archery is extremely compet-
itive, but it's also very individ-
ualistic. When we shoot, we're
not only trying to beat our appa-
ll nents' scores, we're trying to
$ beat our own," Kari Granville.
As with any sport, a lot of
hours were devoted in order to
make the team a nationally-rec-
ognized contender. Last year, all
of the hard work paid off, as the
Sun Devil Archers took Nation-
als. The men's team took first
place, 204 points higher than sec-
ond-place Purdue.
The women's team beat sec-
ond-place James Madison by 170
points. In the mixed competition,
the Sun Devils beat second-place
James Madison by 346 points. An
exceptional score of 2,303 points
was shot by Michael
Bergenheier.
Besides all of the hard work,
there was a lot of fun tied into
the Archery team.
"One of our team jokes is from
the move 'Caddyshack'," said
Granville. "In the movie, they al-
ways said, 'Be the ball'. So, as a
joke, we always tell each other to
'Be the arrow'."
Maybe the saying didn't help
the "Caddyshack" golfers too
much, but it might have been
part of the overall spirit that
made the '88-'89 archers a team
worth knowing.
KIM CHUPPA
ARCHERY. Front Row: James Swanson, Kathy Mason, Kari Granville, Janet Schaffer, Kris Maskery, Head
Coach Sheri Rhodes. Second Row: Cope Baily, Dan Donley, Dan Crain, Brian Faust, Dannhy Stinnett, Chris
Castner, Jim Cassidy, Michael Bergenheier.
Layout by David Kexel
W hat's the Score?
ARCHERY
DUEL IN THE DESERT
ASU INVITATIONAL
ASAA CHAMPIONSHIP
Tropicana Championship
Arizona Collegiate
Wildcat Invitational
U.S. West Regional
Intermountain Meet
Glendale Invitational
ASAA CHAMPIONSHIP
West Regional Collegiate
Championship
Arizona Collegiate Championship
World Target Trials
U.S. Intercollegiate Championship
Archery 10
1
POSTSEASON
Team captures two titles
The Sun Devil Baseball
team captured two cham-
pionship titles and second
place in the Pac-10 during 1988-
89 season.
In January, ASU upset the
heavily favored Korea Universi-
ty, 7-6, in the International Uni-
versity Baseball Tournament in
Taichuns City, Taiwan.
The Devils went on to capture
their second title of the season in
March when they defeated
Brigham Young 14-12 at the Riv-
erside Invitational.
The Sun Devils slipped to sec-
ond place in the Pac-10 after be-
ing swept by UofA during the fi-
nal three games of the season. As
runner-up in the conference, the
Sun Devils were bumped from
playing host to NCAA regional
competition.
"We would have preferrred to
play at home," Head Coach Jim
Brock said. "But we didn't earn
that privilege."
For the first time in ASU base-
ball history, the Sun Devils had
to pack their bags for postseason
play and traveled to the North-
east Regional in Waterbury,
Connecticut.
The Sun Devils won their first
two games in the double elimina-
tion series, downing George
Washington, 5-0, and Pennysyl-
vania, 15-4. However, back-to-
back losses to LeMoyne, 4-2 and
Arkansas, 1-0, ended ASU's antic-
ipated journey to the College
World Series.
The season was highlighted by
freshman Mike Kelly, who was
awarded the National Freshman
Player of the Year award by Col-
legiate Baseball/ESPN.
Kelly established the ASU
freshman RBI record (55), tied
the freshman stolen base record
(16), and recorded 10 home runs.
In final regular-season polls,
ASU was ranked No. 6 by Base-
ball America and No. 7 by Colle-
giate Baseball/ESPN and fin-
ished the season with an overall
record of 40-17.
TOMI MCELROY
BASEBALL. Front Row: Managerette Marsha Weatherland, Equipman Bill Kennedy, Dave Robson, Brian
Harris, Oscar Rivas, Kevin Higgins, Batboy Kyle Kilgo, Bob Dombrowski, Dave Alexander, Dan Rumsey, Rex
McMackin, Trainer Bruce Kalish, Administrative Assistant Tomi McElroy. Second Row: Hitting Instructor
Jeff Pentland, JV Coach Tim Esmay, Eric Helfand, Pete Gleason, Anthony Manahan, Kip Yaughn, Rusty
Kilgo, David Cassidy, Sean Rees, Dave Robson, John Finn, First Base Coach Ricky Peters. Third Row: Head
Coach Jim Brock, Steve Brody, Mike Kelly, Tommy Adams, Tucker Hammagren, Brian Dodd, Jim Henderson,
Phil Essex, Steve Bivens, Steve Martin, Steve Willis, Jim Austin, Recruiting Coordinator Kendall Carter,
Pitching Coach Dub Kilgo.
I
04 Baseball
Going for the double play Ail-American
second baseman Kevin Higgins whirls
the ball to first base. Higgins most pro-
ductive series was against Arizona, hit-
ting .400 with six RBI's.
Layout by Erik Leverson
What's the Score?
BASEBALL
ASU
OPP.
4
UC Riverside
1
2
UC Riverside
7
Cal Poly Pomona
6
10
Cal Poly Pomona
2
6
Florida State
9
3
Florida State
8
4
Chapman
12
10
Chapman
3
5
Texas Tech
3
7
Texas Tech
1
9
Texas Tech
8
3
Texas
10
1
Texas
4
8
Texas
4
6
Lubbock Christian
1
13
Lubbock Christian
5
5
UCLA
1
10
UCLA
9
4
UCLA
3
10
Stanford
2
10
Stanford
6
7
Stanford
2
5
San Jose State
4
3
California
4
7
California
5
4
California
6
3
Cal State Long Beach
2
9
Cal State Long Beach
6
3
use
6
8
use
5
7
use
4
3
Arizona
5
3
Arizona
2
16
Arizona
6
6
Washington State
7
18
Harvard
2
5
Brigham Young
4
18
UC Riverside
4
4
Oregon State
2
14
Brigham Young
12
12
Stanford
1
10
Stanford
9
12
Stanford
6
2
UCLA
4
6
UCLA
7
5
UCLA
4
10
New Mexico State
3
12
New Mexico State
11
California
1
10
California
3
3
California
2
2
use
8
6
use
7
11
use
6
Arizona
10
4
Arizona
9
Arizona
10
5
George Washington
15
Pennsylvania
4
2
LeMoyne
4
Arkansas
1
Letting it go, pitcher Oscar Rivas throws a
•strike over the plate. Rivas a junior transfer
(pitched the Sun Devil team to a 12-1 win over
iStanford. Photo by Jack Beasley/State Press
Discussing the game strategy against New
Mexico State is Head Coach Jim Brock and
hitting instructor Jeff Pentland. The Devils
went on to win both games in the series.
Putting a little extra on the ball, senior
Yvette Baltazar throws out the runner
at first base. Strong defense helped the
Devils win the Univ. of South Florida
Classic last March.
Peering from the dugout, Becky Davis
and Cheryl Smith lend support to a Dev-
il batter. ASU finished 34-26 during the
'89 campaign.
•
06 Softball
Rifling one across the diamond is Ann
Rowan. Rowan was one of a few starters
that stayed healthy. Photo by T.J. Sokol
*■ '■*■,
PATIENTS
Devils'injuries add up
njuries are every coach's
fear, but for softball Head
Coach Mary Littlewood,
last year turned into a nightmare
of casts, slings, and Ace
bandages.
During an exhibition game
against Mesa Community College
on Feb. 1, senior pitching ace
Donna Stewart broke her foot
while playing first base. Four
more crucial injuries were to fol-
low before the season was out.
According to Littlewood, inju-
ries were crucial to last year's
performance as a team.
"There were games we have
lost that had we had all of our
strength, we could've won," she
said.
The Devils were still strong
enough to notch a 34-26 record.
ASU finished second in the invi-
tational bearing their name
Three weeks later the Devils
journeyed to the University of
South Florida Classic on March
10-12 to win that title, but lost
junior first-baseman Brandi
Hurst to a broken left leg.
"It just kept happening and
happening," Littlewood said.
It didn't stop there. Although
the team regained Stewart, the
team lost two catchers and a
third-baseman within three days.
During the UofA series at home
on March 29, freshman catcher
Christi Seratelli suffered a dislo-
cated finger, and when senior
second-baseman Karen Fifield
came in to take her place, she too
was sidelined with a fracture-dis-
location of her finger.
Two days later against Oregon
State, junior third-baseman
Stephanie May suffered a broken
fibula while trying to tag a Bea-
ver runner, leaving the Devils
with 11 healthy players.
"The healthy kids hung in
there," Littlewood said. " It's the
gutsiest and least selfish team
we've ever had."
LESLIE ANDERSON
SOFTBALL First row: Ann Rowan, Cheryl Smith, Becky Davis, Natalie King, Yvette Baltazar, Sherry Curry,
Tammy Duncan, Karen Fifield. Second row: Assistant coach Tami Brown, Christy Serritella, Stephanie
Darnell, Brandi Hunt, Terri Carnicelli, Donna Stewart, Michelle Gravatt, Melinda Cook, Head coach Mary
Littlewood.
Turning the double play, Stephanie
Darnell pivots to finish the twin-killing.
ASU recorded its 19th consecutive win-
ning season under Head Coach Mary
Littlewood.
What's the Score?
ASU
SOFTBALL
OPP
Oregon
3
1
Oregon
2
4
Toledo
2
Toledo
5
2
Utah St.
1
5
UC Santa Barbara
2
4
Minnesota
Cal Poly Pomona
1
2
Pacific
8
Penn St.
Iowa St.
2
4
NE Louisiana
5
New Mexico St.
3
Fresno St.
6
7
Oklahoma
2
5
Nebraska
4
Minnesota
2
9
Nebraska
3
6
Central Mich
5
5
Central Mich
4
1
South Carolina
6
Akron
3
Eastern Mich
7
NE Louisiana
2
7
Illinois St.
1
7
Florida St.
3
13
South Carolina
5
California
1
California
1
6
Adelphi
3
3
Santa Clara
1
1
Creighton
3
4
Texas A&M
3
Arizona
1
1
Arizona
Arizona
3
5
Oregon St.
1
7
Oregon St.
3
7
Kansas
6
Nebraska
3
2
Florida St.
3
Kansas
1
Nebraska
2
6
Arizona
3
Arizona
4
UCLA
4
UCLA
1
1
California
2
1
California
13
Oregon St.
13
Oregon St.
Oregon
1
1
Oregon
2
3
Fla Southern
9
Fla Southern
3
UCLA
1
1
UCLA
4
2
Utah St.
2
Arizona
3
Arizona
4
Softball 10'
Keeping his eye on the ball, freshman
Phil Mickelson watches another shot
land on the green. Mickelson's eight top
ten finishes in tournament play led the
Devils to their first PAC-10 Champion-
ship in eight years.
The sun sets on Devil golfers as another
day of practice comes to an end. ASU
was challenged by their new home
course, Karsten Golf Course, designed by
renowned course architect Pete Dye.
Sinking a hole in one, sophomore John
Bizik plays at the Golf Digest Intercolle-
giate in Houston. He was one of five ASU
golfers to qualifty for the NCAA Cham-
pionships in June.
Layout by Robyn Pinkston
I
8 Men's Golf
NUMBER ONE
Freshman takes honors
IP
t takes a lot of hard work
and practice to play colle-
giate sports. But for fresh-
men the transition was always
rough. There was school work
and higher expectations from the
coaches and teammates.
But freshman golfer Phil
Mickelson made the whole pro-
cess look easy.
This California native became
the third freshman and second
Sun Devil ever to win the nation-
al championships. He won when
Kevin Johnson of Clemson, who
was three strokes ahead of Mick-
elson, forgot to sign his score
card at the end of the second
round.
Mickelson, who had 10 'top 10'
placings in 14 tournaments, was
named first team Ail-American.
The top-ranked Sun Devils were
not so lucky, however. ASU fin-
sihed 27 stokes behind the win-
ner, Oklahoma, in fifth place.
Junior Scott Frisch was the
closest Sun Devil to Mickelson at
30th. However, junior Per Jo-
hansson also earned All-Ameri-
can honors with senior Captain
Jim Strickland earning an honor-
able mention.
The Devils registered four
tournamennt titles with seven
runner-up finishes during the
season. In the Arizona Invitation-
al the Devils were nine strokes
behind in the last round and
came back to win it.
The Devils, who had been
ranked number two most of the
season, took over the number one
spot with a runner-up finish at
the John Burns Intercolliegate in
Hawaii.
"February was the turnaround
for this team," Loy said.
The Devils went on to win the
Fresno State classic in March as
well as the annual Sun Devil/Th-
underbird Classic in late April.
The Thunderbird win by the Sun
Devils was only the second in 17
years.
"There is no doubt that this
program is on its way up," Loy
said.
MEN'S GOLF. Front Row: Todd Kernaghn, John Bizik, Jim Strickland, Dave Cunningham, Per Johansson.
Second Row: Head Coach Steve Loy, Keith Sbarbaro, Brett Dean, Phil Mickelson, Scott Frisch, Scott Sullivan,
Rob Mangini.
What's the Score?
MEN'S GOLF
2nd LSU National Intercollegiate
2nd Southwestern Intercollegiate
6th Tour Tulsa Invitational
2nd Golf World/Palmetto Dunes
2nd UNLV Rebel Golf Classic
1st Ping Arizona Invitational
2nd John Burns Intercollegiate
5th Golf Digest Classic
1st Fresno State Golf Classic
2nd Forest Hills Invitational
1st Sun Devil/Thunderbird Classic
1st Pac-10 Conference Tournament
2nd NCAA West Regional
5th NCAA Championship
Men's Golf 1
.
What's the Score?
WOMEN'S GOLF
4th All College Kickoff
2nd Tour Tulsa Invitational
4th Stanford Intercollegiate
4th UCLA Desert Classic
1st USC Yamaha Invitational
2nd Chris Johnson Invitational
3rd Patty Sheehan Invitational
1st Lady Sun Devil Invitational
2nd Pac-10 Championship
6th NCAA Championship
10 Women's Golf
Following the ball with her eye is ASU
golfer Missy Fan. Farr was chosen sec-
ond team All-American prior to the 1988-
89 season.
Mentally guiding her putt is Amy Fruh-
wirth. Fruhwirth went into the 1988-89
season with a first place win at the U.S.
Japan Intercollegiate in Tanagura, Ja-
pan under her belt. Photo by T.J. Sokol.
Layout by Robyn Pinkston
WOMEN'S GOLF. Front Row: Tana Figueras, Tami Proctor, Head Coach Linda Vollstedt, Susan Perrault,
^.ynne Mikulas. Second Row: Graduate Assistant Michelle Estill, Julie Shephard, Heather Hodur, Mindy Bono,
Missy Farr, Pearl Sinn, Amy Fruhwirth.
TEAM UNITY
Ladies win at home
Consistency and team unity
were the strong points of
the Women's Golf Pro-
gram, with the exception of na-
tionals, where the number-two
ranked Devils fell to sixth place,
according to Head Coach Linda
Vollstedt.
"I think we forgot to peak,"
Vollstedt said. "We had been
playing well all the way up to
nationals."
The Lady Sun Devils were led
by All-American senior Pearl
Sinn, winner of the 1988 U.S. Am-
ateur and U.S. Public Links
Championships, and All-Ameri-
can junior Amy Fruhwirth, win-
ner of the Lady Sun Devil Clas-
sic, with help from freshman
Lynne Mikulas and junior Missy
Farr.
"I felt we trained hard," Voll-
stedt said. "We accomplish a lot
of goals."
For Vollstedt, who has been
ranked in the top 10 all nine
years of her coaching career at
ASU, goals included finishing in
the top three in all of their tour-
naments, winning the Lady Sun
Devil and to have Ail-Americans.
The Lady Sun Devils won the
UCLA Desert Classic, as well as
the Lady Sun Devil Invitational.
"There is a lot of pride in win-
ning your own tournament,"
Vollstedt said. "We were really
ready to play."
The only goal that escaped the
Lady Sun Devil's grasp was the
coveted NCAA title.
"It's about the only goal we
have left," Vollstedt said. "They
(the players) were disappointed
(in the outcome of the nationals).
We knew we were better than
that."
The NCAA team consisted of
Sinn, Fruhwirth, Farr, Mikulas,
and senior Heather Hodur.
The Lady Sun Devils finished
second in the Pac-10 behind USC.
"This was the most consistent
year that we've had," Vollstedt
said. "It was another good year,
just in the things I tried to cre-
ate, not just the winning."
LESLIE ANDERSON
Women's Golf 1
I
Returning a high lob, Jenny Chan
makes a cross-court shot. Chan was the
winner of both doubles and singles at
the St. Louis Tournament.
fl2 Badminton
NCAA CHAMPS
Team takes title again
It was like an instant re-
play, the Men and Wom-
en's Badminton Team
swept the NCAA's again, for the
fifth year in a row.
"It was a great year," Head
Coach Guy Chadwick said. "We
basically killed everybody (at the
NCAA tournament in March)."
No offical records were kept,
but Chadwick estimated that the
Devils doubled their closest com-
petitor. The Sun Devils had 10
All-Americans and took the title
in men's singles, women's singles,
men's doubles, women's doubles
and mixed doubles.
The NCAA championship was
the only NCAA competition that
the Sun Devils played in. The
rest of the year they played in
open tournaments throughout
the country. But the NCAA
championships were the "big"
Concentrating on the return Freshman
Paul McAdam practices doubles with
partner Erika Von Heiland Both were
All-Americans in 1989.
tournament of the season.
"That is what everyone gears
up for," Chadwick said. "Differ-
ent schools were strong in one
event, but no school (except for
ASU) was strong in more than
two events."
ASU submitted two teams or
players in each category. In the
men's singles, senior Tom Carmi-
chael beat teammate Asok Boo-
pathy for the men's title while
Liz Aronshon won the singles ti-
tle after eliminating teammate
Erika Von Heiland in the semi-
finals.
We're all pretty much the top,
so we all play each other in the
finals," said freshman Paul McA-
dams. McAdams took the men's
double title with Carmichael.
Chadwick felt his inaugural
year went well.
"It was a great group last
year," he said.
BADMINTON. Front Row: Lori Lichay, Paul McAdam, Asok Boopathy, Liz Aronsohn, Erika Von Heiland, Ben
Lee. Second Row: P&m Rekiere, Tom Carmichael, Joel Kiernan, Joel Goldstein, Tracy Holmes, Head Coach Guy
Chadwick.
Badminton 11!
A HECTIC YEAR
What's the Score?
MEN'S BASKETBALL
ASU
83
89
106
99
81
77
59
121
82
80
60
65
72
65
84
67
71
82
60
63
83
98
93
81
74
72
80
82
Alabama
Baylor
Indiana State
Rhode Island
Texas Tech
San Diego State
Washington State
Washington
San Francisco
UC Santa Barbara
California
Stanford
Oregon
Oregon State
UCLA
Southern Cal
Arizona
NAU
Stanford
California
Oregon State
Oregon
UCLA
Southern Cal
Arizona
Washington
Washington State
Southern Cal
OPP.
84
73
91
87
75
72
65
90
76
84
84
94
70
85
94
62
96
70
76
73
89
94
86
84
109
83
96
94
.4 Men's Basketball
Injuries plague Devils
One setback after another
told the tale of the Men's
Basketball Team for the
1988-89 year.
Injuries to key players early in
the season and resignation by
Head Coach Steve Patterson led
to a rough and rocky year for the
weary Sun Devils.
"Last year was a hectic year,"
said Interim Head Coach Bob
Schermerhorn. He became head
coach on Feb. 4, 1989 when Pat-
terson resigned right before a
game against California.
"Honest to God, I didn't
know," said Schermerhorn about
Patterson's resignition. "It was a
big shock to me."
Patterson's resignation came
right on the heels of losses of key
players to injuries, including ju-
nior guard Tarence Wheeler.
In the 11th game of the season
against California, Wheeler
slipped and tore some ligaments
in his knee. He underwent sur-
gery with a rehabilitation esti-
mation of nine to 12 months.
"Wheeler was as valuable or
more valuable as Trent Ed-
wards," Schermerhorn said. "No-
body could guard him in low-
post."
Another crucial loss was soph-
omore center Emory Lewis due
to a stress fracture in his foot.
That was followed by the loss of
junior forward Mark Becker,
who broke his wrist during a Sun
Devil win over NAU, 82-70.
Both Becker and Lewis were
considered leaders in the front
court in the beginning of the sea-
son. Lewis had a point average of
8.2 per game, while Becker
bowed out with an average of
12.5.
According to Schermerhorn,
the loss of Becker and Lewis only
heightened the Sun Devils' weak-
ness on the defensive boards.
Th offensive strength was also
hindered by the loss of Wheeler.
But Schermerhorn felt that
the team held its own consider-
ing the circumstances.
"The kids went through so
much adversity and I don't think
they ever quit," Schermerhorn
said, "They stayed together pret-
ty well."
The year started out strong
with a healthy team and a couple
of close games including an upset
over Oregon and an almost upset
over Oregon State.
However, the Devils lost their
last five games, but not before
upsetting #20 ranked UCLA 93-
86.
"I'll never forget beating
UCLA," Schermerhorn said. "It
was a big thrill for me."
Continued on page 117
Penetrating the defense, Ma tt Anderson
drives toward the basket for two points.
Anderson's first season proved to be suc-
cessful, with a high of 112 field goals.
Photo by Brian O'Mahoney.
Layout by Robyn Pinkston
Up and Over the defensive player, se-
nior forward Trent Edwards shoots for
two. Edwards strong fundementals and
great play making earned him MVP of
the 1988-89 Sun Devil season.
Stalking his prey, freshman guard Ron
Waller prepares for a defensive attack.
Waller's improved play aided the injury-
ridden Sun Devils throughout the sea-
son. Photo by Shamway Lo
.
A HECTIC YEAR
Before the injuries, the Sun
Devils were optimistic about
their chances in the PAC-10.
They had finally developed a
team with size and strength. The
size and strength came mostly
from Lewis, Williams, Becker,
and Edwards. The speed came
from Wheeler. With the loss of
three of these key players, the
Sun Devils had a lot of talent and
skill to cover.
Schermerhorn said that the
team held its own considering
the circumstances.
"The kids went through so
much adversity and I don't think
they ever quit," he said. "These
kids stayed together pretty
good."
The year started out with a
couple of close games including
an upset over Oregon. However,
the Devils lost their last five
games, but not before upsetting
No. 20 ranked UCLA 93-86.
"I'll never forget beating
UCLA," Schermerhorn said. "It
| was a big thrill for me."
I The Sun Devils ended the sea-
1 son with a loss to winless USC.
To help the strain, ASU moved
quickly to bring in a new head
coach. On March 15, 1989 Bill
Freider, formally coach of the
Michigan Wolverines, became
the new head basketball coach.
His Wolverines were ranked
No. 10 by the Associated Press
and United Press International
baskeball polls when he came to
ASU.
Frieder led Michigan to five
consecutive NCAA tournament
appearances, has a nine-year
won-loss record of 191-87. He be-
came the second-winningest
coach in Michigan basketball his-
tory in 1986 when he led the Wol-
verines to their most victories
ever (28). Entering the 1988-89
season, Frieder was 34th on the
list of Winningest Active Division
I men's basketball coaches.
Frieder is known for his abili-
ty to recruit top players.
"It gives us instant recognition
on a national level," Schermer-
horn said.
Finding an open man, Freshman Guard
Ron Waller passes the ball for a big
play. Waller's keen passing instinct
helped the Sun Devils throughout the
season and earned him Rookie of the
Year.
lEN'S BASKETBALL. Front Row: Alex Austin, Matt Anderson, Ron Waller, Adrian Brown, Tarence Wheeler, Mike Redhair, Manager David Eastep. Second Row: As-
istant Coach Bob Schermerhorn, Manager Neil MacDonald, Head Coach Steve Patterson, Mark Becker, Emilio Kovacic, Torin Williams, Emory Lewis, Trent Edwards,
'art-Time Coach Jay Helman, Assistant Coach Frank Arnold Graduate Assistant Coach Dave Bale.
Men's Basketball 11
1
CLOSE CALL
Women lose tough games
w
hat's the score
WOMEN'S
]
BASKETBALL
ASU
OPP.
66
Northern Arizona 63
69
U.S. International 74
96
Southern Utah St. 70
75
West Virginia 89
74
Northern Arizona 6C
73
Oakland 54
69
San Diego State 87
67
Alabama 84
91
Morgan State 52
79
Cornell 51
67
Washington 77
88
Washington State 79
60
Oregon State 70
75
Oregon 84
81
UCLA 85
58
Southern Cal. 78
70
Arizona 77
68
Stanford 87
81
California 78
62
Oregon State 65
74
Oregon 75
68
Southern Cal. 70
86
UCLA 73
74
Arizona 87
75
California 77
72
Stanford 100
60
Washington State 71
77
Washington 92
18 Women's Basketb;
Rebuilding a basketball
team is not something
that happens overnight
Women's Basketball Head Coach
Maura McHugh and her players
discovered.
"This year wasn't what we
wanted it to be," McHugh said.
"We had some bad luck and a lot
of close games. It was pretty dis-
appointing for us."
Without any seniors, the team
lacked both experience and lead-
ership according to McHugh.
"There was no stability, expe-
rience and they are rebuilding,"
McHugh said. "There was a lack
of leadership within the team."
Although the Sun Devils
finished with a record of 9-19,
seven losses were within eight
points including a heartbreak
loss to Oregon, who won with the
last shot of the game, 74-75, and
California, who won 75-77.
"We were so close at times
that we could play with any-
body," McHugh said. "A lot of it
was opportunities that just didn't
fall our way."
Although the team perfor-
mance was inconsistant, accord-
ing to McHugh, individual perfor-
mances were the strength of the
Sun Devils. Sophomore guard
Karen O'Connor contributed an
average of 19.5 points per game
and led in five other categories
as well, including steals (86), as-
sists (155), free throw percent-
age (78.3), field goal percentage
(51.4) and minutes played (1025).
In 1988, O'Connor set an ASU
freshman record 35 points
against Washington State.
"Karen was outstanding in ev-
ery category." McHugh said.
Other key players included ju-
nior center Fran Ciak who pro-
vided emotional support to the
team and led the Devils against
the UCLA bruins with 22 points
and 14 rebounds. This academic
Ail-American was the conference
leader in rebounds with a 10.2
average.
Junior guard Rosiland Senior
also contributed with a consis-
tant outside shot that placed her
third in the nation for percent-
age of three-point baskets at
47.2.
"You just gotta hang in there
and learn from experience," Mc-
Hugh said. "Rebuilding a team is
long process, at least three years.
"We've made a commitment. It
takes a lot of hard work. I can
only see it getting better."
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL. Front Row: Carolyn DeHoff, Deborah McGee, Kim Robinson, Ebony Kelly, Rosalind Senior, Tania Worgull, Suzanne Nichols. Second Ro
Misty Thomas, Maura McHugh, Lisa Jones, April Mial, Mary Hertz, Karen O'Connor, Fran Ciak, Kim Hackbarth, Cindy Vyskocil, Shannon Gridley, Dawn Bantum, &
Clark, Debra Stephens. Photo by Conley Photography
♦ 1
i*>'
m m
^R
j,
Searching for an open teammate is
Lisa Jones. Despite Jones' eight re-
bounds in the game, the Devils lost to
the Oregon State Ducks, 65-62. Photo by
Cheryl Evans.
Fighting off opponents, Carolyn DeHoff
attempts to control the ball. DeHoff, a
leading scorer for the Devils, contributed
six points against Oregon State.
Layout by Robyn Pinkston
Women's Basketball 1 M
Splitting two defenders, sophomore Jen-
nifer Rogers adds to the Devils point
total with a spike. ASU won the October
clash with NAU, 3-2. Photo by Scott
Troyanos
Teaming up to block an opponents shot]
senior Trade Kisro and junior Tina Ber,
reject a USC spike. The Devils lost to th<
Trojans twice during the season.
What's the Score?
WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL
ASU
OPP
New Mexico St.
3
2
Louisiana St.
3
3
Wichita St.
3
Texas Tech
1
3
Santa Clara
3
Montana St.
1
UC Santa Barbara
3
2
Brigham Young
3
3
Washington St.
3
Oregon
1
3
Oregon St.
3
NAU
Southern Cal
3
UCLA
3
2
Arizona
3
2
Brigham Young
3
2
Washington
3
3
Washington St.
3
NAU
2
1
California
3
Stanford
3
2
UCLA
3
1
Southern Cal
3
1
Arizona
3
Pittsburgh
3
Texas-Arlington
3
3
Syracuse
1
3
West Virginia
2
Washington St.
3
1
Washington
3
California
3
Stanford
3
Oregon St.
3
3
Oregon
.20Vollevball
SET SCORE
Devil spikers eye future
Tough competition in the Pac-
10 placed the women's vol-
leyball team eighth in the
league. But despite the low fin-
ish, certain strengths of the team
remained evident.
The team was noted for hav-
ing very consistent senior start-
ers. Sue Nord, Susan Frid-
richs, and Tracie Kisrowere each
academic all Pac-10 and all-
American nominees.
"They've been starters
throughout their careers and
have been a tribute to ASU's stu-
dent-athlete program," first-year
coach Patti Snyder said. "They
will be sorely missed."
Despite being led by seniors,
the Devils had some young play-
ers show great promise. Soph-
omore Mindy Gowell consistently
ranked among the national lead-
ers with an average of nearly
four digs per game.
"Mindy added consistency and
stability to all facets of our
Finishing off a point, senior Sue Nord
slams the ball into the defenders court.
Hosted by the University Athletic Cen-
ter, the Devils ended the season with a
home record of 4-7.
game," Snyder said."She is a tre-
mendous passer and defensive
player who adds a comfort zone
to our offense."
Gowell was sidelined in late
September with a sprained ankle
that kept her out of action for six
weeks. Injuries weren't the only
factor in the challenging season.
Long time coach Debbie Brown
resigned her position late last
spring. Snyder was brought on
after serving as assistant coach
at the University of California.
Snyder, dissapointed with
1989's 12-20 record, is looking
forward to the future of the pro-
gram now that she is settled in as
head coach.
"ASU has an outstanding vol-
leyball tradition and I believe it
will only get better and better."
Stealing a shot out of mid-air, senior-
Noelle Fridrich prepares to return the
ball over the net. Under a first year
coach, ASU netted four conference vic-
tories.
Volleyball
121
TOUGH LUCK
High hopes sunk at NCAA's
What's the Score?
MEN'S SWIMMING
ASU OPP.
159.5 UNLV 96.5
64 Kansas 49
1st Sun Devil Classic
36 UCLA 106
61 USC 72
56 California 57
105.5 Stanford 133.6
133 Nebraska 110
149.6 Utah 138.5
75 Arizona 38
6th Pac-10 Conference
27th NCAA Championship
E
22 Men's Swimming
With three Olympians and a
slew of young recruits, the
1988-89 Men's Swimming
Team was a gold mine of talent,
according to their Head Coach
Ron Johnson. However, a little
bad luck and lack of experience
stopped the Devils short of their
pot of gold.
The Sun Devils, who were
ranked eighth going into nation-
als, slipped to a 27th place finish.
This was the first time in 10
years that the Devils did not
place in the top 20.
"We just had real bad luck at
the NCAA's," Johnson said. "Ev-
erything has to be right on and
perfect, and you have to have a
little bit of luck."
Bad luck included disqualifica-
tion from the 800-freestyle relay
because of an early exchange. It
also included an untimely injury
to former Olympian David Le-
Blanc's shoulder before his prin-
cipal event, the 200-meter
breaststroke.
But Johnson wasn't
discouraged.
"I thought we had a great
team," he said. "We did about as
well as we could with the guys
we had."
After a victorious opening
against UNLV, the men's team
lost to 5th ranked USC. Howev-
er, the team finished up the year
strong with a convincing win of
75-38 over the UofA Wildcats in
the last season meet on Feb. 18.
Their final record was 5-4 in dual
meets. They finished sixth in the
Pac-10.
According to Johnson, 1989
was a rebuilding year for the
men's swim team. Nearly 80 per-
cent of the team was made up of
underclassmen, and of the 11
NCAA qualifiers, Cocaptain Rich
Shinnick was the only senior.
All of the former Olympians,
LeBlanc, sophomore Ross Ander-
son, and junior Paul Howe will
be returning, as will a host of
other outstanding young swim-
mers. Development of freshmen
will help strengthen the back-
stroke and the individual medley
where the Devils were weakest
last year, Johnson said.
"We've had success in the past
and we will again in the future,"
Johnson added.
HEN'S SWIMMING. Front Row: Paul Mangilli, Eric Fuchs, Rich Shinnick, Chris Zickert.Head Coach
Johnson, Chuck Knoles, Ward O'Connell.Seco/id Row: Paul Howe, Chris Jantz, Bill Bass, Marc Strauch, J
Sholl, Richard Tapper, Peter Boden.Ross Anderson. Third Row: Chris Tull, Bob Childs, Doug King,
Burgess, A.J. Summers, Cliff Arslanian, Doug Bale, Alan Kuester, Josh Appel.FourtA Row: Rick Sawtell, Ter
Flock, Craig Day, Brynnar Swenson, Todd Merrill, David Fix, Danny O'Donnell, David Noble.f/ftA Row: Kei
Dennison, Van Cardineau, Cladio Majewski, Eric Wilhelm, Scott Benesch, Geoff Brisbin, Mark Arnold. Ph<
by Conley Photography
Taking the plunge, a Devil diver he*
for the refreshing waters of Plumm
Aquatic Center. ASU's Diving Squ;
qualified for the NCAA Championsh
held in Indianapolis.
Layout by Robyn Pinkston
Jf^
m. W J
:•
Flying through the water, Freshman
Richard Tapper races against swimmers
from UNLV. Tapper's efforts helped
notch ASU's first victory. Photo by T.J.
Sokol.
As the starter's gun sounds, David No-
ble and Yan Cardineau leap from the
starting block. ASU ranked top ten for
much of the season. Photo by T.J. Sokol
Men's Swimming 121
Layout by Robyn Pinkston
Pulling through the water,NCAA quali-
fier Susie Mortensen finishes with an
exceptional time. The ASU women's
swimming team had six NCAA
qualifiers.
Backstroking to victory, a Devil swim-
mer exibits the form used to maintain
high rankings. ASU's swimming team
was rated as high as fourth during the
season.
I
4 Women's Swimming
INEXPERIENCE
Team confronts adversity
Injury at one end of the
season and inexperience
at the other hindered the
Sun Devil Women's Swimming
Team from reaching their full po-
tential last year, according to
Head Coach Tim Hill.
"There were a lot of freaky
injuries that hurt us," Hill said.
Including the loss of senior Ail-
American Missy Allington to
back problems early in the year.
"The girls responded well to
the adversity, but it did hurt us,"
he said.
The Sun Devils, who were
ranked as high as fifth, finished
the season at ninth, placing fifth
at the Pac-10 Championships
with a dual record of 7-3. Two of
those losses came in mid-January
to UCLA and USC in California.
Illness and injury had depleted
the Sun Devils' strength by one-
third.
Not to be put down so easily,
however, the Devils came back to
beat Cal-Berkeley, who had beat-
en both UCLA and USC
Coming up for air, Bente Rist strokes
her way to the finish at a dual meet.
ASU posted seven wins in 10 dual meets.
previously.
"Overall, it was a real good
year," Hill said.
There were 11 qualifiers for
the NCAA's in March, including
the Pac-10 champions in the 200-
meter freestyle relay team of
freshman Heidi Hendricks, soph-
omores Michelle Thompson and
Nancy Osborn, and Allington.
They set a school record of
1:33.41.
Other qualifiers included
freshman Kristen Niedhoefer in
the 200-meter individual medley
and the 400-meter individual
medley, 100-meter breaststroke,
and the 200-meter freestyle
events. Returning sophomore Ail-
American Jodi Quas represented
ASU in the 100-meter butterfly
and the 100-meter backstroke.
The biggest problem at the
NCAA Championships, Hill said
was the lack of experience and
the confidence that comes with
it.
"We just didn't have the sure-
ness we needed to win at nation-
als," he said.
What's the Score?
WOMEN'S SWIMMING
ASU OPP.
208 Brigham Young 89
78.5 UNLV 43.5
78 Kansas 62
80 Nebraska 60
1st Sun Devil Classic
1st Michigan Invititational
47 UCLA 93
67 USC 73
82 California 68
40 Stanford 84
85 Arizona 55
235 Utah 113
5th Pac-10 Championship
9th NCAA Championship
WOMEN'S SWIMMING.fronr Row: Shari Countryman, Nancy Osborne, Susanne Sheridan, Kari Lupton,
Debbi Dentithorne, Sarah Wickenberg, Kristen; Neidhoefer. Second Row: Heidi Hendricks, Adrienne
Schuessler, Susie Mortensen, Michelle Yatzer, Kim Kremer, Bente Rist, Pam Duryea. Third Row: Assistant
Coach Melissa Belote, Erica Lorenz, Marie Snyder, Christina Erlen, Missy Allington, Amy Bush, Michelle
Thompson, Assistant Brian; Hoffer.fourt/i Row: Head Coach Tim Hill, Therese Lundin, Colette Van de berg,
Jill Martori, Jennifer Under, Lisa Cribari, Janae Lavtenschlager, Jessica Tudos, Diving Coach Ward O'Connel.
Women's Swimming 12
25
What's the Score?
MEN'S GYMNASTICS
ASU OPP.
1st Hawaiian Invitational
267.50 Houston Baptist 271.30
269.46 California 256.50
272.80 San Jose State 250.60
272.75 Oklahoma 239.00
4th UCSB Invitational
5th UCLA Invitational
1st Southwest Cup
272.80 Western Michigan 249.95
273.45 Brigham Young 258.05
3rd Pac-10 Championship
8th NCAA Championship
u
26 Men's Gymnastics
ALL-AMERICAN
Newman takes floor title
For the first time in two
years, the Men's Gymnas-
tics Team went to the na-
tional championships and came
home with a champion.
Sophomore Jody Newman won
the floor exercise title with the
score of 9.85, beating Tedy Han-
yner of Iowa by .025. Newman
took Ail-American honors.
The team finished eighth with
three individuals competing for
nationals titles.
Senior All-American Paul
Linne took All-American honors
for the third year in his ASU
career after scoring a 9.1 on the
high bar.
Linne, who scored a perfect
"10" in the event and scored a 9.8
in the preliminaries, lost his grip
during his routine when his left
hand slipped off the bar.
"Paul was a big contributor
this year," said Head Coach Don
Robinson. "He hurt a bad knee a
week before nationals and did
not compete as well as
expected."
Sophomore Christian Rohde
also suffered a break in his rou-
tine on the pommel horse.
Sophomore Licurgo Diaz-Sandi
finished 17th in the all-around
with Newman coming in at 10th.
"Our success was due to our
all-arounders," said Robinson.
"There was one meet when it
was just Paul, Jody and Licurgo."
Last year the 10th ranked
Devils were knocked out of the
running for nationals by the
Penn St. Nittany Lions because
there had to be an eastern team
in the finals.
Once again, the 10th ranked
Sun Devils found their ticket to
the national championship in
danger. However, they chal-
lenged ninth ranked California
and took over California's spot.
"We did get to go to nationals,"
Robinson said. "We had our prob-
lems, but we succeeded."
However, small mishaps and
injuries throughout the season
hindered the Sun Devils.
"Minor injuries can chew us to
pieces," Robinson said. "We
limped through the season with a
great deal of success."
HEN'S GYMNASTICS. Front Row: Michael Alwicker, Keith Suzuki, Assistant Coach Scott Barclay, Head
Coach Don Robinson, Paul Linne, Eric Brown. Second Row: J.J Sanchez, Jody Newman, Thord Kamakaala,
Patrick Pa. Third Row: Kevin Singer, Licurgo Diaz-Sandi, Scott Hohman, Christian Rohde.
Sure and steady, Devil co-captain Kevin
Singer completes his second place rou-
tine at Norman, Oklahoma. Singer's per-
formance propelled ASU to victory.
,*^ : ''
.'- , ■»*
r
A picture of concentration, sophomore
Licurgo Diaz-Sandi steadies himself on
the still rings. Diaz-Sandi led the Devils
to a third place finish at the Pac-10
Tournament. Photo by Brian O'Mahoney.
Senior Cocaptain Paul Linne prepares
his dismount during ASU's Southwest
Cup Tournament. The Devils registered
their biggest win of 1989 by upsetting
top-ranked Ohio State.
Layout by Robyn Pinkston
Men's Gymnastics 12
,
Concentrating on her routine, Tracy
Butler uses her strength to hold her legs
parallel. Tracy tied for fourth place,
making her the second ASU woman to
earn the Ail-American honors at
NCAA's.
Balance is essential in Molly Carpen-
ter's routine. Despite her 9.65 perfor-
mance, the team lost to number one-
ranked Utah.
With a high split jump on the floor,
Collette Anderson ties for third in the
opener with Oklahoma and Denver. ASU
placed second with 186.95 points.
*
8 Women's Gymnastics
LEADERSHIP
Senior inspires teammates
Inconsistent performances
and minor injuries
plagued the Sun Devil
Gymnastics Team through most
of 1988, according to Head Coach
John Spini.
"We really didn't get together
until the last four meets," he
said.
The Devils started off winning
their first home meet against
Boise State. Senior Ail-American
Karli Urban won the all-around
with a score of 37.80, including
the highest score of the meet on
the balance beam with a 9.65.
"Urban's senior year was one
of the best," said Assistant Coach
Lisa Zeis. "She is just a great role
model."
To the dismay of Spini, junior
Michelle Colavin went down dur-
ing warm-ups for the UCLA Invi-
tational. Led by Urban the Devils
finished third behind second-
ranked UCLA. Colavin was again
sidelined before the year was
out.
"I was hoping for healthy
kids," Spini said. "It was tough
putting seven kids out on the
floor all the time and keep them
from getting injured."
The up and down season con-
tinued, including a disappointing
third place finish at the South-
west Cup. Senior Molly Carpenter
had the only clean routine with a
9.45. The Devils placed third in
the Pac-10 before defeating UofA
in the final meet of the season,
192.35-190.65.
"The UofA meet at home was
great; everyone hit," Zeis said.
"It proved to them that they
were right on top with the rest."
Urban scored high in her last
home meet with an average of 9.7
and the title with a 38.90.
The Sun Devils finished sev-
enth after winning their session
at the NCAA Championships.
The third place finish in region-
al kept the Sun Devils out of the
top five.
"I thought the kids competed
well at pressure meets," Spini
said. "I was real proud of the
girls. It was the best of my career
here. It was so much fun."
What's the Score?
WOMEN'S
GYMNASTICS
ASU
OPP.
2nd
Denver Invitational
187.25
Utah 189.35
189.10
Florida 189.85
185.90
Georgia 188.65
3rd
Washington Invitational
189.75
Utah 190.20
3rd
UCLA Invitational
3rd
Southwest Cup
3rd
NCAA Midwest Regional
7th
NCAA Championship
WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS. Front Row: Cohette Anderson, Suzy Baldock, Michell Colavin. Second Row: Tracy
_ Butler, Molly Carpenter, Kelly Cyskiewicz, Marika Lesieur, Karli Urban, Heather Carter. Third Row: Kim
| Hurley.
len's Gymnastics 12
*
Preparing to unleash his backhand, ju-
nior hen Gyetko eyes an opponents' re-
turn. Five of ASU's top six lettermen
returned for the 1989 season.
Keeping his eye on the ball, sophomore
Dave Lomicky volleys his way to victory.
Lomicky was one of two Sun Devil's to
post a winning singles record in match
play. Photo by Ken Akers/Sports
Information
Layout by Erik Leverson
■30 Men's Tennis
GROWING UP
Devils net experience
A tough schedule and a
young team often mix to-
gether about as well as oil
and water, but Men's Tennis
Head Coach Lou Belken was con-
vinced that the chemistry of his
young team was forming strong
bonds in 1989 that would make
them hard to beat in the next
few years.
With four sophomores, one
freshman, and one senior, the
Sun Devils held their own for the
most part during the 10-14 sea-
son. According to Belken, more
importantly, they began to grow
and develop as a team.
"If you look at how far we
came as a team, we had a good
year," he said. "We measure our
successes in a lot of different
ways. You can't measure the de-
sire of the guys."
"This past season most of us
were sophomores, so we didn't
have as much experience as the
team did in 1988," said junior
doubles player Len Gyetko. "We
had to spend a lot of time on our
conditioning, but we'll grow as a
team."
The team put in 15 hours a
week practicing on the court,
along with extra time on the
track and in the weightroom.
In a conference where 26 of
the last 29 NCAA champions re-
sided, there were bound to be
some tough losses during a sea-
son. The Devils suffered most of
these setbacks against highly
ranked teams. The 5-4 loss to top-
ranked Stanford was decided by
a couple of points during a tie-
breaker in the number-one sin-
gles match. ASU was able to post
some wins over nationally
ranked teams such as Minnesota,
Texas Tech, and Arizona.
"Our schedule was so tough
that you hit streaks when you
played the top five teams all in a
row. But the way you grow is
through adversity," Belken said.
"I was proud of the kids for their
ability to compete."
MEN'S TENNIS. Front Row: Head Coach Lou Belken, Scott Lambdin, Daniel Marting, Dave Lomicky, Len
Gyetko, Jesus Rojo, Jeff Wood, Craig Purcell, Brian Gyetko, Joel Finnigan, Assistant Coach Ford Oliver.
Sending a shot across the court, Brian
Gyetko follows through on his stroke.
The ASU sophomore was the Devil's top
seeded player throughout the '89 season.
V
what's the Score?
MEN'S TENNIS
ASU
OPP
7
New Mexico St.
2
4
Utah
5
5
Washington
2
7
Cal Poly (Slo)
2
3
UC Santa Barbara
6
5
Minnesota
4
4
Southern Cal
5
2
UCLA
7
2
Pepperdine
7
6
U.S. International
1
5
South Carolina
4
6
San Diego St.
1
4
California
6
1
Southern Cal
5
7
Texas Tech
2
2
Clemson
7
6
Ohio St.
3
6
Arizona
3
UCLA
6
4
Stanford
5
3
UC Irvine
6
2
Stanford
7
I)
California
6
4
Arizona
5
Men's Tennis
w
hat's the Score?
WOMEN'S TENNIS
ASU
OPP
9
New Mexico St.
6
San Diego St.
3
6
US International
3
9
South Florida
5
San Diego
4
5
Arizona
4
9
Grand Canyon
4
Southern Cal
5
4
UCLA
5
Stanford
9
3
California
6
3
Miami (Fla)
5
1
Oklahoma St.
6
5
Duke
4
Stanford
9
2
California
7
9
Illinois
9
Fresno St.
9
Minnesota
5
Arizona
4
5
San Diego
2
6
Texas
2
UCLA
7
2
Southern Cal
7
9
Utah
8
Nevada Las Vegas
1
6
Brigham Young
3
8
Trinity
5
Arizona
4
DOUBLE TEAM
ASU women pair for wins
Considering how events
shaped up during their
season, women's tennis
coach Sheila Mclnerney was hap-
py with the results.
"Overall, I think it was a pret-
ty good year," Mclnerney said.
The Sun Devils women's tennis
squad finished the season with a
19-10 record and a national rank-
ing of eleven.
The team was without its top
seeded player as senior Laura
Glitz redshirted the team after
suffering a severe shoulder inju-
ry. In her place freshman Krista
Amend stepped in to lead the
Devils.
"She handled the pressure
very well," Mclnerney said.
Also falling prey to the injury
bug was standout Jennifer Ro-
john. A knee injury kept the
sophmore off the court for the
beginning of the year.
With all the missing personnel,
the individual aspect of the sport
took a back seat as ASU excelled
Concetrating on her forehand, fresh-
man Luann Klimchock sends her oppo-
nent a blistering return. Seven women
came back this year from last seasons
nationally ranked squad. Photo by David
Haneke
in doubles competition. In two
key matches against Pac-10 rival
Arizona, the Devils were able to
sweep the doubles matches to
take the meets each time.
Playing in the grueling south-
ern division of the Pac-10, ASU's
schedule included conference
matches against five teams
ranked in the nation's top ten.
Versus such difficult competi-
tion, the Devil's faced some
tough losses. Included in these
setbacks were 5-4 decisions to
both USC and UCLA.
The ASU team was able to
dominate their non-conference
opponents, posting shutout wins
over Grand Canyon, Illinois, Tex-
as, Fresno St. and Minnesota.
"A tough schedule makes us a
better team," said Mclnerney.
"But, it is nice to have five or six
matches we know we're going to
win. Our confidence came back
once we started to win."
I • -«. :im^mhmmmm
Whipping a backhand, Pam dot
places a winner down the line. The Lad
Devils posted a 19-10 record during 198!
12 Women's Tennis
WOMEN'S TENNIS. Front Row: Head Coach Shelia Mclnerney, Assistant Coach Becky Callan, Jennifer
Rojohn, Karen Bergan, Kristi Jonkosky, Jill Hamilton, Barbara Thompson, Paola Conte, Krista Amend. Photo
by Conley Photography.
Women's Tennis 131
w
hat's the Score?
CROSS COUNTRY
El Paso Invitational
MEN WOMEN
UTEP 23 ASU 29
ASU 39 New Mexico . 63
N.Mexico St. 84 UTEP 66
Texas Tech 100 N.Mexico St. . 72
Highlands . 128 Highlands .... 96
San Oiego
MEN
Arizona
New Mexico
USC
Irvine
Fresno St .
UCLA ....
Fullerton
NAU ...
ASU ....
65
137
175
194
195
197
233
244
248
Invitational
WOMEN
Irvine 66
Arizona 97
UCLA 137
ASU 152
NAU 161
Fresno St . . . 206
Fullerton ... 246
San Diego ... 256
Long Beach . 270
Rocky
MEN
Colorado . .
BYU
Adams St .
Wyoming .
Western St
Utah
Idaho St . .
ASU
Mountain Shootout
WOMEN
Boulder RR
Weber St
Wyoming
Colorado
Adams St
ASU ....
Idaho St
Western St
Keeping with the pack, Devil runner
Todd Lewis stays within steps of the
leaders. The junior was ASU's highest
placer at the Pac-10 Championships.
Coming up on the last mile, Todd Lewis
takes a breath on the run. The ASU
Invitational covered five miles of hilly
terrain on Karsten Golf Course.
69
84
101
112
161
199
255
272
ASU Invitational
MEN WOMEN
Utah 64 NAU
Adams St . . 65 ASU
ASU 67 Cal St. LA .
Houston ... 74 Adams St . .
NAU 86 New Mexico
Pac-10 Championships
. 33
111
120
122
135
137
197
257
. 57
. 58
. 76
. 96
135
MEN
Oregon . . .
Washington
Arizona .
Stanford
California
Wash St
UCLA ..
USC ....
ASU ....
WOMEN
30 Washington . . 65
61 Wash St 79
91 Oregon 83
123 UCLA 110
128 Arizona 127
153 Stanford .... 134
167 ASU 142
186 California ... 182
211 USC 300
14 Cross Country
Closing the gap David Harkin concen- Striding for the finish line, Junior Kim
trates on passing an opposing runner. McKay crosses the greens of Karsten
Harkin was one of four freshmen who Golf Course. The links hosted all ASU
ran for the Devils. home cross country meets. Photo by T.J.
Sokol.
ABOUT TIME
lASU looks to fresh start
Even though the cross
country team could not go
back and alter its stand-
ing in the Pac-10, they could look
towards a future of new runners
and a stronger team. The wom-
en's team finished ninth in the
conference while the men placed
eighth.
"Overall, as a team, we did not
place high in the conference, but
this is because the team is young
and inexperienced," Head Coach-
Ken Lehman said.
Those circumstances changed,
however, because the runners
practiced year round and during
the next season, the Devils start-
ed to recruit again.
Over the past two years, ASU's
cross country program was
placed on suspension due to con-
troversies surrounding the in-
door/outdoor track team. Those
squads are affilliated with the
cross country team according to
Lehman.
This season saw six athletes
Chasing shadows, Daniela Seifert and
Kim McKay try to catch a Cal-State Long
Beach runner. The women captured the
1989 El Paso Invitational held in Septem-
ber.
Layout by Erik Leverson
on scholarships, including four
women. Coach Lehman hopes to
add more during the off season.
The university will be allowed to
award a larger amount of schol-
arships.
Among those leaving after this
past season were Mike Frick, Te-
resa Barrios and Amy Komitzky.
Loss of these leaders meant that
the 1990 team would be even
younger than this squad.
The ASU Invitational was held
at Karstan Golf Course, which
will house the Devils home meets
from now on. Todd Lewis fin-
ished second in the men's race
while Kelly Cordell, a sophomore,
finished fifth on the ladies' side.
According to the runners, the
course proved to be a physical
challenge.
"You know that after every
meet you're going to hurt," said
Cordell. "But its important to
break through the pain barrier."
Cross Country 13
»
RESTRICTED
Devils hurdle obstacles!
What's the Score?
TRACK AND FIELD
MEN
March 4 Texas Tech
84
UC Irvine
66.5
ASU
44.5
March 18 Texas
78
Princeton
74
Witchita St.
21
ASU
19
April 8 Iowa St.
67.5
San Diego St
60
ASU
38
Adams St.
37.5
WOMEN
March 4 UC Irvine
69
Texas Tech
60
ASU
46
March 18 Texas
58
ASU
50
Princeton
40
Witchita St.
15
April 8 ASU
72
San Diego St.
46
Iowa St.
43
Adams St.
21
Head Coach Tom Jones was
tired of hearing about the
negatives involved with
the two-year probation slapped
on the ASU track team in the
spring of 1988 by the NCAA.
"That's all behind us," Jones
said. "Everything I have experi-
enced here has been positive."
Although the rules of the pro-
bation did not allow the team to
compete off-campus, the athletes
were allowed to compete in
meets unattached or sponsored
by clubs. Both senior Linda Tol-
bert, 1988 NCAA champion of the
100-meter high hurdles, senior
Jancito Bartholomew, former
Olympian and 1989 Sun Angel Fe-
male-of-the-year, continued to
compete unattached.
With the probation, Tolbert
was unable to defend her title in
the 100-meter high hurdles or as
a member of the championship
4X 100-meter relay team with
Bartholomew, senior Tamika
Foster, and sophomore Maicel
Malone.
"It is really hard for me seeing
the athletes suffer for things
they had nothing to do with,"
Jones said.
With the onset of the proba-
tion, many athletes chose to red-
shirt last year to stay eligible for
the spring of 1990, depleting the
depth and size of the team, ac-
cording to Jones.
"I thought the athletes per-
formed really well," Jones said,
"and I think everybody on our
team was satisfied with it, as
limited as it was."
There were seven NCAA quali-
fiers, including junior Decathlete
Matt Zuber with 7,555 points;
Bartholomew qualified with a
school record in the long jump of
21-8 3/4 inches, while Tolbert re-
corded the fastest time in the
country for the 100-meter high
hurdles at 13.08 in the third meet
of the year on March 25.
Jones attributes much of the
team's success to the athletes
and the closeness of the team as
a whole.
"There are some strong bonds
in our program and we had to
group together," Jones said. "We
had some great athletes, and it's
the athletes that make programs,
not coaches."
Taking the race into his own hands,
Owen McGregor sprints for the finish
line. The senior anchored a strong relay
team during the 1989 season.
1m
% 'mm
136 Track and Field
I
Clearing the bar with room to spare,
Junior Carl Johnson soars to new
heights. Despite being on probation, the
Devils landed seven athletes in the
NCAA Championship. Photo by Scott
Troyanos.
Preparing to pass the leaders, Junior
Amy Komitzky gears up for the final lap.
The Devils ran their home meets at Sun
Angel Track.
Layout by Tina Amodio
Track and Field 137
The Test Athletes Can't Fail
The United States' govern-
ment is not alone in wag-
ing a war against drugs.
With illegal substances invading
college athletics, Arizona State's
athletic department has enlisted
the services of a drug testing pro-
gram, established four years ago.
"Starting a succesful drug
testing program was a high prior-
ity in rebuilding Arizona State's
athletic program," Athletic Di-
rector Charles Harris said.
All student athletes at the uni-
versity are subject to both a pre-
notified annual drug test and
random testing done to detect the
use of illegal substances and ana-
bolic steriods.
To be eligible for participation
in any sport recognized by the
NCAA at ASU, the athlete must
sign a consent form to be tested
for drugs.
At the beginning of the year,
the athlete must submit a urine
sample as a part of an annual
physical conducted by the ASU
athletic trainers.
Previous testing procedures
required the athlete to give a
urine sample while being ob-
served by an athletic trainer of
the same gender. All samples
were then sent to be tested for
any substance banned by the
NCAA, such as cocaine, diuretics
and steriods.
This year, however, athletes
were required to undergo an un-
observed pre-test. If the result
turned up positive, the athlete
then needed to submit a full
urine sample for further testing.
According to head athletic
trainer Troy Young , athletes
who are suspected by their
coaches for drug use are random-
ly tested throughout the year
with no advance warning
neccesary.
Scott Barclay, assistant men's
Showing no prejudice, drugs and drug
testing affect each and every student
athlete at the university.
gymnastics coach, said gymnasts
are randomly tested when the
coaching staff feels it is needed.
The coaches look for any indica-
tors that would hurt the team.
"Indicators include any abnor-
mal changes, such as changes in
behavior, attitudes, grades and
friends," Barclay said.
Although based on NCAA drug
testing guidelines, the ASU ath-
letic department has drafted its
own drug testing regulations.
The program has achieved
enough success that it is being
utilized by many other schools
across the country.
" We've never had anyone dis-
missed from ASU because of test-
ing," Young said." We are happy
"We've never had any-
one dismissed from
ASU ... our athletes
wouldn't take drugs."
Troy Young
with the low percentage at ASU.
Ninety-five percent of our stu-
dent athletes would never take
drugs anyway."
While the NCAA has previous-
ly only administered drug tests
at bowl games and other major
NCAA events, ASU has contin-
ually tested athletes year-round.
Other Pac-10 schools such as
Stanford, Oregon and Washing-
ton have not tested their athletes
because it is not required by the
NCAA. However, beginning in
1990, the NCAA will require all
football programs to submit to
testing for anabolic steriods.
"They (the NCAA) are con-
cerned with the exploitation of
dangerous performance enhanc-
ing drugs, such as steriods," Pac-
10 executive David Price said.
Young says that drug testing is
done to help the athlete, and pos-
sible abuse of illegal substances
is treated as a health problem at
ASU.
"We make every effort to help
the student athletes avoid
drugs," Young said.
Some athletes have suggested
that the drug testing program is
an important ingredient of ASU
athletics.
"It (drug testing) is not a prob-
lem," junior baseball player Bri-
an Dyer said. "At least with it,
there is the chance people will
get caught, without it, there is no
chance at all."
According to Mark Tingstad, a
senior football player, all ath-
letes should be open to the
program.
"If you have nothing to hide,
then there should be no fear in
taking a little test," Tingstad
said.
Bob Carl, ASU athletic thera-
pist, said he hopes that drug test-
ing discourages athletes from us-
ing drugs, but feels that the
testing is not always effective.
"If athletes are smart enough,
they could use drugs without be-
ing detected," Carl said. "Further
research needs to be done to
make the tests more sensitive
and accurate."
Young said the testing gives
the athletes an out with their
peers, allowing them to use it as
an excuse not to use drugs while
still fitting in with their circle of
friends.
"The drug testing could be
used as a deterent to stay accept-
able, but it is not a solution,"
Scott Barclay said. "I would hope
my athletes have enough pride in
themselves to just say no."
Dawn DeVries
Kristi Howell
Erik Lever son
T.J. Sokol
Athletic Issues 13
1
I
Student-Athletes On Parade
1
The NCAA has laid out a
map for the direction they
would like to see athletic recruit-
ing follow. The course is a one
way street that if not closely
tracked, could lead to a dead end
or an accident.
"Recruiting is an imperfect
art," ASU Athletic Director
Charles Harris said. "You have
to find the students who want to
be at your institution and do it
honestly."
In every NCAA sanctioned
athletic program at ASU, from
badminton to basketball, the
NCAA's recruiting regulations
must be followed.
According to ASU Sports Infor-
mation Director Mark Brand,
"(NCAA rules).. .can be hard for
even the coaches to understand,
let alone the athletes being
recruited."
Because of the difficulties,
most highly recruited athletes
receive a pamphlet produced by
ASU called "Guide for the Col-
lege-Bound Student Athlete."
The guide is a summary of the
rules and regulations governing
transferring, recruiting, eligibil-
ity and financial aid. It also pro-
vides an overview of the NCAA
rules for the general understand-
ing of the athlete and his par-
ents.
"Recruiting involves selling
the school and it never ends,"
Director of Basketball Operations
Joe Czupek said.
Czupek said that the men's
basketball program, under the di-
rection of new head coach Bill
Frieder, starts to recruit prospec-
tive athletes as early as the
ninth-grade.
The coaches spend most of
their time recruiting by sending
out letters, as many as two a
week, making calls and continu-
ously "networking" to persuade
the athlete to attend ASU. Prior
to an athletes senior year, the
only contact he may legally re-
ceive is letters and telephone
calls.
"We start calling kids, trying
to out-mail and out-hustle other
schools," Czupek said. One specif-
ic rule is that no one but mem-
bers of the athletic department
are allowed to make in-person
off-campus recruiting contacts.
The rule is aimed at discouraging
face-to-face contact off the cam-
pus, such as in the home of the
athlete by alumni or boosters try-
ing to inluence the athlete.
However, the NCAA does allow
two assistant coaches to leave
campus to recruit. Even then, the
coaches can only meet with the
students during specific times of
"We
have to show
each of them a good
time
to get them to
attend ASU."
Joe Zupek
the year.
"Between July 10 and July 31
we attend many of the camps
around the country to see kids
compete," Czupek said," but we
can't see the kids again until Sep-
tember. Then we can go into the
home to talk with the family
about their child attending
ASU."
Many coaches rely on other
means to select their players.
"Basically, what we do is sub-
scribe to a lot of paper scouting
reports," ASU's Women's Basket-
ball Head Coach Mara McHugh
said.
McHugh, who has coached for
three years at ASU, added that
starting to recruit early is the
best way to overcome tough re-
cruiting rules.
"We catch on to them early,
watching them and continuously
40 Athletic Issues
corresponding with them from
the ninth-grade through the
twelth-grade," McHugh said.
To be academically eligible,
the athlete must have taken 11
core classes in high school. These
courses consist of english, math,
social science and natural or
physical science. A composite of
700 on the SAT or 18 on the ACT
is also neccesary.
"We're allowed to show 18 kids
around campus each year," Czu-
pek said. "We have to show each
of them a good time to get them
to attend ASU."
This "good time" consists of
campus tours, site-seeing, aca-
demic appointments and meet-
ings with the coaches.
The athlete has to try and de-
termine if what the coaches are
trying to sell is right for them.
"It's a big difference from Chi-
cago," ASU football player Floyd
Fields said. "I didn't know where
ASU was, but now I'm a Devil 'til
I die."
Fields said he chose ASU over
60 other schools.
"The phone calls started in
August of 1986 and didn't stop
until I signed on February 11,
1987," Fields said. "The visit is
what made me commit to the
university."
The recruiting process is long
for all parties involved, but it
needs to be remembered that the
reason for such tedious actions is
to be sure that the athlete is giv-
en the opportunity to get an edu-
cation as well as participate in
athletics.
"The opportunity to attend
college is a privilege," Charles
Harris said, "and this has to be a
priority because a degree is what
the athlete has to rely on to
make it in the future."
Erik Leverson
T.J. Sokol
The center of attention, Ed O'Bannon
enjoys the fanfare associated with his
recruiting visit. Photo by Michelle Con-
way
■
m
*" ^w>
A Clinic For The Coaches
Coaching at a university that
competes on a major college
level, such as ASU, presents a
challenge for those who tackle
the task.
The position of coach has nev-
er been glamourized. Although
they might garner much of the
focus during an event, they re-
ceive little appreciation for the
job they do. It was once said that
if it were not for bad publicity,
coaches would get no publicity at
all.
The coaches usually shun
whatever credit they may
receive.
"We have some great athletes
and it's the athletes that make
the program, not the coaches,"
track and field coach Tom Jones
said.
"Athletics is eight percent
coaching and ninety-two percent
mentality of the student ath-
lete," football head coach Larry
Marmie said.
As Marmie found out in 1989,
the coaching profession receives
most of its attention when the
program experiences a losing pe-
riod. While fans and press ques-
tioned the football coach's lead-
ership ability, Marmie's players
rallied behind their general.
"This team is the most impor-
tant thing to Coach, other than
family," senior Linebacker Mark
Tingstad said. "That makes us
want to work our butts off for
him."
Marmie used the oldest trick
in the book to silence critics, a
winning streak.
When the season ended, many
coaches began their second life,
that of recruiting.
Traveling across the nation in
an attempt to persuade future
|_ student athletes to attend ASU,
coaches lost track of their nor-
mal schedule and home life.
Newly hired basketball coach
Showing the stress involved in being a
coach, Bobby Douglas leads his wrestling
team against Oklahoma State in a Febru-
ary match at ASU.
Bill Frieder, known as a tremen-
dous and tireless recruiter, spent
as little as one day every three
weeks at home with his family.
Frieder insisted that the only
way to turn his program in the
right direction was hard work.
"We've got to create some in-
terest in this program," Frieder
said. "Arizona State can be a
place that wins Pac-10 champion-
ships and sells out the building.
While the revenue sports
(football and basketball) focused
on the future, coaches in Olympic
sports such as Softball and vol-
leyball based their work on tradi-
tion and excellence.
"The academic offerings and
athletic support make this a per-
" I think that Arizona
State can be a place
that wins Pac-10
championships. "
Bill Frieder
feet opportunity for me," said
Patti Snyder, newcomer to the
coaching position in ASU's vol-
leyball program. "I'm excited
about the next couple of years."
Linda Wells, also starting her
first year at the helm of the soft-
ball team, looks to the past to
create a future.
"ASU has a solid program. The
challenge for me is to build on
that foundation," he said.
A primary concern of coaches
was the academic progress that
their student athletes make
while attending ASU. Many
coaches considered it a personal
failure on their part if the stu-
dent athlete didn't graduate from
their program of study.
During the past season, Head
Coach Steve Loy's men's golf
team posted an impressive team
G.P.A. of over 3.2.
Arizona State University, after
a few years of difficulties in the
athletic program, produced nine
Academic all-americans during
the 1988-89 season.
One of the most difficult as-
pects of coaching at ASU is the
school's membership in the Pac-
10 Conference. The strength of
the conference was apparent in
all sports.
If the conference schools had
competed together as a unit in
the 1988 Seoul Summer Olympics,
the conference would have fin-
ished third in medal count, ahead
of the United States.
"Five of the top seven teams
in the nation are members of this
conference," said Women's Ten-
nis Coach Sheila Mclnerney. "A
schedule like that is a benefit to
our team."
Although the athletic depart-
ment saw many coaches leave
the university to pursue other op-
portunities during the eighties,
the decade closed with the pro-
gram still boasting some long-
time veterans. Baseball coach
Jim Brock entered his 18th year
at the Sun Devil helm while Bob-
by Douglas began his 16th year
atop the ASU wrestling program.
Brock, this season was within
reach of his 900th win as ASU's
head coach. The baseball coach
has been named coach of the
year four times. Douglas, who
notched his 200th victory in 1989,
was named as national coach of
the year in 1987-88. Wooed by
offers to go elsewhere, Douglas
decided to stay on at ASU.
"A tradition was started here
in 1973 when I took over, and
there's a lot to be said for loyal-
ty," Douglas said. "I guess you
could say I love ASU."
Erik Leverson
Athletic Issues 14
„
Handing out information
on campus organizations,
REACH members Donna Voss
and Joe Barajas speak with
senior Allen Shinbashi, sopho-
more Candy Mok and junior
Heidi McPheeten. REACH was
a paraprofessional group de-
signed to assist students in all
aspects of campus life.
During a break, Sun Devil
tuba player Bill Cand-
land studies on the field. The
band was ranked number one
nationally by The Sporting
S'ews and Sports Illustrated.
Photo by Scott Troyanos
AljllVJuJ l)adj. marked by vigor-
ous activity: busy. 2)n. the never-ending
involvement and endeavors of campus
organizations.
From politics to pottery, canoeing to
comedy and rugby to religion, ASU of-
fered an outlet for student interests.
With over 300 clubs, students could
plunge into campus life.
Academic honoraries, college councils
and vocational organizations gave stu-
dents an edge when entering the job mar-
ket. Associated General Contractors ap-
plied their knowledge to help build
Mother Theresa's shelter for the
homeless.
Organizations not only prepared stu-
dents for the future, they made the pre-
sent more enjoyable. Americans for Bozo
ignited student spirit and represented
the fun-loving ASU attitude.
Virtually every cultural group had or-
ganizations designed to educate the cam-
pus about their heritage while promoting
interaction with students of similar
backgrounds. The NAACP hosted an Afri-
can Awareness Night spotlighting the
outstanding accomplishments of their
people.
No matter how big or small the organi-
zation, the active involvement of stu-
dents made a statement without exclaim-
ing a word.
SECTION
EDITOR:
Amara
Fotenos
Clubs 145
. ," . ■ ■ .
'.' ■ - \o- '. J !*'!■„">!'.
Senate Deals With
111 Campus Issues
:'■ SASU's Senate helped
•■;>■ make the campus
friendlier and smaller by provid-
ing a place for organizations to
come to with their needs.
The Senate was comprised of
19 members and overseen by Ex-
ecutive Vice President Mike Pres-
sendo. Each member was elected
through his or her respective
college.
The Senate dealt with the 300-
400 clubs on campus. In charge of
handling requests from the orga-
nizations for funds was Appro-
priations Committee Chair Allan
Barfield.
"Whenever an organization
has an event of campus-wide in-
terest, we provide some supple-
mental funding," he said.
Barfield said that about 90
I
percent of the Senate's time was
taken up with considering clubs'
requests, but only 5 to 10 percent
of the Senate's budget is set aside
for distribution to the
organizations.
"The limited amount of funds
for clubs causes an extreme im-
balance between the time a club
spends to acquire money and the
amount given," he said.
Pressendo added that the Sen-
ate was a "responsible govern-
ment" in dealing with campus
issues.
"I want the Senate to feel
their responsibility for their con-
stituents," he said. "Then I want
them to take that into consider-
ation."
Addressing the Senate, Mike Pressendo
discusses how organizations can receive
funding for activities. The last Senate
meeting of the semester was held in De-
cember.
BECAUSE QUALITY
Education means
B_ETT£R_/\i_^-
S.UCCESS IN
A Jiuw*a
.A.U
46 ASASU Senate
Delivering a report, Jeanette Weidemeir
focuses on campus affairs while Hector
Pazos looks over his notes. Reports were
delivered weekly at the meetings.
Requesting funding from the College of
Nurs'mgRod Sicvert displays a T-shirt.
Organizations often requested funding.
'V'-'- 5 '* ••* v.'-'** ' :«'•* '.'•' *.*.-• ■',• •'*'*". •'.*.'• u*.'.-: .'.■ *•„*.'/. ■•■.'o. *•
p. : -'\v*«
Campus Affairs
F/rsf fiflif: Ken Whitley, Tami Willingham, Andrew McGuire, Jay
Briggs, David Harber. Second Row: Erin Penniman, Sharon Phillips,
Laurel Wilson, Cherie Verhines, David Dotts, Nick Di Napoli.
Homecoming
Committee
First Row: Wendi Kuefer, Tim Berry, Carolyn Farley, Natalie Young.
Second Row: Brownwyn Benz, Brandt Bedford, Jennifer Fautt. Third
Row: Kevin Connell, Alan Work, Ted Hiserodt, Frank McCune.
ASASU Senate
First Row: Mary Moran, Diane Eddy, Stacey Vogel, Gloria Ruiz, Kari
Perlraan, Cindee Badalamente.Second Row: Bob Carroll, Tami Wil-
lingham, Alllan Barfield, Anne Borchardt, James Shirley, Jeanette
Weidemeier. Third Row: Chris Stiles, Jack Albert, Greg Schultz, Mike
Pressendo, J'Lein Liese.FourtA Row: Hector Pazaos, Andrew McGuire,
Michael Croatte, Richard Joachim.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
Organizations 14
1
International Association
of Students in Economics
and Business Management
First Row: Mirelle Lane, Ampy Lee, Samantha Kratzet, Jimmy Dwor-
kin, Tanney Lynne Herlocher, Neal Replogle, Karen Hill. Second Row:
Dion Viachos, Jim Brewer, Kevin Hasler, Judith Oltmann, Sheryl
Sabal, Heidi Light. Third Row: Jay Biggs, Mark Mattern, Peter Liefer,
Ed Decker, Kirsten Buchner, David Richards.
American Marketing
Association
First Row: Angela Mazes, Malley Gaulding, Kim Mershon, Maria
Sortino, Ying Sun, Andrea Nickens, Peter Bizzarro, Candice Dull,
Suzanne Burkly, Andrew Fischer, Michelle Martin, Joe Brozic. Second
Row: Libby Takenaka, Gina Patterson, Leonard Church, David Put-
nam, Kimi Redding, Annn Messina, Chris Krochmalny, Jay Gordman,
Julie Stein, Garen Greenberg, Doren Zimmerman, Jeff Demis. Third
Row: Stephen Giannoules, Bethany Swanson, Eric Click, Jeff Mavis,
Kelly Splitstoses, Jeff Brouwer, Belinda Christensen, Teresa Brun-
drett, Marty Mauch, Tony Mickiewicz, Paul Schmidt, Norm Woodman-
see, Martha Jimenez, Lisa Warczinsky, Traci Denbar. Fourth Row:
Julie Pope, Wendy Opatrny, Wade Gower, Cliff Faraci, Brain Kulpaca,
Loretta Wooten, Tracy Williamson, Joy Knowlton, Nancy Torres, Kim
Shrayer, Beth Bringo, Peter Cholac, Andra Martens, Tracy Miller,
Jung Oh. Fifth Row: Anthony Green, Jim Heinl, David Thomas, Greg
Helmstetter, Drew Bergstrom, John Loomis, Victor Kubarovsky, Miles,
Michael Helker, Kerry Kerofsky, Rene Willekens, Doug Haggard, Da-
vid Hay, Corey Owens.
Hispanic Business Student
Association
First Row: Cecelia Ramirez, Claudina Chagolla, Chris Soto, Alisha
Gutierrez, Eleanor Enriquez, Lillian Casey, Melissa Lopez, Veronica
Contreras, Vincent Nunez. Second Row: Jesse Ruiz, Ray Yocopis, Paul
Chapman, Araceli Cecena, Elisabeth Covarrubias, Stephen Ruiz,
Michael Lopez, Rob Martinez. Third Row: Zvonimir Derpic, Paul
Lopez, Joseph Benavidez, Rachel Celaya, Sonia Honnen, Jim Camargo,
Catharina Ventura, Rafael Pereyra, Rachel Villanueva, Andy Ortiz,
Maria-Glena Coronado, Dan Cortez.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
I
48 Organizations
Preparing a flyer, Resa Scott adds fin
ishing touches. AGA produced campus
wide ads . Photo by T.J. Sokol.
I_r "5 — ' ; ,U.. ' . ■■ . "J — S^'TT.",*. .. * . ' . -^ ■''7' .■'*■'■'■ I '.'. .' ■ '.-.'«■ -'o '-. ,u.'. ' ." , ■ ■ .'...'.-,
. ' .■-..» ' ' . * . ' . - 1 • * ' I
l0 • . ./•
'*'* •,*■ ?'.'
• »-*i'.** ***» " ' ■ -V
..,•**- *,•'. ".'**" •■.'-■>
Association Graphics
III Design For Future
nication among members was ex-
ceptionally good. He added that
there was not always adequate
time to finish each project prop-
erly because of the demands that
school put on them.
"We're students and it can be
rough to do things quickly some-
times," he said.
Senior Resa Scott, an employee
of AGA, said that school was
very important to all of them.
"School is high on our priority
list," Scott said.
Scott added that working for
AGA helped to prepare her for a
future in graphic design.
"If you screw up-you screw
up. It's a learning process," she
said.
DiNapoli said that his experi-
ence as director of AGA would be
an asset to his future dream of
owning a graphic design studio
when he graduated.
To brainstorm logo ideas, Nick DiNa-
poli, Mark Olstyzn and Resa Scott con-
sider previous designs. Association
Graphics and Advertising employeed
four people.
hen students and orga-
'-.V'-VO'"' nizations needed to get
the word out, Association Graph-
ics and Advertising helped them
get graphic.
AGA offered an inexpensive
alternative to ordinary advertis-
ing firms and gave its employees
hands-on experience for the
future.
"Our main goal is to provide
the campus with a more afford-
able way to advertise," said ju-
nior Nick DiNapoli, the director
of AGA.
AGA employed four full-time
students, all of whom were en-
rolled in the Graphic Design
program.
Due to the small size of the
staff, DiNapoli said that commu-
Designing a computer graphic, Mark
Olstyzn chooses a typeface for a poster
2 while Nick DiNapoli watches. Associa-
■ tion Graphics and Advertising offered
S professional ads to organizations.
Association Graphics and Advertising 14
„
,- ' ... . . ■
Discussing cultural backgrounds,
Leadership 2000 participants exchanged
religious, social and ethnic viewpoints.
The weekend retreat was held in
Prescott.
Leadership 2000
ffj Promotes Diversity
I
jV-.°,*;y f : n a time when the an-
••;■- 'C- ; - "'■ swer to social differ-
ences appeared to be color blind-
ness, Leadership 2000
encouraged participants to see
rainbows and appreciate societal
diversity.
"Leadership 2000 is an exer-
cise which allows people to get in
touch with with themselves and
share thoughts with members of
different groups," said Gabriel
Vasqeuz an executive of the pro-
gram. "It's an intercultural
experience."
The retreat focused on under-
standing the religious, social and
ethnic diversity of people, Vas-
quez added.
Participants of the retreat
were responsible for their own
learning. Exercises stressed cul-
tural diversity.
"Before I went to the retreat
in 1989 I thought I was blind to
people's differences, but I was
wrong," said Luke Maze, a re-
treat facilitator. "I came back
this year to experience it."
The facilatators helped partic-
ipants start group discussions af-
ter awareness exercises. Among
the exercises were a values
workshop and an anonymous
question and answer session to
discuss different cultural beliefs.
"The program is desigened to
reach people on the emotional,
mental and gut level," Vasquez
said. "Most people come away
having a hard time putting their
experience in words."
Sharing religious beliefs, Mike and
Kari Perlman perform a skit at Leader-
ship 2000. The weekend retreat focused
on revealing social differences.
Dismissing cultural ignorance, Uncle
Pablo and Uncle Fred adopt new identi-
ties. Role playing was an important part
of Leadership 2000.
J50 Leadershin 2000
Psi Chi
First Row : Frank Russell, Heather McLeod, Paula McWhirter, Barba-
ra Clare, Caroline Torge. Second Row : Diane Wysocki, Rhonda Stutz-
man, Ruby Hild, Blanche Johnson, Patty Hulintg.
Shotokan Karate
First Row : Mark Cirino, Rick Dulaney, Bob Turrest, Randy McClure,
Timothy Cale, Lew Bezanson, Tom Thompson. Second Row : Michele
Gerace, Mike Canonici, Steven Urbatsch, Brain McNamara, Mitchell
Kerman, Carln Fernander, Bharath Kumar, Pekka Laine. Third Row :
J.L. Gomez-Rubio, Gail Mairana, Christopher Womack.
Dynamic Exchange
First Row : Yuko Takamura, Laurel Pattison, Christa Hardgrave,
Juliette Salvati, Karen Chapko. Second Row : Hiroko Honda, Sherry
Klein, Jackie Cottrell, Farhad Mosallaie, Itay Netzer. Third Row :
Blaine Lewis, Kevin Schaefer, D.C. Spletter, Roy Smolens Jr., Juhanne
Yamamoto, Dean Eschief.
Economics
First Row : Ryan Talamante, Tom Larkin, Mark-Devine Verdejo,
Jeffrey Williamson. Second Row : Lauren Fleishman, Jennifer Serra-
no, Joseph Kanefield, Gregory McCarville. Third Row : Chris Mizzi,
Chris Triplett, Shawn Olson, Jay Biggs.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
Organizations 15
1
-■•-■■
MUAB Executive Board
Front Row: Frank Voorvaart, Brian Ulinger, Kristina Kallberg, Doro-
thy Bridges, Lopa Misra, Michelle Douglas, Adrienne Whitaker, David
MacMurtrie. Second Row: Julie Cariovsky, Dee Schroeder, Julie Clai-
borne, Rosalyn Munk, Alona Gottfried, Doris Rasmussen, Leslie An-
derson, Yvette Guerra.
MUAD Gallery Committee
Front Row: William Diamond, Leslie Spedie, Keith Gangidino, Kelly
Klumpp, Art Pulis. Second Row: Elizabeth Brownie, Adrienne Whi-
taker, Monica Chinichian, Jennafer Webb, Wendy Modrijan, Mathew
Linton.
MUAB Culture & Arts
Front Row: Shaelin Charania, Pamela Thomas, Cynthia Ann Peralta.
Second Row: Max Lambert, Shana Ellis, Lopa Misra.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
I
52 Organizations
■ . i . i r-«-
■ ' ■ . ' """■ * e ; ■ • * - . ' -, ' ' , ■, ' . , ■ * - ' . ■ o "* f < . ' . ' .., ' ■ ■ ' ~'T ~'' V ' . ■!> ' ■ , " . * . '
~. » ■". ',■
MUAB Of fers Student
i
Involvement
he Memorial Union Ac-
;i : . .•*':;■.;**:•' tivities Board offered
more for the students than just
another mailbox in the REACH
offices. With activities like Orien-
tation, the Seredipity Arts and
Crafts Fair, films in the Memori-
al Union cinema, and the weekly
comedy show, MUAB gave the
students a variety of entertain-
ment and educational oppor-
tunities
"MUAB is students program-
ming for students," said Presi-
dent Michelle Douglas. "We're
one of the largest and most dy-
namic programming organiza-
tions on campus."
MUAB started out in 1959 with
a single committee called Host-
esses. In 1989, the board had ex-
panded to eight committees in-
cluding host and hostess,
entertainment, culture and arts,
promotions, film, comedy, special
events, and gallery.
The main purpose of MUAB,
said Douglas, was to provide en-
tertainment, cultural awareness
and educational opportunities for
the students.
One example, said Douglas and
Special Events Chair Alona Gott-
fried, was 60's Day that was held
on October 25. Titled "Re-experi-
ence the Revolution!", the event
offered "videos of the events that
changed history" from 9:00 a.m.
until 4:00 p.m. in the MU Rendez-
vous Lounge, a lecture by Profes-
sor Mark Reader, who was an
activitist during the 60's, at noon,
a showing of "Hair" in the MU
cinema from 4:00 p.m. until 6:00
p.m. and tye-dye t-shirts for $6 a
piece. KOOL FM also broadcast
from the ASU campus from 10:00
a.m. until 1:00 p.m. giving away a
60's car while B.J. Hunter held a
hula hoop contest with approxi-
mately eight to 10 students, said
Gottfried.
"It went really well," Gottfried
said. "People were watching the
videos and we sold out of the T-
shirts. Mark Reader was really
good."
Continued on page 154
2
1 M & -
i arr
0M
jg
Participating in a traditional Indian
dance, members of the Asha Gopal South
Indian dance group entertain the crowd
at United Nations Day. UN Day was
sponsored by MUAB and ASASU.
Kawambe dancer, Adebij Banjoko, a
graduate student, performs a native
dance. The dance was one of the many
1 that could be seen during UN day festivi-
ties.
MUAB 1
1
1 ; , ' i ■ . ■' .-: ". ■■ "■
, - r ,. ' . ."^ - ' ■ -■ ■ ! • ' „ , . '"
MUAD Special Events
Back to the '60s
: ottfried felt that one of
- the reasons that the
event was so successful was the
recent preoccupation that the
80's generation has had with the
60's decade.
"I think it is nostalgic for some
people, especially the older stu-
dents," Gottfried said. "The 60's
had been making a comeback
with people wanting to know
what went on. It was an impor-
tant era politically, socially and
culturally.
"Some people, I think, feel en-
vious of the energy of that time;
that maybe we are sort of
apathetic."
Other major events for her
committee included the Thanks-
giving cut-a-thon on Nov. 15th
where two cans of food bought a
$22 haircut from Trivoli in the
Borgata, Casino Night during the
spring semester and the Rock
and Reggae Fest on March 24.
MUAB won the most creative
float award in the homecoming
parade as "Movie Munchies".
The float was orchestrated by
the special events committee.
United Nations Day also of-
fered MUAB a chance to enter-
tain and develop cultural aware-
ness. In connection with Culture
Diversity, the culture and arts
committee programmed number-
ous events to celebrate the day.
The day started off with a
u
panel discussion in the MU alum-
ni lounge about "United Nation's
Accomplishments, Issues and
Challenges". It was followed by
Asha Gopal South Indian Classi-
cal Dance at 11:30 a.m. - 12:00
p.m., then Kawambe: West Afri-
can Music and Dance from 12:00 -
12:30 p.m., then a panel discus-
sion over the "Rights of the
Child: Challenges and Opportuni-
ties" from 1:30 - 3:00 p.m., Multi-
cultural celebration from 3:30 -
5:00 p.m. with movies "Rosa Lux-
emberg" at 7:00 p.m. and "Betty
Blue" at 9:30 p.m. in the MU
cinema.
"United Nations day was a
huge sucess," said Lopa Misra,
culture and arts chair.
But one day events are not all
that MUAB offered. There was
also the on-going programming
found throughout the MU. The
film committee featured a film
every Tuesday through Saturday
at 7:00 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. For a
relaxing lunch, the Farce Side
performed in the MU cinema at
12:30 p.m. on Fridays. And for a
quiet and cultural study area,
the MU Fine Arts Lounge housed
the gallery that brought in new
exhibits monthly.
"MUAB makes things fun for
the students and the people on
MUAB," Gottfried said.
The '57 Chevy displayed on Cady Mall
attracts attention from many students.
The car was given away as part of a
month long contest.
Students stop to admire and investi-
gate tye-dye T-shirts sold by the MUAB
Special Events Committee in celebration
of '60s day. Along with selling T-shirts,
videos of prominant happenings during
that decade were shown in the Rendez-
vous Lounge.
54 MUAB Film Committee
' I,,'
MUAD
front BoH-Julie Claiborne, Kathleen Ignatowski, Eva Monsey, Lauren
Fleishman, Stephanie Tucker, Susan George, Julie Carlousky, Shawn
Beyer, Heather Steil, Elizabeth Brownlie, Denise Kayer, Matthew
Linton.Second flowJacqueline Douglas, Dorothy Bridges, Jennifer
Griffith, Adrienne Whitaker, Michelle Douglas, Amy Leggat, Julie
Fenzel, Yvette Guerra, Dominica Minore, Laurel Pattison, Alona Gott-
fried, Amy Diane Turner. Third RowLnrry Kisner, Sandi Klotz, Arthur
Pulis, Leslie Rhea, Shannon Gallagher, Greg St. Peter, Jane Ferguson,
Julie Givans, Brian Fitzgerald, Daniel Miller, Kelly Klumpp, Rick
Olson. Fourth Row&cott Ramsey, Frank Voorvaart, Pitawas Indhara-
meesup, Max Lambert, Holger Braier, Farrell Booth, Sander Alisky,
Scott Somerndike, Johnny Buddha, Shawn Sussiz, B. Brown, Michael
Hunt.
MUAD Film Committee
First Soicfrank Voorvaart, Pitawas Indharameesup, Scott Somern-
dike, Scott Ramsey, Doug Rentmeester.Second RowJames Crossman,
Julie Givens, Daniel Miller, Lance Kaji, Shawn Beyer.
Special Events
First Row:Amy, Leggat, Dana Foster, Jane Ferguson, Sandi Klotz.Se-
cond ffoH'.-Denise Kayer, Alona Gottfried, Heather Steil, Eva Monsey.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
. . , .* •<>,•
Oraganizations 15
1
Invading an unexpecting village, Nor-
wegian Viking Thomas Neuman per-
forms in one of the shows put on by The
Farce Side.
Farce Side Performs ^^
Iff Serious Comedy £*^
I
56 The Farce Side
•;' oots and howls greeted
'.';'■;-;■' Chollo Judge as he
sauntered across the stage. The
Farce Side groupies joined in
singing his theme song while the
rest of the audience awaited the
Judge's comedic antics.
Chollo Judge was one of the
many characters that could have
been seen in the Farce Side Com-
edy Show. The free show was
presented every Friday at 12:30
p.m. in the Memorial Union
Cinema.
As the newest committee of
the Memorial Union Activities
Board, the current program was
a far cry from their beginnings
when they practiced in the halls
and performed in the Pima
Room, said Comedy Chair and
Farce Side Director Brian
Ulinger.
The members met on the
weekends and wrote the show
material. During the time, favor-
ite audience characters such as
Chollo Judge, a Hispanic Judge
Wapner, and Blackman, a Bat-
man-type character saved failing
sketches.
"So far we have not had any-
one complain to us about our ma-
terial. We don't ever try to single
out one specific group for repeat-
ed shots," Ulinger said.
With the increase in populari-
ty of the show and the added
support from the MUAB, the
writing and acting was scruti-
nized, but the director and writ-
ers were not worried.
"Now that the audience is on
our side, we can't go wrong,"
Ulinger said.
Playing "Cleopatra" is Laura Fleish
man. She hides her lover "Anthony'
from "Cesear" in a sketch about his mur
der.
; ' „- ■ >■:. .,:.•■.■:.■ f ?. ' -.»
I » 'o'* • '. »' * '■'".*!.'■ i*. V" .- '.-„\
s - '. ;.■■ • ■ ' ■ • V*. ■, a '" ■ ' .' ■ ■
, - .0 , \ .
. * - ■
■ ' -
Farce Side
Front Row: Shawn Sussiz, Brian dinger, Thomas Neuman, Patrick
Rampson, Scott Beiley. Second Row: Stuart Glassner, Jason Schulte,
George Tshibula, Scott Gray, Lloyd Hummel. Third Row: Sarah Sebr-
ing, Stephanie Tucker, Lauren Fleishman, Scott Genovese, C.J. Fletch-
er.
Entertainment Committee
First Row: Julie Carlovsky, Sean Lyne, Roxanne Kaminsky, April
Rodenbeck, Sander Alisky, Barbara Linquist.
folding a cue card Scott Gray helps the
i.udience follow his joke. Every week a
lifferent member opened the show.
MUAD Host & Hostesses
First Row: Kathy Ignatowski, Susan George, Julie Claiborne, Ali
Bhattachanyon. Second Row: Scott Ramsey, Joanne Bartsch, Shana
Adams, Jennifer Griffith, Kirk Qutter.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
Organizations II
-r; ■ , ;■ ■ ' ■ ■ ■ - ■■'-' .,.'.. "T
MU Information Desk
Mareie Bushfield, Julie Carlousky, Scott Hume, Val Hammer, Aaron
Gnirk, Dawn King, Giao Pham, Andrea Carasquero.
Commuter Devils
Front Row: Sean Johnson, Jane Ferguson, Sandra Klotz, Wayne Lo-
kensky.Seowid Row: Stacy Lang, Maria Sortino, Diane Arnott, Chris-
tine Sortino, Ying Sun.
REACH
Front Row: Lisa Schwartz, Jacqui Schesnol, Mary Marini, Teresa
Gilmour, Mareie Garcia, Janine Carnevale, Kari Perlman, Denise
Douaire, Donna Stewart, Sal Rivera. Second Row Eric Papacosta, Lu-
anda Carrasco, Stace Amabisca, Barbara Manero, Michelle Douglas,
Julie Martinet, Lori Gwynn, Cherie Verhines, Katie Burton, Karen
Handwerker. Third Row: Mary Armbrust, Devri Paluch, Michelle Tee-
ters, Julia Trainor, Donna Voss, Andrea Willingham, Michael Fortun-
ado, Nikki Buchanan, Jennifer Scoutten, Don Workman. Fourth Row:
Paul Biwan, Joe Barajas, Paul Tees, Kirk Marshall, Sean Riley, Ted
Hiserodt, Keith Marshall, Kirsten Barr, Michael Harris, Andy Peder-
Layout by Amara Fotenos
I
58 Organizations
.[,-.. ...
. . t ' ■ ... .
• ■.".'' "»'-'.*
-, ; ,•"' o' . c't ■ ;
Checking the list for the Vietnamese
Student Association, students are able to
find information about clubs registered
with REACH. Students came in and
found out about clubs they wanted to
join.
Offering information to potential stu-
dents at Transfer Student Day, Lisa
Schwartz encourages enrollment at ASU.
2 REACH sponsored various activities
throughout the year.
Encouraging Growth
II With New Programs
; :.-jt'->; ; '-. eacn i according to Web-
',-'•■.- .V:.\; s t e r's Ninth New Colle-
giate Dictionary, meant to
stretch out, extend.
REACH was also an acronym
for Research Educate Advise
Counsel Help, located in the Stu-
dent Life Office of the Memorial
Union.
"REACH is a student helping
student organization," Vice Pres-
ident Kristen Barr said.
REACH offered information on
student organizations, campus
resources and programs, support
groups, counseling and referral
and withdrawing from ASU.
Two new programs REACH de-
veloped in the fall, according to
President Julia Trainor, were the
Student Organization Leadership
Committee, and the Contact
program.
"SOLC will act as a liaison be-
tween oganizations and universi-
ty administration, " Trainor said.
A second REACH program de-
signed in the fall was the Contact
program.
"Contact is designed for some-
one who wants to get involved
but doesn't know how or where
to begin," Trainor said.
Workman said about 90 people
have used the service so far.
Eventually the program will ex-
pand to be included in admis-
sions.
e. c-~£co-~-^
REACH 1
.
I ■ • * , J ' ".
'■' '. ■* ■<■.*.' ■ ..••"••o.
• I I S ■ •---•■ ■ ■ .
'■ fcJU- " -•
"•■■■■' ■ ''■■•-'
Army ROTC Programs
III Offer Diversity
■ bove the door of the
•/.•• : "»- -.. fi rs t floor of Old Main
where the Army Officer's Re-
serve Corps Training is located
reads the words "Leadership Ex-
cellence Starts Here." The sign
speaks the truth.
The AROTC program has been
on the university campus since
its beginning, and has proved
that things do improve with age.
The ROTC program has been
constantly one of the top two pro-
grams in the nation for the last
four years.
"By winning the MacArthur
Award we've proven that our
program is the best in the West,"
said Sgt. Major Willie Dudely, a
ROTC instructor. "This program
is terrific. I love it; if I didn't I
wouldn't be here."
In addition to the core military
classes and drills that a cadet
must participate in, alternative
programs to become more active
in ROTC were offered. Among
these are the Color Guard, Desert
Rangers and Blade and Scabbard.
I
Blade and Scabbard is the
newest program that was estab-
lished this year. It is an honorary
society that cadets with an aca-
demic grade point average of 3.25
and a military grade point of 3.5
can join.
Another type of program
which is offered to both ROTC
and non-ROTC students alike is
the P.E. class Desert Rangers.
This class stresses physical fit-
ness and mental agility by plac-
ing students in situations similar
to those seen by U.S. Army Rang-
er Special Forces Operations
which are behind enemy lines,
said Ranger Commander Eric
Land, a senior political science
major.
"It's a classroom without walls
that promotes team work and
bonding," Land said. "The pro-
gram takes a lot of personal com-
mitment and desire, and just like
the rest of ROTC, it's very re-
warding."
(^VoiAA-r&fewas
(.
Preparing to scale rocks, a ROTC cadet
checks his gear. This exercise took place
at Papago Park in Tempe.
Looking over the edge, Eric Land ob-
serves a student who is scaling the
rocks. Trips to Papago Park were in ad-
dition to the weekly ROTC meetings held
at 6:30 a.m.
60 Armv ROTC
' .".■f'T.' 1 ', 1 ,';..'"... ' ,', JM , . ■ - • •■ 8 ' - J ■ . L ' ■ c -' - ■ • - . ' ■ ' ■ . ■ ■ - ■ ' ' J * » v '■ • ' ■ " ' • ' I
" * ■**'■ *Q.' ''«■"-' ? '"
•'.:>;*.-*'.■*-••:;.■;
Desert Rangers
first Bon-; Tim Wadley, Thomas Talbott, John McLoughlin, Eric
Schwehm, Darlene Russell. Second Row: Wah Kok Low, Daniel Robin-
son, James Caryl, Danial Godbey, Damien Fox, Jeff Caroli. Third Row:
Jeffery Shafer, Marcus Folino, Ross Poppenberger, Robert Haupt, Don
Shannon. Fourth Row: Eric McFadden, Stephen Kane, Kevin Kane,
Stephen Snyder, Jack Kugler, Dana Andrews. Fifth Row: Matt Heikk-
nen, Judi Manley, Carol McElain, James Domaz. Sixth Row: Laurie
Herman, Julia Phelps, Armida Duran.
Army ROTC Color Guord
Joseph Staro, Jack Kusler, Rich Dressman, Chris Palmenberg, Paul
Richardson, Darlene Russell, Ben Delci.
Army ROTC
First flow.' Charles Haygood, Darlene Russell, Scott William, Greg Zele,
Tatyana Dhaliual, Ingrid Cintrion, Kristen Lucas, Eric Schwehm,
Darren Haws, Melissa Stoneman, Richard Apostolico, Mark Russell.
Second Row: Craig Kurek, Phil Hamblin, Guy Roll, Eric Devine, Eric
McFadden, Eckart Pape, Joe Lane, Michael Cooper, Todd Belt, Scott
Kahldon. Third Row: Steve Roberts, Scott Jones, Matt Berriman,
Anthony Pensiero, Alan Timmons, Stephen Snyder, Erin Buhl, Ma-
cAuley Beloney, Greg Lone, Chris Perry.
Army ROTC
First Row: Cliff Rosenstein, Thomas Murray, Steve Faemer, Charles
Hocker, Tina Scheiner. Second Row: David Silver, Jim Caryl, William
Dorsey, Evan Larsen, Eric Thieroff, Adrian Henegan.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
Getting ready for a field exercise,
Kristen Springer is eager to begin.
This was an integral part of the
ROTC program.
Organizations 16
1
. ' ,... ' . ' ■"■ u -. . ■ •.'.'.'..'■.
■ ' ■■". ' ■ .■..■ J ..-'-.' V...
"77 — -i. . ,- J ■ — ?*""
' '* ■ ..-■.■'■••.
Cadet Jason Schultz gets Barry Gold-
water to sign his biography while Cap-
tain- Guiney looks on. Air Force ROTC
had many speakers during the year.
Cadet Eric Montgomery walks in front
of old main. Old main was where most
Air Force ROTC classes were held.
I
ROTC Offers Students
Opportunities
62 AFROTC
oday, even when mil-
tary service is not re-
quired, student enrollment in the
Air Force ROTC program contin-
ues to grow.
"ROTC helps teach leadership
skills and gets cadets involved in
both the university and commu-
nity," said Capt. David Guiney, a
ROTC instructor.
In addition to ROTC there are
two extra curricular honorary
programs which cadets can join.
These programs are Silver Wing
and Arnold Air Society.
"Silver Wing is a competitive
program," said Cadet Reggie Tru-
jillo, a sophomore computer in-
formation major and Silver Wing
member. "The cadets in Silver
Wing are more hardcore mili-
tary." Similar to Silver Wing is
the Arnold Air Society which is
military oriented and volunteers
in the community.
The summer between cadets'
junior and senior year, they go
through intensive field training
which gives them a taste of a
soldier's life, Guiney said. After
training, an option of active ser-
vice in the Air Force is offered to
cadets, and a majority end up
committing, Guiney added.
"I'm glad I decided to commit,"
said Cadet Scott Stormo, a junior
computer information systems
major. "After graduation I won't
have to run around looking for a
job. I know where I am going."
■ I ":.-. ' - ' ■<. ' ■■ • * ■ ' •■■ * .•. " ' :■.'•■ ■ •■"': ■-' : , -°''. °", •■.•■••••■
•«'.i-v •.■•'■ • •».-'
Air Force ROTC
Front flow-Reggie Trujilli, George Gonzales, Matt McDonough, Mike
Rooney, Robert Dao, Wes French, Jeff Peterson, Julie Lewis, Andrea
Hlosek, Douglas DiFrancesco.Serond SowSam Hannan, Jeff Pettett,
Aaron Duhon, Brad Harris, Leo Hollis, Dan Young, Peter Jacob, Alan
Struthers, David Denham, Charles Smith. Third SowJason Schultz,
Matthew Larsen, Michael Meyer, Casey Danner, Rich Dressraan,
Michael Butler, Alan Vander Ploeg, Chad Blostone, Greg Ogburn,
Leonard Bettendorf . F ourth ffoH-.-Phillip Cox, Jay Marschke, Michael
Loforti, Eric Lohmann, Greg Perry, William Davis, Tom Ferencz-
halmy, Ronald Tinseth, Matthew Zuber, Mark Fitzgerald.
Arnold Air Society
Front flow/Alan Vander Ploeg, Michael Butler, Douglas DiFrancesco,
Joey Hoffman, Peter Jacob, Dan Vasenko, Eric Krueger.Second Row-
.Oavid Parrish, Mark George, Daryl Janes, Paul Shivelhood, Michael
LoForti, Eric Lohman, Todd Schmidt. Third flow.Tara Davis, Susan
Skowronski, Sarah Gabig, Jace Gardner, Linda Alby, Julie Lewis,
Andrea Hlosek, George Gonzales.
Silverwing
First floiv.Gary Benites, Wes French, Joey Hoffman, James T. Egbert,
Daniel A. Vasenko, Dan Young, Nathan Brown. Second flo»Kirsten
Nagel, George Gonzales, Douglas DiFrancesco, James Scooler, Robert
Dao, Candace Whidden, Reggie Trujillo, Capt. Bernard Feldsher. Third
Son-John Shannon, Eric Montgomery, Mike Stowers, Rustan Schwich-
tenberg, Cedrick Stark, Ryan Russell.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
Organizations 16
I
Pi Tqu Sigma
Front Bow: David Parrish, David Shoup, Brent Nebeker, Maria Frew,
Michael MacArthur, Brent Hendrickson, Timothy Kallmer. Second
Row: Michael Brock, Kristy Kearney, Michael Halverson, Leigh Little,
Brenda Rasmussen, Michael Abraham, Nghr Nguyen, Cao Nam. Third
Bow: Chris Montgomery, Larry Vondra, David Laanen, Christopher
Blinn, Thomas Rothacker, Wayne Scheel, Hal Allen.
Institute Of Electrical &
Electronic Engineers
Front Bow Gary Burnside, Michael Palais, Christopher Harvey, Jeff
Davies, Richard Kearns, James Kapp, Stewart Hall, Vick Stivers.Se-
cond Bow: Randall Patterson, Erol Burghardt, James Rush, Hazem
Moakleit, David Pivin, Brian Crawford, Mariselle Gonzales, Mike
Iannitti.
Society of Woman
Engineers
First Bow: Amy Lewis, Anna Yee, Jeanna Capp, Valerie Ochoa.Seeonrf
Bow: Kari Plue, Rene Hicks, Kristy Kearney, Doris Yee. Third Bow:
Telisa Seiter, Wendy Long, Denise Holdman, Lily Tom, Shannon Ot-
tara, Anne Sepie.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
1
64 Organizations
Pi Tqu Sigma
f
Unifies Chapter
hree Pi Tau Sigma
•■'•'••■■'•'■ •'-•■ committee members
looked at each other, breathed a
sigh of relief, and collapsed on
the couches in the Sun Devil
Suite at the Tempe Holiday Inn.
The national convention was
over and the ASU host chapter
members could not have been
happier.
"The convention was a suc-
cess, it really got our chapter ex-
cited to get out and start new
community projects," said Presi-
dent Wayne Schell.
Pi Tau Sigma was an honorary
society for junior and senior me-
chanical or aeronautical engi-
neering majors. It recognized stu-
dents' academic excellence and
« leadership quality.
§ The national convention was
a held at ASU in hopes that more
I western chapters would partici-
pate, Vice President Michael Hal-
verson said.
"Community and peer involve-
ment were a big focal point of the
convention, as were the seminars
on engineering ethics," said com-
mittee chairman Brent
Hendrickson.
The main ethical question
stressed at the convention was
whistle blowing.
"Engineers are public ser-
vants," Halverson said. "Their
designs affect society, and be-
cause of this we have a responsi-
bility to keep our research ethi-
cally sound."
Schell said he felt the conven-
tion to share ideas.
"Most importantly , it unified
our chapter." Schell said.
G>
V\olAA_
f^Vt?
t£fc>
'it
Engineering students at the National
Pi Tau Sigma convention enjoy the ban-
quet held on Saturday night. The con-
vention was a three day event and was
held at the Holiday Inn in Tempe.
Discussing his work at NASA, space
artist Robert McCa.ll , speaks about the
space program. He designed commemo-
rative stamps of space and was also the
first artist to draw space shuttle pic-
tures. Photo by David Haneke
Presenting the convention T-shirt
Brent Hendrickson gains approval from
President, Wayne Schell and member
Marie Frew. ASU hosted its first nation
al convention.
Pi Tau Sigma 1
65
Circle K
First Row: Eleanor Enriquez, Michele Richmond, Shawna Morgan,
Mary Campion, Dallas Roper. Second Row: Michele Culligan, Thomas
McGrath, Jeanette Wiedemeier, Cathy Hoggs, William Kopp.
Forensics
First Row: Janeen Rohovit, Dana Engstrom, Eva Monsey, Tiffany
Price, Cynthia Marasco, K. Denino, Karen Susag, Karen Kimmey,
Brian McAnallen.Second flow: Joel Sannes, James Hecht, Dave Genko,
Pam Joraanstad, Travis Brinster, Sunita Advaney, Tom Sexton, Rob-
ert Adanto, Meg Howell. Third Row: David Preudhomme, Scott DuBois,
Vince Meldrum, Clark Olson, Natalia Moore, Carlo Bonura, Jason
Fruits, Christopher McCall, Michael Klapwyk.
ASU Telefund
first Row: Alka Hingorani, John Gimbel, Kent Thomas, Lisa Greene,
Kim Razy, Beth Price, Jennifer Ball, Kristi Erford, Natalie Boehme.
Second Row: Minh Dang, Jay Marshke, Linda Kwok, Beth Deines,
Sandi Martin, Scott MacPherson, Stephanie Crow, Michele Johnson,
Peter Meier, Lisa Schafer, Jenny Spillard, Mark Palmer, Chris Wright,
Stacey Doner. Third Row: Brad Kaplus, Alan Knepfer, Richard Bens,
Ellen Brice, Chris Triplett, Rick Hecht, Rudy Paredes, Leonard Chuah,
Tom Humphrey, Cynthia Sieler, John Barno, Vanessa Novak, Rachel
Black, Lynn Eckert, Cindy Balmuth, Laura Kaye, Said Hayouna,
Kourtney Troyer, Debbie Martini, Vickie Levine. Fourth Row: Mike
Daniewicz, Michael Loforti, Donovan Routsis, Tonya Lieberman, Phil-
lip Zeigler, Jenn Keys.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
6 Organizations
* c ."..",■ t *. ■, * '-
V >■<>. *.'■"• " **V.
Telefund Calls for
li Donations
;.° : i!-t-- : or most people, it
'':■:.■■:.':•:■'. would seem unrealis-
tic to envision raising $800,000 in
one school year. But to the ASU
Telefund directors, the amount
was one more step ahead.
"We always try to make it
more than what we raised the
year before, so that we continue
to improve," Assistant Telefund
Director, Michele Johnson said.
"Last year our goal was $750,000
and we went over that. This year
our goal is $800,000."
ASU Telefund was a part of
the Annual Fund, which, in turn,
was managed by the Office of
Development on campus.
Telefund Director Annette
Brown said that the basic pur-
pose of the Telefund was "to
raise funds for ASU."
"We try to raise smaller annu-
al gifts," Brown said. "We start
with the Century Club, which is
$100, and we go down from there.
But what we really stress is
participation."
Johnson said that the money
collected by the Telefund could
be used "anywhere on campus
where it is most needed."
In order to reach the set goal,
there were 62 callers, three su-
pervisors, and seven clerks em-
ployed at the Telefund office.
Both Brown and Johnson said
that calling people for money
was not an easy job.
"It's a hard job. We only em-
ploy ASU students (as callers),"
Brown said. "We are represent-
ing ASU. There is a lot of good
will in that."
"It's not like any other tele-
phone job because we're not high
pressure," Johnson said.
Talking with a contributor, broadcast
journalism major Rick Hecht works to-
wards earning part of the $800,000 tele-
fund goal. Students worked at night to
| get donations from alumni and other
3 sponsors.
Calling for a $30 pledge, political sci-
ence major Kurt Thomas talks to a previ-
ous donor. Often pledges from previous
years were called because they would
donate yearly. Photo by Mike Lewis.
Telefund 16
1
'. . . c . '. • o- . ■- ."
- J - • - ',"'"•*:
'Anything Goes' For
>o
Spina Bifida
holla Apartments
':•*•'.'•'- -1' held their annual Al-
most Anything Goes charity
event benefiting Arizona Spina
Bifida on Nov. 4. Some new and
bizarre contests were invented
for the 150 students from Cholla,
Palo Verde West and Palo Verde
East Halls who participated in
the event.
One of the new games played
during the day was the wooden
spoon race. Each team of 12
members was given a wooden
spoon with a rope attached to the
end of it. After the gun went off,
the spoon and rope had to pass
through each team member's
clothing before a winner could be
declared.
Although this day of wacky
Olympics had the usual games
such as the three-legged race and
balloon toss, some of these were
altered for Almost Anything
Goes.
"We did 'Simon Says' to aero-
bics," said Peter Brockal of Chol-
la Hall. "It definitely made the
game more difficult."
Almost Anything Goes was
held each year since 1985, and
many people wanted to see it oc-
cur each semester due to its fun,
popularity, and good cause.
Brockal, who single-handedly or-
ganized the event, said that more
participation would be needed
for this to continue.
Although all the residence
halls on campus were invited to
participate, Brockal said most of
the students involved lived in
Cholla.
To raise money for the event,
Brockal received help from spon-
sors, such as Sno-Oasis, Dunkin
Donuts, and various pizza estab-
lishments. For the aerobics ver-
sion of Simon Says, Club- Aerobics
donated their time to make the
game possible. Coors also spon-
sored a raffle.
Musical chairs was another
traditional game that went zany
at Cholla Hall. In this game,
when the music stopped and ev-
eryone scrambled to plant them-
selves in a chair, it was more
difficult because chairs were un-
expectedly pulled out from un-
derneath the participants.
At the end of the day the 15
teams tallied their points. The
overall winners were Cholla
floors A-B 3 combined with C-D 8.
One team from PV East and West
participated, but could not over-
take the veteran Cholla resi-
dents.
BmmFfffmsm
Participating in the spoon race Julie
Lenegan threads the spoon through her
clothes. The race was part of Cholla's
Almost Anything Goes which benefitted
Spina Bifida.
I
68 Almost Anything Goes
*•'■ '«*• •■••b. 1 -it;*'- ■
Cholla Hall Council
Aunt flow: Kimberly Brown, Love Slating, DeNel Sedo. Second Row:
Kim Razy, Peter Grossgold, Amy Turner, Rich Haldeman.
Residence Hall
Association
Front Row: Mike Wolfberg, Brian Winter, Dave Fox, Adam Flath.Se-
cond Row: Judi Biggs, Joy Sullivan, Jennifer Parlet, Cindy Netzgur,
Carla Biejemeyer, Kimberly Phar.
STARS
Front Row: Jeremiah George, Ron Davidson, Chuck Belcher, Marquita
Davis, Michelene McClellan, Alissa Murdock, Celinda Shamsiddeen,
Nicole Gross, Charles Smith. Second Row: Ashahed Triche, Rhonda
Carr, Michael Mitchell, Tracye Warfield, Robin Beavers, Sherri Moore,
Andrea Wharton, Raquel Monroe, Leticia Carey.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
Organizations 16
1
■.c.,'. '.• .0 > ' <
* . o . - «
The Sun Devil Spark
Front flow; Kristina ByBee, Tina Amodio, Michelle Conway, Tammy
Vrettos, Tori King, Marlene Naubert, Debbie Lisman, Tina Russo,
Dione Dozal, Marnie Donnelly, Kim Chuppa. Second Row: Heather
Kimes, Eric Scudder, Mike Lewis, Nicole Grove, Steve Kricun, Shelly
Girouard, Paige Slautterback, Dani Midtun, Melissa DiFiore, Shannon
Morrison, Amy Bowling, Michelle Douglas. Third Row: Tracey Di
Cicco, Michael J. Scannell, Craig Valenzuela, Jill Harnisch, T.J. Sokol,
Sean Lopez, Dave Haneke, Erik Leverson, Frank Fender, Robyn Pink-
ston, David Kexel, Amara Fotenos.
State Press
Front Row: Sonya Lewis, Kelly Ettenborough, Elise Elsberry, Kelly
Jain, Wendy Strode, Kelly Pearce, Joie Ann La Polla. Second Row: Kim
Harris, Chris Nackino, Michelle Henry, Nicki Carroll, Lynn Vavreck,
Suzanne Ross, Carolyn Hofig, Scott Troyanos. Third Row: Francine
Stahl, Larry Newell, Mike Ritter, Jack Beasley, Marty Sauerzopf,
Michelle Allman, Ben McConnell, Mark Crimson, Scott Seckel, Darrin
Hostetler, Paul Coro, Tyrone Meighan.
Student Handbook
Steve Kricun, Nicki Carroll.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
I
• -' '.o ■ '•.,- ■ - ' e."»-
'*•*■»' - * ■.*. '■ tt •*_■ * '.
•0- .*■.,. o. ■ .
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70 Organizations
i ' ; - , , ' ■
Magazine Establishes
%
Readership
our years ago Hay-
den's Ferry Review
was just a dream of a group of
creative writing students, but
that dream became a a reality
and blossomed into a showcase
for both new and established
writers around the country.
"This is our first big year,"
said Salima Keegan, managing
editor of the magazine. "Our sub-
scriptions are up 100 percent."
1989 was the first year that
Hayden's Ferry Review pub-
lished two issues, one in the
spring and one in the fall. Previ-
ously, it was published only once
a year. Keegan said that the
change helped the magazine to
be taken more seriously.
"Most libraries won't sub-
scribe to a literary magazine un-
less it's published at least twice a
year," she said. The first issue
was published in 1986. The maga-
| zine was marketed nationally for
$5 and anyone was free to submit
poetry, fiction or slides of art for
publication.
The magazine's editorial staff
was made up mostly of graduate
students in creative writing.
There were two poetry editors,
two fiction editors, and one art
editor. The editorial positions
lasted for one year.
Barb Nelson, a poetry editor,
said that this past year was par-
ticularly good for the magazine.
"It's a real exciting time be-
cause Hayden's Ferry Review has
really established itself," Nelson
said.
She added that it had gone
from a fledgling magazine to a
showcase for what was happen-
ing in progressive writing.
"We are helping to show that
good, quality writing can come
from ASU," said Wendy Ring, a
fiction editor.
//(jlUct-<*. xQ^/^^e-
Reviewing manuscripts of the Hayden's
Ferry Review, Poetry Editor Barbara
Nelson, and Dianne Nelson work to-
wards meeting their deadline for the
spring issue. Copies of the magazine
were sold at $5.
Viewing slides for the sixth issue of
Hayden's Ferry Review, Vivian Spiegel-
man works as photo editor of the maga-
|s zine. Subscriptions of the magazine in-
| creased 100 percent which helped gain
~ national attention.
Selecting work from slides submitted to
the magazine, Vivian Spiegelman looks
for a possible cover photo. Over 2000
slides, fiction, and poetry submissions
were received for each issue.
Hayden's Ferry Review 17
1
■,-0 •,.' ,'0 ■ •"/*, *.''
■ ,. -a- '. »'o ■«.
' " i ' Y <■'
Political Parties
Iff Foster Action
."■ uring a time when
'•''-■''/.'•■•.^.'.V; there was trend to-
wards political apa-
thy on college campuses, the
Young Democrats and College Re-
publicans emerged forcefully
with the intent to get students
involved in the political process.
Both organizations encouraged
students to vote. The Young
Democrats made enormous pro-
gress with the continual pres-
ence of a voter registration table
on Cady Mall.
"A university is supposed to be
a laboratory for free thought and
we want to encourage that," said
Walter Richter, a junior political
science major and president of
the Young Democrats.
Richter added that by register-
ing people to vote, the Young
Democrats brought people closer
to the political process on a state
and national level.
The Young Democrats and Col-
lege Republicans helped foster
political involvement with
speeches and debates, particular-
ly with the debate between
George McGovern and Ed Meese.
Both groups said that they were
greatly affected by meeting the
politicians.
"I really think that bringing
Meese to ASU legitimized our or-
ganization," said John Coe, a se-
nior journalism major and chair-
man of the College Republicans.
Richter said that the McGov-
ern and Meese debate helped to
unify the Young Democrats and
ease tensions with the College
Republicans.
"It brought us closer together
in a unique way," Richter said.
"There was no bickering or bad
feelings between the two organi-
zations while McGovern and
Meese were here."
Coe said that he felt that the
two clubs had a common bond
because there were issues that
affected all college students, no
matter what party they belonged
to.
"Our most important goal was
to get involved in the political
process," Coe said.
Coe added that he hoped that
the lack of animosity between
the two groups continued.
"In the future, I envision us
working together," he said.
Discussing the Iran-Conta hearing, Re-
publican Ed Meese debates his point
with George McGovern. The debate was
co-sponsored by ASASU and the political
union.
I
Talking to Young Democrats, Glenn
Davis discusses candidate selection at
the Young Democrat convention. The
convention was held in September at the
Radisson Resort in Scottsdale.
Speaking to the democrats, James
Shum way secretary of the state of Arizo-
na addresses current political issues. He
was one of the many speakers who at-
tracted a large audience.
72 Campus Politics
Front Row : Charles Fimian, John PlesKovitch, Carl Rich, Michael
Mandell, LoraLei Caldwell, Corbin Howes. Second Row : Jonathon
Horley, T.J. Buck, Eric Sanford, Steffany Colgan, Michelle Gomez,
Hilary Weinberg. Third Row : Shelly Kleca, Jennifer English, Sigrid
Ebert, Karen Kimmey, Dominica Giannangelo, Dulce Amor Sulit,
Christina Carmony.
. ■' « ,.",'- ""■ ' - ° '«" ' ~-
Phi Alpha Delta
College Republicans
first Row : Derrill Wolkins, Kathy Roye, Charmayne Cooley, Brandy
Cooley, Creighton Anderson, Chris Cioffi, Annette Mashler. Second
Row : Kimberly North, Grieg Cashman, G.W, Martin, Eric Fenster,
Derek Ciccone, Paul Richardson, Robert Kestelik, Janet Gradijan,
Suzanne Gritzuk. Third Row : Doug Larson, John Coe, John Mahoney,
Bill Ocker, Mark Laliberte, Karl Roebke, Marco Spagnuolo, Jeff Mey-
er, Matt Niemeyer, Steve Primrose.
Young Democrats
First Row : Catherine Gustafson, Daniel Berman, Brandy Hotchner,
Amy Hamilton, Aileen Keeletier. Second Row : David Blais, Eric
Farber, R.D. Johnson, Walter Richter, Peter Doria. Third Row : Jason
Swingler, Andy Ortiz, Robin Walper, Kim Kolowitz, Mark Boyd, Ange-
la Barone, Daniel Denotsky.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
Organizations 1
1
Amateur Radio Society
Front Row: Mike Rauchle, Orian Watts, Matt Horbund, Neil Watts.Se-
cond Bow Joseph Nucci, Cynthia Varnam, James Nucci, Clarence
McAllister, Nick Avaneas.
Delta Sigma Omicrom
Jackie Greene, Christine Larson, Patty Bookman, Michele Martinez.
KASR
Christine Pointer, Julia Trainor, Fritz Leigh, Matt Crum, Steve Baker,
Patrick Kittridge, Christopher Potter, Leah Miller.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
B.74 Organizations
Assisting deejays with instant re-
quests, Erik Dudley pulls albums from
the record file. KASR was aired through-
out all the residence halls.
The winning floor, Octillo E-2, are hap-
py with their first place pizza party
prize. This was the second year that this
floor had won. Photo by David Haneke
Mixing a commercial promo, produc-
tion manager Christopher Rotter deejays
the Local Line Up Show. KASR played a
variety of music, from pop to alternative.
KASR Encourages
S Floor Wars
hat would you do for
25 free pizzas?
For the men of Ocotillo E-2,
requesting 1,302 songs over a
two-week period was a small
price to pay for the elation that
they experienced when they re-
ceived their steaming, bubbling
prize.
The pizzas were awarded as a
part of KASR's annual competi-
tion, "Floor Wars", which pitted
dorm floors against each other to
see who can request the most
songs over two weeks. During the
time period of Oct. 23 to Nov.l,
the station received 2,900 calls,
the highest number ever.
Rob Hammersley, a junior
broadcasing major and DJ, said
that the hardest thing about the
contest was the volume of calls
they received.
"There were so many calls
that we could only play about
half of the songs requested," he
said.
Ocotillo E-2 repeated its vic-
tory from last year. Of the resi-
dents on the floor, Preston En-
glish, a sophomore broadcasting
major, and Scott Bowman, a
sophomore psychology major, re-
quested the most songs. They
said that repeating their victory
was important, but that the piz-
zas were more of an incentive.
"We were mighty hungry," En-
glish said.
KASR 1
n
■ 1 • '■ ' . ■ '■■
■■'&■• o . °,;
• , „■ -° . ' r. .' ','C . ■ , c>.
American Nuclear Society
Front Side: Gary Burnside, Natalie Morris, Sandra Whaley, Bruce
Howell, Matthew Barnett. Second Row: Victor Howard, D. Brent Mor-
ris, Jerald Hunter, Brent Finley, Roseanne Harrington. Third Row:
Keith Holbert, Matthew Hanly, Randall Patterson, Bob Kovalcik,
Shawn Pantz.
Americans For Bozo
Front Row: Eleanor Conrad, Sam Becchetti, Circus Circus, Cliff Rosen-
stein, Ralph Sanchez, Sarah Gabig.Second Row: Curt Ritter, Bozo
Clown, Jason Chesler, Liz Burns. Third Row: Matt West, Marc Oppen,
Mike Bernier, Fred Mertz.
American College of
Health Care
Front Row: Gordon Hedrick, Tammy Christ.Second flow.- Brad Higgins,
Michael Olson, Jim Wallace.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
I
76 Organizations
;}^i-:'r).\i.:.'-:'t
', ='_"_ ,■•■>•&. ■ ■ .'.?-
Americans for Bozo
111 Bolster Spirit
hat was one of the most
• '■-.:■ '■ '■'-'■ '•' notable fixtures at ASU
football games? Bozo, of course!
Founded in 1988 by freshman
broadcasting major Curt Ritter,
Americans for Bozo's purpose
was "to promote school spirit
among all ASU students... arous-
ing other students to participate
in the various programs offered
at ASU."
Where does Bozo fit into all
this?
"The 'Bozo Factor' came into it
when I walked into a Pic 'N Save,
saw a six-foot inflatable Bozo,
and bought it as a party gim-
mick," Ritter said.
He first brought Bozo to the
ASU-Missouri football game,
dressed in a T-shirt mocking the
Missouri quarterback.
"Bozo sparked an interest in
people... they got excited and
spirit rose. I thought, 'Why not
make some type of club out of
this?'"
Thus, Americans for Bozo was
born.
"People's initial reaction is a
little skeptical when they hear
the name of the club, but when
they hear what we're about,
they're all for it," Ritter said.
"We hope to help everyone make
the most of the ASU experience
for as long as they are here and
in the years to come."
Taping Bozo to the roof of the van, Liz
Burns, Rick Hecht, and Christine Piazza
prepare for the Homecoming parade.
Bozo attracted much attention for the
club throughout the year.
Bozo body guards prepare the honored
mascot for the parade. This was the
club's first year in the Homecoming Pa-
rade. Photo by Tammy Vrettos.
S^^^^^B
Americans for Bozo 17
1
. I ■ I ■ ■ I ' I ■
■. ■■.•:.-v°: •;*..■.• •.'.■■« •.••i--.-:,,-.'/ :- ",°- '•'»■'.■;';•■"*.■ ;'•'.■'• .■'.' >;^^■•*•;^»^/y^•XV■■■-V.^^■-V.*•^*• , • :;^«' •%•'■> :o : -. - ?•? •'•:•'■.•■•' • -.•••>.'.°. ,•?,•.••;••.•■,• ;, f /-"
Advertising Club
Front RowSheri Contois, Joan Eckerman, Daneil Colarich, Sau Tang,
Monica Paluch. Second RowEmilie McLaughliin, Howard Rudin, Amy
Dixon, Lee Barber.
Public Relations Society
Students of America
Front Rowjohn Coe, Eric Levake, Diana Hall, Fran Matera.Second
RowSandy Lee, Juliet Ord, David Powell, Virginia Boss, Sally Moore.
USA For Choice
First ftwSandy Greenlich, Darrin Heirabuck, Gabriella Tako Martha
Doherty, Shery Kline, Yleana Samaniego.5econd Soiv.'Mark Boyd, Ja-
son Swingler, David Blais, Kim Kolowitz, Shannon Tromp, Angela
Barone.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
.
78 Organizations
Making a statement, pro-choice advo-
cates use a giant hanger to support their
campaign. Both pro-choice and pro-life
supporters used visual methods to ad-
vance their opinions.
A student takes time to read the mate-
jg rial presented by USA For Choice. This
| organization was seen on Cady Mall
3 weekly.
USA For Choice
Gets More Support
±
he giant hanger carried
the warning, "This is
not a surgical instrument, keep
abortion safe and legal."
The pro-choice group, United
Students of Arizona For Choice
originally was established in
January '88 as Universities For
Choice by Jody Horn, a justice
graduate student who saw wom-
en unable to cross a clinic black-
ade set up by pro-life demonstra-
tors. Once the table was set up on
Cady Mall participation quickly
grew.
"The increased involvement is
exciting, and includes both men
and women," Horn said. "These
issues affect everyone. It's not
just a woman's thing at all."
"We are not monsters against
babies," Horn added. We are a
coalition, that is pro-planned par-
enthood, pro-family and pro-
women's rights."
Response to the group's efforts
have not always been positive,
said Angie Barone, co-chairman
of the organization.
"The other day I was at the
information table and a woman
came up to me and told me I was
going to go to hell," Barone said.
"What can you do? I just thanked
her for her opinion.
"When something like that oc-
curs, you have to ignore it. Argu-
ing is out of the question because
neither person will be persuad-
ed."
0> ^ » CJ^\ A_P&tjB?t£fc>
USA For Choice 17
I
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R.M.S.A. Makes
*
The Connection
he Recreation Majors
- -' ;: °' Students Association
continued a tradition of connect-
ing students with professionals
in order to make the transition
from school to the workplace a
smoother experience.
The group stressed student
and professional involvement
with its shadow step program
where students were able to fol-
low a professional in their field
for a day.
"We feel that our organization
is beneficial because it encour-
ages students to meet future em-
ployers," said Leslie Weed, a se-
nior recreation major and vice
president of RMSA. Weed said
that the program helped stu-
dents to get more involved.
I
Diane Rieding, a senior thera-
peutic recreation major said that
the club provides a necessary
connection between students and
professionals.
"It provides a good opportuni-
ty to meet professionals in the
field," Reiding said. "It also al-
lows us to participate in activi-
ties with other recreation
majors."
The organization also spon-
sored fundraisers such as selling
sodas at the Haunted Hayride at
South Mountain Park, from Oct.
28 to Oct. 31, and a "Clean-up" at
the PERA Club in Tempe.
Weed said that club's volun-
teer work helped both the com-
munity and students.
80 Recreation Majors Student Association
Carrying table cloths to be sorted is
Diane Rieding. RMSA earned $200 dol-
lars from the clean-up fundraiser. Photo
by Shannon Morrison
RMSA member pitches a tough seconi
inning. RMSA played the faculty in :
softball game in which they were defeat
ed 15-13.
■ <;■-.'..■ ■ VJ ' - .-.-. c .-
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•,.■=■ -.». . v- ...;.»,. v. ■ ,o># ,•*:.'.: , c . .,.-..■ J.*; V -o ■ ■•■ ■ i ;o. • ■ ■*./.-. .•.-»■•.•■ .■„..« • .• '. . - ■ ■ • - • ° .'.-».'.■ . ., o.;- o. .-■-.-* 6 . -■•■.
=".' '-'* -.v. '-■;?* ■■ ■. ° .•"..'.-• ;■-•>.' ° ■ '.-v.v.','°.# ;.■•■ ° ■' ■ -■ ■ '■.'/'' - *•' ■', : o >; ? •'■»'?■ ,•*■•■-]'.,■ ."■' '. •*•"./.•*■',''■•'»'*•■ ?•'•*- '< '*'•-'■ ■■". - "'•'*»'*.'*•■
»•.,->„':,'..'"•.-*' - ■"• - >\° ' '■• ■■-■ " ■■"■'■'". ''•■"-„- '■' „■ -v.--' .;-»-.,«»."-»
c_-,.'a '. ~.l. ; ■ .*,
M.E.C H.A.
IMSA President Johnathan McCabe
, umps the left over cups into a trash-
ag. The cleanup was at the PERA Club
i Tempe. Photo by Shannon Morrison.
First Row: Eddie Chavez, Virginia Gallegos, Diana Sanchez, Jerri
Rangel, Angie Cuevas, Vincent Nunez, Rosita Pinedo, Laura Diaz,
Guadalupe Torres, Gloria Kuiz, Elida Barrandey, Diane Murrieta.
Second Bow: Jessie Garcia, Art Flores, Norma Valdez, Jose Mendoza,
Edward Caldeson, Hector Rojas, Anthony Carrillo, Elisabeth Lunquez,
Araceli Cecena, Rafael Sanchez. Third Row: Nancy Gilstrap, Wyndi
Brownell, Jesus Rodriguez, Virginia Pesqueira, Eduardo Delci, Andy
Ortiz, Steven De La Ossa, Manuel Ortega, Albert Ruiz.
Food Science Club
First Row: Carmen Amaya, Douglas Geshell. Second Row: Teresa
Flannery, Shireen Ahmed, Rula Mushahwar. Third Row: Dave Stenke,
Terry Tully, Moshe Raccach.
Recreation Majors Student
Association
first Row: Maxine Rohde, Shannon Morrison, Leslie Weed. Second
Row: Danielle Barr, Johnathan McCabe, Connie Smith.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
Organizations 18
1
.!.' ».!.. . '-
Student Baptists
ii Promote Unity
'S'i' : 's:- ; -'-. he Baptist Student
■:■■•■:.■"■ : - : '- Union was an up-and-
coming organization on campus
at least in accordance with its
past history. In his third year as
director, Keith Henry has seen
an average of 40 students pre-
sent at group meetings.
"We have a meeting every
Tuesday from 7 to 8:30 p.m. and
every Thursday from noon to 1
p.m. They are planned and led by
the students and include singing
and Bible study," Henry said.
In the spring, BSU held an
evangelistic event on March 6-9
called "Here's Hope - Jesus Cares
for You," Henry said. He also
added that BSU held both a fall
and spring festival in inner-city
Phoenix. They were all-day Sat-
urday ministries for the
underprivileged.
"Activities got going after
Keith came. BSU is mainly an
extension of the church by add-
ing people from other churches
for fellowship," said junior aero-
space engineering major and BSU
President Maria Kemp.
Outreach Coordinator for BSU,
Jeremy Stockert, had two main
goals that he hoped the students
would achieve through BSU.
"I would hope that the stu-
dents come to realize that they
need to develop a personal rela-
tionship with God.. .and share it
with others," he said.
Gathering together in song members of
BSU join in fellowship. The group hosted
bi-weekly meetings for members to join
for Bible study and singing.
After students have eaten, they gather
to, sing praise and share the gospel. The
activities that BSU sponsored were both
religious and social.
18
2 BSU
■ ■ *.' '" '■, '-,* • ..* . o
", ° - " '.•■ ■■^- ' . ".7-
Dahai Club
First Row: Darius D. Hines, Eric Mortensen, May Movafagh. Second
Row: Yasaman Nafisi, Shahram Dana, Jeff Davey.
Winners Circle
First Row: Patti McEvoy, Renee St. John. Second Sow.- Kin Leung, Lori
Rundstrom, Paul Marco.
Baptist Student Union
First Row: Jeanne Ferry, Keith Henry, Kyle Hawkins, Daniel Martin,
Jeremy Stockert, Tony Smith. Second Row: Cynthia Meier, Byron Dou-
gals Hill, Debbie Henry, Andrea Kemp, Leanna Streety, Maria Kemp,
Jan Lewis, Amy Ferry.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
Organizations 1
.
i-'* -■« 1 . - u .' .•'»!■:■.
• ',"o' ;
:•'.-.:•?.*>•":'«
.0 ■, .' ,-o- -•
■ ••.•*.«•."*••■•«•■
Jujitsu
first Row : Mario Cannon, Eric Krinke, Tiffany Stewart, Randy Davis,
Michelle Ethelbah, Lisa Ryan, Brian Hill, Fred Doerner, Van Le, Brien
Katsuren. Second Row : Craig Lehman, Hardiman Tedia, Brad Tebow,
Tim Ault, Jeremy Cutin, David Winters, Mike Bloom. Third Row :
William Meier, Carlos Bobadilla, Matt Roberts, Mark Silverstein, Sher-
ry Klien, Cindy Cohen, Nancy Carberry, Maureenh Watson, Lesa
Moberly, Tessa Jones. Fourth Row : Sid Joesph, Jon Kitchel, James
Struckmeyer, Matt Kish, Thomas Jones, Mark Hunter, Michael
Kielsky, Jay Shray, Mike Goodbar.
Raquetball
First Row : Sau F. Tang, Randy Rafidi, Melinda Decker. Second Row :
Linda H. Pham, Missy Lurtsema, Toyohiko Hirano, Jason Small. Third
Row : Tony Cabrera, Tony Pond, Mike Riordan, Brad Lurvey, David
Farias.
Ice Devils
First Row : Rick Stinson, Dave Sharp, Kevin Hicks, Brad Glass, Jeff
Beske, Aaron Lundstrom, Kevin Gallasini, Doug Horst, Abel Moreno,
Pete Niklason. Second Row : Jim Manquso, Mike Hoffarth, Matt
Malec, Rich Matthews, Rob Watssom, Don Maloney, Jason Musyz-
chenko, Ron Matthews, Dave Peterson, Rob McClleland, Jay Giaca-
lone, Derek Chaif, Mark Hilgers, Gary Cornelson.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
IS
...... ° 1 - J , , . - ., . . •. ,.,* ■
■■.•.-' O ;,■,•,•-'•.- y.'.° . ,.
4 Organizations
— ! ." , , J I
Y< - ! -';:'- u - v • 'S' ." " fl .■-•»■'. V
,*.«•'.'«'.• .*,•.* -.' ? !• i ■_•',■& ;■.".•'• ' ■ ■ ■
' -.■ : -•:.-'■* o". °. ; ff -;- ■*...;■• ?**. » .*■
• •a", i.' ^ •'■"#■'.!*■*'• "<!■**; ■ kV*- -' ■ ' ■'.
1 . • . ■ - , ,° -■" . • ,- .0.,' •*. ■ ., o- ■ ■ .^ i *-■
'. ft" *0- ', " * ;"•*• ■ »'.,". ■-'•
Racing to beat the competition, Abel
Moreno tries to earn the Devils a victory.
The team has been at ASU for 14 years.
Making his way to the opponents goal,
Brad Glass attempts to score. The Ice
Devils played 27 games. Photo by T.J
Sokol.
| Getting pushed by the opponent, an Ice
■ Devil struggles to keep control of the
j puck. The Devils home rink was at the
« Tower Plaza Arena.
Ice Devils Shoot
For Fan Support
*
he ASU Ice Devils
••'•-•:'■ - : ■■»"' emerged as a competi-
tive team that was willing to play
the best hockey that they could
in order to warm the cold recep-
tion that it had received from the
university in the past.
"I'm trying to drum up some
interest in the team so that it can
support itself," said Michael Hof-
farth, the team's manager .
Hoffarth said that the hockey
club received funding from ASU,
but that it was not allowed to
advertise and sell its tickets on
campus. The tickets were $4 for
adults and $3 for students.
Jeff Beske, a junior political
science major who played de-
fense, said that the team was
much more organized. He added
I that this was partially due to the
>. hiring of a new head coach, Jim
| Manguso.
"We played better and that
really helped the morale of the
team," Beske said.
Beske added that the team
had more people try out then
ever before.
"We have a lot of good talent,"
said Kevin Galassini, a senior fi-
nance major and president of the
club.
Galassini added that the team
needed more support from fans.
"Part of the problem is that
we play too far away from cam-
pus," Galassini said. The Ice Dev-
ils played all of their home
games at Tower Plaza in
Phoenix.
"We have definite fan poten-
tial," Beske said. "All we need to
do is get the word out and we can
develop a strong club."
Hockey 18
1
here were you on the
night of Sept. 11, 1989?
Since it was a Monday, you may
have had your face crammed in a
book or two doing homework. But
if you lived in the Saguaro dormi-
tory, homework may not have
been at the top of your list. Some
residents chose instead of spend
an evening with California band
the Untouchables on the dusty
Saguaro field.
This free concert, sponsored
by ASASU, had a surprisingly
good turnout. An estimated 800-
1000 people showed to dance and
stir up some dust.
"They're a really good dance
band," said ASASU Concert Di-
rector Charlie Levy. "They've
been around for a while."
Levy, who was in charge of
free concerts at ASU, said that
he decided on a change of pace,
and brought the alternative rock
Playing their Latin flavored music,
Zum Zum Zum performs by Hayden Li-
brary during homecoming. The band was
sponsored by ASASU. Photo By Michelle
Conway.
band Concrete Blonde to PV
Beach on October
"It wasn't a dance oriented
music," he said of the Concrete
Blonde concert. "It was more of a
'hang out dude, this is cool'
music."
Freshman graphic design ma-
jor Graham Walters said that he
agreed.
think it's pretty relaxed,"
he said.
Kristen Stipe a resident of Sa-
guaro, said that she was pleased
with the location of the Untouch-
ables concert.
When asked if she would at-
tend a similar event, Stipe said
that she would.
"Definitely," she said. "Right
near our dorm. Definitely."
Concrete Blonde's lead singer, Joh-
nette Napolitano performs Back in Hol-
lywood, The band played on P.V. Beach.
1
86 Sponsored Bands
'' •"■ a > "'.
International Student Club
First Row: Choong Wai Lim, Dan McCoy, Nandana Silva, Bob Berg-
mans, Shui-Tuen Lau, Jac Shepperson, Yaonan Liao. Second Row Mei-
Chun Lin, Saran Kanthi Sree-Variganji, Andrea Carasquero, Mitsue
Yoshikawa, Yuko Inoue, Yukie Matsushita, Debbie Tang, Bret Meyers.
Asian American Student
Association
First Row: Elly Ong, Ann Lee, Angela Hu, Joyce Ong, Cindi Wood,
Teresa King. Second Row: Bam Bam, Hansoo Pyon, David Moon, Jason
Park, Ignacio Ong Jr. Third Row: Michael Wong, Emit Jin, Big Al,
Peter Yu, Edwin Chen.
Native American Student
Association
First Row: Bert Benally, Susan Secakuuk, John Sandoval, Sheldon
Preston, Pamela Briggs. Second Row: Lance Polingyouma, Lenore
Haskie, Angela Arviso, Vickey Bahe, Charolette Yazzie, Randella
Bluehouse. Third Row: Candy Enos, Verlene Lomatska, Edgar Toht-
soni, Howard John, Darlene Bendle, Wayne Cody.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
Continuing their homecoming debut,
Sum Zum Zum also plays at the College
)f Architecture's 25th anniversary Sil-
ver Jubilee. Zum Zum Zum was a local
band that college students favored.
Organizations 18
1
■ ■ I .. — ■ ■ , I '
Student Foundation
111 Raises Funds
;:#;&■!& tudent Foundation, an
'■■•'"'■'■' ■'■'■'- organization of 35 stu-
dents, tried to combat the con-
stantly rising costs of college tu-
ition rising costs of college
tuition by devoting a majority of
its time to raising $500 scholar-
ships for students in each college
on campus.
"Volunteering for this organi-
zation takes up a lot of our time,"
said Mike Yehle, a junior busi-
ness major and vice president of
Student Foundation.
The group sponsored its annu-
al leadership seminar at Tempe
Mission Palms and its annual
golf tournament at ASU's Kar-
sten Golf Course in an effort to
raise funds for scholarships. The
tournament, held on Nov. 17, was
geared towards local business
people who paid $100 to play.
r.
When Student Foundation in-
terviewed scholarship appli-
cants, the members looked for
leadership qualities.
Senior political science major
and President of Student Foun-
dation Matt Ortega said that the
group looked for students who
displayed leadership in a variety
of ways.
"We didn't only want to give
scholarships to junior politicos,"
Ortega said.
Both Yehle and Ortega said
that the members of Student
Foundation benefited from the
organization as well.
"Foundation is unique in that
it is one of the only organizations
that gives its members a real-
world experience," Ortega said.
Heading for the first tee, golfers in the
Student Foundation tournament play on
the the new Karsten Golf Course located
on Rural Road and 1st Street. The golf-
ers paid $100 to play in the tournament
which went towards a scholarship fund
for ASU student leaders.
Knocking one into the rough, John Kel
ler, a student player, chips up from I
sand trap on the first hole of Karster
Golf Course. The money raised from th(
tournament went towards 12 Studem
Foundation scholarships, one for each
college. Photo by Scott Troyanos
88 Student Foundation
■ .;' M '> > - . , rr
Tqu Beta Pi
First Row: Edward Kotlarz, Michael Wong, Kit Chu, Shannon Dhavale,
Joon Tham, Kie Sung Park, Wendy Sue Long, Tonja Krutckoff, Mo-
hammad Tamton, Steven McKown. Second Sow: Anne Sepic, D.J. Orr,
David Burrows, Matthew Barnett, Dr. Timothy Cale, Derrill Wolkins,
Clarence McAllister, Michael MacArthur, Russell Stuart. Third Row:
Tailung Hung, Brian Gyetko, Scott Morris, David Parrish, Arya Bhzad,
Len Gyetko, Mark Reibert, Ken Gustafson, Lance Null, Hazen Moak-
kit.
Alpha Lambda Delta
First Row: Wendy Gilboe, Karen Thomas, Maren Lee, Laura Pck,
Natalie Boehme.Seco/id Row: Dora Yee, Kendra Diegan, Sarah Am-
bler, Angi Prather, Kristi Nolde, Jeanette Wiedemeier. Third Row: Dr.
William Weidemeier, Jeff Hare, Ken Zwiebel, Rob Babyar, David
Harber.
Student Foundation
First Row: Wendy Sue Long, Claudia Tracht, Alisha Gutierrez, Lisa
Shelly, Lisa Polikov, Jeanette Alvarado, Lynne Villnueva, Erika An-
derson, Chris Kieselbach, Eddie Alexander. Second Row: Cathy Hi-
guera, Natalie Young, Tempest Mault, Christine Barnard, James Dun-
can, Andrew Suorinic, Mark Duplissis, Jill Fraker, Tara Rhodes, Anne
Graham. Third Row: Mike Yehle, Chris French, Carlos Galindo, Mat-
thew Ortega, Brian Myli, Andy Ortiz, Jennifer Niber, Lisa Ferrell,
Cathy Yehle, Anna Hawken, Gabriel Vasquez.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
lissing a putt, Dan Quixby plays in the
tudent Foundation tourney. The group
.lso hosted a leadership seminar.
Organizations 18
1
■ V-. ' -, r' ^ ' - ' r . ' , '
..»■,*.•... .'. .:« .. :
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o.» *....*.
Holding an unusual chicken species,
Cheryl Sellers enjoys her trip to Out of
Africa. It was one of many exotic ani-
mals found at the refuge.
Stretching after a nap, H.G. Saginaw, a
3-year-old, 670-pound, male Siberian ti-
ger licks his chops. The cat is known for
its mellow disposition.
Pre- Vet Students
Seek Refuge
re-Vet Club members
didn't have to go all the
way to Africa to receive an edu-
cation in the dynamics of exotic
animals.
Out of Africa Wildlife Park in
Fountain Hills provided students
with an opportunity to view fe-
lines up close and in a natural
environment.
"I loved it," said Cheryl Sell-
ers, a senior zoology major. "The
people who own these animals
have such a bond with them."
Sellers said that one highlight
of the trip was seeing two three-
day-old lion cubs.
"The owners slept with the lio-
ness and her cubs," she said.
"They camped out in sleeping
bags near the cats. I thought that
was amazing."
Field trips were just one as-
pect in veterinary medicine that
the club explored. Guest speak-
ers such as the deans of the
Washington State and Colorado
State University schools of veter-
inary medicine gave the club an
idea of what schools looked for in
prospective vet students.
"The guest speakers gave me a
better idea about what it will
take to get into vet school," said
Scott Darger, a senior zoology
major. "I have more realistic ex-
pectations now."
r
Pre-Vet Club
■•-•-•.«.:.*•;•.'
■*-■ °"» '.'
.-•.A-.'.*.-;*-"
°"" : ".:*. - * " ■' '-' «»' ; . <■' '« ."'■'■•,-■■ ••'-- - - ■•'"■*- °
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i ** ■ i
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' ■ °- ■' • ■ ■ ■ -' ■ '-.-■
Alpha Kappa Psi
first Row : Jennifer Thompson, Michelle Levario, Vy Dam, Tonya
Tillery, Christy Chase, Bruce Hausmann, Eileen Walter, Michelle
McDonald, Cari Callarman, Ronald Kosmack, Dawn Gingrass, Kim
Turner, Nandana Silva. Second Row : Ritwik Murkherjee, Amy Kagen,
Kevin Akbari, Kim Meek, Bill Toon, Jason Kaplan, Tom Forguen,
Monica Gaylor, Megan Hughes, Tracy Howell, Barbara Schebler, Dan-
elle Knight, Steven Anderson. Third Row : Mark-Devine Verdejo,
Kevin Whorl, Andrea DuMassa, Heather Haen, Cory Ahn, Nicholas
Koury, Andreaux Goldblatt, Warren Schapiro. Fourth Row : Lori
Session, Suzy Torian, Adolfo Ramirez, Steve McEwen, Michael Win-
gard, Eric Reif, James Lanphere, Rikk Veon, Kevin Neal.
olding a young lynx, Pre-Vet members
xamine the animal's behavior. The lynx
'as found at Out of Africa, a refuge for
xotic animals.
Pre-Vet Club
First Row: Marshall Levine, Philip Steiner, "Bogart," Scott Darger.
Second Row: Heidi Purrington, Cheryl Sellers, Tammy Vrettos, Larry
Crosby.
Delta Sigma Pi
First Row: 0. Scott Ramsey, Jay Massow, Joseph Durant, Rogelio
Corella, Bradley Hachtel, Steven Spadaro, Michael Scipione, Scott
Okabayashi, Randy Hawkins. Second Row: Doug Akins, William Ow-
ens, Margaret Koppen, Brad Steppert, Jason Scheier, Brian Boley, Eric
Strait, Jon Wachter, Lisa Shellly Third Row: Ingrid Fath, Gwen Smith,
Cathy Schenkel, Sally Howard, Sharon Jacobson, Marlece Esty, Karen
Grame, Wendy Laird, Monica Moore.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
Organizations 19
1
1 " !■ ■ ri .
Addressing the Film Makers of Tom-
morrow, guest speaker Lance Wilson-
White from Los Angeles talks about au-
ditioning. He was invited to speak about
the film industry.
Discussing ideas for new movies, mem-
bers listen to Lance Wilson-White's opin-
ion. The club was created because of a
lack of film courses at ASU.
ft
Film Makers Prepare
Future Careers
2 Film Makers
v.\!l°;-.f-'.°'v ot all aspiring actors,
»"... :.'■. directors, producers,
and script writers lived in Holly-
wood last year. As a matter of
fact, some of them attended
A.S.U., and decided to form the
club, "Film Makers of
Tomorrow."
Junior broadcasting major
Sean Colins, the the founder and
president of the club, said that
students transferred from ASU
because there were not many
film-oriented classes offered.
"There's student interest in
pursuing film. I figure we give
people education," Colins said.
Colins said that education
would involve actually working
with film equipment, talking
with professionals in the indus-
try, and attending writing and
acting workshops.
Senior broadcasting major
Christopher Haddad, president of
creative affairs, said that the
main goal of the club was to
"help students get experience."
Funding, however, was the
predominant obstacle that the 55
member club faced.
"The main problems are mon-
ey, money and money," Colins
said.
He added that the club reme-
died that problem by doing
"whatever we could that didn't
require money."
"We're hoping to make the
club into a tradition, and some-
thing people can be proud of,"
Colins said.
%
.•i. :".■:■ -•■«:
" * - x — r- . . Mm _*.
Precision Flight Team at
ASU
First Row: Andrew Wainwright, Ingud Centurion, Chris Culligan.
Second ffowvEric Dust, Brain Schnepf.
Society For Creotive
Anochronism
First Row: Nora Grace Calato, Edward Akers, Jeremy S. Dwiggins,
Michael Brown, Sarah Kenny, Randi Porter. Second Row: Mary Cald-
well, Nicole L. Stamm, Victoria Cosner, Tiffany J. Robinson, Camille
Cordero, Brandy Hotchner, Mike Isaaoson. Third Row: Adam Mc-
Naughton, Carey Myers, Jack Wagner, Morgan Cline, Jeremy Fink,
Jason Stacy.
Film Makers of Tomorrow
First Row: Chistopher Haddad, Jeff Dapser, Heather Loll, Caleb J.
Clark, Richard Catalano, Travis Dutch, Matt McFarland, Bobby Barr.
Second Row: Jenna Bucci, Bradi Kuhlman, Molly Brauns, Kip Culver,
Sean Colins, Sean Layton, Dawn DeSantis, Shannon Finch.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
■••'•••.'■•>.■•.••■
Organizations 19
■
u I » . «J , I >,
Rolling paint over the A, Maya Lara
restores the symbol's gold wash. SAA
helped maintain the traditional campus
monument.
Members of SAA paint the A after it
was redecorated by the Wildcats. SAA
painted the A numerous times through-
out the year.
SAA Makes Connections
WM With Traditions
i
hat did oozeball, the
Alumni Career Net-
work, and the homecoming ball
have in common? They were only
three of the many events and
programs sponsored by the Stu-
dent Alumni Association.
SAA involved students
through programs such as "Din-
ner for a Dozen Devils", where 10
or 12 students would have dinner
at the home of a faculty member
or alumnus, and the Alumni Ca-
reer Network.
"The career network pairs up
students with alumni who are in-
terested in helping students en-
tering their (the alumnus') pro-
fessional areas," said Neil
Giuliano, the club's adviser.
However, SAA President Matt
Ellis said that the organization
4 Student Alumni Association
was more famous for its special
events because they touched a
broader base of students.
These events included the
homecoming ball and the orien-
tation weekend oozeball
tournament.
"The oozeball tournament was
a huge success," Ellis said.
"Throughout the day, we had
about 1,000 students show up,
whether they played or just
watched."
Although the SAA was a stu-
dent organization, Ellis said that
his experiences in the club would
help him after he graduated.
"It's given me a lot of invalu-
able skills that you need in busi-
ness," he said.
Putting on devilish faces, SAA merr
bers prepare for a meeting. The organ
zation planned events like oozeball an
homecoming ball.
Phi Epsilon Omicron
First Row : Karen Weber, Geargianne Baker, Margret Bond, Helen
Hoover, Cheri Nuckols. Second Row : Mary Utter, Debbie Cochran,
Carol Hunt, Barb Jenkins, Laura Martillard, Kristina Ciudad.
Student Alumni
Association
First Row : Vaughn Wilhelm, Lynne Abel, Michele Siegmund, Dionne
Fedderson, Audra Shine, Richard Balderram, Kent Tomas, James
Berkman, Casey Carder. Second Row : Michele Kokos, Kristi Johnson,
Jenny Weaver, Lisa Fedler, Bergitta Bonne, Emily Rigueroa, Maya
Lara, Dawn Snyder. Third Row ; Bill Gates, Ginger Hannon, Shannon
Sellers, Matt Ellis, Glen DeBusschere, Stormy Weppler, Mia Mendez.
American Production
Inventory and Control
First Row : Milind Kamat, Derek Mulligan, Wade Fogle, Marcela
McDonald, Amy White. Second Row ; Judy Perron, Tina Altonen,
Jennifer Smith, Jennifer Wimmer.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
Organizations 1
95
Nursing College Council
First Row: Jennifer Impson, Patrick Samora, Frances Ducar, Greg
Schultz. Second Row: Anita Thome, Marin Mitchell, Sultanna Kontsio-
tis, Terrence Moody, Valerie Thompson.
Student Nurses Association
Ros Sievert, Natascha Troehler, Joseph Poole.
Alpha Kappa Delta
Patty Huling, June Meitz, Rosemary Wardell, Laurie Goldberg.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
H96 Organizations
-rr : . ■ -
-■ t .■ Q ■
4 ST*
fa m- .*, C
• 1987 ROSE BOWL CHAMPIONS *
■
nit m m
Playing tribute to Batman at the ASU
vs. San Jose State football game, the
band forms the bat emblem. They also
played a medley of blockbuster movie
themes.
During the percussion clinic at ASU
Band Day, the snare line demonstrates
techniques. More than 50 Arizona high
schools attended Band Day.
Marching Band Plays
Sun Devil Pride
i
he Sun Devil March-
ing Band always had
a tradition of playing the Band
Day show without sheet music on
the field, but this tradition was
almost broken. That is, until the
entire band gave every ounce of
"Sun Devil Pride" that they had
and upheld up a tradition of
excellence.
ASU Band Day brought togeth-
er more than 50 Arizona high
school marching bands for a day
of ratings and camaraderie. At
the end of the day, the ASU Band
performed.
"I was excited two weeks be-
fore Band Day," freshman music
| education major Scot Lewis said.
S "I knew I had to work hard after
| hearing from old members how
1 the high school students
reacted."
When the band members
learned that they would have to
carry music onto the field, the
response was one of frustration.
"I thought it was disappoint-
ing that we'd have to use music,
but if it would make us sound
better, I'd do it, said sophomore
music education major Cheryl
Fortier. This, however, was not
necessary.
For many high school students
the ASU Band performance was
the highlight of the day.
"It was the most exciting show
of the year. The high school stu-
dents supported us a lot," said
freshman music major Jeanne
Barron.
Band 197
•»■ .'•o\- ■; .■: c
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-•■'. V. : ■'.' •■>■
' ;•.■''.'. V'.' '-'.' ■• '» V'c :>.."''. •:
START
Firs! *o»-.fiirdie Bohne, Lillian Casey, Maren Lee, Laura Peck, Erika
Steelinger, Tina Hite. Second fto»vMichelIe Bray, Monica Beville, Mi-
chelle Ingermann, Lily Tom, Lori Gwynn, Karen Thomas Third Row-
iaTonya Harrison, Nikki Lomack, Andy Ortiz, Kimberly Todd, Angi
Prather, Diane Stuart. Fourth Row.-Lois Meyer, Pat Helfrich, Frank
McCune, Amy Ostrom, Sean Riley, Drew Diedrich, Wes Stroh.
Devils Advocates
First Rowjeff Lowe, Frank McCune, Paul Tees, Michael Skaggs, Jean-
Noel Thompson, Matt Ortega. Second RowSM Rivera, Lynn Vavreck,
Michele Hardy, Sadie Madole, Joan Henry, Natalie Young, Chris
Kieselbach.77?/rc/ MwNancy Stracke, Marcelle Lovfald, Ellen Ing-
mand, Tara Vergamini, Lisa Basile, Denise Corrente, Wendy Jordan,
Shelley Traw. Fourth Sow/Dan Workman, Derrick Hall, Chad Kolo-
disner, Wayne Lokensky, Kelly Farland, Suzie Valdez, Mark Courtney,
Drew Diedrich.
SOS
First /tow.fiergitta Bohne, Tracey Kyle Drake, Kim Korosec, Dawn
Nelson, Lorri Garrett, Becky Richardson, Lynnae Villanueva, Maren
Lee. Second RowJuhe Trainer, Donna Voss, Linda Shetton, Katie Bur-
ton, Darcy Lichner, Kathy Bailey, Mindi Hoallander, Cherie Verhines,
Lori Gwynn, Sharon Phillips. Third Row.Kay Harris, arrie Coleman,
Dan McNamara, John Chapara, Bill Gates, Paul Tees, Frank McCune,
Dwight Witherspoon, Lara Hill, Jonathan George.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
f
98 Organizations
IT
*".•»'•"*■« * '*' - , *,0..' ■/ .7 o ., , ; - t
Student Devils
lit Advocate ASU
k;.; ot many students can
• •'■ : .'V- walk backwards and
talk at the same time. You may
have noticed, however, a few stu-
dents who have mastered the art.
But did you know who they
were?
The Devil's Advocates, a vol-
unteer organization consisting of
35 members, assisted new and
old students alike throughout the
year. The group, gave campus
tours and lectured at high
schools and community colleges,
and played a prominent part of
spring, fall, summer and out-of-
state orientation.
Assistant Director for New
Student Programs Robert Fran-
cis, said the the Advocates "help
students with their transition" to
college.
During speaking engagements,
Devils Advocates tried not to fo-
Taking potential students by Palm
Walk, Ellen Ingmand points out one of
the landmarks of ASU. The Devils Advo-
cates gave tours of the campus through-
out the year.
cus just on ASU, but on the val-
ues of higher education, said
Francis.
Drew Diedrich, who was a se-
nior with a double major in busi-
ness management and organiza-
tional communication, had been
with the group for three years.
He said that conducting the
campus tours had special advan-
tages because they allowed new
students to grasp another "stu-
dent's perspective on what they
will be experiencing."
The Advocates also benefited
from the tours.
"They benefit by seeing stu-
dents coming up at a later point
and saying 'I decided to come to
ASU based on your tour'," Fran-
cis said.
Informing students about the bridge
over University Drive, is Ellen Ingmand.
The Advocates were responsible for
knowing about the entire campus. Photo
by David Haneke
Devils Advocates 19
99
.- > , .'■■•,■.-.(■•
I ■ '•'"■ ■ ■■ I
NAACP Sponsors
f.
Night of Culture
or the NAACP and
°' : °°'"' their guests, the Afri-
can Awareness Workshop was a
time for cultural celebration.
More than 100 students and fac-
ulty came to the workshop to dis-
cuss the problems facing
minorities.
"We planned this workshop
hoping that it would bring stu-
dents closer together and inspire
students to share and celebrate
their uniqueness," said Tayna
Holmes, president of the NAACP
and head coordinator of the
event.
The two hour workshop start-
ed with a movie that featured Dr.
Asa G. Hillbard III of Georgia
State University. He discussed
"what it means to be black and
the components of racism." He
defined racism as a "mental dis-
order that allows people to see
reality but deny it."
After the movie Gabriel Vas-
quez, Student Life Cooridinator
and workshop moderator asked
that the audience get involved
and share their feelings about
Hillbard's observations.
"Racism is denying that we all
are equal, said Warren 'Big Time'
Brown, a senior photography ma-
jor. "It's a disease and like can-
cer it can destroy us."
After the open discussion,
members of the NAACP per-
formed a tribute to famous
blacks and a skit that focused on
black pride.
Holmes said she was pleased
with the turnout of the
workshop.
"It went well and maybe it will
help students understand each
other better," Holmes said.
Speaking on racism, Tanya Holmes de-
scribes it as internal and external.
Holmes coordinated the workshop to dis-
cuss minority problems.
Portraying C.J. Walker, Stacia Holmes
honors the first black woman million-
aire. Walker was one of 15 blacks recog-
nized at the event.
,,
00 NCAAP
Discussing topics like racism and fam-
ous blacks, students celebrate the
achievements of blacks. More than 100
people attended the workshop.
NAACP
First Row: Kecia Beasely, Nikki Sinkwitz, Tanya Holmes, Erica Eu-
gene, Mildred Holmes, Sherri Bryant, Charles Smith. Second Row:
Michael Mitchell, Robbin Williams, Leticia Grey, Andrea Wharton,
Evita Holmes, Donna Riggs. Third Row: Ashahed Triche, Terrence
Spencer, Ron Davidson, Max Lambert, MacAuley Beloney, Rodney
Slater, Michael Noyd.
Social Work
College Council
First Row: Jesse Kaulaity, Bob Carroll, Kathleen Harmon, Carleen
Cranmer, Stephen Healey. Second Row: Rosana Bamonte, Minnie
French, Cami Cooper, Melody Fischer, Nancy Mork, Sarah Gorman.
Third Row: Brenda Sekaquaptewa, Carole Brazsky, Fran Shapiro,
Barbara Lamere, Eileen Allan, Stephanie O'Neil.
Arizono Council of Block
Engineers ond Scientists
First Row: Michael Mitchell, Phillip Nelms, Stephanie Darnell, Myron
Lindsey. Second Row: Terrence Spencer, R. Lorenzo Statie, Nicholas
Dingwall, Rossie Turman III, Nathanial Lee Jr.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
Organizations 2
1
■ ™ . f t ■ i i . . . . i i . 7 ■! ■ ; i ii , r .
Society of Hisponic
Professional Engineers
First Row: Anthony Salas, Luis Morales, Raul Monreal, Maria Torres,
Benjamin Chavez, Dan Trujillo, Franciso Cano. Second Row: Eddie
Amador, Pete Castaneda, Debbie Montez, Jaime Gonzales, Richard
Navarro, Peter Ruiz, Yvette Maldonado, Lisa Montez. Third Row:
James Maese, Jerri Rangel, Elvira Tejada, Mandy Celaya, Alma Quin-
tanilla, Nick Nicholes.
American Indian Science
and Engineering Society
First Row: Randella Bluehouse, Darlene Bendle, Evener Scott, Clar-
ence Begay, Angela Arviso, Edwin Norton, Perry Riggs. Second Row:
John Sandoval, Bert Benally, Sheldon Preston, Pamela Riggs, Lance
Polingyouma, Susan Secakuku, Ernestine Gray.
Society of Manufacturing
Engineers
First Row: Stan Braun, Leon Krzmarzick, Mark Garcia, Michael Ar-
riaga, John Levenda, Telisa Seiter, Nguyen Nghiem, Pinwen Su. Sec-
ond Row: Dale Palmgren, David Pyron, Justin Farabee, David Jand-
zinski, Jeffery Schifano, Andy Saum, Marv Miller.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
I
02 Organizations
.-.;... a." /■"..
■*■'. . :. .■*-■- ■ -. .'o.-o, ■ •* ?.' . . . • •*»■
.••.^•••.■.o.-,-?-:
Making final adjustments on the pro-
totype hand, David Pyron and Chris
Grubbs check for malfunctions . Preci-
sion alingment of the the drive unit was
necessary for the hand to ensure proper
movement.
Machining a peice of metal, David
Pyron prepares a prototype finger part.
The mill used can machine identical
pieces consecutively. Photo by T.J. Sokol.
Getting a Grip on
Hi Human-Like Hands
^Ld
Studying the plans for the computer
xmtroller broad, Leon Krmarzick tries to
ivoid potential problems.
etting a grip on first
«V.,°'. prize motivated mem-
bers of the Society of Manufac-
turing Engineers to design a me-
chanical hand for the West Tech
Robotics Challenges.
"I came up with this idea
awhile ago and this competition
gave me the opportunity to get it
built," said David Pyron, a senior
manufacturing engineering tech-
nology major.
Leon Krzmarzick, a graduate
student with a major in electron-
ics and mechanical engineering
volunteered to do the elctronic
design.
"The hand will run by comput-
er," Krzmarzick said. "The com-
puter will activate the motors
that make the fingers move."
"The hand is modular which
allows the fingers to be put in
different configurations to grip
unusually shaped parts," he
added.
While Krzmarzick designed
the electronic system, and other
SME members machined the
pieces, Pyron oversaw the me-
chanical design. The design en-
sured that all the fingers could
move together.
"The fingers were the most
time consuming," Pyron said. "To
complete the final finger proto-
type took more than two months
work and three designs."
The hand has many practical
applications. It could be used to
transport hazardous wastes or
repetitive factory work, Pyron
added.
"There is a misconception that
robots all look like C3PO or R2D2
in Star Wars," Pyron said. "How-
ever the hand that we designed
does conform more to what peo-
ple would think that robots look
like."
(j>Vic*AA-'r&
Sorietv of Manufacturing Engineers 20i
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Ski Devils
Members who attended the Utah Ski Trip: Krista Gibson, Derek
Milligan, Nona Freedman, John Bayne, Jeffrey Brochy, Molly Carpen-
ter, Robert Cass, Jim Collins, Laura Freed, Jennifer Gerson, Jeff
Gilraor, Joe Haggerty, Tom Hamann, Todd Hammer, Chris Hogan,
Brad Hunt, Dave Jones, Chris Jues, Kevin Kein, Pat Kelly, Brian King,
Kellee Kohler, Pam Locke, Jack Mack, Mike Marshall, Janine Meyers,
Tom Mills, Bryan Mryon, Lane Oliver, Eric Owen, Chris Perry, Chris
Pettigrew, Jim Robbins, Paul Roethman, Janine Roubal.Steve Rust,
Mike Seckinger, Todd Smith, Jason St. Louis, Jeff Stanley, Scott
Stevens, Ross Stoeve, Alan Timmon, Mark Van Arc, Yong Ho Wang,
Jeff Brochee, Jim Bizily, Jim Booth, Antonio Alcazar, April Beau-
champ, Joe Belford, Wes Blanding, Randy Brown, Chris Carver, Ken-
dra Carver, Tina Cress, Miguel Cruz Y'Elis, Raymond Dillman, Ben
Diponoi, Chris Durham, David Felix, Dan Fischer, Rich Fisho, Scott
Flint, Bailey Garrison, Michael Greger, Allyson Grenier, Troy Hagh-
mann, Ray Hammond, Randy Harrison, Judy hirst, Dina Horton, Bill
Hubele, Bruce Jackson, Rudolph Jass, Danny Jiminez, Carl Johns,
Karie Kloos, Marty Kreutzbender, Mike Lammers, Isabel Luna, Brian
Mullins, Ron Murphy, Melissa Nyquist, Tricia Pederson, Bob Perez,
Keith Petrine, Chris Povich, Jeff Sounart, Jim Waschlo, Jennna Whar-
ton, Dave White.
Snow Devils
Members who attended the Colorado Ski Trip: Clint Welker, Dennis
Baca, Brad Westfield, Ed Chaney, Jason Rekowski, Alicia Rojas,
Michael Rojas, Chise Suzuki, Izabell Gouni, Randy Lee, Eric Faulkner,
Mark Purdy, Tom Scott, Robert Riethman, Tracy Kramer, Brian John-
son, Gina DeCarlo, Shad Bruce, Dow Lindholm, Erik Peterson, Rich
Rombough, Chaiki Mori, Erin McCartin, Cheryl Franchi, Becky Bland-
ing, Chris Atherton, Adam Norton, Ian Anderson, Todd Rozakis, Erin
Hopkins, Kirstie Maier, Tiffany Mawby, Alice Britt, Nancy Huettner,
Kathy Haines, Christie Hudson, Tim Ahlman, Lary Bremer, Ray Lo-
pez, Rusty Duggan, Rod Kinney, Tom Talbott, Ralph Chandos, Diane
Bruchhauser, Cindy Blauvelt, Jill Kostinek, Sara Tamaszewski, Jason
DelMonte, Charlie Broucek, Eli James, Aaron James, Dennis Gordan,
Mark Brooks, Randy Corral, Jeffrey Hare, Leslie Gatesh, Diana Hyatt,
Mike Mercier, Chris Rapp, Josh Boyd, Ahmed Alsubaey, John Buss,
John Bates, Kelly Shinn, Tim Sapp, Mike Bort, Doug Clendenen,,, Rick
Bearup, Tom Funicello, Mitch Knothe, Todd Ludwig, Wade Ebert, Dan
Gitomer, Doug Bittinger, Becky Oakley, J.P. Parenteau, Debbra Wieg-
gel, Scott Roelke, Todd Kelly, Bethany Swanson.
Snow Devils
Members that attended the Colorado Ski Trip: Nancy Averett, Ken
Casey, Joe Davis, Darrell Ussery, Robert Campbell, Chris Silvestri,
Katie Nenniger, Ted Waldon, Paul Lantz, Tom Osborn, Sean DeFord,
Steve Day, Rich Liberante, Ryan Johnson, Trey Miller, Patrick Miko-
lakczyz, Benjamin Nelson, Griffen Coffelt, Tom Griffith, Randy Cor-
ral, Matt Arnold, Hillary Shuker, Tiffany Rider, Jennifer Latin, Sa-
mantha Latin, Gary Carrington, Amir Pirastehfar, Scott Davidson,
Mark Tice, David Velastegui, Darren Buchbinder, John Hill, Bryan
Houbeck, Brian Flader, Paul Dinham, David Wilson, John Wilson,
Kevin Young, Chris Cline, James Walbert, Susie Hogan, Sean Gall,
Debbie Peters, Susan Henderson, Beth Hill, Heather Tomazin, Amy
Hunderfund, Kevin Brown, Calvin Culbreath, Ruben Johnson, Steve
Livingston.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
I
04 Organizations
< '„; °l„ :-.«*=". '/■-■ ]"• ■"■■"'' "■ °" °V
Living it up at a party, Becky Blanding,
Clint Welker, Larry Bremer, Tom Funi-
cello, and Nancy Huettner enjoy the
benefits of being a Snow Devil. The club
had many social events.
Coming off a slope, Eric Faulkner skies
I Copper Mountain in Colorado. The club
I skied at three Colorado resorts during
Christmas break.
Snow Devils Celebrate
20 Years of Fun
• he 1989-90 school year
commemorated the
20th anniversary of the Snow
Devils ski club. Along with par-
ties, the Snow Devils celebrated
this milestone during its Christ-
mas trip to Colorado.
"We would ski during the day
and either Jacuzzi or go out
nightclubbing in the evening,"
said Ruben Johnson, a senior art
photography major.
The trip drew 141 members
who paid $200 each for four days
of skiing, hot tubs and resort
living.
"We generally end up putting
people in a five-star resort, and
that includes the bus trip up
there, lift tickets and every-
thing," said Dennis Baca, a se-
thing," said Dennis Baca, a se-
nior electrical engineering major
and the club's vice president in
charge of promotions.
The trip gave advanced skiers
the chance to get together with
others at the same level of ability
and allowed the inexperienced
skiers to benefit as well.
"On a couple of days, the ad-
vanced skiers were skiing with
the beginning skiers and brought
them up a few of steps," he said.
Baca added that it took every-
one in the club to make the trip
happen.
"The key to our club is peo-
ple," he said. "That's the bottom
line."
Snow Devils 20
1
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Travel 6 Tourism Student
Association
First Row: Michele Sosnowski, Tina Turner, Kim Miller, Charna Sabal, 5 tfS
Carrie Class, Wendy Davis, Karen Zuchowsky. Second Row: Paula
Skladany, Chandra Putnam, Tina Palazzolo, Penny Morley, Melanie
Manera, Kris Robinson. Third Row: Victor Teye, Denis Leclerc.
The Society for
Range Management
First Row: Boll Miller, Robert Kilian, Glen Burkhardt, Denis Hum-
phrey, Robert Fink. Second Row: Joanne Mount, Anne Osborn, Heidi
Gulick, London Lacy, Todd Stephens. Third Row: Maria Shepard,
Tardie Roupe, Mark Hocken, Darrin Gardon, John Brock.
Business College Council
First Row: Scott Pollart, Nancy Torres, Michele Villanueva, Davri
Paluch, Randy Hawkins. Second Row: Jeffery Woolard, James Du-
Mars, Joseph Borthiak, Skip Dolittle, Biff Bogart, Blake Briscoe. Third
Row: Alexander Erickson, Karlton Wolfgang Kho, Bill Baber, Don
Davington, Richard Peterson.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
I
06 Organizations
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Sheep Airlift
111 Benefits Club
° ounting sheep often put
: ' people to sleep, but
there was no rest for the mem-
bers of The Society for Range
Management. In an effort to as-
sist the Arizona Game and Fish
Department, the group helped in
an airlift of bighorn sheep on
Nov. 12-14.
"It was a lot of fun, as well as
educational because we were
able to see what we were learn-
ing about in school and put it into
action," said Heidi Guelick, the
society's vice president.
The Arizona Game and Fish
Dept. conducted the airlifts bi-
annually.
"We assist the Arizona Game
and Fish Dept. in moving the big-
horn sheep from one range to a
better suited winter range," said
Tardie Roupe, the society's
president.
Carrying a bighorn sheep, Glen Burk-
hardt leads two other volunteers to a
| trailer to load the animal. The Society of
3 Range Management worked with the Ar-
izona Game and Fish Department in or-
der to airlift the sheep to better ranges.
The airlift took place in the
Kofa Game Refuge. Roupe said a
helicopter was used to net the
sheep. They were then blindfold-
ed and airlifted over a mountain
to a preparation site.
Miller said that temperatures
were monitored and antibiotics
were administered. The sheep
were also radio-collared, ear-
tagged and then put into a Ewe
Hauler for transportation.
"The trailer was transported
to a release sight depending upon
the environment desired and the
goals of the Arizona Game and
Fish Dept.," said Dr. Bill Miller.a
professor of environmental
resources.
The fall airlift relocated a to-
tal of about 45 sheep. Miller said
that the true benefits of these
kinds of events goes to the
students.
"It gives them practical appli-
cation," he said. "Overall, it's a
good training experience and a
lot of fun for everyone."
Preparing a bighorn for the airlift, vol-
unteer students from U of A and ASU
along with a retired veternarian prepare
a sheep for transport. The Arizona Game
and Fish Department organized the Nov.
12-14 airlift.
Hovering above the preparation site, a
helicopter transports another bighorn
sheep across the mountains. At the prep-
aration site the sheep were tagged and
then hauled to new ranges for the win-
ter.
Society for Range Management 20
„
AGC Helps Shelter
!# Less Fortunate
'©:
n Saturday, Dec. 2,
: members of the Arizo-
na General Contractors Student
Chapter helped to ease the pain
of the homeless in Phoenix and
built the Mother Theresa Shelter
at 1406 S. 17th Ave.
Larry Vagnozzi, the project
manager, said that the home was
primarily for the homeless who
were terminally ill. The shelter
had four bedrooms, each of
which could sleep eleven.
Vagnozzi said that the entire
project was staffed by
volunteers.
"I'm proud to be a part of
this," he said.
Vagnozzi added that it could
not be run like a normal project.
"I enjoy working with volun-
I
teers," he said.
Duane Kling, the AGC secre-
tary, said that he thought that
the project would be good for
them. He said that donations of
air conditioners, washers and
dryers were made, but that the
nuns refused all luxuries.
"It's something important,"
said AGC President Beth Phagan.
"You never know what may hap-
pen to you."
AGC volunteer Joe Brunsman
said that he found out about the
project when he read about
Mother Theresa.
"I thought that this would be a
good chance to get involved in a
neat project," he said.
>-MAm e. cue.
-a-
'Ua^_
Leveling gravel, Scott Zimmerman and
Don Rissling prepare the new entrance
to the Mother Theresa Shelter. The shel-
ter was located in downtown Phoenix
and was aimed at helping terminally ill
homeless people.
Collecting concrete, Associated General
Contrators members Brad Lancaster and
Beth Phagan listen as a worker instructs
a tractor on where to move the debris.
The group volunteered to help build the
Mother Theresa Shelter for the home-
less.
08 Associated General Contractors
Recognizing helpers, Duane h\\
and Tracy Wilson thank donatcf
Many groups built the shelter. I
to by David Haneke
I - ' ' .
i— i '.ii ' ■ ' ■ f.-.r '
Institute of Electrical &
Engineers Technology
Brian O'Brien, Paul Young, James Myers, Erol Otto Burghardt.
Associoted Generol
Contractors
First Row : John Sloan, Andrew Lloyd, Brad Lanaster, Byron Handy,
Duane Klinge, Dean Schifferer, Donald Rissling. Second Row : Scott
Zimmerman, Beth Phagan, Blain Erskine, Chris Schermann, Jaice
Krovlik, Jack Albert, Eric Olson. Third Row : Rod Rummel, Robert
Sanquinetti, Chana Frederick, Joe Brunsman, Vicha Lan, John Pe-
troff.
Sigma
Lambda Chi
first Row : Andrew Lloyd, Chris Savarese, Byron Handy, Gus Meyers,
Dean Schifferer. Second Row .Cindy Bryan, Jay Siegel, Barry Dluzen,
Mike Milewski, Chana Frederick, Dennis Haney. Third Row : David
Weber, Max Griesenbeck, Tom LaVanway, Mike Foster, Mark Snider,
Lon Smith.
Layout by Amara Fotenos
Organizations 20'
,'■ i.-. 1 . u. .
Amnesty
International
first flow Tanya Heflin, Rendee Ice, Sherry Klein, Lori Greenawalt,
David Jefferies. Second Row: Heather Leonard, Pam Ponce, Damien
Fox, Kari Biddick, Greg Branch. Third Row: John Moreau, Kelly
Jensen, Todd Osborn, Clifford Yee, Mark Boyd.
American Humanics
First Row: Lisa Hines, Stephanie Hiatt, Barbara Beard, Lody Allen,
Debra Cleary, Lisa Schmidt. Second Row: Cathy Coffey, Dawn-Cherie
Brown, Michael Duenas, Patty Stanley, Robert Ashcraft. Third Row:
Patti Meigs, Shari Saikin, David Lerner, Gretchen Long, Julie Rawe,
Susan Raspotnik.
Student Council for
Exceptional Children
First Row: Joanne Hanson, Jacgueline Juetten, Debi Rohner, Kym
Talavera, Romelle Anderson. Second Row: Angela Denning, Jane
Chipman, Jennifer Bowers, Gina Mascolo-Saleh, Mike Cady.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
I
Organizations
Discussing toy drive plans, Jane Chin
man proposes ideas to a faculty member
Toys were donated to families with for
ter children. Photo by Susan Fitzgerald
•.•/• >■*>"
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Toy Drive Creates
Holiday Cheer
r
he toys were scattered
"'.> around the floor and
tables of the student lounge in
Payne Hall. But, despite the
mess, the Student Council for Ex-
ceptional Children still felt like
they had accomplished some-
thing great.
"We didn't care if we only got
one toy," said Jane Chipman.pre-
sident of the council and a spe-
cial education major. "Even it
would have made one person
happy."
The council held a toy drive in
the College of Education on
Dec.8. It worked in conjunction
with the East Valley Catholic So-
cial Service to provide toys for
abused children who had been
placed in foster homes.
"Foster parents typically don't
have a lot of money for presents,
Thanking volunteers, Kay Vilendrer of
;he Catholic Social Service works with
Student Council for Exceptional Chil-
iren members. This was the second year
t sponsored a toy drive.
Wrapping donated toys, members of
the Student Council for Exceptional
Children volunteer time. The organiza-
tion wrapped for more than four hours
in the student lounge in Payne Hall.
said Kay Vilendrer of the Catho-
lic Social Service. "Because of toy
drives like this children recieve
gifts who otherwise wouldn't
have gotten them."
Chipman said that the council
had a list of what each child
wanted and that it had enough
toys to give each child at least
two.
"We're all educators and be-
cause of this we need to be in-
volved in the community," said
Mike Cady, a senior special edu-
cation member.
At least 15 people, members of
both the Council for Exceptional
Children and the College of Edu-
cation Council, spent the day
wrapping presents that were
donated.
Chipman said that it was im-
portant for the organization to
get involved with children
around the holidays because
spirits are typically low.
"It's nice to know that these
kids won't be sitting next to an
empty Christmas tree," Chipman
said. "They need to know that
someone cares."
' - ■ ' ' ■ ' : ~
Student Council For Exceptional Children 2L
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Commuters Gain
Ample Solutions
y ; -+v.y he Office for Off-Cam-
»V'-'1 ; Vv ■■=•'■ P us Student Services
helped bridge the gap between
commuter students and the cam-
pus by supplying information
that brought students closer to
school activities.
"We found that students who
lived off-campus were not that
involved," said Wayne Lokensky,
assistant director of the office.
The office provided students
with information on where to
find apartments, parking decals,
available childcare and even me-
diated some tenant/landlord
disputes.
"Sometimes if we call up a
landlord and tell them that we're
backing a student, they'll listen
to us," said David Dotts, director
of the office.
Dotts said that the office was
Commuting from West Phoenix, Gabe
Gonzales parks on campus. About half of
ASU's students commuted every day.
«
also responsible for having re-
corded messages played on the
trams.
"We run the messages to let
students know about the activi-
ties that are going on," he said.
Lokensky said that the office
has grown a great deal over the
past five years and because of
that it's focused more on
advertising.
percent of students are
commuters," he said. "They can
be hard to reach. It's not easy to
target 45,000 students."
Dotts said that the office nev-
er turned anyone away.
"Any issue that could be con-
sidered a commuter issue, we try
to help with," he said.
Giving information to Mark Courtney,
David Dotts tries to help familarize him
with campus services. Courtney commut-
ed from The Villas in Tempe.
2 Off-Campus Student Services
'■ •'*'< ."' 1* " '■.*'
Christian
Campus Aglow
First Row: Jaynee Teagardin, Liz Martin, Debbie Prigge,
McCoy, Betty Krings, Casrissa Denney, Vinee Usaha.
Crystal
Alpha Phi Omega
First Row: Julie Bailey, Lisa Riser, Qhyrrae Michaelieu, Richard
Shaffstall, Erich VanSanford, Scott Correl, Pitawas Indharameesup,
Sean Carroll. Second Row: Connie VanSanford, Kim Kolowitz, Sander
Alisky, Debbie Mudrack, Lee Kline, Karen Longo, Mida Policarpio.
Lesbian and Gay
Academic Union
For reasons of discretion members of the L.G.A.U. have chosen not to
disclose their names.
Layout By Amara Fotenos
Organizations 21
1
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i *
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V
Sliding through the mud,
Palo Verde West resident
Donn Coolidge plays football
in one of the irrigated lawns.
Football was one of the many
activities that residents par-
ticipated in.
Searching for keys
for a new resident is
RA Lisa Corm. Student
staff helped make the
move easier for new stu-
dents. Photo by T.J. Sokol
LIVELY; l) adj. briskly alert and
energetic. 2) n. the hustle and bustle of
community living on campus.
Outsiders might think of scary potluck
roommates, community bathrooms and
not enough closet space, but just about
anyone living in a dorm would say other-
wise. Halls served as more than just a
place to eat, sleep and take showers in
the mornings; they were the hub of social
activity for most students.
Center Complex residents added a
splash of color to their rooms and made
their hall a little more like home. A pro-
gram, on trial in Center Complex, allowed
students to paint their rooms.
Residence Hall Assistants formed the
foundation that each hall was built on.
RHA's retreated to Payson to hone lead-
ership skills and work to improve hall
life.
What was residence life without par-
ties, noise and fun? Ocotillo hall resi-
dents jammed on Oct. 27 with a show
featuring lip-sync bands. It was only one
of a number of events, organized or casu-
al, that residents could take part in.
Whether kicking back in their rooms
or studying with buddies, dorm dwellers
led lively lifestyles and made a statement
without exclaiming a word.
SECTION
EDITOR:
Kristina
ByBee
Halls 215
RHA retreats to set goals
Happy Campers
Bearing in mind the usual ref-
erences towards hall life, it made
one wonder if there was any sort
of standards or order. This job of
governing was the responsibility
of the Residence Hall Associa-
tion, or RHA, according to its
president, sophomore Mike
Wolfberg.
RHA had what was called the
Executive Board Retreat on Sep-
tember 15-17, according to Activi-
ties Director, sophomore public
relations major Cindy Metzger.
Wolfberg said the purpose of the
weekend at Kohl's Ranch near
Payson was to get to know each
other and set goals.
"We had workshops on motiva-
tion and delegation of power,"
Wolfberg said.
He also said that they played
games that acted as ice-breakers
between the unfamiliar students,
which numbered approximately
75.
Metzger said RHA had posi-
tions, such as president and vice
president, etc., on the executive
council, which oversaw the exec-
utive boards of the halls. She
said that all the boards then
worked together to benefit the
halls.
Wolfberg said RHA had three
main purposes: activities for the
halls, legislative duties such as
presenting ideas to the university
for extra hall amenities, and ju-
dicial responsibilities such as de-
ciding consequences for wrong
activities.
"Overall we try to advise and
keep the halls on track, without
interfering. We're there to help
when needed," Metzger said.
Wolfberg said that, in 1988,
RHA worked and succeeded at
getting condom machines and 24-
hour visitation for the halls. This
past year, they worked to get ca-
ble television, a computer link
between dorms, and recycling
programs set up for the halls,
according to Wolfberg.
"There has to be a lot of give
and take between the halls and
the board," Metzger said .
Both Wolfberg and Metzger
said that the weekend was a
success, and they hoped that
RHA continued to help the halls.
"RHA, the second-largest stu-
dent organization on campus, is
here for the residents, and they
can voice their opinion through
us to get the attention of Resi-
dence Life and ASU administra-
tion," Wolfberg said.
BEST A1&A2. Front Row: Anita Pena, Lynn McClellan, Beth Cox, Mary Stefaniak, Joyce Baldernas, Vinita
Prasad, Kaye Hoover. Second Row: Leah Goodman, Jeni Ensslin, Rosa Ferdowsmakan, Robyn Hearn, Jaimye
Vogt, Brenda Craig, Tammy Huang. Third Row: Tracey Geringer, Anne Tinklenberg, Daxa Bhakta, Sheila
Brody, Carolyn Chase, Brenda Zaun, Aprin Rodenbeck. Photo by T.J. Sokol.
BEST A3&B1. Front Row: Tacryn Nehem, Liz Yoder, Christa Plaza, Carin Swanson, Sayo Kurashina, Meag.l
Donahue. Second Row: Tammy Olson, Christine Mikula, Karen Dubner, Dolores Gavaldon, Michele Kroegei 1
Stacy McBride. Third Row: Helen Pugh, Kristin Olivier, Georgiana Manly, Ingrid Burkert, Ericha Eugent
Photo by Tom Hershey
r.
16 Residence Hall Association
Playing the part of the patriarch.Jason
Brown, PV West Activities Vice President,
occupies the elder's square in the Alpha Cul-
ture. It was one of two societies in a game
discussing cultural differences. Photo by
Frank Fender.
Beta leaders Lora Christianson and Paul
I Pyrz question Mark Hoffman, Jason Wylie
I and Pete Grossgold. They had just returned
£ from an encounter with the Alpha Culture.
:ST B2&B3. Front Row: Janice Sheid, Amy Purris, Nicole Stafferd. Second Row: Tonya Hunt, Rebecca
kley, Rhonda Leaks, Niccole Villa. Photo by Torn Hershey
BEST C2&C3. Front Row: Danny Miller, Scott Thompson, Travis Salsig, Brett Fedrickson, Jim Berkman, Billy
Barba, Jeremy Dwiggins. Second Row: Fritz Moeckel, Andrew Hinkelman, Carl Burik, Dan Weldon, Isaihs
Carrera, Jon Hopkins, Joey Hamby, Walt Beams. Photo by Tom Hershey
Residence Hall Association 217
Travelling from Cholla Apartments to
class, junior Joseph Cobler enjoys the
advantages of riding his bike to class.
Many students rode bikes on campus.
Finding a spot to park his bike at Man-
zanita is freshman Jonathan Fier. Emp-
ty spaces at bike racks were rare.
BEST C4. Front Row: John Higa, Chad Sisco, Ross Kantor, Ken Kohle, Chad Munimu, Chris Miller. Second BEST C5. Front Row: Kenneth Garcia, David L. White, Jeffrey Putnam, Michael Haluska. Second Ro
Row: Ted McAllister, Kooch Furlinger, Richard Laborin, Jay Seabright, Bob Balgemann. Third Row: Derek Shawn McClellan, Mark Mckinnon, Jeff Mangigian, John Drago. Third Row: Alex Orraan, Brad Segui
Francis, Christopher McCall, John Cockfoasten, Brian Cramer, Pat Cunningham, Troy Monthye, Mikey Patrick Mulready, Scott Fahrner, Randy Maville. Photo by Tom Hershey
Hillaboe. Photo by Tom Hershey
I
18 Bikes
5 Getting from here to there
Bicycle Blues
When students made the
choice to live in a residence hall,
there were certain rules that
they had to follow, such as secu-
rity checks and no cooking or
bikes in their rooms. The no-bike
rule was the most unfavorable
for many students.
This rule was made for the
students' safety because the bi-
cycles were said to add to a fire
hazard in the residence halls.
But what about the safety of the
bikes?
Bikes were reported stolen ev-
ery day on campus and most
were never found. Junior travel
and tourism major Kim Winburn-
had three bikes stolen: two while
she was on campus, and one at
Manzanita. In each case, she re-
ported the thefts to the Campus
Police.
"Basically, the Campus Police
were called, they took the re-
ports, and I never heard from
them again," she said.
Although this type of dead end
was frustrating, she brought up
the point that once a bike was
stolen, there wasn't anything the
police could do about it unless it
was registered or had distin-
guishing marks on it. Most stu-
dents took the necessary steps to
secure their bikes, such as locks
and chains, but even these steps
didn't always work. So what
were the choices of the students?
Many students felt that a bicy-
cle was no more of a fire hazard
than the chairs in the rooms.
There were special hooks on the
walls to hang a bike on to keep it
}ut of the way of the door. Some
students also suggested being
able to rent a small storage space
to store bikes. Winburn believed
that bicycle theft could be avert-
ed by "having a really good U-
lock, or a bike not worthy of rip-
ping off."
Bike theft was definitely one
of the most common crimes on
campus. To many students, a bi-
cycle was their primary mode of
transportation, and the loss not
only caused them to lose time in
getting around, but in some
cases, not to get around at all.
HOLLA AB 1&2. Front Row: Ann Ciemnoczolowski, Jolinda Miller, Josh Davis. Second Row: Ethan Miller,
eri Menke, Marcy Delgado. Third Row: Kim Papscun, Seth Emers, John Heher. Photo by Michelle Conway
CHOI, I, A AB 3*4. Front Row: Diane Hennel, Erin Speneer, Kristy Hunt, Karen Bunting, Moly Schwartz,
David Hughes. Second Row: Heather Lambert, Jana Harden, Rick Spencer, Paul Pereira, Jacque Kemmerer,
Sheila Hoppe, Mike Neil. Third Row: Jeremy Handel, Ross Thomas, Eric Moore, Rob Fisher, Dan McNamara,
Mark Sides, Don McFadden. Photo by Michelle Conway
Bikes 21
1
Participating in an icebreaker at a hall
council meeting is Todd McElroy. McElroy
won the "Marshmallow Contest" by being
able to stick 12 in his mouth and still talk.
Addressing the issue of cable in the halls is
Center Complex Hall Council President Cary
Jo Merritt. Council meetings were the oppor-
tune time for residents to discuss ideas.
CHOLLA AB 5&6. Front Row: Anne Marie Abruscato, Jennifer Dickey, Mark Balboni, Stacy Gentry, Lisa
Valenzuela, Erica Melton. Second Row: Jennifer Brogan, Michael Trontz, Dan Medich, Patrick Gaasch, Greg
Kist, Joseph Crawford, David Geis. Third Bow: Tawnya Snyder, Rafael Blanco, John Marriott, Jeff Concors,
Jeff McGojgh, David Winter. Photo by Cheryl Evans
moiiu.
11 n
nnn/»
;i
CHOLLA AB 7&8. Front Row: Patricia Reilly, Trang Nguyen, Gina Powell, Kanae Kawano, Andrew Neison
Second Row: William Schindele, John Berg, Larry Mavencamp, Leesa Story, Randy Anderson. Third Ron
Patricia Athridge, Merika Jaie Fisher, Peter Grossgold, Kristin Higgins, Michael Arriaga. Fourth Row: Wassin
Awada, Kurt Hume, Pat Murphy, Scott Hawrauck, Tom Curren. Photo by Cheryl Evans
Councils promote involvement
Governing Body
If you were unhappy with the
quality of life in your dorm,
where could you go to make a
difference?
Hall council. Each resident
hall had a governing board con-
sisting of seven officers, and a
representative from each floor
which made up their hall council.
The main purpose of hall coun-
cil was to provide residents infor-
mation on issues such as parking,
food service, building usage,
maintenance and improvements.
It also organized such activities
such as movie nights, dances,
parties, and holiday parties. Hall
councils also sponsored orienta-
tion and educational programs.
"The main objective of the
Center Complex Hall Council was
to serve the residents and get
them involved," said President
Cary Jo Merritt.
Hall council meetings were
_ held every week. Each officer
I would give a report and then pro-
-j posals were discussed and voted
on.
"The thing I like most about
being involved with hall council
is that you are able to express
your ideas," said hall council
member Dan Nataci. "Then see
them put into action."
Looking at the agenda, Center Complex
representatives discuss the proposal of
new felt on the pool tables. Council
meetings were held every Tuesday.
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HOLLA CD 1&2. Front Row: Stephanie Thomas, Julie Hoffman, Peter Wojcik, Fil Tortora. Second Row:
like Fliehler, Paul Chekal, Scott Schweitzer, Pia Atkins. Photo by Mike Scannell
CHOLLA CD 844. Front Row: Liz Drahold, Tara Barnes, Shanan Dikeman. Second Row: Elaine Moates,
Natalie Bauer, Shawn Beyer, Sondra Valentine, Chris Caccayale, Elise Christianson. Third Row: Paul
Danforth, Angela Heins, Todd Mayer, Matt Shannon, Bill Bennett. Photo by T.J. Sokol
Hall Council 22
S
Taking in a brighter moment, ('holla
Resident Assistant Joseph Crawford cel-
ebrates with a giant happy birthday sign
constructed by residents of his floor.
RA's worked to help students adjust to
college life and to make their hall feel
more like home.
CHOLLA CD SM. Front Row: Kimberly Razy, Amy Diane Turner, Ken Schimanski, Amy Brucker, Robert
Dlabik, Cory Clinkscales, Sue Koerick, Jennifer Wasserburger. Photo by David Haneke
CHOLLA CD 7&8. Front floic-Simone Male, Kelli Baltzersen, Maria Bridgewater, Hidekaza Quitsuka, Geo
Rehbein, Luke Bees. Second Row: Alison Rein, Tina Vernagelli, Ceasar Montez, Amy Diane Turner, Kim Ra -
Kim Lau, Beth Wedemeyer. Photo by David Haneke
I
22 Job of an RA
RA's keep peace, gain respect
Hall Leaders
What's the first thing that
pops into your mind when you
think of dorm life? Parties, 2 a.m.
fire drills, constant fun? Now try
picturing this through the eyes of
a Residence Assistant, or RA. To
some, this could have been a
frightening situation, but RA's
Tonya Harper and Joseph Craw-
ford looked at it as a challenge.
"I like people and enjoy inter-
acting with the girls on my
floor," said junior theater major
Harper, an RA in Manzanita.
The job could be time-consum-
ing, which called for good organi-
zation and time management, al-
though this was not always the
case, according to Crawford and
Harper.
"I'm benefitting from this ex-
perience because my time man-
agement and study skills im-
prove," said senior journalism
major Crawford, an RA at Cholla
Apartments.
Neither expressed many nega-
tive aspects about their jobs, ex-
cept having to break up rowdy
parties, floor inspection, and
having to deal with any drug or
alcohol problems. Both said that
the interaction they had with
their residents helped them de-
velop an open communication
and trust.
"I enjoy it; it's a great experi-
ence, and it helps me gain self-
confidence," said Harper.
"My job gives me good leader-
ship experience. Just a smile of
appreciation motivates me and
makes it worthwhile." said Craw-
ford.
Resident Assistants of Arizona State Photo by T.J. Sokol
OLLA FG i.Front Row: Rodney Mixen, Cathy Dombrowski, Christina Hidalgo, Brent Spencer, Marc Mazur CHOLLA FG Z.Front Row: Kim Chuppa, Niurka Agnoly, Jim Brainarz, Susan Gunter, Sonia Delgado, Kym
»nd Row: Alan Entin, Doug Van Ommeran, Kristyn Block, Toni Kuehl, Laurie Parker, Brandi Raynes, Suzy Van-Norman. Photo by David Haneke
'. Photo by David Haneke.
Job of an RA 22
-
Picturing the new hall,is a sign on the
construction site. The scheduled comple-
tion of the hall was May 1990.
Construction is underway on the South
campus hall. The hall will be home for
four hundred students.
9i< M'if$-
IRISH B. Front Row: Ronald Smith, Frank Thurman, Che Wilson, James Faulkner. Second Row: Jeff Tibbits, HUSH C. Front Row: Charles Smith, Ted Reyes Estrellon, Ross Shimabuku. Second Row: Joe Lindberg, ( I
Michael Young, Ric Carson, Doug Boyd, John Watkins, Jim Sparaco, Chuck Castleman, Jeremy Holder, Mario Allhusen, Johnny Holmes, Jason Macy, David Rad. Third Row: Thos Fitz Simons, John Turcotte, Chad Et I
Rodriguez. Third Row: Vaughn Wilhelm, Jamie Winpenny, Corey McCormick, Steve Tweet, Mark Thibert, Matt Ferigno, Matt Harris, Syd Barret. Photo by Tom Hershey
Peter Weir, Paul Richardson, Charly Jones, Jason Carter. Photo by Tom Hershey
.
24 New Residence Hall
I
New hall premieres in spring
More Housing
A new residence hall under
construction east of Sahuaro Hall
housed about 400 students when
it opened in the fall of 1990, ac-
cording to Cliff Osborne, resi-
dence life director. Additional
construction at the site included
an addition to Sahuaro Dining
Hall, a Residence Education Cen-
ter, and a central plant.
The residence hall featured
suites that four students shared,
Osborne said, with two bedrooms
and a common bath and living
room.
"The dorm lobby will contain a
student government office and a
computer room," Osborne said.
"But we don't know yet what
kind of computers; we're still
looking for donors." Each floor
has a study lounge, and most
have a kitchenette/laundry com-
bination, Osbourne said.
The buildings stepped up from
one to five stories and was ar-
ranged around a grassy court-
yard with shade trees. This, in
addition to the small pool and
five new tennis courts nearby,
Osbourne said, provided a variety
of recreational opportunities.
Funding for the new buildings
came from current dormitory res-
idents, Osborne said.
"Residence halls operate sole-
ly on fees from room and board,
so planned increases are already
in effect," Osborne said.
An increase of 1/2 percent
above inflation began in 1988 to
fund the new dorm. The current
increase is one percent, Osborne
said, which will continue to rise
1/2 percent each year for three
years if the funds are needed.
"We don't know the exact fee
schedule for the new residence
hall yet," Osborne said. "It
should be close to that of Cholla."
}~4~a~M—A-~*
8. C^JeQo^^^
The central plant and warehouse are
the only completed buildings on the
South Campus. The buildings housed
maintenence work stations and equip-
ment.
HAYDEN 1&2. Front Row: Troy Curtis, Doug Antwiler, Blair Shotlow, Ken Warshaw, David Corcoran,
Chip Frank, Sean McKenzie. Second Row: Joseph Picha, Joseph Wilson, Paul Winter, Pat Young, Kevin
Schmidt, David Neuberger, Jeff Miller. Third Row: David Schoen, David Kiesel, Sean Elbeck, Sheldon
Preston, Dhanie Irawan. Fourth Row: Jeff Petersen, Aaron Docsa, Tom Osborne, Syd Vicious, Richard
Wilson, Christian Stoeven. Photo by Nicole Carroll
HAYDEN 8. First Row: Yancy Littler, Jim Torre, Jeff Pearson, Chris Neuman. Second Row: Probir
Kumar Mukerjee, Jeff Wilson, David Rand. Third Row: Jeese Head, Andy Wesely, Eric Shelton, Jay
Nelson. Photo by Nicole Carroll
New Residence Hall 2
25
■i»H
MKil
^v.
.- K
n,A
Repairing the ceiling of PV West's rec
room is Jack Reyes. Fix All was applied
to the ceiling to seal cracks.
Mixing Fix All is Scott Perkins of Spray
Systems. The machine in the back-
ground cleans the air of asbestos.
,^^^^
2^2 nL nl L ,? n ' fer Geyer ' Trida Neely ' Cheryl Gal °P e - Lauren Heinz ". Chr is'in« Work.
SlrfnL^T « h J™f '' " eathe > r , Betar ' Cari B€lan « er - Cadi McCracken, Diane DeMink. Third Row:
Knsta Canfieid, Lis McNealey, Shern Moore, Betsy Turnlund, Kristen Barr, Nikki Osborn, Juliane Herbert
_ Jamie Oertschen, Inga Haagenson, Derrie Nauta. Photo by Kim Bodin
MANZANITA 3. Front Row: Kristin Oistad, Caren Levy, Darcy Tannebaum, Jessica Sanchez-Bernal. Sec
Row: Adrienne Ohle, Susan Tuttle, Jennifer Cooper, Andrea Delmissier. Third Row: Catherine Blair, Jt
Adams, Stacey Miner, Melissa Gross Photo by Kim Bodin
t
26 Asbestos
Students, faculty concerned
Asbestos Cleanup
While many ASU students
spent their summers taking
classes, vacationing or just relax-
ing, workers were busy removing
and sealing asbestos in three of
ASU's residence halls.
Asbestos, a cancer-causing
mineral used for fireproofing
buildings, could be found in Palo
Verde East and West and Manza-
nita Hall.
"The workers have been work-
ing on this for the past two sum-
mers," said Manzanita Hall Di-
rector Betty Dye. "They must
remove all of the furniture and
seal off the rooms before they
can begin the project."
When the summer's work was
completed, all of the carpeting in
the affected rooms needed re-
placing, Dye added.
Asbestos, a natural substance,
is distinguishable by its crystals,
which are in the form of long,
thin fibers. This insulator gained
wide spread use because it was
plentiful and inexpensive.
Asbestos is fire resistant and
is a poor heat and electric
conductor.
By order of the Fire Marshall,
Manzanita Hall restricted the use
of its pool tables because stu-
dents often poked holes in the
ceiling with the cues, which may
have released the asbestos fi-
bers, said Dye.
"I know that asbestos is a con-
cern to many of our residents,"
said Manzanita Hall RA Kristin
Barr.
As long-term exposure to as-
bestos increases, the risk of dis-
ease increases as well. Asbestos
fibers accumulate in the lungs,
which may cause asbestosis, a
disease characterized by fibrotic
scarring of the lungs.
(2tca^UoV^a^utc^_.
CANCER AND LUNG
DISEASE HAZARD
Posted outside a work site, a sign
warns passersby. Aesbestos was re-
moved from PV East and West and Man-
zanita. Photo by Scott Troyanos
iNZANITA 4. Front Row: Mark McKenna, Mike Golaszewski, Chris French, Lewis Pelissier. Second Row:
hard Lupori, Ryan Krose, Michael Quaranta, Mark Detmer, Keith Healy Third Row: Erik Hanson, Travis
n, Tom Herstad, Jeremy Bloom, Richard Adamkiewicz, Jeff Collins. Photo by Kim Bodin
MANZANITA 5. Front Row: Michelle Blatt, Alison Davis, Michelle Johnson, Julie Olsen, Alison Solomon,
Synidie Helms. Second Row: Tosha Scott, Becki Rizzo, Leah Castady, Stacey Dykstra, Joanna Lerner, Beth
Givens, Heather Jurek, Audra Martire. Third Row: Karyn Olson, Karen Stoddard, Michelle Smith, Jeannie
Moran, Stephanie Morgan, Delphina Jim, Shauna Carth, Natalie Young, Michelle Luz, Lisa Wilson. Photo by
Kim Bodin
Asbestos 22
,
Cholla and Ocotillo battle
Most Popular Hall
For the ASU students there
were many possibilities to choose
from when they were looking for
their home for the semester.
There were halls for uper-
classmen, co-ed living, and also
those for men or women only.
With all of these choices, there
was bound to be a couple of halls
that were favorities among the
students.
Last year Ocotillo and Cholla
residence halls passed up Manza-
Ocotillo hall residents John Berg and
Pat Mooney take advantage of the warm
summer with a swim in the pool. The
pools at Ocotillo Hall and Cholla Apart-
ments attracted residents who enjoyed
swimming or tanning on the pool deck.
nita and the Palo Verde halls as
the most requested dorms by
students.
Cholla was designed for stu-
dents who wanted apartment
style living with their own kitch-
enette and bathroom. The Cholla
residents agreed that there was
more independence and privacy
living there, as well as the ad-
vantage of living close to classes
and being invloved in campus
life.
There were three different op-
tions of rooms: three-bedroom,
two-bedroom, and the most re-
quested style, studio.
Ocotillo was another hall with
a long waiting list. The students
said the most desirable extras
were the pool, volleyball court
and the closeness to classes.
I w
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MANZANITA 7. Front Row: Lori Barkoe, Stephanie Wall, Maria Gilancy, Laurie Glassner, Christine Spreen,
Karrin Mayberry, Jen Miller, Lori Mirando, Colleen McGruder, Gina Orci, Janet Tashner. Second Row: Sheri
Andrist, Jennifer Griffith, Nikki Redford, Stacy Dolderg, Erin Weissman, Trisha Egan, Suzy Jaynes, Wendy
Modrtjah, Rob-Renee Beavers, Lenice Bright, Melissa Kroll, Angela Herbold, Stephanie Gula, Melissa Epert.
Third row: Maria Brummel, Sherry-Lynn Chavez, Christy Love, Kelly Bean, Lisa Swisher, Kristie Polk, Gena
Ross, Ginger Hannon, Darryl Clapp, Mollie King, Lori McKenna, Kelly McGinley, Michelle Terry, Vicki Nappi,
Kimberly Yohalem, Laurie Clinard, Lisa Price, Lauren Daley, Laura Leisch, Shannon See. Photo by Kim Bodin
MANZANITA 8. Front Row: Martin Schreiber, Adel Tomas, Scott Nicolow. Second Row: Jason Sheer, (
Charness, Mike Yaro, Lu Datson, Dan Barneh. Third Row: Jeff Riley, Sanjenz Patel, Ehaneh Arnaud,
Kellner, Matt Fantus, Kevin Lamb, David Bitner, Dan Barnett. Photo by Kim Bodin
28 Popular Halls
Practicing pool shots is Ocotillo resi-
dent Adnan Algabyali. Close to campus,
Ocotillo has become a popular hall. Pho-
to by Michael J. Scannell
J Studying in his room at Cholla Apart-
j ments is Greg Henderson. All halls pro-
I vided built-in desks for residents.
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AZANITA 9. Front Row: Maya Lara, Cindy Fersch, Amy Hirni, Laurie Parkes, Kim Celess, Sharon Crisp,
ienne Strickland. Second Row: Melanie Silver, Shannon Nilles, Amy Lobaugh, Carrie Eldridge, C.C.
•mas, Melissa Hoffman, Kristi Johnson, Ilene Winston. Third Row: Angie Dickerson, Kristen Schnabel,
<e Counts, Suzanne Casey, Amy Maltby, Golner Tabatabai, Suzanne Dushoff, Trish Miller. Photo by Tammy
ttos
M ANZA.NITA 10. Front Row: Carl Collins, Tom Wood, Doug Weiner, John Zorda, Brian Stephenson, Dave
Groves. Second Row: Tim Miller, Neal Weber, Andrew Yee, Ryan Hanes, John Sherwood, Jason Jordel, Doug
Hopkins, Robb Polk. Third Row: Jim Ryan, Tom Wisg, Gregg Loventhal, Christian Banke, Kim Kolb, Nyema
Guannu, Sean Waale, Jack Meeks, Tom Dvoratchek. Photo by Tammy Vrettos.
Popular Halls 229
Apartments vs. Halls
The Dwelling War
With the cost of living rising
every year, and time schedules
that demand 27 hours a day of
one's undivided attention, college
students must ask the ongoing
question: should I live in an
apartment or a dorm?
When making this decision,
students must consider finances,
social life, location, and study
time.
Junior psychology major Hos-
kie Largo, who had had a taste of
Taking advantage of the warm weather
to study outside are sophomore Lisa
Hrivnak, junior Theresa Lipnitz, and
sophomore Bill Bonnell. Arizona's cli-
mate allowed for a lot of time to spend
outdoors.
both styles of living, said he pre-
ferred apartments to dorms
when it came to studying.
"The dorm was near campus
and everything. It was conve-
nient, but it was so loud. Study-
ing was hard. A lot of people are
around you and you neglect your
homework," he said. "I like living
alone."
When it came to finances,
however, Largo admitted that a
dorm was the way to go.
"Financially, a dorm would be
better unless you have a room-
mate. I don't, and it's hard on me
because I'm on a tight budget,"
he said.
At ASU there are 10 residence
halls to choose from. Prices per
semester ranged anywhere from
$646 to $1,338. Meal plans were
available for all dorms.
Continued on page 233
PjK3H
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MANZANITA 11. Front Row: Kim Rupp, Meredith Zebofsky, Christina Silva, Desiree Wilson, Jennifer
DonLan, Tracey Robinson. Second Row: Stefanie Peterson, Julie Krahenbuhl, Tonya Harper, Cara Lacey, Jill
Reynolds, Tina Russo, Jennie Stark. Third Row: Danielle Williams, Anne Sodowsky, Veronica Smart, Althea
Huebler, Jennifer Schreiber, Michelle Galligan, Pam Yutel. Photo by Tammy Vrettos
MANZANITA 12. Front Row: James Nasto, Jon LaBarge, Sanjay Partel, Jim Barrett, Jarrett Brody, .
McConville, Andy Hurwitz, Michael Noerr, Sam Conti. Second Row: Patrick Keough, Nick Spankowski. Rob'
Sekera, Ric Brunner, John Peters, Jason Kenzie, Tod Lautenberg, Gary Russo, Jason Stein. Third Row.T
Brennan, Eric Reich, Matt Duler, Yvon Araktingi, Scott Somerndike, Mike Stassi, Rhett Howells, N
Henderson, Mark Stillman, Don Maloney, David Etelson. Photo by Tammy Vrettos
230 Apartments vs. Halls
Manzanita resident Gary Giamo gets a
quick shave before class. Sharing bath-
rooms at Manzanita was a part of hall
life.
Returning his calls keeps Barry Kell-
man busy. Many hall residents used an-
[ swering machines to avoid missed calls.
lANZANITA IS.Front Row: Aimee Williams, Heidi Jo Larsen, Mei-hui Huang, Courtney Wolfe, Gina
asarella, Michele Norlander, Wendy Us.Second Row: Susan Sobkov, Amy Smith, Gabriella Caputo, Tracy
™th, Jennifer Stuckey, Jenni Hatley, Jacki Rush, Lori Ann Reed, Jill Duberstein, Angel Stensly. Third Row:
isa Pappas, Michelle Cory, Diane Welsh, Tammy Triolo, Michelle Lindsey, Ani Shaw, Marcy Chuasta,
honda Christofferson, Nika Coldiron, Michelle Wilkerson, Sydney Tanner. Photo by Tammy Vrettos
MANZANITA 14. Front Row: Michael Fishman, Shawn Lombard, Rob Manderelli, Mike Patten, Jeremy
Razar Second Row: Jeff Sauer, Josh Cobleigh, Scott Theisen, Jason Garner, Mark Greesm, Bill Binch. Third
Row: Brent Miller, Rich Signeski, Michael Curry, Kevin Connell, Brian Relher, Karl Dzeguze, James Brown.
Photo by Kim Bodin
Apartments vs. Halls 23
1
1
—
1 r
*****" Ji i
^M
• t
Students discover a lot of chores to do
when they live away from home like this
McClintock resident. McClintock was
home to Honors College.
Best residents Rosa Ferdowsmaken
and Nicole Guiet prepare a meal. Some
residents preferred to cook their own
meals.
HANZANITA Ih.Front Sow; Lisa Stegman, Victoria Wagner, Sari Yorn.Secondftw.Racheal Riaas, Pamela
Stirba, Krista Gardner. Third Row: Lisa Mork, Amy Olson, Catherine McGrath. Photo by Kim Bodin
McCUNTOCK.fronf flow Tom Ferenczhalmy, Jared Khan, Rob Babyar, Joel Thomas, Shawn DeMumbru
Christopher Wright, Andrea Darby. Second Row: Stephanie Evans, Grace Cheng, Linda Champagne, Phuc
Huynh, Rendee Ice, Natalie Boehme, Camille Cordero. Third Row: Jennifer Stewart, Crystal McCoy, Ge
Brewer, Vicki Wetherby, Monica Quijada, Caryn-Lisa Tulman, Cary-Jo Merritt, Chrissy Marziano. Photo
Nicki Carroll
I
32 Apartments vs. Halls
The dwelling war
Making The Right Choice
Senior fine arts major Karla
Rasmussan, a transfer student
from Washington State, resided
in an off-campus complex, The
Towers. She referred to it as a
"private luxury dorm," which
she said was quite a step up from
her previous dorm in
Washington.
"In my old dorm we had a
community bathroom, so it's nice
to have my own bathroom. I also
eat a lot better now. The food
there (in the dorms) was incredi-
bly bad," she said.
Although The Towers were
off-campus, they operated like a
dorm. Up to four students per
room were allowed, with costs
that varied from $2,575 to $3,477
per school year. Utilities, house-
keeping, and furnishings were in-
cluded and meal plans were op-
tional through Einstein's, a
Tempe restaurant.
The main differences that
Rasmussan found between pri-
vate and public dorms were
studying habits and freedom.
"There's more freedom that
comes with living in your own
place. In dorms they have re-
strictions," she said. "In dorms,
there was more emphasis on
group studying. In an apartment,
studying is pretty much your own
thing."
Sophomore nuclear science
major Jerald Hunter agreed.
"In dorms, people tend to act
more as a group both in partying
and studying, but in an apart-
ment, most of the time you bare-
ly know your own neighbors," he
said. "The freedom of living in an
apartment is great."
Hunter, who lived in Palo
Verde West his freshman year,
moved into an apartment near
ASU last summer, and has been
quite content with apartment
dwelling ever since.
"Apartments are better be-
cause you make your own rules.
Besides, it's much easier to find a
quiet place to study," Hunter
said.
Hunter, however, felt that do-
ing his own dishes was quite a
chore.
"The only drawback is having
to prepare your meals and do
your own dishes. In the dorms,
that was covered with the meal
plan. Even with this, apartments
are still worth the extra cost,"
Hunter said.
£qaju Kong-
COTILLO Al Bl Dl El. Front Row: Bill Clarke, Dave Meehan, Rob Minarchin, Lance Kaji, John LaGrau- OCOTILLO \2&B2.Front Row: Lorane Eribed, Yong Cho. Second Row: Boss Bell, Kenny Ziegler. Photo by
tr Second Row: Bryan Crum, Mark Ashnorth, Gary Dixon. Third Row: Andy Hurwich, David Ferris. Photo by Scott Troyanos
•ott Troyanos
Apartments vs. Halls 233
Lead .singer of the "Vapors", Brad Nich-
ols, belts out a tune. The group per-
formed in front of an enthusiastic crowd.
Entertaining the crowd is Scott "Axl"
Steinkritz. A lip sync contest was one of
the events at the Ocotillo Bass Jam.
OCOT1 1.1.0. Front Row: Joseph Janick, John Kanta, Eugene Spataro, Sam Espinosa, Eric Scalzo, Dave Pixley. OCOTILLO. Front Rom Stacy Shaw, Sudaphoon Wioija, Annette Buzzo, Lisa Glenister. Second Row: Osc
.Second Row: Allison Rafferty, Katie Dockwell, Karen Longo, Joy Sullivan, Becky Noren, Maureen Galvin. Duarte, Derek Ciccone, Kelly Klumpp, Laura Hayden. Third Row: Rick Schmidt, Oscar DeYcaza, Mi
Third Row: Beth Anne Daugherty, Christine Maslan, Lynn Zanelli, Karen Mennino, Doreen Sykora. Photo by Wolfberg, Doug Henry. Photo by T.J. Sokol
Scott Troyanos
I
4 Ocotillo Jam
Enthusiasm sparks return
Ocotillo Jams
Students were encouraged to
showcase their talents in the sec-
ond annual Bass Jam that took
place Oct. 27 at Ocotillo Hall.
It featured four aspiring come-
dians and a number of student
groups that paid tribute to bands
with a lip-sync performance. The
evening wound down with a step-
show by the Phi Beta Sigma fra-
ternity and dancing until 12:30
a.m.
"It went so well last year, we
decided to do it again," said
sophomore Preston English, vice
president of his floor at Ocotillo
and coordinator of the Bass Jam.
Approximately 300 students
attended the Jam as they
watched Guns' and Roses, New
Edition and Kid at Play. One
group from Mariposa did a lip
sync of the Vapors with painted
faces.
No auditions were necessary
to be in the show, English said.
This allowed for last minute
additions, like Rose Capulano in
the comedy part of the show.
"We had a different comedy
act and they cancelled out," En-
glish said. "Rose said she could
do it so I told her to get up on
stage."
Although the Jam started out
near the volleyball court, it was
moved up to the sundeck for the
step show. Total cost was approx-
imately $550. They sold T-shirts
and had sponsorships from Domi-
nos and Alphagraphics. Most of
the publicity came through word
of mouth and flyers around
campus.
According to English, it was a
chance for the students to just
relax and have a good time.
" It was a chance to have fun
and take a break from mid-
terms," he said.
COTILLO E2ES. Front Row: John Kruskamp, Peter Olson, Terry Spears, James Danielski, Edward Striffler.
°cond Row: Todd Freed, Dave Toth, Alan Ferreira, Ethan Wessel, Jim Carrier, Jake Xot. Third Row: Dave
ihaUel, Jamie Knapp, Daryl Cook, Scott Lawrence, Lucky Reyes. Photo by Scott Troyanos
MARIPOSA. Front Row: Lonnie Power, Joann Beideman, Erwin Leibacher, Monty Lovell, Jim Simmons,
Russell Comos, Rick McCann, Ross Potter. Second Row: Craig Browning, Rachel Esposito, Michael Steiner,
Franco Ravennati, Supasak Chirasavinuprapand, Don Berry, Theresa Amado, Christos Papageorgiou, Korren
Zupko. Third Row: Christopher Potter, Prudhiphol Pindhaprateep, Jeff Degnan, Saad Shoucair, Ebony Kelly,
Heidi Morris, Ann Ladner, Elaine Ernst, Laura Donnelly. Photo by Craig Valenzuela
Ocotillo Jam 23
i
PV EAST 1&2. Front Row: Heather Steil, Michelle Steinmetz, Kristen Herley, Heather Spoon, Leslie
Bruraagin. Second Row: Seif Prisca-Nathalie, Cristy Cuddy, Tracy Todd, Patricia Noonan, Sarah Ambler,
Shannon Leonard, Amy Barnard. Third Row: Catherine Gustafson, Lisa Kranz, Pamela Erwin, Shannon
Metcalf, Stephanie McKibbin. Photo by Mike Lewis
PV EAST 3&4. Front Row: Michelle Barnard, Michelle Bartko, Danielle Mitchell, Cindy Adler, Kendr
Larson. Second Row: Jennifer Drinen, Linda Hawkinson, Rita Summers, Lucia Morales, Barbara Lindquis
Sherri Burnett. Third Row: Alexandra Barnard, Natalie Graham, LaVerne Ramirez, Sarah Irvine, Am
Jensen, Tracy Dudman. Photo by Mike Lewis
E
36 Parking Structures
Students scramble for spaces
New Parking
With a majority of the student
body being commuters, residents
often found themselves fighting
for a parking place near their
halls, but with the completion of
parking structure five, Manzani-
ta and Palo Verde residents
found more than enough room.
The parking structure had
three different kinds of parking,
including a visitors' lot with 74
spaces, resident parking with 500
spaces, and 1,058 decal spaces.
According to Acting Assistant
Director for Parking Ron Kucera,
the 500 spaces replaced only 389
that had been available before
the construction.
"Those lots were always a lit-
tle crowded," he said.
Although the new Valley Bank
was built on the corner of the
Cholla Apartments lot, there
have not been any serious prob-
lems there, Kucera said.
He noted that the residents
could park in parking structure
four, right across Rural. There
was no residence parking in that
structure.
Residents at McClintock were
not as fortunate.
During the construction of the
library addition, lot eight was
used for construction purposes.
Parking Services allotted 30
spaces in Tempe Center for
McClintock students, but instead
changed it into a visitors' lot, ac-
cording to Assistant Hall Director
for Center Complex Paul Kranz.
"The lot was not close to the
demand (for parking)," he said.
"The rest have to park down
here (in lots 17 and 18, near Irish
and Best)."
Any extra overflow from the
Center Complex parked next to
Ocotillo across Apache from
parking structure one, which
makes the issue one of safety
rather than parking, said Kranz.
"That's a long walk, especially
at night," Kranz commented. Ku-
cera admitted that there was a
"small area in Tempe Center" for
the McClintock residents, but he
did not know how the spaces
were distributed. He did say that
McClintock students could park
in parking structure three or in
lot three by Gammage.
All of the parking structures
and Gammage were $105 a year.
Lots 40, 55, and 58 were $85 a
year; open parking was $75, Lot
59 was $41, and residence hall
parking was $45 a year. Motorcy-
cle parking lots were $30 a year.
The 30 parking places in Tem-
pe Center were decided by the
date on the original application
deposit for space in the residence
hall, according to Patrick Mul-
ready, a desk assistant at
McClintock .
V EAST 7 Front Row: K. Cunningham, Missy Grbovoc, Rose Caprio, Britton Mauchline. Second Row: Kelly
uajardo, Christy Rouse, RaeAnn Tschumper, Diane Demarais, Kelly Wong, Photo by T.J. Sokol
PV EAST 5&6 Front Sow: Amy Cobbs, Sarai Cabrera, Stacy St. George, Leticia Carey, Brooke Swanson, Olivia
Chagolla, Zann Peden. Second Row: Holly Ann Mueller, Jennifer Shaklan, Melissa Rosenberg, Kristi Boit,
Margo Gillman, Ines Honne, Kris Rice, Jenny Davies. Third Row: Barbara Scruby, Michele Kokos, Kim
Sheppela, Holli Warner, Andrea Duchane, Angie Crouse, Roxanne Franco, Heidi Lyons. Photo by T.J. Sokol
Parking Structures 237
From alcohol to AIDS
Facing Issues
She stood there, dazed and
confused standing on one leg
with her other toe pointed in
front of her, six inches off the
ground. She stared at her toe and
her arms began to flap as she
counted to 30. She lost her ba-
lence at seven seconds admist a
spasm of giggles.
Amy was drunk. And had she
been driving a car, she would've
gone to jail, according to Ser-
geant E.L. Wells of the Tempe
Police.
Fortunately she was just a
participant in an alcohol aware-
ness program called Promoting
Responsibility Through You
(PARTY) sponsored by Palo
Verde East and West halls along
with Tempe Police and the De-
partment of Public Safety.
Alcohol awareness was just
one of nine main issues dealt
with during the fall semester
program "Full Steam Ahea-
d...Your Passport to Diversity"
sponsored by the Office of Resi-
dence Life.
"I think alcohol awareness
was important because 90 per-
cent of the problems in the resi-
dence halls are alcohol related,"
said Mike Gage, assistant hall di-
rector for Mariposa and Ocotillo
halls.
The rules concerning alcohol
in the halls state that only peo-
ple over the age of 21 are to have
alcohol in the dorms and the door
must be closed. If someone is un-
der 21 and is caught with an
open container, either in the
hallway or in a room and the
door is open, it is considered hav-
ing an open container in a public
place and is against the law. If
caught, the student will be sited
for $157.50 with a month proba-
tion. If they are caught a second
time, the student will pay an ad-
ditional $157.50 plus a trip to the
Dean's office and possible
expulsion.
During the year, each resi-
dence hall sponsored events for
an entire week around the main
theme of that week. There were
nine target weeks. The issues in-
cluded safety and security, aca-
demic skills, relationships and
sexuality, alcohol awareness,
cultural awareness, AIDS aware-
ness, drug awareness, career and
life planning and wellness.
There were four resident as-
sistants responsible for each
hall. Those RAs were responsible
for their hall and their floor.
"The target weeks were a way
to breakdown the programs that
needed to be covered during the
school year," said Natialie
Young, an RA at Manzanita. "We
tried to do two or three programs
a month."
During Safety and Security
week, Mr. Condom visted Palo
Verde East followed by self de-
fense expert Tom Hargos in the
Manzanita Coppper Lounge.
Hargos demonstrated five dif-
ferent holds that an attacker
may try and how to escape from
them if someone was attacked.
His main focus was on protect-
ing women from rape. ASU was
fourth in the nation in the num-
ber of rapes on campus with ap-
proximately a rape every other
day.
Continued on page 241
PV WEST 1. Front Row: Rod Romesburg, Bryan Rombalski. Second Row: Zhimin Zhang, Frank Olivas,
Leonard Siegel. Third Row: Alex Tessmer, Chris West, Neil Lichter. Photo by Michelle Conway
PV WEST 2. Front Row: Scott Livezey, Eric Pertnoy, Greg Prudhomme, Justin Bass, J. Conlin, Rob Celesnii
Cloid Adams, Ross Sorensen. Second Row: David York, Craig Miller, Jeff Buell, Mike Thompson, Allen Keen ,
Jason Sipe, Robert Singleton, Toby Tobias, Tom Connick. Third Row: Kyle Bowerman, Dale Norton, Ste< (
Reynolds, Mark Whitman, Ross Poppenberger, Dan Shook, Steve Minjavez, Andrew Steier, David Saris |
Photo by Michelle Conway
I
38 Important Issues
Giving tips to avoid rape is self-defense
expert Tom Hargos . He stated that ASU
had the fourth largest number of rapes.
Photo by T.J. Sokol
A bike is checked out for safety stan-
dards at Sahuaro Hall during Safety
1 Awareness Week. All residents were en-
's couraged to register their bikes with
2 ASU/DPS.
WEST S. Front Row: Kurtis Strauel, Aaron Duhon, Matthew Buehler, Jason Simmonds, Justin Bass, Neil
.stock, Fray Gray. Second Row: Graham Walters, Steve Heintz, Donn Coolidge, Jared Steinberg, Keith
nshock, Matt Demos, Brian Gowan. Third Row: Kris Simonich, Ed Drange, John Weber, Ken Wilson, Craig
nker, Scott Gilfert, Tony Mena. Photo by Michelle Conway
PV WEST 4. Front flow; Mike Nielsen, Bill Juneau, Joel Dugied, Daniel Miller, Sean O'Neill, Rob CommarcAa,
Kevin Seager, John Mialki. Second Row: P.J. Dean, Nick Parkin, Carlos De Souza, Todd Steinberg, Anthony
Troli, Thomas Parascandola, Mike Kennedy, Chris Grasso. Third Row: Keith Wells, Dan Palm, C.C. MeCand
less, Haakon Loevaasen, Ken Schafer, Todd Berg, David Schwartz, Jason Shearer, Herb Zucker. Photo by
Michelle Conway
Important Issues 23
i
n
Testing for intoxication, Tempe Police
Officer Ed Wells holds the breathalizer
for junior Rich Rombaugh. The breatha-
lizer test was one of many tests that
Wells performed on Rombaugh as he put
on a demonstration for alcohol aware-
ness in Ocotillo Hall.
PV WEST 5 Front Row: Phillippe Colliat, Thomas Hosier, Brian Cronin, Mark Markunas, Tom Idzorck, Scott
Larkin, Charlie Silverman, Danny Teplinsky. Second Row: Perry Mason, Steve Loewenkamp, Seth Crawford,
Paul McQuillen, Gene Splitter, Jeff Elsasser, Tat Granata, Derek Sajdyk, Keith Kagen. Third Row: Chris
Sullivan, Tom Hojnacki, Pete Danyluk, John Buchner, Glen Knowles, A. Blair Blaikie, Matt Bray, Marc
Crawford, Sinjin Eberle. Photo by Michelle Conway
»
PV WEST 6 Front Row: Art , Paul Norwood, Jeff Coomans, Pat Hoffman, Jas Lee, Mark Palmer, Anthon; ;
Romanelli, Pete Williams, Griffin Coffelt, Todd Dozier, Steve Beltran. Second Sow; Jason Wylie, Le
Swaim, Jeff Cole, Dennis Kurz, Chris Nunziota, Dave Fox, Sharif Fahim, Mike Lyons, Adam FlatK
Marcus Folino, Carl Hosier, Joe Azzaro. Third Row: Monte Dixon, Stephon Caldwell, John Sheppela, Jef
Pruitt, Scott Ramsey, Jamie Nicpon, Jeff Hakalmazian, Chris Budd, Mohammad Salman, Stephen
Dunnery, Keith Wells, Martin Ebel, Rich Banach. Photo by Michelle Conway
40 Important Issues
Facing Issues
Students Gain Insight
His demonstration included a
list of rules and tips to help pre-
vent a rape situation as well as
pratical uses for ordinary items
that most women carry with
them.
Hargos stressed cooperation
and that the self-defense escapes
should be used only as a last
resort.
"It's not worth dying over,"
Hargos said. ""If he wants your
purse, give it to him. It can be
replaced, your life can't."
Young set up study tables for
academic week and brought in a
nutritionist for wellness week.
Mariposa Hall had a sexual
trivia bowl in game-show type
format during relationships and
sexuality week.
According to the Office of Res-
idence Life, there were a wide
variety of programs throughout
each week to spark the interest
of a diverse residential
population.
"We were trying to deal with
issues that deal with the popula-
tion at ASU," Gage said. "Well-
ness and health are important to
the students."
Mariposa and Ocotillo also had
a presentation on bike registra-
tion and protecting students'
bikes from being stolen for safety
and security week.
Part of the program included
cultural awareness on a monthly
basis. Each month was assigned
a continent to explore with pro-
grams, types of food and general
information.
"What we were trying to do
was make an awareness across
campus," Gage said.
Demonstrating one of the many uses of
keys, self-defense expert Tom Hargos
teaches Manzanita Resident Assistant
Natalie Young how to use everyday
items as weapons in case of an attack.
The demonstration was just one of many
in the halls during Safety and Security
Week.
*mm%M
V WEST 7. Front Row: Guy Norris, Brian Rives, Steven Morrisey, Aaron Sahlstrom, Jason Griffith, David
asper. Second Row: James B. Wolfe, Tom Ford, Neil Steger, Stewart Mitchell, Karl Roebke, Charles Lucas,
hoto by Michelle Conway
PV MAIN RA'S. Front Row: Suzanne Diaz, Beth Stewart, Jenn Daack, Carolyn Kiernat, Allison Steppes,
Dawn Snyder. Second Row: Mary Beth Mockler, Joan McHenry, Mia Mendez, Lisa Kolik, Debra Davies, Laura
Potts, Diana McMillan. Photo by T.J. Sokol
Important Issues 24
I
Meal plan provides convenience
DINING IN
It was 11 a.m. and you just
finished watching your morning
cartoons. Suddenly, you got the
craving for ham and eggs and
realized the answer was closer
than you thought.
Students were able to eat at
The Club, the Mariposa and Man-
zanita Dining Halls on the week-
ends due to the meal plans made
available. Weekend plans includ-
ed brunch and dinner. Students
could choose from a 14 or 19 Meal
Plan.
Pulling Salisbury steak from the con-
vection ovens, Eugenia Peralta cooks a
weekend meal for Manzanita residents.
She has been at ASU for thirty years,
twelve of which she prepared food for
the football players.
"We were getting more and
more of demand from the stu-
dents to offer a meal plan that
included weekends, said Del
Kreuziger of Meal Admin-
istration.
Weekend meal plans ranged
from $580.80 for the 14 Meal
Plan to $632.40 for the 19 Meal
Plan per semester. According to
the the Campus Dining Guide the
best choice in weekend meal ser-
vice was the 19 Meal Plan. For an
additional $51.60 students re-
ceived an extra 88 meals com-
pared to the 14 Meal Plan.
Both meal plans included the
cash value meal plan. This plan
was a pre-paid cash account in
the amount of $100 valid at near-
ly all campus food service
facilities.
"Eating at the dining hall
doesn't come out to be as expen-
sive and it's convenient," said Sa-
huaro resident Hector Pazos.
\
SAHUARO Al Front Row: Franklin Peterson, Marc Swanson, Ryan Hugueny, Mark Axtell. Second Row: Tony SAHUAKO A2 Front Row: Shawna Brinkerhoff, Keryn Darr, Colleen Owens, Angie Linton, Melodi Calv
Moran, John Messenger, Philippides Charalahbos. Third Row: David Mawad, Dan Lane. Photo by T.J. Sokol Second Row: Billy Jo Merritt, Jeff Soil, Wendy Frank, Britt Bensen, Jason Morrow. Third Row: David Blanc
Greg Marovich, Paul Cappiali, Dave Justus, Matt Crucitt. Photo by T.J. Sokol
I
2 Food Plan
Taking advantage of the weekend meal
plan at Mariposa are (clockwise from
top): James Freeman, Alan Ferreira,
. Todd Freed, Jim Carrier, Jamie Knapp,
§ Ethan Wesselwau, and Lucky Reyes.
f Weekend meals were provided for those
" students who purchased the plan.
iHl ARO AS Front Row: Pam McQuaid, Carol Cesaretti, Susan Secakuku, Megan Shoemaker, Dayna Pope.
■cond Row: Liz Rueda, Erin Clarke, Susan Westerfield, Leslie Vann, Dara Tribelhorn, Julie Jacobs. Photo by
J. Sokol
SAHUAHO Bl Front Row: John Bzeta, R.J. Henwood, Jeffrey McKee. Second Row: Peter Lundeen, Dan
Watraan, Stacey Nakamura, Muhurl Thempsen, Randy Gamez, Neil Russell, Eric Drescher. Third Row: Adam
Weber, Lonnie Johnson, Ron Hoffmeister, John Corbett, John Meissler, Schmoo Weinbrenner, Kenneth
LaFleur, Jud Kuwada, Pat Neal. Photo by T.J. Sokol
Food Plan 243
Tending to her laundry is Manzanita
resident Lynn Soho. Many students dis-
covered what a chore laundry could be.
Moving day begins for Steve Heintz and
Scott Gilfert at PV West. Residents
moved into halls the week before school.
SAHUAEO B2. Front Row: Benjamin Birndorf, Derek Freedman, Warren McKenna, Darcie Urman, Teresa
Walker, Kerry Burke, Nicole Wehrle, Patricia Williams. Second Row: Tom Swoveland, Scott Nicholson,
Cynthia J. Lee, Dustin Dingman, Jennie Setka, Michael Schwartz, Keith Goldin. Third Row: Scott Camp,
Christopher Bates, James Wiskerchen, Christopher Rogers, Christopher Graham, Amanda Dolan, Jim Hoge
Darrin Rottihela. Photo by T.J. Sokol
SAHUARO BS. Front Row: Leann Lyskowsky, Tammie Wong, MaryAnn Robinson, Debbie Logoyda, Ailee
Paulino, Ann Cantrall, Karen Scimeca, Lizzy Rekevics, Debra Oberhand. Second Row: Nan-Sea Lessinge
Michelle Dougherty, Jennifer Nahay, Heather White, Debra Rascona, Darla Quackenboss, Krista Leif
MacNamara, Shanti Norelle. Third Row: Stephanie Gordon, Kathi Bergen, Andrea Taylor, Anna Peltovuoi
Janine Russoniello, Cathy Lardas, JoAnna Surveyor, Michele Gerace. Photo by David Haneke
244 Space in Halls
Halls not full in '89
Look to Future
As construction continued on
the new five-story residence hall
during the fall '89 semester, it
was ironic that this was the first
semester in recent years that all
the halls on campus were not
completely booked.
"Our applicant pool was small-
er by about 200 people this year
as opposed to last year," said Di-
rector of Residence Life Cliff
Osborne.
Osborne attributed the unex-
pected decrease in demand to the
high number of off-campus units
available, the overbuilding of
real estate and the Arizona econ-
omy. Despite this, he expected
100 percent occupancy for 1990
and future years and feels the
new dorm is needed.
"Between the years 1990 and
2000, if permitted, the campus
will grow by 12,000 students," he
said.
For 1989, however, residence
life had no problems accomodat-
ing any students interested in
campus housing. At check-in
time in late August during the
beginning of the semester, all fe-
male students, including last-
choice transfer students, had
rooms. Only 20 men had to be
temporarily housed in hotels un-
til rooms could be located for
them.
Residence Life hoped comple-
tion of the new 400-resident
dorm would spur demand for
campus housing. Located east of
Sahuaro Hall, the new hall would
have a centrally located court-
yard and suite-type rooms. Di-
rectly adjacent to the new com-
plex would be the Residence
Education Center, designed to
provide space for educational, so-
cial, and recreational programs.
While it would seat 150 people, it
could also be used for parties,
etc.
Aside from the new complex,
Osborne was also working to
house married students and sin-
gle-parent families on campus.
While ASU currently did not
have housing of this nature, Os-
borne noted that almost every
major university had it and he
was interested in trying it. He
also estimated that close to one-
third of the students on campus
were either married or are single
parents.
The current residence hall sys-
tem seemed to cater to just the
opposite type of student, howev-
er, as freshmen were first on the
waiting list to get a room after all
returning residents were accomo-
dated. Older students and those
who transfered had last choice.
"Freshmen have intentional
priority on the halls," Osborne
said. "We believe that campus
housing has the most benefits for
them."
iHUARO CI Front Row: Heidi Lamb, Ann Miller, Suzanne Baltes. Second Row: John Fortner, Kevin SAHUARO C2 Front Row: Michael D. Mitchell, Craig Kane, Erik Blecher, Jay Bitsue. Second Row: Greg
•eithart, David Petrisky. Photo by Michelle Conway Croteau, Mark Lyons, Dan Heller, Dave Blanchard. Third Row: Robert Denaro, Don Newlen, Hector Pazos,
Peter Honer. Photo by Michelle Conway
Space in Halls 24
1
u
Adding pizzazz, a mural painted by
Rosa Ferdowsmakan brightens Best
Hall. Complex residents were the only
students allowed to paint their rooms.
Displaying her work, Rosa Fedowsma-
kan stands in the Best Hall lobby. The
painting program was being tested on
Center Complex residents.
SAHUARO C3 Front Row: Brenda Pyka, Kathy Desjardins, Lori Hukill, Stephanie Nowack, Jennifer Raznick,
Jennifer Corey. Second Row: Michelle Jenkins, Jennifer Larson, Samantha Loucks, Christina Thompson,
Nicole Dykstra, Stephanie Carter. Third Row: Tiffany Thomas, Shannon O'Gorman, Jodi Marcotte, Deborah
Keyser, Robin Warner, Melissa Copley. Photo by Michelle Conway
SAHUARO Dl Front Row: Dave Finch, Greg Freed, Ben Needleman, Luis Calderon, Ashahed Triche, Dai 1
Shapiro. Second Row: Matt Arnold, Merrick Makowka, Kevin Knutson, Rich Stice, Brad Barnhart, Tom Gal
Third Row: Michael Taddeo, Brian Cabianca, Mark Hoffman, Robert Drawer, Michael Duda, Steve Scham
Photo by T.J. Sokol
I
6 Center Complex Painting
£•
Roll out the rollers
Splash of Color
Residents at the Center Com-
plex dorms experienced a new
found sense of freedom as they
took to their dorm walls with
paint brushes and rollers.
However, unlike years past,
these students did not lose their
housing deposit and gain a repri-
mand from their hall director. It
was part of a new proram initiat-
ed by the Residence Life Office
that allowed students to paint
and decorate their rooms them-
selves, within certain guidelines,
said Center Complex Secretary
Nance Lupez.
"We started it this semester,"
she said. "We started it so stu-
dents would have more freedom
with their rooms."
A $25 deposit fee was required
to help offset any costs if the
painting has to be redone, said
Lupez, but the deposits are usu-
ally returned once the job was
finished. She said that not one
check had been held back yet.
Students could chose from
eight colors. The students also
signed a contract that limited
them to the colors provided by
the Residence Life painters, a
maximum of two colors to be
used per room with no murals,
stripes or designs. The colors
were picked by the Center Com-
plex floor representatives, ac-
cording to head painter Dennis
Howe.
"We had been talking about
this for years," Howe said. "I was
assigned to work on it during the
summer, and we initiated it this
fall."
"We decided to use this on an
experimental basis with the un-
derstanding that if it was suc-
cessful that we would spread the
program campus wide."
Residence Life provided any
prepatory patching, an instruc-
tion booklet and a paint kit
which included everything from
drop cloths to paint.
"The students don't pay for
anything." Lupez said. "They
will paint it to our specifications
and a painter checks it over be-
fore they get their deposit back."
The contract set a 72-hour
deadline for the students to paint
their rooms.
Howe said the program had
proved successful so far. He said
that on the average there was
one room per week painted and
that there were more requests at
the beginning of the semester
than any other time.
The idea was originally gener-
ated by Center Complex Hall Di-
rector Eric Rollerson who had
been involved in a similar pro-
gram at Oklahoma State
University.
Howe said that the program is
one way of trying to cut down on
damage to the rooms.
"If we let them decorate their
rooms, they won't damage them
as much," he said.
<3&
4<<^i
Ondemt*^
HUARO D2 Front Row: Paul Young, Keith Cutler, Macario Padre, Wesley Wheeler, Joe Ohrezda. Second
w: Gerardo Avila, Scott Yandell, Richard Apostolico, Thomas Narvett, Ryan Iverson. Third Row: Kurt
nee, Douglas Allen, Julius Erving, Darrin Dietsch, Chris Smith. Photo by T.J. Sokol
SAHUARO D8 Front Row: Kristen Stipe, Kristel Wenhoff, Stephanie Benke, Cheryl Franchi, Karen Bartlett,
Allyson Hughes, Stacie Drew. Second Row: Erin McCarin, Nancy Larkin, Jack Napier, Mike Tyson, Jon Reeve,
Kerry LaHanzio, Shannon Sanders. Third Row: Brenda Garcia, Michael Sliwa, Christopher Rogers, Lou Devil,
Peter Siegfried, Dutch Ferguson. Photo by David Haneke
Center Complex Painting 24
„
1
1
1
1
1
s^^k.
Taking first in the 200-
meter relay, members
of Omega Mu participate in
Anchor Splash. It was
sponsored by Delta Gam-
ma. Photo by Scott
Troyanos
SPIRITED:i) •# full of ener-
gy and animation. 2) n. the vigor and
enthusiasm emanating from greeks, en-
compassing everything from parties to
philanthropy.
Fraternities and sororities were a
place to grow intellectually, a place to
build lifelong friendships and a place to
call home. For many students, the greek
system was the best way to round out an
enriching college experience. The greeks
managed to rise above stereotypes and
continue to persevere as a strong
institution.
The greek system welcomed new faces
on the block. New chapters such as Sigma
Kappa sorority and Delta Chi fraternity
demonstrated the growing popularity of
greek involvement by successfully mak-
ing a place for themselves on campus.
Mixing the new with the old, tradi-
tions like Greek Week and Greek Sing
strengthened the already tight bonds be-
tween brothers and sisters. Money raised
from both events benefited Valley Big
Brothers/Big Sisters.
Besides joining forces, each chapter
selected its own philanthropies. Events
such as Sigma Alpha Mu's "Bounce for
Beats" exhibited true greek enthusiasm
and charity.
From the unity of Greek Sing to the
competition of greek games sororities
and fraternities kindled spirit that made
a statement without exclaiming a world.
Finding creative new uses
for watermelon rinds
during the Lambda Chi Alpha
Watermelon Bust are Alpha
Gamma Delta members Dawn
Rogers and Adina Niemerow.
All sororities participated in
the fraternity fundraiser to
help raise money for charity.
SECTION
EDITOR:
Shannon
Morrison
Greeks 249
CoufetZtwH, cud Comadwy Make, fium^wTCluvul^
reek Week, in the spring of
1989, did not consist of Greeks
wearing togas, or aging men
wearing leaves round their heads
and throwing javelins.
What Greek Week '89 did in-
volve, according to Greek Life Co-
ordinator Vicki Hersh, was hard
work and dedication.
The week long event included
activities that ranged from Greek
Games to fishbowl contributions
to raffles to a spectacular func-
tion dubbed 'Greek Sing.'
"It (planning) starts in the
spring of the preceding year,"
Hersh said. "Co-chairs are select-
ed in the spring for the Steering
Committee."
Around November the Greek
Week Steering Committee began
weekly meetings where they dis-
cussed goals, transitioning, and
reported on gatherings from the
sub-committees beneath them.
One important decision the
Steering Committee made was to
I
donate the earnings from Greek
Week to a certain charity. They
chose Valley Big Brothers/Big
Sisters.
"It (the decision) is based on
the contacts they've made
throughout the year," Hersh
said. "If there's a real specific
need in the community they try
to address that." Many factors
contributed to the lump sum of
money given to the charity.
"It comes from T-shirt orders
and sponsors," Hersh said,
"There were fishbowls; basically,
the people on teams would go out
and beg on the malls for money."
A raffle held during Greek
Week was described by Hersh as
a "biggie" as far as fund-raising
goes. Another popular event was
the fun run, which was master-
minded by junior political sci-
ence major Debbie Zeschke.
Zeschke, a member of Pi Beta
Phi Sorority, served as the Greek
Events Chairman. She came up
for the idea of a race across cam-
pus in which houses paid for
their members to run. There
were a hundred-ten entries at $3
to $5 a head.
"It brought in lots of money."
Zeschke said.
During the week, fraternities
and sororities were placed on
teams in which they would com-
pete with one another for points.
Points could be attained
through winning Greek Games,
placing well in Greek Sing, get-
ting the most fishbowl money,
and through other activities.
Those fraternities and sororities
that acquired the most points for
the week were awarded an over-
all banner.
Alpha Phi Sorority and Sigma
Phi Epsilon Fraternity received
the 1989 banner.
Continued on page 252
Representing the Yuppie team in the
Greek Games parade are Delta Gamma
member Laura Schultz and Sigma Phi
Epsilon member Andy Newman. Frater-
nities and sororities displayed their
team's theme as they paraded to the
games.
Using all his strength to help his team
win the tug-of-war is Gregg Hrncir mem-
ber of Sigma Phi Epsilon. Tug-of-war
kicked off the 1989 Greek Games.
>.
50 Greek Games
Watching over his team is a Greek
Games coach. Coaches spent a lot of time
training and lending moral support to
their team members.
Greek Games 21
GREEK WEEK
Gwlc £iMa P&Jofumum £kouicaie< Fund-RaUiMn Effort
lthough Greek Week contained
many competitive aspects, its
main purpose was to create a
sense of togetherness for all
Greeks.
"Greek Week is designed for
charity," Hersh said. "It's the in-
tended desire that the Greeks
come together for an effort."
Alpha Phi member Alison
Nace said that "it helps with all
of the Greeks working together.
It's competition, but it's not."
"It's competitive, but it brings
the Greek system together,"
Zeschke agreed.
The last event of the Greek
Week '89 (except for the Closing
Ceremonies and raffle) was
Greek Sing. It was a time for
Greeks to pull together, show-
case their talents, and rid them-
selves of sterotypes.
"Greek Sing is a big competi-
tion," Hersh said. "You have only
six teams in Greek Sing which
means that a large number of
groups are pulling together for
an intense production."
The theme "The Time Has
Come," represented the time for
all Greeks to 'act responsible and
learn from mistakes,' according
to the Greek Week '89 Manual.
Out of the six competing
teams, four placed, with a tie for
third place.
Alpha Tau Omega, showed up
on the winning team again, mak-
ing this their fourth year in a
row.
Alpha Tau Omega member
John MacKenzie said, "It's kind
of like producing a play. We have
people building the set, people
for the music section. We have to
choreograph the dancing, etc."
Greek Man and Woman of the
Year were Sigma Phi Epsilon
Fred Ferris and Delta Gamma
Paige Bingham.
After hours and hours of
sweaty rehearsals, aching mus-
cles and hoarse voices, most
greeks would agree that time
management was a definite
issue.
Alpha Tau Omega Marty
Harper said, "People who didn't
have good time management
probably suffered the most."
When the time came to per-
form, the preparation paid off.
Tickets to Greek Sing '89, held
in the Gammage Auditorium,
went for six dollars. Hersh de-
scribed the performers as play-
ing for a "packed house" that
night.
Yet, with all of the work put
into Greek Sing, it did not net big
profits.
"Greek Sing is not a major
fund-raiser for us," Hersh said.
"We make very little from it be-
cause we pay over $10,000 for
Gammage."
The time had come "for us to
come together and do something
good," Zeschke said.
^qaju from®-
4H ^B ^^*
f *
...^mtt0^^Jf^l^jS» i^.SS^f
to
252 Greek Sing
Singing "Aiko Aiko" for the winning
Greek Sing team are Alpha Phi members
Beth Quaing Horn inn Banks, and Julie
Getson. Teams combined chorus and
choreography to put on entertaining
shows.
Dancing to the beat of "Footloose" i
Sigma Nu brother Mike Tobin. Th
"Loose Ties" team performed five diffei
ent songs during their winning act. Ph<
to by Scott Troyanos
^m
Dramatically performing an ASU
freshman named Stewart, Sigma Nu
John Costellano listens to some fatherly
advice from Sigma Nu Derrick Hall. Ti-
tled as "Loose Ties", the Greek Sing act
won first place for their efforts. Photo
by Scott Troyanos.
Portraying a misinformed journalist,
Dave McMinn of Lambda Chi Alpha is
led through time by spirits Jennifer
Reed of Delta Delta Delta and Eric Wad-
dell of Pi Kappa Alpha. "Greeks in the
Newsroom" was one of the six acts per-
formed at Greek Sing.
Layout by Shannon Morrison
Greek Sing 25pi
-
RulluMg f<%
he stood by the door, wringing
her hands and smiling nervously
at the other rushees. With one
last look in the mirror, she in-
spected her appearance: dress,
unwrinkled; lipstick, unsmudged;
hair, perfectly in place. As the
door opened, she smiled confi-
dently at the sorority women
who had invited her to attend
their skit party. This scene was
replayed many times at ASU's
Sorority Rush.
Hundreds of sorority women
worked for months to prepare for
Fall Rush, which was successful,
according to Stacey Lee, Rush
chairperson for Sigma Kappa
sorority.
"It was a good experience for
us since it was our first year on
campus," Lee said. "Even though
it was a lot of work, no one would
have missed it for the world."
Rush was comprised of seven
days (Aug. 14-20) in which wom-
en interested in joining a sorority
attended seminars to help them
see what a sorority was like. A
mutual selection and elimination
process let the rushees and the
members of each sorority have a
say in who pledged their sorority.
Activity Day and skit parties
led up to Preference Night, the
final night of Rush, when soror-
ities invited potential pledges to
a formal party where they could
get better acquainted with soror-
ity members. The last day was
Bid Day, when rushees were of-
fered bids to pledge a particular
sorority.
Skit parties, intended to show
the benefits of sorority life,
ranged from rehearsed scenes to
musical extravaganzas per-
formed by sorority members.
The women of Kappa Kappa
Gamma did a production based
on the movie musical "Grease",
showing how a rushee made the
choice of which sorority to
pledge. At Sigma Kappa, the au-
dience was taken on a pledge sa-
fari to Arisahara State
University.
"I didn't expect so much ener-
gy!" said Lynn Eckert, a
rushee who later pledged Alpha
Delta Pi. "It was more fun than I
though it would be, but I thought
I would be more nervous."
As Preference Night ap-
proached, one word easily de-
scribed the feelings of many
rushees.
"STRESS!" Allison Hunter
said, "There are lots of groups;
I'm not sure which one's me or
that I'm them."
Lee said that Bid Day was the
highlight of Rush Week.
"It was really exciting for us
to see that we had done a good
job with it," she said.
Eckert summed up the Rush
feeling.
"I'm looking for a place to be-
long, have fun and friends, and
just be myself," she said.
^»
i.
«
Using a photo album, Alpha Gamma
Delta member, Cyntha DeYoung ex-
plains to rushee Andrea Madsen what
her sorority is all about. This was a good
way for the sororities to give the rushees
a more personalized view of their house.
54 Sorority Rush
Trying to balance a hat full of fruit on
Sigma Kappa skit day is member Jackie
Banville; meanwhile, her sorority sister
Kim Winterbourne prepares to go on
stage. Sorority members hoped that
wearing extravagant costumes would
help the rushees to understand the skit.
Layout by Shannon Morrison
Giving the rushees a look back into the
50's, are Kappa Kappa Gamma members
Karen Bently, Courtney Stull. Brooke
Bench, Tanya Burt, and Jennifer Hod-
son Skits gave the sorority members a
chance to show off their talent and their
house. Photo by Michelle Conway.
1 (
M
ftcSs |
"1™
l a|
Paddles are a tradition throughout the
Greek system. Activities Day allowed the
sisters of Alpha Delta Pi to display pride
| in their house. Photo by Michelle
| Conway.
Sorority Rush 2
J
• !• I
Puxfowfij Ftwi&eA
s dusk swept over the quiet
Tempe neighborhood, the battle-
ground was prepared. Broken
pallets stood as barricades, while
guns were dispersed, as were, of
course, the necessary ammuni-
tion-paint pellets.
Rushees and actives of the Al-
pha Tau Omega fraternity await-
ed orders for the wargames Rush
activity while chomping on Ba-
zooka gum. It was obvious Fra-
ternity Rush had begun for ASU
and Tempe had better run for
cover.
Rushee senior journalism ma-
jor Marc Wright, a participant in
wargames, said,"It was great to
be on the end of a gun. I felt like
a storm trooper from Star Wars
with a semi-automatic weapon."
Rush, however, was not all fun
and games. According to Rush
Chairman Marty Harper, Rush
was planned a month before the
spring semester ended.
Harper said that it was impor-
Layout by Shannon Morrison
tant to plan early because Rush
"is the life of the house getting
new members in."
While the Alpha Tau Omega
men were dousing one another in
paint, the Phi Kappa Psi's were
shooting clay pigeons.
Phi Kappa Psi Co-Rush Chair-
man Tom Anderson, explained
why his house chose skeetshoot-
ing as a Rush activity, "It seems
like all the Rush activities are
the same. We had a Rush meet-
ing and someone said 'shooting'.
We made it a joke like shoot the
pledges."
Freshman Matt Arnold a Phi
Kappa Psi rushee said, "I think
it's (Rush) a great way to meet
people."
According to both Harper and
Phi Kappa Psi Rush Chairman
Ken Narramore, funding for
Rush came out of each fraterni-
ty's dues.
Fraternities did not mind
spending big bucks on Rush,
since it was "the lifeblood of the
fraternity." "If you can't get new
members, you go down the
tubes," Anderson said.
Delta Chi Fraternity spent
$120 per hour to rent Oceanside
Ice Arena in Tempe for their Bi-
annual Broomball Rush event.
"It's really a good event to de-
velop interpersonal activity,"
said Rush Chairman Sean Stans-
bury. "We're a smaller house.
The thing we stress most is
brotherhood."
Scott Davis, a freshman who
was rushing with Delta Chi,
thought smaller was definitely
better.
"When I first came in I wanted
to be in one of the big houses, but
I met up with these guys and I
felt really comfortable," Davis
said. "This is where I want to
be."
Conferring about prospective members
are Alpha Tau Omega's Marty Harper,
Jim Torrence, Ken Moorhead, Raymond
Briggs and Derek Cabaniss. To help fa-
miliarize rushees, each house set up a
booth in the university activity center
for Rush orientation.
Firing at clay pigeons, Scott Mac Vicar,
a Phi Kappa Psi member, proves his abil-
ity at skeetshooting. Fraternities enticed
rushees by offering unusual and exciting
Rush activities. Photo by T.J. Sokol.
*
6 Fraternity Rush
CHI OMEGA. Front Row: Lesley Davidson, Stefanie Weinstein, Jennifer Hightower, Mindy Nelson, Jennifer
Pool, Amy Flora, Karla Kellogg, Michelle McFarlane, Mindy Vail, Jeanine Leyden, Lori Henish, Tara
Verrgamlni, Shelley Traw, Joey Pruitt, Michele Kokos, Amberlyn McQuary, Kristen Mandelaris, Stephanie
Elliott. Second Row: Mary Moran, Michelle Marissa Sheets, Shannon Daugherty, Margaret Herriman, Cathy
Mittlehauser, Chrissie Gregory, Holly Ervin, Katie Jarcik, Mona Maupin, Kourtney Troyer, Marcia Pahl,
Christine Smith, Tina Gresham, Jill Moench, Beth Goyette, Kim Stakis, Michelle Neilson, Heidi Schultz, Layla
Sayegh, Kristen Hartley, Amy Grozoen, Kim Murray, Susan Dailey, Christy Langford, Jennifer Nuber. Third
Row: Jenny Weaver, Amy Purvis, Wendy Utiles, Kathy Lovstrom, Wendi Hauptli, Alena Carsey, Grace Ann
Mulhollan, Kathleen Dault, Kaylee Johnson, Shannon Perkins, Mary Marini, Amy Morose, Marissa Taylor,
Michelle Rice, Lori Kulvinsras, Pamela Romanoff, Kim Fairweather, Andi St.John, Jennifer Jeuser, Linda
Padgett, Deanna Sehofleld, Kim Pizzo, Kelly Stropko, Angela Carazo, Wendy Strode. Fourth flow; Lisa Toben,
Laura Larwin, Stephanie Young, Megan McGovern, Veeja Elan, Gina Bohlen, Milissa Chapp, Kelly Carroll,
Cathy Yehle, Nika Coldiron, Stormy Weppler, Julie Denike, Amy Wikoff, Monica Marhoefer, Michelle Mahler,
Lisa Hewitt, Debra Mantgamory, Kelly Troyer, Helana Sayegh, Tricia Gregory, Ainie Eggert. Photo by Tom
Hershey
SIGMA NU. Front Row: Danny Becker, Richard Brakke, Jeffrey Higgins, Steven Fish, John Kunich, T.
Cooper, Chris Walker, Jason Caele, Steve Economos, Eddy Moore, Daniel Levy, Brad Campbell. Second Ro
Christopher Curtis, Christian Houssiere, Christian Reed, Michael Props, Daniel Puccini, Christopher Much
Brad Goff, John Cracraft, Wayne Cochran, Jay Skenderian, Barry Becker, Mark Detmer, Ward Blanc
Derrick Hall. Third Row: Eric Schever, Troy McKay, Matt Lewis, Nick Foxhoven, Craig Story, Steve Herki
Jason LaVoie, Rick White, Peter Methot, Bob Hahn, Jeff Alba, Michael Schaffner, Michael Howell, Som
Travland, Michael Hendrix. Photo by Michelle Conway
mijkiimi
his is great! Everyone's here
and we're ready to win!" said
sophomore fashion merchandis-
ing major and Alpha Delta Pi
member Heather Stobo.
Sigma Nu Relays was the cul-
mination of an entire week of
philanthropy benefitting Cystic
Fibrosis.
"It's a big alumni thing, like a
Sigma Nu homecoming," said ju-
nior business finance major Ken
Gatt. "It's our highlight of the
year."
This came in the form of water
races, where 12 sororities, wear-
ing different fluorescent colors
representing their team, compet-
ed in such races as innertube and
swimming relays. As the judges
watched from atop a wooden
platform, eating pizza and sur-
veying the games from an aerial
view, the sororities sang songs
and chanted, swaying the judges
as well as adding to the spirited
atmosphere. However, according
to Gatt, the judges didn't mind
the effort.
"Judges are usually graduat-
ing seniors. They're treated with
the utmost respect.. .this is the
ultimate weekend of their college
careers," he said.
Sigma Nu relays was not just
an isolated event, however. It
was the end of an entire week of
philanthropy.
"Sigma Nu relays have been
going on since 1978. The original
purpose was as a philanthropic.
It started out just as a basic
canned food drive and a party. It
was just a one-day event. Now
it's turned into a weeklong spirit-
ed tradition," said junior broad-
casting major Derrick Hall.
Sororities became involved on
the second night, which was
Spirit Night. The various teams
and houses made banners, lip-
synched, and sang songs to show
their enthusiasm for the
competition.
"It's obvious by Spirit Night
who has the most spirit," said
Gatt.
Sigma Nu also held Flakey's
Night, when the fraternity and
sorority members took over Fla-
key Jake's, and met Mandy, the
CF poster child. A bachelor auc-
tion featuring Sigma Nus raised
$3,400 in one night, with 20 fra-
ternity members "renting" from
$150-$350.
The last day of the philanthro-
py was taken up by the actual
relays. According to Gatt, al-
though the Sigma Nu Relays was
a big competition between the so-
rorities, participating on teams
made up of combined houses
helped sorority camaraderie.
The winning house was Kappa
Kappa Gamma, and the winning
team was comprised of Kappa
Kappa Gamma, Sigma Kappa,
and Alpha Gamma Delta. All of
the winners took home trophies,
while the runners-up congratu-
lated their teammates and made
plans for next year.
Squashed around the Sigma Nu pool are
house members and mixed sorority
teams. Twelve sororities participated in
the closing day water races.
Displaying the Sigma Nu spirit are se-
nior judges. Sororities designed signs and
sang chants to show their spirit and en-
thusiasm. Photo by Jill Harnisch
Sigma Nu Relays 25
i
Layout by Shannon Morrison
Launching off at the start of the
Stretcher Relay are Alpha Phi members
Terri Wetzel and Tara Holland while
Lambda Chi Alpha coach Matt Osborn
cheers them on. Using watermelons,
teams also competed at discus throw and
volleyball.
SIGMA SIGMA SIGMA. Front Row: Nicole Trotta, Jennifer Nahay, Kelli Vonheeder, Caroline Maul, Becky
Richardson, Nikki Hagert, Sharon Cow, Cyndee Stolt, Laura Kreutzer. Second Row: Lisa Hoynes, Susie
Westerfield, Alison McGawan, Holly Friedman, Alicia Lukowski, Cheryl Gross, Audra Anderson, Mindy Lutz,
Diane Sosinski, Tammy Spina, Ann Marie Pasko. Third Row: Liz Rueda, Mindy Shwayder, Lara McGowan,
Lynn Hagert, Lisa Swails, Jennifer Shay, Kristin Kuehn, Stacey Burgess, Paula Drake, Andrea Summerfield,
Kathleen Manuele. Fourth Row: Jini Wardell, Lisa Tornquist, Erin Clarke, Laura Pilsbury, Jenny Churchill,
Taime Bengoilea, Amelia Gross, Valerie Veech, Teresa Fontana. Photo by Kim Bodin
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA. Front Row: Wes Stroh, Keith Faris, Antenor Adam, Michael Harris, Kino, Tt
Fitzsimons. Second Row: Tim Hughes, John Quamm, Henri Cohen, Andy Fleck, Mark Cunningham, Vic
Shackolopolis, Seymour Solomon. Third Row: Jay Swanson, Scott Harris, Chris Brennan, Brent Harris, D,
Banks, Greg Williams, Scott Belfer, Ken Kasterko. Photo by Jill Harnisch
"60 Watermelon Bust
^^ ^CowUm WiM^alM^^\//ai^^ka^^F/lM
verything was calm at the be-
ginning, and the girls were sing-
ing songs and getting into the
house spirit. By the time the sec-
ond or third event rolled around,
the watermelon started to fly!
"You get watermelon stuck in
your ear, and your eyelashes are
sticking together!" said junior ac-
counting major and Lambda Chi
Alpha Treasurer Matt Osborn.
Does this sound familiar? If
you participated in the Lambda
Chi Alpha Watermelon Bust, this
was the choice way to be enter-
tained as well as benefit Multiple
Sclerosis.
Every Lambda Chi Alpha
member across the nation partic-
ipated in a watermelon-related
fundraiser for MS. While other
chapters held pageants and wa-
termelon feasts, ASU's chapter
held an Olympics-style competi-
tion featuring eight sororities.
The events included an obstacle
I course, discuss throwing and
p bowling.
But what exactly makes a wa-
termelon perfect for bowling?
"Uniformity. It has to be
round-across, not stemwise. If
it's not round, it rolls crooked.
Roundness is crucial," said soph-
omore military construction ma-
jor Chip Howell.
According to Osborn, approxi-
mately 350 watermelons were
used, with no leftovers. But since
Lambda Chi Alpha did this every
year, how did they keep it
interesting?
"This year we had a seed-spit-
ting contest with the sororities.
They'd take their best seed spit-
ter and see which sorority could
spit its seed the farthest," Howell
said.
All of the fun and games was
preceded by extensive planning
and searching for sponsors. Car-
dinals Pizza provided food for the
"athletes", and other businesses
contributed coupons and prizes
to reward the sororities for their
participation. However, many of
the women were rewarded sim-
ply by the fun.
"It doesn't matter what you
do, you have fun. This has to be
the funnest philanthropy on
campus," said sophomore liberal
arts major and Pi Beta Phi mem-
ber Allison Wadsworth. »
The house winner of the Wa-
termelon Bust was Alpha Gamma
Delta, and the team winner was
comprised of Alpha Gamma Del-
ta and Sigma Sigma Sigma. Over-
all, $2,000 was raised for MS
through sponsorships and each
sorority's entrance fee.
Almost immediately after the
Bust was over, the Lambda Chi
Alphas began planning for next
year.
"It's a very detailed effort...
there's so much work that went
into this one that we want to
make next year's so much bet-
ter," said Osborn.
r-i
Trying to strike out, Delta Gamma
pledge Andrea Wiles puts all her
strength into the Watermelon Bowling
contest. Delta Gamma's were one of the
many houses that participated in this
fundraiser to raise money for Multiple
Sclerosis.
Hosing off after coaching at the Water-
melon Bust, are Lambda Chi Alpha mem-
bers, Greg Williams and Henri Cohen.
Lambda Chi Alpha sponsored this event,
and managed to raise $2000 for multiple
sclerosis. Photo by Kim Bodin
NotBkdUr
SAIL AWAY"
(Mm New, UteGm RaiAbMomi oh, Land & U Wrifoo
ho ever said chivilary was dead?
That wasn't the case during the
week of Anchor Splash as frater-
nities went all out in an attempt
to obtain the prestigous first
place trophy given out annually
by the Delta Gamma sorority.
Anchor Splash was the nation-
al philanthropic event for Delta
Gamma. All proceeds earned
from the event went to Sight
Conservation-Aid to the Blind.
From serenades outside of
their window to breakfast in bed,
the sisters of Delta Gamma were
treated like royalty by the com-
peting fraternities. Each paid an
entrance fee of $75 for the entire
week of festivities.
The week started with a vol-
leyball tournament, followed by
serenades on Tuesday, and letter
day on Wednesday. Thursday
marked the Mr. Anchorman com-
petition culminated with the
most favored part of the entire
week, the water events. Each
ottey
fraternity participated in swim-
ming races as well as the syn-
chronized swim. Banner presen-
tation and spirit points were also
accumulated throughout the
week.
The Dee Gees provided coach-
es for each house, said junior
Delta Gamma Erika Soaves. She
coached the Delta Chi fraternity.
Soaves said that the turnout and
participation this year were
outstanding.
"This year was incredible,"
Soaves said. "We had excitement
and involvement all week long."
One of the more popular
events was the Mr. Anchorman
competition held at the Sun Devil
House so that alcohol could be
served to those old enough. There
was a cover charge and the Dee
Gees' got a percentage of what
was sold, said Soaves. Bob Lock-
rem of Phi Sigma Kappa won the
contest.
For the swimming event, then
were nine judges made up of Del-
ta Gamma seniors. The day start-
ed off with the swimming compe-
titions including free style relay,
medly relay, wet sweatshirt and
the crazy dive competition.
"There is a little competition
here, but no bad feelings," junior
Phi Sigma Kappa, Greg Kohout
said.
Phi Sigma Kappa took first
place in the overall competition
for big houses as well as the spir-
it award. They were followed by
the Sigma Nu's in second and the
ATO's in third. Phi Si took the
first place award for small
houses followed by Delta Chi in
second, and Sigma Pi in third.
The Theta Chi's took first place
in spirit for small houses.
"It is really such a fun thing to
do," Kohout said. "Someone else
who isn't here is going to
benefit."
Members of the Sigma Nu synchronized
swim team perform to Bon Jovi's "Lay
Your Hands On Me," one of the many
rock songs used during their routine.
Teams spent the most time choreograph-
ing and practicing for the synchronized
swim competition.
Taking a break during the week long
Anchor Splash competition, Delta Sigma
Phi member Bob Brown, sits on their
homemade boat. All teams' banners
were displayed around the pool. Photo
by Jill Harnisch
^^^^^™
.
(62 Anchor Splash
Viewing the festivities from the high
dive are Phi Delta Theta members Josh
Appel, Matt McDaniel, and Brian Myers
along with Theta Delta Chi member Ed
Dunbar . Besides the races, points were
also awarded to teams for banner pre-
sentation and spirit.
)ELTA GAMMA. Front Row: Erika Soares, Jill Fraker, Kellie South, Nikki Redford, Gretchen Gemar, Tricia
luntley. Second Row: Dory Collins, Michelle Lewin, Brooke Thomas, Julie Thinger, Amy Gomez, Carrie
iichards, Christy Bundy, Merideth May. Third Row: Kersten Webb, Sheri Hauke, Nicole Knight, Janelle
irannen, Erin Strand, Brooke Porter, Linda Shelton, Jennifer Gnap. Photo by Shannon Morrison
THETA CHI. Front Row: Brett Ramsey, Ben Brock, Mark Doring, Rich Ashby, Mike Warden, Brian Roberts.
Second Row: Lee White, Oscar Lizardi, Scott Harnisch, Mark Stull, Mike Nally, Scott Bounardi, Keith
McDonough, Steve White, Pat Mullen. Third Row: Vince Moscher, Mike Hoehn, Jon Greenblatt, Jason
Tortoricci, Eric Wordel, Josh Gardner, John Dorsey, Howard Hirsch, Jason Wienmeister, Marland Franco.
Photo by Tom Hershey
Anchor Splash 26
1
\
Diving to save a play for Kappa Alpha
Theta is team member Carrie Wright
Sororities paid to enter each team in the
volleyball tournament sponsored by Del-
ta Sigma Phi.
Spiking for the kill, while Sigma Alpha
Epsilon member Jason Abt blocks, is
Matt Mills, a Theta Delta Chi. Both fra-
ternities and sororities competed "under
the lights" in the night volleyball games.
Photo by David Haneke
Layout by Shannon Morrison
■■■&
Wrw
iff mm
264 Under The Lights
Fufotxltoi And Sowtfai Face, Off "U«dm Tk Llak
>
or the Delta Sigma Phi frater-
nity, volleyball was more than
just a game. During the second
annual "Under the Lights" tour-
nament held in their backyard on
Oct. 6 and 7 they attempted to
raise money for the March of
Dimes.
The two night tournament
drew participation from nine so-
rorities and 12 fraternities, ac-
cording to Mark Stewart, chair of
the event. Each sorority team
paid $60 entrance fee, while the
two-man fraternity teams paid
$40. Each team received a T-shirt
for participating as well as vari-
ous other goodies including cou-
pons for nearby businessess.
Other incentives included
grand prizes of two free airline
tickets to San Diego, free dinners
at Minders Binders, pizza cou-
pons and give aways from Godfa-
ther's, shorts and T-shirts from
Wet Set and trophies.
"We had some really good
prizes," Stewart said. "It brought
in some good players."
The tournament kicked off
with sorority night on Friday.
The winner of that competition
was a four member team from
the Tri-Delts.
"The biggest success was the
sorority night," said Stewart.
"They are very competitive in
philanthropic events. It went
really really well. They are big
into intramural volleyball, so
they got to show off their stuff."
Co-chair Lee Barber was
pleased with the turn out. He es-
timated that between 200-300
people attended the event.
Saturday night was devoted to
the two-man tournament. The
winners were a team from Theta
Delta Chi and Sigma Chi.
The March of Dimes, the na-
tional philothropy of the Delta
Sigma Phi fraternity. Stuart esti-
mated that $250 was given to the
March of Dimes. He said that
even with sponsorships from
Topps Liquors, Miller Light, B.G.
Einsteins, Pepsi and Minder
Binders, along with Godfather's,
the tournament went over
budget.
He said that they made ap-
proximately $1,500 on entry fees
and an additional $1,000 from
sponsorships and donations for a
total of $2,500. However, the fra-
ternity supplied three bands in-
cluding the local band Strange-
love on Sat. night running the
fraternity "way over budget."
But with the exception of mon-
etary problems, both Stuart and
Barber felt that the tournament
was a success.
"I thought it was a total suc-
cess," said Stuart. "Our main
thing was to do something that
was positive and than all the
Greeks could get involved in and
have fun."
LTA SIGMA PHI. Front Row: Kevin Kelly, Jim Schuler, Lee Barber, Jay Henderson, Kirk Monroe, Johnnie
dwell, Thorn Ryan, Mike Frost, Nyle Marmion. Second Row: Ben Herrera, Doug Lukasik, Robert Shaw, Jeff
er, John Gurley, Shane Niimi, Tyree Cline, Peter Sarnataro, Matt Harrington, Mark Daggett, Kirk Zapp,
1 1rk Kinsey, John Weir. Third Row: Matt Quinn, Shaun Pluramer, Ryan Eckes, Mark Pazdur, Bill Yanowski,
Ice McCurdy, Tyler Rhoades, Dave Church, Jeff Davis, Scott Chesebro, Schuyler Vandenbelgh. Fourth Row:
..n Pappas, Dave Gionfriddo, Dan Haver, Paul Williams, Craig Schuler, Bill Anderson, Shane Ruegamer.
. 'th Row: Eric Burns, Joe Donalbain, Rob Anderson, Mike Pappas, Mark Miller, Ejnar Christensen. Photo by
'tt Troyanos
ALPHA CHI OMEGA. Front Row: Kriss Wise, Dawn-Marie Dunbar, Darcie Redburn, Heather Kennedy,
Shelley Scoggins, Jillian McManus, Carrie Curtiss, Michelle Ross, Amy Bloomberg, Cathie Simpson. Second
Row: Angie Goodman, Holly Alexander, Christina Stoico, Heidi Kenht, Jodi Harmer, Gretchen Manske,
Michele Strigo, Trade Ricketts, Stephanie Higgins, Heather Lambert, Jennifer Clements, Miriam Leffert.
Third RowSobin Levin, Michele VanSlyke, Joanna Parsons, Amy Henderson, Amy Murphy, Tracy Stearns,
Laurie Lewellyn, Susan Lovisek, Kelly Under the Lights Fourth Row: Lyn Bowen, Heidi Hoelscher, Stacy
Marreel, Debbie Patrick, Heather Oglesby, Jennifer Fer, Blythe Koslowski, Suzanne Livingston, Alison
Friedman, Michelle Harbke, Amy Kapernick, Leslie Speedie, Jacqui Schesnol, Tracy Rosenberg. Fifth
Jtoir.Gayelyn Difu, Debbie Manasse, Barbara Ragland, Jenny Clarke, Monique Bue, Trisha Carlson, Amy
Vandervelden, Julie Carlson, Samantha Rigsby, Tori Matthew, Janae Lautenschlager, Jen Stockmeyer,
Heather Gillen, Lynne Hallford, Penny Cigoy, Jennifer Haddad.S/xrA RowAmy Anzeuno, Angie Cochran,
Michelle Kilcreasi, Mary Beall, Heather MacDonald, Rachel Saunders, Kara Dock, Lisa Palmer, Kim Mat-
thews, Patricia Shedd, Kim Schwenke, Tanya Rosenbluth, Jennie Calloway, Ronda Surina, Stacie Jewell.
Photo by T.J. Sokol
Under the Lights
26™
jeglbag
bout a dozen ASU sororities, fra-
ternities, and organizations com-
peted in the fourth annual Cas-
trol Red Race on Oct. 12 to raise
money for the Tempe-based Val-
ley of the Sun United Way.
For the fourth consecutive
year, Castrol sponsored the bed
race and donated a 1989 Oldsmo-
bile Cutlass Calais, which was
raffled off.
United Way expected to raise
more than $4,000 from the race,
all of which would go to United
Way interest groups such as
abuse victims and the homeless.
Dave Gourley, ASU associate
marketing professor and co-
chairman of the United Way
fund drive for ASU, said al-
though he stepped down from the
position on the board of directors
at the Valley of the Sun United
Way, he wanted to remain active
at ASU.
"I wanted to get involved with
ASU activities and help them
raise some money for a good
cause at United Way," he said.
Approximately five people per
team competed in the double-
elimination, 40-yard drag race in
a hospital bed.
The winners in the men's divi-
sion were the PIKE 5 team, with
the PIKE 4 team finishing a close
second.
"This is a few points towards
our philanthropic event," said
Pat Rajesky, fraternity president
of philanthropy. "We didn't real-
ly have a loser here today."
The ASU cheerleaders won the
women's final against the Ameri-
can Marketing Association but
gave their trophy to the runners-
up because they said they just
attended to support and not to
compete.
The female cheerleaders also
won an exhibition race against
the male cheerleaders.
"We're studs," said cheerlead-
ers Lori Logan, a business major,
Greek ASASU members Mike Pres-
sendo, Andrea Willingham, and Andre
McGuire kick back in their bed after
losing the 1989 Castrol Bed Race compe-
tetion. All the teams had creative
themes, ASASU's was "Go Mad." Photo
by Scott Troyanos
and Kristin Howell, a journalism
major.
The winners of the double-
elimination mixed race was the
combination of Sigma Chi frater-
nity and Pi Beta Phi sorority.
The winner of the best deco-
rated bed and costumes was the
team of Alpha Chi Omega soror-
ity and Kappa Sigma fraternity.
The bed resembled the S.S. Min-
now, and the costumes were that
of the crew on "Gilligan's
Island".
Jeff Wolf, marketing director
of Firebird International Race-
way, one of the sponsors of the
event, said the people at Firebird
were excited to have teamed up
with ASU students and faculty.
"The best thing about our bed
race is at the height of the event
there were a couple 100 people
all having fun and raising money
for United Way," he said.
J&U*- 1 /***r*a
I
66 Castrol Bed Race
Layout by Dani Midtun
Competing in the final run off of the
bed races are "Pike 4" team members
Steve Yost, Mike Shea, Keith Elllenbo-
gen, Clint Marks, and Gary Fox. Many
1 fraternities and sororities competed in
| the fourth annual Castrol Bed Races to
a benefit the Valley of the Sun United
I Way.
F LAPPA ALPHA Front Row: Ed Lightner, Jon George, Lee Lieberman, Mike Kinney, Kenny Blakeman, Pat
N phy, Dave Campbell, Rick Meyer, Keith Ellenbogen, Ron Steffy. Second Row: Pat Campbell, Jon Katz,
li k Arshinkoff, Darrin Bloch, Matt Westmore, Phil Helmstetter, Charley Parnell, Par Rajsky, Dave Berkson,
3 t Kehm, Mike Shea, John Harmon, Kevin Brennan, Ed Archuletta, Gary Fox, John Dale, Brent Berry,
S e Yost. Third Row: Greg Raesler, Jon Paul Anderson, Jamey Fox, Mike Heffernan, John Difihipo, Billy
G iam, Chris Borst, Mike McCabe, Todd Masterman, Dave Harris, Greg Zyrini, Mark Diana, Jeff Jacobson,
i t Adams, Clint Marks. Photo by Shannon Morrison
SIGMA CHI. Front Row: Steve Loucks, Tom Armstrong, Bill Phillips, Ian Roe, John McDaniel, Kelly Mero,
Ryan Harris, Ray Naturro, Steve Smith, Kris Robinson, Kent Lassen, Laddie Fromelius. Second Row: Michael
Jacobson, Christopher Tunney, Matt Olson, Paul Zemanek, Scott Streitfeld, Chris Hanson, Allan Gumbinger,
Brent Eastburg, Dave Stanton, Tim Johnson. Third Row: Chris Muxlow, Steve Brounlee, Matt Gehring, Brett
Boyd, Jonathan Cept, Sean Hagerty, Dean Mix, Joseph Bosse, Jeff Uhles, Mike Draklich, Bodie Bohdan. Photo
by Scott Troyanos
Castrol Bed Race 26
1
~k /Vigfc
igma Alpha Mu fraternity
dribbled their fingers to the bone
in their bi-annual philanthropic
event, "Bounce for Beats," which
raised money for the Phoenix
chapter of the American Heart
Association. The fun started out-
side the Memorial Union at 9
a.m. Thursday, Oct. 12, and last-
ed until 2 p.m. Friday, Oct. 13 (29
hours).
Junior history major Jason
Goldman was in charge of orga-
nizing the fundraiser, and sopho-
more business major Paul
Strauss was his right-hand man.
"This is the first year I've run
it," Goldman said. "It was fun to
plan."
Planning, however, took hard
work, since the previous person
in charge was not around to give
advice on how to run the event.
Goldman also encountered
problems obtaining off-campus
sponsors, due to the misuse of
charity funds from Greek Sing
1989.
"We were trying to get corpo-
rate sponsors. We had real prob-
lems trying to convince them
that it was a real event and that
the money was going to the
American Heart Association,"
Goldman said.
"A lot of companies were hesi-
tant to help because of the repu-
tation fraternities have through-
out the country. We had the AHA
willing to call people (to verify
fund use)," Strauss said.
Although the fraternity did
not raise the $3,000 they had
hoped for (the approximate
amount raised was $1,600), Gold-
man and Strauss were optimistic.
We're hoping to raise more in
the spring," Goldman said.
Besides pledging students on
the malls for pocket change, the
fraternity had a Pop-a-shot set
up outside of the M.U., which
was donated by Larry Schnieder
and Larry Sawyer of Intermark
Entertainment.
Strauss believed that the Pop-
a-shot helped attract people to
their location.
"We were easy to see that
way," he said. "Visability was
half of it."
In addition, Alvin Adams, the
former Phoenix Suns player, and
the Suns gorilla made
appearances.
Despite sore muscles, if given
the chance, Goldman and Strauss
would do it over again.
"It was great because we were
all tired. We were ready to die
when it was over. I couldn't lift
my arms above my head for four
days," Goldman said. "It was
worth it to be able to raise money
and have fun."
"We were out there the whole
time," Strauss said. We'd be very
willing to do it again."
.
Shooting baskets between classes, ju-
nior Mike Hoffman helps raise money for
the American Heart Association. Sigma
Alpha Mu members sponsered the
"Bounce For Beats," a bi-annual event,
that went on for two days. Photo by
Michael J. Scannell
68 Bounce For Beats
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JMA ALPHA MU. Front Row: Michael Frost, Eric Weinstein, Jonathan Abrams, Adam Kristal, Michael ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA. Front Row: Lynda Tolbert, Maria Mobley, Michelle Henry, Nubia Levon, Toinette
wnstien, Jeffrey Broman. Second Row: Keith Levenson, Jason Goldman, Brian Shapiro, David Levy, Scott Holmes, Leila Reynolds, Cynthia Brown. Second Row: Goldye Hart, Lorene Harris, Nichele Lomack, Joan
igson, Steven LaBell. Third Row: Eric Rosen, Paul Strauss, David Silver, Brian Kallish. Photo by Shannon McHenry, Natalie Goode, Dana Jones, Malissia Lennox, Sondra Valentine, Rhonda Carr. Photo by Tom
rrison Hershey
Bounce For Beats 26
•
Layout by Shannon Morrison
After being solicited by Kappa Alpha
Thetas, donor technician Tim Morley
points out the needle position to sopho-
more Yolanda Hernandez. ASU Greeks
raised 531 pints of blood during the week
long competition.
Soliciting donators on Tyler Mall are
Kappa Alpha Theta members. All Greek
houses solicited donations during sched-
uled shifts at United Way trailors
around campus. Photo by David Haneke
«
70 Blood Drive
BXJWJEHI
f ofA Gneeh
he ASU/U of A Annual Blood
Drive Greek Challenge from Oct.
19-26 raised 1,452 pints of blood
for United Blood Services.
Denise Ralston of United Blood
Services, said the ASU Greeks
raised 531 pints of blood, losing
to U of A Greeks, who raised 921
pints.
Junior Interfraternity Council
Philanthropic Chair Greg Ko-
hout, contributed the loss to the
way the credit for the pints of
blood were distributed.
"The U of A blood drive is or-
ganized by the Greeks, but at
ASU there are other clubs who
also help with organization and
promotion of the blood drive,"he
said.
The event opened with a rib-
bon-cutting ceremony in front of
the Phi Sigma Kappa house on
New Row.
Leslie Hewlett, Philanthropic
Chair for Panhellenic and Kappa
Alpha Theta member, and Ko-
hout cut the ribbon.
A Gelato's Day was included in
the kickoff day, Hewlett said.
During this day sorority and fra-
ternity members would buy a Ge-
lato's product, giving their orga-
nization philanthropic points.
Gelato's, in turn, would donate
$150 to the Center Against Sexu-
al Assault .
"This allowed two needs to be
served with one theme," Hewlett
said. "Also the success was over-
whelming. Gelato's is anxious to
do it again, so it's opened doors
for more fundraisers."
Since it was so soon after the
San Francisco earthquake, they
decided all the blood should be
dedicated toward San Francisco,
Hewlett said.
Kohout agreed although the
blood usually goes to Arizona
hospitals, the blood donated dur-
ing the drive went to the San
Francisco victims.
All the sororities, said Hew-
lett, had a one half hour time slot
on Monday, Oct. 23. They had to
list 10 people during the time to
donate, while others could do-
nate anytime, on campus or on
New Row.
Kappa Alpha Theta had 25 do-
nations from their house of 139,
Hewlett said.
"People basically do care and
want to help," said the president
of Tau Kappa Epsilon, Kevin
Scott, whose fraternity helped
with publicity on the malls. "Dif-
ferent fraternities manned each
corner of campus and tried to get
the word out about the drive."
"There were not enough beds
for the turnout."Hewlett said.
"The beds remained full the
whole time. If we'd had more
beds, we probably would have re-
ceived more donations."
U>PA ALPHA THETA. Front Row: Sydney Asmus, Kelly Niemann, Krista Nescomb, Stacey Wopnford,
iary Fischer, Shanna Ebers, Caron Word, Tena Nielsen, Stephanie D'Neil. Second Row: Jennifer Hinley,
nee Snadler, Leslie Hewlett, Jennifer Northcutt, Katy Daly, Theresa Kerwin, Melodie Heid, Charlene
uhn, Annette Manterola, Carrie Wright, Maren Lee. Third Row: Ann-Marie Herro, Kimberly Kissel, Dina
i ' wthon, Tammy Wopnford, Loryn Greenberg, Susan Piatt, Tifini Roberts, Brandie Parker, Lisa Leathers, Jill
U, Kelly Alexis. Fourth Row: Sara Myers, Jen Grassan, Julie Darland, Tracey Rotinson, Melanie Wheeler,
:helle Anderson, Jenny Threet, Shawn Whalen, Nicole Uzel, Andrea DeBolt, Karen Jacobs. Fifth Row:
ehelle Teeters, Jenni Bowers, Lisa McLaughlin, Kristi Henley, Melissa McNutt, Sheila Runke, Sharon
illips, Melissa Nold, Alison Riches, Stacey Johnes, Carmen Krueger. Photo by Kim Bodin
TAU KAPPA EPSILON. Front Row: David Donahue, Rob Hisey, Todd Vogensen, Ronald Cadle, Gregory Cole,
Dave Ellis, Bryan Crum, Christopher Ritchie, Keith Connolly. Second Row: William Farborik, Kevin Noreus,
Christopher Holder, Joe Massanova, Kevin Scott, Matthew Bianchi, Rob Sievert, Roland Kamahele, John
Hutchens, Brian Bonner, Kevin Felix. Third Row: Charles Warren, Kevin Kelly, Edward Moomjian, Martin
Mallare, Dan Dale, Louis Tortora, John Guilonard, Tony Dolata, James Tee, James Richards, Timothy Tucker.
Photo by Dave Haneke
Blood Drive 2
1
Layout by Dani Midtun
Excited about making a sale are Phi
Sigma Epsilon members Peter Gibson,
Daren Frerking and Matt Zimmerman.
The week before Halloween the fraterni-
ty men took turns selling pumpkins in
front of the Memorial Union.
PI BETA PHI. Front Row: Amy Orr, Anglea Herbold, Jul.ie Krahenbuhl, Jolene Brunacini, Shannon Tocum,
Karrie Moore, Liz Drahold, Marianne Cielak, Callie Peet, Jennifer Rishel, Jill Fraley, Michelle Long, Ashley
Cotten. Second Row: Chris Kieselbach, Kristin Lueneberg, Lee Lyon, Ashley Haus, Pamela Bacci, Laura Booth,
Canielle Brandenburg, Heather Vossler, Allison Wadsworth, Kelly Brown, Jodi Suttor, Ashley Olson, Shannon
Roberts, Andrea Hayden, Caroline Semmens, Lacy Mayers. Third Row: Nancy Kimmel, Amkanda Simonis, J.J.
Goldthwaite, Ellyn Donovan, Susan Estay, Felicia Robbins, Kegan Bull, Julie Gambs, Elizabeth Slaven, Kim
Looney, Keira Gudnason, Ana Vescovo, Amy Roan, Juli Anderson, Sibley Inman, Laura Davis, Bethany
Bassler, Jennifer Martin. Fourth flonvCoyanne Miller, Gretchen Kriegen, Melissa Fry, April White, Maryanne
McClusky, Stephanie Gribben, Stefanie Morrow, Kriste Korinek, Cecily Armstrong, Michelle Schmitt, Debbie
Zeschke, Amy Anspach, Sara Rowder, Nancy Arrowsmith, kerry Miles, Nina Cullen, Chrissy Cryan, Lori
Cross, Allison Gatto, Ecole Nauber, Lisa Koster. Fifth Row: Jeanie Sager, Margaret Wahlin, Cindy Larson,
Jennifer Lukenbill, Kim Murphy, Tanya Sivak, Stacy Baker, Wendy Davis, Stephanie Haack, Vicki Feiner,
Cathy Dunavant, Denise Sarver, Jennifer Chism, Yvette Reed, Dani Behler, Jane Harris, Jenna Bennett. Sixth
Row: Marcie Evans, Jennifer Frederick, Mimi Ferdman, Jill Carpenter, Jennifer Jordan, Jenni Bond, Alison
Poad, Mamie McGee, Jodi Lewin, Dionne Fedderson, Tracy Orrick, Courtney Sheafe, Melissa Bingmann,
Carey Morgan. Photo by Kim Bodin
PHI SIGMA KAPPA. Front Row: Darren Frerking, Derek Owen, Brian Jacobson, Dinsmore Glenn, Gr
Kohout, Brian Siegel, Nicholas Vafeas, Peter Gibson, Brian Wagner. Second Row: John Jacobson, Dennis Jur
Craig Camberg, Tod Owens, Mark Reid, Bear June, Ron Fain, Randell Carter, Phil Charlton, Carlos Alcaz:
Third Row: Kent Hanson, Toby Ruch, Todd Creaso, Scott Anderson, Brent Smytha, Dan Bittle, Danimal, Bri
King, Jason Chester, Mike Gordon. Fourth Row: Richard Surrency, T.J. Fure, Sean O'Neill, Brad Dioda
Derek Freedman, Steve Trumfio, Todd Meyer, Nikolas Hazel, D.J. Pratt. Photo by Tom Hershey
u m
uring the week of Oct. 23-26 the
Great Pumpkin and all of his
friends took over Cady Mall.
The event was the Phi Sigma
Kappa and Pi Beta Phi Pumpkin
Sale to benefit the Child Crisis
Center. Regular sized pumpkins
all the way down to small, mini-
sized pumpkins were sold within
the price range of $.75 to $4 de-
pending on the size, according to
philanthropic chairman for Phi
Sigma Kappa, Craig Byler.
"We almost broke even on the
first day, and the rest of the
money was profit," Byler said.
"The small ones sold really well
so after the first day, we had to
go back and buy more of them."
Sara Rowder, philanthropic
chair for Pi Beta Phi, felt that
convenience was a factor.
"People don't like carrying the
big ones, so the small sizes sell,"
she said.
Pi Beta Phi handled most of
the publicity side of the sale with
ads in the State Press and flyers,
Rowder said.
Byler said this was the fourth
year of the sale and everything
proceeded without any major
difficulties.
"We had to be on campus with
the truck before 7 a.m. and we
couldn't leave until after 5 p.m.,"
said pumpkin sale chair for Phi
Sigma Kappa Brian Jacobson, "So
it made for a really long day."
According to both Rowder and
Byler, there were no problems in
finding cooperation.
"We had a lot of participation.
Each person took at least an hour
shift and helped out," Rowder
said.
"Everything went really well,"
Byler said. "If I had been the
only one working on the project,
there would have been
problems."
Byler said Phi Sigma Kappa
creates a separate chairperson
for the sale, which is where Ja-
Picking out the perfect pumpkin at the
Phi Sigma Epsilon and Pi Beta Phi
pumpkin sale is political science major,
Sandra Tsang. The fraternity and soror-
ity members sold pumpkins as one of the
year's philanthropic events to benefit
the Child Crisis Center.
cobson's job comes into play.
"We bought two tons of pump-
kins for around $200 from King's
Onion House," Jacobson said.
"We sold just over 200 regular-
sized pumpkins and about 180
small ones."
Rowder said they were sup-
posed to continue the sale
through Friday, Oct. 27, but they
ran out of pumpkins by
Thursday.
"We put in 260 man hours over
the course of four days," Jacob-
son said. "We profited $500
which went to the Child Crisis
Center. As long as it goes to char-
ity, the Phi Sigma Kappa's are
happy."
Byler agreed that the sale was
successful.
"Overall, it was successful and
we enjoyed ourselves," he said.
Pumpkin Sale 27
»
ig Btofltm
U Kuk TiieJi-o^-Tied'
ighty members of Sigma Alpha
Epsilon celebrated Halloween
with about 70 kids from the Val-
ley Big Brothers Program by
hosting a Halloween party in-
cluding lunch, trick-or-treating
and even a haunted house.
The event, which was held
throughout the day on Oct. 28
was made possible through the
fraternity's funds, according to
John Hagasesth, philanthropic
chairman.
In the morning the fraternity
members painted faces, played
games with the kids, such as bob-
bing for apples, and then invited
the kids to tour the haunted
house the members had
prepared.
After cooking hot dogs for
lunch, the fraternity members
took them trick or treating,
which had been organized with
all the sororities residing in Palo
Verde Main. The kids were es-
corted by the fraternity through-
out Palo Verde Main.
Showing off her elaborate costume is a
trick-or-treater little sister from Valley
Big Brothers. Seventy children came and
trick-or treated at PV Main for a safe
atmosphere.
Aside from delivering candy,
the women at PV Main also deco-
rated their floors and played
scary music to highlight the
event.
The event was scheduled for
daytime hours instead of having
it in a traditional evening setting
because of convenience and
safety.
"It was easier to do during the
daytime because more people
from both our house and the so-
rorities were available," Haga-
seth said.
Safety was also a major con-
cern of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. The
kids were turned over to the fra-
ternity with few chaperones to
keep order.
"They loved it," said Haga-
seth. " The kids got rowdy and
destroyed the house. Lots of time
was put into cleaning the house."
While Sigma Alpha Epsilon
had their hands full looking over
70 kids and organizing the day's
events, Hagaseth said that they
»
Getting a big haul from Alpha Gamma
Delta sorority sisters Stephanie Roehler
and Belinda Navarro is little brother
Wayne Tyler. All the Valley Big Brother
children enjoyed their day of trick-or-
treating. Photo by T.J. Sokol
wanted to make it an annual
event.
"This year it was experimen-
tal for us and it was also experi-
mental for the kids and the Val-
ley Big Brothers Organziation,"
he said.
Hagaseth said they raised
money for the event by having a
car wash and by individual mem-
bers' contributions.
The kids that attended the
event were part of the Valley Big
Brothers Amigos Program, which
handles kids in the program who
are waiting to be paired with a
big brother.
As Sigma Alpha Epsilon looked
back on the success of their hal-
loween, it would be most likely
that they would do it again next
year because of the fun they had.
"Everyone really enjoyed it,"
Hagaseth said .
74 Trick-or-Treat
Leading Valley Big Brother kids Sho-
shana Fawly and Mike Smith is Sigma
Alpha Epsilon member John Hagaseth.
Before the children trick-or-treated they
ate lunch and played games at the SAE
house.
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON. Front Row: Chad Taylor, Clay Carpenter, Tim Graffigna, Jasper, Mark Roth, T.
Scott Ryerson, Jason Mowery, Perry Kaiser, Peter coyle, Luka Pecel. Second Row: Dean Barefield, Michael
Diverde, Jim Chiete, Brian Gangel, Mark Parker, Dr. Paul Ference, Dooley Ervin, Brian Radley, John Hoss,
Thomas Feeley, Tony Kraus, Chris Tennal, Jesse Rehmeier. Third Row: Jeffrey Nuzum, Steve Orrick, Mark
Wadley, Stephen Gottschalk, Kurt Davis, Richard Borowitz, John Hageseth, Brian Gattas, J.W. Risseier,
Justin Franks, Jim Miller, Patrick Krumm, Stan Alie. Fourth Row: Chris Hagaseth, Devon Becnel, J.G. Wolpe,
D.L. Carlson, Mark Sutter, Jeff Beske, Shannon Lawson, Brad Rule, rob Hasselman, Philip Yancey, David
Rasch. Fifth Row: Rick Anderson, Chris Debella, John Fosdick, Mike Smith, Daniel Sherlock, Mark Wagner,
Yogi Bear, Storm Normowitz, Lewis Bayner, Herbert Beaker, Ronald Reid, Dave Caldwell. Photo by Kim Bodin
PHI KAPPA PSI. Front Row: David Bolls, Clay Wood, Shawn Jensen, Tom Anderson, Scott Cimino, Mike
Cimino, Mike McGeogh, Evan Moore. Second Row: Doug Hanson, Brad Hoover, Brian Fidler, Efein Yildirim,
Tom Kerr, Theron Ranee, Rene Luna, Jim Perse. Third Sow: Keith Leholky, Richard Wagner, Ryan Kein, Mike
Blaker, Michael Collins, Roger Martin, Luke Zouvas, Mike McClellan, Eric Chapman, Derek Cox. Photo by Jill
Harnisch
Trick-or-Treat 27
1
i
Spending their Sunday morning walk-
ing to raise money for Juvenile Diabetes
are the Alpha Gamma Delta sisters.
Both alumni and current members
walked "on and on" at El Dorado Park in
Scottsdale.
Walking to benefit Juvenile Diabetes
are Alpha Gamma Delta members, Julie
Clark, Marnee Katt, and Dawn Rogers.
With approximatly 400 participants, the
sorority members and alumni raised
about $4500. Photo by Craig Valenzuela
Layout by Shannon Morrison
276 Walk-a-Thon
he Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority
held their annual walk-a-thon
for Juvenile Diabetes on October
29 at El Dorado Park.
The sorority earned about
$4,500 for Juvenile Diabetes
through pledges they gathered
before the walk-a-thon. It is an
annual event for all chapters of
Alpha Gamma Delta throughout
the country. The AGD's were
joined by the brothers of Lambda
Chi for the fundraiser.
"I felt that everything went
very well," Alpha Gamma Lisa
Shankman said. "We had about
400 people there, including alum-
ni and Arizona citizens."
All members of Alpha Gamma
Delta were expected to partici-
pate in the annual charity event.
Each member was encouraged to
meet a minimum amount of mon-
ey earned through pledges for
each mile walked. The course
covered about six and one-half
miles. Shankman felt the event
was a good team builder for the
sorority. "It gave everyone a
chance to meet one another," she
said.
"Some girls made as much as
$100 or $200 in pledges," Shank-
man said. "Our minimum was
$30, but some girls really did a
great job."
Food and music were provided
after a walk that didn't tax too
many people physically.
"It didn't seem that difficult,"
Shankman said. "We all felt like
it was no big deal. It was just
great that we could do this for
Juvenile Diabetes."
The only thing Shankman
planned on doing differently for
next year's event is advertising
more about the walk-a-thon.
"We need to get the word out
about this thing. Juvenile Diabe-
tes is expecting a cure within the
next five years, and more money
is essential.
Qk|^ VXJ. JtM*%J\
1PHA GAMMA DELTA. Front Row: Jennifer Hayes, Tina Eddy, Belinda Navarro, Paula Geiger, Lynda
lack, Connie Cunningham, Dawn Nelson, Jessica Lakom, Cameron Wilkinson, Marnee Katt, Stephanie
oehler, Erica Litz, Julie Clark. Second Row: Becky Kimpel, Kristin Boe, Jennifer George, Donna Christopher-
>n, Kim Harmon. Julie Schneider, Michelle Niehold, Cami Gettman, Jeannine Jones, Myndi Eakin, Vy Dam,
eather Hastings, Dana Wagener, Brenda Rasmussen, Sara Chalpusky, Gina Wickey. Third Row: Kim Daiza,
amantha Lutz, Jill Metzinger, Susan Tuttle, Erin Egan, Ronda Robsaham, Gayl Bates, Tiffani Lee, Andrea
IcDonald, Melanie Miller, Jennifer Bidenkap, Gina Sciola, Randi Wichansky, Shellie Peterson. Fourth Row:
yntha DeYoung, Jennifer Yates, Cathy Coffey, Susan Stein, Lisa Wise, Linda Novotny, Stephanie Maiurano,
hristy Reichelt, Robin Mulcahy, Monica Roehler, Jill Rutledge, Derrie Nauta, Gina Godbehere, Renee Rank.
'itth Row: Sheri Ralls, Melodi Calvo, Randi Richardson, Lori Gragg, Amy Moore, Darcy Lieber, Lauren
ovalik, Tiffani Hanley, Jennifer Smith, Jennifer Prezkop, Lisa Klingel, Darla Decker, Adina Niemeron,
'awn Rogers. Sixth Row: Lynn Vavreck, Suzy Strait, Sara Braithwaite, Sarah Wilhelm, Michelle Meng, Lisa
eitchman, Heidi Scheifele, Lisa Shankman, Beverly Whitaker, Janelle Johnson, Megan Stone, Colleen
allagher. Seventh Row: Lara Pile, Melinda Sheridan, Suzie Valdez, Melissa Ginsburg, Megan Aspinal, Dina
laltzman, Fran McKee, DaNeil Colarich, Michelle Chavez, Vanessa Salem, Kari Pollock, Michelle Daniels,
ebecca Ewig, Mary Ellen Ullerich, Alison Hammersla, Julie Mans. Photo by Candid Color
BETA THETA PI Front Row: Scott Darden, Craig Rissler, Mike Richennifer, P. Andrew Fife, Richard Larson.
Second Row: Len Wierzbicki, Todd McCleary, Jeff Novak, Joe Jerman, James Victory. Photo by Michelle
Conway
Walk-a-Thon 2
I
DELTA CHI. Front Row: Jason Radde, Matt Springer, Jason Whittet, Kristian Gardner, Dave Clayton,
Michael Martin, James Downs, Chris Hartwig, Scott Liles. Second Row: Todd Goldman, Eric Thieroff, Mike
Murphy, Scott Davis, Jason Hansen, Kevin McCarthy, Ara Gregory Hagopian, Eric Stormer, Tom Durkes, Bill
Berman, John Tauss, Richard Sparks, Daryle Gustavel, Joe Stanley, Joe Jaskowiak, Jeff Marion, James
Brown. Third Row: David Wasinger, Michael Lindberg, Mickey Welcher, Sean Stansbury, Gregg Spund, Judd
Weisinger, Jim Rose, John Vasquez. Photo by T.J. Sokol
SIGMA KAPPA. Front Row: Dawn McMurry, Ann Kranski, Suzanne Nichols, Erin Wolfe, Allison Turk, Dii
Leeper, Jenny French, Christine Lyle, Jane Westerbeck, Cindy Cook, Heather Paul, Rene Roberts. Sea
ffoHvTricia Blum, Nancy Maher, Laurie Novak, Barb Gelb, Charmayne Cooley, Tina Monroe, Colleen Harv
Sarah Posegate, Laurie Klinard, Laura Leisch.'Mary Romera, Ann Propheter, Christy Margrall, Kat
Thompson. Third Row. Stephanie Bowers, Pam Jarnigan, Carla Newsome, Dawn Gormely, Heather Cina
mon, Tracy Hoenninger, Lisa Jacobson, Merry Lynn Travis, Shannon Brodenek, Lynn Kiko, Laura Conno
Kerry Hollis, Suzanne Shenden, Lisa Price, Gina Powell, Kristen Maddas, Kelly Smith. Photo by Tom Hersb
I
8 New Chapters
NEW IN TOWN
Stigma, Kappa am Uma Club Join, black S>yi(m
ow could the greek system at
ASU be described? Prominent?
Established? Expanding?
"Yes, even expanding," said
Panhellenic Council President
Shelley Traw.
Traw said that the council de-
cided which sororities came to
campus. The new sorority that
joined ASU in the spring of 1989
was Sigma Kappa.
"The national representatives
for sororities not present on cam-
pus send information on their or-
ganizations," Tiaw said. "Then a
committee decides which ones
would be the most beneficial."
Traw added that these soror-
ities are then invited to campus
to make a presentation.
After the prospective soror-
ities have made their presenta-
tions, the exisiting chapters de-
cide which one to invite to
a campus.
3 Michelle Morris, Sigma Kappa
| president, said that the Panhel-
lenic chose them to come on cam-
pus only after they were sure
that the nationals would back
the sorority.
Traw said that the quota of
members that a new chapter was
allowed to accept was deter-
mined by the average of the ex-
isting chapter sizes. Sigma Kappa
was allowed to accept a maxi-
mum number of 120 members
during spring rush.
"We had a national officer liv-
ing with us for a few months to
make sure that everything went
smoothly," Morris said.
And how do the fraternities fit
into the picture? Delta Chi was
the new fraternity that was add-
ed to the greek system in 1989.
Michael Lindberg, a senior po-
litical science major and presi-
dent of Delta Chi, said that this
was the fraternity's first year as
a chapter and that they had 50
active members.
Lindberg added that in order
to be recognized by the Interfra-
ternity Council, a house needs 40
members, proof of financial sta-
bility and some type of chapter
organization, such as executive
boards.
"IFC didn't want to recognize
us as a chapter because for a
while they didn't really want to
expand the system," Lindberg
said.
Both Lindberg and Traw said
that the main difference between
the two is that a new sorority
was usually started by the na-
tional representatives' initiative
while a new fraternity was start-
ed through the interest and ac-
tion of a group of male students.
"We just had to wait and keep
doing as much as possible to get
recognition and acceptance,"
Lindberg said.
Building a totem pole are Sigma Kappa
members. Sigma Kappa met for chapter
meetings and social activities through-
out the year.
Preparing for finals, Delta Chi member
Scott Fleming studies his Biology notes.
Delta Chi, like all fraternities, reviewed
grade point averages of pledges during
rush. Photo by Shannon Morrison
New Chapters 27
,
hen large groups come togeth-
er, it's usually necessary to have
a leader, or leaders, to create a
sense of cohesiveness and
strength. Such was the job of the
Interfraternity and Panhellenic
Councils in the greek system. Se-
nior Brett Carey governed frater-
nities, while President Shelly
Traw regulated sororities.
"IFC serves as a governing and
legislative body of the fraternity
system," Carey said. "Our greek
system is one out of five self-
regulating in the Western United
States."
Traw said that the Panhellen-
ic served as a governing board
for 13 sororities.
Both the IFC and Panhellenic
contained the same structure
with a group of executive mem-
bers, a cabinet, and delegates
from each fraternity and soror-
ity. There were 24 delegates for
fraternities and 13 for sororities.
"Right now there are 24 fully
recognized fraternities," Carey
said. "In order for fraternities to
be recognized by IFC and gain
voting rights, they have to go
through ... a colonization
period."
Whenever an issue arose that
involved the sororities directly,
the chapters voted on the final
decision.
"Each chapter has only one
vote which the delegate brings to
the meeting," Traw said.
Aside from basic governing du-
ties, both councils carried out ju-
dicial matters.
"Since we're self-regulating,
we have our own judicial system.
Anytime there's a violation of
code of conduct it goes before our
judicial board and we levy out
the sanctions, fines and penal-
ties," Carey said.
In addition, Panhellenic and
IFC organized activities among
the greeks. Many times, the
councils worked together to ar-
range events such as Greek Week
and Greek Sing.
They also shared bylaws con-
cerning parties and alcohol in-
cluding security and limits on al-
cohol availability.
"We require that when a fra-
ternity or sorority has a party,
various cautionary measures
have to be taken," Carey said.
"Security has to be hired, they
have to card at the door, and
only a certain amount of beer
can be served per person for a
certain amount of hours."
"In the Western Regional Con-
ference of Greek Systems which
was held in April of 1989, we
were selected as Most Outstand-
ing Greek Fraternity System,
Most Outstanding Greek System,
Most Outstanding Philanthropic
Greek System and Most Out-
standing Educational Fraternity
Program," Carey said.
Traw and Carey, the main goal
of the councils they presided
over was to improve the greek
system and the community as a
whole.
"As greeks, we pledge our-
selves to aspire to high values
and ideals ... by working togeth-
er as a system," Carey said.
yQoAju fang-
28
80 Councils
Discussing details at an IFC meeting
are 1990 Executive Officers Mike Hager,
Vice-President of Fraternal Affairs and
John Kierman, President. The 1990 IFC
Council was elected in November.
Speaking with an alumna, Vice-Presi-
dent of Internal Affairs Courtney
Rhoades attends the National Panhel-
lenic Convention. Panhellenic hosted the
convention at the Scottsdale Princess.
PANHELLENIC COUNCIL. Front Row: Stepha