Wednesday Arizona State University Voi. 54 No. 16 October 13, 1971 state press Tempe, Arizona P a p e r to test legality of ab ortion ads Out-of-state ads halted at UofA By DAN H U FF Staff Writer University of Arizona’s student newspaper, The Arizona Daily Wildcat, will test the legality of publishing abortion services ads, Toby Burges, Wildcat editor, said yesterday. Miss Burges said she halted publication of advertisements for out-of-state abortion services after receiving a letter Friday from UofA President John Schaefer. In theletter, Schaefer said he had been informed by Board of/ Regents’ legal consultant Tom H all that the Wildcat was in violation of Arizona’s abortion law. Schaefer urged die Wildcat “ not to accept ads of this type,” said M iss Burges. She said the university’s Board of Publications advised her not to run the ads until the courts have ruled on their legality. Last Wednesday’s W ildcat carried two abortion services ads, one for Wickersham Women’s Medical Centèr, 133 E . 58th S t , New York; the other for Problem Pregnancy Information Service. The Wickersham ad promised “ immediate help” from “ certified gynecologists and anesthesiologists” and listed prices from $150 to $400 depending on the method of abortion and the stag» of pregnancy. The Problem Pregnancy Information Service ad listed a Phoenix phone number to call for information on legal abortions in California and New York. “ In most cases,” the ad read, “ a patient can expect their (sic) stay in California not to exceed 24 hours.” State Press advertising manager H al Hubele said ASLPs Board of Student Publications last year ruled that such ads could not be placed in the paper because of the potential legal problem. Miss Burges said the UofA Board of Publications cannot make such rulings. She is critical of Arizona’s abortion statute, ARS 13-213, which states: “ A person who willfully writes, composes or publishes a notice or advertisement of any medicine or means for producing or facilitating a m iscarriage or abortion, or for prevention of con­ ception, or who offers his services by notice, advertisement or otherwise, to assist in thé accomplishment of any such purpose is guilty of a misdemeanor.” Miss Burges said the 1901 law is “ outmoded” and is usually not enforced in Arizona. She said the Wildcat published abortion services ads last year, and that national magazines are publishing them this She said the Wildcat has been singled out for selective enforcement of the law because of the Board of Regents’ Aug. 25th rul­ ing prohibiting birth control services at Arizona’s three universities. “ It’s unfortunate that the board would try to enforce such an outmoded law ,” she said. Miss Burges added that Schaefer tried to apply the m iw law to last week’s distribution of birth control booklets on the UofA cam­ pus. Neither Schaefer nor the board’s legal counsel, Tom H all, could be reached for comment on the birth control situation at the UofA. At press time yesterday, Schaefer and H all were reportedly conferring with the UofA’s student appropriations board. Last week Schaefer was critical of the student board because it Continued on Page 9 S c Il O G f & r urges Wildcat "not to accept ads Ticket proceeds of this decrease type. Story on page 7 "Sitting in the lotus position and hoping to Qod you get there." Tempo Beach Is a scene of Kundatlhl Yoga summed up ttje a rt of yoga as "sitting In the lotus isr H,oh^ work<»” * t«™ Photo by George Steiner P a g e 2 — W e d n e sd a y, O cto b er 13 Defense Department provides grant for project D w in d lin g fin a n c e s h u r i T H E M IS Dwindling fed eral funds, resulting from economic un­ certainty in the United States, have hurt the three - year - old P roject T H EM IS at the University. The project, a grant from the Department of Defense, con­ cerns solid state electrical engineering. D r. Irving K aufm an, professor of electrical engineering and laboratory manager, said the laboratory was designed to establish re­ search centers at universities result, the center has been that lack the large, federallyforced to cut the number of staff funded centers such as at members. M assachusetts Institute of When the laboratory opened Technology (M IT). in 1969, there were only nine Kaufm an said about 400 faculty members, 16 graduate universities wrote proposals for ' students and 16 un­ THEM IS, so they would be dergraduates. In addition there eligible for defense department was a research technician and grants, but only 42 received secretary. contracts. Of the 16 graduate students, But the ASU research center only five received THEMIS is suffering from a lack of research grants. money available to pay both Kaufman, in a memo to Dr. faculty and student staffs. As a Thomas Tice, chairman of the elecrical engineering depart­ ment, wrote last May that the number of THEM IS-funded graduate students would have to be adjusted because project members found that funds originally planned would not be available to provide two graduate students per faculty member. The student staff problem “ If the church approves of our was solved by keeping to a plan, we have to submit a minimum the number of proposal to the administration, students using the laboratory. telling of our money situation Undergraduates also were and what we need to get it employed. running,” said M rs. Woodward. “ If people can just see how Kaufman said the project is close we are to getting a day step - funded, so there is money care center I think our backing left over from year to year. will become even greater.” The first contract allocated Church may offer child care facilities Organizers ask for $2,000 B ySU EM A CEK A child day care center for University students may be established in classrooms at the First Congregational Church, 101E . 6th St., according to Tina Sheinbein, president of Associated Women. Students. Mrs. Sheinbein and Carol Woodward, cam pus a ffairs committee chairman, met with the church’s board of trustees Monday to discuss steps to be taken before final approval is given. “ First the Tempe building inspectors, the state health departm ent and the fire department must inspect the facilities. We need to get a license, estimate a budget arid decide what improvements are needed for the board’s final approval,” Mrs. Sheinbein said. “ Right now everything looks good,” said Miss Woodward. “ We have $1,000 in the AWS budget for staff and pamphlets to get the center going.” Mrs. Sheinbein will ask the Board of Financial Control to appropriate $500 from the AWS budget, previously set aside for a gynecology clinic, and will approach the ASASU Senate Oct. 20 for $2,000. “ Money is a crucial issue,” said Mrs. Sheinbein. “ Tuition will be set at approximately $40 per month. We are hoping for donations in the tyay of toys, art and craft supplies, bodes, fcots and rugs. We are looking into the possibility of federal fun­ ding and grants, hopefully for next year.” A director and three teachers will be paid to operate the center. Student volunteers will be used on a part-time basis. “ We hope to make this an educational facility as well, involving students in education, home economics, sociology and human relations for laboratory credit,” Mrs. Sheinbein said. If approved, the center will accommodate 50 children in two age groups, 18 months—2 years and 3-5 years, said M iss Woodward. Two boards will advise cfnd operate the facility, said Mrs. Sheinbein. The Rev. Paul Gaston, pastor of the church, was contacted after a U niversity student, Mary Dillon, suggested the possibility of using the church classrooms, said M rs. Carolyn Kaluzinacki, Assistant Dean of Student Affairs. t $400,000 to the laboratory, he said, but conditions of the grant allowed him to spend only $200,000. Although Congress failed to appropriate more money for THEM IS, Kaufman said it is still alive here, with unspent THEM IS fundsbeing used along with occasional grants from institutions like NASA. He said the laboratory is “ looking around for other sources of funds” where electri­ cal engineering could fit in. Kaufman is the only faculty member left of the original nine in the laboratory. Government aided Graduate project helps research opportunities Project THEM IS, partially funded by a grant from thé Depart­ ment of Defense, has four functions, all of which are concerned with providing research opportunities for graduate students. Located in the Engineering Center, the Solid State Research Laboratory contains 3400 square feet and was occuppied in February 1969. Funding for the facilities was provided by the University ad­ ministration. According to a paper released by the laboratory in February, the research center’s functions include: — applied research on technical problems of current local, national, or international interest; —keeping the faculty and students informed of current tonhnirai developments in solid state engineering; — training graduate students and selected undergraduate students; and — providing an environment for the creative talents of faculty and students. * SAX, SAR0D, TABLA— fantastic Ali Akbar Khan s a r o d is t''he 9 re a te st m u s ic ia n s in the w o rld a n d India's m a ste r John Handy " H a n d y 's alto sax co m b in e s im p e c c a b le tech n iq u e w ith his m u sica l in ve n tiv en e ss T O G E T H E R FO R A N E V E N IN G O F IM P R O V IS A T IO N A L M U S IC T H A T WILL H Y P N O T IZ E Y O U Friday, O ctober 15 8:30 p.m. GAAAAAAGE A U D IT O R IU M $3, $2, $150 w ith student service card Phone: 965-3434 3 ?.rofoun‘J|y moving experience that will leave you breathless don't ml«« 0' " barKhai’'s |X¡ £' “ |an in stru m e n t of the s ita r fa m ily Wednesday, October 13 — Page 3 wmmm Devil stadium a graveyard? By R ICK SN ED EK ER Birchett, who arrived in Tempe E ach night when molten as a young girt in 1902, says she darkness oozes into the also remembers the burial plots University, huge padlocks grate nesting inconspicuously be­ shut sealing the towering tween the two buttes. In addi­ cyclone gates at the mouth of tion, she hazily recalls hearing Sun Devil Stadium. that the graves were moved. The locks would seem to shut “I rem em ber hearing die midnight world out — or someone talking about moving imprison someone or something the bodies, but I ’m not sure,” within. she said. “ It was about a year Inside, the air is clammy, a after we came to Tempe.” result erf icy winds swooping Long a Tempe mortician, Ed down from the buttes onto the Carr joins Bins. Celaya and turf’s hovering dampness. The M rs. Birchett in remembering arena’s only sounds are your the cemetery and is equally own — and those in your uncertain about its fate. imagination. “ The bodies might have been Even so, a football field moved to Guadalupe hardly seems a likely spawning Cemetery,” he said. However, ground for superstition and no records confirm this. ghostly legend. But a native N ot do city records c o n fir m Tempe woman has memories that the cemetery ever existed. hinting to the contrary. The Tempe Parks and Re­ On A p ril 17, 1893, M rs. creation D epartm ent, which Ophelia Celaya was bom in controls the present Double Tem pe, then a one-horse Buttes Cemetery just off the pinhead on the m ap. She freeway nort of Tempe, has no remembers muggy, summer . records to verify or disprove the hikes between the stadium existence of the alleged stadium buttes to the Salt River, which graveyard. freely flowed just north of the Tempe City Council minutes b u tte s.. dating from 1893 make no She and her friends always mention of any such burial site passed a graveyard. or corpse transfer. Mrs. Celaya doesn’t know Frank Connolly, Tempe Daily what happened to it. All she News publisher and long-time knows is she never went there at Tempe resident, said a fire night. might have destroyed many of Another woman, M rs. Jos Continued on Page 5 m m s s s s s js R A possibly supernatural scene . . . . . . the field of Sun Devil Stadium, “ ghostly" to more than only defeated A S U opponents Photo by Craig Demmon 9 /M BUTTONDOWN C O L L A R S .S . / are for BUTTONDOW N M IN D S | n BREAK OLD FAMILY TIES * it/n LET YOUR NECK J l li f l G E T qmeD 0LLA R A ll clothing brought in for thi« promotion will he' contributed to the ■ Clothing Bank o f Phoenix, a non-profit organization which distributes clothing to the needy at no charge. We want to thank you for helping us help the m so we offer you tliii diecount. Thanks, Mike Adams & Dan Munzer ßtüsuj, in yeuA & ld budtan daw n dlùrìd a n d naw ew tied, a n d g e t $ f tewandd a new- fta/ie c&Uad dlti/ri, by, &ayte, Q an t o/i GdeiyJdten osi w ide tie bn ßdiosi. The C l o t h i n g M e r c h a n t s 125 E. 7th St. TEMPE - BEHIND THE ARCHES OPEN MONDAY thru FRIDAY 10-9. SATURDAY 10 -6 • PHONE 968-3585 ”3 P a g e 4 — W e d n e sd a y, O cto b er 13 th e p o ln t stale opinions press ■. • f i . • . Grand jury system saves time, money The first Maricopa County grand jury was formed Nov. 14,1951. It took a majority vote of the Superior Court judges to impanel the jury. But as a former county attorney noted during the Fifties and Sixties, indictments handed down by temporary grand juries usually have been dismissed on technicalities. On May 3" of this year, Gov. Jack Williams signed into law a is enough evidence to prosecute bill establishing permanent out of the hands of an inex­ - grand juries for Maricopa and perienced deputy county at­ Pima Counties. torney and put it into the hands It was hailed perhaps overof the grand jury.” zealously as a measure that is In the first case the Maricopa truly revolutionary in law en­ County jury considered a t the forcement in the state. end of last month, the 16Under provisions of the member body handed down 13 permanent grand jury law, 12 to indictments in an investigation 16 people will be impaneled for of fraud. Judge Jerry H,. Glenn a period of 120 days. The jury said that action saved money will have the right of subpoena, and two to three weeks of pre­ power to indict and legal liminary hearings. machinery to punish those who It .may not be the infallible lie or refuse to respond. method of determining whether or not cases will go on trial, but B a rn e y H u tch in so n it is the best method available. It is too early to tell if the system will lower crime rates It is an investigative body or clear court calendars. But with the purpose of determining the machinery has been set up whether evidence is substantial and it is up to the people in­ enough for a person to undergo volved to make it work. court proceedings. It will take nine jurors to return an in­ dictment. y rK/YM*ir rupjt Although most of the legal ' r in 1ô'Jf - community of the state favored implementing the grand jury system into county juris prudence, its advent was not hailed by all. Four of 21 superior court judges did hot support the plan, and they cited misuse of the investigative body as the main reason. They figured the money could be better spent in other areas of law enforcement. But former Maricopa County attorney Robert Corbin has pointed out three ways a grand jury set-up can help. "First, it would do away with costly preliminary hearings. Second, it would save state money in avoiding costly delays. Third, it would take the decision of whether or not there . - I B,n Ncrman The sinkdble Travel abroad with an experienced companion can be superbly enlightening, enjoyable and profitable; travel abroad with a flamboyant madman can likewise result in chagrin, despair and disaster. The latter p ossibilities were inevitable on my recent trip to Mexico with the novice Griggs. We crossed the border at midnight, Griggs attired in tennis shoes and a pink jum psuit which he described as the “ going thing” in Mexico, and were pelted with offal at customs when G rig g s fortuitously whistled the theme from “ The Alam o.” The in s c r u ta b le one bought 37 w atches from a street vendor, slipped a tw enty to each custom s o fficia l and fin a lly changed our greenbacks to yen. In Spanish, they thanked the “ fathead A m erican dog” w h ile th e la tte r e x ite d bow ing w ith open f ly , thanking the “ sen o ritas.” I sig h e d in to th e passenger’s seat and we w ere o ff for H erm osillo 170 m iles to the south. Three days la te r, having taken the “ scen ic” B a ja route, we pulled into th at beautiful city drivin g on the axles since 200 m ile an hour sp eed s ( “ one . k ilo m e te r equals two m iles” —G rig g s) had worn our tires aw ay. And in the days th at fo llo w ed , G r ig g s w as altern ately beaten, serviced and robbed. Once he m ade the m istake of givin g an urchin a peso and w as borne fla ilin g back­ w ards into an a lle y , w hence he returned in a taco and G s tr in g s ly ly m u tte rin g som ething about “ the other g u y .” And then the tim e he overtipped a shoeshine boy and w asn’t seen till three d a y s la te r w hen th e y trundled him from the dum b w aiter, encased in. K iw i. * The fun I had planned som ehow never ca m e to p ass; I had n igh tm ares of G r ig g s : Senor G rig -rs stran glin g on ch ile , Matao^x* G rig g s being gored by a bull and A d m iral G rig g s fa llin g overboard. So on our last day there when he asked, “ Had a good tim e?” I knew what to <91. I drove b ack alone in a w orld o f sunshine. Behind m e som ew here the buzzards circled low er. stato press staff A SB 302 Arizona State U n iversity Tem pe, A riz. 85281 (802) 965-3856, 965-3657 D isplay and cla ssifie d èds: (802) 965 3249 Jay Hovdey Ray Wong . Diane M cIntyre John Banaszewski Barney Hutchinson Lin d a Thrane B ru ce Johnston R ick Snedeker Tim Bateman Ju lie Paterson T e rri Hoffman C raig Demmon Fred U hlrich Sue Ann B ailey Gabie Green Dan Huff Tom Journey B ill Norman M ax Jennings Hal Hubele E d ito r M anaging E d ito r News E d ito r C ity E d ito r Sports E d ito r A ss't. C ity Ed. A s s 't. S p o rts E d . Feature E d ito r Weekend E d ito r A ss't. Weekend Ed. Chief Photographer Staff Photographers Staff W riters Facu lty A dviser D isplay Ad M anager ST A T E P R E S S is published by Arizona State U n iversity as the cam pus newspaper every Tuesday through F rid a y during the school y e a r, exce p t h o lid a y s and exam ination periods,, and is entered as second class m atter at Tem pe, A rizona, 85281. counterpoint Editor: Congratulations to George Hillm an and 'the student government of ASU for their attempt to deal with the ritual of Homecoming in a‘ rational way. Too often this and other sunilary contrived celebrations are the rationale for con­ spicuous consumption and the manipulation of interpersonal relationships. Perhaps some of the several thousand dollars saved could be appropriated to help the victims of the continuing war in Asia— those people napalmed, gassed and maimed by anti-personnel weaponry — to provide scholar­ ships for the poor, to fund several organizers who^ could help unionize the non - academic workers on campus who are so terribly paid, or to help support the wives and families of war resisters in prison. JoeGerson Director, Tempe Peace Center Editor: allowing new and more desired activities to take place. This is one way of sustaining student interest in the school’s activities. I am sure such décisions as this will cause the University to continually im­ prove with little feedback from the dying events. Ron Thomas I would like to commend the ASASU Executive Council for fin ally realizing that the University has been wasting money that could be p ut'to better use. I am referring to the dism issal of the annual Homecoming program. When the current student body loses interest in such an event as Hom ecom ing, the program should be terminated Editor: Tim Evans’ article on the parking problem (SP , Oct. 5) should not go unnoticed. As one of these 9,574 com­ muter students with “ R ” permits, I can only confirm his findings, already quite evident to most of us, that there is a parking problem. In the past two weeks I have arrived one-half hour late to two classes (even though I reach the campus 40 minutes before Haas time), plus I received four parking tickets* that have un­ necessarily drained my budget My morning arrivals at ASU are constant nightmares, trying to prostitute my way into a parking spot that might be acceptable to the ever-increas­ ing number of policemen. Last week I noticed that approximately one-third of the cars on the temporary lot behind Tempe Shopping Center exhibited parking tickets. Certainly these students would have preferred to park in a “ lawful” space if this space had been available. When I approached the park­ ing administrator after receiv­ ing my first three tickets, he kindly informed me of two areas where I would be certain to find a parking space. The follow ing m orning - 1 arrived a half-hour late to classafter battling for a spot with a red Volkswagen! It is up to us, the commuter students, to appeal, and if necessary demand, more than a sim ple “ there are enough parking facilities” answer. If the question is finances then perhaps an increase in sticker fee would suffice. We have enough problems entering and rem aining in college. It is not time we stopped w orrying about arriving to class on time for lade of adequte parking NOW! Jose Catalan W e d n e sd a y , O c to b e r 13 — Page 5 * Residents recall cemetery Continued from Page 3 the town’s records and historical documents. A University faculty member and an administrator reject the idea of a graveyard in the stadium field. Vice president of the Arizona H istorical Foundation and curator of the Arizona C ollection , B ert Firem an remembers treking along the river bottom as early as 1931 and not seeing any graves. He said the soft terrain of the river bottom would have been a more prudent gravesite. “ I don’t see how anyone then could have or would have wanted to blast enough to bury someone there (at the stadium) - . . it’s just rocky ground,” he said. N e w f a c e f a r 'neglected' butte Excavation of the east butte has begun, in anticipation of a first-of-the-year start of construction« ! a new field house, and " A " butte, on the west side of Sun Devil Stadium, will have to share some of its renown. ______ Students who have not yet registered to vote m ay do so at the hom e of Ja n e t Sm ith , deputy re g istra r, 940 Sm ith R oad, a fte r 6:30 p .m . The most Meaningful Semester you’ll ever spend... could be the one on World Campus Afloat Photo by Fred Uhlrich graves, Fireman mused, “ That was a long time ago, and oldtimers tend . . . well, it was a long time ago.” U niversity planning and construction o fficia l, M arc tenueux, agreed with Fireman that solid rock was not ideal for burial plots, and said that the saddle between the stadium buttes is 30 feet higher than the surrounding flat area. “ People are basically lazy,” he said. “ Why would they climb 30 feet and chop into solid rock to bury someone?” Fath er D aniel M cCready, pastor of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, said that the first Mt. Carmel Church in Tempe was located on the south side of the sm all butte, although there are no remains of the building. H is records to 1925 include only death and burial date, and do not state where the dead were buried. The first entry in his burial records is Dec. 13, 1925, in Guadalupe Cemetery. McCready recalled also that there was another cemetery in Mexican Town where the Palo Verde dormitory complex now stands. Last year two residents of P alo Verde M ain reported seeing a “ ghost” in their room. It was described as a three- “DONT JUST H U (T LIKE IT IS” “DO SONETHING «BOUT IT” Oeeome a Volunteer now! Sailing Feb. 1972 to Africa and the Orient Through a transfer format, more than 5,000 students from 450 campuses have participated for a semester in this unique program in inter­ national education. WCA w ill broaden your horizons, literally and figuratively . . . and givg you a better chance to make it— meaningfully— in this changing world. You'll study at sea with an experienced cos­ mopolitan faculty, and then during port stops you'lj study the world itself. You'll discover that no matter how foreign and far-away, you have a lot in common with people of other lands. WCA isn't as expensive as you might think; we've done our best to bring it within reach of m ost co lle g e students. Write today fo r free details. TEACHERS; Summer travel with credit for teach­ ers and administrators. 8 Write Today to; Chapman College. Box CC2S, Orange, California 92666 Contact: COMMUNITY SERVICES PROGRAM Academ ic Services Blvd., Room 113 A R IZ O N A S T A T E U N I V E R S I T Y M5-4M5 dimensional shadow that just bodies at the stadium grave­ stood in an open doorway. yard were removed. The only Pricilla Cloud, one of the clue to tiny Melba Curry’swomen, recalled the incident. resting place is a plot number, “ I felt a sudden chill in the L34BL3QU3. room and the eerie feeling that The enigma of the stadium someone was there in the graveyard is apparently a darkness,” she said with eyes broken puzzle. One can only bugging, ‘‘and as I turned speculate. around, there it w as.” Yet, if the graveyard was Another coed in the same never moved — providing, of dorm two years ago said she course, that it existed in the saw a small baby crawling first place — several ancient down the hallway one night. It fans have for years been the disappeared when she went to owners of Sun Devil Stadium’s pick it up, she said. best house seats. According to M cCready’s And past football heroics by files, one Melba C uriy, 2 years Sun Devil greats may have been old, was buried March 31, 1903, . only partly sheer talent. We approximately the time Mrs. may have had a little help from Birchett recalls hearing that the our friends. STUDENT MEDICAL INSURANCE Enrollment Deadline Extended To Oct. 22, 1971 G ra d u a te A s sista n ts and T e a c h in g a re e lig ib le fo r th is P ro g r a m . A ssista n ts DON'T WAIT! SPECIAL LOW RATES FOR STUDENTS WITH DEPENDENTS A P P L Y IN M U R oom 2 2 2 O R CALL 9 6 5 -3 2 3 9 suhomisruminiarm K IC K O F F — Saturday, Oct. 16 Su n Devil Stadium, 8 P M Tickets $1, $2, $3 at Stadium Ticket Office ASU Students $1.00 Faculty & Staff $2.00 Page 6 — W e d n e sd a y, O cto b er 13 Study re su lts announced Counseling could reduce dropouts By G A B IE G R E E N S ta ff W riter F irst of two parts A study conducted by two U n iv e r s it y s o c io lo g y professors indicated th at 4050 per cent o f the 1968 fresh - ad visem en t,” but ‘ ‘a sub­ stan tial num ber o f students w ithdraw as a consequence of inadequate advising or cou n selin g.” S tu d e n ts e xp ressed sim ilar opinions when asked how often they saw their academ ic counselor. One g irl said , “ I w ish I could h ave known where he was and who he w a s.” Another student said , “ I never saw him . He was alw ays too b u sy.” One su rv e y q u estio n asked how the student fe lt about h is " p a r tic u la r a c a d e m ic c o u n s e lo r . Another concerned .ratin g th e g e n e ra l q u a lity o f co u n se lin g a t th e U n i­ versity. Or. Swanson m an class w ill not graduate from A SU or any other university. Using a 56-question in­ terview sch e d u le , D r. Leonard Gordon and D r. Jo h n H udson co n clu d e d “ there is evidence that m ost of th e se stu d en ts a re capable” and the droupout rate “ could be sign ifican tly red u ced by s u b s ta n tia lly re v isin g the a c a d e m ic counseling p ro cess.” Answ ers from 46 per cent of the 302 students who were enrolled in the C ollege of Liberal A rts for the fa ll of 1968, but dropped out of school by the 1969 spring sem ester, were used in the professors’ study. “ The questions concerned fin a n c ia l p ro b lem s and em otional problem s, as w ell as experiences in co u rses,” Gordon said . There also were questions concerning background and fam ily problem s, he said . The study indicates ’ that “ some students w ithdraw for reasons unrelated to “ I only saw m y academ ic adviser once. E v ery tim e I went to see him he was' e ith e r p re o ccu p ie d w ith another p roject or told m e to com e b a ck la t e r ,” one student said . “ A fter the first sem ester was over I decided not to see him any m ore as he w as no h elp ,” he added. A s a resu lt of the study, the Student A cadem ic A f­ fairs O ffice was established last fa ll, an advisem ent ce n te r “ w here stu d e n ts could be offered special needed atten tio n .” D r. R oger Sw an so n , assistant dean o f the College of L ib eral A rts, coordinates the advisem ent center. “ We are tryin g to work w ith students early in their career a t the U n iv e rsity ,” he said . called into our o ffic e ,” he said. Advisem ent for students in the “ no preference” area is fo r “ new freshmen, The o ffice operates with nine ad visers, several who a ré p a rt-tim e fa c u lty m em bers and som e who are p ro fe ssio n a l a d v is e r s , he said. The center helps students . w ith tw o ty p es o f d if­ ficu lties, those on probation in a certain area of study and those students in a “ no preference” a re a . “ In the acad em ic coun­ s e lin g a r e a , w e h elp students w ith d ifficu ltie s in course w o rk,” he said . The adviser learn s “ why the student is h avin g d if­ fic u ltie s an d th en g iv e s advice for im proving h is w ork,” he added. The center alsoTs involved in the “ su rv eillan ce” o f a ll fr e s h m e n r e c e iv in g deficiency slip s, Sw anson said . “ T h o se stu d e n ts a re Dr. Hudson tr a n s fe r stu d e n ts -or students previously enrolled in a m ajo r fie ld who change, to th at a r e a .” form ed to consider a lter­ natives to tradition al ad­ visem ent sy ste m s,” he said . O n ly fa c u lty m e m b e rs “ who are good a t advisin g and w ant to do the jo b ” m ight be advisers under a . new system , he said . M any students who com e to the U n iversity w anting to take a m ajo r hard ly know where to s ta rt,” Gordon said. “ They have a c a ta lo g , but don’ t know a b o u t in ­ structors, or courses or the content of co u rses,” he said . These students need to talk w ith people, he said . There w as “ no in teractio n before his acad em ic cen-1 te r .” H udson an d G o rd o n ’ s study in dicates that “ m any of the freshm an dropouts co u ld b e p re v e n te d by b o ls te r in g p ro g ra m s” academ ic ad visin g, w hich the acad em ic a ffa irs o ffice is now considering. The center is now advising 1500 students, he said . P lan s are being m ade to create a c e n tra liz e d lo c a tio n fo r student advisem ent. T his fa ll a com m ittee w as NEWS 3656 Sixteen per cent of 1968 lib e r a l a r ts fre sh m e n dropped out of school. O nly 12 per cent of la st' y e a r’s freshm en w ithdrew , he said . Citron’s Surplus Jefferson at 2nd St. in Phoenix for Navy denim bellbottoms — Tankers — Pea Coats — Bush Jackets — White & 13 Button Bells — Parachute canopies Kotex'ComforTubef announce two kinds of comfort. REGULAR • This kind of C om forT ube tampon has the absorbency you need for regular protection. And it has a softly-tapered tube so it’s more comfortable than other tampons. If that sounds like your kind of comfort, look for regular ab­ sorbency. Kotex ComforTube tampons. In the blue box. SUPER • This kind of ComforTube tampon has extra absorbency for extra protection. ■ And it has a softly-tapered tube so it’s more comfortable than other tampons. If that sounds like your kind, of ‘ comfort, look for super absorbency. Kotex ComforTube tampons. In the lavender box. Fem ininity today from Kim hetiy-Ciatk •v ) W e d n e sd a y , O c to b e r 1 3 — Two appointed to health center Two new doctors, with medical experience in areas ranging from backwoods Kentucky to the jungles of . B o l i v i a , have been appointed to the staff of the Student Health Service. They are D r. Melvin Phillips of Prescott and D r. John Sin­ ning of Marshalltown, Iowa. Sinning, who earned his m edical degree from the University of Iowa in 1945, spent six months on the staff of a midwifery school in Kentucky in 1962. Besides medical problems, he had to surmount the language barrier between himself, the English midwives who taught the courses and the local girls. As an example of his adap­ tation to the local dialect, he said, “ If someone told me George was dead, I knew that George was hurt, but if he said George was ‘stone dead,’ I knew George was dead.” The following year, Sinning spent six months in the Gameroons doing missionary medical work with facilities he. described as “ un­ derdeveloped—where the only thing in the room is a bare cot with a weaved rug on i t ” D ietary control there is limited because the patient is fed by his fam ily, Sinning said, and “ if medication is required, it is never distributed all at once because the natives are liable to sell it.” “ Instead a ward goes around with a tea kettle three times a day and distributes medication,” he explained. In 1964, Phillips, who has been in general practice for 23 years after earning his m edical degree from the University of M cGill in Montreal, spertt six weeks in Bolivia. “ B olivia is the poorest country in South Am erica,” Phillips said. “ The Amazon lowlands is a jungle area where people are just beginning to start colonies.” “ My mission was primarily to establish good anesthesiology for a 30-bed hospital,” he said. “ The city fathers charged four pesos for my services,” Phillips quipped. “ That’s 32 cents.” “ Medical practices in Soviet Russia are like those of ours in 1925 and the Thirties,” he said. He added he was unable to formulate a complete picture of Russian medicine because the statistics he received varied with the source. "He said that 70-80 per cent of the doctors in Russia are women, attributing it to ex­ tremely low doctor’s wages. “ When a person needs to visit a doctor, he first must go to his assigned district manager. The manager gives the patient a slip to go to the doctor,” he related. “ In Poland and Czechoslova­ kia medicine was practiced much better,” he said, because doctors were then freer and had access to more information. Profits from football game increase student financial aid A S A SU w ill attem pt to raise $10,000 from the sale of $1 tickets to the A SU U n iv e r s ity o f New M e x ic o - fre sh m a n football gam e O ct. 23. Proceeds will be used to increase financial aid to students. The gam e w ill be the first fund-raising event in the new A S A SU program to assist the fund d eficit w hich presently e x ists, said Norm K e y t, A S A SU president. K eyt is encouraging a ll cam pus groups to sell tickets and to attend the gam e, which w ill be the sole hom e gam e for the A SU freshm an team . The individual sellin g the m ost tickets w ill be aw arded two tickets to the F iesta Bowl D e c . 27. The Carnation Company was the first business to respond to an appeal to mer­ chants and business places to buy tickets, K eyt said . Carnation purchased 50 tickets M onday. “ W e’d lik e to m ake this a big social event w ith participation by everyone. We also hope to get contributions from a lo t of businesses and people in the com m u n ity ,” he said . U n iv e rs ity P re sid e n t Jo h n S ch w a d a opened the fund cam paign w ith the for­ m ation o f a presidential com m ission to id ilize a ll resources to increase availab le student aid . K eyt had subm itted a proposal to establish the com m ission a fter learn in g of a need for additional funds for the F in ancia l A ids O ffice . The present funds were running $20,000 below qualified requests. K eyt said . The com m ittee activities w ill engage in p rojects to raise m oney by enlisting student support fo r increasing funds. While his wife made sheets for the hospital and taught English, Phillips helped deal with problems such as intestinal p arasites, tuberculosis and epidemics. He recalled one measles epidemic that wiped out one-fourth of the village children. 'Sinning was one of 25 Iowa physicians to tour R u ssia, Poland and Czechoslovakia in 1963. * A Munchy’s Doming! 6 06 M ill Page 7 We have thousands of unique hand-crafted items from over 40 different posters, incense, taxi-horns, furniture, etc. Even water beds! Unusual things flu room or apartment. Come to Tang's Imports for an "Excursion into the Exotic" campus. Hookas, head-bands, ear and to brighten your . . just a short jog from Note: Now thru Oct. 31st, your student I.D. card entMes you to a 10 percent discount on all purchases of $5 or more, at the Tempe store! Town & Country Shopping Center 4821 North 20th Street Phoenix MESA-TEMPE HfGHWAT 1525 East Apacho Blvd. A L L 3 STORES O P E N 7 D A Y S A W E E K Bethany Home Rd. A 27th Ave. M25 North 27th Ave. Phoenix Pag* • — W ed n e sd a y , O c to b e r 13 Army morale drained Home front army may be problem The ebbing m orale o f the U n ite d S ta te s A rm y is dangerous enough when it co m es to m a in ta in in g security overseas, said D r. Donald ZoD , professor of p olitical scien ce, but it could pose an even g re a te r problem if the arm ed ser­ vices w ere required to keep order w ithin the United States. T his would require “ the h ig h e st fo rm s of professional restrain t, not only in term s of patience under the provocations o f m alcontents and agitato rs, but a refu sal to be lured into the tem ptation o f restoring order by displacing civ ilia n a u th o ritie s an d s e iz in g pow er,” he said in an a rticle in the O ct. 8 issu e of N ational R eview . “ The A rm y sim ply does not know w hat its p lace is in the national fa b r ic ,” he added. “ The A m erican m ilitary forces, losing touch w ith the tra d itio n s o f th e ir on ce honored profession, m ight w ell develop a new form of gu ild fan aticism or w ith­ draw in to a d e c re p it iso latio n ,” he said . “ Both would be disastrous to the national w ell-b ein g.” Federal funding may back 'discussed' police training A law enforcem ent cur­ riculum possibly w ill be instituted a t the U n iversity if federaL funds can be at­ tained for b ackin g, said A cadem ic V ice president K arl Dannenfeldt yester­ day. T he a c a d e m ic v ic e president said m ore about the p ro gram w ould be decided in about a m onth. “ We a r e ju s t h a v in g discussions now, but these things take tim e ,” he said. “ We don't know w hether the program w ill be at the undergraduate or graduate lev el, or if it w ill involve the training of teachers in law enforcem ent.” D annenfeldT said he an­ tic ip a te s no stu d en t op­ position to a police program . Other universities with law enforcem ent program s have experienced none; he said , including the Arizona junior colleges that provide police training. M esa Com m unity College is one junior college that offers a law enforcem ent p ro g ra m . T h e sch o o l’s c a ta lo g sta te s the curriculum is “ designed for students who intend to enter em ploym ent with state or lo c a l la w e n fo rce m e n t agen cies.” Empty faculty lot confuses parking Fu ll use o f a facu lty parking lo t, northw est of G am m age Auditorium , w ill “ open up som e o f th e student lots and m ake it easier on stu den ts,” said Jo h n D u ffy , c h ie f of U niversity P o lice . U ntil recently the parking lo t, area 14, w as a student lot. F acu lty who h ave been parking in student lo ts since a re a 14 w as opened “ probably are not aw are of the new facu lty lo t,” D u ffy said. Com m uting students with “ R ” decals m ay p ark in area 79 lots a lso , D u ffy m entioned Area 79 lots are located near Sun D evil Stadium and in the southeast corner of the cam pu s, he said . o f 23 law e n fo rce m e n t courses are o ffered. F o rty to fifty per cent of Tem pe police o ffice rs are attending M esa Com m unity C o llege, said D av e W right, com m unity relation s o fficer of the Tem pe P o lice D ep art­ m ent. , In addition, the ca ta lo g indicates the cu rricu lu m is approved by the Arizona Law Enforcem en t O ffice rs’ A dvisory Council as “ en­ c o m p a ssin g a ll to p ics specified in their 200 hours basic p olice co u rse.” The coursés ran ge from crim in al investigation and c r im in a lis tic s to tr a ffic control and the study of juvenile procedures. A total The m ilita ry , Zoll said , has “ tran sferred the a t­ m osphere and procedures of the b u reau cracy, p u blic and p rivate, into the m ilitary services” in an attem pt to “ c iv ilia n iz e ” it s e lf a n d , co n se q u e n tly , lo s t th e unique im age it once h ad. In the fa c e of opposition fro m th e p u b lic , “ th e m ilitary could have pre­ served, I th in k, its own internal m o ra le ,” Zoll said , “ except fo r the fa c t th at it had lost touch itse lf w ith a serviceab le self-im age. “ The low state of m orale in the A m erican Services is revealed in . . . a falte rin g sense o f support by m en engaged w ith the enem y as to the b ackin g com ing from superiors and their nom inal civ ilia n d irectors. “ No m an” A m erican fig h tin g to d ay has th e assurance h is predecessors did that h is country w ould u ltim ately com e to his aid were he besieged or im -' prisoned, Z o ll said . “ A rm ies fin d it extrem ely d ifficu lt to reco n cile them ­ selves to d efeats im posed upon th em not b y th e enem y, but b y the m ach in a­ tions o f th eir own states­ m en ,” he said . “ T h a t, I su b m it, is a risk th at the U n ite d S ta te s d a re not ta k e .” Z o ll b la m e d both th e m ilitary and the p ublic fo r this state o f a ffa ir s and advocated a requirem ent for each “ to c a rry the b u rd en s o f in te rn a tio n a l m ilitary com m itm ent: for the A rm y , an extrem ely high level o f professiona­ lism ; for the p u b lic, a com pensating ratio n ale for th e s a c r ific e s an d in ­ co n v e n ie n ce s su ch a com m itm ent e n ta ils .” Tem pe o fficers are sent to th e P h o e n ix P o lic e A cadem y, a 16-week school, for form al train in g, he said . S l U O t H l S '.'.'. M a k e yo u r h o lid a y tra v e l p la n s now b e fo re the rush. G ro u p s w ill re c e iv e re d u ce d ra te s fo r flig h ts to m a jo r citie s. Campus Representatives; — Bob Bell — M ark Sklar MUNDUS TRAVEL BUREAU 44st. & Cam elback Rd. Phoenix, Az. 85018 M UM 0U8 T R A V E L 959-5250 2 FREE BIKES W ill be shown — One G irl's — One Boy's 3 speed, lightweight Bicycles will be given away Friday, October 29 October 14 thru 17 at 7:00 P.M. with the Lucky Winner's names to be drawn by KOY's Toothfairy! 2 SHOWS PER D IV 5 p.m. & 8 p.m. E N T E $ O F T E N AS Y O U L I K E A T KING’S FOOD HOST U.S.A. NEED HALL 1123 S. R ural — >/a Block North of Apache Admission $1°° Presented by ASASO Cultural Affairs Board W e d n e sd a y, O c to b e r IS — 9 Professor admonishes public Environment could exterminate earth A dram atic change of direction is necessary to avoid world destruction of the en­ vironment, said Ernest Snyder, professor of science education. “ We are not paying enough attention to the problem s created by science and technology that simultaneously produce a high living standard and an environment that may well exterminate us,” Snyder said. Snyder said that although “ a great deal is being heard about ^cleaning up the environment, nothing is being done.” He cited as an example the “ watering down of the Clean Air b ill by the Environm ental Protection Agency in its guide- Cam pus cards ready M o n d ay Cam pus ID card s w ill be a v ailab le n ext w eek fo r new an d re a d m itte d stu d e n ts who had th eir pictures taken at the beginning o f the sem ester. s C ard s m ay be obtained in the M U Solarium — M onday and T u esday, 9 a.m .-n oon , 15 p .m . and 7-9 p .m . lines. I think industry pressure brought about a weakening.” Snyder commented on Arizona Public Service Co. advertising concerning its anti­ pollution activities. “ They are cleaning up the fly ash, which is what makes the air dirty but doesn’t really harm anything. They never discuss the sulfur dioxide,” he said. “ Sulfur dioxide in combi­ Registration: ( Student organization renewals due Friday Student organizations must return their renewal forms to the Office * of Student Affairs, Matthews Center 138, by F rid ay , according to Loren Corsberg, assistant dean of the Office of Student Af­ fairs. The forms, which were sent earlier to the adviser of each organization, will be used in making up the o ffic ia l O rg an izatio n Roster for the 1971-72 school year. nation with wet air produces sulfuric acid. “ The apparent pollution from the fly ash is easier and cheaper to control,” explained Snyder. It is the fly ash which has caused public outcry, not the more dangerous, unseen sulfur dioxide. Long-range knowledge and effects are what concern Snyder. “ I am not so interested in today as in tomorrow. The long-range effects m ust be studied in order to prevent irreversible e ffe c ts ,” said Snyder. The automobile has been singled out by many experts as the greatest polluter, and Snyder agrees. “ Automobiles and industry are tied together, and their pollution can’t be separated.” No good answers to cure auto pollution are in sight, Snyder said. All present theoretical answers would require indirect pollution through the generation of the various power sources. “ Even the electric car would need more electric power generated. “ The recent Los Angeles experiment to set one day to encourage people to form car pools or take public tran­ sportation was a flop. In­ dividuals are either not con­ cerned or are w aiting for someone else to do it for them,” he said. Snyder estimates $200 billion are needed in the next 10 years to clean the air and water. He has w ritten a book, “ Please Stop Killing M e,” as a documentation and protest of the lack of attention paid to c a v i i n i w a i i l p n flia a s - T æ book w as pdU nftnd % t t e t o A m e ric a n L ib r a r y . S p t f Books' • F F IN tf. OnraaM U r R eam i UofA ads Continued from page 1 y 1 appropriated $225 in student funds for the purchase of 5,000 birth control booklets. The booklets were distributed to dorm residents and other university coeds. Schaefer was quoted by the Wildcat as saying the board had “ exercised incredibly poor judgment.” In a letter to the board Schaefer stated, “ by these actions you have violated both a policy of the Board of Regents and an Arizona statute.” He suggested the board’s actions may come under more rigid administration control. C a rd s a lso w ill be a v ailab le O c t. 20, 8-10 a .m . and 1-5 p .m ., and O c t. 21,10 a.m .-noon. To r e c e iv e th e c a r d s , students m ust present pink fe e c a rd s th a t w ere sta m p e d “ p h o to ” w hen pictures w ere tak en , said B ru ce A lp er, director of D ata P ro cessin g Se rvice . DISPLAY ADS 965-3249 apea*uwspreM-'-ts AWill IAMCASHprodlKtlor TONY ANTHONY NOW! STARTS m m BLACK SABBATH THIRTY BAYS OUT WALK IN J ilt U E O - S K T 9 0 M -0 o AT 5.98 A L B U M S — 3.79 $4.98 A L B U M S *2.97 & M & e £ tm L s li 7th & F O R E S T A S. U . - T E M P È O P E N M o n . - F ri. ' TIL 9 TODAT! MATINEES SATURDAY ASUNDAY She goes from car to car... th rill to th rill! MOTHERS DEEP PURPLE Randy Newman Moby Grape / Beach Boys Johri Sèbasthm K. Rogers ft 1st Edition Paul Parrish CO-HIT , +40UtnRD' -rM Jo H n so n ? < SUnMoIMT motorLo*a«. . Launige. Tuñpe ~rrATu*JN& Bin C e rc < |-M » l4acM.>HnM«N«K|lnKdaMMl Tatui Harrt-DAUmS/CMUSSiaN -rcrry k c C l - (òoi+n*. ,6 « V * <«-0viten m n ul ftKhwdsMi- riM«e,«o6eL/iKiissiM MONDAY t s m u ä iS BfcNSWA owNwue nMw»uMi ftHM*U*iAl C IM R U H tD %«ne96*S«N W ALKIN P a g e 10 — W ed n esd a y, O c to b e r 13 •Bane enjoys travel Continued from Page 12 and his record w as 2-1, h is loss com ing again st ex­ m ajor leagu er P au l Foytack at T iger Stadium in D etroiL Bane liked New York the m ost. “ There were more things to do th ere.” The team played 10 gam es there and had an opportunity to play in Shea Stad ium , home of the New York M ets. Asked what he felt lik e when he' p itch e d th e re , B ane answ ered “ T ug M cGraw .” The spot he enjoyed most w as Y a n k e e S ta d iu m . “ E ven though we didn’t p lay there, it was great ju st to get to see it ,” he said . The end of the Pan-A m gam es did not m ark the end o f the sum m er for B an e. He went cm to W itchita, K a n ., to play in th e N a tio n a l Baseball Congress W orld Series, fo r a team from Boulder, Colo. H e relieved in two gam es there. “ The players w ere better there than th o se w e p la y e d against in South A m e rica ,” he said. B ane h as m uch respect for W inkles as did the other p la y e rs on th e P a n -A m team . “ O v e ra ll, it w as a little m ore relaxed than sch o o l b a ll is . B u t in ­ divid u ally, coach w anted Sun Devil . Notes the guys from ASU to set an exam ple,” said Bane. “ There w ere two other coaches (Ja c k Sm itheren, K a n s a s S ta te T e a c h e rs C ollege and Ron F ra se r, U n iversity o f M ia m i), but C o a ch W in k le s ra n th e show ,” he said . H e’s the g r e a te s t—th e b e st c o a c h around.” About this y e a r’s A S U te a m , B a n e s a id , “ O u r chances o f w inning are as good as la st year—even better. Everyone h as one m ore year experien ce. M y goal this year is to w in 15 g a m e s,” said B an e. ASU-OSU ticket sales top 4,500 mark T icket sales for the upcom ing Arizona State-O regon State closed circu it football telecast h ave topped the 4,500 m ark, said tick e t m an ager T erry W ojtulew icz. Reserved seating for faculty, staff and students is still available, Wojtulewicz said. Faculty and staff can buy tickets for $2 arid students for $1 with University identifi­ cation. Group seating will be available. The 8 p .m . Satu rday contest w ill be broad cast liv e from Portland to three 15 by 20 foot screens located in front o f three sections o f Sun D ev il Stad iu m . A dditional screens w ill be added if tick et response dem ands. O ffic ia ls in the ath letic departm ent estim ate the three screens w ill serv ice 20,000 people. T hat attendance figu re would break thé existin g closed circu it tv audience recôrd o f 13,000 set e arlie r this y ea r in New Y o rk . The technical organization is being handled by Tomorrow Entertainment In c., a subsidiary of General Electric. cm Hotel? introduces NORTHWALL Arizona State baseball coach Bobby W inkles w ill have another award to add to his im pressive collection this weekend. Winkles has been selected to receive the 1972 Distinguished Alumni Award from lllinnis W esleyan University in Bloomington, 111. Winkles will be the featured guest at the Wesleyan Homecoming game Saturday. His former coach and current Illin ois W esleyan athletic director. Ja c k Horenberger, w ill make the presentation immediately before Saturday's football game. NARTUUfAl I N U n in W H L L co m b in e s B, S & T & C h ic a g o But c re a te s a sound a ll it 's ow ov n NORTHWALL A <,e, new sroup In h th hot new Adam s NORTHWALL ¡ 5 K S * f T a k e in the A d a m s fo r a fu il n ig h t's p le a su re : e le g a n t d in in g , h e a v y e n te rta in m e n t, d a n cin g A n d then . . . show s and d a n cin g 9 — 1 M o n d a y th ro u g h S a tu rd a y Free indoor valet parking 253-1131 Central 8 Adams CLASSIFIED A D S C hustled advertising m ust be paid fo r in advance either in parson or by m a il to the State press, ASB M2, two days in advance of publication. No ads w ill bn accepted over the telephone. O ffice hours are • a.m . to 4 p.m . M onday through Thursday and t a.m . to noon F rid ay. Phono »45-3457. Rare: (1 lo r three linos and M e fo r each additional lino. M per cant discount fo r consecutive additional days. There w ill ha no refunds fo r advertisem ents placed w ith the State Press. • FOR SALE • Bikes—boys lightw eight single speed. $18.50 & $26. Boys 3 speed. S 2 N 3 K 3 L Other bikes, $12.50 & up. 986-3592. (10-14) New VO X 12-string acoustical g u itar w ith hard-shell case, orig. $250, se ll S1SB. MS4536. 00-15) Back Door Shop, 707 S. Forest. G irts, bring in old sandals S2 on purchase off new pair. Oct. 14-16/ (1045) Dolby-Advent 101 noise reduction unit. $85. Ed at 968-0273. 004 9 ) H uffy 10 speed bakes, S75. S till b o n d . C all 968-3755 after 3 p.m. Lim ited supply. 00-13) Unique m ajestic A M radio, large cabinet approx. 4' by 2'. Beautiful wood and good sound. $35, cheap fo r what you get. C all Steve, 967-6418. Zenith color console—S150Ï B O W TV— $25, Offenhauser duaquad m anifold, pa­ perboy bike—966-5497. M anx Kittens 955-6548. 003 0 ) 9x12 used rugs $5.00, a ll sizes in stock. Carpet House, 1516 E . Van Buren, Phoe___ (Sem ester) Honda 1971Va CB 175 excellent condffion. Extras. $525, 956-1146. Drapery rods and ydge fo r van curtains. O scar Leverant F a b rics 4136 E . Indian School. *00-14) Tutoring, Spanish, French, 968-2913. • WANTED Ride needed on weekends to W inslow o r Flagstaff. W ill share expenses. M l lWO apt. 2, 1339 S. Sunset (by V a rsity Inn P izza). (1030) M usic, a rt m jrs. Volntr. Inner-City prg m. Own hrs., eves., wknds., 965-6420 o r W PE 216. O 04S) Help! Volunteers inner-city kids in reation program ested? C a ll Kay needed to w ork w ith an arts it cra fts rec­ Sat. m ornings. Inter­ 965-5100 or M7-0747. 00-13) D esperately need rid e to Kansas on F r i­ day, Oct. 15. M elani, 966-8114. 00-13) SALE M a rtin 00010 acoustical g uitar. O lds "re confin a - com et 247-2957 evenings. (10-15) • SERVICES Spanis h tutoring, G ina Swan, 966-3264. (11-8) Looking fo r R e a lity ? There's only one way says B erkley grad. Come any Sunday, 9:45 a_m. 2424 N . 71st Street, Scottsdale Basdist Church, ask ta r Lloyd. (10-13) Slop th inking about it and do It now! P ermanent rem oval of unsightly fa c ia l h a ir, cam e in and w e 'll ta lk about It. Discern# to r students. C a ll 966-1851. (11-16) A rt lessons, reasonable. Saturdays. 966B Ï I . Tampa. (10-4) T IM E is m o n e y A T C L A R K D E V E LO P ­ M E N T NO. III. T his is a lim ited partner­ sh ip investm ent opportunity fo r the sm all ■nvastar- According to a national associa­ tion th is type of investm ent averages K * ( in earnings. But A rizona Is fa r above average. M ore inform ation from M r. Je rzy Z aborski. 956-5656 Res. 966» L A R R Y C L A R K R E A L T Y , 2728 E. THO M AS RO . P H O E N IX , AZ. 85016. W e are sem e ASU students who would ik e to sta rt a no-charge dating service fo r ASU students. A ll we offer is an op­ portunity to m eet interesting people if In­ terested. Please c a ll 966-27M after 4 p.m. fo r details(10-13) • AUTOMOBILES 1968 Gold Cougar w a ir & w ide ovals new: battery, brakes A m aster cylin d e r, G reg, 956-7746 (10-15) «____________________ 1967 Cam aro 327, a ir, three spd. on the flo or, se ll to r low book o r consider trade. 966-5497. (10-14) 1971 V E G A C H E V . A ir , auto, fastback, opt, Int. Econom ical 4 c y l. 264-6934. (10-14) 1968 Jag u ar X K E , a ir,, excellent condition. $3000. 265-9077. (10-13) '63 Chevy II, 6 c y l. M ust se ll. E xcellent condition, no a ir, $300. 965-5456, ask tor M ike. (10-13) Fem ale room m ate to share three-bedroom house, 116 b lks from cam pus, furnished, p rivate bath. $75 p lu s u tlljlte s. 968-3836. (10-19) F ema Ip room m ate to share 1 bedroom apartm ent. Phone 967-6004. (10-15) Fem ale room m ate to share room In large three bedroom home. A lread y furnished. 0604)068. (10-19) TYPING E xp ert Typing, new IBM : Theses, d isser­ tations, term papers, books. M rs. Potty, 959-5385. . (10-22) Typing (IB M ) 945-1171. (4-21-72) E xp e rt typing, dissertations, theses, term and research papers. C e ll Jean Butterm ore, 277-3602. (a ll sem ester) Typing, close to A SU , 966-4713. (11-30) '69 Yam aha DT-1 M X (250 re.) V ary good condition. 254-1637 o r 965-3124, ask tor Ron. M ature g irl to share apt. W alking d is­ tance to A SU . 9664)331. (10-14) 1970 Opel Kadett econom y special. V ery clean, four-speed. C a ll 966-3734 afte r 6 p.m . (10-15) T Y P IN G : T E R M P A P E R S , R E S U M E S , TH ESES, D ISSERTATIO N S, P R O F E S ­ SIO N A L G U A R A N T E E D W O RK, I E M . M A X IN É M U L L E N —955-6763. (year) W AN TED : stra ig h t room m ate to share sm a ll fa rm located 3 m l. So. of Baseline In Tem pe 360. 967-3795 or 967-1588. (10-14) Typing IB M 253-1285 955-3206. W hite '60 Falcon— m inor rep airs, other­ w ise perfect—$100. C a ll 275-1639 attar 6:M P.m. (10-13) Granada M esa now renting. 176 beautiful new 2 bedroom opts. Furn. o r unfurn. F u lly draped and carpeted. 505 S. Roose­ v e lt, M esa, across from M otorola. Phone 252-7501. (10-13) '69 Chevy II 427, 4-spd. posltraction, Ç rager wheels, 31,000 m l. C a ll 944-0436, w ill take trade in. 1966 Dodge Coronet m ust see m ust se ll VS, super clean, runs perfect c a ll M -F 9-5, 264-9873. See evenings 929 E. V ista del Cerro. Dance to the M u sic! C A H can book any type at bend tor a ll occasions. C a ll M ik e 967-4333. (10-28) TU TO RIN G : A LSO YO G A Free A ird a te puppy, needs a good home wHh big y a rd .. C a ll 9680249 or 966-4349. (10-14) • Typing by professional, research reports, term papers, theses, m inor editin g A spellin g. L u c ille B ryan, 969-9711. (10-13) . IBM Selectric—Choice o f type, style. Ed* Iting as desired: 966-1604. (sem ester) C ertified experienced French Instructor availab le fo r tutoring c a ll after 6, 947«34, ______________ '_______ (10-14) PETS 9 RENT Room m ate wanted to share one-bedroom apt. $50 e month and u tilitie s. C a ll 9676107 afte r 4:00 p.m . (10-15) Goad Sam aritan Day School—offers you day care services w ith school. A riz. Cert. t ea chers. 1st grade thru 4th. Kindergarten •or 4 and 5 yrs. old ., pre-school fo r 2 and 3 y rs. eld . Drop-ins and infants welcom e. Open 34 hrs. Hot lunches—reasonable rates. C a ll 9660410 ta r inform aton. Lo­ cated a t 440 w . 5th in Tempe. (10-14) • * • INSTRUCTION FR E N C H A ■ SPAN ISH LESSO N S. 968-2913 (11-17) Eng lish, tutoring, etc. 967-5925. (a ll sem ester) Self hypnosis Is the key to self confidence,, peace,, happiness, end success, stop sm oking, lose weight, calm nerves, speed learning. 274-0698. G irls to share 4 bdrm . house. $60 mo. A share u til. In M esa; no m ore pets; own room ; 969-6609. 2 bedroom, 2 bath A pts. 966-4713. no lease. San M iguel (10-19) G irl room m ate wanted to share large 3 bdrm . house. 10 m in. from cam pus. New bedr. set w /w carpet, color T V . C e ll Lin de. 962-0427. • LOST HELP WANTED P a rt tim e w ork, 16-25 hrs w eekly, $300 per month. Interview s: 1000 Apache B lvd. #211 B , F r i. 6 p.m . ($11 sem ester) Handm ade pottery, sew ing wanted on consignm ent. C e ll 997-3856 or 943-2502. ». (10-19) P a rt tim e, your own hours. D ire ct sales w ork on com m ission and set your own Income. A p p ly a t 808 E . Ash, Tem pe 12 __________ do.13) to 2 p.m . Salesm en and women fo r com plete lin e of household appliances. Com m ission ba­ sis. M arketing Creators, 660 E . M ain St., Mesa. Good money p art tim e. (10-19) Need 7 g irls p art tim e to become profes­ sional make-up a rtists 9664)571. (a ll sem ester) 8 month Shepherd/Tarrier, Colorado teg. B la ck, brown, w hite tipped te ll. Answ ers to “ M oon". Please help, Stephan, 987-5654. (10-19) B la ck Lab 'pup 3 months. We love our dog, please help us fin d him . Rew ard, C$11 966-4070. • (sem ester) (10-19) • SOCIAL Single C atholics Club, Nov. 19, 1971 1 P.M . Rem ade Inn 3801 E. Van Bui Phx. To be .Informed of future a ttiv i send name, address to PSCC, p o 1 678 Phx., A Z . 85001. gÜ ft W e d n e sd a y , O c to b e r 13 — Roadrunners offer hockey tilt tickets Dust Devils graduate For Larry Shorty and Ben Malone there has always been a little devil in each of them. As prepsters at Santa Cruz Valley Union High (nee, Eloy), they were known as the Dust D evils’ D ynam ic Duo. And they’re still pretty dynamic as sophomore Sun Devils. when you are younger all you want to do is play sports. Besides, there isn’t much else to do down there.” Shorty’s play on defense in recent weeks has made AllAmerican candidate Junior Ah You the “ other” defensive end. A t Utah, Shorty was credited with nine tackles, including three of them for minus yar­ dage. Shorty blindsided Ute runner Gene Belczyk causing a fumble which he quickly gob­ bled up. The tall (6-5) Shorty has been the big man on defense, while the stocky Malone has been a spot player as the number three halfback. But what a third stringer he has turned out to be. In the Sun D evils’ 42-0 victory over Colorado State Saturday, Malone found time to rush for 184 yards and had runs of 87 and 55 yards. one of his prize sophomores. He said, “ Shorty is doing a fine job, and he’ll improve. He is very speedy (4.8 in the 40-yard dash), extremely aggressive and has fine football attitude. Now if he only weighed a little more.” A hernia operation just prior to fall drills cost him eight pounds that he had added before. Shorty said, “ I ’m up to about 190 now, but 1 can still throw my weight around. I just wish I had more to throw.” P a g e 11 More than 4,200 tickets will be available to the U niversity community for the Oct. 23 Phoenix-Denver hockey game, according to Phoenix Roadrunner officials. Tickets will be on sale on the M all today. “ If the response is good for this event, other organizations may find out it is worth their tim e and trouble to give U niversity people discount tickets,” said George Hillman, ASASU vice president Groups of more than 10 can obtain block seating at the Community Box Office at MU 252. Gam e time is 8 p.m . in Veterans Memorial Coliseum. Anyone with a valid ASU identification card can obtain one ticket for the regular $3.50 price and another ticket free. He began his ASU football career as a freshman tight end and played one game. He broke his collar bone in practice which idled him for the balance of the season. When he had healed, Shorty joined the freshman basketball squad where he averaged better than five points per game. Spring ball intervened and a nightmare began for Shorty. . His running style is different, to say the least. Malone walks pidgeon-toed and runs, well, som ewhat sim ilar to a bowlegged mule with its tail caught fire. A very fast mule, too. Ben, the younger brother of the Atlanta Falcons’ Art Malone, was AllEverything in Eloy, as was Shorty. He was moved by the coaching staff to split end, but Shorty could not catch the football. Shorty said, “ I don’t know what it was, but I just couldn’t catch. I’ve always wanted to be a receiver in college, too. Eventually, they switched me to defense. I wasn’t too happy at first with the move, but I never would have gotten a chance to play at split end. All I want to do is play football so I really don’t care where I play.” Defensive end and linebacker coach Larry Kentera has been pleased with the work of Shorty, Both earned All-conference and A ll-State honors under coach Lonnie Foster. Malone was also a prep All-American. While Shorty was a seldomthrown-to tight end and line­ backer, Malone scored 28 touch­ downs his senior year and 58 times in his career. “ Everyone in Eloy takes a lot of pride in the athletic program there,” brags Shorty. “ There are some excellent coaches, and Ben Malone (left) and L a rry Shorty It big as full-fledged Sun Devils. . two form er Dust Devils from Eloy now making A manual for living that integrates the psychology of the West with the mysticism of the East. WEEK AFTER WEEK! WHAT TO IHM celebrations awareness experiments . thought energy massage bre'athing love meditations non drug ways to grow flow on mi by Bernard Gunther author of Sense Relaxation and Love View 127 photographs by Paul Fusco A FREE Volkswagen for 1 week if she finds a difference in you . . . A b b e y is a student on c a m p u s e v e r y d a y , w hen you see h e r, te ll h e r how d iffe re n t you a r e & m a y b e sh e 'll p ic k you a s the w in n e r! There is a difference at Demas Volkswagen © §/ . OCALfR $4.95 paperback; $7.95 hardcover COLLIER BOOKS 3230 N . Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale • 947-4211 A Division of THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, 866 Third Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022 '■ L . - Y O U M U S T B E 21 W IT H A V A L I D D R I V E R 'S L I C E N S E J P a g e 12 — W e d n e sd a y , O c to b e r 13 ASU pitcher recounts summer of travel By L E E P E L E K O U D A S “ M aybe I ju st c a n ’t beat the M orm ons or the Com ­ m u n ists.” Taken out of con text, that would be m isleading. E d d ie B ane is a sophom ore on th e A S U baseball team . H e had a great freshm an y ea r, and it was follow ed by an ex­ traordinary summer-. Bane says he ca n ’t beat the M orm ons or the Com ­ m unists, but he had h is chance. L a st year he lost to Brigham Young U n iversity in the fin al gam e o f the W AC p layoffs, and this sum m er, state I press sports '/ can't beat Mormons or Communists' as a m em ber o f the U . S . P a n -A m e ric a n te a m in. South A m erica, lost to C u b a, th e e v e n tu a l c h a m p io n s. D uring the sum m er Bane went to G ran d Ju n ctio n , C o lo ., where p layers are sent to p lay sum m er b a ll. There for only a short tim e, Bane received a phone c a ll from A S U and Pan-A m coach Bobby W inkles asking him to join the Pan-A m team which w as on tour. “ He (W inkles) told m e a t the end o f the school year that he m ight c a ll m e ,” Bane said . “ It w as s till a pleasant surprise. “ I love to tra v e l, and I thought it w as g re a t th at I ’d be ab le to see thin gs I ’ve alw ays wanted to and ¡day b a ll at the sam e tim e .” B ane joined two of his A S U team m ates on the P an A m team , A1 B an n ister and K en R eed . T he team took second p lace in the gam es in South A m erica and received silv er m edals for its effo rts. B ane said , “ The silv er m edal d id n ’ t m ean anythin g. It w as a disap­ pointm ent not to g e t the g o ld , but representing the U nited States w as enough. “ A ll the other countries played g re a t defense but couldn’t h it,” said B an e. “ B ut Cuba had good h itters and their p itchers w ere little guys and s m a rt.” A t 5 fee t 11, 165 pounds, and con­ sidered a “ sm a rt p itch er” by team m ates and co ach es, B ane is one o f their kind. “ T he Cubans w eren’t a s good a s u s. T hey did n ’t h ave the talen t we h a d ,” said B an e. “ B u t they had m ore experience playing to g e th e r. T h ey p r a c tic e d four years for the gam es. We only had a m onth and a h a lf to p ra ctice togeth er. W e w eren’t rea lly read y for th em .” B ane started again st Cuba but said there w as m ore pressure on him a g ain st B Y U in la st y ea r’s p la y o ffs. “ I didn’t know anybody down there (South A m erica) to im p ress. Sure I s till w anted to w in, but it m eans m ore to m e to pitch w ell here. I w as upset when we lost to B Y U because I fe lt I let the seniors down. It w as their la s t chance to w in it a ll.” When asked about the situation in C a li, C olu m b ia, co n ce rn in g h o u sin g co n ­ ditions, B an e said , “ There w ere nine in a room and we s le p t on fo a m ru b b e r m a ttre sse s.” Som e ath letes w ere reported to h ave le ft the gam es because o f the livin g conditions. “ There w as som e com plain in g, but th e p e o p le w ho ra n everythin g tried to do the best they could. “ I didn’t e at anythin g but bread and Coke for the firs t Ed Bane week because I w as a fra id I ’d g e t sick . So I got side from not eatin g w ell. “ The people w ere very n ic e ,” said B an e. “ W hen we got o ff the bus a t our gam es, people would alw ays crow d around us. W e had to put our hats down our pants because th ey’d alw ays try to take th e m .” P rio r to the team s’ trip to C olu m b ia, it toured the E a s t a n d M id w e st. It p la y e d v a rio u s c o lle g ia te te a m s and had a record o f 22-4-1. B ane w as in 10 gam es and led the touring team in w ith fo u r s a v e s . H e h a d 41 strikeouts in 30 1-3 innings Continued on P ag e 10 - r m BBS! Van Heusen makes your vibrations visible! Styles, patterns and colors that really send out your message. Get with it! Get your body into a Van Heusen 417 Body Shirt. Give real style to your vibes! VISIT VOSS VIA S A S ... Ski the fabulous slopes of Voss, Norway. Frolic in Copenhagen. Two lucky people will win a free round trip ticket via SAS Scandinavian Airlines. Send your name and address to: The Van Heusen College Contest, 417 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10016. Contest closes November 30, 1971. Void' where prohibited by law. V A N H E U S E N Join your campus colleagues who are discovering the visible vibes of new Van Heusen 417 Body Shirts! Get yourself into styles, patterns and colors that really lay it out straight. Contemplate the Body Shirt collection now a t ... jTU X ED O ¡RENTALS | AND SALES Mm's Store 18 WEST MAIN STREET IN DOWNTOWN MESA SlM» Hours 4:00 to 5:30 Ikmdey 9:00 to 4:00 We* M h f or R<