I ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY V o l. 51, No. 86 Holiday spots i C o u n c il o u s t s lure students during Easter g u e r r illa c la s s A S president opposes action By DOUG HARTLEY With a five-day vacation By ED TAYLOR ggPf-rahead, most students are Student Government Writer planning to “get away from •P S . it all.” AS Executive Council mem­ bers voted 3-2 Monday to re­ Many Valley residènts will move foe guerrilla theater class head out-of-state to get away from the Experimental College from the accustomed recrea­ over the strong objections of tion spots. AS President Bill Oldham. The Arizona Highway Pa­ The action was taken because trol reports all roads out three members of thé class in­ of Phoenix clear, with a pos­ terrupted Gov. Williams’ sibility of rain over the speech during a Young Repub­ weekend. licans’ meeting Mart* $t but Across the border in Mexi­ Oldham rontended the gover­ co lies Nogales and Puerto nor’s appearance on campus Penasco or Rocky Point. SL E E PY HOLLOW ? — L a zy sp rin g a ftern o o n s a r e ta k in g th eir y e a r ly fa ll W itn ess was a direct violation of ASU Many will go tim e to surf, statutes. R ip v a n W in k le ta k in g th e o p p o rtu n ity to catch u p o n in i— wi camp on the beach and soak in M U W est. r Oldham said that according up some sun. to University regulations organ­ To the long-time Arizona izations must have their speak­ resident, California is a ers approved by foe A p ril 2 P age 4 Stadium seating: problem resolved? editorial forum Everyone has his idea on the Utopia of the seating contro­ versy — the athletic departm ent, ASASU and the Alumni Associa­ tion, but none of them have come up with the one idea th at pleases everyone arid none of them ever will succeed a t that — b at someone had better com e up with something before Minnesota gets here in September. It’s doubtful that anyone really knows exactly how m any fans the stadium will hold next year 'because of the slow sta rt on thq ' expansion work (it was supposed to begin right aftpr the last home ■- gam e but didn’t sta rt until after the first of- the year). No one person can be Mamed for th at m istake, it’s ju st a gen­ eral incompetence that sernns to abound everywhere. A look around the conference gives athletic director Clyde Smith a right to gripe a littie^-BYU gets $25 per student for athletic d e­ partm ent use while Utah gets $65 per student (of which $50 is used to build a new fieldhouse) and New Mexico and Wyoming athletic directors m ake a budget that they will need1for the year and the money is appropriated from student fees on the president’s approval. Since the stadium is a recreational and not an educational area, state funds cannot be used to build on to the stadium so, of course, Smith wants m ore money from the students. ASU gets $16 per student of which $4 is used to provide m ore seats, new construction, etc. Smith said th at ASU and UofA are the worst in the conference when it comes to getting money from the students. B ut the athletic departm ent shouldn’t bear all the brunt oo the seating controversy — the fan is a t fault as is ASASU. Every fan in the stadium wants to sit on thé ,50 yard Him», which is the sam e as asking ASU to play their opening 1969 gam e against Minnesota on a postage stam p. "W ho said It w a s im p ossib le to g e t a sea t on th e 50-yard U ne?” ASASU on the other hand keeps coming up with all these happy seating plans that don’t please everyone, but can’t. Bill Oldham’s group seating plan worked out adequately, but not well, last year. ASASÜ president-elect John Holman has a plan th at will move the band to the end zone and allow students to sit all along the east side, occupying rows 1-29. Again, as last year, his plan is to allow one person to pick up two stubs, with groups sitting together (in the north end of the stadium , from the 30 yard line around to the end zone). Alumni and general public, season ticket holders who would be displaced from the lower p art of those sections occupied by students in Holman’s plan would be given first priority in occupying the seats vacated in the upper southeast center of the stadiunm — an equal or better position in the stadium . This plan sounds like the most sensible program that anyone has come up with so far —h u t there will probably still be those who feel they are getting the raw end of the deal, particularly in the group seating. hodge podge Students' ventures fail because of ' system' B y DENNIS HODGES drummed into the kid’s head. Perhaps the biggest m istake F irst, and m ost im portant, the to be made concerning the child discovers teacher is om­ American university is that it is nipotent. H ers is the supreme unique in either purpose or tech­ authority never to be question­ nique Item adoration in general. ed. She knows what is good and And if we rixmmt* American not good for children and they education in general we m ay dis­ had b etter believe it. cover why stndent governments Second, the child learns teach­ are impotent and why student- er loves children who accept her initialed ventures such as the authority. She,, loves children experimental college are des­ who can follow orders; who can tined for failure. stand in straight lines; who In that case, the best way to settle it would be to revert to a Briber early in the education have clean fingernails; who can first come first served basis — if a person wants to go to a foot­ process, kindergarten o r first ' prpperly recite the Pledge of ball game badly enough he will find a way to get a ticket when they grade, some very im portant Allegiance. are dished out in this m anner. If he’s not th at anxious to go to a preim sn upon which American Third, the young student gam e, then there is one m ore seat for someone else. edneation is bated are quickly learns, sometimes quite pain­ fully, that teacher has a' great Letter to the e d ito rdeal of power a t her disposal. He can be stabbed into silence with a disapproving glance. He' can be subjected to ridicuie or sco rn .fo r asking “ dumb ques­ E d ito r, o ffic e rs p re s e n t a t p u b lic fu n c tio n s w h e n tions.” He can be flunked out. Setting the teacher up as the In re fe re n c e to th e s ta te m e n ts a ttrib u ­ i t a p p e a rs th a t th e ir p resen ce is n e c e ssa ry te d to L e v i Jo n e s in th e M arch 28 is s u e o f is lo n g sta n d in g . T h e id eo lo g y o f th e sp o n ­ unadulterated authority — an th e S ta te P re s s : I d o n o t k n o w w h e th e r o r so rin g g ro u p o r o f th e s p e a k e rs h a s n o th ­ unaccessible pyram id of wis­ n o t M r, J o n e s w as p re s e n t a t th e in c id e n t in g to d o w ith th is p o licy . T h e p rin c ip a l dom — m ay be most satisfac­ re fe rre d to b y h im . I w as. I cam e to D a le ’s fu n c tio n o f th e o ffic e rs p re s e n t a t su c h tory if education is m erely the a id as soon a s I h e a rd h im . I do say , h o w ­ m e e tin g s is to pres er v e th e r ig h t o f fre e passing on of centuries of ac­ e v e r, th a t in a ll o f th e d e a lin g s I h a v e h a d sp ee ch a n d th e rig h t o f p e a c e fu l assem b ly . cumulated factual information. .w ith b o th M r. Jo n e s a n d M r. D a le th a t But if education is.m ore than I fe e l th a t th e in c id e n t a s d e sc rib e d in th e y h a v e a lw a y s b e e n fo r th r ig h t a n d h o n ­ y o u r M arch 27 issu e p ortrays it a c c u ra te ly . programming people to fit into a e st. Joh n B . D u ffy , 1, well-organized and highly struc­ T h e p o lic y o f C am p u s S e c u rity to h a v e D irecto r o f C am pus S ecu rity tured society in which everyone knows precisely what everyone else is required to do, then the system fails m iserably. If individuals are to discover new relationships between con­ cents or to generalize knowledge to living situations it takes muchEditor Managing Editor C am pai M jfw m ore .han blind acceptance and Dave Gurzenski Larry Ross Aflaa H ardt rote memorization. * * * Weekend E ditors.... —— -David Anderson Copy E d itors_____________ w n w i P erritt Unfortunately, the present ap­ Edythe E dgar Daren Krupa proach to education o f t e n Em phasis Editor..—...— : ... Jan e Sims Asst. Campus B ritar P n Stevenson strifles creativity and imagina­ tion. It denies the individual the Ad M anager------ _ ...— ...........Hal Hubele Asst. Sports Editar_________ Larry Nelson responsibility and initiative for Mechanical Compositor-. :___Tom McOtea learning and often creates an in­ dividual for whom education is News Editor Photo Editor Sports EiHfay Faculty Advtoer drudgery, thinking a painful Jerry Kemper Terry Ross Bill Jaebsoa P n £ B o ta i E. Lance task and exploration a bore. Officers preserve rights ucts of the Am erican educational system , it seem s, a re the ex­ ception ra th e r than the case. For those who find th eir natural curiosity has not been entirely squelched, creative thinking is. an uphill battle to rediscover what 12 or 16 years of education has system atically refused to acknowledge. The m ost grim aspect of this is th at in term s of technique or objective, higher education is no different than kindergarten.- , A fter 18 years of conditioning, students come to the university, heads bowed, hat-in-hand and meekly ask for enlightenm ent. I As Dr. G erald F erber of Cal­ ifornia State U niversity, Los An­ geles assessed the university student’s position in an article entitled “Students Are Nig­ gers” : “A student a t Cal State is ex­ pected to know his place. H ie faculty tell him what courses to take; they tell him what to read, what to w rite, and, frequently, where to set the m argins on his typew riter. They tell him what’s true and what isn’t true. Some teachers insist they encourage dissent, but they’re alm ost al­ ways insincere and every stu­ dent knows it. Tell the m an what he wants to hear or he’ll flunk your ass out of the course.” Student governm ents and stu­ dent-initiated ventures are im­ potent because students them ­ selves are im potent. It was de­ signed th at way. And although student cries for m ore active participation in col­ lege education are noble, little im provem ent will occur until the very foundations of education are rearranged. From building blocks and col­ oring within the lines to upper division French literatu re, edu­ cation m ust be a gradual proc­ ess of active participation, dis­ sent and questioning. Pa^e 5 .— Wednesday, April 2 f » y BRUCE WESTERMAN G ilb ert Cadtjr, v ic e p resid en t fo r b u sin ess a ffa irs, h as f r * * '» ? term ed “m islea d in g an d a d isto rtio n o f th e fa c ts” a rticles in th e A rizo n a R ep u b lic ch a rg in g th e U n iv ersity acq u ired la n d fo r cam pu s e x ten sio n w ith o u t p recise b u ild in g p lan e H e ft H i s i * t A v*. X °. T h e a r tic le cla im ed sev e ra l h o u ses in th e area b e ­ tw e e n V a n N e ss an d S co ttsd a le R oad w ere acq u ired a fter th re a ts o f c o stly con d em n ation p ro ceed in g s w e re m ade § u a g a in st th e o w n ers. F o re s i ©A to ta l o f m o re th an 40 h o u ses h a v e b een acq u ired b y th e U n iv e rsity in th a t area, th u s rem o v in g th em from Mi p rop erty ta x r o lls. S o m e o f th e h o u se s'h a v e b een razed; 4 10 21 a r e b e in g occu p ied b y ren ters a t p resen t. 1 t C ad y sa id a ltb o u g h it ap p ears th e ren ters are b ein g given lo w -c o st h o u sin g , a ctu a lly th e y h a v e added costs. A "T he occup a n t d o es a ll th e m a in ten a n ce, so th e U n iv er­ s ity d o es n o t sp en d a p en n y ,” h e added. 3 — _ "TV a *$*“\ “W e p u t th g -r e n te r s on a m on th to m on th b asis,” V o 0-1 h e sa id , ex p la in m g th e r e a re n o le a se s on th e p rop erties. a C ad y sa id p ro p erty is b ein g acq u ired sp o ra d ica lly to p reven t la rg e in te r e sts from b u y in g b lo ck s o f la n d and co m p lica tin g exp an s ion . A p p rop riation s g overn b u ild in g , an d u n til a b u ild in g is sta rted , th e h o u ses a re ren ted on a first-co m e, first-serv e d b asis. “W efre n o t in th e ren ta l b u sin ess,” com m en ted C ady. 4 - T \f le ir “H o u ses a r e ra zed a s soon a s I can clea r th em .”. H e said b eca u se m o st h om eow n ers w o u ld o b ject to h ea v y m a­ ch in e ry d estro y in g th e h om e n e x t d o o r ,-th e U n iv ersity tr ie s n o t t o b e g in ra zin g u til a ll h o m es h a v e b een pur­ D IS P U T E D LO T — M ap o f area n orth o f L aw B u ild in g w e st o f M cA llister A v en u e in ­ ch ased . d ic a tes p rop erty in d isp u te b etw een A S U a n d C h arles S ch isler, m arked b y X . A sterisk s U n iv e r sity u s e p ro jectio n s fo r th e area ex ten d u n til in d ica te p rop erty a lrea d y so ld to th e U n iv ersity . 1980 a n d in c lu d e lif e scien ce, in d u stria l d esig n an d tech ­ n o lo g y , en g in eerin g an d p h y sica l scien ce b u ild in g s. “I ’v e sa v ed , s ix sp o ts fo r fiv e -flo o r p ark in g stru ctu res w ith tw o flo o rs d o w n ..a n d th re e u p ,” sa id C ady. C ad y d en ie d th a t th e la n d w a s b ein g p urch ased w h ile in e x p e n siv e a n d b ein g h eld fo r se v e r a l y ea rs u n til B y E D TAYLO R “T h e govern m en t’s rig h t o f em in en t b u ild in g co u ld b e sta rted . H e sa id th e area w a s b ein g acq u ired a s fa st a s ap p rop riation s a llo w ed . C h arles S ch isle r is th e ty p e o f person dom ain is n ecessa ry ,” D u sh o ff sa id , “b u t in th is ca se th e U n iv ersity is a b u sin g its C ad y sa id h e lea rn ed ir o m th e R ep u b lic a rtic le w h o w ill stan d up fo r h is rig h ts. p ow er.” J o h n R . E U ingson, U n iv e r sity d irecto r o f p la n n in g and T h e U n iv ersity h as g iv en th è retired H e said th e U n iv ersity h ad n o rig h t to co n stru ctio n , b a d r e la tiv e s o ccu p y in g som e o f th e h o u ses. p olicem an a ch a n ce b y filin g a condem na­ u se th e p rop erty fo r p arking, b eca u se an C ad y sta te d , “I d id n ’t k n o w h e h ad a b o y liv in g th ere, tio n su it a g a in st h im . A rizona S up rem e C ourt d ecisio n h a s h eld - b u t I don’t s e e a n y th in g w ro n g w ith it; h e is a s tu d e n t” U n iv ersity p la n n ers h a v e b een b u y in g th a t p rop erty can n ot b e con d em n ed fo r T h e R ep u b lic sa id up h o m es n ea r th e cam pus a s p a rt o f th eir p ark in g purposes. fa c u lty m em b er w a s g iv e n I lo n g -ra n g e ex p a n sio n program . M ost p eop le H e a lso said th e $21,000 o ffered b y th e a h o m e a t G ady?s d irectio n , h a v e so ld th e ir h om es, b u t sev e ra l com ­ U n iv ersity fo r S ch isler’s h o u se w a s n o t a an oth er p ro fesso r w a s a s- I p la in ed th e y w e r e th rea ten ed b y A S U w ith fa ir p rice. 'sig n ed a h o m e b y D ean W il- I c o s tly con d em n ation su its i f th e y d id n ot. “M ost o f the* p eo p le se ll to th e U n iv er­ la rd P ed rick o f th e la w co lO n e o f th e p ro p erties th e U n iv ersity s ity b eca u se th e y g iv e in to th e sca re tac­ le g e , a n d G eo rg e W . M or­ V w a n ts to b u y is S ch isle r’s a t 918 G ranada, tic s o r b eca u se th ey fig u re it is th e b est r e ll, U n ivers it y p u rch asin g w h ich p la n n ers w a n t to u se fo r p a rk in g th e y can g et,” D u sh o ff said. H ow ever, h e a g e n t a ssig n ed a fa cu lty S ch isle r’s a tto rn ey , J a y D u sh o ff, to ld th e , em p h asized th a t th e S ch isler ca se is d if­ m em b er a h o m e an d re­ S ta te P ress h is c lie n t said p eo p le a t file feren t. d u ced th e r e n t o n tw o U n iv ersity tried to h arass h im in to se llin g “In th e n orm al con d em n ation ca se th er e h ou ses. h is p ro p erty a t th e p rice th e U n v ersity is n o d ou b t ab ou t th e p o w er to condem n,” I t fu rth e r cla im ed . prop­ w a s o fferin g . » h e said. “I t is o n ly in a rare ca se su ch a s e r ty o w n er s w e r e th rea ten ­ B u t, a s S ch isle r sa id , “I d on ’t le t a n y­ th is th a t th e p ow er to condem n can b e ed an d h ara ssed “n ig h t o n e h a ra ss m e.” co n tested .” an d d ay” b y R od J o n es, an A s a re su lt, h è w o u ld n o t s e ll, an d th e H ow ever, D u sh o ff said h i s . ca se h as em p lo y e o f th e U n iv ersity U n iv ersity file d th e con d em n ation su it. b een w eak en ed b eca u se S ch isler b ou gh t p u rch asin g d ep a rtm en t “I ju st k n o w th e w h o le situ a tio n an oth er h om e re cen tly in P h oen ix. C ady sa id th e cla im J o n es stin k s,” w a s S ch isler’s a ssessm en t o f h is “H e (S ch isle r) n ow h as th e op tion o f h arassed people in to se ll­ p lig h t. in g is u n tru e. d ecid in g w h eth er to se ll th e h o u se to th e H is la w y er ex p la in e d th e U n iv ersity U n iv ersity or go ah ead w ith th e a ttem p t W hen la n d is n eed ed fo r cam p u s ex p a n sio n and w as m isu sin g its p o w er o f em in en t dom ain to d ism iss th e con d em n ation p roceed in gs,” fu n d s a r e available^ th e p u rch a sin g o ffic e is n o tifie d b y D u sh o ff con clu ded. th e p la n n in g d ep artm en t, sa id C ady. T w o ap p raisers are in tr y in g to fo r ce o u t S ch isler. th en s e n t to ex a m in e th e p ro p erty , an d th e y g iv e th e p rice th e U n iv e r sity w ill o ffer. “W hen m u tu a l term s ca n n o t b e m et, th e fin a l p rice d eterm in a tio n i s referred to th e S u p erio r C ourt,” C ady sta ted . “T h is con d em n ation p roced u re is th e ex cep tio n ra th er th a n th e ru le.” P la n s fo r th e area b etw een V an N e ss an d S co ttsd a le R oad r eroutin g of G ranada to M cA llister, p a rtia l elim in a tio n o f M cA llister I and elim in a tio n o f V an I N ess. C ady said T em pe I ab andoned V an N ess, M cA lliste r , G ranada and T y ler .str e e ts to th e U n iv ersity on I M arch 27. T h e U n iv ersity is trad in g la n d w ith th e C hurch o f L a tter-D a y S a in ts on M c­ A lliste r A ' v e n u e , addled C ady. “T h e tr a d e is d on e str ic tly on a sq u are fo o t to fo o t b a sis.” H e ca lled th e procedu re a se n sib le and in te llig e n t w a y to c r e a te , m ore u n i­ fo r m ity in la n d d istrib u ­ tion . Jerry' -S tew art o f th è n u t fey Daren Kruaa M aricopa C ou n ty attorn ey's FACING CONDEMNATION —. T h e U n iv e r sity is a ttem p tin g to b u y th e ' h o u se o f o ffic e m id th e n a tte r is Charles S c h isle r at 918 Granedft as p a rt o f its ex p a n sio n program . H ow ever, S c h u le r u n d er h a s b een u n w illin g to s e ll, U n iv e rMl sity h a s file d ai con ' d em n ation su it. £ > O r o * S-fcJ Sck;.* leir lo+ VACfr.Kt LD5 Cku.HCrk^ + T r _ i----- - - I r ■'CM,tr« N . - C l 1 1 1 i * i • * 1 1 1 1 » 1 « » » i —i__ L _ L_ X _ 1 _ 1 _ _ Si Homeowner defends domain mr m mm il W ednesday, A p ril 2 '— P a g e 6 Colors flare at show Van Cliburn to play here Pianist Van Cliburn will per­ form at 8:30 tonight in Gamm age Auditorium. He will play works of Beetho­ ven, Brahm s, Rachmaninoff and a 19th century composer, Taneieff, a student of Tchaikovsky and Rubenstein. Some of the titles include “ Reflets dans Teau” and “Feuz d ’artifice” by Debussy and “Jeux d’eau” and “Toccata” by Ravel. A Chinese dragon dance open­ ed Oriental Night in Cosner Aud­ itorium last Sunday. Presented by foreign students, the inform al, three-hour show featured songs, folk dances, a karate dem onstration and col­ orful costumes from seven E ast­ ern lands. Ajit Thapa and Bobby Yee shared the microphone and banter as m asters of ceremon­ ies. Honored guests present inclu­ ded University, representatives, a local mayor, consuls from Bel- Article directs journalist to 'School for Scandal' gum), France, Italy, Norway and Sweden and local editors. The auditorium was Riled to near capacity. A drawing was conducted dur­ ing intermission. Holders of the six winning tickets won threeminute telephone calls to any part of the world. Highlights included a Samoan fire dance with fire extinguish­ ers as an added attraction, an Indian harvest dance, featuring four couples in gay costumes, with Dr. Ramesh Dhingra {daying the tabla; a karate demon­ stration, led by instructor Shojiro Koyama; and a fashion show with students modeling costumes of their homeland. The last nmnber was a Nep­ alese dance with Guna R. Upadhyaya as the would-be lover and Ajit Thapa humorously por­ traying the shy young maiden. Men students brought howls Cram the audience as they re­ acted to commentator Laurie Callaway’s reference to their “skirts” and other item s of cloth­ ing. Reaction to the ladies’ cos­ tumes drew expressions of de­ light andan increase jp camera activity. • FOR SALE TIRES — Retread»—Used Polya la«— Factory Seconds. You nam e It — we have If. Student and faculty discount. — Terms—Contact L arry Vaughan. 274-3874, 2137 E ast Indian School Rd. If no an­ swer, 946-3217. JIM YOUNG REALTY. 254-6161. A few minor hitches—in tim-' ing, microphone adjustments, and lighting — were casually shrugged off as die performers brought Eastern culture to the W est Kids to bunt Easter eggs at farm B y RO BERT H EA R N Classified ■ B O B B I ’ S Ladles Apparel GOING OUT OF BUSINESS Everything reduced Many Below our cost Huge stock of Juniors and Petites Hurry, Hurry for best selection Frontier Town Shopping Center Scottsdale I I Thomas. Rds. Phone 945-9272 r * • SERVICES AUTOMOTIVE REPAIRS — Guaranteed top quality work — reasonable prices — tune-ups s specialty. G erry Osun, 9672398. 20% oIf to ASlf students. Tempe Phys­ ical Fitness Club — Mill ( Southern — 966-8751. Olympic B ar, Sauna, e t c PARACHUTING LTD. Ten lines in a Lyceum play m ay not be considered Sky Diving School More than 1,500 cooked andbreaking into show business to any great extent, b u t it 1027 W. Camelback, Phoenix 274-6005 colored eggs will be hidden on to the adults. is an experience to be remembered. And it’s an experience w ithin th e reach of ariyonfe. the parkway at the University The competition for the kids • TYPING Farm. The form is staging its No connections or previous experience are needed. I ran across an article announcing tryouts fo r a play First Annual Easter Egg Hunt- is broken down Into three di­ Experienced with research papers, visions: under 4, M and 9-12- theses, manuscripts. Minor editing free. called “School For Scandal,” and all I could see w ere Open House Saturday. Fast, accurate. IBM electric. Ethel Hefyeareold. fernan. 959-5130. stars w ith m v nam e in every one. I tried out for th e play. ' The farm, located at Price I didn’t know w hat th e play w as about though, so I and Eliott Roads, opens to the Woody Starr; KTUF program Typing by professional' experienced In papers, term reports, theses, put down th a t I would accept any part. T h at w as a m is­ ' public Saturday at 10 a:m ., and director, said there would be mresearch anuscripts according to Campbell, take. soft driaks and potato chips for Turabian, e t c Pica type. Lbcllle Bryan, the hunt begins at 11 a.m. ,.969-9711, Mesa. I got th e role th a t could be learned in th e w ings on everyone, and he encouraged KTUF radio station and the people to bring picnic lunches TYPING: IBM. MAXINE MULLEN. 955opening night. I ’m a servant and out of th e tw o hours agricultural fraternities Alpha and make the day an 2T Ptfge: f Devils rip Cowboys again, 18-9 ß v I A D D V KTTT C A M By LARRY NELSON Assistant Sports Editor Once the Devils get untrack­ ed, it appears nothing can slow them down. Wyoming was - thum ped for the fourth consec­ utive gam e Monday as Paul R ay'Pow ell unleashed his own personal attack in leading ASU to an 18-9 slaughter of the Cow­ boys. Powell ripped two round-trip­ pers and two singles in six trips, driving home six runs. He hiked his batting average to .352, which is still only good for third on the' club. Jo lp Dolinsek tops the squad a t . J72, closely followed by Bil­ 1— a im ly Cotton’s .371. Ralph Dick, who slam m ed a hom er, triple and single Mon­ day, follows Powell in hitting a t .347. Bill M assarand rounds out the wrecking crew a t .340 as he w ent' two-fbr-four with three RBIs against Wyoming. A fter the Cowboys jum ped on Devil starter Kenny Hansen for two runs in the first inning, foe Sun Devils came back for four in file first and seven in the second to put things out of reach. Hansen went only five inef­ fective innings but he still re­ ceived credit for his fourth vic­ tory against m e defeat. » « . . Powell took over sole posses­ sion of the club RBI leadership with 27, Dolinsek trailing with 22 and M assarand with 19. Dolinsek and Jack Collinge share the home run lead with five, Powell has four, Dick three. Freshm an third basem an Rick Valley continued his tor­ rid hitting Monday, going threefor-five, upping his average to .333. He has yet to make an erro r in the field in seven gam es. Speed has played a m ajor part in A-State’s success so far. Lenny Randle is the No. 1 thief with 11 stolen bases, followed _ .. .. by Powell and M assarand with eight apiece. Cotton and Dick have each swiped six. Pitching statistics are domi­ nated by senior southpaw Larry Gura. Owning a 7-0 record, Gura has completed six games in six starts and boasts a 1.86 earned run average, while pac­ ing the club in strikeouts with 60. Hansen is second in ERA with a 2.65 m ark, while Lerrin LaGrow (5-1) has a 3.13 ERA. ASU (23-6) has a brief letup in activity, taking the field again Friday to m eet the. Wis­ consin Badgers in the opener of a six - game series. — — Letter to Sports Editor------. *** >, . Red Hat is dead D e a r B a se b a ll' F a n s, ___ _ _ , . Ptioto W BIN Jackson N O C H A N C E — W yom in g secon d b asem an D on B ru m field had n o ch a n ce a t n a ilin g a slid in g R ick V a lle y in M onday’s A SU rW yom ing gam e. S u n D e v ils rip p ed th e C ow ­ b o y s fo r th e fo u rth co n secu tiv e tim e, 18-9. Castillo woes mount; must face S J S next How do you think Baldy Cas­ tillo feels losing to an Oregon State track team minus several key perform ers, and now fac­ ing power-laden San Jose State? M iserable, s a y s Castillo, whose Arizona State squad heads for San Jose and a dual trade and field m eet Saturday on the Spartans’ nine-lane all-w eather surface. A bright spot for the Devils in last week’s losses to Calif­ ornia, 74-66, and to OSU, 94-51, WASDEATH ONLY THE B E G IN N IN G ! ? javelin ace M ark M urro con­ tinues unbeaten in eight m eets this year. M urro hit 261-9 Tuesday, some 25 feet b etter than Cal’s Gary Pennington. F riday, M urro’s . 267-1 was 37 feet better than the effort of Oregon State’s Tim • Voth. Last season M urro set a Spar­ tan., track record of 268-7 while competing for M esa Commun­ ity College. High hurdler F air Hooker keeps lowering his m arks in wins against Cal in 14.1 and OSU ir. 14.2. Both tim es he set new m eet ’records. ASU’s J e r ry . B right lowered his 220 m ark for 1969 to 21.1 against Oregon State but m ust tangle with a San Jose stable of sprinters labeled ‘ ‘Speed C ity.” Spartan Contenders in­ clude John Carlos, Sam Davis, Ronnie Ray Smith, F rank Sla­ ton, Kirk Clayton and Byron Wilson, not to mention Olympic gold m edalist Lee Evans in the 440. ASU’s Ron Freem an, out last week with a m uscle injury, should be ready to run by. Sat­ urday against Evans. But Rick Merwin’s injury m ay leave AState with no entries in the 880. .The Red H at no ’longer exists. O r m aybe it should be said that, th e m onster created by th e Red H at has destroyed its creator. In th e last week o r so the “m onsters” have been qn display behind th ird base in tru e form. The monsters still rattle th e th ird baseman, th e ,pitcHer and anyone else in audible distance, but th eir ,style is w hat m akes them less than human. The original Red H at gang; too, w as based on unnerving th e opposition, but they abided by two rules: 1) they le ft the head coach alone, and 2) they kept it clean. The monsters have no rules. Em bar­ rassed for my w ife and all th e other women in the stands, I actually had to tell them last Friday that I felt one of th eir favorite slogans was obscene, and asked them if they would m ind not using it again. It doesn’t stop there. D uring th e double loss to San Fernando it became obvious th a t the monsters expect nothing less from th eir own team than per­ fection. Bobby W inkles all of a sudden became a bum for leaving th e pitchers in too long, and the hitting and fielding all of a sudden was on a high school level. Comments cam e out like, “I should have gone to M assachusetts w here they play REAL baseball.” Then the suprem e insult cam e th e next night when Jim Craw ford lost a heartbreaker afte r 8% innings of perfection. D uring the nine-run assault the com­ m ent was throw n a t reliever Bruce Haynes, “Why don’t you hit him (the batter) ? You’ve done every­ thing else!” Desertion , when, the team .is. down was not th e Red Hat. style. —I w ill always love to h ear vocal support for ASU’s greatest team and will continue to offer "iny own, but I will no longer w ear the Red Hat., I will ju st hang it up w ith m y “We Love You; M arty” sign and root for another championship in 1969. E llio tt S im o n s, fo rm e rly th e R ed H a t CAR STEREO Tapes Theater Southwest "EASTER" SPECIAL ★ ★ 4-Track Tape____ 2 for only .....----- --- $ 5.50 ★ * or 4 for only ......-------- ... $10.00 ★ TH E L A T E ST IN P O P U L A R + RO CK + S P A N IS H SO U L + C O U N TR Y + U N D ER G R O U N D M U SIC 4 & 8 Track Car Units at COST Plus 10 W e A lso M ake C ustom T apes o f Y otir F a v o rite R ecords At’S COMING .-TO ACRES DRIVE-IN 3720 W . V an B uren O PE N S TO D A Y ! presents ____$ 3.00 ★ Guaranteed E xpert Repair W ork and Installation KALEIDO SCOPE - APRIL 4 & 5 SMOKESTACK LIGHTNING A N D BUDDY MILES EXPRESS APRIL 11 & 12 30th & East Thomas Rd. 2 p erform an ces n ig h tly — 8 p.m . & 11 p.m . CAR STEREO • 966-8213 • CO RNER U N IV E R SIT Y & SC O TT SD A L E R D . ___ „____ TICKET L O C A T IO N S VIALLICK’S MUSIC CITY TOWER PLAZA PHOENIX •ILL'S RECORDS A IL 3 LOCATIONS PM0ENIX ARIZONA MUSIC CENTER 47M W. GLEN0ALE GLENDALE W ed n esd ay , A p ril 2 — P a g e f Beatles' tunes move dancers ¡ f is im Orchesis Dance Conceit will feature a special group of dances entitled “Hère and Now,” choreographed to Beatles m usic by director Santo Giglio. The 17-dance concert will be held a t 7:30 p.m ., April 21 and I p.m ., April 22, in Gammage Auditorium. ' Beatles dances include “Fool on the Hill,” “Happiness Is a W arm Gun” and “ G oodnight” by Lennon and M cCartney. Dances Orchesis choreographed by m em bers ineindo “C reated F orce,” described as “ that effort acting to change the state of motion of a body,” choreographed by Orchesis p re­ sid en t' Ann Clarke and “Hey, Miss Lady,” choreographed by Dorothy P rice and interpreted a s “som etim es blind love can be a race to the bottom .” Other dances are “Enslave­ m ent,” defined as “m an toils for his rig h t to freedom ,” choreo­ graphed by Kay Welch and “nothing begins but comes to end,” choreographed by Molly Colburn. STUDENTS... For all your Easter needs shop: ______ _ _ _ - - ■ _ -_______________ ■ ___________ TEMPE Photo by P»ren Krup. In the first month, on the four­ ■meaning to individual lives. teenth day during the twilight Ib is is the story of Passover. hour, comes the Lord’s Passov­ The Jews were redeem ed from er. Egypt, freed from the house of Passover is the Independence bondage th at they m ight pro­ Day of the Jewish people. Pass- claim liberty to all and work over is the festival of freedom, with all their m ight to bring it the festival of spring which about. During Passover the ceremon­ m arks the onset of harvest tim e in the Holy Land.' The first bar­ ial evening m eal, Seder, is pre­ ley was cut on Passover and of­ sided over by the fam ily head. fered in the Temple. Seder is the special order or pro­ In Judaism it is thtf resurrec­ gram designated for these two tion, not of one person, but of the People. For in Judaism it is the community which gives t k û f ip o t n iA t lf k . A ft IL n f A in | io u t u } £ « • 1« ÉJ « it | ^ "J^ T T | 1 j| g ^ X > lli 1Y X .Ej XV Passover marks Jewish spring festival T n M . . . nights. No o t h e r ceremony among Jew s is perform ed with such pomp and gladness of h eart as the Seder. P rayers and food rites are noted in a book called Haggadah “N arration.” The dishes have special m eaning, e.g., the thin, unleavened m atzoh stands for the “bread of af­ fliction;” the haroset, a paste of apples and nuts, for the m ortar used by Jew s as they labored for Pharaoh. University & Mill 3 n the J 4 e a rt o f S u n I b o v ii C ount*y HERTZ RENT A C A R TUXEDO RENTALS THOM AS MALk 959-0620 (From Noon April 2 Till Noon April 8 TOR ALL A.S.U. STUDENTS 18 OR OLDER THE RATES 1969 • WEEKEND DAYS "24 Hrs." $«.50 a day plus 12c a mil« Mini's Flower Shop in L e e W ong’s Pepper Tree J P fe • CHARGER ¿ff • CO UGAR • ENTIRE WEEKEND, ^19.5(Xplus-l2c a mile___ FORD M USTANG • 1 FULL WEEK "7 D A YS" $60.00 plus 12c a mile FORD GALAXIE CHEVROLET IM PALA 1 FULL WEEK "7 D A YS" $98.00 plus 500 Free Miles Farms Restaurant Specializing in Corsages for all ' occasions. . . " at lower cost 2925 N. 7th Ave. Phoenix 279-9315 For Reservations Office and Information Located at University Shell Station Univ. at Rural Rd. Call 967-9362 r 966-0155 ST E V E B L A G E N C am pos R ep resen ta tiv e