| Consultants' fees | for Black studies ¡cut b y A S A S U ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY-TEMPE Wednesday, A p ril 29, 1970 Vol. 52, No. 95 Director speaks on as draft call falls 42 short By TIM BATEMAN Arizona has fallen 42 men short of the Pentagon s January to March draft call and, according to Col. Norman Erb, director of the state Selective Service System, “The draft lottery is only going to work if Washington lets it.” Local boards across the nation have fallen 80 per cent short in producing the 50,500 men ordered by the Pentagon since the lottery system started in January. Col. E rb sold local boards are not to blame for the shortage because President Nixon notifies boards on the number of'men to be drafted each month by setting numerical limits. Nixon set lottery numerical limits at 30 for January, 60 for February, 90 for March, 115 for April and 145 for May. Arizona fell 16 short of the February 158 man call-up and 26 short of the March 158 call-up after making the January 91 man call, he said. “The only way we can make up the deficiency is by the White House giving a high enough lottery number to draft from,” Col. E rb stated. “The 115 cutoff point in April did not allow the state to fill its call.” | p By CINDY HALE T he ASASU B o ard of I Financial Control has cut in half 1 the $<>00appropriation requested 1 by Dr. George Peek, dean of the p Liberal Arts College, to-pay the If consuhant fee for two m en to p ¡¡'a d v ise th e L ib e ra l A rts | 8 C u rric u lu m C o m m itte e p lan - If H °ing the Black studies program , j| 1 Although unanim ous in its 1 S support of the m inorities studies § I curriculum as “ a good program I | m a badly neglected a re a ,” the 1 * board questioned the validity of 1 the fee coming from anyw here I except the budget of the College I of Liberal Arts. § The board agreed to provide j§ half the fee from the con- 1 tingency fund, requiring the § Liberal Arts Student Advisory 1 Council to provide the rest. I National draft director Curtis Tarr discovered the manpower shortage when he took office March 20. He said the states will have to make up deficiencies in addition to meeting their regular quotas for May, June and July. All deficiencies will have to be made up by August, he said. Col. E rb disagreed with T arr’s statements that local boards have been too liberal in granting deferments and have fallen down on arranging physical examinations for potential draftees under Dr. Peek told the board that he the lottery system. He said Arizona simply didn’t m ay have to take the money for have the manpower under Nixon’s limitations. the consultant fees from faculty travel allotm ents. * Arizona currently classifies 47 per cent of the “ We have a com m itm ent to men who are given physical examinations as unfit Ihe B lack L ib e ra tio n for military service. According to a draft overhaul O r g a n iz a tio n a l Com m ittee and announced by Nixon last week, local boards will no I to the Curriculum Com m ittee,” i l>r. P eek s a id . “ We h a v e longer have the power to grant occupational I fin a n c e d C h ic a n o trip s to deferments. ig national m eetings and a Chicano “The manpower is here but they just haven’t 1 Institute last sum m er. We also gone high enough to get it,” Col. E rb continued. | have a responsibility to the I Black students.” There is no “academic basis” to tell how high I At the request of the Student the lottery will go by the end of the year, he said. I Advisory Council which works Jww graduates wiil go into the draft pool and I with Dr. Peek, BLOC recom become immediately eligible, Col. E rb said. This, ft m ended two Pittsburgh conI sultants, Dr. Andrew HugheV he indicated, should add manpower to make up the current deficiency. Sex brings attention to Mall By RANDY BAILEY Sex was attacked by the University AntiSex League yesterday on the Mail as “. . . wasted energy which should be funnelèd into constructive effort.” David Palmer, spokesman for the day..... old group which was aborted after its rally, said that all the time wasted (hi ^sexual activity could be spent to win the Vietnam war—take care of the Reds in China and retake Cuba. Palmer told 150 male listeners that females are constantly trying to tempt men Into sexual relationships. “Hide your body.. .sex is dirty,” he warned the crowd. Backed by a colorful and appropriately decorated poster which showed the dangers of sex, Palmer told the crowd that “sex is for animals. Your body is next to God—you don’t need sex.” The real cause for Palmer’s satire became apparent when he told the crowd that since his group was not registered on campus he was acting against ad­ ministration policy. “We believe this Mall should be open to all students. This is our freedom of assembly,” he added. “If we were an established group the adm inistration wouldn’t have let us display our poster.” Dr. Leon Schell, assistant dean for student affairs, said that Palmef had been advised to remove his table and poster and that he was in violation of administration rules. “We consider this oppression by the administration,” replied Palmer. “They are definitely pro-sex.” After the Mall rally Palmer said that his Anti-sex League had disbanded, but he would be back on the Mall with annthor “cause” in a few days. Anti-Sex » Pa,m«r P°Llnt* o*it the danger o f sex to a M a ll crowd yesterday. The League ra lly spoofed the role o f sex in American society. Ph„ . . _ I • rn °to by Bay U fa g g m ft ¡f § | I | j ll I J 8 1 I | | ft 1 University stand-off Weather Valley w eather will continue cloudy and cool today and tomorrow. Probability for rain today is 20 per cent. The low tem perature tonight will be in the 50s— the high today 68-73. Winds will continue to gust in the Valley as a Pacific storm moves across the state. House-Senate hassle hinders funding By BONNIE BARTAK The joint comm ittee must Head Staff Reporter consider two different proposals Another university stand-off in relating to the universities. The the Arizona Legislature between capital outlay funds provide for the House and Senate ap­ construction of new or improved propriations committees is still facilities on campus. Late last preventing the allocation of funds week the House passed its outlay for state universities’ expenses bill, proposing to spend $17.4 next year. million for new construction. Thé joint committee also must consider a general ap­ propriations bill which includes the university operating budgets for the upcoming fiscal year. The clash in the joint session is over a Senate proposal to com­ bine the capital outlays and operating budgets. Sensitivity groups build 'self Bv MARY MÂRV K l .I.F!N AIMflNfinN By ELLEN SIMONSON Staff Reporter An awareness of self and of interaction with other people are two goals of the sensitivity sessions taking place at the Student Counseling Service in South Hall, according to one of the counselors, Dr. William Miller. ‘ ‘H u m a n , r e l a t i o n s laboratories” is M iller’s — _preferred name for the sessions, which he believes “try to give a setting for people to be human and themselves.” The sessions were started last year and convene once a week for about one and a half hours per semester, said Miller. Counselor Richard Rodriguez described the sessions as a “basis or self-encounter group.” “Unlike psychotherapy, mere there udirne payi-uuuierapy, i.. n _i » , . is a place where normal people get together in a comfortable atmosphere to try to level with one another and It down their defenses,” Rodrigues said. He feels the sessions provide a place where students “ can communicate openly and honestly, without normal fear of other people being con­ descending, and help one anotner. another.1' Rodriguez believes the ob­ jectives of the sessions are “awareness of self and others and what follows is a change of behavior.” One of the reasons that students come to the sessions is “to get an opportunity to explore behavior that has not been too successful for them on the outside and hopefully they will change,” he said. “Hie function of the leader or facilitator is to try to help the group go where it wants. We help 12 p.m. Friday at 4425 E. Ver­ today in the south corner of the to facilitate by having them do a specific kind of thing—exercise mont in Phoenix. library moat. MU TEA or activity,” Miller said. BIRTH CONTROL Criadas, the newly-formed M iller added th at “ the “Birth Control After 1984: A Sophomore Auxiliary of MU Realistic Appraisal of Future facilitatin' functions as a clarifier Hostesses, is sponsoring , a Contraceptive Technology” is the to help tyem say what they want membership tea at 4 p.m. today subject of a talk by Dr. Carl and "help to open com­ in the MU Rumpus Room' Djerassi at 2 p.m. tomorrow in munication.” (Continued on page 8) AUTHOR FETED PSB A116. The ASASU Cultural Affairs Board will honor author Mrs. Mildred Feague at a reception APARTMENT and autographing party at 3 p.m. University news briefs REGENTTOSPEAK The patio qf the Business Administration building will be the setting at 9:40 this morning of the second annual Honors Day convocation of the College of Business Administration. Regent Paul L. Singer will speak. ACADEMIC FREEDOM The University Committee for Academic Freedom and Students for Academic Freedom plan a legal defense fund party from 8 to As committee member Sen. Thomas Knoles, D-Coconino, said, the Senate agreed to the larger operating budget suggested by the House, and in turn, they asked the House to come down to the Senate figure for capital outlay. The House refused the linked offer, objecting to the Senate figure for capital outlays which is. less than half the amount that was passed in the House last week. S e n a te A p p r o p r ia tio n s chairm an Bob Wilcox, RMaricopa, said his committee offered the combined package to settle the university budgets question in one measure. However, Sen. Knoles said that it may be several days before the two committees meet again. “They’re so far apart, they’re difficult to compromise,” he noted. ..Aspects of the capital outlay fight are absurd, according to Sen. John Conlan, R-Maricopa. Teacher’s salaries should be raised instead of allocating money to build a new basketball fieldhouse here, he said. . Sen. Knoles also objected to the tactics of some of the legislators by saying, “I don’t believe you spank people by cutting appropriations.” Collector POSTERS & KITES Va Block to ASU Lewis B. Windham, television announcer, ex-marine, lover of the great out-of-doors, hunter, fisherman, bon vivant and a connoisseur of fine jellies and jams adds High Tide Swimwear to his long list o f endorsements. Swimsuits $14.00* $17.00 also D -K inis Cover-ups $9.00 - $10.00 Furnished, neat em ail • bed­ room. U til. paid. $100 per m o n th ly y e a rly rate to good tenants. 705 Krueger St. — Call 967-5430 for info. New selection just arrived ★ Indian Jew elry * G ifts * N ew Items University Gift & Moc Shop " IN T H E A R C H E S " 122 East University Drive, Tempe For the Finest in W om ens H air Styling G O O D TASTE BONNIE SUE FASHIONS 913 Mill Ave. Tem|»e Center Phene 967-4094 Open 9:30 - 6:00 Thurs. T il 9:00 BLsmniaTY 945'8457 60 W. Indian School Rd„ SCOTTSDALE m a Wednesday, A pril 29 ^ Mattie's mournec y F ig « Can Regents, senator sa y i mioht be ha A suggestion that it might wise for the Arizona Board of By RICHARD HEZEL Regents to resign was made Mattie Riga Reflection, University Farm cow, died last week as a yesterday morrting on the floor of result of nonproduction. the state Legislature. hgf^Mattie was reportedly the best bovine member of the farm’s Hairy Two senators, Dan Halacy, RMaricopa and Thomas Knoles, DCoconino, presented separate In her life of five years, she had an udder desire to serve mankind speeches before the Senate h*fJn« ,t Srod“ctive years o t her short ^ she produced questioning the validity of the 23,890 lbs. of milk, 861 lbs. of butter fat and 2,011 lbs. of solitte-nonfat. Regents’ role and objecting to the Her great ability to help man would have provided enough butter appearance Sunday of Chicago 7 member Jerry Rubin. to last a normal family 200 years. The Regents have ultimate Mattie Reflection’s milk of human kindness did not stop when she stopped producing, but went on as she submitted herself to allow responsibility for the University, but they don’t exercise adequate students to study her anatomy in order to further their *«h»»ation One of her closest friends, Dr. Grant Moody, professor of animal control, Sen. Halacy charged. science, said at her departure, “Oh it just goes to show that if you don’t He said he is “weary” of being produce you can’t make it in the world.” told of such incidents as the Mattie Rijga Reflection is survived by four children; Ruminant of Students got a Democratic Stantion, Bovine of Greenfields, Cloven and Hoof both of Surge. Society meeting regularly in the ^ " Social Sciences building. Also subjects Arizona to spectacles it that Goodwin Stadium was used is witnessing.” by Rubin, but was not available If the Regents are not able to for a Valley Big Brothers fund­ rectify the situation in a raising event. “reasonable length of time,” Sen. Halacy suggested that it “might Sen. Halacy called on the be wise for them to resign and for Regents to “take immediate and the governor to call a special forceful action to rectify the session of the Legislature to sorry state of affairs which consider possible solutions.” H z z a iim i F O R l ^ , BUY 1 GET 1 'Hum an relations labs' §> -(Continued from page 2)- “ Touching” is one of the ducted is the “trust walk,” said facilitative activities used in the Rodriguez. sessions by which “people pair “One person leads the other off and get to know each other person with eyes closed and they and later talk of experiences in thqy reverse the proedure. They doing this,” he said. talk about what they experience “Touching is used to help in terms of one another—whether people become aware of various they felt more comfortable being ways of communicating and that led or leading and then they we do communicate other than discuss what they could relate to verbally,” he added. “ their everyday lives,” he said. Another group activity conBen Livingston, a counselor and group facilitator, “schedules activities as appropriate to the group/’ “When I go into a group I am concerned about the group Liberal Arts students intending to graduate in July under the developing more alertness to 1969-71 Catalog should submit their feelings and being able to their completion form, fully filled speak, out more openly and out and signed by their advisers, honesfly and listen more often to the dean’s office before June 1. and be aware of the feelings of other people,” he said. Students intending to complete “Some people are irisSnsitive to requirements in August under the each other. I use activity to point 1969-71 Catalog should have their these things out. A person gains a completion forms into the dean’s greater self-confidence and office no later than July 1. exhibits a new respect for them selves and o th e r s ” Graduation form deadlines given A w -t to 'Romt?' A Pear-Shaped or Round? Which w ill be your choice? The round is a classic. The pear is differ­ ent ■—has grace and glitter. If you are thinking of Buying a Diamond Hurry In Now! There are only tw o days le ft in our annual A p ril Sale - 15% Savings ! ! I j e w e l e r s IN T H E ARCHES 130 EAST 1940 UNIVERSITY EAST ALSO CERTIFIED DRIVE CAMELBADK, IN S U N • TEMPE PHOENIX, • 9 6 7 -8 9 1 7 277-1421 CITY B EM O eO B IST ,' A M E R IC A N „ofM SOCIETY * FREE! Livingston said. Role playing where people play ®^ch other” is. an activity employed by Jim Malon, a counselor and facilitator in the sessions. pabUshsd hr Univorstty M tfco ■j TATE .PRESS h Sf>l* ¡ • “ • I campas nswiuaim eVarv jjg c R s r O nasfc Friday during » £ school year, axcapt holidays and aram lnafioa psrjorti, add la anta n d « M C I class m anor a t Tamm? Artxana, asm. ~ Good These Days O nly A p ril 2 9 -3 0 , 1970 Bring This Coupon P iz z a & Page 4 — Wednesday# A pril 29 Warm weather, cool water send Outing Club to river Warm weather and the promise of cool water prompted the first floating of the year down the Salt River by the ASU Outing Club. Seven people spent the day floating down the river from the dam at Saguaro Lake to the bridge at Blue Point. Several runs were made down the river and the group repeated the rapids a number of times. Between runs everyone sat along the bank and ate lunch to the folk songs of Joan Gibbs. The club is open to all students, faculty and staff and doesn’t require any dues or initiation fees. Members participate in any or all outdoor activities. The ac­ tivities are also open to friends. QUIET FLOAT—Members o f the O uting Club flo a t on the Verde River near a Salt River Project dam. Back to fro n t are: Karen Babcock, Darla Dean, Joan Gibbs, Carol Brown, Rick Brown and Jenanne Brown. Outing club m em bers will discuss plans for water skiing this weekend in their regular meeting at 6:30 tonight in WPE 148. Photos - *»y John Rukkila SECLUDED SONGSTRESS - Joan Gibbs o f the O uting Club sings to the passing Verde a fte r a quiet lunch on the bank o f the river. WHITE WATER - Joan Gibbs and companion Rick Brown brace them­ selves as their canoe enters a Verde River rapid. Spring weather brings melted s n o w from the north to swell the norm ally peaceful river into boiling w hitew ater. ROARING WHITE WATER — A coed duo paddles to clear boulders in the Verde River rapids. The thin bottom o f the rubber ra ft makes a poor cushion on the rocks. COED RAFTERS — Joan Gibbs (le ft), Darla Dean and Karen Babcock d rift along a quiet section o f the Verde River during an O uting Club outina. Wednesday, A p ril 29 — Page 5 ■Tempe News- Postal services, hours cut back Postal services in Tempe have been cut back from a 24-hour h a « ' to two shifts. "Tempe postmen changed from a three-shift setup on a 24-hour basis to two shifts to “provide better working tours for the em­ ployees,” postmaster Gil Montanez said. 1116 new operation went into effect Monday, with the main post office announcing that it will be manned from 4 a.m. to 9 p m Under the new system, there will be no collections from deposit boxes in the evening and no collections from the lobby or outside boxes at the main office after 8 p.m. The 8 p.m. collection will be only for the last out-of-city mail. ------ ...................—— ---- —— -— Each day’s local mail will be collected at 4 a.m. for same-day delivery. J Separate boxes for out-of-city mail and Tempe mail will also be installed at key locations, Montanez said. He said no changes in the box service or carrier delivery are expected. Council reviews budget The Tempe City Council reviewed the city’s 1970-71 budget last a 10 P f 06111 cost-of-living pay adjustment to add 5400,000 to the personnel budget. The police department is expected to gain 11 more berths seven patrolmen, two motorcycle officers, a parking man and a clerk under the budget. Although the fire department requested six aiMitinnai men, the council is expected to approve only four. The new personnel authorized in the budget is about half of what department heads requested. other business, the proposed crime stop program for the city, PACE, was reaffirmed by the council to start July. 1. Hare gets hounded on wall Kids draw characters from play By MARC EISEN Drawing on the walls by little children has long been a problem for mothers all over the world, but last weekend a t the Lyceum, kids were encouraged to draw not only (Mi the walls but the floor as well Director Alan Grier put paper on the walls and floor so, as he put it, the children could “extend their theater experience.” ' A sign «1 one wall asked the children to draw pictures of the characters they had just seen in “ The G reat Cross-Country Race,” which is a retelling of the race between the tortoise and the hare. As far as Grier knows this is the first tune that this kind of par­ ticipation has been asked of a children’s audience. Grier plans to keep the mural to analyze it to see what im­ pressed the children most about the play. By looking at what the children draw, the actors will know what to emphasize when they do their next production. The director also e m p h a s i z e d that even though the play was presented partly as an educational experience, the Loan deadline University recipients of National Defense Loans who are not returning to the University are requested by the business office to arrange for an exit interview. Students under the loan program should go to the loan and scholarship window in room 107 of the Administration building. major purpose is pure en­ tertainment.” The fantasy show is brought to life when children meet the ac­ tors after the show and compare the make-believe characters with the real anim als from the Phoenix Zoo. A tortoise and a hare were on exhibit in the lobby. ....Grier_.believes that having children “ extend their ex­ periences” is vital so that they know the difference between reality and fantasy. “ The G reat Cross-Country Race,” a Children’s Theater production deisgned for family entertainment, will be staged at the Lyceum Theater at 2:30 p.m. Saturday and 2:30 and 6:30 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are avilable for $1 at the Lyceum box office. Traffic woes viewed Traffic problems—solutions to the problem now and in the future—will be discussed by Harvey Friedson of the Tempe traffic engineering division a t a Tempe Action Council meeting at 7:30 p.m. today at Hudson School. The council requested Friedson to discuss the city’s traffic problems after reviewing the findings of Dr. Dickinson McGaw, assistant professor of politial science. Dr.' McGaw and a group of University students discovered in a Tempe survey that residents claim traffic is the number one problem in the city. Dr. McGaw’s survey also indicated that only 15 per cent o f Tempe’s residents had lived here 10years or more and that most of the city’s residents had lived here three to five years. Order Your Beautiful School Ring NOW! A L L C LASSES E L IG IB L E , EWELERS 130 E. U n iv e rs ity Designed a n d 'M a n u fa c tu re d by L. G. B A L F O U R CO. A m e ric a ’s Leading College R ing M fgr. 19th A NN U AL X Give your contact lenses a bath tonigfrt In order to keep your contact lenses as comfortable and convenient as they were meant to be, you have to take care of them. But until now you needed two or kg more separate solutions tb properly prepare and maintain your contacts. Not with Lensine. Lensine is the one lens, solution for complete contact lens care. Cleaning your contacts with Lensine retards the buildup of foreign deposits on the lenses. And soaking your contacts in Lensine overnight assures you of proper lens hygiene. You get a free soaking case on the bottom of every bottle of Lensine. oAD # o Proceeds to the Leukemia Fund Am erican Cancer Society TODAY - 2 P .M . SOUTH HALL TOADS FOR SALE A T A X A FRATERNITY & ON MALL It has been demonstrated that improper storage between wearings may result in the growth of bacteria on the lenses. This is a sure cause of eye irritation and in some cases can endanger your vision. Bacteria cannot grow in Lensine which is sterile, self-sanitizing, and antiseptic. Just a drop or two of Lensine, before you insert your lens, coats and lubricates it allowing the lens to float more freely in the eye's fluids. That's because Lensine is an ''isotonic" sblution, which means that it blends yvith the natural fluids of the eye. . Let your contacts be the convenience they were meant to be. Get some Lensine, from the Murine Company, Inc. *•9» * — Wednesday, April 29 Fine Arts Festival The Fine Arts Festival “Spring Tiling” will spotlight student activities in the fields of art, dram a, music, dance, film, speech and architecture beginning tonight through May 1. Tucson poet Richard Shelton will open the festival with a reading from his selection of poems at 8 p.m. today in the Art and Architecture lecture hall. The following is a list of the festival’s events: CAB — Cultural Affairs Board ISRB — international Student Relations Board FSR b — Faculty-Student Relations Board AWS — Associated Women Students Thursday, April 30 8:00 a m. — 5:00 p.m. — Architecture Students' Models — Law Rotunda (CAB) 8:00 a.m . —- 5:00 p.m. — Photography Shoe — College of Law Rotunda (CAB) 9 3 0 a .m .— Modern Dance — Education Patio (CAB) .10:30 a.m . |—. Modern Dance — • Education Patio (CAB) 10:40 a.m . — ASU Mim e Troupe — on M a ll in front of South Hall (CAB) 11.40,, a.m . — Modern Dance < — Education Patio (CA B) 12:40 a.m . — ASU M im e Troupe —- on M all in front of South Hall (CAB) 12:40 p.m. — 2:30 p.m. — Ceramics Demonstrations — Ceramics Classroom, Arts Building Basement (CAB) 1:00 p.m. — 3:00 p.m. — Readers Theater — Lyceum Theater (CAB) 6th S’M ’A'S'H WEEK '“‘M A S H ’ IS W HAT T H E N EW FR E E D O M O F TH E SC R E E N IS ALL A B O IJ T li —Richard Schickel, Life C L A S S IF IE D A D S For. classified advertising submit ad in person to the State tr a u . ¡ i C l V n i S S " ' fr°m Tuesday, May s 1:40 p.'m. — Percussion Ensemble — Room 102 West Stadium (CAB) 3:00 p.m. — 4:30 p.m. — Reception for Mrs. M ildred Feague, author of The L ittle Indian and the Angel, books w ill be on sale in the Library Moat (CAB) : 3 ;3Q. P.m , —-Scenes- for Three Penny Opera — Lyceum Theater 7:30 p.m. — Student Plays: "The Train Station" by John M ille r, "The Servant" by Mike Ange in the Arts and Arch, Aud. (CAB) All day — Spurs and Natanl sell flowers on- the mall (AWS) All day — Clnco de M ay Celebration. All Hall will be serving a Special dinner (AWS) 1:00 p.m. — Fashion Show put on by Daphne Dangerlove on the M all (AWS) 7:00 p.m. — Dinner sponsored by Faculty Women's Club — Mariposa (AWS) 8:00 p.m. — Nina Murphy Lecture AW S ° r Frances M cG il*s of U NM Friday, May 1 TYPING » s c W Saturday, May 2 1:00p.m. — 1:00a.m . — Film Orgy-Arts and Arch. Aud. (CAB) Monday, May 4 Noon — Pollution Rally on the M all — Evie Kenny Nat. I AWS Pres. (AWS) 8:00 p.m. — Dance in P.V . Complex — "The Swagman (AWS-ASASU) 9.00 p.m. — Film "Breast SelfExamination" by A DPI and American Cancer Society in P.V. M ain Cafeteria (AWS) Speaker: D r. John Bruner Air Force Ball to be held Friday The Air Force Ball of the University ROTC detachm ent will be held Friday at 7 p.m. in the Thunderbird Room of the Westward Ho Hotel in Phoenix, The evening will include a formal receiving line, dinner, dance and coronation of the Air Ball Queen. Among the guests will be vice president of student affairs and Mrs. George Hamm, vice president of graduate studies and Mrs. William Burke, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Mrs. George Peek and dean of the College of Business Ad­ ministration and Mrs. Glenn Overman. CLASSIFIED Call 3657 6, ^ 9:00 a.m . — 4:00 p.m. — International Fine Arts and Food Sales on the M all (ISR B ) 2:00 — " M o ra lity " open discussion forum on M .U . Lawn (AWS-Blue Key) 7:00 p.m. — Panel on the role of Women on Community Service "W e Shall Over­ come." M .U . International Lounge (AWS) 6' THES,S AND F a,f' aceura,a' 9:00 a.m . — 4:00 p.m. — International reason- I M r ,n,er,or- E*fc#,,e"t 1967 red F lat 850 .coupe, 30,000 miles, new t iw , very good condition. $1,150. Dave, 966-0426 or 273-3144. (ISRB*rtS anti Fb0d Sa,es on ,he Mali TYPINQ, IBM , MAXINE MULLEN, 955- 1964 Pontiac Lemans, convertible, origInal owner, smooth riding, six cylinder, $275 or best offer. Call 965-2780. Typing. 967-3675.. Typing. M rs. Buttemnore. 277-3602. Saturday, May 9 Î h î a Â Ô M “ ' 800,1 “ ndmon' ■'» Typing. 967-3036. Spurs clean up the Butte campaign 8:00p.m . — Marat-Sade, Arts and Arch Aud. (CAB) 7:00 p.m. — Nina Murphy Lecture Series, Furguson's C a fe te ria Judge M arilyn Riddle — "Women in the Decade of the '70s" Typjng. 279-4270. Experienced. Fest, 1960 Austin Healey Sprite (Bug-eye), new tires, good top sldecurtalns, Interior and body. 962-9769. accurate. 1964 Falran Sprint. Dark blue, buckets, ír*R ® v' .Iro n ie rim s, wide ovals. $1100. .Call Jack, 945-5165. • FOR SALE Monday, May 11 — R alph'N ad er, Gammage (FSR B ) (Tentative) Tuesday, M ay 12 8:00 p.m. — 'In te rn a tio n a l Night at Gammage, an evening of International Talent and Fashion (ISR B ) Wednesday, M ay 13 3:00 p.m. — Panel on International U nderstand ing , M .U . In te rn a tio n a l Lounge (ISR B ) 8:00 p.m. — Film " If ," Arts and A r ­ chitecture Aud. (CAB) Thursday, M ay 14 _ 2:00 p.m . — 9:00 p.m: — Water Sports Day, Big Surf 3:00p..m. — Panel on French Proposal to Neutralize Indo-China, M .U . International Lounge (ISR B ) Ea"?Wer. 8150. Runs and flood- Call 966-9471 afte r 3 p.m. F aculty/staff, house fo r $ele, Tempo, 5“ Ws Catalina model, four bedroom, fwo bath, panelled living room, fu lly carpeted, drapes, beautifully land­ scaped, block fence, refrigerated, near J2“ m £? ,su? - S,8,'0n wagon. Excellent 52?£i5>n; Chrome wheals If desired (extra) 273-0666. MoSs«*0*001' 12,8 E' 081 R,° Dr,ve' $W o ff regular price to college students w"h ID cards. Component stereos, 100 watts, G arrard changer, AM /FM m ultlC MX,J?.!».sVspe2SI?n *P«okors. Also AMF.M m ultiplex 8 track tape deck com­ bination component, 100 watts, a ir sus­ pension speakers. Both $249.95, one year guarantee. Free $19.95 earphones with pur^ « e of elther sal. Stitch and Listen, 2619 W. Bethany Home. 22S4 5eat* ' four speed, 260 V-8, offy 360 degrees, seven quart pan, hurst linkage. $895. Cell 2722202 offer e p.m. 'W Opel sports rallye, green, radio, good “ P ^ o n , asking $1800 after 5:30 p!m. VOO-7493. '67 Mustang fastback, 4-speed, fact, s ir, uiai»a, Spyder. 8,000 m iles, excellent • “ ««»lon. Call Sheryl at 965-3906 or 965- Typing, guaranteed neatness and ac­ curacy. Close to ASU. 967-4967. Wednesday, May 6 8:00 a.m . — 5:00 p.m. — Architecture Students' Models — Law Rotunda (CAB) 8:00 a.m . —- 5:00 p.m. — Photography Show — College of Law Rotunda (CAB) 9:30a.m . — Modern Dance — Education Patio (CAB) 9:40 a.m . — Oral Interpretation — Danforth Chapel (CAB) 10:30 a.m . — Modern Dance Education Patio (CAB) 10:40 a.m . — ASU M im e Troupe — M all in front of South Hall (CAB) 11:30 a.m . — Oral Interpretation — Danforth Chapel 11:30 a.m . — Modern Dance — Education Patio 12:40 p.m. ASU M im e Troupe — M all in front South Hall (CAB) 1:00 p.m. — 3:00 p.m. — Readers Theater — Lyceum Theater (CAB)' 3:30 p.m. — Scenes from Three Penny Opera (CAB) 7:30 p.m. — Student Plays: "The Train Station" by John M ille r, "The Servant" by M ike Ange in the Arts and. Arch. Aud. (CAB) 2:00 p.m. — AWS Alumni Reception, Alumni House, Evie Kenny, "Where it's At In IW AS" (AWS) • reports# and term papers. Scottsdale 945-2489. am E M ? 96M& Ride lu ck aast (N .Y., N .J., Pa., etc.) 965-4176na * W l" *har¡° <,rlV,n8 81X1 « **• Wanted: garage to rent fo r boat ator• jo . »Must be 10* x 20' m inimum. Call • PETS ARC pies. SÈ? • NOTICES » 4 » Sh8Pherd PUP- Three g irls need one roommate fo r JSPWiBwv Apartment In Sin C ity. Cali 968-0442. Two bedroom. Wanted: Female roommate, $58.50 Inî« Â 5 h H ,,liImmediately. ,les’.~«1 1 b,ock from ASU. Available Call 966-7412. S ,i. ¿ .....T - Tor K,’ ar tr |P* down the sa lt River Canyon. One-day round trip i ^ P^'.f? *S ? ’,',LveryLhlno suPPllod. More Intro call 966-4532 and ask for Terry. RENT W block to ASU, neat, clean one bed­ room apartment. Now renting to good S E X S tä Kruager st: calt HM m ** Give Mom a A n d make M o th e r’s D ay last longer. Call o r visit an FTD florist today. A n d order alBigHug Bouquet to arrive early. H e ’ll send it across the street. C /r country. A special arrangement, ro r a very special mother. Yours. Usually a v a i l a b l e C f l at less than l b . D U a SERVICES Research? Let COMPSTAD analyze your data. Complete data processing and staÄ W 'C S Ä , tV d^ p Ä 71*4-4590831. ' 0^ 1 alpha en‘ m?£!Lsh K ? ,a*2 .r w l" ha|P |mProve lan­ guage skills, do research, and (proof) read manuscripts through May. 968-0723. g *6?™* 8 legally Perform marriages, En|oy the privileges If*» w ill ottering S S & ordained m inister! funerals, etc. . . of the clergy. Send to Universal Life 85030. P*°* B0X 34°5' Ph8anlX' N « rt a roommate— Male w ith same, tamale with same. Greater Phoenix Roommate Bureau ,959-7224, 5:30 p.m.11 p.m. Monday thru Friday. Dressmaking, sawing, 967-6173. M A S II Salt-hypnosis can change your life. Learn to have more self-confidence, stop smok­ ing, lose weight, calm nerves, Increase lu rn ln g and creative abllltlee. Classes beginning soon. Call 2744090. An Ingo Preminger Production Starr o? DONALD SUTHERLAND ELLIOTT GOULD TOM SKERRITT | /. • 'AlFTfUtPMAN • P',fc£RT Du.ilL • K'tf i MPïSi’:' HüUxijjrpi INGO PREMINGER 2 í F.'^ E f1L MEX.,? 0 CAR CARAVANS— Next departure June 22 fo r 30 day*. De­ ta ils: Waltz-Doran Tours, 46003 Florida Hemet, Calif.' 02343. (714) 927-2113. ROBERT ALTMAN 6/ RING LARDNER, Jr :, Pl>£P0 H0>fp . V/,'. VSNjfi Color by DE LUXE*, PANAVISION* HI! Sally, lust heard you were In town. I II meet you tonile at the Red Dog. t^nse one bedroom apartment, fu rmshed or unfurnished, pool, refrigerated, ^ r-m o n fh leese remaining. Close to ASU. 9664270. ______ ^ • MOTORCYCLES ec' ’ ° ° l* aSl two helmets, 09 SMn ,0,, Laman' ttunba 65. Excellent condition, must wH, w ill accept best otter. Call »661968 Yamaha ISO E lectric, good condltlon, must sell, $200 or bast otter,’ price Includes helmet. Call 966-5221 from ¿9 p.m. I960 Yamaha E lectric 1(0, good condlf j “ * ! *e ll' $200 o r best offer, PfIp* - Includes helmet. Call 966-52)1 from 6*9 p.m. • HELP WANTED National organization wants you for p a rt or fu ll tim e selling. This Is not Insurance, magazines, or pots and pans— J I* selling sett-improvement and the k a y s to SUCCESSI Do not apply If you cannot diligently spend 10 hours pE Week. You m ust, have a neat appear­ ance and eo|oy talking to people. If you qualify, you w ill not only be help! 5® .»♦•'•rs, tx it yourself and your future tsrvlew Ca *44‘*W1 1or Personal InDoorman-bartender. W ill tram . Age 2574.°RedraDogta App|T evenings The FTD BlfiH^jjl bouc[uet. _!__ Open 1 P.M. TRAVEL 2-2 bedroom house, tumlshed 23 w. 9th St., Tampa—Chuck o r Richard after s p.m. * A l en Independent buslne4sm.n, each FTD Member Florist sets his ow n prices. LOST Can't function without) Glasses lost. Round, tortoise shell. High prescrip* Afford another parr. Call 969* 4536. ” .y*tJ in|?-r l?w j ! an Up petitions and circulate them around campus to get both male and female signatures. She spoke to the Associated, Women Students general assembly which * unanimously endorsed her plan to cir­ culate petitions. So far in the campaign she has collected 4,300 signatures. “I am confident this niidi won’t make it. Women that spread this are those that’d buy anything,” said the tall, slim brunette. “I guess some people don’t think this is a pressing issue of the times and that may be true, but when it comes to protecting yourself—your feminine morale—it is very im portant” Miss Tillinghast has visited several department stores in-the Valley and-found “that some are buying about 40 percent of the midis. The rest are just waiting to see how they catch on.” “But, if buyers see girls aren’t catching on, they aren’t about to go to New York and put orders in,” she said matter-offactly. Thd U niversity’s varsity cheerleaders and pom pan line will sponsor their fourth annual High School Cheerleading and Pom Pon Workshop Saturday on campus. The day-long workshop will include spirit and technique teaching sessions conducted by die University groups. In the afternoon, participants from all over^ the state- will be given chance to participate in the spirit extravanganza program and compete for honors in cheer and tV U W IW . pom routines Senator to speak State Senator Sandra O’Coftnor will be the keynote speaker at the Women’s Week Banquet, 5:30 p.m., May 7, Manzanita Hall. Tickets, available through Lee Brown, Manzanita Hall Shd Barbara Phelan, student affairs office, are $1.50 with a meal ticket or $2.25 without. asaI uT S S a£ £ S ! £ S ies 5'w 's E n tn ^ w d lb e ju d g e d on content, originality, composition and photographic technique. All types of film s a re eligiblethere is no lim it on the num ber of entries or on subject m a tte r The spirit extravaganza will feature the high school cheer and pom lines performing favorite old or new dance numbers and cheer spirit skits. This session will be held in the men’s gym at 2:30 p.m. serving as an idea exchange and spirit builder. The public will, be admitted free of charge for die apa rtm ent Application deadline for the Fall semester editorship of the State Press has been set for May 7 by the Board of Student Publications. Qualified students may pick up necessary forms from the MassCommunications office, OBA 304. Furnished, neat sm all - badroom. Util. paid. $100 par m onthly yaarly rate to good tenants. 9 FREE 2 fori MEATBALL DINNERS FREE | _ ..........-- head 2 CHICKEN CACCIATORE DINNERS 1 D l N O ’S W E « k St., Tempe g 45! _ total Italian 1 Food & Pizza s J Open at 5 e the •S tr e e t books “Andy & The Lion” — 45c “Bread & Jam For Frances” — 50c “One Wide River To Cross” _75c “Who Took the Farmer’s Hat” — 60c Many More!! | total 3 --- ■ 705 Krueger St. — Call 967-5430 for info. p S e s a m $