Arizona State University Vol. 54 No. 28 Tempe, Arizona November 5, 1971 Chícanos delay cultural activities C ln a a C a h a a l Week is postponed because of harassment Cm ASASU Senate and an ad hoc committee of Mexicanarid Aaron Kizer, member of the Planning o f Hie Movimimiento Estudiantil Chicano de LaSem an adeln postponed the CTiir— begin Monday. Aaron B a e r , m ittee, said the harassm ent from A SA SU committee o f members. H ie ad hoe questions of funds by the The M ovim iento (M EC H A ). Kizer said from the fa ct M EC H A for cultural “ Becam e a organize the group withheld,” B a e r a He added th e a d l cultural week f a d s Manuel president, said, “ We Onto ra m p « be used. However, integral part o f the times consider Urn No member of readied for ad hoc “ »«■ ■ ■ **■ » Burruel, Burruel denied mittee and stated cultural week Kizer possible accused o f con flk t o f Concerning (he Chavez said, “ H e a d M EC H A members pa (has Lwhich was to conodue to Ia n ad hoc aanm unity raised it week a t o f the d e A ztla n stem by contracted » h a s » say over ¡feASASU statutes. vice p o o p can come adod fin d s naay University is an w e should a t a ll could be said the o f D r. Jose advisement, « i d the com on the nw trartpd all ft could not be o f funds, said some on checks meant for the entertainment groups. “ They were saying, in effect, that.M ECH A was trying to pocket this money. But the checks are supposed to be m ade out to the group in care of the individual, which is how we had planned it .” Confirmation of the correct procedure for filling out checks could not be obtained by press deadline. Another reason for halting the week, according to Kizer, was the action of the A SA SU Senate Finance Com m ittee. M rs. M arlene Skiba, chairm an of the finance, com mittee, said,“ When we found that one-third of the Chicano Week budget was to be spent on a banquet, dancers and speaker?— all at Guadalupe — we called ah em ergency m eeting.” M rs. Skiba said the com mittee felt all cultural events should be held on cam pus, for the benefit of the University. Kizer said the banquet was moved to Guadalupe because a representative of Saga Foods, In c. told M EC H A it could not serve food prepared off cam pus. “ We (fid not want Saga to prepare the food because we feel they are not qualified to prepare ethnic diets. Four days before the banquet, M rs. Skiba had the nerve to tell us we had to bring the banquet back to campus. She said as long as outside food wasn’t sold, it would b e.alright.” Kizer said M EC H A feels it is being harassed because it never intended to sell the food, only to serve it. M rs. Skiba said there is a communications gap between M E C H A and the finance committee. “ When the finance committee spoke to Saga foods Wednesday morning, they okayed the use of the facilities by Chicano workers,” she s a id ., Danny O rtega, A M E C H A member* said, “ If a poor job is done on the week, the blame will be placed on M E C H A . We don’t have time to straighten out what has happened.” Library hours 5JOOD signatures were collected by a University group to support a resolution to extend University library hours. showed adequate student in- Blown glass-garbage Is art Spiraling pollution problem? have forced ecologists to develop recycling campaigns for metal and glass debris. But Fred Navarro has gone one step further— he glorifies garbage. Along with partner Dan Mores, he uses glass-blowing and metal-working techniques to transform rank refuse into vases, lantern, lamps and other fun things. Story on page 6 resolution W ednesday ad­ vocating extended Mhi u j b a a s and d efeated a ch an ge m University policy regardug O k ca rryin g o f fire a rm s b y University poBce. Steve M atlk B . group collecting longer library petitions with 5,000 signatures” ta 1 Although M aW M original g o d had I signatures from 8 1 the University, the I cent presented to Ross B a n , who introduced the resolution, said, “ If people are aware they can go to the B r a r y a t any tim e during finals « e e k , they w ill.” T he resolution, o rigin ally ash in g fo r extended hours dm ing exam week and the week before exam s, was changed to a M l— extension after M attio&’s presentation. hours will go into effect if the resolution is signed b y A SA SU President Norm K eyt and A SU President John Scbwada. Duane Janssen’s resolution statin g th at the U n iversity abolish the carrying and use of firearm s by University police was defeated after arguments were presented for both sides. In other action, procedures for adopting a new University insignia are being established, Klein told the senate in a progress report by his com­ m ittee. The procedures authorize A SU President Scbwada to set a date for an election in which members of the University submit and vote on a new in­ signia. Page 2 — Frid ay, November 5 University becomes divided community B y B IL L NO RM A N Staff W riter A SA SU adm inistrative vice president said yesterday the U n iversity is a com m unity divided within itself and a lack of communication has resulted in factionalism , alienation and inefficiency. M anuel Figueroa said, “ The attitude in most students is such that they get in their own little worlds and don’t go beyond them and the situation is the sam e w ith the individual colleges.” He said this attitude is the prim ary cause of factionalism that permeates all facets of University life. “ I think it gets down to the question of the value of the university experience,” he said. “ Do you go to college just to buy your books, go to class, take your tests and take your degree? “ Or does the whole idea of the u n iversity experience im ply that you’re going to get a broad ASASU officer says attitudes of students result in alienation tv fi Manuel Figeuroa education by virtue of meeting with a tremendously varied student populace where there are more things than simply books?” He said a college education is not merely one of an academ ic nature but also education in how to exist, other than by making money, in “ the big cruel world out there.” Selfishness exists The student government of A SA SU should have the role of b ringing cam pus groups together, he said, but factionalism and selfishness exist in that body too. “ Somehow the whole idea of student governm ent has degenerated to where it’s just become a big ego gam e,” he said. “ People, instead of trying to do things in a positive w ay, are only interested in chalking up brownie points for the future.” M ost students at the University have little knowl­ edge of, or interest in, the functions of A SA SU , he said, m ainly because the student governm ent^ has not done anything for its constituents on a personal level of the “ grass roots reality type.” Both the student senate and University and Valley radical groups will present a “ City of Peace” plan tomorrow when they join in a day of national demonstrations against the Indochina war and domestic issues. The groups will rally at the Phoenix M unicipal Building. “ We are trying to show people that the war is not winding down,” ' said Jon Markoulis, treasurer of the Anti-War and Oppression Coalition (AW OC). AW OC, a league of 30 movement groups sponsoring the rally, wants to draw attention to the fa ct that “ The U .S . is daily dropping 2000 tons of bombs on Indochina . . . the A ir Force is carrying on the w ar,” Markoulis said. M arches from three V alley locations w ill m eet at 1 p.m . tomorrow at the M unicipal Building, 3rd Avenue at Jefferson, he said. A “ Tempe B icycle Contingent” will Radical coalition joins in national anti-war rally G r o u p w ill p re s e n t ‘C it y o f P e a c e ' p la n the A SA SU executive council need introspection and greater interaction among themselves and the students they serve in order to function efficiently and harmoniously, he said. But the issue is not one-sided, he added. “ We can say we’ll try to do this and this but if we don’t get some input from outside, our efficiency is cut by h alf.” Attem pts to establish a better communications link between the student body and A SA SU officials include the monthly forum sessions held at the M U , he s a id .---------------------------------Students were invited to these in form al m eetings w ith executive officers to express any opinions they m ighthave, he said, but the results of tw o1 -m eetings have been very discouraging. Silent Majority “ What we have here on. campus is the proverbial silent m ajority and we haven’t yet found an augnue whereby we can com nfluncate,” he said. A possible solution to the problem is the increased u tilizatio n of cam pus p u b lication s, he sa id , but another avenue m ight be the restru ctu rin g of student government to incorporate all leave Gam m age Auditorium at 11 a.m . and pedal to the M unicipal Building to re­ emphasize the ecology theme. Other m arches w ill leave from Bem ey Park in South Phoenix at 10 a .m ., and Encanto Park a t 11:30 a.m . The Radical Student Union and the Student Mobilization Committee w ill attem pt to organize a student contingent a t Encanto Park, said John Beadloe of S M C .' “ The war is not an isolated incident,” said M arkoulis. “ It directly relates to the state of our own economy and to George Jackson .” The rally w ill be addressed by the mother of one of the recently slain “ Soledad B ro th e rs,” M rs. G eo rgia Jackson. George Jackson was shot while allegedly attem pting to escape from San Quentin prison in California. M rs. D elia Alvarez, national coor­ dinator for POW -M IA Fam ilies Against the W ar, also w ill speak at the rally. those campus organizations not now in liaison. “ The thing I have found in m y short term, in office is that there’s one hell of a lot of duplication,” he said, pointing as example to the numerous minority aid programs at the U n iversity w hich often duplicate functions. Figueroa said, “ I ’d like to see something that could bring the dorms, college councils, senate, execu tive cou n cil and a ll branches of student activity into closer proxim ity so we can operate as a unit, rather than as a loose and stretched -out confederation of organizations.” H e said U n iv e rsity ad­ ministrators are usually willing to help student government with its programs but som etim es, with differing occupations, they are not close enough to the student problem. “ Sometimes they lose sight of student needs from where they sta n d ,” he sa id , “ and it becomes a problem of dollars and cents and bodies. That attitude can block certain good things that could be done.” H e said programs under the direct jurisdiction of his office are functioning well and should continue to do so. Programs inform These in clu de the Educational Aids Com m ittee w hich sets up inform ation centers at high schools and in the com m unity to inform potential college students about the aspects of college life, fin a n cia l aid a v a ila b le and make the University appealing in general. “ W e’ve gotten com ­ mendations from people as high up as representatives of H E W in W ashington, D .C .,” he said. O f student government he concluded, “ We have got a . group of dedicated people with a j lot of good ideas who can get: down to the practicalities of problem solving if they say, ‘this is the way we’re going to do it—let’s do i t ’ ” LET US WIRE TOO FOR SHUT. BARGAIN? . . . only a professional know s It costs no more to buy your diamond from a reputable firm with qualified personnel to properly e v a lu a te the ston e y o u select. A s m em bers o f the Am erican G e m Society, you m ay be assured o f both our reliability and proven know­ T o d a y , all d iam o n d s have determinable value. I f a stone has any worthy qtiality to it, a je w e le r c a n o b ta in th e s ta n d a r d p r ic e fo r it and doesn’t need to sell it to you *“ wholesale.” M an y so-called “ bargain” diamonds have first been marked up in order to be “ slashed down.” ledge- / S it MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY J E W E L E R S E X P E R T W ATCH & *N T H E JE W E LR Y R E P A IR 130 EAST U N IV E R SIT Y 1940 EAST D R IV E CAM ELBACK. ALSO C E R T IFIE D ARCHES , • TEM PE • 9 6 7 -B 9 1 7 P H O E N IX . 2 7 7 -1 4 2 1 IN S U N BEM SO C IETY Convenient credit terms, or use your Master Charge or BankAmericard. FREE — A spare pair of clear, single-vision lenses with a complete pair^of glasses. 2 CONVENIENT EYEWEAR CENTERS Open Friday w a n in g and all day Saturday. Temps Shopping Center Corner M ill & U n ive rsity C IT Y B E M O LO B IS T , A M ER IC A N Our contemporary "wires” come in all shapes and sizes. And there’s a rainbow of precision, colored lenses to go with them. Whatever your taste in fashion, you’ll find we have hundreds of the very latest frame designs from around the world. With the expert help of our staff, you’ll find fashion eyewear just right for you. Come in — for a new outlook. 967-7864 9 other convenient offices in Phoenix, Park Central, Maryvale Chris-Town, Thom as M all, Scottsdale, Tempo, M esa, Yuma ’ Single-vision glasses as low as Iff ' Where I f * always S A F E to save m o ne y o n gla sse s e n d c o n t e a lenses. Friday, November 5 — Page 3 Library fines remain same, honor freeze H ayden L ib ra ry h as not raised fines in violation of P resid en t R ich a rd N ixo n ’s w age-price freeze, despite allegations by some students, according to Librarian W illiam Axford. Axford said fines remain as they were last sem ester, but with the addition of a three-day grace period. Fines are 15 cents per day if paid at the time the overdue book is returned and 25 cents per day if paid after the bode is returned. Axford said the intent of the new policy, instituted A ug. 10, is “ to weed out a policy that we felt to be . . . unfair to students and to put in something better:” Allegations that the library was violating the freeze arose because the library neglected to say that the fines had not been increased, Axford said. “ In our enthusiasm we forgot to add the second half of the policy, which said that if fines . are paid a t the time the bodes are returned, it’s 15 cents a day instead of 25 cents.” The installation of autom atic data-gáthering equipment for the new circulation system last spring caused the library staff to review the fine collection system . “ In going over the old system we discovered it was unfair to the student in this respect — that the book could actually be returned on a given day but we couldn’t get the information to the computer until the following day, which looked like the book was a day late,” Axford said. Model UN organization meeting slated Stu den ts in terested in b eco m in g d e le g a te s to th e M odel U n ited N a tio n s (M U N ) o f th e F a r W est m a y atten d an o rgan ization al m e etin g a t 3 p .m . M o n d ay in M U 271. M U N is a stu den t w orkshop d u p lica tin g th e workings 0f the U m ted N a tio n s, sa id C a ro l F r o s t, one o f la st sprin g ’* 15 A S U d elega tes to the M U N . R ed C h in a w as a d m itte d to the M U N la s t A p r il, sh e sa id , b ut d eleg a tes m d n ot fo resee th e exp u lsio n o f N a tio n a list Ch in a fro m the U N 4 n O cto b e r. D e le ga te s represen tin g T aiw an w alk ed out o f th e M U N * session and no fu rth er actio n w as ta k en , she sa id . A S U ’s d elegates to th is y e a r’s M U N w ill be chosen in the sp rin g from am on g the U n iv e rsity ’s M U N m em b e rs. A ll m em bers are requ ired to do independent stu d y o f a co u n try and w rite a resolution to be presented to the assem b led M U N . “ L a s t y e a r w e w ere ab le to send everyo n e b ecau se the school p aid our fe e s and w e provided our ow n tra n ­ sp ortatio n ,” M iss F r o s t sa id . X TRADED M y OLD SP EA K ER S IN FOR THESE BOSE QOI's. STA TE P R E S S is published by Arizona' State University as the campus newspaper every Tuesday through Friday during the school y e a r, except h o lid a ys and examination periods, and'4s entered as second class matter at Tempe, Arizona, 85281. 4 REASONS W HY YOU SHOULD DO THE SAME 4P 1. The BOSE 901 Diredt/Reflecting™ Speaker System is the only one which radiates the proper balance of direct and reflected energy into your room, the same way instruments radiate sound to listeners in a live performance. Phyllis High ASU COEDS PREFER . . 2. The BOSE 901 eliminates woofers and tweeters and crossovers. By using 9 identical full range drivers, the 901 eliminates the audible resonances and crossover (phase) distortion of conven­ tional speakers. 3. By using reflected sound, the BOSE 901 does not “ beam” high frequencies at the listener but distributes them evenly throughout the room. This allows the 901 to radiate a flat power spectrum and to réproduce the correct timbre of instruments and voices. 4. The BOSE 901 costs $496 (2 speakers with equalizer). Yet in an industry where several speakers sell for over $1600 a pair, the BOSE has received rave re­ views calling it the best regardless of size or price. $49» COMPLETE WITH EQUALIZER BRING YOUR OLD SPEAKERS IN-LET’S TRADE ! WE NEED USED GEAR— OUR RESALE DEPARTMENT IS THE LARGEST IN ARIZONA h M o n ., T h u ?., & Fri. T il 9 :0 0 P .M .— Closed Sundays ERIC 1020 M IL L A V E N U E 966-8491 3 3 3 E. C À M E L B A C K * 264-9911 1 Page 4 — Friday, November 5 . ''S the p o in t state opinions p ie » by If o n ly h e 'd a sk e d h e r n a m e Although she was some 30 or 40 feet away and twilight rays like iced lances jabbed into his eyes, he felt compelled to watch this girl flickering toward him through the trees. Even at that distance, she was sta rtlin g . M ayb e, he thought, she was actually quite * drab and the evening was her shimmering makeup. B u t, as the earth rolled slightly, momentarily blocking out the sun, and the girl veered into full view from behind a staggered oak, he could plainly see that she was an admirable creature in her own right. Not plastic perfection, but unique. And she flowed with a leopard’s grace. Approaching him , apparently ignorant of his admiring gaze, she selected a suitable mossy tree three away from his, knelt down curling her legs to one side, slipped a paperback from her shoulder purse and began to read. He had not realized how endlessly long those legs were, and more infinite still when she knelt, with her tiny skirt rising to the occasion. A s she rested her shoulders and back against the craggy . . HOWEVER, WE NEVER TAKE THIS SORT OF THING TOO SERIOUSLY!' R ick trunk, he noticed that her blouse merely veiled nude essence, supplely bold against the air’s nipping chill, with the revealing breath of jersey. She was beautiful, he thought, pot really believing the term was adequate or just. Suddenly, with the zip and sting of a cracked whip, she jerked her head and stared directly into his eyes. S ta rtle d , he im m ediately realized he had been staring and dropped his eyes like a bomb into the depths of his own book. He wished he was un­ discovered, like the little boy snatching his hand in the nick of time from the cookie ja r, but sporting crumbs on his clenched lips. “ What are you looking a t?” her voice scolded. H e h esitan tly looked up, hoping she was reciting prac­ tice lines in a play. But her gla re could not be m isin­ terpreted. “ W h y?” he half-w ay breathed, half spoke in his degradation. “ What do you mean w hy?” she snapped. “ It’s rude, that’s w hy.” He resented her arrogance Sn e d e k e r but somehow felt ill-equipped to retort. Glancing, he noticed the title “ The Foun tain head ” sneering at him from her book. She continued reprimanding him , “ Don’t you have better things to do?” Like slapping at an irritating gnat, he blurted out his mind. ' “ I ’m terribly sorry about m y ignorance, m iss, but I was not aw are th at adm iration of beautiful women had become ob so lete.” H e w as vagu ely sorry he said that. She seemed stunned for a moment, awkwardly lipsinking, but then retaliated with vigor, “ You weren’t adm iring, you were leering; and I refuse to be your sex object.” “ Since you seem to have .m y mind thoroughly tapped, I do believe I ’m through being quizzed,” he said with finality. “ Good day, woman.” He untangled from his crouch and began to amble aw ay, still feeling a little guilty. “ You could have asked m y nam e!” she scream ed a t his fading form . R agin g, she looked back to her book, but the dusk was too thick to read. John BanaszewSki VD epidemic has not arrived— yet Whether it is called Pox, Lues, Bad Blood, S iff, Hair-Cut or Old Jo e, they all refer to the same thing. They are a ll nam es fo r syphilis, and regardless of the ascribed name the disease can cause in sa n ity, p a ra ly sis, blindness, d eafn ess, heart disease or death. Whether it is called the Clap, Strain, G leet, Morning Drop, A Dose or The Whites, they all refer to gonorrhea, and aliases won’t alter the disease’s effects. Besides dam age to the sex organs in both men and women, gonorrhea can cause sterility, arthritis or crippling, blindness or death. If ttk-ic sounds harsh it is only because of the harshness of venereal d isea ses. R e ce n tly released m edical studies report that venereal diseases have reached the epidemic level on a national scale. Ir. -n interview, D r. Richard Jones, director of the Univer­ sity’s Student Health Service, said “ among college students syphilis is not a ir epidem ic.” épidémie.” The Health Service director reached th at conclusion because only one case of syphilis was reported last year at the University Health Center. One isolated case, obviously, does not represent a disease reaching epidemic proportions. The doctor also said that nearly 100 cases of gonorrhea are reported each year at the center, and that “ one or two cases of crabs” are reported there every day. The number of reported cases does not present an epidemic on cam pus, but a concept called the “ Hidden Women’s Reser­ voir” could easily make it that way. The symptoms of gonorrhea do not outw ardly m an ifest themselves with women as they do with m en, and the Hidden W om en’ s R eservoir sim ply means that the infected woman does not realize she has the disease. Because of this, a woman can easily pass the disease on to any man with whom she has sèxual relations. A woman will not feel sick, and there is no visible sign of gonorrhea infection until it spreads up through the uterus and into the Fallopian tubes. Jones said the symptoms for gonorrhea and' syphilis “ are zero” in women. “ M any , gals are walking around this campus right now who have any one of these diseases” and don’t know it, he said. He said the most important element involved is the man’s interview once he has discovered he has the disease. Jones said that if 100 girls were given a test for venereal disease, only 75 would show positive factor because of the Hidden W om en’s R eserv o ir. This points up the importance of the m an’s willingness to release the girl’s name so preventive treatment steps can bé taken. Syphilis is a disease that can easily trick its victim s. The disease is caused by a germ , and the symptoms are often so mild that they go unnoticed. After a short while the obvious sym ptom s w ill disappear, making it appear only as a temporary condition. Once all the outward signs have disappeared, the syphilis is laten t A person m ay feel fine and go along for years thinking he is healthy. But actually, he is in danger of becoming blind, insane, crippled or dying of heart trouble. Jones said, “ The best thing to do is just sit tight and wait for the symptoms to m anifest.” . Then, he said, a blood test will be taken, but the results will not be known for three months. It is imperative that the person return to the doctor after that three month period to get the results of the blood test. If not yet considered epidemic, venereal disease has definitely increased. Reasons for this rise can be attributed to many sources. Jones said the birth control pill is directly responsible for counterp oint r Editor: I would like to comment on the recently begun construction of the intercollegiate athletic arena at Arizona State University. I am certain that the building w ill be architec­ turally exquisite. But. so, I feel, is the mountain which is being scraped aw ay to build this edifice. the rise in gonorrhea. He said the pill is m ost effective for the prevention of unw anted p regn an cies, but “ then the m an n ever uses a rubber anymore, and that rubber was a ctu a lly protection a ga in st syphilis. “ B ut now it’s ju st not used, and it leaves you open to V D . This is what has really added to the rise of gonorrhea,” said Jones. Venereal disease m ay not be considered an epidemic on this cam pus y e t, but m isin ­ formation, naive notions and misconceptions concerning the disease’s infection and treat­ ment can easily make it that way. Be honest with yourself and your doctor. I f you have the disease, report i t Only you the the people you come in contact with can be hurt. farewell, mountain Why, with all the fla t land around us, m ust we destroy one of the only two mountains in Tempe so that people can watch basketball a t night in a pretty building? In a clim ate such as ours, I personally don’t feel it is necessary. B ut if it is, couldn’t we build it on flat land? Roger Cox Friday, November 5 Page 5 Cambodian describes war effort B y T IM B A T EM A N Cambodian Arm y Reserve Captain K im Leang Huot said Wednesday intellectuals and u n iversity students in his country understood the feeling of Am erican students in their protests over U .S . involvement in the Cambodian war. However, Cam bodians also believed thé U .S . invasion of Cam bodia in M arch, 1970, was necessary to elim inate V iet Cong sanctuaries on Cambodian soil. Speaking through interpreter Chum T ry, Huot said, “ Cam ­ bodians sym pathize with the feeling here but they think if Am ericans could go over there. and find out the feeling in C am b o d ia, understand the feeling, Am ericans would know why the U .S . has to support Cam bodia.” Huot, who fought front line against Communist attackers during the U .S . invasion, is the president of the University of Fine A rts in Phnom Penh. The Khm er Classical Ballet per­ form ed a t G am m age W eder tion. (Cam bodia is now known as the Khm er Republic.) Under the Hang Thun Kak dictatorship, Huot said, most Cambodians were .unfriendly toward the U .S . But since M arch, 1970, when Lon Nol became prime minister, the people have becom e m ore sym p ath etic tow ard this country. M uch of the northern section of Cam bodia is now controlled by Com munists, Huot said, but he believes the strong ties to the Buddhist religion have kept Cam bodians in occupied territory from being converted to Communist doctrine. “ The Com m unists h ave: m iserab ly m istreated Cam ­ bodians,” Huot said. “ They refuse religion and kill monks— an ything a ga in st them is prosecuted. This is very heavy' for our people. The religious _ of our people is why we have been able to stand this long.” While commanding front line operations in 1970, Huot said, he w itnessed the Cam bodian peoples’ courage. “ We started from scratch. We had a very w eak supply. Courage is the only thing that helped us at first. “ The Cambodian arm y has now reached another phase,” Huot said. “ The North Viet­ namese and V iet Cong can no longer overcome our troups. They have now to sneak behind us and depend on guerrilla techniques. “ We are now aware of our problems. We do our best now. Naturally it is possible we need support m aterial to fight. We have all the know-how, courage, men and strength to fight—we need m aterial. “ This is not like the war in Vietnam ,” Huot said. “ We are not fighting each other; we were invaded. The invasion has nothing to do with the U .S . in­ volvement in Vietnam . Even if Am erica was no longer in Vietnam we still would have been invaded.” New from Warner Bros. w TH E LONESOME PICKER RIDES AGAIN JOHN STEWART Includes: DaydreamBeliever Just anOldLoveSong LittleRoad andaStonetoRoll Members of the Cambodian Khmer Classical Ballet began Intricate costuming procedures five hours before their Wednesday night performance in Gammage Auditorium. photo by Tim Bateman' P U Y WEE-TEE MINIATURE GOLF m k Your Choice of Two 18-Hole Coarses University Drive et Rural - ,Tempe Open TO A.M. Daily Phone 966-M27 Celebrate “ 3W-Days” The Lonesom e P ick e r travelled a bizarre trail from Los A n ge le s to San Fran cisco to New York to N ash­ ville to bring you his W arner Bros, first. JOHN STEWART % (W hee-W e-W on) SUNDAY A MONDAY following an A SII Football Victory FREE • Sott drink with each htnch or dinner • FREE P d ru g stores AVAILABLE AT ALL SUPERx LOCATIONS Am erica's Fastest Grow ing rprug Stored Cru tain OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK corner University & Forest Serving Chinese & Italian Food — Specials from 69c AT ALL 17 STORES • — Frid ay , ti i waiwbci S Potential pollutants make art B y C H R IST Y PEARM EM E The ecology cam paign has inspred Dan Mores and 'F e r ­ nando Navarro to develop a method of transforming glass bottles and tin cans into arty glass-blow n creations for com m ercial and home use. The Artistic G lass Works shop, 416 M ill A ve., has myriad blown-glass item s such as bar glasses, m ugs, candle holders C O L LA G E is a bi-weekly calendar of campus events, excluding athletics and ac­ tivities sponsored by the M em orial Union. Members of the University community are welcome to bring information about activities to the State Press office, ASB 302. Form s are provided. TODAY,NO V. 5 Mid-sem ester scholarship reports due. Region 2 Convention of the National Association for Humanities Education, 9 a.m .-5 p .m ., M U , Arizona and Sem inar Rooms. Open to a ll N A H E members. Students free. Also Nov. 6. Bike Club, 2:30 p .m ., meet at fountain. Ice cream ride to Farrell’s in Scottsdale. Everyone w elcom e., . A SU Library Associates reception and dinner, 7 p .m ., M U to honor University President and M rs. John Schwada. Guest speaker w ill be Edwin M cDowell of the Arizona Republic, $4. Reservations in Administration 210. “ Sadhu Aur Saitan,” 7:30 p .m ., Murdock 101. Indian m ovie with English subtitles. Sponsored by the A SU India Association. $1 for members, $1.50 for nonm em bers. ‘‘Genesis V I,” University Players, 8 p .m ., Lyceum Theatre. Also Nov. 6 and 7 ■ Southwestern Frontiers of Chem istry, 4 p .m ., P S A-203. Edward King on “ Equilibrium and Kinetic Studies of Chromium (H I) Reactions in Solution.” Argento’s “ Masque of A ngels,” 8 p .m ., M usic Theatre. Also Nov. 6. SA T U R D A Y , N O V . 6 “ Wild Strawberries,” “ Ikiru,” 6:30 p .m ., Neeb H all. SU N D A Y , N O V . 7 Hillel Picnic with U a fA , 11 a .m ., Picacho Park. M eet at Baker Center. $1 for food and gas. “ The Golem ,” 1:30 p .m ., “ G la ss,” “ Kind Hearts and Coronets,” “ Treasure of Sierra M adre,” 6:30 p .m ., Neeb H all. M ONDAY, N O V. 8 Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 2 p .m ., M U 272. Carlos Montoya, guitarist, 8:30 p .m ., Gam m age Auditorium. and light fixtures, a ll handmade by Mores and Navarro, owners of die shop. “ It’s a groovy way to recycle throw-away glass and at the same tim e perform the a rt,” Mores said. B eer and w ine bottles collected from neighborhood bars or brought in by young ecologists furnish the supply of used glass. Tin cans and pieces of scrap m etal are used for glass molds and lam p fram es. In the alley behind the shop, a large, enclosed work area is strewn with fractured glass and rusted pieces of scrap m etal. A Directories The 1971-72 U n iversity Directories are now available at the M U Information Desk and the University Bookstore. Distribution began yesterday afternoon. Directories are limited to one per student glass clings to toe end of the blow pipe. The red-hot glob is blown gently into a mold. When toe glass is set, a roughly formed m ug of swirled, thick glass is extracted. forced-air, natural gas furnace, aglow with molten glass, awaits toe rod used to collect a “ gather” of toe simmering glass. Like clear, hot taffy, toe Western fun day features roping, horses, greased pig There w ill be at least one pretty slide customer a t toe old fashioned western fun day this Saturday — toe star of toe greased pig contest The event, sponsored by toe Sun D evil R ange, and Rider Association, is scheduled for the A SU Field Laboratory at Price and EUiot'Roads in Tempe. Robin Stadm iller, a member of the group, said other events w ill include three types of roping contests, a horse show and livestock judging. Proceeds w ill go to finance future club activities. The group hopes to send members to in­ tercollegiate rodeo competition and sponsor other w estern events. The program is free to the public with the exception of a $1.50 noon barbecue. Correction United States and Arizona Co n stitu tion exam in atio n s, required fo r tea ch e r ce r­ tification, w ill be administered N ov. 13, not tomorrow as stated in yesterday’s State Press. Testing w fll begin a t 9 a.m . in S S 198. ASASU CULTURAL AFFAIRS BOARD t. (Zam ft, & @ tei¿tic *?ilm S e n itA . Absolutely Free! 6:30 Ingm ar NOVEMBER 15 - NEEB HALL - Bergm an's 8 PM - 50c 8.00 A k ira Kurosaw a's Treasure of Sierra M adre " K in d H e a rts & C o ro n e ts w it h A le c G u in e ss 6:30 Sunday Silent: 1:30 P.M. Paul Wegner's great monster movie— (1920) A L L F IL M S W IL L B E SHOWN IN T H E A R T S A N D A R C H IT E C T U R E A U D IT O R IU M ( N E E B H A L L ). S H O W T IM E IS 6:30 P.M . FO R A L L F IL M S . NO A D M ISS IO N C H A R G E — O P E N T O A L L . NOVEMBER 15 - NEEB HALL - 8 P M - 50c Page 8 — Friday, November 5 Avante Garde art appeals to a 'mixed bag' of people U n d e rg ro u n d c in e m a : B yPA U LPER EY Underground cin em a! A whole mixed bag of Arizona culture — bleary-eyed, strungout looking longhairs, thrill­ seeking crew cuts with their nervous purse-clutching wives and slick looking dudes sporting well-coiffed pompadours and wearing Fifth Avenue shop clothes — wait in line every Saturday midnight at Tempe’s Valley A rt Theater to see the underground cinem a. —-------- And why shouldn’t there be a variety of people attending the undergrounds? F o r the hip culture it’s one of. the IN things to do — something like going to a rock concert or spending the evening at The Place (formerly Parry’s). For those outside the culture, it represents a good way to be temporarily hip and get exposed to some Avante Garde art at the same time. The idea behind the un­ derground cinem a is quite sim ilar, though on a different plane, to the idea behind the form ation of the literary Saturday blur surrounds underground cinema reviews. They were formed in the early twenties to give the unrecognized writer a chance to publish his works. The un­ derground cinem a does basically the same thing: It serves as a springboard for non- **+ F O R M A N - N A C E T H E A T R E S ** Hollywood film -m akers by giv­ ing them a chance to distribute their film s on a regular circu it Where the literary reviews have su rfaced such gre a t writers as Ernest Hemingway and Gertrude Stein, the un­ derground cinema has come up w ith A ndy W arhol, Rom an Polansky and Ernie Pintoff. Though the underground cinema has been around in the United States since the middle fifties, it took until 1966 for it to reach Tempe. Since that date, with the exception of a short lag in 1968, Tempe’s underground cinema has been a summit success. “ The theater manager can NOW SHOWING B E S T P I C T U R E ly ^ Winner of 10 / Academ y Awards! 59 r c c t aw adhc AW AHUb P IC T U R E 'C T U R E “ Through The Lens, 72” The 5th Annual Cultural Affairs Boards* JURIED PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST A EXHIBITION )Unlike other -Best-of-Show classics 'West Side Sto ry' grows younger! V ................ .$100 -Second P la c e ........... ......... ................ $ 50 PANAVIblON* TECHNICOLOR Showtimes Wesfside Story 9:15 Around The World 6 P.M Doors Open 5:45 Rules & Entry* Form s in MU252 9 A.M.- Noon, IIP.M.-5 P.M. y \ NOW SHOWING ftWESTDALE 4 THEATRES ^ WOULD YOU BUY A SLAVE FROM THIS MAM? 3SlhAVE RW VAN BURIN ¡2 7 8 -3 5 3 9 T WITH THE WIND” Jam es Garner W ESTDAIE SHOPPING CENTER JASON ROBAROS DONALD SUTHERLAND U N FO R G ETTA B LE S p e c ia l fo r 1 W eek! =@ S® =C 0L0R7 Dustin Hoffm an "W ho is H arry KeHerm an ROBERT MITCHUM — GEORGE KENNEDY in “THE GOOD GUYS A MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY Munchy’s On A Bun Lou Gossett-Susan Clark Showtimes Skin Game— 4:15 & 9:55 Good Guys-* S: 15 Only Doors Opon l P.M m ake or break the un­ dergrounds,” said B ishop Cornw ell, m an ager of the Valley A rt. Cornw ell has obviously “ made” them here. H e is a slim , alm ost mushroom pale looking fellow who le ft the ca rn iva l a t­ mosphere of New Orleans in 1968 and cam e to Tempe to m anage the V alley A rt. “ When I got here the theater manager wasn’t doing anything at aU to promote the un­ dergroun ds,” said Cornw ell. “ So when I took over I started advertising on K C A C and we started getting full houses right aw ay.” They have had full houses alm ost consecutively since that date. In fa ct, the V alley A rt has been the m ost su ccessfu l theater on the underground circuit. “ The fa ct that there’s nothing else to do in Tempe at a ll, let alone after midnight, attributes to our success,” raid Cornwell. “ There’s a lot of people out on Saturday nights who aren!t ready to go to bed by m idnight.” O f course some of the people, not knowing exactly what the undergrounds a re , find them selves deeply and erotically disappointed. “ A lot of tim es people come from out of town and expect a different type of underground,” raid Cornwell. “ You know, skin flicks. They come out to the box office about half way through the show and demand their Continued on p a g e 9 A Meal S k in G a m e THE BAD GUYS” photo by Paul Perry AIRPORT BURT DEAN LANCASTER «MARTIN Ä HELEN HAYES © 5:00,7:30/9:55 T W ILIT E 4:30-5:00 A D U LT S 90c andwhyishesayingthose terriblethingsabout me?” -P L U S KIRK DOUGLAS YUL BRYNNER “THE LIGHT AT THE EDGE ® O r THE WORLD’’ J®. H arry — 5:30, 9:45 Light — 7:30 TW tL ITE 5:00-5:30 AD U LT S 90c You d o n 't h a v e to be P o lis h to enjoy ou r P o lis h S a u sa g e — on an Ita lia n R o ll. w ith F R E E F . F . & Soft D rin k MUNCHY’S 6 0 6 M IL L 9 6 8 -2 7 4 2 Open 10:30 to 10:30 M on. th ru T h u rs . T ill 1 A .M . F r i. & Sat. O f f e r G o o d T i l l N o v . 11th • U n d e rg ro u n d Continued fro m p age 8 money back. ‘I thought these were different,’ they say. 'I refuse to pay for something like this.’ ” The fa ct is, that although a considerable amount of sex does exist in the cinem a, Cornwell tries to promote as little of it as possible. Su rp risin gly enough, w hat sex that does appear in the movies doesn’t seem to offend the local authorities. What did prove offensive to them though. was one series of film s last year entitled “ Lavender Cinem a,” which catered to the gay crowd. “ Lavender Cinem a” had been going over very well at theaters in Los Angeles and San Fran­ cisco, so Cornwell decided to run it at the V alley A rt. “ But we ran it one night and the Tempe police busted us and burned the print,” Cornwell said. Often there is more to the undergrounds than m ovies. When A SU lost its gam e to Oregon State, for exam ple, the theater sponsored a kazoo cheer line during intermission. On another occasion, in a move of impromptu burlesque, a fellow got up on stage and put on a strip show. According to Cornwell, the fu tu re o f the underground cinem a is notat a ll bleak. “ Only the good film -m akers w ill sur­ vive,” he said. “ There won’t be an end to the underground cinem a, new levels and new talent w ill just keep surfacing.” Friday, November 5 — Page 9 9S9S6i9f}9SiSiSeeSSSSSSSSSA This Weekend What to do n «V N EEB HALL ASASU Cultural A ffairs Board presents Ingmar Bergman's "W ild Strawberries" and " I k ir u " tomorrow at 6:30 p.m. Su nday's m atinee is the G erm an monster movie, "T h e Golem ." The 6:30 p.m. shows are Bogart's "Treasure of S ie rra M a d r e ," " K in d H earts and Coronets," starring Alec Guineas, and the short "G la ss." There is no admission charge to any of these movies. MUSIC T H E A T R E The L y ric Opera Theatre, University Dance Theatre and University Singers have joined forces to produce "T h e Masque of Angels" by composer Dominick Argento. It opens tonight at 8 o'clock and w ill have repeat performances tomorrow and Nov. 12 and 13. LYCEUM — ^ G e n e s is V I ." a rn r k m u s ic a l the story of Noah, w ill open tonight. Presented by the ASU Players, "Genesis V I" w ill be at 8 p.m. Nov. 5-7 and 12-14 and also at 2:30 p.m. Nov. 6 and 13.. M EM O R IA L UNION • The M U Fall F ilm Series presents the all-time favorite, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance K id ," starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford. There w ill be two showings tonight, 7:30 and 9:30. Tickets are 50 cents and are available in the A c ­ tivities Center. " F lim Flam M an " w ill be shown at 7:30 p.m. in the Movie House on Wednesday. No admission charge. T R A V E LO D G E Tonight at 8:30, John Stewart in concert. Tickets are $3.50 in advance or $4 at the door. M R. B's George Carlin famed comfc, opens Wednesday night at M r. B's. He w ill be appearing in two -shows nightly through Sunday, Nov. f3. 'French Connection' H O R SE S FO R RENT PAPAGO STABLES ^ NAT RUMS „ GROUP RIMS •* RIDING USIONS * GUIOES AVAILARU •»SENTII NORMS FOR RSGINNCRS «- BOARDING HANDCRAFTS Famous ghost town A R T IS T & D R A F T I N G S U P P L IE S Cm fts - Picture Frames Clouds hover mystically over Jerome, Arizona's most famous ghost town. Jerome Is1located on Highway 89 about 100 miles from Phoenix.r Photo by Tim Bateman O p en M on. & T h u rs. N ites Decorating Material 10% D iscou nt to Students M8-9783 T e m p e C e n te r • W O 7-4482 S2S I . PIMA. TEM PI 'North of Sun Oovll Stadium A meeting of thç.minds. (and bodies). Okay, it's finally the weekend, and you don't have any definite plans. So, you, call up your friends, or your date, or your whatever, and say, ''Let's do some­ thing." And, it being the weekend, you naturally want to release, let go, forget about the mid-lerm you blew this week. So what happens? You wind up going to the same old place, complaining about the same old drag, dnd going home alone or dissatisfied. Well, why don't you come to M r. B's this weekend, instead? (all week, If you like.) Why? We think we have some pretty good reasons. One is that M r. B's is more than fust a bar where hundreds of bodies cram together and suffocate. True, it does get crowded, and our dance floor does get pretty cozy, but that's because the music at Mr. B's is so good that people can't help dancing. Which brings us to another point. Simply, that Mr. B's books the best entertainment of any club in the Valley. Not just about the best, or nearly the best, but the BEST. For instance, tonight SIXPOUNO M IL E plays and entertains all night with one of the heaviest, most exciting sounds in the West. Or, how about G E O R G E C A R LIN ? Probably the busiest, most soughtafter comedian on the college campus'today. He is also probably thefunnlest, hippest, most contemporary comedian since Lenny Bruce. And so, we come to yet another point. M r. B's is a place for a meeting of the minds. In (nore ways than one. First, we offer you top-flight entertainers and artists that w ill undoubtedly stimulate — if not dazzle — you (e.g. CAR LIN , DR. DANTE). But, we also offer you a place to meet people. And talk. That's right, you can actually converse with people at Mr. B's — loudly perhaps, but you don't have to yell and scream until your throat gets sore and you have to buy another drink (like some other local establishments we know). Speaking of drinking, we think we have another good reason for jrou to come out to Mr. B's. Every Sunday through Thursday, a large glass of cold, draft beer Is only 5 cents! Yes, A -N ICKEL-A -BEER . So, finally, we come to the point of this ad: Do yourself a favor, check out Mr. B's and meet a few minds (and a lot of bodies, too). We think you'll like it. 825 N. SCOTTSDALE ROAD SIXPOUND SMILE every nite except m onday TROY WALKER every m onday & tuesday GEORGE CARLIN com ing novem ber 10th OR. DANTE com ing novem ber 17th s»at meBö IN THE RIVER BOTTOM Page 10 — Friday, November 5 'R a inb ow B rid g e ' b uild s H en d rix le g a cy G en iu ses a re a p retty rare com m odity in th is d ay and a g e . T here ju s t a re n ’t th at m an y around a n ym o re. L a te la s t su m m er the ran k s w ere thinned con­ sid erab ly w hen Jim i H en ­ d r ix p a s s e d on to th a t French Connection A thrilling documentary Bv RICH BARROWS “ The French Connection” is athrilling and realistic, but most importantly, entertaining film . It has two m ajor flaw s, but many more assets. Flaw No. 1 is a lack of character development. A s a matter of fa ct, there is such a lack that the movie is no more than an acted-out-documentary. It documents an incident that took place in New York between a heroin sm uggling ring ($38 million worth) and the New York Narcotics Division. That is not to say that the acting is anything less than great. Gene Hackman (who has never had a bad performance) is “ Popeye” Doyle, the overzealous narc who leads the assau lt a gain st organized crime. But then all the actors are good. They just didn’t have much challenging to do since there is never any insight into how or why they tick. Flaw No. 2 is a disappointing ending. Why didn’t the cops close in sooner? Because that way there couldn’t have been a final shootout. And that way there couldn’t have been the cliched showdown in the end between the N o. 1 good guy (narc or crim inal—it’s not too clear which) and the No. 1 bad guy. These two criticism s aside, “ The French Connection” is a quite successful film and it certainly won’t be known as a dull or slow-moving one. From die time the credits begin to the end, “ The French Connection” surges forward with exciting action. P robab ly the m ost out­ standing scene in the movie is a unique chase scene reminiscent of “ B u llitt” —only b etter. There’ s no doubt th at the audience adrenalin level rises to a crescendo during the scene. There’s much more and it’s all totally realistic and en­ tertaining. A good bet for anyone who can get in (rated R for no apparent reason other than cuss words that 12-yearolds use and violence no worse than tv). Last week to catch SHEPHERD . . . p erfect pop fe s tiv a l in the sk y. H ere w as a m a n w ho n ever m ad e a b ad reco r­ d in g. (A n d h o w m a n y people can c la im th a t?) T h e re a l b rillia n ce o f H en d rix su r­ fa c e d on “ E le c t r ic L a d y la n d ,” w hich m a y w ell be one o f the b etter alb u m s ever reco rd ed b y an yone. W e a ll know th a t Jim i w as ju st d evelop in g m u sic a lly when he d ied , but a t le a st he w as ab le to le a v e so m e kind o f le g a c y . It is a film and su b se q u e n t s o u n d tr a c k ' alb um , both lab eled “ R a in ­ bow B r id g e .” T he m o vie is e ve ryth in g other m u sic-o rien ted film s sh o u ld h a v e b e e n , b u t w eren’t . M a n y film s o f th is genre h a v e little or no p lot an d e v e n le s s th e m a tic q u a litie s . H e n d r ix ’s h a s both. FÓR SALE SERVICES Lange boot 12 M $40, Reichlas boot 11Mt M 2 yr., $40, bith pair excellent condi­ tion, 964-3445. (11-10) G irl Singer with much paid experience wants gigs with working band. Plays per­ cussion, call R ita after 4:30, 255-3189. Original H istoric Newspapers, New Y o rk Times 1862. London Tim es 1862-62. New Y ork Harpers W eekly 1874-75. Much C iv il War news, etc. The Antiquary,, 502 S. College. (11-10) ( 11- 11) Sale today on beanbag chairs and pillows alterations, patches, drycleaning. V isit us at Joe's Central Cleaners. 505 S. M ill. We're squeezed between V alley A rt 8» Jean's West. (11-19) Spanish tutoring, Gina Swan, 966-3264. ( 11-8 ) Stop thinking about it and do it now! Permanent removal of unsightly facial hair. Come in and w e'll ta lk about it. Discount for students. C all 968-1851. (11-16) “ One Flight Up” F irs t d rin k only lc if you bring in stub from tom orrow nite's B Y U Gam e! • AUTOMOBILES 2 free professional makeup lessons— this opportunity doesn't happen often! Ask for E m ily 966-0655. (11-12) " T E L L U S " Hotline 968-2477. 6-12 p.m. for loneliness, runaways, suicide line, for problem pregnancy call 968-0755 24 hrs. TUESDAY. . . by th e b r illia n t con ­ d e m n a tio n o f th e J e s u s th in g. A p p a re n tly the m o vie w as stru ctu red so th a t you ca n see w h atever you d esire. T here a re so m a n y in ­ fin ite s im a l s u b tle tie s — sim ila r to those sp rin k led throughout a ll h is a lb u m s — th a t it r e a lly m ak es you w onder w h a t’s go in g on. I thou gh t the film w as fa ir ly obvious and sim p le , u ntil people b ega n te llin g m e in in cred ib le d e ta il how it su pp osedly e x p la in s th eir One week old 10-speed bicycle, must sell. 968-3035. (11-5) Tennis raquet for sale. I also have tennis gut strings, for $6 and $8 a set. 9661606. (11-5) Ampex 985 reel-to-ree! play and record with auto reverse, includes A M -F M radio. 966-5767. (11-9) Fender Showman Am p for sale, $250, w ill bargain, ca ll 966-5142 between 1:00 8. 5:00. (11-5) Rummage, Bazaar, baked goods. Tempe 1st Congregational Church, 6th & M yrtle, Saturday, November 6th, 8 a.m. - 2 p.m. (11-5) '70 Yamaha 350 like new, $575, 272-6288 days, 275-2622 after 6 p.m. (11-5) 9x12 used rugs $5.00, all sizes in stock. Carpet House, 1516 E. Van Buren, Phoe­ nix. (1-7) TYPING E lectric typing in my home. Rosemary Vance, 967-9143. (1-7) WANTED Female roommate wanted, two bedroom townhouse on Fifth St. and Hardy, $45.50 and utilities, call Tauna, 966-8405. (11-5) M ale roommate $67 8» ut. own bedroom, 4 miles from ASU, call after 19, 273-0784, prefer mature person. (11-5) Earn $75 weekly, 3 evenings 8> Sat. Call 966-6826. (until changed) T Y P IN G —Tempe, 967-3675. (1-7) Typing, term papers 967-7159. (1-7) Typing, ASU experience, fast, reasonable, accurate. 967-4517. (1-7) (4-21-72) Typing (IBM ) 945-1171. E xp ert typing, dissertations, theses, term and research papers. C all Jean Buttermore, 277-3602. (1-7) Typing, close to ASU, 966-4713. * (11-30) RENT Roommate for furnished with N of Woolco Rob, 947-8955 IBM Selectric—Choice of type, style. Ed­ iting as desired. 966-1684. (1-7) 3 bedroom townhouse fully color T V and H iF i 1 mile $100 month, no freshmen. after 10 p.m. (11-10) 1 female roommate ne'eded, rent to share a two bedroom apt. at Bali Lanai, Apt. 2, 966-5585. <11-5) C larry V illa, 1014 Farm er Ave. 2 room, unfurnished apts., heated laundry facilities, 3 blocks from $175 plus utilities, inquire at Apt. bed­ pool# ASU, 3. T Y PIN G : T E R M P A P E R S , R E SU M E S , T H ESES, DISSERTATIONS, PRO FES­ SIONAL G U A R A N T E E W O RK, IBM. M A X IN E M U L L E N —955-0763. (year) Typing IBM 253-1285 955-3206. (1-7) INSTRUCTION G irls to share 4 bdrm. house, $60/ monthly 8$ utilities. Mesa (close to ASU) No additional pets, 969-6609. (11-5) Parkway Apts. 615 S^ Hardy Dr. 2 bdrm. unf. $185. Furn. $210 3 bdrm. unf. $215, furn. $245. Immediate occupancy. 968-2600. (2-24-72) Rooms with«4citchen privileges, pets ok, couples-singles, $60 and $10 deposit, also hor$es*,bqorded# tel. 255-5416, ^ (11-12) Attend Special introductory class in self hypnosis, Nov. 17, 7:30 p.m. at 6522 N. 23rd ave. Lose weight, stop smoking, calm nerves, speed learning, etc. 2740698. (11-17) Sport parachuting instruction. Licensed iumpmasters, F A A examiner and master rigger on staff. 14 years experience. U.S. Parachute Service, Mesa, 985-3980. * (all year) TUTORING: ALSO YO G A FREN CH LESSONS. '68 Trium ph GT-6 $1300 or best offer, ' 939-2344. (11-10) F-85 station wagon, air, $550 273-0742. (11-5) *63 TR4, New top, new clutch, new disc brakes, rblt. tra n s .,«. excell, condition, $850, 947-0230 aft. 4 p.m. (11-9) VW Bus 1962 camper with built in couch/ double bed and cabinets for storage. 9696644, Sandy. (11-10) '62 VW eng., paint, upholst. custom in­ terior. Perfect cond. M ake offer. 962-4470. (11-5) Porsche 1970, 911-T, 5-speed, A M -F M BlaupunKt, excellent condition through­ out. 9684)234. (11-12) 1971 BMW 2002, A ir, radio, lowc mileage, excellent condition, see at 822 W. 5 St. Apt. D, Tempe, 967-5008. (11-6) '63 VW Bug, Body in good shape, very clean, rebuilt engine, call 9684)111 after 6 p.m. (11-5) '62 M GA-GT, one of a kind, fastback, Fiber'gs, remov'e top, new interior & tires, excellent cond., $900, 266-6639. (11-5) STOP O V E R C H A R G E FO R TOWING, help this crusade, if you have been towed, call 966-7118, "Jo e ", Mon., Tues., Thurs., Evening. (11-5) 1930 model A, good condition, original parts, $500, 275-2866. 3420 £? Palm Lane. (11-3) "N e w " '71 Mercedes 250 c, 2 dr., air, auto., full power. Flawless. Under 8,000 miles. Save $2500, Warranty transferable. $6950. »46-3719. (11-5) One-of-a-kind. '65 M alibu 327 cl 4-speed. One owner, in mint Condition. 947-7996. (11-5) New & used ca r and truck sales, see John Angel at Berge Ford, 256 E. Main, Mesa. »64-2921. (11-30) • HELP WANTED $25.00 P E R H U N D R E D addressing, m ail­ ing, possible. Work at home your hours. Sample and Instructions 25c and stamped self-addressed envelope. CH ASM AR , Dept. E M , Box 263, Elkhart, Ind. 46514 (11-5) Need 7 girls part time to become profes­ sional make-up artists 9664)571. r (1-7) SOCIAL ( 11- 12) 1 bdrm. apt., Irg. kitchen & living rm ., " new turn., air cond.. pool, near campus, $175 8$ u til„ ca ll V icki or Jayne, 968-3225. (11-5) 4321 N orth Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale H iis liv e (d ead ?) con cert segm en t clim a x e d the film a s H en d rix, M itc h M itch e ll and B illy C o x m ad e e v e ry ­ body rem em b er ju st w h at a p rodigious talen t Jim i re a lly w a s. T h e E x p e rie n ce rip th rou gh som e o f the- old fa m ilia r tu nes and also p la y som e new ones. It is the kind o f film w hich m ak es you w an t to go see it a g a in , a g a in and a g a in — and 10 y e a rs fro m now on the M o vie o f the W eek.. I f y o u a r e n ’ t fe e lin g fa n ta stic w hen you w alk in , H en d rix w ill tak e ca re o f th a t. Y o u ’ll be flo a tin g w hen you w alk out. C L A S S IF IE D A D S Dance to The M usic! C & H can book any type of band for all occasions. Call Mike, 967-4333. (11-11) STARTING By Bob Wischnia p a rticu la r th eses. T he th in gs th a t everyon e saw w ere su rfin g fo o ta ge o f D a v id N u u hiw a and others and an extended portion o f a con cert H en d rix p layed on M a u i, w here n e a rly a ll o f the m ovie w as film e d . Classfied advertising must be paid foFfin advance either in person or by mail to the State Press, ASB 302, two days in abvanco of publication. No ads will bo accoptod over the telephone. Office hours are 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 0 a.m. to noon Friday. Phono 965-34». Rate; *1 for three lines and 30c for each additional .line. 50 per cent discount for consecutive additional days. There will bo no refunds for advertisements placed with the State Press. TERM PAPERS of Southern California, Inc. Largest western distributor of quality re­ ference material. Thousands of papers listed. Hrs. 9-4 Mon.-Fri. & Sat. A.M. 1100 Glendon Ave., Suite 1445 Los Angeles, Calif. 90024 C A L L : (213) 477-5043 (11-30), re -li E v e r y person I know w ho h as seen th e show h a s a d ifferen t opinion o f it . O ne friend d islik e s it b eca u se o f w hat he th ou gh t to be a n endorsem ent o f th e Je s u s fr e a k s , w h ile a n o th e r a cq u a in ta n ce w as th rilled & SPANISH 968-2913 (11-17) English, tutoring, etc. 967-5925. (4-7) Beginners auto R ally, 7 p.m. F rl. Nov. SE corner, Thomas M a ll $1 fee, Aw ai top 10%, 997-3942. (IK LOST Rolex watch, no band, ASU -AF footba game, reward, call Bob 939-0601. (11-1! MISCELLANEOUS Anyone with Info, on Vietnam reporting for research group call Carmen at 9652679. -<11-5) Friday, November 5 — Page 11 B Y U ’s defensive secondary has 23 interceptions, compared to nine for their opponent. Cougar D ave Atkinson leads the nation w ith nine interceptions. “ The return gam e w ith Golden Richards is one of the m ost potent I ’ve ever seen,” Kush said. “ We traditionally are horrible in this area of covering punt returns.” R ichard ; leads the nation in' punt returns, averaging 21.8 yards per return. A SU ’s Steve Holden led the nation in that department last year with a 19.2-yard index. In addition to these areas, B Y U is heavier in both lines. The Co u gars average 230 pounds on offense to A SU ’s 211-' pound defensive line m ean. The D evil offensive lineup of 214 BYU Grodebook Sc K« UJ ?O — • o u - Questionable B y B A R N E Y H U TCH IN SO N The stren gth s and w eak­ nesses of the football team s of Arizona State and Brigham Young fit together like a jigsaw puzzle. And the picture that results upon completion of the puzzle tomorrow night at Sun D evil Stad iu m should reveal the Western Athletic Conference nhnnnpinn an d thft host nf the first Fiesta Bowl. K ickoff is at 7:30 p.m . The gam e w ill be broadcast state­ wide over a 10-station network vis K O O L radio (960 am , 94.5 fm ) by Bob Davies and B ill Denney. Tenth ranked A SU leads the W AC with a 4-0 record. B Y tJ is second with a 3-1 record. I f the winner of tomorrow’s gam e remains undefeated in league action through seven gam es, that winner w ill take the title and gain the D ec. 27 bowl ap­ pearance. “ They do extrem ely well in areas we have problems—like kick coverage and defensing the pass,” said A SU coach Frank Kush. The D evils’ em erging passing gam e under the direction of sophomore Dan White w ill be up against the best ball-hawking tram in the league. White has been completing passes at a .630 percentage the last two gam es, good fm* nine touchdowns. I, 1 ASU-BYU game may reveal Fiesta host X Quarterback (pass) Quarterback (run) X Running Backs X Receivers X Offensive Line X X Defensive Line X X Linebackers Defensive Secondary X Punting Game X Field Goal X FA C TFO LIO Location: Provo, Utah (52,000). Enrollment: 25,000. Stadium: B Y U Stadium (30,000). Nickname: Cougars. Colors: Blue and White. Lettermen lost: 23. Lettermen returning: 23. *»Transfers: seven. Red shirts: nine. 1970 record: 3-8, (1-6-in WAC fo r tie for seventh). Series with ASU: ASU leads 12-3. Last Brigham Young victory: 1965, 24-6. Last ASU victory: 1970, 27-3. COACH Head coach: Tommy Hudspeth (Tulsa '53), Overall record: seven season, 34-36-1, .478. Record against ASU: 1-5. TH E LEAD ER S Gordon Granvelie, ot; Joe Liljenquist, de-k; Jeff Lyman* lb; Golden Richards, se; Pete Van Valkenburg, tb; Dave Coon, fb; Dan Hansen, s. pounds w ill be going against an average 227-pound Y defense. “ We know that we w ill have to generate a Tnore e ffe ctiv e passing attack, if we are to beat Arizona State,” said B Y U coach Tom m y H udspeth. “ Con­ sequently, we are going to devote a lot more time to our passers and receivers.” The Cougars, picked for the cellar in the W AC pre-season polls, have used two quar­ terbacks this season to gain a surprise 5-3 overall record. Transfer B ill August has a .400 pass completion percentage and sophom ore D a ve T erry is slightly better a t .430. The m ain part of the B Y U offense, aside from Richards’ punt returns and the secon­ dary’s interceptions, has been their veer option running gam e. Pete Van Valkenburg (4.9yard average), Steve Stratum (4.9) and Dave Coon (3.3) lead the running corps that has outgained opponents by 200 yards this season. W AC s ta n d in g s pet 1.000 Arizona State Brigham Young New Mexico Wyoming Arizona * Utah Texas E l Paso Colorado State .750 .667 .600 .500 .400 .200 .000 WAC tp opp 167 105 76 84 59 114 28 36 56 45 88 72 47 110 69 155 Last Weak's Results W-l-t 6- 1-0 5-3-0 3432-5-0 40-7-0 Overall pet .857 .625 .5712-2 .5004-0 .4294-0 .286 ,.5004-0 .000 tp 247. 185 165 158 120 155 101 65 This week's Games Arizona State 44, A ir Force 28 New Mexico 34, Arizona 28 Brigham Young 16, Texas E l Paso 0 Wyoming 29, Utah 16 Utah State 18, Colorado State 1u Brigham Young at Arizona State Utah at New Mexico Oregon State at Arizona Colorado State at Wichita State Wyoming at Utah State OPP 125 117 198 179 126 180 Golden Richards . . . the golden streak for BYU leads the nation in punt returns averaging more than 20 yards per recep­ tion. He has scored three touchdowns. state. ipress 88 200 sports Abbey is still looking for the Difference in You. . . |Ä f 1 d\fcw . (yfw n m m m nm aÉÉÉbJ To give the Little Orange Bug to­ PORSCHE IAUDI lt ili you be the one to have it next week? She will also be seeking out VW owners to present them with a F R E E G IF T certificate for chassis lube and engine diagnostic check. k ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ THERE IS « DIFFERENCE! F A C T O R Y AU TH ORIZED D e m á s V o lk s w a g e n Our Used Car* Carry 100 Percent GUARANTY è 3230 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale • it a ., a Em c h im i m u u e, ------------------ —--------------- - m oon s u m -------- ----- - 947-4211 YOU MUST BE 21 WITH A VALID DRIVER'S LICENSE ' ® Page 12 — Friday, November 5 I Non-residents dominate W A C s t a t is t ic s Passing Offensa 231 Ì16 94 192 84 192 53 119 120 _ 56 42 83 34 75 32 75 52 19 7 8 6 7 7 7 8 6 Rushing Offense G 6 6 7 7 7 1. Woodrowfcreen, ASU 2. Fred Henry, UN M 3. Rich Diller, UN M 4. L. McCutcheon, CSU 1 Rocky Long, UN M 6. Frosty Franklin, Wyo. 7. Gene Belczyk, Utah 8. Steve Stratton, BYU 9. Nate M cCall, UNM in p Van X/alkenharg. B Y U 8 7 6 7 8 Scoring G .Pts 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 7 46 S. Hoden, ASU 7 . 43 D. Ekstrand, ASU 48 P. Van Valkenberg, BYU8 36 . 6 Fred Henry, UNM 6 30 Woodrow Green, ASU 7 32 Rocky Long, UNM 7 30 Nate M cCall, UNM 7 30 Gene Belczyk, Utah 7 30 Joe Petty, ASU Punting 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. M arv Bateman, Utah G. Keithley, U T E P J. Liljenquist, BYU M. Shuford, UofA Ted H ill, CSU Dan White, ASU ' D. Holtaday, Wyo. Bruce Boone, UNM No. 43 60 49 54 51 27 49 42 Avg 6.6 6.1 6.0 6.0 5.0 4.6 4.3 4.3 4.3 Avg 50.0 41.7 39.8 38.21 38.0 36.9 35.7 33.0 Com Att G 8 1. G ary Fox, Wyoming 2. Gordon Longmire, Utah 3. Gary Keithley, U T E P 4. Scott Simmons, CSU 5. B ill Demory, UofA 6. Dan White, ASU 7. Rocky Long, UN M 8. B ill August, BYU 9. Jim Erickson, CSU Att 118 114 117 148 100 139 90 57 90 99 Yds 710 585 583 549 539 549 472 383 436 497 TO Pet 11 5 .502 .490 .535 .445 .467 .506 .453 .427 .365 4 1 4 9 1 1 0 9 -avg TO 118.3 97.5 83.3 78.4 77.0 68.6 67.4 63.8 62.3 62.1 3 5 2 3 5 2 5 2 5 8 Pass Receiving No G 1. Fred Graves, Utah 7 2. Ken Hustad, Wyo.8 3. C. McKee, Ariz. 7 4. S. Freeman, Wyo.8 5. Joe Petty* ASU 7 8 6. J.G adin, Wyo. 7. G. Stemrick, CSU 7 8. C. Demery, ASU 7 9. G. Belczyk, Utah 10. M. Anderson, UTEP 8 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Yds 28 31 27 30 26 24 21 21 21 281 329 471 597 451 455 295 232 183 22 300 Punt Returns ’ No Yds G. Richards, B Y U J. Wallace, UofA S. Holden, ASÜ W. Green, ASU A. Kim ball, U T E P 20 25 14 9 26 Avg 208.5 143.3 125.5 110.7 99.7 89.9 59.1 42.3 37.5 P-nvg 6.0 5.1 5.0 3.7 5.4 3.9 5.2 6.7 4.8 5.0 Avg 2.8 436 437 146 62 160 Team wins tournament Arizona State “ A ” volleyball team defeated both New Mexico and Arizona winning the in­ vitatio n al round-robin tour­ nament that took place over the weekend in conjunction with the state tournament. Score of the A SU -U N M matcher were 15-3, 10-15, 14-12. Scores of the ASU-UofA m atch were 14-16, 15-8, 15-9. E a ste rn A rizona College defeated the U ofA to win the “ B ” division state cham ­ pionship and Glendale Com­ munity College topped Eastern Arizona College in the finals of the “ C ” division. A S U ’ s “ B ” team fe ll to Eastern Arizona in the sem is. The Sun Devilette “ A ” team w ill tra vel to U C L A this weekend for an invitational tournament. They will head to New M exico next weekend, Nov. 12-13, for the southern region Intermountain playoffs to determine which teams may compete in the Intermountain finals held a t Southern Colorado State College at Pueblo, Colo., Nov. 19-20. spring O u t-o f-s ta te n ew co m e rs dominate the athletic squads for the spring sports rosters at Arizona State, according to lists made available by m anagers and coaches. A m ajority of the top A SU re cru its a rriv in g fo r com ­ petition in 1972 come from California. But the lists show rosters freshmen, six of whom are pitchers. Infielder Dick Harris is a form er All-Stater in both football and baseball from M esa W estwood H ig h . Jim U m barger, a 6-6 left-hander, was the 33rd person selected in last Jun e’s m ajor league baseball free agent draft. Frank W hitney, from Indiana Cochran Oklahoma and Indiana. are righthanders that w ill join The following sport sketch in-state Prospects Paul Moskau, w ill conclude the winter sports Jim Donker and Tony newcomer listings: Komadina. Sw im m ing—Thb up and ' Tennis — B arry Young, 16th com ing young swimming team * ranked nationally in the 18-andlead by Coach W alt Schlueter under age group last year, will has a couple of fine all-around be the top freshman for coach frosh swimmers to fill in some B ill Lenoir. of the gaps. Je ff L a tz, from G o lf — An impressive list of Rochester, M inn., probably will new golfers w ill be competing swim sprints this year and Jim for the top spots on coach B ill New hall, from Scottsdale H igh, Mann’s squad. Wade Borg, could help in the distance state high school champ from freestyles, the 200IM and the Scottsdale Arcadia H igh, heads breastroke. the lis t The following four spring sports sketches w ill detail the new individuals attending A S U : Baseball — Two-time junior college All-Am erican pitcher Jim Otten transfers from J C power M esa Com m unity College to play for coach Bobby Winkles at A SU . Otten compiled a 28-4'overall mark in two years at M esa, with a 0.97 earned ru n , average, and struck out 295. Winkles also recruited seven Fresh Vegetables O thers in clude C h a rles B igso n , one-tim e C a lifo rn ia juniors cham p ; M ik e M c­ Daniels, form er Oklahoma high school cham p; Jim Long, a m em ber of the- Southern California Juniors team ; and Ted M eier, a J C transfer from M iam l-Dade College in Florida, who led the 1971 National PubLinks at the halfw ay m ark. Track — Several new per­ formers should pump some new Mood into this year’s track squad. Compton, C a lif., fresh­ man Ram Perkins has bests of 9.7 in the 100 and 21.4 in the 220 in addition to a long jum p best of 24-3. Hurdler C liff Sm ith from Staten Island, N .Y ., has bests of 14.5 in the highs and 53.6 in the in term ed iates. C a lifo rn ia n s M ike T yrell (1:52.5 in the 880) and Larry Lawson (4:12 in the m ile) are other top freshmen. fair and cleancut. One was tall, dark and freaky. Both were sensational. No w. . . a plan to provide you and your fam ily with natural vegetables, grown W ITH O U T the use of poisionous weed and Insect sprays. Vegetables for your whole fam ily .'or only S’ .OO per week. Locally grown. M U 238 Harvest Bounty Produce Plan Phone 982-2824 HERTZ RENT A CAR STUDENT SPECIAL FOR A U A .S .U . STU DENTS 18 O R O LD ER THE RATES -W EEK EN D DAYS “ 24 Hr*.' $4.50 a day plus 12c a mil* -ENTIRE W EEKEND -1 FULL W EEK “7 DAYS" $52.29 plus 12c a mile 1971 -F O R D LTD -C O U G A R -C U T LA S S CHEVROLET IM PALA -1 FU LL W EEK "7 DAYS" $109.00 with unlimited Free Mileage For Reservations Office Located at University Shell Station Univ. at Rural Rd. Doak W alker ripped apart college gridirons the late 1940s. Lew Alcindor i i e sam e kind of m enace on the ; courts in the late 1960s. "The D oakeran d"B igj Lew." Both appointed > ■ this month, to Sport's A lt Immortality team of the Ids1 years. Just part of the great moments and the great memories that began before you were born. A ll featured in our November Silver'Anniversary issue. Plus Eugene M cCarthy recalling his days in bush league baseball. Sport M agazine for November. It's starting a small sensation at your newsstand, right 'now. and Information Call 947-9342 944-0155 STEVE BLAGEN Campus Representative Celebrating 25 momentous years of bringing you, and your father, into the action. Senate Norm Keyt produces' ASASU officers Norm Keyt and Jim Martin are optimistic about the possible materialization of programs such as the credit union and married student housing because of better student government. S e co n d of a se rie s tuesday Arizona State University Voi. 54 No. 29 November 9, 1971 S$SirW&SiftWSSSK' B y B IL L N O R M A N Staff W riter Arizona State University’s student government compares very favorably with sim ilar bodies throughout Arizona and is slowly but definitely im proving its program s for the benefit of students. Sucl) was the opinion o f A SA SU President Norm Keyt and First Vice President Jim M artin in an interview last Thursday. “ We’ve tried to make a point of watching the other universities,” Keyt said. “ We’ve learned a lot from them and I tend to think we are getting as much done as they a re .” He said the reason for the slowness in instituting student government programs stem s from the nature o f the University’s bureaucracy. He said adm inistrators who question the continuity and sound management of student officials’ ideas are only partially receptive to them. Martin agreed that progress was slow but said the situation is no different than that in other areas. “ If you’ve got a good idea, it ’s up to you to sell it. You can’t just go up and sa y, here’s the idea, gang — like it .” state press T e m o e . A rizon a Klahrattacks City ; says issues 'pushed under rug' W a r n s P h o e n ix m a y b e c o m e ‘a n o t h e r C h ic a g o o r N e w Y o r k ' G ary Peter K lahr, independent candidate tor the Phoenix G ty Council, likened his possible election to that of putting Ralph Nader on the General Motors board of directors. hi a sparsely attended, short notice speech given in the M U Cochise Room , Klahr accused the current C ity Council o f “ consistently pushing the issues under the ru g ." “ There are problems that people don’t yet see that are capable of turning this city into another Chicago or New Y ork.” The problems he specifically referred to were those of mass transit, proper park facilities and redevelopment o f the inner d ty . “ Years ago, before the Phoenix Transit Company went bankrupt, i suggested the use of mini-buses and they (the council members) looked at me like I was nuts,” Klahr said. “ Now , six weeks ago, the City Council voted in the use of mini-buses and is taking crédit for the idea.” ‘Poor allocation of funds' * G ary Peter K lah r Klahr condemned the city parks department for what he termed “ poefahocation of funds,” because they spend more of their budgA on golf courses than on “ youth-oriented projects.” “ But that is understandable,” he said. “ Since the main body of voters lie with the golf crow d.” Klahr said when the City Council talks about d ty redevelopment, it is referring to the area o f North Central and not South Phoenix. “ They (the City Council) a ll own land in that area,” Klahr said. “ And they want to make sure that the property value stays high .” Klahr claim s the Charter Government people are afraid of him . ' “ As an independent on the City Council I could expose a lot that they had successfully hid,” Klahr said . “ That’s why they would like to keep m e from winning. The City Cou nd i dection is today. Klahr is opposed by a Charter Government slate. Regarding the student of­ ficials them selves, M artin said he felt none are more dedicated in their jobs than they. “ I have the feeling that what I ’m trying to instill among the senators this year is that they are important and what they do here is im portant,” he said. “ I think we’re accomplishing a lot, I really do.” Executive harmony The two officers said working relations among the top four A SA SU executive officers are much better than they were in the past. They said this is due m ainly to a willingness to discuss problems in the light of personal in volvem en t and determine what decisions might have an effect on the student body. When several officials are spending p ublic m oney, disagreements are inevitable, Keyt said. The degree and frequency of such disagreements this year speaks well for the executive officers’ coordination, he added. He agreed th at stiident response to A SA SU government is not overly enthusiastic, but said this was not unusual. “ I think people are not in­ terested in A SA SU , just as people are not interested in what the city of Tempe is doing. You become interested when you have something at stake,” he said. Students watch Attem pts to acquaint students with the workings of their government include a monthly Forum Session where students can take shots at us if they want, K eyt said. Fifty students attended the first session, but none were present at die second. Keyt reasoned this was due to a lack of publicity. The weekly Student Senate meetings are the one area where student in terest has picked up, M artin said. “ At senate meetings lately we’ve been drawing galleries of 25 to 50 people, when before they didn’t have any use for them .” K eyt said even if A SA SU government m akes thousands of dollars in loans available through a credit union, people m ay still not know who has made it available. “ They m ay not be interested. They’re just interested in the loan and that’s the way it is ,” he said. Credit Union The idea of a credit union on cam pus, recently vetoed by University President John Schw ada, still m ight m aterialize if an off-cam pus office is utilized, Keyt said. More than $1,000 has been deposited, even though the credit union has not actually been formed and success o f the project is likely, he said. Page 2 — Tuesday, November 9 COLORFUL Body Art. New designs for the skin. Marvelous in detail, fantastic in color. Skin transfers like you see on Carnaby Street, or on the beach at St. Tropez. Easy-on, to wear for an evening or last a week. Easy-off, change with your mood or costume. Takes seconds to apply, removes easily-Skin-Sees are shower-proof, colors non-toxic. Beautiful F. D. A. approved colors. Wear anyplace, anytime. Express yourself in small accents or bold splashes. Skin-Sees become a silky part of you in living color, like exciting temporary tattoos. Each package contains 5 to more than 12 individual decals in beautiful color. Order by number. The package shown above is about % actual size. Set 104 Set 105 Set 109 0 '• ? ® t ta q « M Go. Set 107 O « ¡1 i .... Set 106 « : r Set 103 ALL SETS AND DESIGNS SHOWN ABOVE ARE APPROXIMATELY ONE HALF ACTUAL SIZE. SEND TO: JOCAR INC. P.O. BOX 224. NEW CANAAN «CONN. 06840. S e le c t t h e s e t s y o u lik e b e s t a n d m a il c o u p o n w it h c h e c k o r m o n e y o r d e r ( n o c a s h , p le a s e ) . ¡Please send the following sets Ì Check one Set No. Quantity 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 ? cS O rd e r to d a y a n d h a v e y o u r s b e f o r e t h e y h it th e s to re s . F o r e a s y d e liv e r y c h e c k y o u r, Name Address City State Zip E n c lo s e $ 3 00 p e r s e t p lu s 2 5 0 h a n d lin g c h a r g e f o r e a c h s e t. Please allow one to fo u r weeks fo r delivery. Ï f r ie n d s a n d o r d e r to g e th e r. Pag« 3 M archers from three V a lle y locations gathered at the Phoenix Municipal Building Saturday to demonstrate to end the war in Vietnam. Police estimated 750-1,000 persons attended the protest. Among organizations represented were the Young Socialist Alliance, Yippies, Krishnas, Vietnam Veterans against the War, the National Coalition of POW-MIA Against the War, abortion law repeal groups and a Chicano power group. Listed as featured speaker in pre-rally publicity, Mrs. George Jackson, mother of the slain "Sgledad brother," was unable to attend for health reasons, said Hank Benoit of the Angela Davis Defense Committee. Photo by Craig Demmon Viking emblem BOTANIST CITES PROS, CONS promotes pitch for fund drive B a rry Shepard’ s viking brainchild competing with die current im pish Sun D e v il emblem for public benevolence keeps cropping up on the sly. Students peering down the M all today will see several of the bearded novelty again, only sporting an ironic, embarrassed flush. Blue K ey Vice President Phil Morton said the appearance of the upstart emblem is not a subtle advertisem ent for Shepard, who is a Blue Key m em ber, but rather a promotion pitch for a special student United Fund D rive. Morton said the viking em­ blem symbolizes the financial goal Blue Key and Mortar Board hope to attain in con­ tributions. The m ore em­ barrassed the viking becomes, the closer the goal. A mammoth thermometer hanging from the M U was the traditional scale. The viking display, which will have four weekly sequences, is only one facet of the special student drive and is separate from the payroll drive, Morton said. It w ill'ru n , continuously through Nov. 19. This week and next, Morton said, committee members will m an the M a ll and dorm s so licitin g contributions they hope w ill reach $7,500. The two organizations will be competing with each other, theorizing that competition will inflate proceeds. ST A T E P R E S S is published by ArizoniP State University as the campus newspaper every Tuesday through F rid ay during the school y e a r, except h o lid a y s ' and examination periods, and is entered as esecond class matter at Tempe, Arizona, 85281. DDT needed despite dangers B y TOM LAW SON Though it is endangering some species of anim als, D D T still has no safe and effective replacem en t fo r erad icatin g crop-killing organisms and a complete ban on its use would not solve any problems, a c­ cording to an a sso ciate professor of botany. It has never been proven con­ clusively that D D T is harm ful to human beings, D r. Duncan Patten said. A U ofA professor has been feeding sm all amounts of pure D D T to men to prove it is harm less, but he won’t feed it to women, Patten noted. " It has been proven that DDT affects the reproductive process of some anim als,” he sidd. He cited as an example the brown pelican, which lays “ extrem ely soft eggs as a result of D D T intake.” But D D T has been the only solution in some cases, he said. “ D D T has been a savior of mankind in areas of m alaria-in­ fected insects. I don’t think any other product would have done as good a job ,” he said. Patten added that during World W ar n soldiers in some foreign countries were sprayed directly with D D T to prevent disease. B ut D D T is not needed in many areas and its use in those p la ces should be severely restricted because it affects the land and some form s of w ildlife, he said. The brown pelican is among, many species threatened with extinction as a result of ex­ posure to D D T. P a tte n said D D T a ffe cts anim als such as the pelican through a long cycle that begins when the land is sprayed to kill insects. Rain w adies the DDT into stream s, which carry it to the ocean. M icro-organism s in the ocean absorb the D D T . L a rge r organism s eat these m icro­ organisms. breakdown of D D T. I f we stopped using it right now there would still be a buildup in some organisms. “ W hat we are using now is parathion,” he said. “ This is much more potent, but short­ lived.” “ We’ve got to come up with some system to allow us to raise crops,” he said. “ The best solution would be some other organism to kill the crop-killing organism s.” Parathion is very dangerous and has killed humans before, but is widely used, Patten said. Something is needed to kill crop-destroying insects, Patten said, and insecticides are the only solution right now. E a ch step concentrates the D D T a little more. When it gets to the pelican, which eats DDTcontaminated fish from the ocean, it is strong enough to affect the bird’s reproductive system . Patten said the m ain problem with D D T is it does not break down. “ It w ill probably be hundreds of years before we w ill see a Marcle Rubalcaba A SU ...only $1 COEDS Students and Faculty!! PREFER . . . CALL IMMEDIATELY: . Lim ited se a ts a v a ila b le on photoyraphy .Cliff's Notes are designed to help you be calm, cool and capable in the toughest literature courses. They're written by experts to give you the outside-of-class help you need to understand (and enjoy) your reading assignments. Look them over. Your dealer has nearly 200 titles available covering the most frequently assigned plavs and novels. G R O U P fligh ts to C h ic a g o a n d N e w York— C h ris tm a s V acation A R T IS T & D R A F T I N G S U P P L IE S Crafts - Picture Frames Decorating Material O pen M on. & T h u re . Nites 10% Discount to Students T e m p e C e n ter • W O 7-4482 MUNDUS TRAVEL Camel Square Phoenix y 959-5250 ____________________________ h ERIC 10 2 0 M ILL A V E N U E 9Ó6-8491 Leak tec the Clift's Notes "first â il" Statica wherever keeks are seM Page 4 — Tuesday, November 9 the p o in t state press opinions The public security is preserved again Code n am e: C an n ik in . L o ca tio n : A m ch itk a Isla n d , A la sk a . T est re su lts: a 'cra ck e d road w ay and a w orkable n u clea r w arh ead fo r Sp a rta n m issiles. A n a lysis: it w as an exp erim en t n ecessa ry to “ p reserve the p e a ce ” and “ protect n ation al s e c u r ity .” Code n a m e: P ro je c t X . L o ca tio n : Iow a p la in s. T est re su lts: an ab an ­ doned farm h o u se, tra cto r, w ater tow er and seven go ats o b literated by a new sound vib ratio n w eapon, the H arm o n izer. A n a ly sis : “ T h is invention is a gre a t, new in strum ent o f p e a c e ,” and “ an in va lu a b le in strum en t o f p ub lic se cu rity .” A m erica n new s services reported the fir s t in cid en t, N o v . 6, 1971. A yn R an d w rote o f the la tte r in “ A tla s S h ru g g e d ,” 1957. E v e n ts le a d in g up to the P r o je c t X exp erim en t in the novel m igh t be va gu ely related to recen t developm ents in our tim e. T he railro ad s w ere go in g out o f b u sin ess; in d u stria lists w ere bein g a t­ tacked fo r ign o rin g the p ub lic w e lfa re ; the govern m en t en acted D ire ctiv e 10289 — freezin g w a ges, p rice s, re n ts, p ro fits and new produ cts — then ap ­ pointed a U n ifica tio n B oard to ca rry out the d ire ctiv e ; and the S ta te Scie n ce In stitute announced the u n veilin g o f Top C o n fid en tial P ro je c t X . 1 And Zeke and / sped | | into the Okina} T he topic o f ra cism w as th rust upon m e a num ber o f y e a rs ago a s I sa t before a vin ta g e sake in O k in aw a’s B lu e M oon B a r w ith m y fr ie n d Z e k e , a n u n a d u lte r a te d F la g s ta ff H op i. W e had been good frien d s sin ce w e m et m onths before ab o ard ship w hen, a risin g fro m the odious ta sk o f lo sin g m y lu n ch , I encountered h is h eavin g torso a t the a d ja ce n t bow l. “ G rib b fle rs ,” h e s a id , an d from that m om ent fo rth w e w ere bud­ dies. Sa tu rd a y ’s test, w itnessed b y n early 250 persons on the islan d and h eard by the rest o f the nation via ra d io , did not reap the sh o ck in g, a go n izin g a ffe c ts o f P ro je ct X . D id n ’t , th at is , unless you con sider a s u psettin g the creatio n o f a 200-foot w ide ca vern fu ll o f m olten stone and m in erals so hot th at rock fragm en ts fu sed to g la s s , a 5.8 R ich te r earthq uak e and som e isla n d c liffs sheering o ff into the se a . A ll fo r p ea ce . The n ovelist could be considered a p roph et, a shrew d a n a y lst or a so cieta l n uisance. B u t it is tim e to stop con siderin g the source and b egin to heed the w arn in g. It’ s u nderstan dable th at M iss R a n d ’s m e ssa ge o f 14 y e a rs ago rem ain ed shelved during the A m ch itk a uproar. T he m o st listen ed -to group in fo rce today is not the philosophers w ho point out the m ad ness o f cre a tin g w eapons for p ea ce , but the co n servatio n ists, concerned w ith w a te r, a ir , se a ls and birds. Y e t th is eco lo gica l a tta ck cou ld n ’t stop Can n ik in eith er. P e rh a p s the observation o f Co n gressm an C r a ig H osm er on the Su prem e C o u rt d ecision to go ahead is tr u e : “ T he m a jo rity still ru le s in A m e r ic a .” I f so , the m a jo rity in A m e rica is in sa n e. E v e n though w e’ve been assu red by A E C o ffic ia l M a j. G e n . E d w a rd G ille r th a t “ a repeat o f th is te st w on’t be n e ce ssa ry ,” there w ill be m ore te sts, only d escrib ed in d ifferen t term s w ith d ifferen t code n a m es. P u b lic con fiden ce in su ch tests is in stilled b y fe a r o f an u nseen, a llpow erful en em y. A n enem y w ho w ill a tta ck w ithout w a rn in g, show no m e rcy and ru th lessly control our liv e s. It ’s a lso an en em y who w ill be co rd ia lly re ce iv in g , in tw o o f it ’s c a p ita ls , the head o f our Sta te to talk o f w orld p ea ce . P erh ap s th ey should m eet in stead on A m ch itk a Isla n d , brow se a cop y o f “ A tla s Sh ru gge d ” and p rep are th em selves fo r the re a l o u trage o f in d ividu al m inds sick to death o f double-speak. T h is d a y , th ou gh , w a s p a y d a y in town and w e jo yo u sly d ivided our attentions am on g d iscussion o f the c o m m a n d in g o ffic e r ’ s d u b io u s lin e a ge, the in cred ib le a n a to m ica l ca p a b ilities o f a n earb y m aiden and booze. W e w ere ju s t a t the point o f flip ­ p in g fo r a round, w hen entered the room the la r g e st sp ecim en o f raw physique I h ad ever beheld. H e approached in the m an ner o f a tree and took the se a t to m y le ft. “ H E Y H E Y H E Y , h o w ’s it g o in g ? ” he ask ed o f Zeke to m y rig h t, in a tone rem in iscen t o f d ivin g k am ik azes. A nd from the v erb a l b arrage he threw p a st m y n o strils I gath ered he w as a B la ck fo o t, quite proud o f h is h e rita ge and trem en ­ dously p lea sed to fin d one o f h is ow n in Zek e. I saw it w a s tim e to introduce m y se lf, so : “ H ow do you d o, s ir . M y n am e . . But “ G O D D A M L O N G K N IF E N FO R K ED T O N G U ESQ U A W S T E A L E N P A L E F A C E !” w as ap p ro xim ately the in terru ption th a t sent m e b ack to m y sak e w ith the a ir d riven fro m m y a lv e o li. A p p aren tly I had b ad b re a th , h ad m urdered h is fa m ily an d d a ily p r a c tic e d u n s p e a k a b le r e la tio n s w ith ce rta in in a n im a te o b je cts. A nd as the n igh t w ore on, it grew m u ch w o r s e . P a r t ly fr o m th e b e h e m o th ’ s s u g g e s tio n s , w h ich ran ged fro m p ulp in g m y h ead to r o ta tin g m y p e lv is , b u t m o st b ecau se m y buddy Z ek e seem ed on the b ad g u y ’s sid e. It w ould h a v e been su icid e fo r either o f us to con fro n t th e b e a st, o f co u rse, b ut I w as even p lastered p ast the point o f a sen sib ly m eek d ep artu re, and Zeke w as nodding a t the g r is ly p la n s fo r m y d em ise. H e even a cce p ted the m o n ster’s g ift. “ H ere’s m y w a tc h ,” it sa id . “ To show m y tru st I le t you- keep it till tom orrow . Y o u b rin g it b ack sam e p la ce sa m e tim e .” How ch u m m y , I th ou gh t. T h e y ’re not o n ly g o in g to m u rd er m e , th e y ’ll exch an ge k n ick k n ack s o ver m y corpse. • B u t m y g la n ce w as ca u g h t b y fra n tic g e stu rin g . It w as m y fo rm er friend Z e k e , stan d in g a t the e x it lik e som e d eran ged sem ap h ore, w hile the ogre abu sed th e m e n ’s room . I sauntered tow ard the door in circle s to slu r ab u se on m y treach erou s co m rad e, but he shut m e u p, poured m e into a w a itin g ca b and w e sped o ff in to th e n igh t. W e hocked the w a tch , found a cozier nook and a t daw n w ere slobbering upon one an other lik e b ab ies. co unterp oint Recognize Stovall Editor: After reading your preseason evaluation of this year’s basketball team (S P , O ct. 29), I feel forced to make a few comments. We have among us this year a bonafide A llAmerican candidate. I am speaking of Paul Stovall. Anyone who has seen “ Atom ic Paul” play knows that this man is a great athlete. On the basketball court he is a combination of Elgin Baylor and Connie Hawkins, with a little of Muhammed A li when needed. Besides all this, Paul is an unselfish player who consistently passes up open shots. In fa c t, if Paul had any faults last season, it was that he didn’t shoot enough, taking only six and seven shots in some gam es. This year’s team w ill suffer if he doesn’t take 20 a gam e. Paul Stovall not only is the greatest haaimthaii. player this school has seen, he is probably the greatest athlete ever to come here. H e is 6-5, 225 lb s., hands like giant clam ps, can jum p like a kangaroo and run like a deer. He w ill certainly be drafted by both pro basketball and football team s. It seems a shame that he won’t be around to fill the empty seats that w ill greet Arizona State’s team when the new arena is built. It is likewise unfortunate that due to nonexistant local publicity, when Paul Stovall becomes a pro superstar people are going to ask where he went to college. Garth Casper Disgusting offenders Editor: Boiling them in oil isn’t harsh enough. Fiery splinters under their fingernails would be a waste of tim e. Hanging by the heels is trite and toe Chinese water torture takes too long. A sw ift kick to their teeth would probably do toe job. Unfortunately there are law s against such violent acts; unfortunately, too, there are no laws against the slobbering idiots who rip articles from toe library’s bound m agazine volumes. Too bad the library staff can’t guard against those demented, drooling termites who have no consideration for students who m ay also need toe information. Often students are forced to go to other libraries in surrounding communities. This is a drag. The perverts who com mit such inconsiderate acts should be incarcerated along with toe rapists and child molesters currently plaguing society. Either that, or their activity cards should be revoked. O f course seeing a scarlet “ I ” (for “ Idiot” ) tattooed on their foreheads woule be a helluva lot more satisfying to the victim s. Why toe idiots can’t^pare a couple of nickels to copy toe m aterial is beyond m e. There are copy machines on every floor of toe Library, change machines, too. A cashier on the m ain floor eagerly awaits those with nothing sm aller than a Franklin. Little can be done to halt these perverted pilferers, but I suggest one step would be in order. The library staff should place sm all sign« in every m agazine volume. The signs should read: “ Children and other pathetic m entalities mauling this volume must use blunt-edged scissors only? Artemus LaCrosse if Tuesday, November 9 — Paga s Khmer skill impressive . B y M A R IO N JO N E S Faculty Associate, Dance and upper bodies moving in a continuous, sustained manner. Skill masked difficulties of performance last week as the C la s s ic a l K hm er B a lle t of Cam bodia tranquilly presented three long dances and a dance drama. Differences in style and aim between Western and Eastern dance forms were im pressive. — An~ dance con cert is u su ally characterized by excitement, mounting tension, a display‘ of vigorous free m ovem ents, sharp contrasts and variety , both in the type of* movement used and in the choreographic patterns. In the Cambodian Ballet, how ever, there w as little contrast in the dynam ics of the, p erform an ce. In jew eled costum es and elaborate headdresses, the dancers glided over the sta ge chan ging sm oothly from one group pattern to another, their arm s There was little elevation. When the dram atic content demanded excitement, a sm all, controlled leap or a stamp of the foot punctuated the flow of the dance. The Cambodian dancers also used gestures in a charac­ teristic Eastern w ay. Gestures dance express human behavior and emotions such as shaking hands in greeting, waving goodby and bowing. In addition, they are not performed in an exact way but vary from dance to dance. In Asian dance, however, gestures are far more com­ plicated, describing not only human emotions and actions but o b jects and their movements, abstract ideas, and states of mind. In m any cases, the manner in which the gesture is performed is rigidly prescribed and is not easily, changed or modified. Thus, in Asian dance, the gestures form a complicated sign language understood by the audiences of the place where the dance originated, but often without sufficient pictorial cues for detailed understanding by others. choreography of the Khmer B a lle t con sists of sm all m o ve m en ts p a in s ta k in g ly executed and repeated. The training of the Khmer dancer starts early. It is based on a degree of distortion of the physique and m ust be ac­ complished while the skeleton is still pliable. W rists, elbows and fingers are gen tly but persistently trained to bend back far beyond normal lim its The resulting curves of the arm s, hands and body give the Cambodian dance its distinctive style. A third great contrast bet­ ween Western and Eastern tieem phasis— on d etail Both modern dance and ballet tend to stress clean lines and movements of the whole body. By ANN N A YLO R It is a bitter fact of. theater life that an enthusiastic and often talented cast do not necessarily a successful production make. It should be made clear from the beginning that the m ajor flaws in the A SU Players presentation of “ Genesis V I” are prim arily the Asian dance, however, like ■ responsibility of the w riters. Asian art, is full of detail—tiny Noah represents Fam ily life and the Commune, where Noah’s movements of fingers, toes, and runaway son, H am , turns up, represents Freedom , or Something. In even eyebrows. Ju s t as the the end, the D evil introduces Violence, and all dreams of inter­ famous Cambodian temples of generation, free-to-do-your-own-thing understanding are washed Angkor are covered with in­ away. trica te c a rv in g s, so the “ Ridiculous,” somehow, just isn’t the right word for all of this nonsense. M usically, the play is alm ost as forgettable. While there are some good m usical moments—notably G reg Hubach and Marilyn Kagan’s rendition of “ F ish ” —most of it remains on the level of Noah’s final impassioned prayer, promising to “ do a good jo b .” Egads. Two problems stand out. F irst, the inconsistent use o f the hand microphone made the w eaknessesJn the users’ singing voices cmly the more apparent. ^ Second, cast members portraying characters least like them­ selves were the most believable. Hubach and M iss Kagan nearly stole the show as the fish nut and his very pregnant w ife. L . J . Smoot going up and down, and the was properly sinister as Lucifer. Charles Skinner, as Noah, was also somewhat clum sy shifting of notably successful in characterizing a m an far.from his age and scenery, I was distracted more perspectives. Donald Joseph, as M eshech, cam e off as a weak-willed than once. However, lighting pouter, while Steve M alan, as H am , didn’t come off at a ll; despite the effects masked some of this and. fact that both played extrem ely contemporary characters with drew the setting together. whom, one would expect, they are sym pathetic in perspective. “ The Masque of Angels” w ill The oustanding exception in the ‘young’ group was G race Zack, be presented again on N ov. Ifl who by virtue of her voice and stage presence deserves a better part and 13. G o with a friend, or do in a better show. something different for that The University Flayers have been much better in the past, and weekend date—particularly if wUlno doubt survive this play and this review . Those who want to see you’ve never seen and-or liked “ Gopesis V I” for themselves (alw ays a sm art thing to do) should be opera before. at the Lyceum Theatre, N ov. 12,13, or 14. REVIEWS 'Angels'great fun. . . By ANN N A YLO R The Lyric Opera Theatre’s interpretation of D om inick A rgen to ’ s “ The M asque of Angels” is not only m usically and theatrically competent, it is' great fun. The simple story involves a hapless group of angels doing what they can to promote love in the world, in this case, bet­ ween a young couple wavering on the brink of commitment. It is sung in En glish, and requires no m usical knowledge or predilection for opera to be enjoyed. This is not to say the production is somehow less ch allen gin g or a rtistica lly satisfying than a more ‘serious’ opera. The often unmelodious nature of modem m usic requires a special kind of s k ill and the A SU Lyric Opera handles most of the difficult sections very w ell. Cathy Grossberg stand out as the young girl, while Paul Yoder handles the difficult part of Metatron, the officer in ch a rgé , w ith considerable ability. A special word of praise belongs to the Cherubim , Seraphim , and Virtues Who Dance. Their infectious good humor and enthusiasm support the mood of the entire program, proving once again how im ­ portant sm all parts are to the success of a production such as this. Ardee's . Decor A r t & C r e a t iv e Sin ce the L y r ic O pera depen d s' rath er h eavily on pantom im e, the d ram atic aspects of this production must be mentioned. M ichele FioRito seem s to understand the necessity of acting, in addition to singing, more clearly than any other participant outside the chorus. The characterization of John, the young m an, suffers rather badly from stage-stiffness, and M etatron, as w e ll would be visually improved by more distinctive m ovem ent - TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION AS T A U G H T BV MAHARISH! MAHESH YOGI TRAN SCEN DEN TAL M ED ITATIO N IS A N A T U R A L SPO N TA N EO U S T EC H N IQ U E WHICH allo w s ea ch IN D IV ID U A L T O E X P A N D HIS CONSCIOUS MINO A N O IM PROVE A L L A SPECTS O F LIFE . 1st LECTURE — Ceramics — Jute — Dry Flowers-all kinds — Wood Beads NOV. 10,8 P.M. Room 272 S tra w Tempo Center F lo w e r s for the Difference in You. . . W ÊÊÉËÊk G if t s • is still looking Costum ing and make-up often suffer in am ateur productions, but not with “ The Masque of Angels.” Both are conceived im aginatively, and there is apparently enough fin a n cia l support to carry through the costumer’s dreams. Weaknesses in this production were logistical, rather than artistic. Between the orchestra To give the Little Orange Bug to­ wn!you be the one to have it next week? i h e will also be seeking out VW owners to present them with a F R E E G I F T certificate for chassis lube and engine diagnostic check. ★ ★; ★ ★ THERE IS A DIFFERENCE! 2nd LECTURE NOV. 17th, 8 P.M. Room 274 STUDENTS’ m jVRN A TJONAL MEDTTA n a if SOCIETY ★ MTNOM2CO 3230 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale • 947-4211 YOU MUST BE 21 WITH A VALID DRIVER'S LICENSE Page 6 — Tuesday, November 9 Black cell diseases | CONCERN | frequently confused » !v X >:• Questions for CONCERN must be submitted at the Message Center of the Memorial Union on forms provided there. Name» address and must be included for verification purposes. Only initials are used In CO NCERN. Initials will be withheld upon request. The State Press reserves the right to edit questions. Questions of an informational nature are welcomed from any member of the University community. | Q . C a n I p ra c tic e on th e organ s in the m u sic b u ild in g? H a lf o f th em aren ’t b ein g used and I h ave to p la y fo r a w edding n ext m on th. •X :? H ie O ct. 5 issue of die State Press incorrectly stated that Debbie Kennard, A SU junior, is a fflicte d w ith sick le cell anemia. M iss Kennard is a victim of sickle cell trait. Following is a clarification of Br these two related diseases. B y S U E A N N B A IL E Y Staff Writer Sickle cell anemia and a less serious ailm en t, sickle cell trait, are frequently confused hereditary blood diseases that affect Black people. Sickle cell anemia is present when a m ajority of the red blood cells have a half-moon shape rather than the round shape of normal cells. The disease frequently causes early deaths due to abnormal clotting of the sickle cells, according to D r. Richard Jones, D irector of Student H ealth Service. Sickle cell trait occurs when about half the red blood cells are normal and half have die ch a ra cte ristic sick le shape. Sickle cells carry one-fourth to one-third the normal amount of oxygen. In young people, the sickle ce ll tra it often fla re s up drastically and can become serious. It usually causes ex­ cessive fatigue, blackouts at high altitudes and slow healing of injuries. Treatment of the anemia is p rim arily lim ited to blood transfusions and an ti­ coagulants to control blood clots. Neither disease can yet be cured, Jones said. R esearch into sick le cell anemia began in 1968 after four Black pilots died following high altitude flights, according to the O ct. 19 issue of Ebony. An Air Fo rce doctor perform ed autopsies which revealed the presence of sickle-shaped red blood cells. Sickle cell trait does not create the severe pain and loss of blood circulation associated with sickle cell anemia. But lack of oxygen at high altitudes adversely affects those with either form of the disease, Jones said. Debbie Kennard, A SU junior in the College o f‘Nursing, has the sickle cell trait. “ I would love to be an A ir Force flight nurse, but it looks very dim ,” she told the State Press. “ M ost a ir transports are not pressurized, so it wouldn’t be possible for me to fly in them .” M iss Kennard inherited the trait from her paternal grand­ m other. “ She su ffers from 100-foot fall kills senior An A SU student was killed Saturday in Oak Creek Canyon when he lost his footing and fell 100 feet from a c liff to the bottom of the canyon. The accident occurred about three-; fourths of a m ile north of Slid e1 Rock. W itnesses told Coconino . County sheriff’s deputies that M arc Raymond Bilsky, 21, was climbing Oak Creek Canyon when he slipped and plunged 100 feet into the canyon. The sheriff’s department said Bilsky, 1010 E . Orange, Tempe, apparently lost his footing and tried to grab a tree as he fell into the creek bed. Bilsky’s body was recovered by a search and rescue party of the Coconino S h e r iff’s Departm ent The 21-year-old U n iversity student w as a c­ companied on the hiking trip by two fem ale companions. Sheriff deputies report that A SU student G eo rgia M ae Walker, 26, of Tempe and Jean Amaro of Flagstaff were with Bilsky when the accident oc­ curred. University records show thatB ilsk y ’s parents liv e a t a Beachwood, Ohio, residence. m DOZEN if BOTH TOGETHER / MINI-PACK 12-1 way Bottles N TODO AO K C H N lC O lO R » Showfimes West Side Story 9:15 P.M. Around the World 4:Qti P.M. "Ends Tuesday" ARIZONA UNIVERSITY CHARTERS For students, faculty, employees, alumni, and immediate fam ilies >299 ROUND TRIP to EUROPE June 15 Aug, 23 TUCSON— LONDON AMSTERDAM— TUC July 2 TUCSON-LONDON AMSTERDAM— TUC Aug. 14 Jamos Garner “ Robert Mitchum George Kennedy A "T H E GOOD I^ GUYS&THE BAD GUYS" "Ends Tuesday" DREW DONAHUE ARIZONA UNIVERSITY CHARTERS 2251 EAST BROADWAY " f U M . ARIZONA — 85719 2,624-5521 Showtimes Skin Game 4:15—9:55 Good Guys 8:15 Matinee Sat. Sun V A . T he ga m e w ill be p la yed N o v . 27, said T e rry W o jtu le w icz, m a n a ge r o f th e fo o tb all tick e t o ffic e s. Auditions set for 'Nightfall' A ud itions fo r the B la ck production, “ N ig h tfa ll,” are today from 2-8 p.m . in the M U Pim a Room . A cast of 10 males and 10 fem ales is needed for the series of speeches, one-act pilays and p oetry. Those interested in auditioning m ay pick up m aterials in South H all 229 (Black E O P Study H all). M u sician s who p lay the conga, bongo, flute, tenor sax or drum (traps) also are needed. Instruments and music will not be provided. The production is sponsored by the Blade Cultural Center. • AUTOMOBILES I960 VW bug. Rebuilt Interior and en­ gine. Body In good shape. $575 call John, 965-4059, 6 p.m. on. (11-12) Girl Singer with much paid experience wants gigs with working band. Plays per­ cussion, call Rita after 4:30, 2SS-31I9. For Sale: 1969 Suzuki 350 Twin, Fine con­ dition, best offer, call 966-4787. (11-11) '68 Triumph 939-2344. Men's complete set of Golf clubs, 4 wood, 10 iron, Kroydon Thunderbolt, Call 946-7228, $80. (11-10) '63 TR4, New top, new clutch, new disc brakes, rblt. trans., excell, condition, $850, 947-0230 aft. 4 p.m. (11-9) Waterbed for sale including fr>me, liner, and pad. Call 966-5130. (11-12) VW Bus 1962 camper with built In couch/ double bed and cabinets for storage. 9696644, Sandy. (11-10) (11-11) T E R M PAP ER S of Southern California, Inc. Largest western distributor of quality re­ ference material. Mrs. 9-4 Mon.-Frl. & Sat. A.M . 1100 Glendon Ave., Suite 1445 Los Angeles, Calif. 90024 C A LL: (213) 477-5043 (11-30) Stop thinking about It and do if now! Permanent removal of unsightly facial hair. Come in and we'll talk about it. Discount for students. Call 968-1851. (11-16) Sony TC-350 4-track tape deck, hardly used, $85, Lafayette TB tuner & Am p, $30 throw in spks. Tot. - $100 or sep. 9647112. (11-12) Roommete for 3 bedroom townhouse fully furnished with color T V and HIFI 1 mile N of Woolco 8100 month, no freshmen. Rob, 947-8955 after 10 p.m. (11-10) Clarry Villa, 1014 Farm er Ave. 2 room, unfurnished apts., heated laundry facilities, 3 blocks from $175 plus utilities, inquire at Apt. bed­ pool, ASU, 3. ( 11-12) Parkway Apts. 615 S. Hardy Dr. 2 bdrm. unf. $185. Furn. $210 3 bdrm. unf. $215, turn. $245. Immediate occupancy. 968-2600. (2-24-'72) Rooms with kitchen privileges, pets ok, couples-slngles, $60 and $10 deposit, also horses boarded, tel. 255-5416. (11-12) GT-6 $1300 or best offer, ( 11-10) Porsche 1970, 911-T, S-speed, AM -FM Blaupunkt, excellent condition through­ out. 968-0234. (11-12) Lange boot 12 M $40, Reichlas boot H Vi M 2 y r„ $40, blth pair excellent condi­ tion, 964-3445. (11-10) 1971 BMW 2002, Air, radio, low mileage, excellent condition, see at 822 W. 5 St. Apt. D, Tempe, 967-5008. (11-6) Original Historic Newspapers, New York Times 1862. London Times 1862-62. New York Harpers Weekly 1874-75. Much Civil War news, etc. The Antiquary, 502 S. College. (11-10) New 8> used car and truck sales, see Jnhn Annpi at Berge Ford, 256 E . Main, Mesa. 964-2921. (11-30) Ampex 985 reel-to-reel play and record with auto reverse, includes AM -FM radio. 966-5767. (11-9) 9x12 used rugs $5.00, all sizes In stock. Carpet House, 1516 E . Van Buren, Phoe­ nix.____________________________ (1-7) Girls self defense course, starts Novem­ ber 9, class limited, call YM C A, 945-6351. (11-9) Sport parachuting instruction. Licensed lumpmasters, F A A examiner and master rigger on staff. 14 years experience. U.S. Parachute Service, Mesa, 985-3980. (all yaar) TUTORING: ALSO YOGA F R EN C H LESSONS. • HELP WANTED Need 7 girls part time to become profes­ sional make-up artists 966^0571. (1-7) LOST • INSTRUCTION Attend Special introductory class in self hypnosis, Nov. 17, 7:30 p.m. at 6522 N. 23rd ave. Lose, weight, stop smoking, calm nerves, sliced learning, etc. 2740698. (11-17) Spacious 20 x 18 building tor artist stu­ dio, workshop, storage, etc. Private. 1102Vh Maple. (11-11) ...ta not a skin flickirai Q . W ill the d ate o f the A S U -U o fA ga m e rem ain sched uled fo r N o v . 27, o r w ill it be ch an ged to D e c . 4 as it w as la s t y e a r ? 1971 Singer Sewing machine, used six months, $60 call 949-9538 after 6:00 P.M. (11-12) RENT M “ T he in strum ents a re m a in ly fo r stu den ts tak in g applied m u sic and m ain ten an ce is the m ain problem w ith le a v in g the room s o p en ,” said B ro ek em a. T he doors a re not le ft open b ecau se the o rgan s are d am aged b y students w ho stop in to p la y but do not know how to han d le the o rgan s p ro p erly, he sa id . 2 free professional makeup lessons—this opportunity doesn't happen often! Ask for E m ily 966-0655. (11-12) Spanish tutoring, Gina Swan, 966-3264. V ( 11-8 ) , £: A . “ A n y student w ho needs to use the o rgan fa c ilitie s on a tem p o rary b asis ca n com e b y the m u sic :$ jij: o ffice an d ta lk w ith m e ,’ ’ .sa id D r . Andrew B ro ek em a, :§ ch a irm a n o f the m u sic d ep artm en t. “ W e u su a lly m a k e | i-ii— arran gem en ts fo r them to g e t in . ------------------:— ------_$L • FOR SALE • SERVICES Sale today on beanbag chairs and pillows alterations, patches, drycleaning. Visit us at Joe's Central Cleaners. 505 S. Mill. We're squeezed between Valley Art & Jean's West. (11-19) STÖRY g C L A S S IF IE D A D S “ T E L L U S " Hotline 968-2477. 6-12 p.m. for loneliness, runaways, suicide line, for problem pregnancy call 968-0755 24 hrs. sim ;a ; X; Classfled advertising must ba paid for 1» advance either in person or by mall te tbs State Press, ASB 3*• 8, SPANISH 968-2913 (11-17) English, tutoring, etc. 967-5925. (1-7) Rolex watch, no band, ASU-AF football game, reward, call Bob 939-0601. (11-12) TYPING Electric typing in my home. Rosemary Vance, 967-9143. (1-7) TYPING—Tempe, 967-3675. (1-7) Typing, term papers 967-7159. (1-7) Typing, ASU experience, fast, reasonable, accurate. 967-4517. (1-7) Typing (IBM) 945-1)71. Typing, close to ASU, 966-4713. WANTED 2 students to share house w/grad stu­ dents. 2 blocks off campus. Pool, central heat, air. Low cost. Call 966-0440 aft. 6. _____________________ _______ (11-11) Earn $75 weekly, 3 evenings & Sat. Call 966-6826. (until changed) (4-21-72) Expert typing, dissertations, theses, term and resonrrh papers. Call Jean Buttermore, 277-3602. (1-7) (11-30) IBM Selectric—Choice of type, style. Ed­ iting as desired. 966-1684. (1-7) TYPING: T E R M P A P ER S , R ESU M ES, TH ESES, DISSERTATIONS, - P R O F E S ­ SIONAL G U A R A N T E E iNORK, IBM. M AXIN E M U L L E N — 955-0763. (year) Typing IBM 253-1285 955-3206. (1-7) t Tuesday, November 9 — Page 7 White scrambles Devils post BYU B y B A R N E Y H U T CH IN SO N Everyone knew before the season started that Arizona State’s Dan White could pass, punt, kickoff and run. Everyone now knows White is performing those duties better than ever.. White, displaying a high degree of poise, rallied the Sun Devils out of first h alf doldrums to a 38-13 win over a tough Brigham Young University team Saturday night. White’s scram bling ability and his knack of spotting secondary receivers secured 10 points for A SU just before the half. It boosted coach Frank Kush’s team from a 7-7 tie to a 17-7 lead, an advantage they never gave up. A fou rth stra ig h t sellout crowd of 50,341 watched the possibility of a run when w e gam e that made the Devils 5-0 quarterback drops b a c k ,” in Western Athletic Conference Kentera said. play and 7-1 overall. A SU has “ Our gam e plan was to run only to win one of two remaining outside and achieve a balance gam es fro m W yom ing or between running and passing,” Arizona to cinch its third W AC Kush said. The B Y U interior title and host role for the newlydefensive line averaged 225 created Fiesta Bowl. pounds per man and Kush White, who completed 13 of 26 wanted to take advantage of the passes for 164 yards and one Devils’ quickness. touchdown, led his teammates The plan was successful with to two crucial second quarter 175 of the 313 yards rushing scores. com ing on plays run outside the A fter firing a 23-yard pass to tackle slots. O f Woody Green’s Jo e Petty and a 19-yard aerial to gam e-leading 162 rushing C al Dem ery, White had A SU on yards, 143 yards cam e on the B Y U seven midway through sweeps around end. the second period. . The Devils ratio between the On a. third down situation, rushing and passing was 65 per White rolled to his right, and cent to 35 per cent. kept rolling and rollin g. . . until Arizona State, besides the he stopped short of the sideline league win, took a number of and fired a touchdown pass to individual battles. Steve Holden. That gave the W hite, the league’s sixth best Devils the lead 14-7. punter going into the contest, Then with less than a minute booted seven times for a 43.1 to go in the first half, A SU yard -a v era ge. T h at topped marched 47 yards to the B Y U B Y U ’s Jo e Liljenquist, ranked 25-yard lin e to put Don Reserve halfback Alonzo Emery (42) sweeps right end against Brigham Young late in the third in the le a gu e, who Ekstrand into field goal range. fourth quarter Saturday night. In pursuit are defensive halfback Benny Smith (19) and averaged 39.4. White scram bled on two oc­ defensive end Paul Howard (78). Emery lost six yards on the carry but brought back two casions during the drive, once to The “ Y ’s” Golden Richards, kickoffs for 33 yards. Arizona State rolled up 313 yards on the ground to down BYU 38-13. hit Dem ery on a 23-yard pass the nation’ s leading punt play and once to run out of returner, ran back only one for bounds, stopping the clock with 11 yards, well under his 21-yard 18 seconds left. average. Ekstrand’s 42-yard field goal • B Y U ’s Dave Atkinson, the attem pt w as good. nation’s top pass interceptor, 17-7 Ekstrahd's 42-yard field goal “ W hite is an excellen t was thé third time in as many F irst downs did not pick off any of White’s tries he has been successful Rushing yardage p a sse r,” sa id B Y U coach from outside 40 yards this Passing yardage Npasses. A SU nabbed four offTom my Hudspeth after the season. 0:18 Total offense target tosses to counter B Y U ’s Third Quarter Passing gam e. “ H e was on target all Green's three-yard TO run was 24-7 Punts one interception. set up by Holden's 33-yard Fumbles lost night and we fe lt lucky to bat wingback reverse. Ekstrand's down two passes in the endzone PAT was good. 4:44 Scora by quarters 31-7 Blocking by tackles Ed Fisher that otherwise would have been and Roger Davis plus reserve Brigham Young fullback Oscar Dragon helped sure touchdowns.” THF Arizona State Green to two back-to-back 20The D evils found themselves yard runs. Dragon carried over HOW T H E Y SCORED Time 1 .w-l-t. from the five for the TD. w pet opp. ♦P Ip AS*BY First Quarter tied 7-7 midway through the Left 7-1-0 Ekstrand kicked the point after. 2:21 69 285 Arizona State 5 0 1.000 205 7-0 ASU started the scoring after 222 Fourth Quarter 1 New Mexico 1 3 .750 133 127 4-2-2 first quarter m ainly on the recovering a fumble on the B Y U 5-4-0 31-13 Two B ill August to Golden Brigham Young 3 .600 118 83 198 2 21. Woody Green swept the left 189 Richards passes covered 81 of Wyoming 84 72 5-4-0 surprise tactics of the “ Y ” 3 2 .600 end for two yards and a touch­ 154 the drive's 91 yards. An August 2 .500 59 57 4-4-0 Arizona •2 down. Don Ekstrand kicked the offense. 2-6-0 to Steve Stratton pass from five .333 153 167 190 Utah 2 4 extra point. yards out capped the drive. The .200 69 4-4-0 101 Texas E l Paso 4 28 1 “ In the four gam es we had 7-7 BYU took the ensuing kickoff 234 79 P A T was missed. 8:11 0-8-0 Colorado State 36 155 Q 4 .000 and marched 88 yards in seven 38-13