dent Rny Burnell os "blond-haired, bronze skinned bubblehead*"—are alive and rocking, a more serious, solid school hums beneath the surface In this, its 101st year, ASIJ is striving mightily to gain academic respect And as statistics indicate—and a conscientious look around the campus dem onstrates— the student body is older, more seriousand more conservativethan its first glance appearance The problem is, it’s hard to ignore the beauties of ASU The 600-acre Temf>e cam pus is nearly as spectacular as an Arizona sunset ASU boasts strikingly eclectic ar chitecture, including Frank Lloyd Wright’s hist building—a fanciful, carousellike con cert hall that looks as if it could fly away at any moment And ASU has greened the desert: exotic flora line the walkways, and grass is watered rice-field style, so that the grounds are verdant. Students treverse the campusonopen-uirbuses, stylish mountain bike* or skateboards Fashion is self-con sciously casual; hair might be unruly, but seldom unkempt Senior Mark Duskin, no slouch in the looks department himself, laments: "Sometimes it feels like I’m walk ing through a genet icexperiment." Undtr rna tunact: amu s attractions no, however, run more than skin deep Now the nation's sixth largest university, it of fers a choice of 122 baccalaureate degrees. Although a full third of its undergraduates concentrate in the business school, ASU authorities rank its College of Fine Arts in the top 10 nationwide, and several other departments— including business, law and engineering—in the top 30. Strong stute funding and grantsmanship huve helped the school accumulate state-of-the-art equipment, such us one of the world’s most powerful electron microscopes. ASU also pays its academicians relative ly well: associate professors earn $31,885 per year, $2,000 above the national aver age, and the faculty boasts such luminaries as engineer David K Ferry, who helped develop the world’s smallest transistor, and former business dean William Seid man, who now chairs the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Patrick McGowan, former chairman of the respected political science department, observes with a laugh: "It's very easy to recruit first-rate fuculty here—especially if you bring them in Janu ary." ASU is also u bargain. Tuition has been held to only $090 per year for Arizona students; out-of-stuters pay a modest $3,844, but after one year they can qualify as residents and pay the instate fee Yet even Tempe has clouds. One of the blackest hovers over the powerhouse ath letic teams In the past, they have produced such sturs as baseball’s Reggie Jackson and football’s Danny White, and contended reg Rays ’n’ plays: Sun Devils in action MKIHA PRODUCTIONS, ARIZONA STATU UNIVKNSm KKNT 8IKVKK8 SUck transit: ASUstudent transpi>rt ularly for Pac 10 and national champion ship But now the Sun Devils seem to col lect as many scandalous headlines as trophies Between August 1983 and Janu ary 1985, Pac 10 or NCAA sanctions were leveled against the baseball, basketball, wrestling, track and gymnastics teams for various rules infractions. Neither the heavily recruited athletes nor the golden girls and boys on fraternity row represent typical ASU students. They are more likely to be commuters (87 per cent live off campus) and older than most undergraduates (the median age for all stu dents is 25'/i). Many are transfers; atypi cally, ASU has more seniors than fresh men, a significant proportion married and working at off-campus jobs. This contributes to the sense of isolation born of ASU’s size: growing with sun-belt rapidity, enrollment has jumped from 17,000 i n 1964 to40,5581ast yea r. Com pa red to smaller, more residential schools, "it’s harder to meet people here, harder to es ablish relationships that are enduring,” says Robbie L. Nayman, ASU’s director ofcou nsel ing und consu 11at ion M usic grad uate Don Slutes calls his school "the McDonald’sofhighereducation—you drive up, get your education and drive away." Wsr of the minds: As at practically every other college, students tend to call their peers largely apathetic, but ASU’s student government and newspaper flame with ideological battles between political and religious conservatives on one side, and moderates and liberals on the other. Says law student Jay Heiler, a conservative and former editor of the student newspaper, the State Press, "There’s warfare going on for their minds.” Political conservatism should come as no surprise in Barry Goldwater’s Arizona— and ASU is theonly university with its own chapter of the John Birch Society. But ASU’s conservative tide derives much of its strength from an unusual source—the fun damentalist City of the Lord, a charismatic "covenant community” (recognized by the Roman Catholic Church, though not offi cially affiliated with it). This 350-member group and like-minded students have been gaining clout since the late 1970s, when they rid the campus of X-rated movies. Re ligion frequently intrudes on secular mat ters. One student-government officer, for example, recently supported her argument against funding gay-student groups by quoting from an open Bible. Ray Burnell, a