ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY Friday, October 20, 1967 V o L 50, N o. 18 Tempe, Arizona Court Turns Down Ballot Injunction By LARRY ROSS The AS Supreme Court refus­ ed to issue an injunction yester­ day that would have stopped the distribution of the Homecoming election ballots for today’s elec­ tion. The hurriedly-called first ses­ sion of the student court m et to consider an action brought by Terry Forsberg and several can­ didates in the election against Bob Wacker, chairman of the Election Board. FORSBERG, repres anting the plaintiffs, maintained that Wacker had violated the statutes of ASASU by having the ballots for the Homecoming election printed in a fixed order instead of a rotated order. Forsberg, who sponsored the bill which put the rotation clause in the statutes, told the court that this had been done because people who have no firm detisionon a candidate tend to vote for the first candidate on the list. The plaintiff also alleged that Bob Wacker had “willfully and wantonly and with complete dis­ regard for his sworn duties of of­ fice conspired to deprive the membership of the Associated Students of Arizona State Uni­ versity of their right to be of­ fered and presented a fair and im partial election.” “THIS IS a clear case of stat­ utory interpretation,” Wacker told the court. The defendant did not deny that the rotated order stipulation Student Cyclist Robbed; 3 Jailed Campus Responds ___ Photo by Clifton Furedy GREAT EQUALIZER — The security men. who issue tic­ kets apparently follow the letter of the law—bikes are under the same rules as automobiles. To Liquor Survey By ROBERT SHAW A recent government-sponsor­ ed study recommending lower­ ing the legal age to 18 for buy­ ing and drinking of alcoholic beverages in public, has brought varied response from campus drinkers and thinkers. A commission working out of — Stanford University on a $1 mil­ lion federal grant recommend­ ed a national policy to promote drinking in a family setting and to lower the legal age for drinking to 18. THE STANFORD University study noted that the 21-year-old age Umit is “largely unenforce­ able and creates a basically hypocritical situation.“ It con­ tinued that with an 18-year-old minimum, liquor could be avail- able on college campuses “in a more reasonable, healthier context,’’ reducing the tenden­ cies of students to flock to out­ side bars. Freshm an Steffi Renken is op­ posed to lowering the legal age as a solution to the increased national rate of alcoholism. She said, “Countries like Italy which encourage youngsters to drink have just as high an alcoholism rate as we do.” This fact, ac­ cording to Miss Renken, seems to prove that earlier drinking doesn’t necessarily discourage alcoholism. . Tax Hearing Rescheduled Three studies published by two members of the political science department and a research con­ sultant to the State Tax Commis­ sion propose an overhaul of the s t a t e government, including abolishment of the State Tax Commission. The reports released Wednes­ day are written by Dr. Heinz C. Hink, professor of political sci­ ence, Dr. John P. White, pro­ fessor of political science, and Dr. David A. Bingham. The reports will be presented to the Cbuncil on Organization of Arizona S t a t e Government (COASG) at 9:30 this morning in the State Capitol. ACCORDING TO the report proposals, the activities of the State Tax Commission could be The City of Tempe sales tax suit against the University has been postponed until Nov. 22. The hearing before Superior Court Judge Kenneth Ghatwin had been scheduled for yester­ day, but was postponed on the request of Gary Nelson, assis­ tant attorney general, represent­ ing the State Board of Regents. Tempe City Attorney David Merkel said he was skeptical about the value of such a delay, since previous efforts at com­ promise between the city and the University had been unsuc­ cessful. A 21 - year - old geography m ajor is grateful for the ef­ ficiency of the Phoenix police department. Jam es P. Beck, a junior, said he was riding his bicycle on Camelback Rd. near Alham­ bra High School Wednesday at 3 a.m. when three men driving a 1960 Cadillac forced him off the road and then took his wallet containing $24, his watch and his shoes. “They grabbed me, beat me up a bit, then threw me into the irrigation canal,” Beck said. Beck was treated for head cuts at Maryvale Community Hospital. Beck told a State Press reporter he plans to at­ tend classes today. “We’re both grateful for (he efficiency and courage display­ ed by tbs Phoenix police. Everyone was very helpful. It’s a great tribute to the human family,” Gordon Beck added enthusiastically. Pick Up Came Stubs Tuesday Students may pick up ticket stubs for the Oct. 28 Wyoming game between 8:30 a.m. and 4:45 p.m. starting Tuesday at the front ticket windows of the gym upon presentation of a cur­ rent activity card or two cards if a date’s stub is also being picked up. State Offices Examined Studies Propose Changes transferred to the State Board of Property Tax Apppeals or to. a newly created board. Dr. Bingham said toe only function of toe Tax Commission in toe field of property tax now is setting of the state property tax rate, with further jurisdic­ tion in revenue fields of income, luxury, transaction privilege, ex­ cise and use taxes. Because toe commission is elected, Dr. Bingham said that it faces toe problem of allowing political consideration' to influ­ ence administrative decisions. Another of the reporte noted that a joint legislative budget committee is preparing to draft proposals to amend the Arizona Constitution to eliminate the of- ficers of state auditor and state examiner. An auditor general woud assume the duties of both offices. HINK SAID the functions of the two offices are sim ilar, so that the transfer of duties seems “logical.” He said the preaudit and general accounting function of a state may be better per­ formed by an administrative of­ ficial within t h e executive branch. The third report concerns the reorganization of the executive branch of the state government, concluding that consolidation of the governor’s administrative authority must be decided by the people and their represen­ tatives rather than by experts on administrative theory. existed in the statutes, but he maintained that another clause takes precedence over it. This clause says, “If voting machines and/or IBM cards are used, appropriate procedures shall be approved.” WACKER informed toe court that during a visit to the DATA Processing Center on campus two weeks ago he was told that they were so far behind they could not process the election at all. Aft«* further consultation, he got a commitment to process the polling if only a fixed-order listing was used on the ballot. He explained that rotation would require 12 to 35 combina­ tions of ballots, depending on whether the ballots for king and queen were separate. A decision was then made, Wacker said, that the accuracy of computer counting would far outweigh the accuracy of hand counting and that this would off­ set /the lack of rotation on the ballots. THE CANDIDATES were in­ formed of the .possibility of a fixed order ballot last week, ac­ cording to Wacker, and they then drew for a place on the bal­ lot. Apparently some dissatisfac­ tion developed, however, as the names of six candidates were listed as plaintiffs. These names have been withheld at the re­ quest of Wacker wbo felt their publication might prejudice to­ day’s election. Wacker’s main contention was that the section on machine counting was put in the statutes to meet practical problems such as they had encountered, and that he had therefore acted cor­ rectly in having fixed order bal­ lots printed. THE COURT decided in favor of the defendent, Wacker. The decision was unanimous that Wacker had not been negli­ gent in his duties as Election Board chairman and split in re­ gard to the decision on an in­ junction to stop distribution of the ballots. A fire in a waste paper bas­ ket added to the heat of disr cussion at the first session of the AS Supreme Court yester­ day. The fire poured smoke in­ to toe corridor outside the meet­ ing room. A quick - thinking spectator waiting in the hall for the court to reconvene spotted toe fire and put it out in short order with water from the mens restroom down the hall. Hie fire was apparently start­ ed when someone tossed a light­ ed cigarette into the basket. Friday, October 2 t, 1H 7 STATE PRESS Page 2 Debaters To Wrangle Students, Faculty See Plans Income Controversy Campus Expanding - Interest at the annual stu­ dent-faculty reception in th e College of Education yesterday m itered around blueprints and drawings of the proposed edu­ cation complex. The reception, sponsored by the Academic Council of the Old Main Setting For Southwinds An outdoor jazz concert will be given by they Southwinds Monday at 7:45 and 8:15 p.m. in Old Main Park. The activity is sponsored by the Cultural Affairs Board. The combo consists of Rick Hodge, piano; Jimmy Golini, drums; Tony Morrell, reeds; and Don Stewart, bass. College of Education, was “an aittempt to build a college atmosphere,” said Marc Weidinger, president of the Acade­ mic Council. Faculty, students and student advisers in the college visited the Education Building patio yesterday from 1 to 4 p.m. to talk with advisers, professors and deans of the college. Infor­ mation concerning the nine or­ ganizations comprising the Aca­ demic Council were available at booths surrounding the patio and manned by representatives from the organizations. Free refreshments were serv­ ed and a display of artwork done by third-grade children, enrolled in the Payne Labora­ tory School for the college, sur­ rounding the activities. The display of the plans for the second unit of the edu­ cation complex were the center of attention. The unit, schedul­ ed for completion by December of 1968, includes two major buildings — the Tower with the Learning and Resources Center as an extension, and the Divis­ ible Auditorium. These units, plus an addition­ al building presently in the idea stage, will complete the educa­ tion complex for the uni­ versity. The first Earlybird Invitation­ al Debate Tournament will be held on campus tomorrow. De­ bate teams from 15 colleges and universities will discuss the pro­ position: “Resolved: The federal government should guarantee à minimum annual income for all citizens.” C. Richard Keil, new director of forensics here and former as­ sistant director of the debate team at University of Southern California, said five prelimin­ ary rounds will be conducted throughout the day at the Lan­ guage and Literature Building with the final round taking place at 6:30 p.m. The first and sec- Friday’s Flicker Stars Alan Ladd In 6Shane9 Role “Shane,” directed by George Stevens will be shown in the MU Friday Film Festival series tonight at 6 and 9 in the MU Arts Lounge. Stars include Alan Ladd, Jean Arthur, Van Heflin and Brandon deWilde. Rancher Joe Starrett hires a buckskin clad, mysterious-ap­ pearing drifter hoping that to­ gether they will have the cour­ age to stand off Ryker, the cruel, dishonest cattle baron who is trying to steal the town. At first, Heflin, his wife and 9-year-old sot are wary of the stranger, but they accept him as one of the family when he puts on his gunbelt and joins Starrett in working the ranch. Seating in the MU Arts Loun­ ge is available for only the first 200 persons. ST A T E P R E S S is published by Arizona Stale University as the official campus newspaper every Tuesday through Friday during the school year, except holidays and examination periods, and is entered as second class matter at Tempo, Arizona, S52S1. Sedleys at If your m ajor is listed here, ISM w ants to se e you O cto b er 25 th/26th Your major, whatever it is, makes you a prime candidate for a career with IBM. Sign up for an interview at your placement office right away—even if you’re headed for graduate school or military service. THE VALLEY TRAVEL MART SELECTION TRIUMPHANT SET His S29.S0 Hers $27.50 We have one of the Largest Wedding Band Selections in the Valley— Come and 8ee S co tt Why is IBM interested in so many different people? . The basic reason is growth. Information processing is the fastest growing, fastest changing major industry in the world. IBM computers and other products are being used to solve problems in widely diverse areas, such as government, law, education, medi­ cine, science, the humanities. We need peo­ ple with almost every kind of background. That’s why we want to talk with you. Whatever your major, you could do a lot 966-6101 — Honorary Picks New Swimmers Naiads, women’s synchroniz­ ed swimming honorary, has chosen 10 new members. They are: Elsie Absher, Polly Brous­ sard, Carole Carpenter, Aim Clarke, Barbara Gabel, Terrie Gregory, Patty Heiple, Marge Sanford, Connie Trio, mid Barb Zauft. Accounting Aerospace Engineering Art Banking Business Administration Ceramic Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemistry Civil Engineering Communication Sciences Computer Sciences Economics Electrical Engineering Engineering Mechanics English Finance Forestry General Engineering History Humanities and Social Sciences Industrial Engineering Industrial Management Languages Management Engineering Marketing and Distribution Mathematics Mechanical Engineering Metallurgical Engineering Metallurgy Music Oceanography Operations Research Ornithology Philosophy Physics Political Science Power Engineering Psychology * Purchasing Religion Sociology Speech and Dramatic Arts Statistics Transportation and Traffic of good things at IBM- Change the world (maybe). Make money (certainly). Con­ tinue your education (through our Tuition Refund Program, for example). And have a wide choice of places to work (over 300 locations throughout the United S tates). We’ll be on campus to interview for careers in Marketing, Computer Applications, Pro­ gram m ing, R esearch and Development, Manufacturing, Customer Engineering, and Finance and Administration. Come see us. P. S. If you can’t see us on campus, write to Mr. E. C. Purtell, Jr., IBM Corporation, 3424 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles. California 90005. IBM An Equal Opportunity Employer Tempe Shopping Center 911 Mill Ave. ond place teams will be awarded trophies. Going into this tournament, the S lut Devil team posts a 16-28 record in three matches. Page 3 STATE PRESS Friday, October 20, 1967 Handicapped Optimistic - Mexican-Americans Studied Findings of a campus soci­ ological study of handicapped Mexican Americans are shatter­ ing many of the stereotyped images said Mrs. Naomi Harward, associate professor of sociology. D ie three-year study, financed by the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare for $143,000, has thus far indi­ cated an optimistic attitude among Mexican-American fam­ ilies whose providers are phys­ ically or mentally handicapped. “WE ARE studying 150 sub­ jects who were successful ap­ plicants for vocational rehabili­ tation in Arizona, and are com­ paring them with a sim ilar num­ ber of Caucasians suffering from the same handicaps,” said Mrs. Harward. One hundred persons from each group were interviewed between July, 1966 and April, 1967. The results were tabulat­ ed and will soon be sent to Washington. The interviewers concentrated See exciting on job interests during the per­ iod, periodically visiting Mexi­ can-Americans who were ac­ cepted for job retraining at state rehabilitation centers in Phoe­ nix, Tucson and Yuma. THE INTERVIEWS revealed that the families involved hoped to improve their socio-economic status. “A high percentage at, the Mexican-Americans interviewed expressed an earnest desire for employment, and an interest in Mrs. Harward said, “Whether he lives in Phoenix or Cotton­ wood, Yuma or Miami, Tucson or Nogales the Mexican-Ameri­ can’s work attitude is high, his desire for education and training strong. He is sincerely striving to improve his economic status. H O C K E Y * «.e COLISEUM SPEC IA L DISCOUNT TO STU D EN TS (Fast 8ervlce) • Prescriptions Filled • Prescription Sun Glasses • Contact Lenses GATESH OPTICIANS 75» o ff on 947-2171 30 W. Main For information * J Scottsdale Mary Ellen Larsen, member of the San Francisco Volun­ teers hi Service to America (VISTA), will be on campus Nov. 29 through Dec. I to re­ cruit new volunteers. After speaking before several selected classes, she will meet with the officials of the Leap program in Phoenix and brief Arizona’s VISTA workers. Naomi M. Harward, associate professor of sociology working in conjunction with Mrs. Larsen, said that the VISTA program stresses a person-to-person con­ tact in order to accomplish meaningful duties. Paper backs make A Better Grade ROUND — OVAL RECTANGULAR IC E 254-6693 Financial need, larger than average families, and language differences are barriers to ad­ vancement. Wfre Frames professional on home schedule ... or to order tickets, phone ... education and training,” said Mrs. Harward. VISTA Looks To Volunteers Bring In Your Litt . . . W e Have 'Em HILLS BOOKS & RECORDS Tempe Center Open Mon. and Thurs. ’Til 9:00 BLA C K and WHITE ? What can you know about a diamond? NOT W hen You Can Have A Find out at..; NATURAL COLOR PORTRAIT For: 5 x 7 — $ 3.00 8 X 10 — $ 5.00 11 X 14 $10.00 ON LY AT 1 3 0 E A S T U N IV E R S IT Y O R IV E • TEM PE o 9 6 7 -B 9 1 7 1 9 4 0 E A S T C A M E L B A C K . P H O E N IX 2 7 7 -1 4 3 1 C E R T IF IE D G E M O L O B IB T . A M E R IC A N D E M S O C IE T Y 967-4662 0 liu n w F rid a y , October 20, 1907 D D V C C Captain Fenwick's M ail Box , Specific K General Clouts L a st sp rin g , th e S a h u a ro w as w allo w in g in a d e fic it a p p ro a c h in g $1,500. T h e cau se w as th e a p a th y o f stu d e n ts w h o fe lt u n to u ch e d b y th e y earb o o k a n d w ho p e rh a p s co n sid ered it a la c k lu ste r p ro d u ctio n fro m th e s ta r t T hough i t m ay b e ra th e r e a rly to fo recast tre n d s, th is c e rta in ly looks lik e a b a n n e r y e a r fo r th e S a h u a ro b y con­ tr a s t T H E M A IN reaso n is th e w ell-p lan n ed , p ro fessio n al a d v e rtisin g b u ild u p th e y earb o o k h a s h a d th is fa ll u n d e r S a h u a ro E d ito r W ayne B rew ster. H e h a s k e p t h is p ro m ise o f la s t A p ril to “com m ercialize a p o p u lar m ovem ent am ong th e stu d e n ts . . . in o rd e r to g e t o u r m essage acro ss.” H ow ever, a slick ad cam paign fu ll of g irls an d gim ­ m ick s is n o su b s titu te fo r q u a lity in th e fin ish ed p ro d u ct. T h a n k fu lly , B re w ste r h a s e v id e n tly rem e in b e red th is a n d p la n s a n u m b er o f m a jo r a n d m in o r im p ro v em en ts fo r th e volum e. H e in te n d s to h a v e m u ch m o re copy, in ­ c lu d in g fe a tu re a rtic le s a n d in te rv ie w s, an d a m o re ev en d istrib u tio n o f color p h o to s th ro u g h o u t th e 1967-68 S a­ h u aro . T H IS E D IT O R IA L w as n o t w ritte n m e re ly to en co u r­ ag e th is y e a r’s S a h u aro s ta ff in its e ffo rts. W e a lso w ish to w o n d er o u t loud ab o u t th e fu tu re o f y earb o o k s a t A SU a n d o th e r u n iv ersitie s. T o sum i t u p su ccin ctly , college y earb o o k s acro ss th e n a tio n h a v e faced serious fin a n c ia l d iffic u lty th e la s t few y e a rs. P e rh a p s th is is w ith good reason. Often, they have been too similar in content to high school yearbooks with their tiresome collection of indi­ vidual snapshots and photos of myriad clubs with their members standing stiffly and grimacing at the camera. W E T H IN K stu d e n ts a re a p r e tty so p h isticated , a lb e it b lase , g ro u p of peo p le w h o ju s t don’t c a re fo r th a t k in d o f M ickey M ouse p rese n tatio n , n o m a tte r how p ro fessio n ­ a lly pro d u ced , m ech an ically speaking. I f B re w ste r succeeds in m ak in g th e S a h u a ro m ore a d u lt in its outlook w ith th e a d d itio n o f in te rv ie w s a n d m eaty fe a tu re sto ries, w e sh a ll ap p lau d h im h e a rtily . A t a n y ra te , h e seem s to b e m oving in th e rig h t d irectio n . B u t w h a t th is gro w in g cam pus re a lly n eed s in th e fu tu re is a yearbook w h ich is a N EW S book, n o t a social re g is te r o r a h an d y in d ex of g rad u ates. T h is m ig h t n ecessitate a ch an g e to a m agazine fo rm a t, b u t i t w o u ld p ro v id e stu d e n ts w ith a p e rm a n en t rec o rd o f th e e n tire y e a r’s a c tiv itie s, sum m arizing a n d supple­ m en tin g th e d ay -to -d ay coverage of th e S ta te P re ss. W e th in k th e s tu d e n t body is m a tu re enough to d e sire so lid n ew s co v erag e in its yearbook. The first rule of the biology department—make extensive tests to see if it’s alive. We fraternity mascots spread joy all over campus. THE LIBERATION News Ser­ vice, which reminds us that “Freedom is not a gift from Captain Fink,” also sent us a poem. Too bad it wasn’t censor­ ed. How it escaped we don’t know, but its asininity says thing about people who produce such tripe. IT REALLY BLOWS YOUR MIND i was one of those who came one of the few who came we actually entered into the brain of the great death machine and tried to give it time to re­ consider. Letters to the Editor Editor: Correction, please: my letter, printed Tuesday, originally stat­ ed that “The State Press oper­ ates with a minimum of intel­ lect mid maximum of bias,” not “minimum of bias” as you mis­ printed. I would now add “minimum of efficiency” to the a b o v e charges. Paul D. Schaefer Editor’s Note: A letter of max­ imum efficiency, typed doubleor triple-spaced on a 50-space line, is most likely to see print with a minimum of errors. * * Editor: Strategically located between University Drive and the Social S t u d i e s Building towers the greatest obstacle between ASU students and language and liter­ ature. Six floors of steel, cement and brides guard the pathway to learning in these fields, and a hardy Jason or El Cid is re­ quired to gain entrance. The la­ bors of Hercules were m ere tri­ fles compared to entering the Language-Literature Building at 10:40 in the morning. * Editor: Dr. Daniel Witt, director of Brendan Behan’s play “The Hos­ tage,” told me Saturday night why we should end the war in Vietnam. If you haven’t seen the play at the Lyceum, you are missing the'loudest anti-war protest on campus all year, under the guise of a bawdy Irish play. Britan, the Dublin - born play­ wright, died in 1963 of a chronic case of alcoholism. But a s in his play, it is only the drunks that tell the truth. Brendan tells the truth about the inhumanity of war so well that the audience goes away muttering, “Let’s get the hell out of Vietnam.” He tells the truth: that is, stop fighting whether you are right or wrong. I suggest, as I am sure Brendan would, that we get LBJ and Ho together, give them a few strong chinks, and whis­ per this into their ears. And if they , don’t come to an agree­ ment then, let them play Rthsian roulette with each other for a little while, instead of letting innocent Americans and Viet Cong tear each other’s guts out. No (Hie loves you like yourself. Mike J. Jordan This man-made barrier to edu­ cation utilizes all of its facili­ ties (few and tiny doorways, narrow and steep staircases and eerie wind - elevator - produced sound effects) to ward off wouldbe learners. It leers as stu­ dents tram ple one another in its doorways and stand packed on its stairways like so many crat­ ed oranges while the minutes tick away. Chuckles quiver its multi-million dollar sides as its wailing sound effects drown out professors’ voices in 200 level rooms. However, this steel-girded opposer to the teaching of langu­ age mid literature is not satis­ fied. It plans to expand. It would like to stretch all the way to University Drive with per­ haps one more five foot wide entrance. Its subversive mission seems to be to confine and destroy, and it certainly is capable of encouraging students to d r o p French and enroll in Underwat­ e r Basket Weaving if it is taught in a more accessible building. , These conditions are deplor­ able. Let’s unite against this Frankenstein of ASU mid de­ mand that its creator satisfy the purpose of this towering structure and render it useful. ♦ Editor Bill Dempsey Faculty Adviser Prof. Robert E. Lance Patti Mowery * Editor: Campus Editor—Linda Cottam Assistant—Athia Hardt Sports Editor—Jerry Kemp«' Assistant—Edy the Edgar Photo Editor—'Wendell Peacock Proofreader—David Anderson Managing Editor-i-Susan Black News Editor—John Wallace Society Editor—Diane Blied Copy Editor—Sandy Smolen Ad Manager—Hal Hubele Printer—Tom McCrea * Apropos of the sign on the Mall, “Make Love, Not War,” that seemed to arouse both amusement and defensive com­ ment: surely tins is not an age of such specialization that one has to choose. From my obser­ vations I should say that most Marines, etc. are quite capable in both fields. C. G. Swanson it did not reconsider rather it tried to trap our bodies (knowing full well it could not imprison our minds & love) and failing hi tins it thrust us back, echoing lies mid breaking trustsas is the way with death ma­ chines. concrete, growing up into a great heartless complex of corridors and rooms that one might chose (sic) to call a pentagon or the pentagon . . . called this cm account of its geometrical shape and because it sounds nicer than murder incorporated, my back is against a pillar near the river entrance and some of the guards know my name. norman morrison burned him­ self to death a few yards from this place, it is a lovely day. the last 2 days have been awk­ ward — but I came to realize my love for people, i almost left them, almost, but my {dace was set among them. walking up here the last day i was near tears, for dedicated and sincere as they were i did not want to see my friends go to prison, there must be another way i thought (and think) another method that doesn’t put people to cages, these people were not m eant for cages. no people are. . . and yet they (fid as they must, and walked into the brain of the death machine, they entered to to occupy for peace. and halt the apparatus of war. of course they were blocked, but they stood still and waited— trying again mid again to enter again and again being blocked, the brain police pushed them back somewhat but staying was done, and the night came uncertainly, tiie second day— it really blows your mind that’s Washington out there, Washington, d.c. capitol of the entire railed states. across the river you can see the Washington monument and capitol dome. it really blows your mind, this is the pentagon, you are throwing your soul against it. it really blows your mind some­ times. what a groovy thing to be do­ ing. what a vitally important, groovy thing to be doing. Frank Kowalsky is the blown mind responsible far that tra­ vesty on the English language. * • • FINALLY, F i d e l Castro’s newspaper, Granma, sent us a poem against the war to Viet­ nam. The following lines are of special interest: At a Texas ranch a steer lassoed to the morning Is barbecued. It reeks of the burning flesh of Da Nang mothers. STATE PRESS Friday, October 20, 1967 ’r,K 0o%#X #X ,X ,**X *X V .% °«V r Interviews Slated The following organizations win conduct interviews on cam ­ pus next week. Interested and qualified students should make appointments in die Placement Office, Adman. 101. MONDAY California State Government—C E County of Los Angeles—C E Dupont— K E , E E , M E , a ll Chem. Factory Insurance Association— K E , C E , E E , Engr. Mech., Engr. Sc., IE , M E N aval Weapons Center—C E , K E , E E , Mech., Engr. Sc., M E , Math, Rhys., Ana lytical and Physical Chem. New Mexico Unlv. Physical Science Lab— E E , M E , Match, Phys., Elec. Tech. U.S. A rm y Engineer D istrict, L.A .—C E . EE, ME U.S. Geological Survey—C E , Math, a ll Chem., Geol. Wash. State Highway Comm.—C E , also summer employment U.S. A rm y— Interviewing on M a ll Plttsburgh-Des Moines Steel— C E , E E , IE, M E , Cons't., Design tech.. Welding tech. TUESDAY N aval Weapons Center—as above Carnation Company—A ll Bus. Admin., A ll Lib. A rts Freeport Sulfer Co.— K E , M E Morrlson-Knudsen Co., Inc.—C E , Cons't., Acctg. Owens-Coming Fiberglass Corp.— K E , C E , — IE, M E , M ktg & Sales P acific Mutual L ife Insurance Co.—A ll Bus. Adm in., a ll Lib-Arts Simmons Co.—Acctg., Adv., Econ., Gen. Bus., Mgmt., Mktg. & Sales Westinghouse E le ctric Corp.—C E , IE , K E , E E , M E , Engr. Mech., Engr. Sc., Math, Phys., Aero. Tech., Comm. Tech., Elec. Tech., Design Tech., Tool & Mfg. Tech., Welding Tech., M B A Tech, u-g degree for R & D, design engr. application, mfg., tech. mktg. U.S. Atom ic Energy Commission— K E , E E , Engr. Sc., IE, M E , Phys., Acctg. MBA-Tech. non-Tech, Econ, Fin., Gen. Bus., Mngmt. Frosh Golfers Take 2nd Place Freshmen men and women’s golf team s each finished secmid in their divisions a t the William H. Tucker Intercolle­ giate golf tournament last week. Sun Devil Dave Sheff was in­ dividual winner in the freshmanjunior college division, topping the second place winner by two strokes. In the women’s division, Odes­ sa Texas Junior College won the women’s division title with & team total of 455 over ASU’s 481 in the 54-hole competition. The men’s senior golfers plac­ ed fourth over New Mexico, with Mike Morley finishing fifth in individual play with a 290. H a n n y ’s üarqurt »luips W EDNESDAY Morrlson-Knudsen Co., Inc.—as above Chrysler Corp.— K E , Engr. Mech., Engr. Sc., C E , E E , IE, M E U.S. Navy— Interviewing on M .U. Patio Del Monte Corp.—Acctg., Econ., Fin., Gen. Bus., Mgmt., Off. Admin., Stat. & D.P., aasorted Lib. Arts IBM—A ll Engineering, A ll Bus. Admin., A ll Indus, design & Tech., A ll Chem., Math, Phys. Spch & Drama P acific M issile Range—E E , M E , Phys: for R & D, design IB M San Jose United Airlines—A ll women candidates in­ terested in airlin e stewardess THURSDAY IBM —as above U.S. Navy— Interviewing on the M .U. Patio • I The Boeing Co.— K E , C E , E E , Engr. Mech., Engr. Sc., G E , M E , Math, Phys., Acctg., Econ., Fin., Gen.Bus., Mgmt., State & D P , Mba tech u-g degree, M B A non-tech u-g degree. Aero Tech, design tech, Tool & Mfg Tech, Welding Tech R J Reynolds Tobacco Co—A ll Bus Ad­ m in, a ll L ib Arts F R ID A Y Del Monte Corp—as above U.S. Navy— Interviewing on M .U. Patio E . G. S> G.— E E , ÄAE, Phys., Acctg. Motorola, Inc. Gov't. Electronics Division — E E , M E , Acctg. Ryan Aeronautical Co.— E E , IE, M E , Phys., Acctg. Schlumberger W ell Service — E E , M E , Phys. Sperry Flight Systems Division — E E , E ngr. Mech., IE Charles Pfizer & Co.— Econ., Gen. .Bus-’, Mgmt., M ktg. A Sales, M B A tech u-g degree, M B A non-tech u-g degree, Biol. Sc., a ll Chem., Health, P .E . & Ree., Lang. A Lit., M ass Comm., So. Sc., Hum, Spch, A Drama Canyou meet the test? Here's everything you need to help you get a top score in the tests you have to pass. • Up-to-date test material • Best organized study guides • Do's and don’ts of test-taking • Step-by-step programming • Accurate practice tests • Correct answers and solutions • Self-evaluation profiles >»S "COWLES SCORE-HIGH EXAM BOOKS äftS H ow to N i h GRADUATE RECORD EXAM IN ATIO N APTITUDE TEST w i t h s p e c i a l Test-Yourself Examination bonus. 444 poges H ow to P o m LAW SCH O O L ADM ISSION TEST MEDICAL COLLEGE ADMISSION TEST m DENTAL APTITUDE TEST MILLER AN ALO G IES TEST FEDERAL SERVICE ENTRANCE EXAM INATIONS GRADUATE BUSINESS SCH O O L ADM ISSION TEST N ATIO N AL TEACHER EXAM IN ATION S makes a strapping raincoat! A ctually, the leg straps on this bold rain­ coat are useless unless you ride a horse, drive a sports car, straddle a motorcycle, or just want to look as if you do. The "Paddock" model has a wool plaid lining that zips in or out to suit the weather. Scooter straps and a handy "book pocket" inside. Lots o f flare for traveling room. Deep center vent. 65% Dacron® polyester, 35% cotton in traditional British tan shade. Entirely wash & w ear. An< Protected against rain and stain with DuPont ZePel® fabric fluoridizer. See it H an n y ’s la c k $3.95 Paper • O ver 300 pages 24 GRE Advanced Tests also available ...p lu g fiarqurt S ip p a - COM PUTER PROGRAM M ER APTITUDE TESTS $4-95 Paper SHORT-CUT SHORTHAND ................ . ... .. Leant Shorthand in 40Easy Lessons by S. M. Wesley, Ph.D. $3.93 Paper Available at your campus bookstore » COWLES EDUCATION CORPORATION LOOK B u ild in g /488 M adison Avenue, New York-, New York 10022 CHRI8TOWN DOWNTOWN swXv THOM AS M ALL Friday, October 20, 1967 Page 6 Improved Teacher Concept Disclosed at Conference Improved instruction tech­ niques and better teacher-stu­ dent realtionships may result from a recent conference on in­ teraction analysis here. Dr. Jam es W. Bell, associate professor of secondary educa­ tion, said 134 educators from Arizona, Utah, Nevada, and California unanimously agreed that the interaction analysis theory presented by Dr. Ed­ mund Amidon will improve the role of the teach«- in die class­ room. DR. AMIDON is a professor of educational psychology at Temple University in Phil­ adelphia. Speaking before an audience of 300 in the MU ballroom, he demonstrated his theory with a tape recording of an actual classroom lecture. With a plan­ ned volunteer he showed proper and improper criticism tech­ niques. Co-author of two texts on the subject, Dr. Amidon said the interaction analysis system as­ sumes that classroom behavior can be stated objectively, data collected, analyzed, and eval­ uated to show that teachers can be helped to change their be­ havior. DISCUSSIONS were head­ ed by Dr. Terry Cornell and Noted Conductor Will Open Series The internationally famed Vienna Symphony will perform a t Gammage Auditorium Oct. 25, opening the Fine Arts Series. The Vienna Symphony will be directed by Wolfgang Sawalliseh who Time magazine call­ ed one of the most gift«! Ger­ man conductors to emerge since Herbert von Karajan. Selections that will be per­ formed are Mozart’s Symphony in C Major, known as the “Linz” and “Symphony No. 1 in D major” by Mahler. For ticket information call the Gammage Box Office, 961-3434. Sedleys at THE V A U E Y TRAVEL MART A.S.U. BREAKFAST SPECIAL $ 1.00 3 EGGS AND HAM H ash B row n P otatoes T oast, J e lly and C offee Served Daily 6:30-11:^0 HARMAN'S Mesa-Tempe Hi-Way TEMPE Dr. Wayne Roberson of the Uni­ versity of Arizona; E l b e r t Brooks, assistant superinten­ dent of the Tucson Public School System; George Jeff, representing the L a s Veg­ as, Nev., public schools; and Wayne H. Parrish, assistant professor of education. The one day session included a talk by Dr. Richard G. Landmi, dean of the planned Litch­ field College. He discussed the cluster college concept, and said the new college should be operating by 1970 with a class of 1,000 students and a staff of 65 instructors. ★ White Stag ★ ★ C a ta lin a Koret of California • Jonathan Logan • Howard W olf • G ay Gibson • Sacony Lingerie by VANITY FAIR PETER PAN — PLAYTEX rtr«****w < mi * m _ I T C R EA M ER Y O at A C N E “ > < X ' ^ g e » * * * RB ’ * * TR. «-J < at ■ 9 OC Tempe 915 East 8th Street juad Creamery Road 9-11 P.M. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Page 10 STATE PRESS Team Balance Called Key - A balanced Sun Devil football team will go against a strong rushing Washington State team this weekend in Spokane. Washington S t a t e assistant football coach Red Smith des­ cribed the Devils as “the best balanced team we will face all year.” This is surprising since Washington has played Southern KTAR radio will broadcast the game from Spokane with Bob Vache and Ray Cox hand­ ling the play-by-play. Game time will be 2:30 MDT. California, the nation’s No. 1 team, and UCLA, No. 3. COACH Kush agrees. “Bal­ ance and the long pass. . .our running and passing have both been established and people can not use gimmick defenses or concentrate on stopping one part of our game.” But Kush’s biggest criticism Friday, October 20, 1967 I Pigskin Prophecy I FROM THE SPORTS DESK (Winners in bold face) of his team going into tins Cou­ gar match is speed. “Washington State has three backs as fast or faster than anybody on our squad,” Kush said. “I’d say the only back we have with exceptional speed is J. D. Hill, who can really fly. Max Anderson and Art Malone have great balance but are not particularly fast. Karry Walton has great moves but not great straightaway speed. Ken Dyer gets the job doné more by great effort than anything else.” WASHINGTON State has an 0-5 record for 1967 but this does not tell the whole story. T h e Cougars losses were to t o u g h team s like Southern California, UCLA, Oklahoma, Baylor and Stanford. sell was injured in pre-season drills. Veteran Cougar Doug Flansburg, 6’2” , 195 pound end could be the biggest single Washing­ ton State threat. He led the Pa­ cific Eight in receptions with 54 for 613 yards last year and caught 12 passes against Hous- SOUTHERN Washington CALIFORNIA a tl Record 21-6-1 Brigham Young a t TEXAS —1 EL PASO I ARIZONA STATE UNIVERS­ ITY at Washington State Wichita State at WYOMING Utah at ARIZONA TEXAS a t Arkansas COLORADO at Nebraska NOTRE DAME at Illinois Tennessee a t ALABAMA Oregon State at PURDUE (Continued from page 10) JL S P E R R Y RAI\D Hie Cougars will be strength­ ened with the return of No. 1 tight end Bob Simpson and 240pound defensive tackle Ty Hansell. Simpson has been on the bench for three weeks, and Han- TEMPE BODY SHOP 11 E. 4th St. D ay Ph. 967-1601 - N ite 967-1279 24 HOUR TOW SERVICE • WHEEL ALIGNING & BALANCE • Auto Glass Work — 1 Day Service • Auto Body & Fender Work This is your chance, Student #7026941. Drink Sprite and be somebody. MR.BIG Take heart. Take a dime. Then take a bottle of Sprite from the nearest pop machine. Suddenly it's in your hand. Cold. Biting. Tart and tingling. You cackle fiendishly and rub your hands together. (You should; they’re probably chilled to the bone by n o w .) You tear off to a corner, alone, but within earshot of your fellows. And then? And then? And then you unleash it. SPRITE! It fizzes! It roars! It bubbles with good cheer! Heads turn. Whisperings. "Who's that strangely fascinating student with the arch smile. And what's in that curious green bottle that's making such a racket?" And you've arrived! The distinctive taste and ebullient character of Sprite has set you apart. You're somebody. uh...ub, whoever-you-are. SPRITE. SO TART AND TINGLING. WE JUST COULDN'T KEEP IT QUIET. I, TWàfiff MAO« A t 9:45 P .M . E S T on February 27 . a Pan-A m erican Boeing 7 2 7 jetliner w ith 98 passengers on board m ade a fu lly autom atic landing at John F. K ennedy A irp o rt in New Y o rk — the firs t operational autom atic" landing in the h isto ry of aviatio n in the U nited States. Sperry F lig h t S yste m s D iv isio n particip ated as a m em ber of the Boeing -Sp erry engineering team w h ich m ade th is event p o ssib le. Our S P -5 0 A u to m a tic F lig h t Control System played a key role. It put the Boeing 7 2 7 dow n "s m o o th as a fe a th e r." less than fo u r feet to the right of the run w ay's center line under co n d itio n s of sn ow and fog — w ith a cro ssw in d of tw e lve knots. T h is is just another reason w hy Sperry F lig h t System s D iv is io n is recognized as the leader in the developm ent of F lig h t C o n tro l S y s­ tem s and F lig h t Instrum ents and D isp la ys. O ur engineering team is second to none. Jo in Sperry F lig h t System s D iv isio n upon re ceivin g your degree in Engineering and take that big firs t step tow ard fu lfillin g your pro­ fe ssio n al and a ca d e m ic goals. W e are looking fo r engineers w ith B.S.. M .S . or Ph.D. degrees in E.E. or M .E .. to w ork in the areas listed below . Sperry F lig h t Syste m s D iv isio n , located in Phoenix. A rizona, leads in flig h t system s fo r a irlin e and bu sin ess aviation, and also pro­ v id e s such system s fo r v ita l m ilita ry aviatio n and space program s. S in ce opening our plant in A rizo n a 10 years ago. w e have grow n from 50 to over 3 ,0 0 0 em ployees, w ith four plant expansion s to a cco m m o ­ date our grow th. A bo u t P h o e n ix : It's a great place to live, w ith a dry, sunny climate*, that lets you enjoy year-around outdoor sports and hobbies. Nearby A rizo na State U n iv e rsity — w ith present e nrollm ent of ap pro xim a te ly 2 3 .0 0 0 — o ffe rs program s leading to advanced degrees in a ll e n g i­ neering fie ld s. T o a s sis t you in pursuing your further educational goals. Sperry F lig h t System s D iv isio n w ill pay your fu ll tu itio n and book costs. ON CAM PUS INTERVIEWS FRI., OCT. 27 It takes only a half hour Of your time to g e t th e c o m p l e t e story. To sign up for an appointment with a Sperry Flight Systems Division Professional Representative, see your Student Place­ ment Office. Gyroscopics • Mechanisms • Circuit Design Advanced Avionics • Research and Development Autopilots • Magnetics • Control Systems • In­ strument Displays • Standards • Publications Logistics • Industrial Engineering • Manufactur­ ing Engineering • Product Support FLIGHT SYSTEM S DIVISION P.O . B O X S 9 S 9 , P H O E N IX . ARIZO N A An equal opportunity em ployer U / F BSOOS Friday, October 20, 1967 STATE PRESS Volleyball Tourney Returns Nineteen team s representing nine junior colleges mid uni­ versities will participate in the third annual 'ASU Intercollegi­ ate Volleyball Tournament to­ morrow in the Women’s Physi­ cal Education Building. Matches begin at 9 a.m. and Athletic Fraternity Pledges To Contest for Membership will continue all day with the finals scheduled for 1:45 and 2:30 p.m. A female sextet from the Uni­ versity of Arizona is defending champion in the “A” Division, and the “B” Division champ is Northern Arizona University. Sun Devils, expecting to be a strong contender in this year’s tournament, according to Coach Mary Littlewood, will enter teans in both divisions. Members of the team are Dale Petty, Pat Behr, Kathy Handel, Betty Williams, Mary Lou Petitjean, Carol Newman, Joan Dewar, Sue Annis, Jan Rouwenhorst, Eva Mercado, Roni Mc­ Gill, Tyna Barinaga, Kris Farm er, Kathy Mattice, Elaine Hunt, Stephanie Hopkins, Judy Browning, Diane Wolta, Judi Driggs, Nancy Ellis, Catherine Arviso, Cherry Roberds and Marion Esquivel. During a recent practice, Che­ rry Roberds was elected “A” team captain and Judy Brown­ ing captain of the “B” team. The mens intram ural tennis the top position in B league by finals for singles were complet­ outplaying Les Smith of Sigma ed Wednesday, and competition Chi. for membership in Sigma Delta Competition was based on sin­ Psi, national honorary athletic gle elimination play. Each play­ fraternity, takes place Saturday. er had to compete in preliminary Jerry Gordon of Sigma Nu matches, consisting of winning clinched the A league cham­ five out of eight games per pionship in mens intram ural match, to reach the finals. tennis by beating Buddy BackA CONTINUING program of ery of Sahuaro D while Ken physical testing for membership Spence, Phi Delta Theta, took in Sigma Delta Psi will utilize the University swimming pool Saturday for competition. MORE ABOUT The event will be a 100-yard swim which must be complet­ ed within 1 minute 45 seconds. Testing will begin promptly at 8:30 a.m. and candidates must (Continued on page 11) be on time. ton in the Astrodome. He was a first team PAC selection and a s e c o n d team Academic AllAmerican. THE COUGAR No. 1 ground gainer is Mark Williams, a 5’8” 170-pound halfback who has net­ ted 249 yards in 69 tries. Devil-Cougar relations have been on the storm y side in the past. In 1960 the Sun Devils won, 24-21, there was a 24-24 tie in 1962 and in 1965 the Sun Devils edged out Coach Bert Clark’s Catt W O 7-3049 “Rose Bowl” team 7-6. Last year the Cougars pulled for an upset victory over Devils, 24-15. “I think it’s going to be a t o u g h game,” said Kush, “which is just what we need right now. I think our boys real­ ize they can’t afford to look ahead to Wyoming.” * Sun Devils ORDER OUR TAKE OUT DINNERS AND REALLY ENJOY TOMORROW NIGHT'S GAME P age 11 Undergraduate Soccermen To Face Rough Maryvale Both University s o c c e r squads will see exhibition ac­ tion this weekend against future Arizona Soccer League foes. The University Soccer Clubs undergraduate team will face Maryvale’s Cougars Sunday morning. The opposition is a new team in Arizona soccer competition but promises to be tough this year. The undergraduates will sport the same starting lineup which last Sunday tied state cham­ pion Judson High School 3-3. The senior-graduate squad will battle Hollandia, long-time powerhouse in this state, the same morning at 10 in Montersarne morning at 10 in Monter­ ey Park a t 7th Street and Sher­ idan, Phoenix. hi an earlier outing against Hollandia, the combined Devil team s were shot down 7-2. The older Devils will be to­ gether for the first time all year against Maryvale. The graduates and seniors can rarely make it to practice and have yet to play together as a team. 4 LOCATIONS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE ★ R a y 's A S U B a rb e r S h o p TEMPE CENTER ★ B o le s B a rb e r S h o p 905 E. LEMON ST. ★ M . U. B a rb e r S h o p MEMORIAL UNION BUILDING ★ R a y 's H a yd en P la z a HAYDEN PLAZA EAST PROFESSIONAL QUALITY BARBERING O N R A D IO CHICO'S RESTAURANT Burnished Scotch Grains by M A N S F IE L D S FINE MEXICAN FOOD 1120 East Apache Blvd. — Tempe "‘A ir Conditioned of course Intramurals Men’s Tennis Doubles A LEAG U E Best B over Delta Chi PI Kappa Alpha over Best A Sahuaro D over Irish Hall Sigma Chi over Sahuaro C Sigma Alpha Epsilon over Vet's Club College Inn over Sahuaro A Phi Kappa Psi over Theta Chi Sigma Nu over Kappa Sigma Theta Delta Chi over Lambda Chi Alpha Ph| Sigma Kappa over Heyden Hall L.D.S. over Best C — F ills over Bye Alpha Tau Omega over Sahuaro B Wee Ones over Sigma Phi Episllon NOW IN STOCK BY POPULAR DEMAND! B LEAGUE Kappa Sigma over L.D.S. Best A over Delta Chi Alpha Tau Omega over College Inn Theta Delta Chi over ARO TC Sigma Nu over F ills Sahuaro C over Best C Phi Delta Theta over Delta Sigma Phi Phi Sigma Kappa over Hayden H all or brown Sedleys THE VALLEY TRAVEL MART "Top 40" Singles T T C SPECIAL* HILL'S RECORDS A N D BOOKS Tempe Center A deluxe soccer shoe or intramural football shoe that elim inates that slip tendency that canvas shoes have on grass playing fields. Converse style low cut with fine moulded rubber sole and moulded cleats. Blue trim on top grain leather uppers. Rubber padded top for maximum protection. Approved for intramural football. M ansfield's new long-wing brogue in Bur­ nished Scotch Grain—the beautifully textured •m leather that blends so well with this season's bold-patterned, tweedy look in sports and casual wear. Add full leather linings, full storm welts, and blucher comfort—all at a realisticprice. Come see what we mean! 25.00 H anny’s LIST PRICE TEAM UNIVERSITY 1 2 30 PRICED A T SPO RTING 895 GOODS TEMPE CENTER Earqupt D o w n to w n • C h r ls t o w n • T h o m a s M a ll S c o t t s d a le Page 12 STATE PRESS Friday, October 20,-1967 BRING YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTION TO A RYAN-EVANS RYANE DOUARAMA V A SALE N FREE PHARM ACY A N D JUDGE FOR YOURSELF ARE LOW . . . LOW . . . LOW . . . . . . OUR PRICES BE SURE . . . Y O U C A N PUT YOUR TRUST IN A RYAN-EVANS REGISTERED PHARMACIST. $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ SAVE WITH SAFETY. $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ FOR THE FIRST 70 CUSTOMERS $ * $ 2.50 VALUE BAIN N O U VEAU SOAP WITH ANY 3.00 COSMETIC PURCHASE BRING THIS COUPON AND SHOP OUR ALL NEW COSMETIC DEPARTMENT. LIMIT 1 FREE ---- COUPON — FREE CLAIROL $ $ $ $ $ DRISTAN TABLETS 1.98 VALUE o o 1 4.76 VALUE LIMIT 4 BAN I ROLL-ON OR SPRAY LIMIT 2 $■ FACIAL TISSUE D rCO UK mm 200s, REG. 35c LIMIT 4 | * 1 0 0 4 | V W FO. ■ 2.36 VALUE KLEENEX 2 LIMIT 2 1 M AGNETIC 1 HAIR ROLLERS CANS SUPER STAINLESS STEEL 5 * 1 0 0 $ HAIR SPRAY GILLETTE 1.98 VALUE $ VISIT OUR ALL NEW COSMETIC DEPARTMENT . . . A N D SAVE M O N EY O N OUR EVERYDAY LOW . . . LOW . . . PRICES. LIMIT 2 Pkg. $ GET SET NICE V EASY 2.00 VALUE $ 100 I FILLER PAPER 300 COUNT 2 $1 0 0 FOR mtm 2.00 VALUE LIMIT 4 FOR 1 LIMIT 4 PRICES GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY A T OUR TEMPE CENTER STORE ONLY Page 2-B F r id a y , O cto b e r 2 0 , 1967 STATE PRESS WEEKEND Tired tasters? Inns ‘stuff your gullet’ Weekend dining is a pleasure rare; to be savored far more than the few extra hours sleep Sunday afternoons or the break in daily clash bash of classes. Weekend eating is cheater eating because it is necessary to go some distance, pay a lit­ tle more for the privilege of Beanrarise, sour cream , cham­ pagne, steak, lobster or your choice. It is cheater eating because a loosening of the belt one notch or a tug at the skirt waist de­ notes only a pleasant hunger satisfaction that is accompani­ ed by slower, more prolonged conversation. Bavarian buffs will find that the Alpine Village Inn blends a clever but not pretentious Ger­ manic atmosphere to accompany an excellent bevy of Gennan and American favorites that are truly delectable. From the relish tray and cal­ dron kettle soups that begin the feast to the Sauerbraten, steak mid lobster or whatever entree follows, the attractively costum­ ed waitresses keep a steady but not-too-rapid barrage of morsels coming. Chez Louis, behind the fron­ tier-hewn facade of Scottsdale West is the Frenchman’s delight. A relatively small menu is per­ haps misleading because the succulent dishes available re ­ flect the expertly blended flav­ ors of Louis G eraain, formerly Saga keeps the By JOHN WALLACE When one eliminates the apartment-dwelling home economist, the Burger Chef >- Cherniy Dug d e v o t e e , and the Executive House gourmet, what’s left is an enormous aggregation of Uni­ versity students who daily ad­ here to the law of self-preser­ vation by permitting Saga Food Service to soothe their minds, still their hearts and fill their stomachs. Saga — 36 states, three coun­ tries (how’d they escape out of the United States and bow’d th e/ get into Canada and Leb­ anon?;, 220 colleges and univer­ sities, 23 hospital accounts, $75 million gross last year and this school's favorite Big Brother (save for my mother the admin­ istration). Five tons of meat, 3,000 gal­ lons of milk, 700 gallons of ice cream a week a t this university alone — “I don’t believe it,” anrkted one strikingly slender coed. But despite the relentless ef­ forts of these community-mind­ ed, humanitarian do-gooders at the top of the Saga pedestal, you college kids still aren’t eat­ ing the way your m other would like. Sedleys at TRAVEL MART THE VALLEY healthy What would the mothers of serve Saga food to patients here America think if it were made a t the center,” said Mrs. Mc­ known to the world that Mrs. Farland. “They have an excel­ Elaine McFarland, director of lent balanced diet.” the Student Health Center, says “I think that boys, on the the occurence of f a i n t i n g -whole, eat very well,” she add­ among coeds is “fairly fre­ ed, quent.” It seems that most of the diet Reasons given for these un­ trouble occurs in the weaker fortunate experiences include sex. “Food’s food for the most skipping breakfast, a low sugar content in the blood, and iron part,” said a healthy specimen deficiencies from a lack of meat the other day. “When you’re hungry .. and broke, Saga real­ and vegetables. But don’t blame Saga. “We ly comes on strong.” Stan ’«Fireside Fish Fry Every W ed. $1.25 Children .75 W onderful Food and Cocktails STAN and JEANNIE STANFORD Complete Banquet Facilities Small ort Large Groups 966-6416 (A.S.U. 24 Wash. St. 17) Happy House Tempe Center 8 4 0 -0 9 8 3 1 6 EJ. M a i n . ■ ^ ■ ■ S B S B S S H iSCOTTSDALE “The strongest of Bunuel’s many strong films, a harrowing parable of salvation and damnation in which the grand old anarchist pours all the vials of his wrath upon the idle rich and the mother church." —Time LUIS BUNUEL’S Closed On Sundays Your Hosts; - FULL POST OFFICE SERVICE - "BUÑUEL stages this play with explosive fero­ cities. He is showing us the played-out privi­ leged classes in all their stubborn sterility. It is fitfully fascinating, well-staged and wellplayed." _ —Boslay Crawthe, N.r. f U SPECIAL BUFFET LUNCH $1.00 Plus Drink Live Music Fri. and Sat. GREETING CARDS THAT GREET I Under New Management Nitely The Stationery You Arte Looking! For •A R T THEATRE GUILD 3300 S. M ill Ave. Dancing gets tiie nod as seafoods’ best with Perino’s in Los Angeles. The Coq au Via; Chicken, ba­ friend. The elegant Phoenix res­ con and mushrooms cooked in taurant caters well to those who onions and cognac, or the beef want the best in ocean-fresh bourguignonne, beef casserole shark, swordfish, lobster or with vegetables and bacon in shrimp — even in this desert red Burgundy sauce and served metropolis. From the “Big Four” restau­ with buttered noodles, are two rants, the knife, fork, napkin' of Germain’s best. Steak is at its best in Phoe­ and hunger crew moves out to a nix, as attested by the myriad great number of eateries with of excellent dining rooms with menus as big as their reputabeef as their specialty, and - fions. So, take a suggestion and perhaps nowhere can well-pre­ pared steak and side dishes be stuff your gullet with an all-out, found with such a unique atmos­ no-holds-barred meal a t any one phere as at Monti’s La Casa of over 100 Valley inns. Your di­ gestive tract — and your dis­ Vieja. Neptune’s Table necessarily position — will thank you. /-. the exterminating angel NOW SHOWING FOR ONE WEEK ONLY! HERTZ RENT A CAR FOR ALL COLLEGE STUDENTS 18 O R OLDER O N LY $99.50 3& E '.’ANYTIME-ANYWHERE” TAPE RECORDER T ap« th e e a s y w a y w ith ' Sony's solid-state, Easymatic C assetteC order! H ere's th« "anytime-anywhere" record­ ing w ay to go. Simply press the batton, snap in the Sony >e C assette and tape up to m inutes...press the button ag a in ... out pops the cassette ready to reload. What could be «aster? S Hi Fi Sales 764 W. Main, Mesa 969-3191 THE RATES THE CARS • WEEKEND DAYS "24 Hr*." $6.50 a day plus 12c a mile 1968 • FORD M USTANG • ENTIRE WEEKEND, $19.50 plus 12c a mile • FORD GALAXIE • CHEVROLET • 1 FULL WEEK "7 DAYS" $60.00 plus 12c a mile r% • A N D OTHER • 1 FULL WEEK ”7 DAYS" $88.00 plus 500 Free Miles • FINE CARS STEVE BLAGEN Campus R epresentative Call 966-0155 J o B« A»ur«d o f th . Car You W ont M a la Rw ruation» 24 H our. In A dvan e. § Friday, October 20, 1967 STATE PRESS WEEKEND Jennings stays for jd encore Page 3-B APARTMENT Chad & Jeremy “Anything that’s original knocks me out” said Waylon Jennings, who considers himself the originator of his own brand of music, Country-folk. Between performances at JD’s, Jennings said, “I like the Lovin’ Spoonful 'because their m ixture of psychedelic a n d country is original.” He add- Vi NEW LOCATION BLOCK TO ASU Dr. Robert G . Skok Optometrist 1 Bedroom furn. All util, paid. $90 a mo.. 706 Krueger. 967-4221 17 E. 7th St. Phone 967-6430 for info. Onferapus with (By the author of “Rally Round the Flag, Boye!”, “Dobie GiUisetc.) A THERE ARE NO BAD TEACHERS; THERE ARE ONLY BAD STUDENTS The academic year has only ju st begun and already one th in g is clear : you’re not ready fo r college. W hat, then, should you do? Should you throw up your hands and quit? I say no! I say you m ust attack, grapple, cope ! I say Am erica did not become the world’s leader in motel construction and kidney transplants by r unning away from a fight! To the question then : You say you’re not ready fo r col­ lege. Tbu’re too green, too naive. You lack m aturity. Okay, th e answ er is sim ple: get m ature. How? Well sir, to achieve m aturity you need two things : a ) a probing m ind; b) a vest. A probing m ind will be quickly yours if you’ll remem­ ber th a t education consists not of answ ers but of ques­ tio n s. B lindly accep tin g in fo rm a tio n and dum bly m em orizing d ata is high school stuff. In college you don’t ju st accept. You dispute, you push, you pry, you chal­ lenge. If, fo r instance, your physics prof says, “E equals me squared,” don’t ju st w rite it down. Say to the prof, “W hy?” This will show him two things : a) Tour m ind is a keen, th ru stin g instrum ent. b) You are in the wrong m ajor. Ask questions, questions, and more questions. T hat is th e essence of m aturity, the h eart and liver of education. N othing will more quickly convince the teachers th a t you are of college calibre. And the tougher your questions, the better. Come to class w ith queries th a t d a rt and flash, th a t make unexpected sallies into uncharted territo ry . Ask things which have never been asked before, lilt« “How tall was N ietzsche?” and “Did the M inotaur have ticks? If so, were they im m ortal?” and “How often did P itt the Elder shave?” College special, folk-rock by Chad & Jerem y, English turned American vocalists Tonight: 8:30 in Gammage. Pliotos by Ron Schlsxlk wailing Waylon ed, “I song country music be­ cause that’s the only music I know. I can sing it and I can feel it.” Prior to coming to Phoenix Jennings worked as disc jockey in Texas. Jennings said, “I came here because I was hungry. My claim to fame is being the world’s worst news­ caster.” Jennings said, “I’ve been all over the world and I think Phoenix is the greatest town there is. lid s may sound cor­ ny, but that’s the way I feel.” Waylon Jennings, glittering country singing success will be a t JD ’s tomorrow night for a special hold-over performance. _____ our g ift to you ! save KP on Xm as photo-greeting cards m ade b y K odak 9 x 12 Used Rugs - 7.50 ■Just bring your favorite snapshot, negative or color slide to us. Choose from a variety of contemporaiy and modern designs. But act NOW to take advantage of our eariy-season 10% saving to you—order by October 27. A ll Sizes in Stock CARPET HOUSE PIONEER CAMERA SHOP 967-4662 Tempe Center 1516 E. Van Buren, Phoenix THE. C O - E D presents a P i e - F o r m a l O p e n i n g S pe ci al PAN T DRESSES Regular Price $10.00 This Weekend O nly . . . • Just $ 6 00 THE C O - E D 715 S. FOREST TEMPE - ARIZONA Just Received Shipment — Coat Dresses (Incidentally, you-may never know th e complete an­ sw er to P itt the Elder’s shaving habits, but of one thing you can be positive: no m atter how often he shaved and no m atter w hat blades he used, he never Vnjoyed the shaving com fort th a t you do. I am assum ing, p t course, th a t you use Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades, a logical assum ption to make when one is addressing col­ lege men—which is to say men o f perspicacity discrim i­ n a tio n , w it, ta s te , cognizance, and sh rew d n ess—fo r Personna is a blade to please the perspicacious, delight the discrim inating, win the w itty, tickle tn e tasteful, coddle the cognizer, and shave the shrewd. (I bring up Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades be­ cause the m akers of Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades pay me to w rite th is column, and they are in­ clined to sulk if I om it to m ention th e ir product. I would not like to see them unhappy, the m akers of Personna, fo r they are fine ruddy men, fond of m orris dancing and home brewed root beer, and they make a blade th at shaves closely and cleanly, nicklessly and hacklcnsly, and is sharp and gleam ing and durable and available both in double-edge style and Injector style. (A nd from these same bounteous bladem akers comes Burm a-Shave, regular or m enthol, a lath er th a t outlathers other lathers, brother. So if you’d rath e r lather better, and soak your w hiskers w etter, Burm a-Shave ’3 your answ er.) B ut I digress. We have now solved the problem of m aturity. In subsequent columns we’ll take up other is­ sues, equally burning. Since 1953 when th is column first started running in your campus paper, we’ve tackled such thorny questions as “Can a student of 19 find hap­ piness w ith an economics professor of 90?” an d '“Should capital punishm ent fo r pledges be abolished?” and “Are room-mates san itary ?” Be assured th a t in th is, our 14th year, we will not be less bold. I . . * * * 0 m t . M u Shulman The makers of Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades (double-edge or' Injector) and Burma-Shave (regular or menthol) are plemsed(or apprehensive) to b^ing you another year of Max Shulman’* uninhibited,' uncen­ sored column. ^ ... i w u - . « Page 4-B STATE PRESS WEEKEND Friday, October 20, 1967 Pair by menotti to open lyric opera By BERTHA REYNOLDS Tom Bums officially becomes a “thief” and Tomm Fox com­ petes with Steve Hood, who portrays a telephone, for the love of a girl tonight as the Lyric Opera Theater -opens its season in Cosner with a pair of productions. The two operas by Gian-Carlo Menotti are “The Old Maid and the T h i e f ” and “The Tele­ phone.” ' “The Old Maid and the Thief,” is a grotesque comedy, direct­ ed by Dr. Kenneth Sdpp. Per­ forming in it will be Mary Mar­ garet Dillon as Miss Todd|y; M ary Reynolds as Miss Pinker­ ton, Julie Gibson Grier as Laetitia and Tom Bums as the thief. “The Telephone,” directed by Alan Grier of Tempe will feat­ ure Susan Mecham as Lucy; Tomm Fox as Ben and Steve Hood at the telephone, Ben’s only rival for Lucy’s love. Set designer D ouglas-Scott Goheen has created a complex series of Steps and levels upon which the action will take place. Goheen even obtained authentic pot-bellied stoves for the set. Slims, a 19-year-old sopho­ more majoring in vocal perfor­ mance, is playing opposite Mrs. Grier for the second tim e. He portrays the thief who is literal­ ly kidnapped by pining, panting spinsters. Mrs. Grier, who usually plays a glamour girl, will display her versatility as a lower-type char­ acter. The—20-year-old sopho­ more major in vocal perform­ ance changed from a piano ma­ jor last year when her voice developed sooner than she ex­ pected. Fox, a graduate assistant in Spanish, is a m aster of six to eight languages and considers music a hobby even if he has spent 15 years of his life per­ forming. A sophomore drama major, Hood, pantomimes most of his part as a baritone singer in “The Telephone.” He will play Mr. Doolittle in the coming pro­ duction of “My F air Lady.” Ruth Yandell, a graduate in education, is pianist■■for both productions. Grier, director of “The Telephone,” uses a real character as the telephone which is usually not done. The plot of “The Telephone,” which is set in an ultra-modem futuristic time is the desperate attem pt of Ben to win the hand of Lucy who spends her tone on the telephone day and night. Finally as a last resort, Ben leaves to call her on the tele­ phone to ask her to m arry him. “The Telephone” is a short, light, delightful comedy written to precede “The Medium.” The English librettos and the music for “Telephone” and “Thief” were written by Menotti who is a winner of two Pulitzer Prizes as an internationally pop­ ular chamber opera composer. Menotti, who was bom in Italy, came to this country In the twenties where he attended the Curtis Institute in Philadel­ phia. He directed the film of' his opera, “The Medium,” wrote “Amald and the Night Visitors” especially for televis­ ion, and won Pulitzer Prizes for “The Consul” and “The Saint of Bleecker S treet” “Because of toe enthusiastic response to our performances last year of Menotti’s ‘The Medium,” Dr. Seipp said, “we have scheduled,, two -more operas this year by the same composer.” “The Telephone” and “Thief” wifi be performed in Cosner Auditorium tonight, tomorrow night and next weekend, at 8:30. Students, faculty and staff may see tods production free by buying a season ticket for three musical theatre presenta­ tions for as low as $2. The regular price for tickets is |1 per show, but by taking advantage of this offer three productions can be seen for the cost of two. Tickets may be obtained in advance at the Lyceum box office, 981-3437, o r a t Cosner on evenings of performances. SOM ETHING NEW COLLEGE COURSE OUTLINES - Keyed to your Text and/or Course Nearly all Freahmen and many Sophomore Courses available now. Others are oh order Sold only at THE INK POT 407 M ill A ve. • Tempe 10-6 D aily except Sunday Hughes announces new openings on the TECH NICAL STAFF. Assignm ents exist for Engineers g ra d u a tin g in 1967 w ith B.S., M .S. and Ph.D degrees in ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING. H U G H E S-F U L L E R T O N Engineering Laboratories assignments range from research to hardw are development and operational support of products and systems in the field. O ur current activities Involve the advanced tech­ nologies of phased-array frequencyscan n in g ra d a r systems, real-time general purpose computers, displays, data processing, satellite and surface communications systems, surface-toair missile systems, and tactical air w eapons command/control systems. For ad d itio n al Inform ation on the opportunities offered at H U G H E S FULLERTON in Southern California — and to arrange for a personal inter­ view with our Staff representatives, please contact your College Place­ ment Office or write: Mr. D. K. Horton, Supervisor, Professional Staffing, H U G H E S -F U L L E R T O N , P. O . Box 3310, Fullerton, California 92634. On-campus interviews November 3 HUGHES HUGHES An equal opportunity employer - M & F / U.S. citizenship is required A IR C R A F T COMPANY