Wednesday Arizona State University Voi. 55, No. .52 December 6, 1972 state press Tempe, Arizona Famed conservative shows flexibility Columnist bends ideology By JOHN B A N A SZE W SK I Syndicated columnist James Kilpatrick may not be considered a standard ideological con­ servative. He’s in favor of the legalization and decriminalization of m arijuana, considers Chicago Seven Judge Julius Hoffman a man with a “strange” sense of humor and advocates, in theory, an all-volunteer Army. Although admittedly a political conservative, Kilpatrick said yesterday during a talk to mass, communications majors that on many issues he* simply cannot follow uniformly conservative line of thought. Favoring the legalization of marijuana is such a case. Kilpatrick, whose views are distributed to 2S0 papers, three times a week through the Washington Evening Star syndicate, said he did not feel like an ideological traitor in backing the move to legalize pot . “It’s been a very difficult question, in­ tellectually, for me to grapple with. But after studying the material and the arguments I feel there is no longer a conservative justification for these broad crim inal sanctions against marijuana,” Kilpatrick said. But he said, there should be selective criminal penalities for marijuana users, as in the case of smoking and driving. James Kilpatrick Fielding questions from an audience of about 75 persons, Kilpatrick said he was in the western region for speaking engagements at the Phoenix Executive Club, the University of Arizona and the University of Colorado a t Colorado Springs. Kilpatrick said his past in reporting'has always dealt more with the Supreme Court Bum anything else although he spent the last four months on the presidential campaign trial with four different candidates. Regarding Sen. George McGovern’s un­ successful bid for the presidency, heiaid, “I think McGovern was honestly reported. I t wasn’t the press that botched him up in the Eagleton Affair. That was his own doing. “The sheer self-righteousness of the man was starting to get to us all after a while. These mistakes were of McGovern’s own making. He did it to himself relentlessly. It was almost masochistic by the time it was all over,” he said. Spicing his comments with Southern-drawled anecdotes, Kilpatrick said there is a small-scale revolution taking place within federal jurisprudence. He cited six-man juries and the admissibility of pre-trial evidence as “healthy changes” taking place within the courts. “It’s a time of flux and I think we the press are going to gain from it in the long haul,” he said. Addressing himself to the Supreme Court, he said President Nixon is making a concerted effort at remolding the ideological posture of that court. Nixon high court appointees are selected specifically for their politically right-of-axis stance to agree with the President’s goal of moving the Supreme Court more to the right, he said. The columnist said conspiracy laws “are lousy laws.” “It’s a useful form of harassment. . . but the law shouldn’t be used for harassment purposes,” he said. Asked if he agreed with the Supreme Court ruling against capital punishment, Kilpatrick said the decision came a bit unexpectedly but the court was essentially caught in a socio-political bind. With 600 men on Death Row, he said, the nation would have stood witness to the “grisly spectacle” of mass executions had the court held capital punishment as constitutional. Saigon worker says: 'Children face w ar's real hell' By SA N D Y SHOOK “ The re a l hell in Vietnam is what is happening to the children,” said Ja c q u eline Chagnon, who w orked in Saigon for two y e a rs and lived with a Vietnam ese fam ily for one year. C hagnon, 25,. show ed slides a n d lectured yester­ day on “ Vietnam : The War and the C ulture” as p a rt of th e In d o ch in a E d u c a tio n P r o je c t th a t p ro v id e s m aterial on the culture and history of Vietnam , Cam­ bodia and Laos. Chagnon said she once asked a sm all V ietnam ese child in Saigon w hat he thought of th e U.S. He replied, “ Since you a re so m uch rich er, you m u st have m uch m o re ta n k s and barbed w ire than we do.” “ The children can tell you m o re a b o u t th e w a r. E specially th e shoe shine boys th a t w ander through Saigon,” she said. “ Usually these children a re left o r se p ara te d from their parents. They go into the cities and becom e shoe shine boys. At the a g e of six they can survive by earning money by doing odd jobs for the m ilitary m en in Saigon and for others. They can do th is b e c a u s e th e y a r e considered cute. “ When they grew older and a re n ’t considered as cute as they used to be, they a re into other m eans of trying to e a rn a living, doing a n y th in g th e y c a n do whether it’s legal o r not,” she said. In adolescence th e youth sell h a rd drugs because it is the only thing they know how to do, and the only way they can survive,” Chagnon said. “The youth of Vietnam have a total lack of hope for the future, it’s difficult for them to have any because a t the age of 17 they a re drafted and c a n ’t get out o f . the arm y till (hey a re 43,” she said. O rp h an s in V ietn am num ber a half million. The thousands of shoe shine boys a re not considered orphans because they cannot prove their p arents left them , said Chagnon. She said adoption ru le s in Vietnam a re very stric t for both fo re ig n e rs a n d th e Vietnam ese to be able to adopt c h ild re n . P a r e n ts m ust be m ore than 30 y ears old, m arried m ore th an 10 years and earn m ore th an a certain incom e'for the year. Many of the V ietnam ese fam ilies who would like to a d o p t a ; c h ild c a n n o t because of the se t amotint of incom e required. “ T he o rp h a n s on th e average receive 45 cents a month. The orphanages or centers th at c a re for the children receive aid from the U.S. and other foreign agencies, but by the tim e the money actually is received and used for the child, th ere is a lot of room for corruption,” said Chagnon. Apollo launch tonight The final Apollo m ission, Apollo 17, w ill begin its record breaking flight a t 11 p jn . Arizona tim e. Astronauts Eugene Ceraan, Harrison Schm itt and Ranald E vans w ill control m an’s sixth landing on the moon. Ceman and Schm itt are to land a t an area named TaurusLittrow and search for som e o f the oldest and youngest rocks on die moon. E vans w ill rem ain in the orbit craft above die moon’s surface. During the 75 hours on the moon Ceman and Schm itt w ill spend 21 of those hours outside the lunar craft. , , Television coverage of d ie moon shot w ill begin a t 7:45 p m . Arizona tim e. Students can watch die historic event in the MU television room downstairs. Page 2 — Wednesday, Decem ber 6 Director outlines goals Famous Olympian | speaks tonight j Role of justice center to b rid ge facu lty g a p Jessie Owens, fam ed Olympian of 1932, will/ present a lecture a t 8 tonight a t G am m age Auditorium. The lecture, “ The Olympics of 1972 and The F u tu re,” will be Owens’ im pression of the Olympics, past, present and future with references to his book “ I Have Changed.” The lecture is free and open to the public. By R A E P IM L E Y The role of the newly e s ta b lis h e d C e n te r of Criminal Justice will be to bridge the gap between the faculty and die crim inal justice system , according to D r. I. G ayle S hum an, director of housing. S hum an, ap p o in ted to d ire c t th e c e n te r, s a id yesterday th at the center will: (l) work to establish courses to m eet the needs of the crim inal justice com m u n ity ; (2) s tim u la te research Activity among the fa c u lty rn th e field of criminal» ¡justice; (3) en­ courage doctoral students to do d iss e rta tio n s in th e crim inal justice area, (4) en c o u ra g e g ra d u a te s to consider careers in crim inal justice; and (5) coordinate th e i work, th a t v a rio u s faculty m em bers a re now engaged in a t several Valley institutions. For several years there have been n u m ero u s requests for the University to involve itself in this field, Shuman said. The City of Tempe passed a resolution to this effect m ore than a year ago. An i n t e r d i s c i p l i n a r y fa c u lty c o m m itte e w as appointed a y ear ago by Dr. K arl Dannenfeldt, academ ic vice president, to study the possibility of establishing such a center. “ We (th e c o m m itte e ) started to survey the faculty and found a lot of them — 75 or 10Q — a re doing work som ew here in the crim inal justice system ,” Shuman said. “ By ‘crim inal ju stice ’ we don’t m ean ju st law en­ forcem ent. We m ean law e n fo rc e m e n t, th e c o u rts,a n d c le a r on th ro u g h probation and parole, l i e te r m ‘c rim in a l ju s tic e ’ c o v e rs th e w hole sp e c ­ tru m .” “ We h a v e m a d e a p ­ plication and will continue to m ake application for fe d e ra l fu n d s ,” S hum an said. A unique aspect of ASU’s Center for Crim inal Justice is that it is not attached to one departm ent, Shuman said. “ We will be able to draw from the total resources of the academ ic com m unity,” he said. The center also will have an a d v iso ry b o a rd pf m em bers of the local crim inal justice field. Shuman holds an Ed.D. degree from ASU. He has 12 years in the crim inal justice a re a , h a y in g s e rv e d as d ire c to r of th e ASU d e p a rtm e n t of s e c u rity , sp e c ia l a g e n t fo r the FBI. MEN! WHEN YOU’RE IN GOOD SHAPE * YOU FEEL GREAT. LET US BUILD A NEW YOU AT THE NEW - / OLVMPIA HEALTH CLUB 520 N. Scottsdale Rd. 000-5002 Registration packs OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK. FOR MEN ONLY available Monday Completely Pre-registered students may pick up their registration m aterials for the Spring semester in the MU Rendezvous Lounge Dec. 11-15, from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., and the evening of Dec. 11, from 6:30-8:30. Students - who wish to avoid cancellation of their early registration must pay . their semester fees and have thair I.D. cards validated in the MU Arizona Room at the same times scheduled for registration material pick-up. 10 to 10 Mon. thru Fri. 10 to 0 So*. Equipped — Pool Table - & TV Room — Showers - Sauna ^Fire p lace — Health Bar & Foods — Dressing Rooms — Exercising Room Complete Phjvieal Program ^ j ^ f r t y e ig h f , - Gain Weight % — Conditioning — Relaxation — Weight Lifting Owned by — Individual Jerry Irvine Instruction end Bob Foster S e ll t h e O h i lla ii: To you he’s old - all used up. It’s the end of the semester and you have no use for him anymore. He could sit on some shelf and collect dust but he’s still worth something. ^ 1 W c S t f id e n f * ^Book? G e n ie r * 704 S. College Avenue One block North of ASU 966-6226 The Student Book Center will buy him back and not only pay you cash but give you a valuable gift certificate as veil When you sell your used books for $20.00 you get $20.00 cash and a gift certificate for $2.00. If you get $30.00 for your used books you II get a gift certificate for $3.00. You can use this gift certificate now to save on a gift for yourself or a friend. Or you can hold on to it till next semester and save even more by buying the books you’ll need from the supply of used books the Student Book Center will have on hand. Either way you’11 make out better when you sell your used books to the Student Book Center on College Avenue one block north of campus. Do yourself a favor SELL THE OLD MAN, HE’S WORTH IT 1 £ $ $ p § 8 :g j§j .Vf W ednesday, December 6 — Page 3 Phys Ed department sponsors ski vacation on Austrian slopes Students, high schools seniors, grads and faculty have a chance to participate in an 18-day skiing trip to Austria, w ith side stops in London and Paris. The ASU Physical education departm ent offers a two-hour independent study credit course in conjunction with the trip, which begins Dec. 29. Photo by John GherardI An artist's delight Christmas surprises can be purchased at the Student A rt Sale in the M U Art Gallery and Alumni Lounge from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. through Friday. Art Hahn, coor­ dinator of the event, said yesterday the sale made $7,200 in the first three and a half hours of business Monday evening. Hahn said nearly 200 students are par­ ticipating in the event. The profits from the sale go to the student artists. The program is sponsored by a Germ an student travel service a n d offers ASU students a chance to ski on the slopes of Innsbruck and Zell am See. Several other colleges and universities a re involved in the program . “ It (the trip ) s ta rts a fte r Christm as, allowing students to be a t hom e for a while and ends Jan . 14 before second sem ester begins,’’ said Dr. Jam es Qdenkirk, chairm an of the m en’s physical education departm ent. The trip costs $629 and includes a jet 747 round trip to Munich, accom odations, m eals, ski passes, Ski in­ structions and transfers. the program is open to beginning, interm ediate, and advanced skiers. ASU students work to assist small business development The College of Business Adm inistration is working in co n ju n c tio n w ith th e S m all B u sin e ss A d m inis­ tration in Phoenix to provide s tu d e n ts w ith p r a c tic a l experience and to assist the sm all business in operation and developm ent. W illiam M iller, c o o rd i­ nator of Sm all Business C onsulting (SB C ), s a id m any sm all businesses fail due to a la c k of m anagem ent know-how. The students a re strictly volunteer and a re not paid for th e ir s e rv ic e s . Both g r a d u a te s and u n d e r­ graduates a re selected by Miller from the College of Business Adm inistration. T h e re a r e 20 sm a ll businesses participating in the program selected by the S m a ll B u sin ess A d m inis­ tration. Most of them are minority-owned businesses. The SBC a t Arizona State University is one of 48 colleges and universities in 20 states participating in the pilot program . The SBA s ta r te d th e p ro g ra m in October, 1972. A “ s m a ll b u sin e ss m anagem ent’’ class will be taught in the College of S tu d e n ts in te re s te d in p a rtic ip a tin g in th e p ro g ra m sh o u ld c o n ta c t W illiam E . M iller, SBC Coordinator, in BA 352-G. P articipants leave Los Angeles on Thursday, Dec. 28. They will fly to London, P aris, Zell am See, in the province of Salzburg, A ustria; and Innsbruck, also in Austria. *■ Applications for the trip m ay be obtained from Dr. Odenkirk in M P E 128. F o r m ore information, contact Dr. Odenkirk a t 965-3151. \0 f \rn e T o r B u sin e ss A d m in istra tio n next sem ester. W a»a: resistant Electronic., 0rO„n tumlnou^VoB Corlam strap IteCollegehi Israel I Orient from L.A. $150-300 Student flights' Contact: Mitch Peles, 278-5253 4248 W. Osborn Phoenix, Az. 85019 A Challenge fer r a ©@0,® in d UNITED STATES AIR FORCE Become a Pilot or Navigator, LIVE AT THE COLLEGE INN Where people care about you and your needs. Where the entire staff w orks tirelessly to provide a clean, pleasant and satisfying student home. . his \ife weariT*9 S S S S s S s s ? S fS K É sacCU 3 e ïe r movements a jewel design Where you can discu ss your problem s with the management, and get full effort and cooperation in determ ining a solution. Where the price is right and the location is perfect. C A L 6 " ® 1 calendar dia' „ ioaols.£a , 25.95 Water res«» Call: 967-7828 or stop at 401 East Apache for Second Semester Reservations e Storting totory—ovor $8.400. * 30 day« paid vacation annually. * F r « modicol and dental care. * Opportunity to advance your education. * Opportunity for world-wido travel. OBTAIN COMPLETE DETAILS FROM A N Ain Foncc nccnuiTcn 321 N. Central Ave. Phoenix, Arizona 261-3344 ouAJk Ufc&L W ftlNhB T V JEW ELERS 138 E. U N IV E R S IT Y D R IV E — 967-8917— MEMBER AMERICAN GÉM SOCIETY P age 4 — W ednesday, Decem ber 6 Opinion state press Survival: a matter of course By R IC K M A H R L E Universities across the country have been opening their doors to m ore m inority students. Sometimes these students lack the basic skills needed to survive cam pus life. Even if the m inority student is academ ically pre­ pared, he or she m ay not be able to adjust to the new life a t the university. At ASU we have a way of helping students to adjust to college life. It is the controversial survival course. Class instructor Carolyn Kaluzniacki says the class provides clues to success a t ASU. She said the course attem pts to enhance the student’s ability to rea d and speak and attem pts to help the student cope with the red tape of the university system . It seem s the class is m ade up of m ostly athletes. What about the m inority students? Indians, blacks and chicanos face trem endous adjustm ent problem s and each group h as its own needs. Kaluzniacki seem s to em phasize th at only one class is needed, but I disagree. How can one tedcher be ex­ pected to deal with the problem s of an Indian girl from Window Rock and a black from South Phoenix? Even though the basic problem is adjustm ent, the particulars of each case are quite different. When any hum an is dropped into a strange environ­ m ent like the University, he goes through cultural shock. The student m ay becom e disoriented and unm otivated. Students, especially m inority students, feel this shock. Im agine the student from a reservation school with 250 students coming to this University of 30,000. The change m ay be enough to drive the student into failure. If ASU is going to have a survival course, it m ust recognize the differences between various m inority students and athletes and provide the adjustm ent help and counseling the m inorities need. The basic concept of the course is sound, but in practice it needs help. Without special counselors and special program s, the class will never effectively m eet the problem s of students not capable of functioning a t ASU without special help. jSgjSaK** • *30*rm tSTStoote 'WE CAN'T GO O N MESTINO AND MEETING AND MESTINO LIKE THIS!' M other Nature: By B R U C E T O M A SO merchants play momma's boys Last year (or was it the year before?) the fad issue was ecology. Overnight, everyone from Boy Scouts to automobile manufacturers began to wail over the state of the environment. And close behind the waiters came the mer­ chants who offered trinkets of all sorts _ manufactured, no doubt, in ugly.filtbspewing factories — to soothe the nation’s conscience. Within a short while, ecology flags, pins, posters, ash trays, T-shirts, buttons and bumper stickers flooded the eager m arket The American pocketbook was cleaned out while i-akn Erie was left to ro t So much tor ecology. An offspring of the environmental issue, the “Return to Nature” movement has become the latest commercial craze. Now, a manufacturer need only link his particular variety of garbage in some way to the theme of “nature” to insure a hearty public response. And apparently, it m atw no difference how blatant the contradiction bet­ ween product and promise. Cosmetics manufacturers are selling this year’s line of paints under the banner of the “Natural Look.” If that seems somewhat in­ congruous, then the promotion of “natural” wigs, “natural” bras and “natural” false eyelashes is downright absurd. Yet it sells. “Natural menthol” cigarettes are as unnatura l . as any commodity that can be legally purchased. Yet that is the current advertising theme of the best selling brand. Natural foods, once associated only with muscle-bound fanatics and 90-year-old men who run six miles every morning, have been in­ strumental in this exodus back to nature. Recently, they have even earned a niche on the supermarket shelves, along with potato chips and frozen pizzas and jars of marshmallow creme and all the other things producers have decided con­ sumers want. But surely, the most ridiculous parody of truth (and intelligence) in advertising is tbe com­ mercial for natural-scented deodorant Think' about that a moment: natural-scented deodorant. There’s one bom every minute, quoth Rnrnnm Fortunately, fads are short-lived. The public’s preoccupation with nature will subside, just as interest in ecology is waning now. One consolation is that stranger diversions have been popular in Past; after all, few people are swallowing goldfish or going over Niagra Falls in barrels these days. But maybe that’s because our seafoods are contaminated, and our waters hrfouled. Letters 0 beautiful for spacious power plant Editor: The instant ecologist strikes again, unfettered by such restraints as any knowledge whatsoever of his subject. Your photo of Nov. 30 capt|>ned “O beautiful for spacious skies . . . ” has captured a remarkable likeness of the condensed water vapor plumes which naturally form over the APS boiler w®*®r ®°°toig towers on a frosty mom. The power plant behind said cooling towers is fired by natural gas, and it is in the best economic 01 .toe greedy, oppressive, moneygrubbing capitalists who run it to operate it in the most efficient manner possible so that combustion is complete and carbon dioxide and water are the only pollutants permitted to spew forth from its noxious chimneys. Perhaps you would prefer to edit your broadside m Uie charming glow of candlelight, with the jragrance of rancid tallow wafting about your J. E . Thompson W ednesday, Decem ber 6 — » R a g e 5 * A nti-urban b ia s raps values By J O H N P H IL L IP S 'The primeval pulse of life' A H arv ard professor speaking a t ASU Monday night said A m ericans have projected unrealistic values onto w ilderness a reas. D r. H arvey Cox told 45 persons in the lounge of die MU Arizona Room that we falsely “ see wilderness a s a source of salvation.” Cox sa id A m ericans have had a century-long love affair with w ilderness and have learned to distrust everything about cities. Am erican thought and religion “have a v e ry strong anti-urban b ias,” he said. Cox said A m ericans go to the wilderness for three m ajor reasons. He said A m ericans alw ays have had a frontier to invade and have looked,to it as a chance to break with th e past. He also said A m ericans turn to the wilderness to resto re contact with life. Cox said w ilderness cannot really give any of these things. “ The w ilderness is c ru e l. . . it’s very dangerous, it h as no concern w hatever for hum an life,” he said. “We’ve come, to the point w here th ere ’s no place to go . . . no p lace to conquer,” Cox said. A m ericans should look to cities for som e answ ers. “ I ’m excited about the urban possibilities of s ta rting again,” he said. Cox said ecologists h av e called our present cities “exam ples of ecological catastrophe.” “ We have never developed an urban aesthetic,” Cox said. “ We have such grotesque cities because we don’t have this urban aesthetic.” Cox suggested an “alternative institution strateg y ” to experim ent with different kinds of cities. The first thing A m ericans m ust do before ex­ perim enting with different kinds of cities is overcom e the prejudice against density. People need to respect closeness for survival, he said. Cox said one reason people feel trapped in cities is because they don’t see any alternatives. He hopes new types of cities will provide these alternatives. Anthropology grad student traces past with stone tools By N E A L B A L M E S Cobblestone hammers, elk antlers and deer tines are the tools of A1 Goodyear’s trade. Goodyear, an ASU graduate assistant in anthropology, is one of approximately 50 North American archaeological specialists, who makes stone tools in the tradition of pre-historic man According to Goodyear, flint knapping is one way of tracing man’s past. “One of die main purposes of experimental flint knappers is to rediscover many of the flaking (the chipping of the stone into the desired shape) techniques and practices that prehistoric man was using.” The archaeologist, who is able to duplicate, by trial and error, the stone tools found at various archaeological sites, is able to get an insight into some of the problems pre-historic man en­ countered thousands of years ago in developing different phases of stone cultures, he said. Making stone tools under experimental con­ ditions with raw materials used by an isolated culture also enables the archaeologist to trace the development of that culture, he said. Goodyear uses only natural tools to make the stone-age instruments. If he needs a hammer, he uses cobblestone or an elk antler. If he needs a pressure flaker for more detailed craftsmanship, he uses the tip of a deer horn. There are a lot of faked stone tools on the market, Goodyear warned. The fakers use natural materials to make the tools, and modem instruments to shape the tool. The fakers then sell their products as authentic artifacts, he said. Stone tool making cannot be learned from a book. There has to be a teacher, just as primitive man far generations passed knowledge of «kills from father to son, Goodyear said. Goodyear said he has received training from Don Crabtree, one of the best stone tool makers in the country. Crabtree, is what Goodyear calls the father of North American flint knappers. Crabtree, who. is not formally trained in an­ thropology, has held university positions. Every year he receives funds from the National Science Foundation to research problems in the area of prehistoric stone tools. He has over 40 years ex­ perience in flint knapping, Goodyear said. Goodyear and four other graduate students spent four weeks one summer at the bottom of Snake River Canyon with Crabtree learning how to make stone tools. During those four weeks, Goodyear said, the small group made stone tools to prepare their food as well as other stone tools needed for outdoor life. “We found it easy to slip into a primitive life,” he said. The camp’s purpose was to explore another type of learning process that isn’t gained by reading or writing, he said. At camp, students were given a chance to solve academic problems and were also ««posed to various worldwide stone cultures, he « hh The camp, Goodyear said, gave the graduate anthropologists a specific skill teat can be used as a research tool in understanding primitive man. A l G oodyear “Does Anybody Care" Become a Volunteer now! park your folks at the Park Riviera Keep your folks in luxury at ST U D E N T D ISC O U N T R A T E S! They'll be just close enough to campus. LOCA TED JUST ACROSS THE BRIDGE {¿C O N T IN E N T A L B R E A K F A S T It ^ ^ E D POOL • CO LO R TV PHONE 967-7521 PARK Western, MOTHS 625 N. Mill Ave. • Tempe, Arizona J COMMUNITY SERVICES p U K/IM .Academic Services Big., Room 11 1 A R IZ O N A STA TE U N IV E R S IT Y MS-4305 P age 6 — W ednesday, Decem ber 6 For public broadcasting C M T ic ia l plans tv setup An ASU official is working to m ake educational television available in areas that now receive no public broadcasting. Robert Ellis is the director of the Bureau of Broadcasting and president of Rocky Mountain Broadcasting. He is working with NASA, the D epartm ent of Health, Education and W elfare, and various other organizations to launch a m ulti-purpose comm unications satelliteover the Rocky Mountain states sometim e in 1976. The satellite’s chief function will be to transm it educational television signals in conjunction with a delay center located in Denver. The delay center will m ake it possible to store program s broadcast from the E a st coast and show them a t la te r tim es in the West. The satellite will function prim arily for the Rocky Mountain states, but also will broadcast to p a rts of Appalachia and Alaska, h e said. The experim ental operation is being financèd by affiliation fees from stations, the states involved, and the National Corporation of Public Broadcasting. ' 'Free' book donations to library aren't really free, make more work D onations ac co u n t for about 10 per cent of Hayden L ib ra r y ’s y e a rly book acquisitions. But its gifts and exchange departm ent is la rg e ly u n a p p re c ia te d , according to Sheila W alters, g ifts and e x ch an g e librarian. “In m ost libraries I think it’s the area th a t’s most overlooked and neglected,” she said. “ People think of a gift book as free, but it really isn’t, because of all the work involved.” There a re salaries to pay the people who sort the books, decide what to keep and what to forw ard to other places, insert gift plates and acknowledge receipt of the STA TE P R E S S is published by Arizona State University Tuesday through Friday during the academic school year, except holidays and examination periods. E n ­ tered as second class matter at Tempe, AZ 85281. gifts, she said. “ P r iv a te do n o rs often give us their old textbooks when they’re cleaning out their closets getting ready to move. It’s a tax break for them , but it’s usually m ore of a problem than help to us, since the lib rary uses only th e m o st c u rr e n t te x t­ books.” When a book is received, library personnel check the lib ra ry ’s holdings to decide whether they want to add it. If they don’t, they try to exchange it for m aterials from other libraries, or trad e it in for other books th ro u g h a book d e a le r, W alters said. State law prohibits the sale of donated m aterial, so all unwanted m aterial m ust be disposed of in one of the above ways. “ Often people call and want us to evaluate their g ifts fo r in co m e ta x deductions, but this we c a n ’t do,” she said. “ The Internal R ev en u e S e rv ic e has regulations th at say they (the donations) have to be evaluated by an outside p a rty .” “ If we tak e them and we’re forced to m ake an evaluation, w e’ll generally put a very low value on them . It would have to be low enough th at the IRS wouldn’t question it,” she added. GIVE YOURSELF A CHRISTMAS PRESENT — A charter flight to EUROPE next summer— CHRISTMAS SHOPPING . . . CAREER!? G nA atnf * 72 - 73? Interested in an exciting I career which offers early I executive advancement? Going to be in Southern California during the Christmas break? Then consider the challenge offered by retail merchandis­ ing! Spend a couple of hours with us in one of our R E T A IL CAREER SEMINARS December 27, 28 or 29 MAY COMPANY CALIFORNIA For information and reserI vation forms contact your Career Planning and I Placement Office. on equal opportunity employer We will fly from Phoenix to Am sterdam , Holland, M a y 27, return June 27, 1973. Round trip only approx. $255. less than round trip to New York. For information, call 967-1673 or write Arizona Academic Associates Prof. G. Kleinfeld and Prof. L. Tambs P.O. Box 26480 Tempe, Arizona 85282 SWAP YOUR YOUTH CARO FOR TWA’S! mYouth Passport' A N D R E C E IV E A S T E R E O R E C O R D A L B U M O F Y O U R C H O IC E A B S O L U T E L Y F R E E !! C O M E TO : D IV E R S IF IE D T R A V E L 64 E. B R O A D W A Y , T E M P E C O R N E R O F B R O A D W A Y & M IL L O F F E R L IM IT E D — SO D O IT N O W ! Director of ASU s Bureau of Broadcasting, Robert Ellis, is working with other organizations to launch a multi­ purpose communications satellite so people in rural areas can receive national television broadcasting. Parents Visiting During The Break? Remind them we have close, convenient accommodations — and at a discount. For our special family rates writeTerry Cattell, your Howard Johnson's host T E M P E H O W A R D J O H N S O N ’S MOTOR LODGE AND RESTAURANT A c ro ss from Arizona State University at 225 E. Apache B lvd ' Tempe, Arizona 85281, or Telephone (602) 967-9431 £ °jLjPg^L^LPISC O U N T-PRESEN T THIS AD UPON REGISTRATION Buy Sahuaro 73 at the same time you pay your tuition. Sahuaro 73, more than just a yearbook a ui, engine rebuilt Aug. 1972, $495, call 833-3798 after 5 p.m. (12-6) • TYPING S A L E S P E R SO N W A N T E D — FO R P A R T T IM E S E L L IN G IN S T E R E O C O M PO N­ E N T STO RE R E Q U IR E S P R E V IO U S A U D IO OR M U SIC S T O R E E X P E R I­ E N C E , A FT E R N O O N A N D E V E N IN G W ORK, A U D IO S P E C IA L IS T S , 264-9911. ( 12-8) State Press photographers for the spring semester. Call Dan Huff, 965-3657. (12-8) Need singer, guitarist, flutist for wedding Dec. 30, 8 pm. Non-religious music. Call Ruth or Bill after 9:30 pm or before 9:30 am 967-6726. (12-8) Business opportunity, big money parttime or -full, male or female training provided. Earn your independence. Call 834-9559. (12-8) 69 Pontiac Lemans convertible, new top. 1966 Olds 88 Green convertible, new tires, god condition, $700, phone 964-8413. (12-6) Earn $90 weekly, work 3 evenings and Saturday, car necessary. Phone 834-0879. ( 12-8 ) Fiat. 124 Spyder '70 in top shape, has every extra, radial tires to A M -F M radio. 967-1740. (12-6) We need 9 Vivianne Woodard cosmetic consultants, training free, 9664)571. 64 VW van, new 1500 engine, new shocks and tires paneled and insulated, tape deck, must sell, best offer 968-3848, Robin, (12-8) Busines opportunity, female or male, part or full-time, very good pay. Call 966-2635. ( 12-8 ) 67 MG B, good engine 8s drive train, in­ terior needs work, $700, 275-9729. (12-8) • RENT Two bedroom coop. apt. $129 monthly, 946-1707. (12-8) San Miguel apts. 2 bd. 2 bath available Nov. 1, no lease 966-4713, 910 E. Lemon. ( 12-8 ) Coeds— Excelint opportunity to pick-up extra Xm as money and still maintain ac­ ademic and social obligation. We train cocktail waitresses full or part-time. Night work only. Apply in person at Friday's and Saturday's, 825 N. Scotsdale Rd weekdays. (12-8) Professional typing, call 275-9165, Mrs. Dee. (12-8) T Y P IN G — IB M Executive, 50 cents a page. Theses, dissertations, reports. East Phoe­ nix. 955-3206, 267-9812. (run) Term papers, resum es, theses, d isse rt* tions. Professional, guaranteed work. IB M . M axine M ullen. 955-0763. (run) Typing— fast accurate pica style, reason­ able rates, reports, research plus term papers, etc. call 955-6047. (12-8) IB M Prestige or Gothic type. Experienced editing, format. Convenient to ASU. 9661684. * (12-8) Blizzard Snow skis. 206 cm with poles, $55. Nordica boots size 10% fit 9 % foot $15. 9674906. (124) ( 12-8 ) Typing very reasonable, fast 8i accurate, exp. in thesis diss, pkup ASU, Lyn, 9638428. (12-8) Typing in m y home, IB M Selectric, Rose­ mary Vance, 967-9143. (12-8) Professional typing, IB M selectric, minor editing, reasonable 956-7983. (run) (run) • LOST P O E T R Y wanted for possible in coop­ erative volume. Include stamped env.. Editor, Box 4444C, Whittier, Calif. 90607. • INSTRUCTION Tennis instruction Tempo Racquet Club, prou por private lessons given by John Byron, Mike Wilkinson, Greg Parkerson, for more info, call 968-2453. 02-8) Sport parachuting instruction. Licensed im p m a it ir i, F A A exam iner and m aster rigge r on staff. 14 years experience. U . S. Parachute Service, M esa, 985-3980. (run) Reduced prices: Pioneer receiver $175, Ampex tape deck $190, AR5 spks $95 each, B SR turntable $35, all In very good condition, hurry must sell, 968-2330. (124) Typing, call Sherry Buttermore, 742-4375. Typing, term papers, transcription, theses, mailings. Resumes composed. Call Lora at 946-9517. (12-8) Smell gold German Shepherd, big feet add big ears, answers to Joshua, we loye him. 968-5006. Must sell B S R turntable, car stereo cas­ sette, Holly 4 bb. carb. weights, beads, 9464914. (124) New Wilson statt golf Clubs. 9 irons and 4 woods. Save $150 on thls set. Call 9672663. (124) • ANNOUNCEMENTS Shabbos dinner and service, Fri. Dec. 8, 6:30 p.m. with the film "L e t M y People G o," reservations at Hi lief, 966-5371 price $1.00. (12-8) New top brand stereo components from factory dist. 20% o r more off list price, 947-14M. (124) Fast, accurate typing. 10 years A SU ex­ perience. Pica or elite. 838-1642 or 8381649, 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. (run) 2 bd house, nice secluded, F& B yards, trees, carport, carpet near ASU, .$150 mo. call 966-0827. (12-8) (12-8) Panasonic RS-272US cassette tapedeck, autoreverse tape,' selector etc. near new, S100, call 959-1858 after 4. (12-6) Typing - exp., thesis, dissertations, sta­ tistics, former exec. sec. Karen 9680488. (run) Typing Jean Buttermore 277-3602 expert diss. thesis, term paper research papers. (run) Lost black lab pup. female, 9 wk old, white spot on chest, please call 967-4549, we love her. (12-6) SH O W T IM E S P la y Mon.-Tuas.-W ed. 7:15-9:10 P L A Y Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.-Sun. 3:30-5:207:28-9:20 1000 return address labels $1, 100 gummed gold-strlpt labels beautifully printed In Black with any name and address up to 4 lines, two inches long. Gold trim. Set of 100 In hand box, $1, postpaid, Labco, PO Box 7041, Phx. Arlz. 8501). (124) Typing— Tempo— 967-3675. * G irl's suede coat. Size 9/10, excelent con­ dition. 9664554. (124) MICHAEL SACKS RON LEIBMAN SHARON GANS VALERIE PERRINE Part-ownership In airplane Aeronca Champ. Good,' cheap' time builder. Cantact Dan, 9674071. (12-1) 10" Phllco color TV. like new, 2 months old. 222.00, call 966-2749, Pete. N E W set 14 x 7 G M mags, fit any Chevy make or model. Won on KU PD. retail 37.50 ea. Carless owner will S A C R IF IC E for much less, cell 2524791. (124) B P il l y il g r im l iv e s F R O M T IM E T O T IM E TO TIM E... M a n 's 10-speed bicycle In good condition, $50, 967-1140, 1137 E. Orange, Apt. #2. (124) • MOTORCYCLES 1971 Kawasaki 350 bighorn, exp. cham­ ber, comp, release, must sell, 968-3917. ( 12-8 ) • WANTED Honda 150 perfect cond. 9800 mi. $225, Schwinn paramount $290.00, 968-0615. ( 12-6 ) Need female to share rm in 2 bdrm apt, $61. 9674095, Charon or Leslie, 1700 Col­ lege, #24. (124) • SERVICES Roommate to share apt., one minute to campus. $60 total. Contact Chris at 705 Krueger #0, Tempe. (124) G raduate students, Chanukah party. Wed., Dec. 6, 8 p.m. 4540 5. R u ral Rd. Apt. F4 B y H illel. (12-6) ASTRO LO G Y. I will calculate, analyze and Interpret your horoscope for SIS. Larry, 966-4350. (124) Mele roommate, $67.00-month, own room in house, many bonofits, come see coll 966-7005, 960-2507. (124) Sunrise ski package availab le: Nine Pines M otel. Pinetop, Arlz. Reasonable rates, 833*4633. (12-8) G aur. typew riter service. A ll m akes, cleaning and new rib. M.S0, 966-5047. af­ ter 2:00. ()2 -l) Wanted rides to Paradise Valley, 30 0, Shea, willing to share expenses, contact Am ba Girl, 992-7635. (124) First fri. niter car rally, N E corner Thomas Mall, 7:00 pm $1 per carload, Phx Rally Org, ph 947-1654 fri. Dec. 1, C U there! «Minai nwrwwMni • FOR SALE Typing— experienced, neat, accurate. Call Anne, 946-4105. (12-8) Assistant head waitress with manage­ ment experience must have waitress ex­ perience and references. Contact Karen Weekdays, Friday's 8t Saturday's, 825 N. Scottsdale Road. (12-8) few 2 bdrm. townhouse shag/drapes, hildren, pets welcome $185, Dobson/ Broadway, 959-1612. (12-6) H ’PLAY AS CLASSIFIED ADS a HELP WANTED 3rd Week I D l l W C leisfied advertising m ust be paid fo r id advance either la peri od or by m a il ta (IN Stale Pres*, « S O 302, two d ays ia advance of pobiicatioa. No ado w ill bo accoptod aver the telephone. O ffice boors are I a.m , to 4 p.m. M o a ^ y through Thursday and • a.m. to aooa F riday. Phone M5-J457. R ato: $1 fo r three lines and M e fo r each ‘a dditional line. 5t per coat discount fa r consecutive additional days. There w ill bo no refunds for advertisem ents placed w ith the State Press. • AUTOMOBILES HELD OVER Broadway Rest of Rural Tempe .947-7057. Wednesday, Decem ber 6 — P age 11 In Fiesta marathon Runner defends title Arizona State cross country runner Pete Span will defend his title as Fiesta Bowl Marathon Champion Dec. 23 before the Fiesta Bowl game between ASU and Missouri. The marathon, in its second year, will cover 26 miles,; 385 yards, from Cave Creek to Scottsdale Community College. The race is sponsored by the Downtown and Valley of the Sun YMCA’s, and will begin at 9 a.m. Span covered the course in 2 hours, 23 minutes, 33.7 seconds last year and is looking for a better timé this year. “I’ll be trying to break the national collegiate record of 2:16,” said Span. M arathon director Tom Harris of the Downtown YMCA expects a field of 150 to 200 competitors, with the Uni- versity of Colorado sending down about 30 entrants. Harold Stephenson, a 42-yearold Phoenix attorney, will defend his title in the Senior division. Stephenson ran the course in 2 hours, 50 minutes, 20.7 seconds last year. He is one of 40 members of the Arizona Road Racers who will enter the event. The course originates a t Cave Creek and Basin Roads, and goes east to Scottsdale Road, south to Cactus, east to Hayden Road, south to Cholla, east to Pima Road, south to Chapparal, and east to the finish line in S c o tts d a le C o m m u n ity College’s parking lot Entries are being accepted by Harris at the Downtown YMCA, 350 N. First Ave., in Phoenix. The fee is $3-and deadline for entering is Dec. 15. Strong swimmers face tougher WAC By B R U C E JOHNSTON Optimistically, ASU this year has its best swimming team ever. “We have two or three, possibly five or six of the best swimmers we’ve ever had,” says Coach Walt Schleuter. Pessimistically, the Western Athletic Con­ ference lines up stronger than ever this year. For ASU, which never has finished higher than fifth in the WAC despite improvement every year, that’s bad. Depth factor This year Newhall, a sophomore, is eligible and swimming hard in practice. “Jimmy will go under two minutes in the EM (individual medley) this year,” Schleuter says. That time at the WAC championships in Albuquerque in the 200-yard individual medley could cinch first place. Top sw im m e rs Along with Newhall, Schleuter names as some of his best swimmers NCAA All-American Blair Driggs, a freestyler and butterfiyer; freshman sprinter Joel Johnson, a high-school All-American from Minnesota; and Jeff Latz, a sophomore who Schleuter says “is swimming times now equal to what he did at WAC last year.” Driggs and Latz were undefeated last year in WAC dual meet competition in the 200-yard but­ terfly, finishing 1-2 whenever they swam. Two weeks ago Schleuter hbd an intrasquad meet and said he was pleasantly surprised by the shape his team is in. ‘ ‘id That’s no surprise to anyoneffelso, though, as Schleuter is considered by mafty’&s one of the U.S.’s foremost swimming cobclies oh workout and training philosophy. •¿qm o ri Schleuter is a former Olympic coach, having trained many world record holders, including Don Schollander. 1•* Depth, once again, is Schleuter’s problem. In dual meets, lack of depth is a minor worry at best At championship meets it is killing, which is why ASU has a history of low finishes despite having had its share of swimming stars. So Schleuter says, optimistically, “If we caii keep everybody eligible and keep them from getting side, we’ll do all right.” Pessimistically he adds, “Sometimes T think this team has a hex over i t ” For example: Tuesday afternoon one of his swimmers came up to him a t the start of practice. Sigma Chi captured the intramural “A” league football The swimmer told him his roommate, another championship with an 8-6 win over Pi Kappa Alpha ending Com­ swimmer, wouldn’t be at the afternoon practice. petition between 87 teams in four divisions. Why? Sigma Chi accumulated 200 points over the season while Pi ’X The roommate had been sitting in his dorm Kappa Alpha had 194. The SAE’s and Theta Delts were third with room on the edge of his bed when a car squealed its 184% points. brakes in the parking lot outside his window. Terry Brenner, Sigma Chi’s quarterback, was voted the out- , Startled, he fell from the top bunk, injuring his W A C com petition standing player for the 1972 intramural season. Eight olto's. jvere | knee. There are no world, national or even WAC selected on the all star team offensive unit. They i%cjiia$|;‘j.D. | record holders on this year’s Sun Devil swim In the past, one of Schleuter’s top swimmers Schkeuter, Sigma Chi; John DeFonest, La Mancha; Bump'Wills, § lias jammed his arm through a closed window, team, spelling a doom, of sorts, to r ASU in WAC Sigma Chi; Gene Larson, SAE; Brad Parker,.Theta Delts; Bob competition. cutting it so severely that he was out for the Alicea, Pi Kappa Alpha; Greg Hdelk, SAE and Dan Madison, “Arizona is really potent. They should take it season. Last year the flu bug struck several team Sigma Chi. all,” Schleuter says. “Charlie (Hickcox, the UofA members — at the conference championships. The defense consisted of Bill Arnst, Sigma Chi; Henry coach and a 1968 Olympian) has really done some Raymond, Pi Kappa Alpha, Rick Smith, Fijis; Lee Wagner, Sigma recruiting. He’s got two kids we were pushing hard Eligibility p ro b le m s Chi.; Bruce McDonald, SAE;Jefjf Dowling, Sigma Nu; Bob Schmitt, for. ’Tort Feasors; Mark Wright, Joint Effort; Tom Rustwick, Pi Kappa Eligibility, that other affliction, seems to strike “If we had them we’d really be strong.” every year, but especially hard last year. Jim Alpha. Newhall one week set a school record in the 200- Recruiting strength The Theta Delts won the “B” league championship defeating Posssy in the playoffs, and also won the “160 pound” league over yard breaststroke. The next Week he was the Sig Eps. ineligible. Hickcox’s recruting strength comes from his Sigma Chi led the fraternity division for overall points with association with Jim Counsibnan, coach at the 1,654. They were followed closely by the Phi Sigs with 1,649 points. University of Indiana, Hickcox’s alma mater. 1972-73Swimming Schedule P.V. West leads in the residence hall division with 787 points while Indiana has so many swimming superstars Date —Opponent Site the Tort Feasors are atop the independent division with 1,880 Counsibnan is now farming them out to his Jan. 20 —University of Arizona Tempe points. protege at the UofA. Jan. 26 —Air force Tempe Schleuter rated New Mexico right behind Jan. 27 —Colorado St., Arizona, Albuquerque Arizona, with Colorado State third. Feb. 3 —Cal State-Long Beach Tempe “They’re (Colorado State) the defending WAC Feb. 9-10 —Arizona, Brigham Young, Tucson champ and they’ve always got a good club. Then Univ. of Texas at Arlington there’s Utah and BYU. They’re pretty good too,” , Feb. 15-16 —Arizona, San Diego St. San Diego he says. Mar. 1-3 —WAC Championships Albuquerque Sigma Chi captures football championship M « f i m u i , w in m m HIGHEST QUALITY LOWEST PRICES • 1845 E. University Tempe V/2 B lo ck E a st of Hayden R d .) • 706 N. Scottsdale RdH Tempe (A t the R ive r Bottom ) P age 12 — W ednesday, Decem ber 6 ^Î^^Î^iW ^ÿÿÿSSÿÿÿÿrS « Plans for an intram ural sports program for han­ dicapped students received a big boost Thursday with the passage of an ASUSU Senate bill transferring $500 from a defunct organization to the intramurals office. Money transfer boosts handicap The money, transferred from the Residence Hall Association, will double the funds currently available for the program, according to Violet Pauls of the Intramural Office. Intramural activities will include wrestling, baseball, gymnastics, archery, wheelchair basketball a n d . wheelchair judo. The activities finally offered will depend upon the response intramural hopes By S A N D Y S H O O K 'Four Loves' shows tonite A full-length Chinese movie, Four L oves,” will be presented Dec. 7 by the Center for Asian Studies and the Ad Hoc C om m ittee for AsianAmerican Studies. The movie from Taiwan was filmed in Mandarin Chinese with both English and Chinese subtitles. • Four Loves” is the story of a girl who must choose a husband from three cousins who love her. In the midst of the girl’s family conflict, the Chinese Revolution of the 20’s is raging. There will be showings at 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. Cost is 75 cents. by handicapped students to a survey taken by Pauls, who is in charge of the new program. The largest obstacle to the program, is finding out who the handicapped students are, so that they can be surveyed, Pauls said. The University maintains no lists, and the program will remain in the tentative stages until they can be located, she said. “After that, we’ll just have to hope we have a good turnout to keep the program going,” Pauls said. Pauls is researching a physical education thesis on the status of intramural programs for handicapped students in member schools of the National Intramural Association. She said volunteer teachers for the program will be drawn from the community and from physical education majors on campus. Mike Martena, head of the Disabled Students Organization, is working on a federal grant to aid the project, which he described as “Therapeutic for a lot of people who haven’t been covered by die University — and a university should cover aU people.” He added that the funds transferred to the intramural office “might get the University hopping.” Would An A’ Help Your Average Sem ester ? Concert features PICK symphony winds a p l a id marching band R O G R A M M E D k E A R N IN G A concert featuring ASU’s Symphonic Winds and the Sun D evil M arching Band is scheduled for 8 p.m. tomorrow in Gammage Auditorium. P L A ID s are available in R atailin g Introduction to Business Busine** Law Managem ent A ccounting Business and M arketing The marching band, con­ ducted by Robert Miller, will feature hit tunes including “Bali Hai,” and the title song from Issac Hayes’ movie “Shaft” in the second part of the program. Muniz to speak Ramsey Muniz, La Raza Unida Party’s candidate for governor of Texas, will speak at 2 p.m. today, in Murdock 101. La Raza Unida Party is an independent political party. Series P L A ID s teach you S T E P B Y ST EP , unlike other college study aids. P L A ID s are self-testing and review as you go. P L A ID s are programmed. Y ou can always be sure you understand and have learned the material. The concert is free to the public. The two-part program begins with a performance by the Symphonic» Winds under the direction of Dr. Kenneth Snapp. “ King Cotton,” “ Semper Fidelis” and “Golden Jubilee,” all by John Philip Sousa, the famed “ March King,” will highlight the symphonic winds program. A current campaign during this 40th anniversary year of Sousa’s death seeks to have him elected to the Hall of Fame for Great Americans, according to Dr. Snapp. AID Business and Econom ic Statistics Interm ediate Accounting, Vot. 1 Interm ediate Accounting, V o l. 2 Elem entery Accounting, V o l. 1 Elem entary A ccounting, V o l. 2 Handbook for Achieving Academ ic Success College Mathem etics S id e iïT d a Ë Principles o f Menegement Basic Algebra Introduction to Data Processing Principles o f Econom ics: M acro Introductory Sociology F O R T R A N : A Beginner's Approech Principles of Econom ics: M icro College level study supplements. Professionally programmed fo r quick learning and review. Exam inations with answers fo r each chapter, and a final. Detailed glossary/ index for easy reference. One Block North of Campus 704 S. College, Tempe, Arizona 966-6226