; Fridajfi'-'F*}). 14 — Pag« H ¡¡¡§ ;• & .SMK W ARIZONASTATEUMVBtSfTY VoL 51, N o. 60 Senate releases Oldham allegations B y B U R T K EN N ED Y FIN D IN G S The findings of the Senate committee, quo­ ted fai fidi, are as follows: “Football Seating: ''We have documented evidence to the effect that non-students were sitting in student sections in direct violation of the contract between Associated Students and the Intercollegiate Athletic Department. “Appointments: William Oldham has re­ peatedly broken appointments with students, faculty and non-University Community people without explanation to either file parties in­ volved or telling his secretary why. “Appointments to Committees, etc: In di­ rect violation of the AS Statutes, William Old­ ham has consistently failed to make appoint­ ments to University Boards and Committees and to the Supreme C ourtof Associated Stu­ dents. -¿T “Unauthorized documentation: William Oldham has signed the nafate of Associated Students to ‘Your Rights and Obligation When GooCronted by a Policeman’ without consultation with the Executive Council mem­ bers. “Parking Citations: This Committee has !*»umentation to the effect that William OldM has accrued over $100 worth of parking chations (30 parking violations ) widen were hot paid by 12 noon on Feb. 8. As Ope was quoted in the State Press on Feb. i t, lit» , in a statem ent concerning parking violation ac­ counts (unpaid), ‘Not only can’t the student receive U s diploma, but he also wiB not be aMe to regfafaer far the following eem estei1with these financial obligations iwmftw vM to’ » By ED TAYLOR The Experimental College was denied use of University class­ rooms by file Board of Regents yesterday. A motion introduced by Dean Burch of Tucson and approved by file board stated the regents did not have the power to grant REPLY Some responses of AS President Bill Oldham to the committee findings are as follows: Football Seating: “I don’t know what in the world could be m eant by that,” said Old­ ham. “As to r as I know the chairm an of the Athletic Board and Clyde Smith have no com­ plaints about the administration of our con­ tract with them.” Appointments: ‘‘All my appointments are handled by my secretary. Of course there are tim es when faihme to keep appointments has been unavoidable,” s a d Oldham. Appointments to Committees, etc.: “As far as I know,” said Oldham, ‘‘all student position; on University Boards and Committees have been filled. The vacancy on the Supreme Court was not filled because I did not fed that it was in the best interests of the University «tndento to fill it a t that time. “Since that tim e I have decided on a stu­ dent to fill Ads position and I will submit his name to r consideration of the Serete,” said Oldham. Unauthorized Documentation: “As ASASU president I sign for ASASU every day without the approval of the Executive Cbuncfl. * “In objecting to the contento of this paper critics tofi to realise that it does not: « w f a demonstrations o r crim inal acts, but therety informs students of their rights.” Parking Citations: “This charge does not realty relate to my duties a s president of ASASU. I usually w rit to the end of a semester to pay my perking fines, and I have; store Feb. S, paid the fines mentioned far the {fad togs of the investigatory committee,” he said. T h e S tu d e n t S e n a te co m m ittee s e t u p to in v estig ate a lleg atio n s co n cern in g A SA SU P re sid e n t B ill O ldham rele ase d its fin d in g s a fte r re p o rtin g to th e sen ato rs in a n h o u r-lo n g recessed session W ednesday afternoon. A fte r th e receased session, closed to p ress and spec­ ta to rs, S e n a te S p e a k e r L in d a Y arb ro u g h em phasized th a t th e se w e re “fin d in g s” a n d n o t “ch arg es.” S en. D ennis C ole, m em b er o f th e in v estig a to ry com ­ m itte e , sa id th a t O ldham w o u ld b e in v ite d to a recessed session, w ith th e co m m ittee o f se n ato rs a t th e n e x t sen ate m ee tin g to d iscu ss “u n ific atio n o f s tu d e n t governm ent a n d o th e r q u estio n s b ro u g h t u p b y th e se n ato rs.” A ccording to S en. G ary E schbacher, th e findings o rig in a lly covered seven p rin ts . H ow ever, when released, o n ly fiv e p o in ts w e re lis te d o n th e o fficial fin d in g s of th e com m ittee. D eleted d u rin g th e recessed session o f th e sen ate w as a f in din g co n cern in g O ldham ’s resp o n sib ility in h a n d lin g th e sch ed u lin g o f th e B a ja M arim ba B and. A lso d e le te d w as a fin d in g th a t O ldham h ad rid i­ cu led A SA SU . I n re g a rd to th is m a tte r Sen. Jo h n C lark rem ark ed , “S om e p eo p le g e t u p tig h t ab o u t b ein g called th e p e a n u t b u tte r clu b .” T h e re le a se o f th e fin d in g s clim ax es sev eral w e e k s o f b itte r ch a rg e s a n d c o u n ter-ch arg es b etw een O ldham ’s su p p o rte rs a n d m em b ers o f th e in v e stig a to ry com m ittee. T h e co m m ittee o rig in a lly w as com posed o f S en. B ill P h illip s, T om E d w ard s; C a th y S tre e c h , Jo h n H olm an, S h a ro n Ia q u in to , C h a rlie D av is a n d D en n is Cole. S ens. E d w ard s a n d H olm an resig n ed a t th e firs t ses­ sio n fo llo w in g tiie C h ristin as v acatio n because o f outside com m itm ents to o th e r se n a te com m ittees. T h e co m m itte e f ir s t d rew c ritic ism fo r giv in g a re ­ p o rt to th e se n a te o n th e o f th e investigation, T h e rep o rt« fro m S en. te, w as p u b lish e d At the senate meeting, after the statements were made, Sen. Walt Ulman requested that since Oldham had not been confronted with any charges, no senators told the State Press. “I have should make statements to the sent letters to the regents asking State Press. At the same session Sen. to talk.w ith them but have not Iaquinto asked that the senators been able to.” not quote others on inside con­ In other action involving the versations. University, the board approved Along this same line Speaker the award of a $2,383,000 con­ Yarbrough commented, “If you tract to the Arnold Construction can’t trust your fellow senators Co. of Phoenix to build the 100,- to speak with privately, who can (Contissed on page 5) you trust?” deny use of rooms use of University fariHtfoq for other than approved awnfanip courses. The Experimental College had asked the board for use of Uni­ versity classrooms, even though the project has not been approv­ ed by the University administra­ tion. SDSers fail in attempt at Regent confrontation Mike Goodman, coordinator of the experiment was allowed into the meeting room but could not speak on behalf of fads proposal. After the meeting Goodman complained he has “repeatedly been denied right to explain my case.” “I have addressed every ad­ m inistrator I could find,” he By AL SHIYA An SDS-sponsored m arch on the Board of Regents monthly meeting fa) the Administration Building yesterday toiled in its attem pt to present the board with demands that they abolish the use of supposed secret police on campus. About 50 students and newsmen walked into the Administra­ tion Building after a rally of nearly Ido on the *r«n Though the gathering was allowed to enter the second-floor hallway, it was not perm itted to enter the meeting. Before the march, Chad Smfah, chairman of d an page I) to a lac k o f room . H ow ever, n o n e o f th f m rm h rfi ap p eared in t i n m in tin g \ . m Court in Armstrong s/z fl n r ii Students see judicial process B t GL E NN HUNTER H UNT E R By GLENN The bailiff rapped b b gavel sharply, three Hack - robed judges filed intn the Great m and for two hours Wednesday af­ ternoon the Armstrong f lJ V y of Law building became the set­ ting for an extraordinary ses­ sion of the Arizona Staff G ovt of Appeals. Although the c o v t never meets on legal holidays, the pre­ siding judges derided to waive that riding on Lincohi’s birth­ day, and took the oppor tunity to hear two civil cases before about 200 law students gathered in B e Great Hall. Hearing the oral augm ents in the two cases were Court of Appeals Chief Judge Francis J . Donofrio, and Judge Henry S. Stevens, both of Dhr. 1 of Phoe­ nix and Superior C ovt Judge John A. McGuire, Dhr. 2, of Yuma. » The first case presented, Dick- . h , concerned j . v- A an ap- »' A second-year law student, jjealI hby a young mother to over- Galen Wilkes, was allowed by v e r court ruling on the the court to sit with counsel for of her child. The sec- the appellant in the first action. . an action involving the Wilkes had worked with attorney d o rin e County Attorney against Mike Hammer through the Le­ the ehnrinan of the Cochise gal Aid program in preparing donato Board of Supervisors. file case. m ‘ . . . . . . Following the session, the three judges answered questions posed by the law students. Dean Willard H. Pedrick called the afternoon a “singularly worth­ while experience for the stu­ dents.” Prof. Morris J. Starsky’s at­ torney, Jay Duqjioff questioned this week why the prosecution waited seven days before filing for a rehearing on the grounds that they ( th e prosecution) didn’t receive a copy of the superior court’s ruling. On appeal, Judge Yale McFate ruled that the word “ob! scene” in the statute under i which Starsky was convicted of disturbing the peace was too vague. He gave the county/10 days from Jan. 15 to refile the char­ ges, but no action was taken within the time limit. “The county claims they didn’t { learn of the decision in our faU W C O U T S LAWYERS — T h re e ju d g e s o f th e A rizo n a C o u rt o f A ppeals ^ " b e n c h ! vor until Jan. 31 — but why did t£ m ~ « a l h i A rm stro n g H alL Ju d g W m -e (le ft to they wait until Feb. 7 to ask for n g b t) Jahn^A ^ M cGuire , D ivision 2, Y um a; F ra n c is J . D onofrio, D ivision % P h o en ix : a new bearing?” Dushoff quer­ a n d H e n ry S . S tev en s, D ivision 1, P ho en ix . ied. Nomadic experimental classes find homes »By CLETE PREUSS If at first yon don’t succeed, try the church of j w riyin» This is what the Experimen­ tal University has done In at­ tempting to secure classroom space. Denied access to « mi p « buildings, the Experimental Un­ iversity has appealed to the re­ ligious centers around «nipM and so has secured rent - free classroom space in two eh v th es, the Newman Center awd Baker Center. Three Experimental Univer­ sity classes, parapsychology, man and his mind and a< a social commentary, were hdd Tuesday in the Newman Cen­ ter. One class met there yester­ day and another class is A W for today. “Because of the University's position, facilities are not avail­ able for the experimental ed­ ucation program,” Father Walsh of the Newman Center explain­ ed. “Dean Hamm assured spon­ sors of the program that he’d make every effort to provide off-campus facilities f ir name. es. One of these facilities is the Newman Center. “Dean Hamm has #«iph»«i» nf his strong endorsement of the idea of the Experimental Uni- questions filing w m ty. When I was asked to serve all the University famiprovide soeh facilities,. I was ly,” Father Walsh said. happy to do so because the Reverend Tom Belt, director Newman Center, as well as othJ centers, is here to ^ Jh e^ £ isco g a ^ _ S tu d e n ^ C e te ter in the Baker Complex, has lent his office space to a class £ “ 1^ ™ en.tal “ usic- Ab^ 25 students showed up for the first meeting. ¿¿f/t Dushoff said his office receiv­ ed the court’s ruing on Jan. 20, and asked why the county didn’t receive theirs until 11 days later. The hearing on the prosecu­ tion’s claim is set for Feb. 19 at 9 a.m. before Judge McFate. College Delli N o GianJs . . . No Monsters . . . Just Good Delli Food! a r iz 6n a state U N IV E R 8 IT Y OPEN 9 AJML TO 1 A.M. A R T S B U IL D IN G F E B R U A R Y 17, 825 S. Rural Rd. — 967-64 1069 10 A . M . t o 4 P . M . ST A T U P R E S S Arizona Sialo U aivarsity m the officiai cam pa* i im p a p u a— n r T jtsd a y Wiraag» m m «am th* « S u l yaar. aaB oxaminatiaa M rtorti ao aacao at Tam a«, M m A L SA N CH EZ F orm erly o f th e MAI. B arbershop Has m oved to COPE'S BARBER SHOP 703 Mill A ve.—M 7 -07S1 * 3 0 -6:30 Tubs, th r o Bat. I H t PEOPLE BOOK JA n U A K U /6 V IS SA H U A R O /69 is a y e a r b o o k w it h s o m e th ,n n tr , -, a w a lk on a br.sk A utum n aftern o o n ,u S A H U A R O / ’69 IS THE PEOPLE PEOPLE BOOK $7 * s o u t h SOUTH HALL p/ons reading course Manzanita, in coordination with the University reading clinic, is sponsoring a course designed to help students im­ prove their reading skills The non-credit reading pro­ gram will begin Tuesday. It will be directed toward “self-im­ provement” of reading effect­ iveness, comprehension and gen­ eral skills, said Mrs. Mary Hunt, director of Manzanita. The 10-week program is un­ der the direction of Dr. John L. Edwards, head of the College of Education reading clinic. Classes will be every Tuesday and Thursday in the Manzanita conference room 6:30 - 8 p.m. Mrs. Hunt said Manzanita is underwriting part of the course fee for students taking the pro­ gram in the dormitory. By charging $20, Manzanita is sav­ ing students an additional $5 they would be charged by tak­ ing the course in the reading dine. Other sections of the reading program are availabe for foe $25 fee in the reading clinic. Applications for the Manzan-' ita section can be picked up from Manzanita administrative assistant Libby Friedman. They will be accepted until Feb. 18 if foe section is still open. The program is constructed to help students develop reading skills by using equipment from the reading clinic, hand-out m at­ erial and two bodes. Pre- and post-course tests are given to demonstrate increased reading effectiveness. Mrs. Hunt said many of the students in the Manzanita pro­ gram are upperclassmen. She explained they are generally good scholars majoring in nonreading departments. But they lose touch with reading «kill« and want to increase their read­ ing speed before they start studying for finals. One difficul­ W M ,5lW W v«»gwoosgwUUÜÜÜUÜUlW UIHIÜIlW t»a CALENDAR AM n u r t w — we«, m ould bo twboitttod throe days prior to Sw publication to a sso rs « a ir appsaraaca in IN Today Dr. Keith Basso, UofA, speaks on Apache witch­ craft, 3:30, SSMtt. Opening speaker of the psychology meeting, Dr. D. N. SptneDi of Stanford University Mwfra) Center, 3:30, SS205. Jeannette Wagner, soprano, performs in a sen­ ior voice recital, And. 301, 8:30 p.m. 13fo Annual Southwestern Forensics Champion­ ship Tournament for high school speech and dram a students (all day). By CHARLIE MACK The Department of Psycho­ logy has established a Clinical Psychology Center to provide the assistance of psychologists in working with a wide variety of personal problems. The Center will be manned by 13 part-tim e staff members con­ sisting of the clinical faculty and advanced graduate students who are nearing completion of their doctorate degrees.' Dr. Austin Jones, director of the cento*, said foe Center was created by a decision of the fa­ culty of the Clinical Psychology Training Program after being in the planning stages for about two years. The center is not lim ited to student clients. “I don’t envision any pro­ blems,” Dr. Jones said. “The only problem which might oc­ cur would be due to our limited facilities where a client might not have an opportunity to be seen.” “The clients who come to the Center are usually those people who wish to gain a better un­ derstanding of their personal problems,” Dr. Jones stated. “We cannot guarantee any re ­ sults, but we will try to assist them in finding ways of solving these problems,” he continu­ ed. “All discussions will be in strictest confidence.” Clients who wish appointments may call the center a t 001-6728 or visit the office which is locat­ ed in SS405B. Clients who m ake appoint­ ments will be interned Within one week after their initial in­ quiry as to Whether the center will be able to provide the ser­ vices requested. AF Officers Qualification Testing, 7:30 am ., LSC191. Open House—Interfraternity Council, rash orien­ tation assembly, noon, SS10S. T he A rticu la te P la id Suit Very P rop er.. .Very Cool. Beginning of classes for new members of the Karate Club, 7-9 p.m. Coming P artial to plaids—interesting plaids? Come in and see our Deansgate warm w eather collection. The fab ric: 9 crisp 55% I Dacron® polyester/45% wool blend th a t keeps its good m anners on the w arm est days. Im portant: these suits are tailored in D esnsgate’s own understated n atu ral shoulder construction, and there are m any colors to choose from.j^Qg Faculty piano recital, Stmday, And, 301. Frank Spinosa and Dan Durand performing, 3 p.m. International Voluntary Services recruiter M ar­ cus Birdaen on cawqma to opportunities for overseas development work, Monday. International Student Relations Board meeting, Monday, 3:45 p.m., Trophy room, MU W est 400 em ployers will interview at Placement Over 400 employers will con­ duct career placement inter­ views on campus during foe next two months. Cqmmercial, industrial and governmental recruiting has be­ gun in the Commercial Division of foe Placement Service for seniors or graduate students completing degree requirements by January 1970. Students must register with foe Placement Service as soon as possible to be eligible for on-campus interviews. Approximately 70 new employ­ ers will recruit students this semester. This is in addition to those companies and agencies - that participated in the fall recruiting program. Various employment litera­ ture, including copies of “En­ gineering Opportunities” and current announcements and ap­ plications for foe Federal Ser­ vice Entrance Exam, are also available at the Placement Ser­ vice. ty is that some students post­ pone improving their reading skills until it’s too late to help with finals. The Manzanita class will con­ sist of 30 students, a chop of 20 from those enrolled in 'the dorm’s two sections last seme- Psychology center target: aid clients with problems Why I aDiamond? From Biblical tim es, the diamond has been linked with love and fidelity. Throughout the ages, it was considered one of the world’s most precious substances. The ring mounting, being circular, denotes “love without end,” With this tradition, naturally, your engagement diamond should be chosen carefully, and be of the finest quality within your budget. We will be happy to explain the “Four C’s” of diamond value to you according to the standards of the American Gem Society—a select, professional or­ ganization of fine jewelrs working in behalf of fine dia­ mond customers Cjb you. V % l J EWELERS IN T H E ARTIST & DRAFTING SUPPLIES Crafts • Picture Frames Decorating M aterial Tamp« Center * W O 7-4482 Open Men. A Thu re. Nitee ARCHCB I m 130 EAST 1940 i U N IV E R S IT Y EAST A LSO C E R T IF IE D D R IV E CAM ELBACK, IN SU N • TEM PE P H O E N IX , C IT Y ^ N D • 9 6 7 -B 9 1 7 2 7 7 -1 4 3 1 F l^ iU B T A I^ ^ . ’ Q E M O L O B IS T , A M E R IC A N 13E * f | j B ( if ilE T Y C L O T H IE R 130 EAST UNIVERSITY DRIVE f P t o n S sfci-H - ¡ T i p * Senàtes thinking a Do y o u lik e m y steries? T hen y o u ’ll love th e A SA SU Senate;. T h e se n ato rs keep com ing u p w ith im p ro b ab le b ills th a t leav e you w o n d erin g if th e b u tle r d id i t T he b ill of th e m om ent is S e n a te B ill 8 w hich w ould h av e excluded a ll ex cep t m em bers o f th e S e n a te from se rv in g on U n iv e rsity boards. “W ould h a v e ” is th e p ro p e r p h rasin g because A S P re sid e n t B ill O ldham v etoed th e b ill a n d th e S e n a te fa ile d to gain th e necessary tw o -th ird s m a jo rity needed to o v e rrid e it W ednesday. O ne o f th e few th in g s A SA SU can be com m ended fo r th is y e a r is O ldham ’s d riv e to in cre ase stu d e n t p a rticip a tio n on U n iv e rsity b oards, com posed o f b o th fac­ u lty an d stu d e n t m em bers. O ldham , of course, h a d o th e r in te re s ts in m in d w h en he s ta rte d h is p ro g ram — h e w a n te d to boost h is cam paign la s t sp rin g a n d a ttr a c t a tte n ­ tio n to a flo u n d e rin g A SA SU — b u t m ore im p o rta n t w as th e re s u lt o f g e ttin g m ore stu d e n ts in v o lv ed in th e g o v ern m en t o f th e U n iv ersity . T h e S e n a te m em bers w h o su p p o rted th e b ill d e m o n stra ted o n e cause o f lo w tu rn o u t fo r s tu d e n t g o v ern m en t electio n s. S tu d e n ts a re n ’t in te re ste d in p e rp e tu a tin g a p riv a te clu b fo r th e b e n e fit o f a few . T oo few sen­ a to rs re a liz e th a t th e ir o ffice c a rrie s a r e ­ sp o n sib ility w ith i t — th e resp o n sib ility to re p re se n t, n o t ex p lo it. T he se n a to rs w ho v o ted in th e firs t p lace to p a ss th e b ill an d th e n to o v e rrid e O ldham ’s v eto o f th e b ill w e re e x p lo itin g e d ito r ia l th e tru s t stu d e n ts p laced in th em b y seek ­ in g to fu rth e r re d u c e s tu d e n t in v o lv em en t in U n iv e rsity ad m in istra tio n . O ne o f th e p rim a ry a rg u m e n ts o ffe re d fo r th e n eed o f lim itin g b o a rd m em b ersh ip to S e n ato rs is th e irre g u la r a tte n d a n c e o f th e p re se n t b o a rd m em bers. C oncerning th is arg u m en t, a look a t th e v o te to o v e rrid e th e v e to m ay p ro v e in ­ tere stin g . T h e v o te w as 13 yes, 12 n o — and 9 absent. T h a t w o rk s o u t to a little o v e r 25 p e r c en t ab sen t — a n d th e se a re th e p eo p le w ho a re supposed to im p ro v e a tte n d a n c e a t U n iv e rsity b o a rd m e tin g a O r m ay b e th is is ju s t a n o th e r o n e o f th e m an y m y ste rie s th e S e n a te co n tin u es to p re se n t fo r o u r e n te rta in m e n t. C A PT A IN FEN W ICK'S M A ILB O X The Sam Adams Committee of Public Safety, “patriotic po­ litical action” arm of the Dem­ Letter to the editor ocratic Nationalist Party, in­ tends to attack Trotskyite trai­ tors be they Republicans or Democrats. “It will conduct a campaign of propaganda and physical ter­ Editor, A recent decision by the Senate’s Committee of the Whole to ror against the guilty individ­ recommend that the constitution be amended to eliminate the uals and their associates,” a president of Associated Women Students as a voting member of the new booklet declares. Executive Council is neither justifiable nor necessary. An examin­ Uncle Sam is selling out the ation of some of the arguments of members of that committee . white man and white civiliza­ should bear this out. tion, according to this booklet This action is justifiable, said some, because the AWS repre­ emblazoned with a thunderbolt, sentative — its president — speaks in the interest of “only a «nail a symbol used by several racist fraction of the student body” — namely, that miniscule group of groups. all registered women students. A small fraction? Admittedly, there Appropriately enough, fee are considerably fewer women on this campus than mwi, but booklet has a round hole on fee when one speaks in term s of one-third to (»e-fourth of the entire cover almost as large as fee student body this is no longer a “small fraction.” one in fee head of its author. Inasmuch as the student government organizations are intended Styangely, though, the cover is to be representative bodies, no organization — not even ASASU — black, not white. is more truly representative than Associated Women Students. It’s certain that Sam Adams, The old standard, “Yeah, but who is really affected by the actions a leader of fee American Revo­ of student government?” is answered quite explicitly by AWS. lutionary War, wouldn’t sanc­ “into a moral > and spiritual Every woman student. Every one . . . and more so than is the case tion the Committee’s use of his squalor worse than that of any with any other governing body on this campus. name. Adams was, in the con­ nation in world history.” (Even “Consider the rules and standards which AWS sets for its than “degenera t e text of his time, a radical. But worse members,” Marsha Lindsay, President of Palo Verde Main told racists usually don’t know his­ Rome?” ) me in a recent conversation. "Things such as dormitory hours and tory anyway. The Committee’s enemies are dress codes directly affect every women on this eampngt and in­ fee non - whites, “all those At any rate, this Committee directly affect every man who dates one.” This is no small fraction. who think and act as negroids Another argument stated that AWS and AMS were placed on is for people who aren’t robots, even if they have a white skin.” haven’t been affected by the the Executive Council at the same time but feat, since AMS has One crude drawing depicts a since folded and been removed, there is no longer any justification brainwashing (translation: ed­ for keeping AWS on fee Committee. One must strain one’s reason­ ucation) of fee public schools chained white man socking ing ability to see the logic in this argument. AMS folded, for what­ and intend to fight the “parli­ both world Communism and ever other reasons, prim arily because it was not serving its in­ amentary scum” running the Uncle Sam on their respective chins. The occupation center of tended function on this campus. AWS is an active and representa­ nation. “We are of the same stock as “foreign dictatorship” is Wash­ tive organization which deserves, for the same reasons mentioned when it first gained membership to that Council, to have a voice the legions of Caesar, fee Van­ ington, of course, and anti-white on fee Council. Its position is not — or should not be — affected dals who sacked a degenerate Jews control it. The political foundation of fee Rome, and fee sailors of Sir by AMS’s ability or desire to serve its constituents. Other arguments, ranging from overlapping interests to no Francis Drake,” they declare. Democratic Nationalist Party is reduction in communications were also given. They are not the This much may be true; after what it calls race nationalism. main issues of this amendment, however additionally im jw rtaiy all, Caesar was a dictator, “It places- fee Nation above the they may be. The point is this: AWS is serving fee same functions and they certainly may be class, special - interest group and fee individual within a and bears the same encompassing representative relationship to classified as vandals. the women students of this campus as it did when it was placed on These characters intend to framework of national regula­ the Executive Council years ago. assert themselves as white men tion.” If the idea sounds fa­ Senator Cheryl Bradshaw College of FA ireflon even though they were ' born m iliar, feat’s because it was tried once, by Hitler. When fee party gets around to controlling fee nation, no Communists, liberals, human­ ists or pacifists will have the privilege of citizenship. Furthermore, it demands feat Editor Managing Editor Campus Editor Canada, Greenland and the Dave Gurzenski Larry Ross Athia HardtNorth Pole be incorporated into feis nation. What Canada and Weekend Editors_____ David Anderson Copy Editors. ..Elliott F erriti Greenland think about the idea Edythe Edgar Daren Krupa evidently doesn’t m atter. Emphasis Editor.. ---------Jane Sm s Asst. Campus Editor. -Pam Stevenson To accomplish all this, the party and its Sam Adams Com­ Ad Manager____ —--------- Hal Hubele Asst. Sports E d ito — ....Larry Nelson mittee will drive traitors from Mechanical Composito'.____:Tom McCrea public office and “reduce them to a position where suicide will News Editor Photo Editor Sports Editor Faculty Adviser be the only salvation” for them. Jerry Kemper Terry Ross Bill Jackson Prof. Rnhert B1 I m m Meanwhile, it will pre-select political candidates so voters A W S seat supported DEATH! to the Traitors It’s time for old-fashioned American Justice -can make a “positive decision at the polls.” Presumably this means there will be only one candidate, and citizens will vote yes or no at the polls. Hitler used this method for some of his election victories. . The Committee has many wonderful slogans which sound like graffiti from the wall of a racist bathroom, such as “Death to fee traitors! It’s time for old - fashioned American justice” “Whiteman Awake! The hour is late.” “Communism and race-mixing are Jewish.” “The Thunderbolt Man, Amer­ ica’s future hope for whitefolk salvation.’ “Your uniform is fee color of your skin.” These are, after all, fitting’slo­ gans for a group which aims at “fee complete control of the status-making machinery within our local society.” According to fee booklet, the Committee will assign speakers to appear before interested groups for a detailed explanation of its plans and methods. Somebody should try to brihg members of this fruit group, to .campus, and anyone who’d Bke to learn what sick groups exist in America should write t o the booklet wife the thunderbolt. Write M. Nelson, secretary of the Committee, a t P.O. Box 1785, Chicago, m . 60880. Then hope they reply in plain brown envelopes so sane people like your mailman don’t tMnk you have gone off the deep aid. f c a i* * - to s ti w m State ( (M in e d from page 1) i (fid not actually belong to the people. (Continued from page 1) “Actually, we’d like to ask (the regents) to resign due to the jh c tth a t Any are not repr esentative of the people who pay taxes,” 000 square foot addition to the Smith said before the rally. MU. The written condemnation concluded with a demand to “throw Funds for the addition includ­ th e parasites o u t” ed 12,000,000 to be raised through Richard Dillon, another speaker who discussed the relation the sale of revenue bonds, which secret police and the police state warned students, “The will be retired by. student fees secret police are out to get you.” and services and rentals provid­ i DQho said toe people who get busted far possession of nar- ed by toe MU. The remaining e o tts a r e the “working class kids,” and eked the case of Jam es funds will come from a previous S y d er, a farm er SDSer. issue of revenue bonds. _ ffo deciding Snyder’s case, toe judge set a precedent by deThe regents also authorized lerring sentencing of- narcotics chacges of which Snyder ptoaAwi toe University to caU for bids on gmKy.) additions to Sun Devil Stadium. Citing a specific instance of presence of an undercove r police The construction calls for officer, &nith sa id that he M id a group of friends followed an team dressing and assembly m dercover campus security officer who eventually admitted his rooms, now located in Goodwin identity to them. Stadium, public rest rooms, tic­ Jo ta Duffy, head of Campus Security, later identified toe man ket facilities, recessing toe side a s detective Theo Neilson, an officer on campus who was strictly lines in front of the stadium on assignment to apprehend a person believed to have iwfarwnHy exposed himself. “His assignment bad nothing to do with Smith’s organization o r anybody else’s movement,” Duffy said. Also offered as evidence of supposed imdercover security men were several photographs taken in public view on the Mall. -Smith asked toe gathering to join him and his “affinity group” m a m arch to the Administration Building where the They were stopped a t the head of the stairs leadhg to the room M ere the regents were meeting by Duffy, who warned the gmq> that any disruption or distufianoe might lead to an a rre st The gathering was allowed to enter the second floor hallway 38 ™ «ted for ti» h o o d to resum e its open session. Several students were appointed to represent ti» group and p e r o t toe 21-point platform of the Student Power Cbafitian to the Regent^ and more specifically discuss the presence of imderedver security men on campus. Answering to charges of secret police on campus, ti» director of Campus Security said yesterday that off-campus Ipw enforcers will normally notify Campus Security if they come on campus Property. Security has jurisdiction over all University property. “We do have men who work in p la n clothes,” said D itty. “ R is the nature of their assignment But they are not tmdereover m ™ -O ar detectives are well known on cam p«. We are not a secret police, but we will continue to have plain clothes officers.” D uty also stated that he was not aw are of any narcotic agents on campus. A S petitions ready today Petitions for the prim ary election for student govern­ ment offices may be picked up today in South Hail 235. The deadline for the return of petitions is 4 p.m. Feb. 28. The prim ary election will be March 12 and the general ejection March 19. and construction of a roadway and concourse a t ti» top level of ti» stadium. President Durham told the re­ gents a request to call for bids on additional seating would be made later. The regents d s o approved catalog copy for all three uni­ versities that would clarify re ­ quirements to be considered a legal resident of Arizona and therefore not required to pay the non-resident tuition fee. The nonresident fee is $407.50 in addition to registration fees. Thomas Hall, legal advisor to the board, said litigation is pend­ ing against the non-resident fee. He said there are three bases to the suit: —toe legislature does not have the authority to differentiate be­ tween a resident and non-resi­ dent student. —the legislature does not have the power to delegate the author­ ity to the Board of Regents. —the requirement of the non­ resident fee is unreasonable. “I don’t think the suit will be successful,” he said, “but if it is, a heavy financial burden will be added to the universities.” Photo* by T a rry R o m PAPERWORK — P resid en t D urham h e fts a la rg e stack o f m a te ria l u sed to dem on­ s tra te th e n eed s o f th e U ni­ v e rsity to th é B oard o f Re­ gents. (sötaiiM CC HAND EM PHASIS — M ike G oodm an, c o o rd in a to r of th e E x p e rim e n ta l C ollege, ex p re sse s h is d issa tisfac ­ tio n w ith B o ard o f R eg en ts’ actions. N O W IS THE TIME TO BUY FUTURE SHOWER A N D W EDDING GIFTS AT LESS THAN DISCOUNT LAST DA Y FEB. 28TH mner you £oveher H A PPY HO USE SH O P TEMPE CENTER Take A Cue From Cupid W E HAVE EVERYTHING FOR YOUR VALENTINE v . . ★ ★ SCHUBACH "Famous for Diamonds” JE W E LER S Uader-21 accounts welcomed No co-signer required ★ BOOKS RECORDS POSTERS FREE Gift W rapping HILLS Records tem pe center Inside the Mill at Tower Plaza; Use ice riak-theater entrance 3S33 East Thomas • Phone 2670900 967-5243 CELIA'S fashions TEMPE CENTER P-S. W e Love You Too! In the Heart of Sun D evil Country Friday, Feb. 14 — Page 8 Senate overruled by Oldham veto; on College Beat bill to limit board members dies 1 BunnyMother Singer Rick Nelson and the Playboy Club highlight tonight’s KAET-TV College Beat program a t 7:15 p.m. The “Bunny Mother” of the Phoenix Playboy Club, Mrs. Betty Stanford, talks about recruiting new bunnies with host Jim Spehar. They also discuss last Saturday’s open house which several pros­ pective bunnies attended. Bunny Carlin, also of the Phoenix club, demonstrates the “Playboy stylized method of service.” The procedure of serving drinks is always the same, aimed at making the customer as com­ fortable as possible. Co-host Cathy Sandstrom interviews Rick Nelson, currently appearing a t JD ’s nightclub in Scottsdale, during the second half of the show. They discuss Nelson’s new image and new sound as they fit into today’s music. Nelson relates memorable moments of his long career in television, movies and recording. He also talks about the future direction of his career. _ Nefl Bobrick is the producer, and Stan Rosenfeld directs the KAET-produoed program. It will be repeated Saturday morning on KPHO. New R O T C staff head takes over at parade John R. Rollins, junior from Tempe, has taken charge of the Army ROTC cadet staff for second semester. Rollins received the tradi­ tional sabre signifying his new position from Col. Robert J. C. Osborne, Professor of Military Science. Rollins, a design engineering major, said, “I feel honored be­ ing chosen considering there were 120 seniors eligible.” His responsibilities include serving as liaison for file cadre (regular arm y officers) and di­ recting activities on the drill field. Said Rollins, “I- mainly make policy decisions pertain­ ing to drill activities. “The whole idea of college,” Business smoker A rush smoker for all busi­ ness students will be held in the Alumni House Sunday at 7:30 P-m. by P i Sigma Epsilon, pro­ fessional fraternity in market­ ing and sales management. Rollins said, “is to teach lead­ ership and responsibility, and the ROTC program provides excellent training in these fields.” Rollins said he was planning to return to school after he com­ pletes his two years in the ar­ my. He plans on receiving his m asters degree and then pos­ sibly going to law school. Rollins replaces Cadet Wil­ liam H. Wheeler who served as brigade commander last se­ mester. B&M Typewriter Service RENTALS SALES 966-5031 73 SBB The ASASU Senate failed to override the veto of ASASU president Bill Oldham on a bill which would limit student rep­ resentation on University Boards and Committees to members of the Student Senate and the Executive Council. 'The bill, which had been ve­ toed by Oldham, needed a twothirds vote of the senate to send it on to President Durham. The vote was 13 ayes, 12 nayes and 8 absent. A bill which appropriated 61,507.06 from the ASASU unap­ propriated balance for the Stu­ dent Bar Association was pass- ed unanimously over Oldham’s veto. Before discussion of these bills the rules were suspended to allow Steve Yarbrough to participate in the debate. Yarbrough cited several prec­ edents in earlier bills that uti­ lized appropriations from the ASASU unappropriated balance to justify the Student Bar As­ sociation appropriation. His efforts on behalf of the bill to limit student representa­ tion on University Boards and Committees to members of’the Student Senate and Executive Council were not as successful. John Coates, a former sena­ tor, was allowed to address the senate on this bill. He opposed it on the grounds that it would “freeze 23,000 students out of Dr. Morrison Warren, direc­ student government.” tor of experimental programs Coates added that if the sen­ in the College of Education ate passed this bill they would and vice mayor of Phoenix, run “a real risk of some sort will speak in front of Danforth of demonstration or riot.” Chapel today a t 11:30. Sen. Walt Ulman opposed the P art of “Black Heritage bill, saying, “At the beginning Week,” his speech, “Education of this year I was on the Inter­ for Whom?” was orig inally set national Student Relations for yesterday but was cancelled Board and Speaker Tinria Yar­ due to various conflicts. brough told me that I would In his speech, Dr. Warren have to resign my position on hopes to cover file various fac­ the board because the senate tors needed to educate the child was a full-time job. in what he considers is a dis­ “If that is the case, being a advantaged situation. The most senator is still too much a full­ important factor, according to tim e job to be on University Dr. Warren, is the need to give committees,” said Ulman. the child a basis in the English Sen. Sharon Iaquinto favored language. passage of the bill over the Cancelled speech to be given today veto of the ASASU president, saying, '“In our naive faith, we trust people more than they merit. We have to have some kind of control over people be­ cause we can’t expect every­ one to be good ‘Johnny Do-Bee’ and be faithful to the end.” Filmmaking prize sponsored by AS Future filmmakers will have a chance to prove their talents. The ASASU Cultural Affairs Board is sponsoring a film con­ test with a |65 first prize and 625 second prize. The contest is open to any full or part tim e student or student groups. Entries must be a t least five minutes in length with no limitation on subject m atter. Judging will be based on originality and treatm ent of content. Judges will be faculty members, one each from fire following departments: art, ar­ chitecture, humanities, speech, dram a, mass communications and English. The deadline for entries is April 30. Judges will screen films during the first week in May. Each winning film will be screened by the UCLA Cinema Department as well as next year’s Cultural Affairs Art Se­ ries. For further information call 961-3142. Rip up our instructions on self-defense. After all, ifs Wentméfe Day. 3300 S. MILL AVE. - In Danelle Plaza B eh in d the Fireaide P le n ty of F re t P a rk in g LJKSr° t the Opera” w ill be shown Sun­ day night ia Armstrong H all, 7:30 P JL , presented by the Cultural A ffairs Board. “Son o f the Shiek” w fll he shown Saturday night, 7:30 P JL as part o f the “Silent Film Festival” this weekend. Normally, we insist that every man read the Instructions on selfdefense that we put in every package of Hai Karate» After Shave and Cologne. But we’ve got a heart. So on Valentine’s Day, we’d like every woman to tear our Instructions to shreds. That way you can give your guy Hai Karate, with some Instructions of your own. Hai Karate-be careful how you use It* I & O g ii --- M .d$1 'titb flf t Photos Donna Boyle University non-club olans weekend treks see story on p. 8 k £ J Friday, F c k 14 — Page 8 Campus 'nonentity' very busy Hie University's only "nondub,” a t its last “non-meeting” planned a 15-mile weekend trek through the Superstition Mountains. At the next nonmeeting, a non-member will say, “Id ’s go” — and they will. “We’re the least dub - like dub there is,” said dub par­ ticipant M d Franks. “We meet only to d an outings. Whoever wants to go, goes.” For a nonentity, however, the Outing Club is one of the cam­ pus’ most active. This year, 12 weekend out­ ings have been taken — the latest a two-day hike through LeBarge Canyon in the Super­ stitions. “We had all our provisions on our back.” said Frank, “and though some have taken a mountaineering class, we were pretty much on our own.” Most of the outings are all­ day events, though four ovdrnighters vary dub plans. Only a few hiking “casual­ ties” w oe reported by the club’s trekkers. These occurred during its September hike through Seven Springs, and all mishaps were attributed to heat prostration. “Before I joined the dub, I never went east of Mesa,” said a. member. “Most of the mem­ bers aren’t natives of Arizona, and they want to discover the state in sort of an informal way. Outings are covered by school insurance and, according to members, “the insurance is our only official connection” with the University. Non-meetings begin at 6:30 each Wednesday evening in the WPE lobby. There are no officers. “Places to go are suggested by the people who know Arizona best,” said Frank. IPLAY REVIEW i Actress loses play's hysteria by edythe edgar Gigi Perreau changes the humor of female hysteria into a tootiipaste-commerdal-like pitch when she leaves the child­ “About half of the group is ish unpredictability out of her “Barefoot in the Park” per­ formance. interested in microbiology or bi­ ology of some kind, so they get During Tuesday’s opening night show a t the Palace West a first - hand look at Arizona Theatre, Miss Perreau’s even vocal deliveries forced viewers’ vegetation,” a member said. attention on the more humorous characters. Scenes of newly­ wed clashes that should have spotlighted Corie focused on the more talented “outsiders.” A comparison of Miss Peireau’s performance with that of Jane Fonda (who plays Corie in the movie version) would have to discount the film ’s perfectability, yet Miss Perreau drains the newlywed instability from the female part and often seems to reverse roles with her supposedly more stable Carole White, who played the husband (played by John McCook). hilarious mother of Albert Peter­ Miss Fonda, on the other hand, added insane dimensinn son in “Bye Bye Birdie” will be to her role with a more varied performance. adding a contrast to her acting I McCook milks a maximum share of humor from his career in the highly dramatic somewhat stodgy role with prime delivery timing and direc­ role of Clytemnestra in “Iphi­ tion. genia at Aulis,” directed by Dr. “I’m now crawling into our tiny little single bed. If James Yeater. you’d like to join me, we’ll be sleeping from left to right tonight,” he says during a typically irrational newlywed spat. : The two plays are being per­ formed consecutively, explained Both he and. Miss Perreau are excellent “fighters,” but, Doyle, “because we thought it whereas McCook’s character lapses smoothly into battle, might be fun to see the differ­ his stage wife has to undergo an abrupt character change. ences in style between these Virginia Mayo (playing Corie’s Mother) tags a vintage rather short plays.” sophistication to the motherly role — a little too sexy at times, but m are often effective. Set designer Lee Ritterbush Lyle Talbot as Victor Velasco to a perfect “bluebeard.” was given the task of creating He follows his comic performance in “The Odd Couple” with scenery for both productions and an equally-funny interpretation of an amiable dirty old man. faced the lack of storage facu­ Though worthy of the many laughs it received, “Barefoot lties in the Lyceum. in the Park” lacked the hysteria captured by the film He settled on groups of mov­ able cubes, blocks and ram ps to create a classical atmosphere for the Greek tragedy and a far­ A Pulitzer Prize-winning re­ cical mood for the Roman com­ porter, Harrison Salisbury, as­ edy. sistant managing editor of the New York Times, will lecture on “Contrasts” will open at the Sunday at 8:30 p.m. in GamLyceum next Thursday a t 7:30 mage. p.m. and continue for three con­ secutive weekends. Curtain tinu* His address, “Russia Versus is 8:30 on Friday and Saturday China: Global Conflict?” , is a evenings, 7:30 on Sunday eve­ comprehensive analysis of the nings. conflict between the two Com­ munist giants. Tickets are now on sale at the He served in Russia as Times Lyceum box office for $2. Stu­ correspondent for five years and dents, faculty and staff may pur­ in 1966 traveled throughout chase tickets for SI. China and southeast Asia. Harrison Salisbury His lecture is free to students. New Lyceum production given appropriate name “Contrasts,” the upcoming Lyceum produdion by the Uni­ versity Players, couldn’t have been more accurately named. A double feature dramatic event, “Contrasts” will include one-hour edited versions of the Greek tragedy from the Aga­ memnon story, “Iphigenia at Aulis” by Euripides, and the Ro­ man comedy by Plautus, “The Twin Manaechmi.” But the University drama de­ partm ent didn’t end the con­ trasts in “Contrasts” when it se­ lected the two plays. “The Twin Manaechmi,” a hu­ morous tale of mistaken iden­ tities, posed a special casting problem for its director, Don­ ald Doyle. The play called for identical twin brothers; Doyle called for Identical twin broth­ e r s . After an unsuccessful search, he decided to cast Mike Hood as both brothers and give him the task of creating two en­ tirely different characters. IGOR D a n Glenn IS BACK! from Les Baxter’s Show Group . . HOLLYWOOD — NASHVILLE — SEATTLE NOW APPEARING VILLAGE INN Thom as Rd. and 3rd Avenue, Phx. CLASSIC GUITAR & MODERN SONGS Friday & Saturday: 9 p.m.-10:30 p.m.- M idnight Sunday “Hoot” from 7 p.m. till 77 Editor prepares Russia-China lecture HOUSE THIS WEEKS SPECIAL FOR RENt ON JMT Block to A SU 2 Bedroom furnished or u n­ furnished. Couples or fam ily only. 715 Krueger St. Call 967-5430 for Info. Reason­ able rent to right party. COLUMBIA RECORDS V ,, yj'iihcluding: Variations On A Theme By EriKSatie And When I Die/God Bless The Child Vbuye Made Me So Very Happy NOTICE THE R E F U N D P E R IO D ALSO ENDS ON S A T U R D A Y , F E B R U A R Y 15 UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE... A! Kooper - “I STAND A LO N E" .. P STEREO $*%99 Melody Shop CROSS ROADS OF THE CAMPUS 751 S. FOREST TEMPE p ?rìd»y, ¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ | 14 'ÊSÊÈÊÊÊÊ S h l » t — Friday, Fdb. 14 B U N N IE S A N D D O LLS — P h o e n ix P la y b o y C h ib b u n n ies S a n d ra a n d C aro l a n sw e re d q u estio n s fro m A SU coeds J o y S ta n to n a n d N an cy S an so n a b o u t th e ir w o rk a t a n open house. Jo y , a ju n io r arch aeo lo g y m ajo r, is also th is se m e ste r's firs t D ev il DolL S h e p la y s d ie v io la in th e A S U o rc h e stra a n d i s a c tiv e in a term i« eh ib Photo b y D a re n K rup e Playboy bunnies m ay be safer than business office secretari by daren krupa A fte r h e a rin g se v e ra l P la y b o y b u n n ies ta lk ab o u t th e ir jo b s a t th e P h o e n ix P la y ­ boy C lub o p en h o u se la s t S a tu rd a y , an o ld e r la d y in th e a u d ien ce com m ented, “S ounds lik e y o u g irls a re sa fe r h e re th a n in som e o f th e b u sin ess offices I ’v e b een in ,” A b o u t 70 p eo p le g a th e re d a t th e 8 th flo o r P h o en ix P la y b o y C lub h e a d q u a rte rs a t 3033 N . C e n tra l to h e a r b u n n ies a n d o th ­ e r re p re se n ta tiv e s o f P lay b o y te ll th e sto ry o f th e ir o rg an izatio n . In clu d ed in th e v isitin g g ro u p w e re six U n iv e rsity coeds, som e in te re s te d in b e ­ com ing b u n n ies, som e ju s t c u rio u s ab o u t th e place. “B asically w e w e re a ll cu rio u s,” said N an cy S anson, 21, se n io r in E nglish ed u ­ catio n , a s she sp o k e fo r th e re s t o f th e g roup. “T h e P la y b o y m y stiq u e is ju s t th a t to m o st p eo p le—a m y stiq u e. M ost p eople h a v e p reco n ceiv ed id eas a b o u t w h a t goes on b e h in d th e d o o rs a n d ju s t don’t know .” O ne o f th e p u rp o ses o f th e open house, th e firs t a t th e P h o e n ix clu b sin ce its op­ en in g in 1960, w as to “d isp e ll a n y m iscon­ cep tio n s a b o u t w h a t goes on h e re ,” said W ebb E llis, g e n e ra l m an a g e r o f th e club. S e v e ra l b u n n ie s g a th e re d fo r a q u es­ tio n -a n sw e r p e rio d on “bunnydom .” Q ues­ tio n s ra n g e d fro m q u alificatio n s fo r b ein g a b u n n y (“th e y look a t y o u r h ip s f ir s t”) to w h e th e r th e b u n n y u n ifo rm s a re re a lly co m fo rta b le (“yes, p ro v id in g y o u don’t e a t too m u ch ”). P M PLAY WEE-TEE P ro sp ec tiv e b u n n ies m ay b e in te re ste d to know th a t th e m inim um b u n n y age, al­ th o u g h it v a rie s fro m s ta te to sta te , is 21 in A rizo n a; a b u n n y can b e m a rrie d o r sin g le, b u t can ’t d a te k ey h o ld ers; th e av­ e ra g e s ta y fo r b u n n ies is. 4-5 y e a rs; an d th e y w o rk 20-26 h o u rs a w eek a n d m ake m o re m oney th a n a irlin e stew ard esses o r se c re ta rie s. MINIATURE GOLF YOUR CHOICE — TWO 18-HOLE COURSES University D rive at Rural — Tempe H o u rs 1 P.f. . to 11 P.M . D a ily EAST if she doesn't give it to you, get it yourself! by Terry Roes Phone 966-8027 SKI A SA SU SOCIAL BOARD PRESENTS THEIR AN N U AL SKI TRIP TO FLAGSTAFF, A RIZO N A 2-DAYS $15.00 ( F E E 18 F O R T R A N S P O R T A T I O N A N D R O O M O N L Y ) PLEASE FILL OUT THE REGISTRATION FORM A N D RETURN IT TO THE STUDENT ACTIVITY CENTER IN SOUTH HALL ALO N G WITH YOUR REGISTRATION FEE. SKI TRIP APPLICATION NAM E .....................D A TE LO CA L A D D R ESS lade Cast After suave from $3A0, Cologne from * 9.90; and a complete collection of mascolino grooming ossea* tisi*. As a g 'lM M M lK lN B a B liìK J R lB flM fe it a È n M IM M M IlH llM M Iit t M N lM É M t f M It ft a iM .... ......... ................................ ................ PH O N E S k ............... ..................— ........ .... AM O UN T P A ID * F * ^ s ? á # h ’t 4--=-T?% ti»4* by fenw ick anderson H ie Smothers Brothers Com­ edy Hour promises to be the best bet for TV viewing this weekend. Besides the Brothers and Pat Paulsen, this Sunday’s show (7 p.m., channel 10) will fea­ ture a new stop-motion “time capsule’’ by Chuck Braverman and the impressions of David Frye. Frye’s bird-like impres­ sions of William F. Buckley are a scream. Speaking of Buckley, his 11:15 discussion program on channel 5 that night will be de­ voted to a talk with historian Eric Goldman about Lyndon Johnson’s battles with intellec­ tuals. Other entertaining TV: “Mannix” (Saturday at 8, channel 10) promises a suspenseful epi­ sode in one of those booby-trap­ ped houses and channel 10 will screen Stanley Kramer’s atom­ ic destruction flick, “On the Beach,” at 10 p.m. Sunday. Serious students of film can choose either “The Covered Wagon,” a 1923 Western classic (channel 8) or “The Golden Age of Comedy,” clips of many si­ lent comedians (channel 21), at 8 p.m. Friday. Then at 10, if they can stand the commer­ cials, they can watch Hitch­ cock’s acclaimed study of the homicidal personality, “Stran­ gers on a H am ,” on channel 5. Viewers who listen to Jim Spero on radio early in the ^ Monday — “NET Journal” (channel 9 at 9 pun.) will ex­ amine the pathology of child­ beating. Not a pretty topic, but an important Tuesday — National Geogra­ phic examines the color and spirit of Australia (6:38, chan­ nel 10); channel 21 reruns Berg­ man’s “ The Seventh Seal” for the seventh tone a t t p.m.; and channel f s series on cine­ ma illustrates the concept of music as inspiration for film, instead of m ere background, with recent dips a t 9. Wednesday — Glenn Camp­ bell’s new hit show roDs along on channel H a t 6:38 and chan­ nel 3’s i p_m_ movie win be “Hie Slender Thread” with Sidney Pokier and Anoe Ban­ croft. Thursday — The delightful Snoopy appears m another ani­ mated “Peanols” special at 6:30 an channel If; and a t 8 p.m., viewers can flip a threesided cam and watch “Hie Americamzalian of Emily” (10), “The Paanfarofcef” (21) or spy novelist Le Carre explaining the of espionage stories (Q C O SI FA N TTJTTE — O p era b u ffs w ill b e a b le to see th is y e a r’s o n ly fu ll le n g th p ro d u ctio n in .th e V a lle y on T uesday. “C osi F an T u tte ,” a com ic o p e ra b y M ozart, w ill be p re se n te d b y th e N a tio n a l S o ciety o f A rts an d L e tte rs. T he sin g le p erfo rm an ce w ill be g iv en in English a t W est P h o en ix H igh A u d ito riu m a t 8:30 p.m . Phantom, Sheik to appear in silent movies festival F am ous flic k s from “T he P h an to m o f th e O p era” to “Son o f th e S h eik ” w ith R u d o lp h V alen tin o w ill b e show n S a tu rd a y an d S u n d ay n ig h ts a t 7:30 in A rm stro n g H all “P h an to m of th e O p era” (1925) w ill b e show n S a tu r­ day n ig h t only, an d “Son o f th e S h eik ” o n S u n d a y n ig h t. " yS*T A * P a r t o f th e A SA SU C u ltu ra l A ffa irs B oard film series, th e A m erican S ile n t F ilm F e stiv a l w ill in clu d e “Salom e,” -an e x p e rim e n ta l a d a p ta tio n fro m O scar W ilde film ed in 1923; C h a rlie C h ap lin ’s “F lo o rw a lk e r” (1916) an d “T he F ire m a n ” b o th evenings. T të ÿ T ì|I Mozzarella Cheese Green Pepper Onion Sausage Mushroom Pepperoni Anchovy Pizza Supreme Hamburger Black Olive Green Chili Judy Collins, who recorded the recent album, “Both Sides Now,” will appear in a theaterin - the - round concert a t the Phoenix Star Theater Saturday at 8 p.m. Hckets ranging in price from $2.75 to $4.75 are on sale at the boxoffice and Community Boxoffice locations. * * * “That Art of Tomoika Tessai,” an exhibition of scrolls and painted screens by a mod­ ern Japanese sculptor, _ will be shown at the Phoenix Art Museum through Sunday. At 2:45 Sunday afternoon, the museum’s film classic program will feature the “Village Potters of Onda,” showing activities of Japanese folk potters. possibly daring next ■rit load al- worthwhile i week (if the lows): Sun D evils..} all the Pizza .You Can Eat MENU promise variety m om a« r a p t m e Mi new talk abñr at a l h j ÿ t Saturday on cham rl 2L Busty Warren, Phoenix Mayor Mflton Gra­ ham and an ESP expert «Ol shoot the breeze. PERSON 5-9 PM egas Party M ONDAY G B 1 1420 N . Wrwifwiali U . A TUESDAY N GLENDALE 4322 W. r - t f i l f ^ * . * D R L S * • Sunday matinee performances of “Georgy Girl” will be held at 2 and 4 p.m. a t Valley Art The­ ater, 509 Mill Ave. An overwhelming demand for new, popular films has prompt­ ed tiie Memorial Union to rent “Georgy Girl” and show it a t a local theater to accommodate crowds. The 50 cent tickets are avail­ able a t the front porch of MU West or at the Valley A rts box office half an hour before each showing. Waves, surf fan arrive in summer fornia to enjoy the big waves and surfing fun. They’re coming to you! Expected to be completed around July, the “Big Surf” is now under construction. If you can’t surf already you’ll learn this summer. •Hie actual water area will be from three to four hundred feet long by 350 feet wide. A tower standing 32 feet high will pump the water which will be controlled by gates opening and closing with the water en­ tering the pool in the form of giant waves. Its location near McKellips and Hayden Roads in Tempe makes it an ideal spot for the campus set. ST A T E P R ESS W e e ke n d Editors E d y th e E d g ar D avid A n d erso n WEEKEND Is publshad svsry M • supplsm snt Is M o dolly stats W EDNESDAY PH O EM X 5 7 « N . 7fk SC. The men. o f Pi Kappa Alpha fra­ ternity cordially invite all men inter­ ested in Fraternity rush to a Las Vegas Get the gang together and Putt - Putt - Putt to the party Saturday, February 15, between 1 and 5 p.m. , at 410 Adelphi Drive. Amber From the Show Girl is PIZ ZA H U T coming. .Are You?. Rrvi« Self-Hypnosis C an C h a n o s Y o u r U fa , In c re a sin g L o o m in g and C ra aU va ab llltio a Loaa w eight, calm , nervet, sto p Sh ottin g an d C u ra Inaam nia Call 274-0698 RIVI# New Ballet West in Auditorium America’s newest profession­ al company, Ballet West, the successor to the famed Utah Civic Ballet, will perform Wed­ nesday at 8:30 p.m. in Gammage. Hie final event in the Man and the Dance Series, it will replace the originally scheduled San Francisco B a l l e t program Mardh 1 which has been can­ celled. Included will be Bizet’s “Sym­ phony in C,” choreographed by George Balanchine. Virgil Thompson’s “Filling Station,’’, with choreography by Lew Christensen, is a laughpacked, completely - American comedy ballet. Tickets for this program, pric­ ed at $5, $4 and $3, are on sale a t the Gammage box office, 3434. Single event or series tickets already purchased for fife San Francisco Ballet will be honored at the Ballet West performance. Shakespeare, Laugh-In make odd bedfellows a n ll by w endy hbeall bf/ “The lio n in Winter” te a delightful look a t the games royalty played way back when Henry n was king of England It is delightful despite a ma­ jor flaw — the script. W riter Janies Goldman was evidently too tom between Shakespeare and “Laugh-In” to choose eith­ er, so the movie stumbles from poetic heights to sophomoric depths as die actors toy to bal­ ance on an unwieldy seesaw of comedy and tragedy. Goldman reduces die conflict over the succession to the throne of England to a family quarrel fraught with “mother always did like you best” pet­ tiness and quibbling. Eleanor of Aquitaine, Hen­ ry’s wife, wants sulky Richard to be king. Henry has been training his favorite son, John,,, a pimply ninny of a boy to succeed him. The middle son, Geoffrey, frets on the outskirts nf file cnitahhln Qiul M /lAfl of the squabble and rides with whoever is winning — when he’s not whining because no­ body ever wants Mm to be king. Thè conniving of the royal family resembles a combina­ tion of Monopoly and chess, as people and hind are traded like toys in the struggle for thè throne. In these scenes, the in­ ner conflicts of the script be­ come glaring as the actors have to alternate between tears and pretended high good humor. At one showdown between Henry and Eleanor, the bar­ tering is conducted with the same detachment that would accompany an offer of Board­ walk and Park Place in ex­ change for all of the “get out of jail free” cards. Unfortunate­ ly, Shakespeare intrudes into the Rowan and Martin dialogue in the form of a piteously tear­ ful and poetic speech by Elea­ nor about her loss of freedom. fri addition to the conflict be­ A a 1J 'a s tween tragedy and1 comedy the dialogue abounds in anachron­ isms. The actors, however, save' the show by pretending that there’s nothing wrong at all. “The sky is pocked with stars,” Peter O’Toole intones without a quiver. With a very straight face, Katharine Hepburn says sadly, “It’s 1183 and we’re all barbarians.” O’Toole smooths his portion of the script by acting his part with convincing vigor. O’Toole, as the lusty old lion Henry, is not the pale and fragile pussy­ cat of former roles. He bellows and roars with gruff mischief as he stomps through the cas­ tle,'overpowering all opposition A • C I* if ■ .1 ON STAGE spectacular effects or special mechanical features, its ade­ quacy in the areas of photog­ raphy and cutting and the ex­ cellence of the actors diminish the importance of the incon­ sistencies of the script. But the most fantastic acting on earth can’t obscure the fact that Row­ an and Martin and Shakespeare make very strange bedfellows. IN ■ PE R SO N *! PHOENIX STAR THEATRE ■FOURB SEASONS Friday and Saturday, Feb. 21 and 22 Showtime 8:30 p.m., Sat. Matinee 2:30 Box office open 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT HOUSE (good Friday night only, Feb. 21) FOR RENT Regular Price % Block to ASU • 6 .5 0 5 .5 0 4 .5 0 3 .5 0 2 Bedroom furnished-or u n ­ furnished. Coupled or fam ily pnly. 718 Krueger S t •» to the throne and the script with his authority and w it Miss Hepburn is old and love­ ly enough to perfectly portray the aged and once beautiful Eleanor. Some of the script’s most painful moments are sal­ vaged by her subtle and dry delivery enhanced by her inimi­ table, queenly voice. Although the movie lacks any C all *87-8430 fo r Info. Reason­ Student Price * 4 .5 0 3 .5 0 2 .5 0 1 .5 0 Y jbsee JULIET PROWSE, Feb. 2 4 - Mar. 2 able rent to right party. FOR TICKETS.. . contact Doug Frisch Campus Drugs, 1, to 5p. m ., Tues-Sat Our Regular 60c * CREME DE MENTHE w ith this coupon Good TONIGHT and SATURDAY & SU N DAY 8 p.m. to 11 p.m. only Big Brad’s Breakfast Bacon, Sausage or Hambuger Patty, Three Eggs, Hash Brown, Toast or Hot R oll, Coffee or Mlllr Regularly on Our Menu for $1.15 25c O ff With This Coupon j G O O D D A I L Y F R O M 8 A .M . T I L L 18 N O O N BRAD'S 1212 E. Apache Blvd., Tempe m w iW iw O T iW O T iw COFFEE SHOP ¥ r if lä £ Tomorrows TV to be examined on KAET special lf i o 11C T O O tf J best of barbershop The potential for new tele­ vision systems will be examin­ ed on KAET-TV Sunday at 8 p.m. on a 90-minute special program. “Tomorrow’s Television: Get What You Want or You’ll be Forced to Like What you Get” will ask whether cable TV or any other developing technolo­ gy serves the public interest. This program is part of the .Public Broadcast Laboratory series. The question of whether the Federal Communications Com­ mission adequately regulates broadcasting will be discussed, as well as the President’s Task Mr. Force on Communications Policy report. Viewers will be taken to the islands of American Samoa where television has been used International organist and im­ ^primarily as an educational de­ proviser, Piet Kee, wiU give a vice. Edward P. Morgan will recital at Gammage Auditorium narrate. Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. Kee Famed organist to play Kee wiU open the program .with several Bach numbers and will also present pieces by the late Dutch organist, Anthon van The fraternity rush assembly der Horst, “The Jehan Alain,” will be noon tomorrow in SS and Ludwig Lenel, an American composer. He wiU also present 105. an original improvisation. The assembly is to acquaint prospective rushees with the Kee, who was born in tbe procedures involved in frater­ Netherlands, h a s performed nity open house. AU prospec­ tive rushees should attend to throughout Europe and Amer­ acquaint themselves with the ica and is organist for two fraternities participating inrush. churches in the Netherlands, St. Rushee assembly to begin at noon Bavo a t Haarlem and St. Laur­ ent in Alkmaar. Tickets are $2 and are on sale a t the Gammage box office, 9613434, Seats are not reserved. S tra in s o f “L e t m e c a ll y o u S w e e th e a rt,” w ill echo fro m th e s ta g e o f G am m age A u d ito riu m to n ig h t a n d to ­ m o rro w n ig h t. T h e P h o e n ix C h a p te r o f T h e S o ciety F o r th e P re s e r­ v a tio n A n d E n co u rag em en t O f B arb ersh o p Q u a rte t S ing­ in g in A m erica, w ill p re se n t its 22nd a n n u a l p erfo rm an ce of “The Best Of Barbershop” ______ ~ , ____________ starting a t 8 p.m. shop singing. Tickets for the program, which The show will also feature the will present top barbershop Phoenicians, a Phoenix chor­ quartets including the current us of 65 men who have twice international champion, Phoe­ held third place in the Interna­ nix’s The Western Continent­ tional Medalist Chorus. als, will be half-price for stu­ Other quartets to appear are dents at tbe door Friday night The F ar Westerners, 1967 F ar only. Western D i s t r i c t Champions Tickest cost from $3.50 to $2: from Downey, California and an­ other Phoenix quarter, The Cleff Among the barbershop quar­ Links. tets to appear will be The Roaring 20’s of Cincinnati, All members of the quartets (M o, four young men who en­ and chorus are businessmen, tertain with a unique style of who sing as a hobby. The group singing called “New Barber­ is a melting pot — a potpourri of shop.” Considered to be a com­ vocations, from servicemen to edy quartet, the group has rank­ attorneys, doctors, clerks, in­ ed high in singing contests and is surance agents, engineers, all tradem arked by their enthusias­ singing together because they tic, modem approach to barber­ love to sing. C $ VO LKSW AGEN PAC IFIC , IN C . 1968 Book sale at Paperback book collectors win have a field day Sunday when Manzanita HaU hosts a discount book sale from 2 to 6 p.m. in the dorm’s conference room. Librarian Pam TUlman said both fiction and non-fiction works wiU be on sale. She anticipated no profit, saying the sale is strictly for the students’ benefit. ANNIVERSARY SALE 4055-75% SA VIN G S S T O R E W ID E 913 M ill A ve. T em pe C e n te r P hone 967-4094 .-las«,. O pen 9:30-6:00 T h u n . ’T il 9:00 O ld Volksw agens never die. Some of them turn into dune bug­ gies. And go racing, and bounding, and bouncing around on the desert. Now, if you do all your driving around town, don't feel left out. Because the main point we want to make is this: The things that make a bug a good buggy are the same things that make it a good family car. The a i r - c o o l e d e n g i n e , for instance, can run all d a y in the desert sun without overheating.Your more conventional V W has the same a d va n ta g e on a clo gged freeway. W hen water and tempers start to boil. The engine is also rear-mounted for better traction. Perfect for dune buggy drivers in dll that sand. And not bad for you regular people just trying to get moving on a slippery street. P H O E N IX M a rk Im ports 2020 E. Indian School Rd. GLENDALE Bob G ran t Motors - - ........-4484W» G lenda le A venue - The Volkswagen has independent suspension on all four wheels. This is a very stable arrangement for rac­ ing — often flying — over the dunes. And very comfortable on a country road. O r an almost-paved street. W hen an overly large dune is encountered, the V W 's quick, pre­ cise steering can turn as fast as the driver can change his mind. Which can be a definite a d va n ta g e in these days of defensive driving too. Then there's the way the bug is built. A n y car that could take ten years of normal driving, and then go banging around on the desert is obviously built to last. So, if you need d good, practical, family car that won't give out in a . few years, drive a Volkswagen. A n d if you ever do hear the call of the wild, you'll be ready, P H O E N IX ' Morgensen Motera 1402 N. Central Avenue M E8A Pattereon Motora, Ine. —4482 W est M ain Ctreet How 'w ell dtildreft'hrarr? main concern of Gould I K E ‘ VT ?\w)lTfWT!ht Minister speaks on Gibran By RICK EDEN By ROBERT HEARN bigger role in the future. 7. There must be more research Sir Ronald Gould, famed Brit­ into all aspects of education. ish educator, said he is not as In speaking of the University, concerned with how well teach­ ers teach as how well children Gould praised its architecture, especially that of Gammage Au­ learn a t Grady Gammage last ditorium. He quoted Winston Tuesday night. Churchill as saying, “We shape Gould’s lecture, entitled-"Ed­ our buildings and then they ucation and Change,” was part shape us.” of Grady Gammage Memorial Gould has been the general Night in memory of Dr. Grady secretary erf the National Union Gammage, ASU president 1933- of Teachers since 1947 and has 1959. received countless awards and Gould outlined seven reforms honors in the field erf education. for education for the future: He pointed out how both he and 1. Schools must show discrim­ Grady Gammage worked fof the ination in favor of the under­ same goals. privileged to attain equality Mrs. Gammage was present of opportunity. as a platform guest and said of 2. P r i m a r y and secondary her late husband: “The great schools must adopt new m eth­ use of a life is to give it to some­ ods with all the latest edu­ thing that outlasts it.” cational facilities. 3. Schools must adopt new curriculums where a child can work at his own pace. 4. More a n d better trained teachers must be available. 5. Higher education institutions must be totally reformed. 6. Adult education must play a Musical auditions open to students for spring drama Auditions for Gian - Carlo Menotti’s musical dram a “The Consul” will be 2 p.m. March 2 in Aud 301. P arts in the annual opera pro­ duction will be cast to Univer­ sity students for performances a t the end of April. Scores are available from Dr. Kenneth Seipp musical director, in the Music Department. “The Consul” is being produc­ ed by the University Players in conjunction with the Lyric Opera Theatre. Donald Doyle will be the stage director. Gypsum will meet college students United States Gypsum of Southern California will inter­ view interested students on cam­ pus Tuesday. Engineering, geology, con­ struction and accounting are a few of the m ajors U..S. Gypsum will be interviewing., Also, sta­ tistics and data processing, fin­ ance, general business and of­ fice administration. Pan American Corp. will be interviewing chemical, electri­ cal, engineering science and mechanical engineering m ajors Thursday and Friday. Candidates qualified for inter­ views must register with the Placement Service and make an appointment in OBA 109 to be eligible for placement - inter­ views. A W A R f meets AWARE (Association for Women’s Active Return to Ed­ ucation) will m eet' at 11:30 a.m. to ir p.m. every Friday. Bring sack lunch, but coffee will be provided, as will an opportunity to discuss mutual problems. jiotruu iiiam Matv T h e R ev. G eorge F ra n k lin E m ery , a M ethodist m in iste r, p re se n te d A ra b ia n p h i­ loso p h er K a h lil G ib ran ’s w o rk s W ednes­ day ev en in g b y “becom ing” G ib ran . In th e f ir s t o f fo u r le c tu re s d iscussing G ib ran ’s rele v an c e to to d ay , R ev. E m ery em phasized Hie re la tio n sh ip b etw een p a r- REVIEW e n t an d ch ild . “S eek n o t to m ak e th em lik e you,” h e said, ad d ressin g p a re n ts. G ib ran w as h im se lf a, v ictim o f to o m uch p a re n ta l co n tro l, sa id R ev. E m ery. T h e g irl G ib ran w as to m a rry w as fo rced to m a rry a n o th e r m an to b rin g m o re m on­ e y to h e r fam ily . T u rn in g to th e m an y yo u n g p eo p le in th e au d ien ce, R ev. E m ery encouraged p ro sp e c tiv e te a c h e rs to d ra w id eas o u t of stu d e n ts, n o t ju s t p u t id ea s in to th e ir heads. T o uching b rie fly on relig io n , R ev. Em ­ e ry , as G ib ran , said ev ery o n e is “an ex­ p ressio n o f G od.” E a c h p erso n h a s h is ow n p u rp o se in th is life . H e ju s t n e ed s to know how to liste n , a s d id J e su s C h rist, to le a rn h is p lac e in h u m an ity . F u rth e r le c tu re s, fre e o f charge, b y Rev. E m ery a t th e N ew m an C ath o lic S tu d en t C e n te r a re sch ed u led fo r F eb . 19, 26 and M arch 5. T opics a t th e rem a in in g le c tu re s w ill in clu d e a discussion o f relig io n , w ith p a r­ tic u la r em phasis o n G ib ran ’s book “Je su s” a n d co n c en tra te d stu d y o f th e philoso­ p h e r’s book “T h e P ro p h e t.” Do you think a bright young engineer should spend his most imaginative years on the same assignment? Neither do we. That’s why we have a twoye a r R o ta tio n P ro g ra m fo r g r a d u a t in g e n g in e e r s w ho would prefer to explore several technical areas. And that’s why many of our areas are organ­ ized by function— rather than by project. At H u g h e s, you m ight work on spacecraft, communi­ cations satellites and/or tacti­ cal missiles during your first two years. All you need Is an EE, M E or Physics degree and talent. If you qualify, we’ll arrange for you to work on several different a s s ig n m e n ts ... and you can help pick them. You may select special­ ized jobs, or broad systemstype jobs. Or you can choose not to change assignments if you’d rather develop in-depth skills in one area. E ith e r way, we th in k y o u ’ll like the H u g h e s a p ­ proach. It means you’ll become m ore v e rs a tile in a sh o rte r time. r ---------- l ---------(A nd your HUGHES sa la ry will show it.) HUGHES AIRCRAFT CAMPUS INTERVIEWS: February 19,1969 Representatives of several activities of Hughes Aircraft Company (each with highlyspecialized personnel requirements and separate interview schedules) will visit your campus. If your career interests lie in one or more of the following fields of aerospace/electronics, contact your Placement Office TODAY to make syre your name gets ort the interviewing'schedule for H U G H ES A ER O SPA C E DIVISIONS: Microwave & Antenna Engineering Guidance & Controls Engineering Spacecraft Design Engineering Components & Materials Engineering Weapon System s Engineering Electro-Optical Engineering Microcircuit Engineering Space System s Engineering M issile System s Engineering Circuit Design Engineering U .S. C itizenship required/An equal opportunity em ployer. COMPANY Friday, Feb. 14 P age 14 *1 S f . c f - íf , v : ; b n 1 9 S B *I Campus groupaids A program to aid Phoenix area underprivileged high school students in their studies is the new project of the Uni­ versity chapter of the Student Affiliates of the American Chemical Society (SAACS). It is believed that many of these students who have fallen behind in school could improve their work with help from oth­ ers. SAACS, under the guidance of Mark Beeny, junior chemis­ try m ajor, is attempting to co­ ordinate a volunteer tutoring program. Said Beeny of the project, “It is aimed a t helping the disad­ vantaged who otherwise could not afford tutoring. Tbe subjects to be covered will not deal whol­ ly with chemistry or the other physical sciences but will be rather diversified to cover as many subjects offered in the high schools as possible.” He went on to say, “We need more participants than just our members, therefore we are ask­ ing anyone who feels qualified to donate two or three hours a week to help tutor these kids.” Community leaders have al­ ready become interested in the program thanks to Beeny’s ef­ forts. He explained its function and goals recently to the mem­ bers of the central Arizona di­ vision of the American Chemi­ cal Society and succeeded in receiving encouragement and offers of help from representa­ tives of Central High and the senior chemist of Motorola. . While the program is definite­ ly well on its way, there are still some problems to be solv­ ed. The locating of facilities in RO TG cadets commissioned CO RRECTIO N — F irs t ru n n e r-u p in G am m a A lp h a C hi’s B est D ressed C oed C o n test w as in a c c u ra te ly re p o rte d in T uesday’s S ta te P re ss as Ja z e lle G hiz flig h t). T he ru n n e rup in th e G lam o u r m ag azin e sponsored, c o n te st is S u e N eu m eister (le ft). Director wants agency The director of the Bureau of Educational Research and Services believes a state agen­ cy is needed to guide training of professional librarians. Mayor Sam Yorty On 'Gty Makers' Mayor Samuel Yorty of Los Angeles will discuss the pro­ blems of his ’ city, especially Watts, and will comment on rad­ ical youth movements on '“ City Makers” Wednesday at 8 p.m. on KAET Channel 8. Yorty refers to Watts as “a ghetto problem, not a slum pro­ blem,” and tries to draw a dis­ tinction between the riots in Watts and those of other ma­ jor cities which he blames on television news coverage. He also feels that radical youth movements, both black and white, have been infiltrated and are being exploited by com­ munists. IM K f B M IJ I M l I LATELY n TEMPE PHYSICAL him down • hu our nm • flOHIIN-* -PONI--WmmM * AWos.-WW.-fri. mm * Tm'TiMft.'iaf. T.P.F.C. MOO$, MN/QmwO* Hm Cal NMW Oar AppaMMnrt Dr. R. Merwin Deever said an integrated plan, implement­ ed by strong state leadership, is the key to developing effec­ tive library services for Ari­ zona. Calling on the state’s three universities to provide the link in such a program, he said, “The demand for professional librarians will continue to in­ crease as services are expand­ ed to meet the needs of a grow­ ing state.” Dr. Deever pointed out that such an agency would require adequate financing to achieve effective staffing, training, and service personnel. “Courses for training library technicians should be provided at the uni­ versities and community col­ leges,” he said. Dr. Deever summarized cur­ rent difficulties with librarj) services, as identified by a re­ cent Arizona Library Survey. Some of these problems are lack of adequate support for all types of libraries, insufficient staffing, and complications in services arising from the state’s many sparsely populated areas. Twelve mid-semester ROTC graduates were commissioned Air Force second lieutenants yes­ terday during ceremonies in Great Hall. Three of these graduates, Bruce M arshall, Charles K. Yard and Terrence Dolan, were designated “distinguished gradu­ ates” and received commissions in the regular Air Force. The other nine cadets who re­ ceived commissions in the Air Force Reserve are Wayne Belke, Richard Hastings, Lawrence Hibler, John Thurston, Paul Meador, William Standage, Gordon Cald­ eron, Richard Favella and Chris­ topher Cookson. After four years of active duty, the men may go on reserve duty or seek admission to the re­ gular Air Force. Guest speaker for the cere­ monies was Maj. Gen. Ralph D. Curtin (ret.), deputy chief of staff for programs and resources at the Pentagon until last year. . ? O U fU jM which to hold the sessions is a problem a t this time according to Beeny. “We hope to set up classes in either private homes or un­ used classrooms but as yet no de­ cisions as such have been made on this m atter,” he said. Another uncompleted detail is that of obtaining the under­ privileged students. “We will rely on the school a d m i n i s t r a t i o n s , working through their counselors, to in­ form their underprivileged stu­ dents of file program and to When in need of Tow Service, request TEMPE BODY SHOP 11 E. 4th S t 24 HOUR TOW SERVICE • Auto Body & Fender Repairing • Auto Painting • Wheel Aligning & Balancing Classified N r classified advertising subm it ad in person ts tbu Statu Pre ss, Old B A Ml, two days to advance at auM catton, tram 1:00 a.m. la 1 :M p.m., call Ml-3457. Rate: Sc pe r ward, 7Sc mtatomm. FOR SALE 440 m m telephoto, $145; Exakta, W L F $35; Retina S45; lenses, accessaries. Re­ mote protector $35. 144-7332. «41-5100. 44 Ford engine, 240 V S with 4 speed and linkage $250, also snow sk is and poles $20. 944-0144. RENTALS V • tv ! THOMAS I / MALL 959-0620 U. S. M ARINE CORPS OFFICER SECTION OFFICER i INVITING YOUR INQUIRY ON OFFICER PROGRAMS: Time: 9:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. Date: 17, 18, 19, 20 February 1969 Place: Mall across from the Library Officer Candidate Course: Seniors A Grade W om an Officer Candidate: Juniors, 8eniora, G rad s Platoon Leaders Class: Freshman thru Juniors 1944 M alibu 2 door HT, V-t, Autom atic, *2,750. Phone 941-5442 after 5:30. FO R S A L E : 947-4171. ' 1945 Tempest. M u st sell, below whole­ sale. Power, factory air. $995 ca ll 945 $726. Hide-e-Bed sofa, $35. C all N E A R new Ten Speed Schw inn - B ike with Book Rack. 944-4078. S M IT H Corona standard m anual type­ w riter —- lust overhauled — $50. 941-3417. 1945 Oktsm oblle V ista C ru ise r »-passen­ ge r station wagon. One owner, excel­ lent condition. 959-1143. 1945 - 324 L E M A N S $1,050. 945-2797. TYPING T Y P IN G — reasonable. 9549435. Executive Secretary desires typing. Pro* fessional IB M , 947-3544. MOTORCYCLES 1940 Yam aha 305, windshield, m irrors, crash bare, book rack and tools, 2,000 m iles. «495. 944-0144. ’E X P E R IE N C E D with research papers, theses, m anuscripts. M in o r editing free. Fast, accurate. IB M electric. Ethel H rifem an, 959-5838. - 1944 Yam aha 305, excellent condition. 9591143. FA ST , Accurate, Guaranteed. IB M Elite. Sue Johnson. 211 E ast 14th St., 944-7848. 1940 Kaw asaki 120 T R m otorcycle. 400 m iles, full w arranty. Cell 947-0239 after 7 p.m. T Y P IN G — 9444945. P R O F E S S IO N A L Typing Service. Them es, Thesis, Reports. Experienced, Reason­ able, Fast Service. 944-9009 o r 944-2557. T Y P IN G — 947-4913. M axine M ullen. ’ 245 Tennis lessons tor beginners — Inex­ pensive. C ell M a rk o r M ike 944-3500. T U T O R IN G : M ath and Chem istry, fresh­ m an-sophomore levels, 944-4775. IN D IV ID U A L T U T O R IN G in math, chem­ istry, physics, and biological sciences. Phone 947-7924. |\ M U ST S E L L — W IL L S A C R IF IC E P R O F IT — /Moving to W ash., D.C. 1943 Studeb a ksr V-S, Autom atic, Refrigeration — 939-1435. 1943 Volkswagen, excellent condition, ve ry clean, 1949 plates, lew mileage^ $900. 2454144. INSTRUCTION Î Ï S' • AUTOMOBILES 40 volum es 1949 Encyclopedia. 1970-7» Yearbook prepaid. R esearch Service 10 years prepaid, retail price $1,400 asking $$450. C all M ark, 944-4394. T Y P IN G : IB M . 3245 o r .9550743. b TUXEDO enroll those interested,” said Beeny. It is anticipated that there will be a considerable number of participants when the tutor­ ing begins in two weeks. Although this program is be­ ing conducted on a local basis, it is part of a national effort originated and sponsored by the American Chemical Society. Any person wishing addition­ al information or desiring to tutor is urged to write Mark Beeny, Box 20, c-o chemistry department. • SERVICES A C O M P L E T E E L E C T R O N IC T U N E U P and D IA G N O S IS: SS.95 ((-Cylinder), $4.95 (4-cylinder), $4.95 (4-cyllnder), parts. V N B card accepted. K E L L E R 'S T U N E SH O P, 1951 E . Apache — 947-0759. 1940 Honda 450. E X C E L L E N T , C U STO M EO . $750. Contact: John, 1031 E. Lemon, Apt. 34, Tempe. 1940 B.S.A. Firebird Scram bler 450 c.c. excellent condition, m ust sell Immedlately__________ ' H O N DA, Clio, lied, 1944, 2200 m iles, $125 firm . C a r bum per m otorcycle car­ riers, used twice, $20. Helmet, bubble shield, $10. 9457841. 1948 Honda 350 Scram bler, «450. 947-7177. 1947 Honda S-90 Scram bler, 2,700 m iles, wlh rein cover end new knobby tire* — $225, 947-5304. 1944 Custom 450 Honda, Unique Street or D irt, $450. 944-9890. Bike, S U Z U K I 100 C.C., Sept. 48, w arranty end Insurance. $350. C all 944-4435. B R ID G E S T O N E 17S Scram bler M ust sell, good condition. $325. 941-2407. W ANTED X E R O X C O P IE S — 7Vic each D IV E R S IF IE D S E R V IC E S , IN C . 1014 South 23rd Street Phoenix, Arizona M A L E roommate to share 1-bedroom apt. with senior B.A. m ajor. 9457021. G ayle E . W illiam s— Registered Electrologlst. Perm anent H a ir Rem oval, 1443 W. U niversity Dr., M esa, 949-4954. R O O M M A T E S wanted: Large 34>edraam house W ell furnished, $50 and share util­ ities. 9459912. 112 E . Fairm ont, Tempo. W AS your la ri date a D lng-a-ling? Meet your ID E A L M A T E m atched by C O M ­ P U T E R ! C all fo r free com patibility ques­ tionnaire, 244-903! — 24 hrs. . R ID E R S from Buckeye area, 2754544. l o r 2 m ala to share 2-bedroom house 1 block from cam pus. 739 E. oronge St., after 4 p.m. L O SE W E IG H T safely w ith Dex-A-blet Tablets. O nly 90c at Cam pus Progs, • HELP W ANTED N E E D M O N E Y ? $100 to $400 par month spare time, men end women. C e ll 947- ". là • TRANSLATION T R A N SL A T IO N S: R u ssian to English, Germ an to E n glish , aloe R ussian lésions by native. 253-1510. C ell weak days 5 « p.m. (except Thursday). «■A &Mät 1 Page 15 By BILL JACKSON Sports Editor A rizona State’s hopes for a chance to d e f e n d its w restling title in th e 7th A nnual Sun D evil Invitational today and tom orrow took a tu rn for th e b etter yes­ terday w hen it was announced Cal Poly of San Luis Obispo w ill not be able to participate in th e m eet. Cal Poly, th e defending college division NCAA champs, w as unable to come up w ith th e funds necessary to m ake the trip from San Luis Obispo. “Since Cal Poly can’t come, UCLA has to step into th e favoritefe role,” said Ted Bredehoft, Sun Devil w restling coach. “If w e can get a good Sun D evil effort in five or six divisions, w e could pull it off and defend our title,” B redehoft contin­ ued. The field is cut to six team s w ith the absence of Cal Poly. Besides th e B ruins and Devils, those attending include Cali­ fornia a t Berkeley, W estern S tate of Col­ orado, New Mexico and Arizona. The tournam ent w ill be conducted un­ der NCAA rules w ith nine w eights to be contested, 123, 130, 137, 145, 152, 160, 177 and heavyweight. Arizona S tate w ill have no contenders at 137 and 177. UCLA is led by tw o All-Americans, Sergio Gonzalez a t 123 pounds, runner-up in th a t division a t the NCAA Champion­ ships la st year, and John Halm, 137 pounds, who finished sixth a t th e cham­ pionships. Bredehoft w ill counter Bob Shines at t r i . i h f i ¡ t MOtfX nui in Friday, Feb. 14 123 pounds. Shines and. Gonzalez have tangled once already this year w ith the Bruin coming out on top, 6-5, in a contest­ ed m atch at Los Angeles. “Shines had a take down w ith four sec­ onds to go in th e m atch, but a very tight referee’s call gave Gonzalez th e m atch/’ Bredehoft said. A nother top m an in th e 123 pound di­ vision is Arizona’s Paul Betts, 10-2 for the season. One of his victories is over Shines in a m eet Arizona S tate eventually won, 22-11. A nother top UofA contender is 160 pounder G ary Rushing. Rushing, a senior and team captain, is 13-0 this season. Coach Ron Jacobsen of New Mexico w ill be w ithout th e services of tw o of his better w restlers this weekend. Lobo Dale Scott, 152 pound champion of last week’s New Mexico Ihvitational, and Roger Brown, heavyw eight runner-up in the same tourney, both suffered injuries over the weekend and are not expected to m ake th e trip. Scott has an 8-2 record for th e year. Rudy Griego w ill give th e Bruins’ Hahn some com petition a t 137 pounds. Griego won his division a t th e New Mexico tour­ ney. Sun Devil Rick C ahill could end up w ith the championship crown in the heavy-'" w eight division. H e has already downed the heavyw eights from New Mexico and Arizona and won by forfeit a t UCLA. O ther top Devil grapplers are Jim Lambson a t 130 pounds w ith a 12-5-2 ' m ark and A rt Holland (145), 10-5-3 on the season. Redskins threaten Devils l in Salt Lake City By LARRY NELSON Assistant Sports Editor The Devils’ brutal road trip concludes tomorrow night in Salt Lake City, and coach Ned Wulk is hoping the four-game set can finish the way it start­ ed — with a victory. The job won’t be easy, see­ ing as how ASU could only manage to top Utah by a 93-88 margin in an earlier meeting in Tempe. At the beginning of the cam­ paign, few basketball enthu­ siasts would have picked the Redskins as a conference threat. Coach Jack Gardner not only lost All-American Merv Jackson to graduation last year, but he lost, the other four men who played alongside Jackson. Howeyer, Gardner was bless­ ed with every coach’s dream — the freshman hotshot who ac­ tually has enough talent to play varsity ball. In this case, the hotshot is 6-3 Mike Newlin who paces the WAC scoring statis­ tics, sporting a 26.0 conference average going into last night’s game, Another classy sophomore making his presence felt is 6-5 forward Ken Gardner, sixth in the WAC scoring race with a 17.2 mark and sixth in WAC rebounding at 9.8, not including figures from last night’s UofA contest. To counteract Newlin and Gardner, the Devils have Sea- bem Hill and Gerhard Schreur. In the Tempe contest, Hill pac­ ed Arizona State’s scoring wilh 20 points, and Schreur pulled down 16 rebounds to lead that category. After the Utah clash die Sim Devils return home for three games in six days. The Wyo­ ming Cowboys come to Tempe Feb. 20, followed by the New Mexico Lobos Feb. 22 and Southwestern Louisiana Feb. 25. The Devils take to the road once more, but the way things are going it could be the game that decides the WAC race. On March 1, the UofA plays host to the Shn Devils in Tucson’s relic Bear Down Gym. CROSS MOTORS Presents . . . DEVIL CONTENDERS — Bob Shines (top) and Rick Cahill figure heavily in D evil hopes for a repeat of last year’s championship team in the 7th Annual Sun D evil Invitational today and tomorrow. Shines competes at 123 pounds, w hile Cahill is the Sun D evil heavyweight ÂHRA Wfcternatioaiils Sun Devil /IP A ® ' BARBER SHOP V » fl Class Winner In the Arches 130 E. U niversity Drive Phone 966-5462 ROFFLER HAIR STYLING 1 By Chet Suchocki OPEN M O N D A Y THRU FRIDAY See & D rive the Superstock Import I CROSS MOTORS u l ufrti Bavarian Molar Wann 1401 E. CAMELBACK 1401 E. Camelback Rd. Phoenix—Phone 266-8429 Friday, Feb. 14 — Faye 1C Gymnasts to face 'toughest' in S IU The Arizona State gymnastics team will face its roughest test of the season tomorrow night at Coronado High School in Scotts­ dale when it tangles with the powerful Salukis of Southern Il­ linois. The Salukis bring in a record of 5-1, not counting the encount­ er with Arizona tonight, iden­ tical to Arizona State’s. But their lowest scoring out-put of the season has been 157 points against Air Force and Michi­ TyyL lO lI V gan State, while the Devils’ highest effort came last week against New Mexico State — 157 points. SIU lost its opening meet against Iowa, 162.00-162.40, and dumped its next five opponents, averaging almost 160 points per meet. Their highest effort came against Iowa State, amassing 162.675 points. An interesting battle is shap­ ing up on the still rings, where Sun Devil John Price will meet c A s c A fi A iit l/ id L M -G M /ll v U IIW n head on with Saluki Wayne Borkowski. Price is averaging 9.22 points per routine on the rings with his highest individ­ ual effort a 9.8 last week. Bor­ kowski is averaging 9.225 points per outing with his highest score a 9.4. Sun Devil all-around ace Dar­ ryl Bair sat out last week’s vic­ tory with a torn hand, but has gotten back into the swing of things this week and is expected to give SIU senior Pete Hem- ^ W U vU uU I merling all the competition he can handle. Hemmerling calls the rings his best event, adding to the Prioe-Borkowski battle. Another Devil threat will be freshman Dan Smith, who came within five - one hundredths of a point of breaking the school record of 52.35 in all-around competition held by Rich Impson. Smith tallied 52.3 at NMSU with a 9.4 on the long horse, a 9.35 on rings and a 9.3 on the horizontal bar. Coach Don Robinson will also field his “four horsemen” to the attack against SIU. “I have a real strong side horse team in (Darryl) Bair, Joe Kappes, Ralph Weise and Stan Ferguson,” Robinson said. Price summed up Sun Devil feelings about facing such stiff competition when he said SIU had better be ready or ” ‘we’ll be nipping a t their Achilles ten­ don.” I dEtav/iincj- l i n s l s t h is v/© © k. | worrying Castillo this year. The the milers with ample competi­ By LARRY FOUGHTY Optimistic is the word best Sun Devils have outstanding in­ tion. Sun Devil cross country ace describing coach “Baldy” Cas­ dividuals in many events — tillo’s outlook for the upcoming most notably the running — hut Jerry Jobski will team up with Sun Devil track season which are weak in back-up personnel. Quintinar in the two mile event. Coach Castillo considers the opens Feb. 22 at ASU’S Joe Barring any serious injury, they can make a serious bid to take field events to be the weakest Selleh track. Devil cindermen will partici­ everything at the WAC Cham­ area of the squad. In this area the Devils are lacking the great­ pate in their first meet of the pionships in Tempe, May 23-24. season by hosting the Arizona Leading the Sun Devil hopes est in depth, and any injury Relays at 11 a.m. this year are returning sprinters could seriously affect the re­ This meet is the beginning of Jerry Bright (9.4160-yard dash), sults of any given meet. one of the toughest schedules J- D- Hill, defending WAC 106- - In the high jump Barry Shep­ ever faced by the Sun Devils. yard sprint champ; and John herd returns from a successful Other notable foes include Oc­ Holbrook, member of the relay previous season. The leading pole vaulter is Dick Rambo, cidental, Arizona, USC, and team. who has cleared 16 - 2. In the UCLA plus the other regular In the 440-yard dash Ron Free­ javelin ASU should take the WAC foes. man should provide the winning honors with the presence of The Devils have an outside margin in most meets. Free­ Olympian Mark Murro, a trans­ chance in the WAC this year, but they must oautnd with man was a bronze medalist in fer from M esa Commimity Col­ powerful UTEP, BYU and New the 400-meters and grid meda- lege. All home evening meets be­ Mexico. UTEP flexed its musc­ liat on the 1,600-meter relay les in the WAC Indoor Champ* taaai a t the, Olympic Games at gin a t 7:30 p.m. with the field ionships last week in Albuquer­ Mndco City. events. The naming events que, N.M., displaying the much In the longer events Rick Mer- start at 8, Further schedule information needed depth that all team s , win should set the pace for the half mile, while Chuck LaBenz may be obtained a t the ticket need. Depth is the me problem and Manuel Quintinar provide office in the MPE building. ^The spring sem ester inin­ tram ural program h a s be­ gun, with an eight-sport sche­ dule. Currently under way is bowl­ ing. Qualifying rounds were held Tuesday and Wednesday and finals yesterday. Results of the finals were not made available in time for publication this week. Top team in ‘A’ League quali­ fying rounds was the Tort Fea­ sors with 2,100 pins, followed by Hayden Hall, file Obsequious Sycophants, the Fijis, Sigma Nu, the Phi Sigs, K a n » Sigs Tickets available Students may rick up tickets for file UTEP-ASU basketball game of March 4 on Monday, Feb. 18, and Tuesday, Feb. 19. Tickets for file Wyoming, New Mexico and Southwestern Louisiana d ashes will also be available on these dates, as ori­ ginally announced. Pick-up tim es are Monday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Tuesday, 8 am. to 9 p.m. and Delta Sigs. Several teams which didn’t make the qualify­ ing rounds Tuesday had a chance to qualify Wednesday. The top eight team s bowled off in yesterday’s finals at Tem­ pe Bowl, with the top indivi­ dual and team each receiving a trophy. Skiing good Ski reports from area re­ sorts all report weekend skiing will be good, to excellent. All facilities a t file Bill Wil­ liams ski area, three and one half miles south of Williams, will be operating this weekend. Snow depth a t the top of the n n is 20 inches packed base and depth a t the bottom is eight in­ ches packed base. All runs are clear, skiing-conditions good and the weather is cloudy and cool. Chains are not required a t the tim e of file report. Conditions a t Purgatory, o u t side Durango, Colo., are report­ ed as excellent with 60 indies of snow. Who picked your roommate.., the computer? Fraternity Rush February 15&16 SIG N UP O N THE MALL O R G O TO SOUTH HALL *238 O R PHONE 961-3086