î friday Arizona State University Vol. 55, No. 55 M arch 1«, 1973 state press Tempe, Arizona Court hears profs suit against copper mines By JO H N L E H O C K E Y S ta ff W rite r The A rizona Suprem e Court took under a d v ise m e n t y e s te rd a y th e question- o f w hether a c lass action su it ag ain st various Arizona copper com panies should be allow ed to be h eard in th e low er co u rts a t ASU. The high co u rt m et in th e G reat H all in th e College of Law . The c la ss action su it w as filed in behalf of th e people of M aricopa County by two ASU professors and th e ir w ives. D r. M ark R eader, asso ciate professor of political science, and D r. A lbert M ayer, professor of sociology charg ed th e copper com panies w ith “in terferen ce w ith th e n a tu ra l enjoym ent (of th e environm ent) of th e people of M aricopa C ounty.” T heir atto rn ey , R ich ard W ilks, said sev eral copper com panies a re nam ed in th e s u it _ “ We h av e nam ed M agna-Supenor Copper. Com pany, Inspiration C onsolidated Copper Cp. R ay M ines D ivision erf K ennicott Copper C o rp o ra tio n , A m e ric an S m eltin g a n d R efining; Phelps-D odge and M agna Copper Com pany, W ilks said. W ilks said th e su it originally w as filed in D ecem ber of 1969. “ We a re asking for actu al, punitive an d injunctive dam ages totalin g $1 billion,” he said. ¿ ^ R e a d e r said h e filed th e su it because of th e grow ing serioqsness of th e a ir pollution problem in th e Vglley. “ We filed in th e w ake of a serious sm og a tta ck . It seem ed a s though no one c a re d ,” he said. T h e tw o p ro fe s s o rs a r e p e rso n a lly supporting th e co u rt costs, although they say they have receiv ed m any offers of support. M ayer said they w ere not a fte r anyone. W ilks said he h ad no id ea when th e court w ould ren d er a decision on y esterd ay ’s .litigatio n . --------------------- . “ I don’t know w hen th ey ’ll decide. We’ll ju st have to w ait and se e,” h e said. Slate lists 13 TROG candidates TROG announced y esterd ay i t w ill be running a broad-based, m u lti-racial sla te of can d id ates in th e upcom ing student governm ent elections. Jo h n M o rg an , TROG spokesm an and candidate ass ¿.ms for ASASU p resident, th e c o a litio n has m e m b e rs ru n n in g officer positions. PIÉ ip ^ m « % m s M organ, said a TROG m em ber is’running for each of th e five executive officers positions. M em bers a re also com peting for five senate seats from the college of L ib e ra l A rts,' an d th re e B u sin ess A d m in istra tio n seats. M organ h a s ^ issu e d ultim atum s to th e other p re s id e n tia l c a n d id a te s , challenging them to debate any issue a t any tim e during the race. He a lso c h a lle n g e d c a n d id a te s to fo rm a lly p re s e n t th e ir p o litic a l p la tfo rm s b e fo re th e U niversity voters. M organ said a fte r spring recess TROG will set up a table on th e M all to explain th eir positions. He said this is being done to p re v e n t “ ru m o r cam paigns” w hich m ight s ta rt against th e TROG coalition. “ L a st year M anuel F ig u e ro a ra n a v icio u s ru m o r c a m p a ig n a g a in s t M arlen e S k ib a (d e fe a te d p re s id e n tia l c a n d id a te ) T h is y e a r, a ru m o r cam paign is being sta rte d against TROG. “ T h at's why w e’re com ing out in th e open w ith th is tab le on the M all." M organ said. Figueroa, present administrative vice p re s id e n t an d e le c tio n s coordinator, said TROG’s accusations a re unfounded. He said he did not w age stfch an a tta c k a g a in s t Skiba, and is not w aging one presently against TROG. “ We have differences of opinions on som e things, like tactics used and so on. but th a t’s ju st different strokes for different folks,” he said. “ Since I’ve assum ed the p o sitio n of e le c tio n s coordinator, I have not said one thing for o r ag ain st any one can d id ate.” ¡S3Sa9ftB^ Library hours change III ti M aybe next time the 'French Connection?' Joyce Knight and David Colosimo, members of the Styles: Acting and Directing class, perform excerpts from a Greek dram a on the steps of the Education Lecture Hall. The players, being graded by another drama class, appeared around noon yesterday hoping to gain experience by performing for students passing by between classes, ptwto by A m HeroM H ayden Library w ill be open 8 a.rri. to 5 p.m. M o n d a y through Friday •next w eek. It w ill be closed both sp rin g b re ak w e e k ends. Page 2 — Friday, M arch 16 "Selling the right to se ll" Official raps pyramid sales plan B y C L IF G L A S G O W M any pyram id sales operations a re built on unfulfillable prom ises and m isle a d in g in fo rm a tio n , according to R obert Blakey J r ., ASU law graduate, and assistan t attorney g eneral in th e Consum er Protection D ivision o f A rizo n a’s A tto rn ey G eneral’s offide. B lakey told th e ASU m arketing club W ednesday a pyram id sales schem e basically involves selling th e rig h t to sell. A distributorship is sold w hich gives th e distributor the rig h t to sell th e product. T he p y ra m id s a le s o p e ra to rs co n v in ce p ro sp e c ts th ey can accum ulate fan tastic profits quickly by purchasing a distributorship and d ev elo p in g sa le sm e n to buy p ro d u c ts w h o lesale from th e d istributor. d is trib u to r to en c o u ra g e o th e r Some pyram id sales operators u s e . prospects to invest.) incentive m eetings sim ilar to high B lakey said since passage of the school p ep ra llie s to d eceiv e Arizona Consum er P rotection Act of prospects and tra p them into signing 1967 his agency is no longer c o n tra c ts fo r an e x c lu siv e re stric te d to investigating illegal d is trib u to rs h ip w ith in th e s a le s contracts. The agency is now free to organization, B lakey said. use F ed eral T rade Commission “ W hat is w rong with these outfits guidelines in exam ining the conduct selling distributorships is they a re of m erchants before a sale. The m aking statem en ts th at a re ju st agency can use federal law to im possible o r very m isleading,” he co rrect discrepancies in practice, he said. said. B lakey noted th a t extending the The Consum er Protection Division pyram id sales prom otion concept to w orks c lo se ly w ith b u sin ess its extrem e would quickly produce organizations, especially the B etter an organization th a t num erically B usiness B ureau (BBB), to obtain exceeds th e sta te population. voluntary correction of problem s. He said tap es of som e incentive rallie s had disclosed the use of O ften th e p ro b lem is reso lv e d w ithout legal action, he said. reh earsed routines and shills to speed sales of distributorships. (A “ We re ta in th e rig h t to ignore shill is a person em ployed by the *th eir (the BBB) disposition if we feel com pany to a c t as a potential it’s not eq u itab le,” he said. The “m uscle” behind th e agency is its investigative sta ff and pow er of subpoena, B lakey said. As a branch of th e A ttorney G eneral’s office, th e agency can hold its own investigations and h e a rin g s , im p o u n d goods for, in v e s tig a tio n , se e k in ju n c tio n s a g a in s t b u s in e s s e s, a n d p la c e c o m p a n ies i n " re c e iv e rs h ip fo r failu re to com ply to stan d ard s, he said. Inform ation com es from m any sources B lakey said. “ We get a lo t of inform ation from people who have ju st h eard of som ething happening.” Any citizen m ay file a form al com plaint but even w ithout a form al com plaint, th e division can proceed ag ain st un fair p ractices, B lakey said. Indian demonstration cancelled EVEN NUNS CAN BE LIBERATED. By JO H N B A N A SZ E W SK I S ta ff W rite r An In d ia n stu d e n t dem onstration against the 14th A nnual In d ia n ' E d u c a tio n C o n feren ce a t ASU h as been called off; because student grievances regarding th e conference have been resolved. T he p ro te s t is now u n n e c e ssa ry b e c a u se a special w orkshop h as been added to th e conference’s agenda to provide a forum for Indian students to a ir th eir feelings, according to . Bill D eH aas, coordinator of the U niversity’s Office of Indian A ffairs. St. G erm aine said the grievances began la st year when th e conference did not consult th e advisory board on scheduled activ ities for th e w orkshop. H ie sam e thing happened th is year, he said, with the board having little o r no voice in the •shaping of the conference. R ick S t. G e rm a in e, m em b e r of th e S p ecial Services Advisory B oard to U niversity P resident John S chw ada and fo rm e r c h a irm a n o f th e In d ia n Advisory B oard, said the dem onstration, planned for today, w as “ on” a s late as W ednesday. St. G erm aine said other problem s exist with the C e n te r fo r In d ian E ducation, sponsors of the a n n u a l c o n fe re n ce , lik e tokenism and a lack o f , co m m u n ic a tio n . He sa id m em bers of th e U niversity’s Indian com m unity a re not being involved adequately in th e d ecisio n -m ak in g process of th e center. D e H a a s . sa id som e tokenism exists a t every level of the decision-m aking hierarch y , but not to the extent th a t som e contend. C om m unications a re as good a s can be expected, considering th e divergent view s w ithin th e Indian com m unity, he said. The C enter w as conceived a s a m odel fo r fu tu re p ro g ra m s, h'e s a id . T he C enter’s fram ew ork w as a fo re ru n n e r fo r th e U n iv e rsity , b u t it now cannot a c t a s a cure-all for all Indian-related problem s. S t., G erm aine said th e dem onstration was considered only a s a m eans of stopping th e Indians on cam pus from “ being led like sheep” and a t infusing them directly into th e decision­ m aking a p p aratu s of th e conference. T he c o n fe re n c e ru n s th ro u g h to d ay and highlights eight w orkshops devoted to discussing such topics a s fed eral legislation affecting Indian education, In d ia n te a c h e r a id e p ro g ra m s a n d th e lo c a l adm inistration of reserv atio n schools. Megillah Reading & Party Saturday, March 17,7:30 PM at the Party Room of La Tierra Apt's 4540 S. Rural Rd„ Tempo BYOB Call Hillel for m ore info — 966-5371 Paperback News from HILLS Â A « C O » IM A IH W U A USTTiP IM A M i l « NUT* " O p e n M a r r ia g e ” now available In paperback Yesterday’s nuns led a cloistered life. When they ventured out, It was two-by-two. Then- rote* were traditional and within church in­ stitutions. ^ Thlngs have changed. The world. . Thè Church. The roles women play. Yet for one order, these changes are hardly apparent. Ever since the Dominican Sisters of the Sick Poor were founded ia 1876, they have been engaged in pastoral ministry. Theyhave always been flexible. Always self-motivated. Always had freedom. Why? By flat vgry natele od their work. The Dominican Sisters of the Sick Poor give free nursing care to the needy in their own homes. They travel alone by bus or by subway. Or by d r . Or on foot And their day doesn’t end at 8ve o’clock. Each case presents t dNfered problem: whether it » bring»» physical or spiritual comfort, keeping a family together, coun­ seling or bridging the gap be­ tween social agencies, we bring the ietve «ad devotion of Christ. We are in direct contact with the people we care for. You see. we don’t have to be lib­ erated. We a rt.. For more information on the Dominican Sisters of f o f t t Poor write tot Sister Marguerite Mitchell, Vocation Director Room 196 at M alfondate, O ssiotag, HILL'S New York 19562 BOOKS AN D R EC O R D S F O R R E S E R V A T IO N S A N D IN F O R M A T IO N C A L L : Tutmp* Center - 967-5243 "Browsers Welcomod— Buyers Adored" For student» and faculty 21 end over ALLEN G A ED E Berge Ford, M esa, Arizona 764-2921 INI SKXPOOR. Friday, M arch ló — Paga 3 Administrator says 'Flunk Slips don't help' The long, ulcerous w ait fo r deficiency slips m ay b e com ing to a rap id end, according to E nos Underwood, U niversity re g istra r. H ie “ D ” and “ E ” slip te n d s,to te ll the student som ething he alread y know t o r doesn’t' c a re about, he said. T here is a possibility m id-term g rad es w ill only be d irected tow ards freshm an in d ie ’future, “ We’re taking into consideration th a t th e seniors, ju n io rs, and sophom ores alread y know w hat’s happening,” Underw ood said. A v ast m ajo rity of un iv ersities only req u ire deficiency rep o rts for freshm en. “They apply ju st to freshm en, a s a m a tte r of e n c o u ra g e m e n t or d iscouragem ent,” he said. U nderw ood said a la rg e percentage of th e faculty do not tu rn in th e ir deficiency slips and th a t no specific ru le req u ires a teach er to subm it them . Studies to determ ine th e percentage of m id-term g rad e s tu rn ed in w ill begin in th e next m onth. E ach deficiency slip costs th e university eig h t cents to m ail. U nderwood said deficiency rep o rts only serv e a s a w arning to th e student. They cannot com pell a person to re a d th e th e notice, if th e student evidently h as not been reactin g in th e classroom ,” he said. Collage Today Lunch, noon to 1:30 p.m „ Baker Center. Home-cooked meal for only 50 cents. College Life, 7:61 p.m., 13th and M ill across from Gam m age. Sponsored by Cam pus Crusade for Christ. "A n tarctic Tetrapode in Gondwanaland, 3:40 p.m., A g 150. Speech by Or. Edw in Colbert, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the M useum of Northern Arizona In Flagstaff. Tuesday, M arch 20 Arizona Mountaineering Club, 7:45 p.m., /Madison School, 15,525 N. 16th St. Phoenix. Rock clim ber B ill Forrest w ill present a lecture and slide show on the "F o re st W alker Route" Thursday, M arch 22 George and Helen B liss of Friends Com mittee on N ational Legislation, (F O N D , 7:30 p.m., M U Yavapai Room. Veteran European traveler Indians sponsor raffle gives advice to ÄSU students for alleged kidnapper B y L IN D A D O H E R T Y Students traveling to Europe shoidd do some research before they leave to decide where they want to go and what kinds of things they want to see, veteran European traveler, Ed Levi, told a group of ASU students. He advocated camping over staying in hotete for the student. “ Camping is cheaper than hotels, but it also offers more freedom, relief from the ten­ sions of the dUes. and, most important, a fabulous ¡dace far meeting other Europeans,” be n ta l' campgrounds a re generally very nicely situated and are well equipped with dean, modern facilities. We’ve found cam ping throughout Europe not only the easiest, but also the most ad­ vantageous means of travel,” Levi said. He said that it’s a good idea to get a car if possible, because driving allows the trav eler more freedom to get to some of ttie out-of-the-way (daces. “It’s wise if you’re driving or using a motorscooter, to get an international driving pennit,” Levi said. Car insurance is more ex­ pensive than in the United States, he said, about $80' for three months. Gas is veryexpensive, he said, about 90 cents a gallon. 5C Sundae Buy one, get the second one for 5C For those who choose to hitchhike, Levi said the main problem is weariness. “Often, when I got to a city, I was so tired I didn’t get to see the things I went to the city for,” he said. U you want to trav d cheap, Levi said, the key is to watch people.« - „ “The main way to stay cheap in any country is to live the way the people do,” he said. --------- T . jig .■ .— A raffle supporting the R o b e rt N a k a tin a e L egal D efen se F u n d w ill be sponsored by th e Arizona Indian Student A ssociation a t th e Indian Student A ffairs Office (AISA), M atthew s C enter, th is m onth. The raffle prize is a 2’ x 2’ N avajo sandpainting of the Sun a n d E a rth , by a rtis t E. Hunt. The painting is on dis(day in the AISA office. : The ra ffle will he}p raise m oney for the defense of R obert N akatinae, one of th e tw o In d ia n y o u th s involved in the “supposed” k id n ap p in g of M ayor E m m et G arcia in G allup, New M exico, s a id P a t C ronem eyer of th e AISA. R affle tick ets, 25 cents a piece, w ill be sold on the m all from 9 a m . to 3 p.m . w eekdays. T he d raw in g fo r th e s a n d p a in tin g w ill b e on M arch 30. T he w inner does not have to atten d to win. HAMANTASCHER HOUR! ■i« < • l i l n_n ^ipPrfH ANMRAflSy Friday, March 16 V0-12 Moon Baker Center A R T IS T - & D R A F T IN G S U P P L IE S FREE! Crafts • Picture Frames Decorating Material O pen M on. A T h u rs . N ite s 10% Discount to Students ill E. University — 967-4482 Call Hillel, 966-5371 for more information CONTACTSAREA GIRL’S BEST FRIEND. a "Scrum pdillyishus" offer good Thurs. & Fri., M arch 15 & 16. What a “acruinpdillyiahua" aaia. Buy on. DAIRY QUEEN sun da. any siaa and gat a second on. for W. It’s America’s favorite treat tripped with hot fudge or strawberry or any flavor you like. Any­ thing this good just hss to ha shared. So bring a friend and aati drink and save white Ala great offer lasts at participating DAIRY QUEENS. . "L m t'm a l l g o to t b e D A I R Y Q U E E N " T E M P E DIARY QUEEN Corner 1«lh A M ill- « 67-4442 "Across from Tempo Cosier" Contact lenses can help you look better, feel better. Our contacts are flawlessly ground to exact specifications. They're fitted with care by professionals. Let u s show you the new comfort and convenience of our contact lenses. TEMPE 13 CONVENIENT VISION CEN TERS THROUGHOUT ARIZONA Op*» Monday through Saturday. Tem p* C enter/2032 S. Industrial Park Are. 967-7864 967-7333 ■ttaaun.nw.ow.. aw. oa. osw. toowyitaw wra »» as», owe. • ra t« ;« » » . a a « « .« a-j»« • a « . c t * a a ! Single-vision contact tenses: m O p tic a l in ti m m H in r n t m t in t in it « i Page 4 — Friday, M arch 16 Op inion state press * Contempt Bruce Tomaso 'Moving quickly' On Dec. 16,1971, M ark Wilson presented a. com prehensive report on the need foi4 m arried student housing to U niversity P resid en t John Schwada. Schwada in turn, directed G ilbert Cady, vice president fori business affairs, to study the report. Wilson, a t th at tim e adm inistrative' assistan t to the ASASU president, said he' was “ inordinately pleased” with Schw ada’s response to his proposal. He w as quoted in the Jan . 6,1972, State P ress as saying Cady “has gone ahead and is m oving quickly” to solve the U niversity’s m arried student housing problem . That problem , sim ply stated , is th at ASU is the only Arizona university th at does not provide housing for m arried students. Ac­ cording to records based on registration inform ation, th ere a re m ore than 6,000 m arried students a t ASU. A U niversity of­ ficial said th a t this figure is alm ost certainly a low estim ate, since m ore than 9,000 students failed to answ er the question regarding m arital sta tu s on registration form s. But back to m oving quickly. Four m onths a fte r W ilson subm itted the proposal, he w as elected student body president. One of the things about which P resid en t Wilson talked a great deal w as m arried student housing. As a rep o rter for th e S tate P ress last sem ester, I w as assigned to cover th e progress of the m arried student housing proposal. T here w as none. Cady m et w ith Wilson. Wilson m et with Schw ada. Cady and Wilson and Schwada m et together. But very little w as done. On Nov. 27, 1972, Cady announced th at A dult S tu d en t H ousing, a n o n -p ro fit organization based in S eattle, w as studying th e feasability of m arried student housing a t ASU. • The resu lts of th a t survey w ere com ­ pletely predictable. ‘-‘We found th ere is’ a need for low cost housing,” Cady said this week. M arried students could have told him th at y e a rs ago. On M arch 22, five arch itects w ill m eet w ith Cady and Schw ada to study design and building concepts which w ill be considered. That m eeting m ay be th e firs t indication th a t ASU is seriously contem plating building m arried student q u a rte rs. Cady said th at som e specifications and a proposed site for th e building have alread y been determ ined. A ssum ing a t le a st one of th e arch itects’ Plans is acceptable, and assum ing th e U niversity decides to go ahead w ith the pro ject, Cady said fu rth e r planning would tak e about six m onths. A t th e «am » Him» construction would h ave to be funded through th e sale of revenue bonds. Though th e bonds would be rep aid by revenues collected, i.e. ren ts, instead of tax assessm ents, Cady said th a t econom ic conditions do. not fac ilita te passage of any kind of bond issue a t th is tim e. A ssum ing, again, th a t th e proposal survives th e p lanning and funding stages, Cady said “ th ere is no w ay of telling how long construction m ay tak e .” So, am id a host of vague assum ptions, te n a tiv f proposals, and sketchy tim etables, only one fa c t is c le a r: A nother academ ic y ear and another ASASU election w ill pass before m arried student housing is any m ore a rea lity th a t 15 m o n th s ago. T hat’s a funny w ay to “m ove quickly.” state press STATE PRESS is published by Arizona State' University Tuesday through Friday during the a c a d e m ic y e a r , e x c e p t h o lid a y s an d exam ination periods. Entered a s second class' m a tte r a t Tempe, AZ, 85281. If you want a more efficient Associated Students, one that is more responsive to student needs, you can Marne a select group of student senators for holding up the show. For about five weeks these senators have been fooling around with the ASASU executive officers’ proposal for restructuring the student association. The latest word is that the proposal has been tabled indefinitely, which probably means no reform for a long tune. . Of course, there may be a few insignificant changes in the ASASU statutes—just to show us the Senate is alive and well. It would take a pretty incredible em­ balming job to pull that off, however. Nobody knows the real reason behind the Senate’s failure to act, but we can guess: 1) Either the senators are confused about the proposal, which is understandable if you’re ever listened to the inane bubbling that frequently passes for discussion during their meetings; or, 2) They think by approving the proposal — and thus abolishing the Senate in favor of a more representative college council system — they will be admitting what everybody has been saying all «dong: Hie Senate is not only inefficient and unrepresentative, it is also a cesspool of petty bickering. The following senators are members- of the sub­ committee which tabled the restructuring proposal: Walt Kendall, Ira Matloff, Eddie Yee, Lendra Powell, Jim Witherspoon, Art Garcia, Ran Dee Bowerman, Mike KeDey, Debbie Drommerhausen and Karen Starith. ‘ gMinu t These senators have demonstrated their contempt for the wishes of ASU students. Now it is time for the students to take action. We hope the executive officers can find a way to put the restructuring issue on the general election ballot. Rick Mahrle Shopping in 1980: worse than 1973 E very W ednesday afternoon, I go rushing to th e food section of th e p ap er. I ’ve been doing it since Nixon’s first econom ic m oves in th e e arly 70’s, but it’s been g ettin g w orse in th e 80s. The ads don’t look m uch different, but p rices a re higher and inscribed in th e co rn er th ere is: “ P ric e s subject to change.” And th e p rices change fast. S uperm arkets a re now equipped w ith com puter p ricers. As th e p rice goes up, a digital calcu lato r shows th e new figure. Som etim es th e prices- can go up w hile you a re holding th e item in th e check out line, so once in th e storeyou have to m ove fa st, especially if you a re on a lim ited budget. A fter surveying th e ads, I quickly m ade a list of w hat I thought I could buy w ith m y $8 and rushed to th e store. As I w alked in, a lady knocked m e down try in g to get checked out before h e r bread w ent up to $1. F irs t stop—th e m eat counter. I asked th e bu tch er for som e ham burger. “ Will th a t be th e ground fa t, th e ground chuck fa t o r th e ground sirloin fat? ” he asked w ith a sneer. L et m e have a pound of th e ground chuck fa t I a sk e d .1 Click-click w ent thevdigits^pn th e com puter p rice listin g ., Between asking fo r th e m qat and getting it w eidied, it w ent up two cents. j And alread y I had only $6 left. N ext w as a loaf of-bread, 95 cents. Some cheese, 60 cents a slice, bacon-$2 a pound. I quickly figured th e costonly about $3.50 left. « » tte s , som e m u stard and a sm all sack ofjw tato chips and I w as up to $7.95. Suddenly th e sto re’s p rice com puter sta rte d clicking and every item w ent up two cents. M aybe I’ll just have to stop eating Friday, M arch 16 — Page 5 S? m Letters Election boss clarifies pointE d ito r: R egarding yom^ a rticle , “ W ilson P icks^A ssistant to C h e c k .V o te R e s u lts ,” a point"!» clarification is in o rd er.. A cco rd in g 1 to th e ASASU E le c tio n C ode, A rticle I, Section 1.2, (G ), (2), “ A ll c o m p le te d absentee ballots m ust be tab u lated and verified by th e E lections C oordinator, th e A c tiv itie s V iceP resid en t, and th e ASASU P re s id e n t,. or th e ir designated rep resen tativ es, if th e s e o ffic e rs a r e unavailable . . . ” The Code fu rth er re a d s in A rticle I, Section 1.2, (H ), (5) th a t “ The E lections C oordinator shall re s tric t everyone, w ith th e exception of th e ASASU P re s id e n t a n d A c tiv itie s V ic e -P re sid e n t, E le c tio n personnel authorized by th e E lections C oordinator, and A dvisor, provided they a re n o t c u rre n t c a n d id a te s , fro m th e s ite o f th e ta b u la tio n . No p e rso n s, oth er th an th e E lections C oordinator and E lection p e rso n n e l a u th o riz e d by him , sh all p a rticip a te in any m a n n e r in th e v o te tab u latio n .” In lig h t of th is,.M r. Steve K irby’s involvem ent in the counting and validating of ballots c a st in th e Spring E lection sh all be lim ited to absentee ballots only. The E le c tio n C ode c le a rly - m akes a distinction betw een th e ta b u la tio n and v a lid a tio n o f a b s e n te e ballots and re g u la r ballots and betw een th e pow er of th e ASASU P resid en t as it p ertain s to th e designation of p r e s i d e n t i a l re s p o n s ib ility in th e tabulation and validation of th ese tw o kinds o f ballots. It is h o p ed th a t th is ». » explanation shall c le a r up any m is u n d e rs ta n d in g s a b o u t P re s id e n t M ark W ilson’s designation. M anuel F igueroa $ E lection C oordination :§ early hour for serious study. the basis th at a sizeable g photographs by K. E zra & Or, if a resident and her | minority participate in them jijj S horr, one of w hich w as not * visitor are watching a late :§ (for instance, the attem pt to | | only a prize w inner, but w as movie that ends a t 12:30 (some M increase the already sizeable £ obscene, sa cre lig to tib ,, and | movies run til 2:30 a.m . on S allotm ent given to the in- g sexist. F ifty dollars w as | weekends) the visitor will not g tram ural program) I propose a gi aw arded for a C hrist-like sim itar subsidy to smokers; ff i fig u re , see the end of the show. O r'if he c o v e re d w ith does,-be will break the Code of g ASASU will cater to one special f? sw astikas. Conduct and risk explusion. $ interest group, it Should cater to % A n o th er p hoto e n title d g As far as the inconvenience g all special interest groups. “ A fter th e Touch,” w as for a roommate, there are two & Therefore I propose th at g nauseating and insulting to ASASU supply all smokers with % Editor#- -**• •sr-rvr“ ; S rooms in McClintock for two | a ll wom en. Possibly I should girls — a living and study area, g smoking m aterials of th eir % We resented very much the be addressing th e judges, choice. g ed ito rial published in la st » andv . the . bedroom ; r .. .. . A- . tired » Absurd? Not when compared g but it has com e to m ÿ a t­ Tuesday’s State Press re g a r-g reddent could easily go to her § dOOI* Oil close tile the door on her SI to other ASASU special interest :§ tention th at M r. S horr is ding the 24-hour niciioliAn visitation !•!• bed and ClOS8 roommate and date. Where is jp program s! Why should all g haying a poetry reading proposal of McClintock Hall. g students pay for the toys of g along w ith slides of his work The editorial said, in effect, that Si the inconvenience? a t N eeb H all, A pril 13. One The 24-hour visitation g those “students” who prefer the sex-crazéd women of Mc- g Clintock should find outlets for iji proposal which was rejected by g recreation to education? jiji can only im agine w hat kind of w ork will be spew ed out in th eir desires other than ^ Student Affairs was a plan for pi Twenty-thousand dollars is University facilities. p an experimental 15-day period ■:•: easily more than enough to \ th e nam e of a rt. I certain ly cover such para-educational have no intention of a t­ We wish to straighten out a g during which 24-hour visitation activities. . :? tending and hope th at M r. few misled minds. First of all, g would be practiced. After this Somehow it seems that many Shorr will receive no m oney there was a bit of misin- g 15-day period, the residents such programs get out of hand. would decide iflhey liked it, and formation given. The Univerand no attention. They often establish petty g sity rule about visitation hours g then present's final plan to the It seem s to m e th at poetry bureaucracies whose chief §: of a rea l a rtis t such a s Rod is 12 noon til 12 midnight on g Student Affairs Committee for function is self-perpetuation. I weeknights; 12 noon til 2:00 g approval. M cKuen would be m ore for one would like to know what « w o rth w h ile. C an ’t With the hope of sounding like a.m . on weekends, not 1:00 a.m . g th e all that money is spent on: :$ as stated in the editorial. ip intelligent humans in 1973, we C ultural A ffairs C om m ittee Some coordinators’ salaries, no :j£ Secondly, the writer assumed i-i- ask that in the future you get doubt. g req u est Rod M cKuen in­ that sex only takes place at g your facts straight, and hang stead of coddling the c rass night in a bed. The act is quite » your scarlet “A” elsewhere. J.D. Silento w ork of M r. Shorr? possible a t any time of the day g ^un G Swiger Moderator, -i-i Suzanhe F rench or night, in cars, to the desert | vlce ¿ McClintock The committee to g: and on floors, as well as to bed. break Parkinson’s Law. Bette Taylor The present visitation hours her roommate The State Press welcomes provide ample time for any » comments from the University resident of any dormitory to do community on any m aterial what he or she wishes. published to the newspaper, or However, the most important on any topic determined to be of inference the editorial made 1 interest to the majority of the was that the only purpose of the Editor E d ito r: | campus. 24-hour proposal was the It has come to my attention R ecently I attended th e | L etters typew ritten, procreation of the species. We that between one-quarter and F o u rth A nnual Photography g doubled-spaced — to be sub­ would like to point out that one-half of a ll U niversity Show a t th e M em orial Union mitted to the Editor, State McClintock is an honor hall. All students are smokers. G allery. Although not a Press, must be edited for libel of the residents must have at Although I am a non-smoker,' photography stu d en t, I am and compliance with postal least a “B” average to live I am writing this letter on regulations. in terested in photography as here. We are a unique hall to behalf of the smokers a t ASU. many ways. We are totally a rt. T here w ere m any ex­ 1 The E ditor, with whom Since there have recently responsibility for publication stiident-run and studentc e lle n t p h o to g ra p h s. Un­ been attem pts to get ASASU to rests, may a t his discretion governed. We have been the fortunately, «there w ere two subsidize certain activities on refuse publication of any item. innovators of many current University dormitory policies. All of our residents are upper classmen. In short, we are a group of m ature, responsible women. Study is important to all of us. Often before exams, groups of students get together to study and share inform ation. At McClintock, we must end this study at midnight, a relatively Residents say 1 'Hang scarlet A '! Special projects don't rate funds Irate photo fan | decries picturesI P R O B L E M A T IC A L R E C R E A T IO N S - 1 5 Gtat The B est M e d ica l A ssista n t T ra in in g SO UTH W ESTERN Established A Operated by M aricopa County M e d ical Society Four snails start at the vertices o f a unit square and move directly toward one another in cyclic order, at unit rate. How far will they travel before they meet? —Mathematics Magazine For the answer to this problem, write: DATA SYSTEMS DIVISION LITTON INDUSTRIES [. J-« 0 L ittO li Employment Office 15800 Strathern Street Van Nuys, California 91409 InffornsGtioa 252-5696 2025 N. Central Ave. 85004 A n Equal Opportunity Em ployer M /F OUR PROFESSIONAL RECRUITMENT REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE ON CAMPUS M arch 27 & 28 IN T E R V IE W IN G C A N D ID A T E S IN E.E., M .E., M A T H / C O M P U T E R S C IE N C E S Page 6 — Friday, M arch 16 fSXiWHvXvÄWÄiWÄWÄWfti^Ä-’ÄSWKtSrftSÄivSttWÄVÄVftWl-Ä'iSS-SS:: ¿SSW i Camping: ASU offers solution to classroom bluès By KENT IRELAND Searching for a class out of the classroom and into n atu re? An ASU course entitled “Cam p P rogram s A ctivity and Skills’’ m ay provide the an­ sw er. Allen Ja te n , an ASU cam ping instructor, said th e course is divided into m ajors and non-m ajors. “ N on-m ajors a re probably in the class for th eir own use. W hat we try to. do is give them a broad view of all types of cam ping,” Ja te n said. The student is exposed to tent,* tra ile r, horse and even backpack cam ping, he said. In stru c tio n in clu d e s su ch a re a s a s survival and first aid needs in cam ping situations. R e c re a tio n m a jo rs le a rn te a c h in g techniques in cam ping. They also learn the use of these skills for organized cam p situations. “ We also give th e m ajors in acquain­ tan ce w ith th e inform ation agencies in the U nited S tates on cam ping,” Ja te n said. Professor cites Musicians go to N. Mexico Pre-Med deadline Students planning to submit applications to medical schools this summer should report to the Pre-Med office SS 104, to complete files and arrange interviews by March 30, ac­ cording to Dr. John Cronin, chemistry professor. The interview s will be scheduled for the first two weeks in April. April 13 is the deadline for the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) applications, which will be given on May 5. Application deadline for the Dental Admission Test (DAT), is April 2. This exam will be given April 27 to 28. Application blanks for both exams are available in the PreMed Office, and from University Testing Service in Ed B-302. Medical and dental schools will begin accepting ap­ plications around July 1 for fall 1974 classes, he said. ASU’s Sym phonic Winds will perform a six-concert tour through New Mexico la te r th is m onth. D uring th e four-day tour, the 58-piece ensem ble will have concerts in Silver City, Rosw ell, a n d C arlsbad. Dr. K enneth Snapp, ASU d irecto r of bands, will d irect the group. F eatu red soloist on the tour will be tru m p et p lay er R uss C apri, a ' freshm an from Phoenix. Before leaving on its New M exico trip , th e group will perform in concert a t 7 p.m . M arch 23 in G am m age A uditorium . SAVE MONEY & TOUR EUROPE B Y M O T O R -C Y C L E The Most economical way yet! Huge choice of all popular makes new & used m/cycles, keenly priced — A LL TA X F R E E + speedy personal service — we collect you from Air Terminal. Full Insurance for Europe & shipment back to U S A arranged — or we guarantee re­ purchase. Write now for full details. G E O R G E C L A R K E (M o to rs) LT D . E st. SO y e ars. 135-156 B rixto n H ill, London SW 2 Eng lan d . T e l: 01 -674 3211 LOSE 2 0 PO UNDS J N TWO WEEKS! Famous U.S. Women Ski Team Diet During the non-snow off season the US. Women's Alpine Ski Team members go on the “Ski Team" diet to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. That's right — 20 pounds in 14 days! The basis of the diet is chemical food action and was devised by a famous Colorado physician especially for the U.S. Ski Team. Normal energy is maintained (very important!) while reducing. You keep “full" — no starvation — because the diet is de­ signed that way! It's a diet that is easy to follow whether you work, travel or stay a t home. This is, honestly, a fantastically successful diet. If it weren’t, the U.S. Women’s Ski Team wouldn’t be per­ mitted to use it! Right? So, give yourself the same break the U.S. Ski Team gets. Lose weight the scientific, proven way. Even if you've tried all the other diets, you owe it to your­ self' to try. the U.S. Women’s Ski Team Diet. That is, if you really do want to lose 20 pounds in two weeks. Order today. Tear this out as a reminder. Send only $2.00 ($2.25 for Rush Service) — cash is O.K. - to Infor­ mation Soured Co., P.O. Box 231, Dept. ST. Carpinteria, Calif. 93013. Don’t order unless you expect to lose 20 pounds in two weeks! Because that's what the Ski Team Diet will do! “Both of these courses a re so popular we have to tu rn people aw ay.” J a te n said students learn techniques in class and then apply them .to cam ping situations. One-day hikes, over-night cam ping jau n ts and th ree day field trip s a re av ailab le to th e class. Ja te n said each class picks th e type o f $ trip they w ant. P a s t classes have frequently visited such sites a s th e Superstition M ountains and the G rand Canyon. Tbis M ay th e c lass w ill be taking a three-day field trip to th e G rand Canyon, she said. He said th e classes try to go th e cool country during th e sum m er and sta y in the V alley a re a during th e w inter. The course h a s been offered a t ASU for 13 y e a rs. A fee of $6 covers tran sp o rtatio n costs for th e trip s. A new course for canoeing and raftin g en th u siasts w ill be offered in th e recreatio n d ep artm en t th is sum m er. Ja te n said th is course w ill be offered the second sum m er session. the laughter th e problems the success so d failures there is human need in the cities,, the suburbs, Former Secretary ot Health, Education and Welfare One of the weird and nonsensical facts about our government — at all levels — is that much of the pub­ lic’s business is done in the deepest, darkest secrecy. Citizens assume that only questions of national se­ curity and some aspects of criminal justice are dealt with in secret. Little do they know! Most of the time our public officials act as though the way they con­ duct our business is none of our business. In 1972 roughly one-third of the Senate Public W orks Committee meetings were held in secret. The figure for the Senate Agriculture Committee was 59 percent, for the House Appropriations Committee over 90 percent. The House W ays and Means Com­ mittee, which drafts the laws governing every federal tax dollar you and I pay, is notoriously secretive. Se­ curity is so tight that even the staff assistant of a Con­ gressman who is on the Committee can’t attend the closed meetings. What are they hiding? A ll sessio n s of congressional committees — and records of all votes taken at such sessions — should normally be open to the public. Committees should be allowed to clo se a meeting only for considerations ot national security or invasion of personal privacy, and the procedure lor closing It should be carefully pro­ tected against abuse. In the Executive Branch, virtually everyone asso­ ciated with national security acknowledges that the system of classifying documents to preserve secrecy has been badly abused — air todjjftojrLfox. the-pur— pose of concealing bureaucratic error. And the zeal for secrecy extends to every government agency un­ der the control of the Executive Branch. Regulatory agencies often meetbehind closed doors, omit public hearings, and suppress reports the public should see. Of course, the secrecy involved is only secret-from-' the-public. The special interest lobbyists know very well what goes on in those hush-hush meetings. Quite often they’re right in there with the decision makers. The only one who has splinters in his nose from bump­ ing against closed doors is John Q. Public. Now there is a resolution before the Senate — sponsored by Senators Humphrey (D., Minn.) and Roth (R., Del.) (pips 11 other sponsors) which would open all Senate committee meetings. A bill (S 260) re­ cently introduced in the Senate tw Lawton Chiles of Florida and in the House (HR 4) by Dante Fascell, also of Florida, would open all Legislative and Executive Branch rheetings except those dealing with national security or involving personal privacy. Information Is power, and secrecy is the'm ost con­ venient means of keeping that power out of the hands ot the people. What the people don’t know, they cah’t object to. rejoicing in the m * mai. rwiu you can neip. write your two Senators and your Congressman. Tell them you want them to open up the system. Or join Com3 S 5 -,?au5,® i.2100 M street NW, W ashington, D.C. 20037) and ally yourself with 200,000 other members in getting these changes made. We’re going to give this nation back to its citizens. The student member­ ship rate is $7.00. Don’t just stand there! For more Information write: andin New York, N.Y 100Î9 John W. Gardner, Chairman Common Cause on campus are «fi «boat. , Father Donald C. Campbell, Roani 103. ' - >- | THE SCANDAL OF SECRECY around us This space Is contributed a s a People Service by The Van Heueen Com pany P F r id a y , M arch 16 —• Page 7 Bane faces USC in pivotal game By L E E PELEKO U DAS ASU and the University of Southern C alifornia resum e their three game series tonight at Phoenix Municipal Stadium. Lefthander Eddie Bane udii be throwing for thè Sun Devils against the T rojans’ Clif Holland. H ie top two team s in the nation last year opened the series last night. Rem its were not available at press time. Bane goes into the game with a 4-0 record and a 1.00 earned run average. He has 44 strikeouts in 36 innings. In the College World Series last year, the Trojans got only five hits and two runs off Bane in six innings but it was enough to win 3-1 and give Bane his first loss of the year. Holland is a junior college transfer from Canada College in Redwood City, Calif, where he earned all-state honors. He currently has a 3-0 record for the Trojans. The two team s close out the series tomorrow night a t 7:30. ASU coach Jim Brodi will probably send sophomore Jim Umbarger to the mound if the lefthander’s arm is up to par. If not, Doug Slocum (4-0) will get the call. The Devils will get another shot a t last year’s World Series Most Valuable Player, Russ McQueen. McQueen glammori file door on ASU in the series last year when the Devils had the bases loaded and no one out in the fifth inning of the final game. McQueen came on to retire the side without allowing a run and the Trojans won national championships. Sophomore outfielder Dick H airis continued to lead the Sun Devils in hitting going into last night’s gam e with a .467 average. Tommy Sain followed a t .359. Freshm an Clay W estlake and senior Gary Atwell were the other .300 hitters, Westlake at .333 and Atwell at .300. ASU continues its busy schedule next week with an afternoon gam e a g a in st1 Colorado Tuesday followed by an exhibition game with the Milwaukee Brewers at 7:30 that night a t Phoenix Municipal Stadium. The Devils entertain Weber State next Thursday and Friday at 3 p.m. and host Oklahoma at 7:30 Friday night and at 5 p.m. Saturday March 24 in a twinight doubleheader at Phoenix. JV team fashions perfect m ark - The ASU junior varsity baseball team currently has an undefeated record of 9-0 with its latest victory coming against Phoenix College, 9-5. Lefthander John Poloni, who has a win for the varsity, has a 3-0 record, two of the wins being shutouts. Mike Odum, last year’s Prep Player of the Year in Arizona, also has a 3-0 record for the Sun Imps. Jim Lantine leads the hitting record with a .455 average and Gary Allenson follows with a .380 average. Allenson has also seen action with the varsity at second base, getting three hits in six a t bats for a .500 average. state press sports ASU Stu d e n ts. . If you're over 18 you coo rout u foré or other fine ear at at SPECIAL LOW WEEK-END RATE of $ ô H 9 0 W H W A DAY A N D 13c p e r m il e U N L IM IT E D F R E E Mileage Rates ; 7 D ays for $119.00 or R e n ta Pinto for only $79.00 a week For Your Car, Call Your A.S.U. Representative STEVE BLAGEN 9 6 7 -9 3 6 2 or 9 6 3 -5 7 8 6 A S U c o a c h J im B ro c k ta k e s M s te a m in to a c tio n to n ig h t in the secon d g a m e of the th r e e -g a m e s e r ie s w ith S o u th e rn C a lifo rn ia . B r o c k w ill se n d le fth an d e r E d d ie B a n e to the m ound fo r the Sun D e v ils. In track dedication Sun Devils face tough foes Coach B aldy C astillo’s Sun D evil track team w ill com pete ag ain st som e of the nation’s b est when they host New M exico, B righam Young, and Southern C alifornia in a quad ran g u lar m eet. F ield events s ta rt a t 7:30 p.m . S aturday a t Jo e Selleh T rack. The first running event g ets under w ay a t 8:05 p.m . A special dedication of th e new 10-lane m aroon and gold T artan tra c k is scheduled for 7:50 p.m . F e atu red a t th e dedication w ill be (governor Ja ck W illiam s, and form er O lym pian Jesse Owens. ASU boasts th e faste st tim e in th e nation in two events th is season. C arl M cCullough, fre sh m a n se n sa tio n fro m S a c ra m e n to , C alif., h as recorded a national best with his 20.9 clocking in the220. The 440-relay team of M cCullough, P hil Chewning, C harlie Wells and M aurice Peoples leads the country with a 40.1 clocking. C astillo said yesterday Peoples m ay not com pete because of a leg injury suffered W ednesday. “ The extent of the injury won’t be known until we get the m edical rep o rt,” C astillo said. The 100-yard dash could be th e top event of th e m eet a s McCullough leads the field of fine p erform ers. Don Q uarrie of USC should give the ASU freshm an his toughest com petition. Q uarrie ran a 9.5 h ere last y ear. M cCullough ra n a 9.5 la st week and has a best tim e of 9.4. A nother freshm an, Ron Sem kiw , gives ASU a-sK git edge in th e shot p u t w ith a best of 60-4. Pag« I — Friday, M arch 16 ASU tennis features two doubleheaders Gym team enters championship meet ASU will host Utah State and Northern Arizona University in a tennis doubleheader today at 1 p.m. on the ASU courts. The Devils also ^have two matches tomorrow when they face Mesa Community at 1 p.m. and Northern Colorado at 8 p.m. Both matches are on the ASU courts. ASU beat W eber State Wednesday 9-0 and faced the Colorado School of Mines and New Mexico State yesterday. Coach Marty Pincus takes his foam to Southern California next week to face die number one and two team s in the co u n try . in UCLA and the’ U niversity of Southern California. ASU gymnastics coach Don Robinson takes his team to Ft. Collins, Colo, for the Western A thletic Conference Cham­ pionships, Thursday through Saturday, March 24. Robinson feels New Mexico is the team to beat. The Lobos are defending WAC champs and have the favorite for the all around championship in Jim Ivicek. Ivicek w as a 1972 Olympian. “New Mexico’s the team to beat,’’ Robins«» said. “We’re rated number tae in th e WAC as far as scores this season and CSU is second, but those scores don’t mean that much for this m eet” Sophomore All-American Gary Alexander is the defen­ ding WAC champ in the floor exercise and has a good chance of repeating, according to Robinson. Myron Tucker is also strong in that event, as well as being the defending champ in the vaulting event. L.J. Larson and Steve Isham are the Devils’ hopes on the side horse while Rick Curtis is the top man on the rings. Dick Dalton and Jim Furdni have good shots at the championship on the horizontal bar. “Last year we had New Mexico beaten in dual com­ petition and then they beat us at WAC,” Robinson said. “This year they beat us in duals, so I hope hiktory can repeat itself and we beat them at WAC.” CLASSIFIED ADS C laasfM m v h II i Ih must be paid far la advene« atthar la paraaa ar by mail la Mm » ata Pmaa> A M M L I m bays la advance af pvbHcatiaa. Na ads will ba accaptad avar Iba talapbaaa. Offlca baars ara • a.m. ta 4 p.m. Maaday tbraaah Thursday aad • a.m. H aaaa Friday. Pbaaa N H IS I. Kata: t l far Ibraa Haaa aad lie far aacb addltlar al Dae. St par caat discaunt far caasacvtlva additlaaal days. Thera will be aa ralbada far advert!»ameat« placed with the »ate Prate. • ANNOUNCEM ENTS PHI SIGMA KAPPA Centennial Pounders Day banquet awards and dance. 1:00 March 15, Arizona Country Club $6.50 par person. Hamontase han Hour! F ri, M arch 16, 10-12 a t Baker Center. Coffee, tea and Irani Call 966-5371 for Info. Happy Purlm. (3-16) P arty and Megillah reading. March 17 7:30 pm a t the party room Latíerro Apts, 4550 S. Rural Rd. Freel Call Hillel. 964 5371 for Infob BYOB. (3-16) T e a m c a p ta in D a v e K a n te r w ill lead the A S U tennis team in a c tio n to d ay a n d to m o rro w on the A S U c o u rts. N e x t w eek the Su n D e v ils tra v e l to C a lifo rn ia to fa c e to u gh Sou th ern C a l a n d U C L A . Photo by Jim Finn PRIMAL SCREAM; group sessions. By appointment only. Donation 54. Tues.Sat. 7:30 p.m. 244-1096._________ (»20) • WANTED WANTED — YOUR WRITE-IN VOTE FOR JE F F KILGORE FOR FIRST VP ON APR 3-6 HE HAS HELPED THE STUDENTS. (44) Fem ale roommate immediately $69 par month near campus call 964-2919 attar 5:32 p.m. (3-16) 4 Fem ale roommate Immed. 67 mo. util pool own room noor cam pus 967-144». (3-14) 4 r NEWBATE: FBI. MAR. 23 a ¿ROBERTA ■ ( TFUCSONICOA CKU MMUNITYCENTER All scats reserved at *5.50, *4.50, *3.50 8 PM Ticktts tvaiUbit at Mam Box Ottica. Phon« /91 4 ?6 6 and at aM Box Ottica Localtom. A lio E l Con Shopping Cantar. Oavts Monthan Air Forca Baae & Fort Huachuca. In Phoanin: Tickati avariatola at aH Diamond Community Box Ottica*. Fo i information call 277-6205. Produced by CONCERT ASSOCIATES MAKE SOMEONE HAPPY Roommate your half $64/mo Bel Air Apts. — /Move In now — pay rant start­ ing Apr. 1 Roale 96451«. Immediately tam ale roommate will have own room $67 pool utilities paid 1226 E. Lemon. CaH 960-140» after 3 p.m. Home needed for ugly but lovobie dog will furnish food If could kaap for 2 months call 2647065 attar 4:00 evening. B U Y S . . . GALS 1 semester... *35 TEMPE HEALTH STUDIO 3$S XXL m 966-4111 Sport parachuting Instruction. Licensed. 15 y r. experience US Parachute Service Mena 905-3900. (run) Trailer for rant completely furnished 3 bedroom 5 min from ASU 14- or 3 people $100 total can 960-1903 1056 E. Apache Blvd lot 31 ask for Don Fan­ tastic deal. (3-16) Hawaiian dance lessons call Lanl 9666977. (3-16) Language tutoring 960-2013 no answer call 904053. (3-30) 1 bdrm all utilities Incld.. pool, gas barb-que, laundry Or storage facilities. Close to ASU, shopping cantors, Coco's and University 1&2, taase/tarm s. Landmark Apts. 929 E. Vista Del Cerro, Tampa, 9664091. Furnished. (4-0 Ballet beginners thru professional. Rec­ ommended for children, leans, adults and ASU dance m ajors. Qualified Instructor: M ary Adams, LEAD, AISTD. Arizona Academy of Dancing. Tampa: Valley. F air, 95 E. Southern. Ptm: 3002 E. Ind. Sch. (Run) • FOR SALE TUTORING—French X Spanish transla­ tion service. Call 9642913 betora 7:30 a.m . o r nights. For sale Ironstone dish sat dining table stereo traito r hitch call 945-3704 attar 5 : » pm. (3-16) 1 » A MONTH and you've got your own piece! Lovely custom bul)t 1971 "K it" mobile homo, 24X45, 2 h r, 2ba In "M ass E ast." Beau­ tiful clubhouse, all extras Included. Worth 130600. Must sail *o will taka any reas­ onable offer. Call 2747105 a r 9441061. Proper Developm ent Corporation. (43) » mobile home 12X60 In Tampa Park uniquely furnished m ust sea 039-3007 be­ fore noon. .............. _„.(3-30) 62 MG rune good $ 3 » call a tta r 4 p.m. 9641304 Jim new top. (416) Siamese Kitten cute X Intelligent as felinas go. $15 9024023. (416). Specialize In thesis, dissertation, and m anuscript typing, IBM Selectrlc. 944 2572. (3-10) AKC Basset pups, axe bloodline reason­ able, electric floor polisher » 0 oft 4 p.m. 949-5463. (416) Professional typing. Term papers. Re­ search, Reports, etc. Reasonable ratte. 9554047. (410) Siberia Husky AKC Registered champion papers 9 wks. old asking only 9 » 968-3359. (416) PROFESSIONAL TYPING. IBM Solectrlc. Minor editing 4 corrections. Rea­ sonable. NE Phoenix. 95479(3. (54) Used Ovation guitar and case need caih or trad# 9645276. (416) VW owners spring recess special on all VW parts and repair tuna up 010 Ray 267-9726. (2-16) Wigs & wiglets cut 4 styled free pick up 4 deHv. Tem pt area only call 9642015. (3-14) Experienced editing, form and stylo. IBM Gothic o r standard type. Near ASU 964 1664. (run) • LOST Lost tan hound 4 months old answers to Tilly Naods Medication 215 Aeh. 96712«. (3-14) Girls tolgo midi raincoat leather trim Darin 96421». with rod (3-14) to Ford ton pickup now transmission, generator, u-iolnts overdrive $425 964 30S4._________________________ (416) AUTO 1971 VW Cam per w poptop radio heater excel lent cond. $2995 or boot offer . 2740478. (414) A good first cam era GAP Mtm orox 35 EE. At Pioneer Camara $35 Tampa Can­ tar. (415) Housse leaning - thorough • dependable • reasonable 2.00/hr. call 967-2SS5. (3-30) • AUTOMOBILES 57 chevy w 64 327 cu In auto new tira*— to sartas runs g reat call Jeff a ttar 6 pm 9441523. (4 « ) 1971 mobile home 12X50* 2 bdr carpeted, refrigeration, unfurnished. Close to cam­ pus $42» a tta r 6pm 9646323. (414) Typing—term papers, reports, letters, 4 resumes composed. Call Laura, 9449157. (3-30) • SERVICES Need help In Biological sciences or mathemetics. Weekends available. Call 0303374. 0-16) 2 Bedroom, unfura, a ir cond. no lease, pats allowed, 145+ utl. 1212 S. Smith 966-5151 aft 6pm. (3.16) Ladles western saddle, 14*5" padded seat $50 9641952 evenings. (416) TERM PAPERS, RESUMES. THESES DISSERTATIONS, PROFESSIONAL, GUARANTEED WORK, IBM. MAXINE MULLEN 95541763._______________ (run) • INSTRUCTION Clean 2 bedroom unfurnished apt. Refrig­ erated. Sea a t 031 Transvaal-Tampa or call 966-3333. (3-16) • TYPING TYPING—IBM SELECTRIC PICA TYPE, ROSEMARY VANCE TEMPE 967-9143. (54) S&etfie 6 HCtU-(fOU. • RENT Conn trum pet excellent cond. $2». » 4 2473. (416) 3 bdrm. homo walk to ASU custom built, family rm study rafrlg, carpet, custom drapes dbl carport, low 30's 9673250 owner-agent. (420) 72 Comoro lo m ilage Xclnt condition 3 » air condition rally sport atto r 6 wknds 2646696. (416) Maks offer io* X S f mobile homo, ex­ tra clean, many extras near campus, call 960-3023. *________________ (417) 4 track Panasonic storto c a r tape deck cost new 0140 hardly used. 5 « 96415». (416) German short-haired pointer with papers, 1 y r old tam ale good linos $50 962-6314 attar 5 : » p.m. (416) 19" Panasonic black X white TV $40 962« 1 4 attar 5:30 p.m. (416) ' « LeMans fully equipped a ir PM starao beautiful condition m ust sell call 944 237X (491) • HELP WANTED Do you like people? P a rt tim e contact work provides good money and Inval­ uable experience ta r those who qualify call 992-2674 or 992-2674 ta r interview. (46) Bobby McGees is hiring experienced busboys. Applicants m ust bo 10 o r older. Apply In parson Thursday and Friday 3-4pm 7043 E. McDowell Rd. Scottsdale. (416) M ats Comm student ta r work study pro­ gram prof, fluent In Span: to conduct to hr. weekly radio show Call Laura 944 6 3 » o r Roxle 94410». (416) good paying part-time |o b t reliable people wanted to work In Phoenix In connection with the Phoenix JC 's 4hrs par day at $2.63 p /h r plus Incentive pay. Depending on capabilities evening work only 4 9 tar intv. 2 6 4 » « mon-frl 1-5 pm. (46) Gina's Pizza hiring delivers part evenings own cor apply $22 Mill 3 pm If you know the fawn you'll 1 4 » bucks a nils. time attar make (416) BORED? Put excitement Into your life with a challenging job. 834-0679 must bo 10. car.__________________ (423) Do you like people? P a rt tlm s contract work provides good money and Inval­ uable experience (or those who qua IIfy. Call 992-2674 for Interview. (416) • MOTORCYCLES Diamond«, Wholesale prices every dia­ mond guaranteed In writing tend for lit­ erature. Haskell Jewelers • Box A Little­ ton, N.H. 03561 (430) ' « Honda 65 Cheap bast offer phono 9643122 attar 7 : » pm. (416) Good used books. Out-of-print search ser­ vice. Dollar Sign Books. Alma School Rd. a t University, Masa 962-6257. Triumph 750ec trident under 100» miles customized Immaculata condition $1200. 9644910. ___________.___________ (416) Ampsx 14S5A open real tapa deck w /sot X ache, saa It a t my apt. 1224 William, by Wodco pj. Must Mil situation 1972 Honda 450cb ex­ cellent condition rune Ilka new 59» miles m ake offer call Bob 272-72». (416) Friday, M arch 16 — Page 9 Lillian Gish implores young to advance cinema art Star rem em bers film beginnings P a g e 10 — F r id a y , M a r c h 16 - Silent screen star says Am ericans don't take film seriously By R U ST Y F O L E Y The “first lady of tbesilent screen” rem ains a grand­ motherly m atriarch who is slightly displeased with how the American film industry has grown from the infancy she helped nurse. For this reason, Lillian Gish has been traveling around the country and stumping for the UJS. government in foreign countries with her lecture and film presentation on the early era of American films. She brought the presentation of early film clips to Gammage auditorium on Wednesday night along with a message to the young in the audience,, reminding them the industry will soon be theirs. Earlier in her dressing room, seated on a folding chair under the glare of dressing room lights, she discussed her career in the movies and theater. Gowned in a long silk dress, she sat with her feet resting on another chair. She spoke with cultured- inflections, th at slightly British tone. The lights played on her greying Monde, softly curled hair..She was a picture of the ■ poised, benevolent regality that seems so natural for theatre people. She bemoaned her belief that Americans do not take film seriously. They have got done what they ipight with it. She says she never realized this until she went overseas. “For instance, Russia. Next to their government, film is the most important thing they have. Within the Kremlin walls there is a marble palace which holds' 16,000 people where they run films. By film they tell all their history. And we’ve never told our history. We’ve never had even one film about our great man Jefferson,” she said. The Russians, she said, have filmed all of the great novels, their landscapes, their life. “I suggest they do our history and all the great men connected with it.” She cited Alistaire Cooke’s “ A m erica” series of documentaries as the sort of film presentation of America she is talking about. “I’m sure of the youngsters, today. It’s going to dawn on diem. They’re more intelligent. They’ve been exposed to more. When they take it (the film industry) over, which they PUY WEE-TIE «MATURE GOLF Ymt Choice of Two 18-Hole Ceirses Lillian G ish relaxas m om ents before her lecture m ust, perhaps we’ll have something we can all shout about. “When we made silent films we controlled the world. Other countries, their films didn’t m atter. Now India makes more pictures than we do. Japan makes more. Italy makes more. We’re way down the line,” she said. _ She belongs to that time when Am erica was seeing the beginning of this a rt form. As part of that era, she is an expprt of sorts on the time. With; her theories she also related anecdotes about h er con­ temporaries to the Gammage audience. Miss Gish and her sister, Dorothy, began in stage productions when she was 5 and Dorothy was 4. “Mother had two girls to look after and no m eans.to support them. She was an actress and she couldn’t leave us in file day time. At night she’d put us to bed but during the day she had to take us to the two matinees.” A play producer needing a child for a part asked her mother if he could use Lillian. p R .g s gA/>_ University D rive at R ural— Tempe HOU R S — 1 p.m .12 m idnight D aily Phone 966-8027 Sat., Sun. and holidays to a.m .-l i p.m. ._SVKnniR«lHEIMilMIB nCSIM COMIM IY CENTER SAT. MAR. 3 1 8PM T ickets $ 3.7 6 in adv. / $4 A 0 at tha door Ticket* svsilaWt et Main Box Office, Phone: 791-42S6 end at all Box Office Location*. Also El Con Shopping Center, Dav« Monthan Air Force B an & Fort Huachuca. la Phoenix: Ticket* available at lH Qiamond Community Box Office*. For information call 277-8205. ._______________________ P ro d u c ed by CONCERT ASSOCIATES » F'""»«. U R IA H KM cE E N KENDREE SPEC IAL GUEST STAR S P R IN G SATURDAY. M A R C H 31 8:30 P M CELEBRITY THEATER. R B B h ff SEAY TICKETS AMNLAKf NOW $6.50, $6.80 AND $4.50 AY C&EBRfTY THEATER BOX Q H « . H U 'S RECOUDS; TEMPE; G O RDO N S CASUALS— CHW SIOW H AH P THE THOMAS MAJL >OK OfBCE. «t \ t It M f ^ l U M M A I K SS Soon Dorothy started working, and they were all into the theatre. They were friends of Mary Pickford and her family who had begun work in films. Soon to be “ A m erica’s S w eetheart,” Pickford in­ troduced the Gishes to D. W. Griffith, who has been called the father of film. Griffith was responsible, she says, for - m any of the revolutionary changes going on in film of the tim e. His “Birth of a Nation,” in which Lillian Gish starred, was the first epic film made. He created his battle scenes of the Civil War dram a from the photos of Matthew Brady. The scenes were peopled by only 300 persons, but the staging made the number appear larger. He was the first to have his cameraman zoom in dose to capture facial expressions, using them as another means of telling the story: Miss Gish, used to visit insane asylums and county hospitals searching for telling ex­ pressions of pain and anguish to use in her portryals. Realism of that time was fostered by the conditions under which the actors worked. They didn’t use doubles. Actors and actresses were subjected to perilous stunts that had to be done right the first time. In the Griffith movie “Way Down E ast” Miss Gish floated down a river in winter on an ice floe to be rescued by the hero just as the floe was to go over the falls. Continued on page 11 Friday, M arch 16 — Page 11 ^ • Gish Shakespearean fete C on tin u e d fro m p a g e 10 As the audience watched the d ip on screen, she said, “i thought I was all through. I don’t know how he ever got to me.” She said Douglas Fairbanks, the swashbuckling actor, and Charlie Chaplin competed for the reputation for performing the most daring acrobatic stunt. Chaplin prided himself, she said, on never having an ac­ cident on the set, in spite of all the stunts in his films. , “Everyone was so perfectly rehearsed. They had everything timed down to the second,” she said. Filming was sometimes done ^ in 25 hour stretches. Films were finished in a-m atter of weeks rather than months. When talkies cam e into vogues, Miss Gish bowed out. She went back to the stage. “I thought if I was going to use my voice, I’d use it where it belonged. We hadn’t conquered sound. It wasn’t very good. You see I made a talkie, after which everyone said, ‘Oh, you have a new career. You’re so lucky because you have a voice,’ ” she said. “They wanted me to redo all my pictures and talk. I thought, ‘I’ve done the best I could so I'm not going to go back and do them again.’ ” On sexuality in American movies, “They’re so childish about it. It’s all been hush hush.” Her mother, she said, took her sister and her to European movies without fear of what her children were seeing. “She wanted us to know all about it.” , Miss Gish finished her three reels of film clips with a few more words of praise for the possibilities of film a rt and another admonishment to the young in the audience to carry on the art. She made it sound almost like a sacred duty not a sen­ timent. It wasn’t hard to un­ derstand coming from someone who has invested so much of a lifetime to the development of the art. Gammage plans dinner G am m age A uditorium is offering a package deal to theatre-goers planning on attending th e two shows being presented b y ’ th e N ational Shakespeare Company on M arch 27. In cooperation w ith the MU, a $10 ticket pays for the 2:45 p.m . show of “ A ntigone,” a festive Shakespearean dinner a t 6 p.m . in th e MU, and a reserv ed seat ticket for the 8 p.m . perform ance of “ King L e a r.” The dinner featu res E nglish ro ast beef, Y orkshire pudding, and plum pudding. Single tickets for both perform ances a re also available and a ll reservations for the dinner deal m ust be m ade by M arch 22 w ith the G am m age box office. anew land...anewhope...anew dream G re e k tragedy Classical d ra m a by the National Shakespeare Company (NSC) will be onstage a t G am m age Auditorium, M arch 27. "A ntigone" will play a t 2:45 p.m . and Shakespeare's "King L ear" will be presented a t 8 p.m . "A ntigone," third in a trilogy of plays about Oedipus Rex and his children, d e p ic ts c o n flic t b etw een O ed ip u s' d a u g h te r, Antigone, and his brother, the king of Thebes. The play, w ritten by Sophocles is an exam ple of classic G reek tragedy and shows the struggle between individual conscience and th e central power of the state. "K ing L ear" is the story of a legendary British king caught in a conflict between two generations. The NSC is presenting these plays in the lOtti an n iv ersary reason of traveling repertoire th e ater. Tickets for both perform ances a re available a t th e G am m age box office, priced a t $2 for "A ntigone" and from $3 to $5 for "K ing L ear." factory Supply women for the clients. Hairy Stoner will do anything to more season. Nominated for Four Academy Awards including Bast Picture M a x v o n S y d o w -L iv U llm a n n T h e E m ig r a n t s ■ W A Broadway East of Rural U n i T o “ A a M Tempo . »47-7057 - W EEKDAYS: • P.M. SAT. A SUN. 2: IS. S A 7:5« ______ _ Technicolor* From W arner Bros. A W arner Communications Com pany © [ W IN N E R N E W Y O R K F IL M C R IT IC S ' A W A R D : » D IR E C T O R ” “B E S T SC R E E N P L A Y ” H O M M E S FOB RENT PAPAGO STABLES A C T R ESS U V ULLMANN H N r c M tO H k ASU Students Man. turn Art. 966-9793 626 E. Pim a, Tempo North of Sun Devil Stadium R IN G W IT H CLA SS PARAM OUNT PIC TU R ES CO RPORATIO N a n d F1LMWAYS, INC. p resen t JACK L E M M O N in A MARTIN RA N SO H O FF P roduction “S A V E T H E T 1G ER” C O -S ta rrin g JACK GILFORD a n d Introducing LA U RIE HEINEM AN W ritten by STEVE SH A G A N Music scori*d by MARVIN HAMUSCH In COLO« COM E SE E T H E O T H E R S ID E MU2S2 CRŒSAND W HISPERS H t» COMMpromt! ANEWWOULDRELEASE E xecutive P ro d u cer EDWARD S . FELDMAN P roduced by STEVE SH A G A N D irected by JO H N G . /W L D SE N J INGMAR BERGMAN'S Am RAM O UNT PICTURE w li NOW PLATINO HELD OVER EXCLUSIVE SHOWING ® ' W EEK D A Y S: 7 P.M . A 8:S0 S A T U R D A Y ft S U N D A Y 1:15,3:10,5:05, 7 P.M . ft 0:55 Broadway Cast a t Rural - »47*7857 P a g e 12 — F r id a y , M a r c h Idr I This M em o rial C oliseum . P erform ances a re a t 2 and 8 p.m . F rid ay and Saturday. Sunday night perform ance is a t 7. T ickets a re available a t all Coliseum box office outlets from $2.50 to $6.50. SATURDAY: Sergio M endes and B rasil 77 a re in concert .a t th e C elebrity T h eatre a t 7 and 10 p.m . Tickets a re $3.50, $4.50 and $5.50. I W eekend Follow ing is a p a rtia l list of spring b reak activities. MONDAY: P e te r F ran k l, H u n g a ria n p ia n is t, w ill perform w ith th e Phoenix Sym phony O rchestra a t 8 p.m . in Sym phony H all a t Phoenix Civic P laza. WEDNESDAY: The Indian T rade F a ir and Rodeo will begin a t 10 a.m . and run until evening on th e S alt R iver Indian R eservation, 10,000 E . McDowell Rd. Indian dances and c ra fts featured. ' ‘ FRIDAY: “ D uck Soup,” “ A S ession w ith th e C o m m ittee” an d tw o Spanky and O ur Gang shorts go on a t 7 p.m . in th e student lounge at S c o ttsd a le Community College. Adm ission is tre e . The Phoenix Rodeo of Rodeos P a ra d e begins a t 9 a .m ., w in d s th ro u g h dow ntow n P h o en ix , an d a id s up a t th e fairgrounds. T ickets for se a ts along 19th Ave. and McDowell a re 50 cents for children and $1 for adults. G enesis 5 is the film program a t m idnight a t the Valley T heatre, 509 Mill Ave. Adm ission is $2 for , th is group of film s including “ Heavenly S ta r,” a takeoff on a 50s flick, com plete w ith leather-jacketed g reasers and a teen queen. Arizona A m erican Indian A rts and C rafts Slow and Sale s ta rts a t noon a t the SunBurst H otel, 4925 N. Scottsdale Rd. Adm ission is $1.75 for ad u lts and 75 cents for children. FRIDAY: K icks U nlim ited will p resen t G ladys Knight and ttie P ip s, th e D ells, M r. C lean a n d th e T o ta l C o m m itm en t a n d P a tti W illiam s and th e Odd Squad in concert a t 8 p.m . in the Convention C enter a t the Phoenix Civic P laza. The B est of G enesis film program is a t m idnight a t V alley A rt T h e a tre . A dm issions is $2 for this c ro ss se c tio n of underground m ovies. SATURDAY: Buck Owens and his B uckeroos will s ta r in a show a t 8:30 p.m . in the E xhibition H all of Phoenix Civic P laza. Adm ission is free, but listen to KTUF for th e g im m ic k te llin g listen ers how to get in. John S tew art is in concert a t the C elebrity T heatre a t 8:30 p.m . A dm ission is $3.50, $4.50 and $5.50. C om edy m o v ies a re featured a t m idnight a t the V alley T h e a tre . $2 adm ission. SUNDAY: E n g lish C aptain B eefheart and th e 1 p e rfo rm M agic Band w ith L ittle F eat G am m age a re in c o n c e rt a t th e p a rt of th e C e le b rity T h e a tre , 32nd Series. S treet north of Van B uren, 7 and 10 p.m . T ickets a re $3.50, $4.50 and $5.50. Ju lia n B ream , g u ita r is t, w ill a t 3 p .m . in A uditorium as A rt of th e G uitar IN TEMPE . . . The Phoenix Rodeo of R odeos c o n tin u e s to d ay th ro u g h S u n d ay a t th e CAKM T 9 N C IÂ IS This summer, like last summer, more people are going to be passing Coppertone* Tanning Butter than any other. Because Coppertone is chock-full of cocoa butter and coconut oil and buttery things that help you get rich, tropical-looking tan.So when you ask for tanning butter, make sure they pass you the tanning butter—Coppertone. » x ia m e in n » 1»M AN S in s In Stock CARM I K I CHAM - son Mints A product of Plough, Inc. G A II« tor ■ B g V , * ..: The Red Giant ison one knee, but he's getting ready to stand. Page 4 * r tuesday Arizona State University Voi. SS, No. Sé M arch 27, 2973 V________ ________ __ _____ _________________________ state press _ J A home on the road . • By N E A L B A L M E S Staff Writer A house is a ' hoiûé is a' ' - “ It doesn’t h ard ly cost us anything to live, L arm an house, but G ary L arm an’s house is a bus p ark ed next to said. L arm an h a s $3,500 in­ a “ No O ver-N ight Cam ­ vested in his bus. p i e ex­ ping” sign. pense of tire rep a irs and “ Coming back to your bus e n g in e m a in te n a n c e a re is like com ing hom e,” said cheap com pared to ren t, L arm an, a d rifte r who w as p ro p e rty ta x , m o rtg a g e s living a t th e roadside re s t and oth er living expenses a re a a t C urry R oad and M ill th at a re a p a rt of owniim o r Avenue north of th e Tem pe ren tin g a hom e, he said.. B ridge. L arm an said he w ent to L arm an’s bus is hidden th e ro ad life by accident am ong oth er buses, vans, when he bought h is bus from tru c k s and c a m p e rs a friend. belonging to people who say “Since I got th e bus I they have no w here to go thought I m ight a s w ell do and a re in no h u rry to get som e trav elin g ,” he said. th ere. Bob, who would not give L arm an said he and his his la s t nam e, had his bus w ife live on th e spur of the parked next to L arm an’s. m om ent. H e never m akes Bob said he w as once a plans and m oves only when m usician who played g u itar he begins to feel restless. in th e M id-W est. “ I didn’t “ D id you ev er {dan a w ork for a y e a r so I figured I vacation,” L arm an asked, m igh t a s w ell (tra v e l).” “ it never w orks out.” M any Now he e a rn s m oney selling people spend th eir lives pipes for sm oking pot. a c tin g lik e th e y a re “Sure I sm oke, you can’t w orking, he said , but they tell som eone w hat a good take day-long coffee breaks pipe is unless you do it a n d p la n n e x t y e a r ’s yourself,” he said. vacation. Bob adm itted his bus w as “ W hen I don’t w ant to not a s w ell equipped as w ork I don’t w ork,” he said. L a rm a n ’s fo r e le c tric a l L arm an, who claim s to usage, but said he w as have a bachelor’s degree in planning to in stall a show er m e c h a n ic a l e n g in e e rin g , in his bus for his son’s said he is a m echanic by convenience. H is son lives trad e. w ith him in th e sum m er. “ If I feel like w orking I go “We (now) go over th ere into a shop and w ork for two (ASU) and use the show ers o r th ree m onths,” he said. (in th e d o rm s),” he said. He said he lives very L arm an said m ost people c o m fo rta b ly . H is b u s is a re envious of trav elers. equipped w ith a ll the con­ The ones who think th e ro ad veniences of any hom e. He life is bad a re th e ones who h a s te le v isio n , to a s te rs , do not like th eir own sty le of vacuum clean ers, all w ired living, he said. to operate off of th e bus “ All any of us a re looking b attery . for is a com fortable w ay to live,” L arm an said. Bus living “feels ok, feels good, fe e ls c o m fo rta b le . R eally, I feel a lot b e tte r,” said M ing Sanchez, who said she lives on a bus w ith som e friends. S an ch ez w as e v a siv e answ ering questions. She guarded h e r p a st history and sa id she does not know how h e r fam ily feels about h er trav elin g . Sher, a Tem pe g irl who would not give h er la st nam e, w as sittin g next to Sanchez. She said she often com es to visit w ith people in th e bus com m unity. Sher trav els “off and on when I feel like it.” She w orks in T em pe and hitch­ hikes when she trav els. If she w ants to tra v e l bad enough she m akes excuses to h e r boss whom she called very understanding. When la s t h itc h -h ik in g to C alifornia, she told h e r boss she needed tim e off from the job to g et an abortion. S h er s a id h itc h -h ik in g does not sc are h e r because sh e ta k e s p re c a u tio n a ry m easures. “ Now before I get into th e c a r I check to see w here the door handle i s ,” sh e s a id . S econdly, since m ostly guys pick h er up “ I check out his fly to see if it is open.” S e v e ra l peo p le liv in g around a truck and cam per w ere relu ctan t to talk. They expressed a concern they could be hasseled by police. L arm an and Bob both said the police seldom give them a bad tim e. “ If you have a trash y looking bus they (police) • C on tin u e d on p a g e 2 Illegal campers check their bus Page 2 — Tuesday, M arch 27 Emergency car pool could aid commuters Senate drops manager and his $47,300 budget By PATTY NOLAN Staff W riter The ASASU Senate agreed a t its la st m eeting to elim inate the sa la ry of th e E xecutive M anager from the $176,000 student activ ity fee budget. It also provided additional funds of m ore than $9,000 to the C ultural A ffairs Budget (CAB) and increased the allocations to th e E ducation and F ine A rts College Council budgets. $$$ Garcia proposes $13,000 reduction A rt G arcia, law senator, m oved to take $13,000 from th e $47,300 E x e c u tiv e M anager-G eneral A dm inistration budget. G arcia said a responsible person could, .be hired for th e position of m anager a t a m uch low er salary . He said w hile he w as su re the cu rren t executive m anager, Steve Y arbrough, m erited the salary , the position w as m ere ly th a t of a “ g lo rifie d bookkeeper.” He fu rth e r a rg u e d th e a s s is ta n t m anager-director of public relations should be paid less because he has less to do now th at the yearbook is defunct. H arb ro u g h w as n ot p e rm itte d to disclose the am ount of his sa la ry or th at of his two assistan ts because of a request for silence from P resident Schwada. $$$ G arcia's motion defeated D ebate continued for som e tim e, and the Senate finally defeated G arcia’s m otion. Instead, the Senate elim inated the en tire E x e c u tiv e M an ag e r-G e n era l Ad- state press STATE PRESS is published by Arizona State University Tuesday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class m atter a t Tempe, AZ, 85281. m inistration budget. This included the salaries for th e executive m anager, th e assistan t m anager — d irecto r of public affairs, and a secretarial staff. A total of $58,365 w ent into the con­ tingency fund from this sa la ry elim ination. F rom th is fund, $12,000 w as provided for the salary of th e D irector of Intram iirals. An additional $390 w ent to th e Education C ollege C ouncil, b rin g in g th e to ta l allocation to $793. . ' SSS _ Fine Arts; request $6,000 $$$ More discussion Thursday H ie Senate did not get through th e en tire budget, but adjourned a t . 9:30 p.m . p rim arily , som e senators said, for th e ASUUCLA basketball gam e. H ie budget w ill again be discussed a t th e Senate m eeting this T hursday. A fter the Senate approves th e budget, P resident Schw ada m ust approve it. M any senators expressed doubt th e budget would be approved by Schw ada because of th e elim ination of th e E xecutive M anager — G eneral A dm inistration budget. FREE STUDENT TICKETS 4 Tuesday, April 10 at 8:00 p.m. NAN A M O U SK O U R I and the Athenians M iss Mouskouri presents a delightful evening of folk songs, ballads and pop songs, sung in her native Greek as well as in English. The Athenians provide an up ;beat accompaniment. Students with Cam pus Service Cards validated for the Celebrity Series m ay obtain a free reserved seat ticket this week, M arch 26-31, at the Gam m age Box Office. should stop you. If you keep your bus looking s tra ig h t. . . no one ever hassels you,” L arm an said. Bill W estm oreland, the ro a d sid e p a rk a tte n d a n t em ployed by th e sta te , said he keeps police inform ed of the cam pers. T here have been up to ten vehicles a t a tim e parked a t th e a re a and they rem ain w eeks even though over­ night parking is prohibited, he said. W estm oreland said the cam pers a re litterin g the a re a . “ I t h a s got to w here it is a w aste of tim e fa r m e to try to clean it (th e p a rk ),” h e s a id . C a p t. C la re n c e C arpenter of th e Tem pe City P olice field operations said th e Tem pe police can not enforce ¡lark ordinances a t Continued from page 1 the re s t a re a until it is designated a s a city p ark . An official from d istric t 1 of th e A rizona Highway D e p a rtm e n t s a id th e y p h y sic a lly m a in ta in th e p ark , but law enforcem ent of p ark ru les is in the ju ris­ diction of th e Tem pe C ity police. “ The vagrancy law s have b een d e c la re d un­ constitutional even though they a re still on the books,” C arpenter said. . W hat determ ines how long th e cam p ers stay a t the park? “ N o th in g re a lly , it depends on how long I w ant to s ta y ,” Bob said. O r a s one unidentified cam p er said , “We’re not traveling. W e’re ju st lurking around h e re .” ROUNDIMP ’* EUROPE For students, faculty, employees alumni, and immediate families June 19 TUCSON— LONDON July 16 PARIS— TUCSONAr iz o n a u n iv ersit y c n a r t b s 2201 EAST BROADWAY TUCSON, ARIZONA — 85719 PHONE (602) 624-5521 TODAY OAMMACE AUDITORIUM presents •campers * The F ine A rts College council originally * requested m ore than $6,000. The Senate Finance C om m ittee recom m ended a $270 b u d g et/' ’ Moe M osley, F ine A rts senator, said this am ount.w ould not cover m ailing costs for thé finé a rts festival and an additional $500 was provided from the contingency fund. . - The CAB received an additional $9,121 from the contingency fund for dances, film s, and re la te d functions. D ean R isen, F iné A rts, m oved to tra n sfe r $480 from the Spirit Squad-uniform allocation for usé in thé CAB dance program . This brought the total CAB budget to $32,921. $299 He asked those interested in A car pool to help alleviate such a service to leave short traffic problems caused by notes of support at the MU water in die Salt River will be established a t ASU if enough' Information Desk. Hie city of Tempe has taken interest is shown, said ASASU ; President Mark Wilson. steps to ease the tra ffic The University computer Will situation in the campus area caused by the flooding. be used to establish car pools by Signs were posted yesterday districts if there is a positive prohibiting parking on Mill reaction to the plan, Wilson said. avenue from the Tempe bridge to Apache Boulevard, according “We want to get people aware of the fact that we will offer the to Harvey Friedson, Tempe traffic engineer. service of a. car pool,” he said. GAMMAGE AUDITORIUM presents THE NATIONAL SHAKESPEARE COMPANY in Sophocles’ Shakespeare’, "ANTIGONE” "KING LEAR” Tickets: "A ntigone" $2 unreserved "K ing L ear" $4, S3 , S2. ¡ i l i i t i ee'e’ ee • e e.» e 2* , « . '« M l . Tuesday, M arch 27 — Page 3 Breaking down the wails between two worlds t , S ig n la n g u a g e : By P H Y L L IS F R E N C H The w orld of th e deaf has se n t a m in i-sk irte d em issary to ASU. Irene S p a n e a s, deaf sin c e childhood, h as m ade it h er g o al to p ro m o te b e tte r u n d e rsta n d in g b etw een p eo p le th ro u g h sign, language. “ T here is a w all betw een deaf people and hearing p e o p le ,” s a id th e ASU g rad u ate student. “It is a w all betw een two w orlds. You cannot see it, but it’s th ere. We m ust break down th at w all. We m ust bring Photo by John GherardI Irene Spaneas these w orlds together by com m unicating.” “ D eaf people don’t think they’re deaf,” she said. “ It is th e h earin g people who think they a re cteaf. It is society th at m akes them deaf, w e m ust change this m isconception.” In o rd er to achieve h er a im s , Ire n e is te a c h in g “ Sign L an g u ag e fo r E veryone” , a class spon­ sored by th e YWCA, Wed­ n e sd a y n ig h ts a t R itte r J u n io r H igh School, 815 T yler St. in M esa. She is a g ra d u a te of G a llu d e t College in W ashington, D.C., w here all classes a re taught in sign language. “ I studied sign language for eight y e a rs,” she said, “ but I w as alw ays shy and never got involved in m any ac­ tiv ities.” Tim Scanlen, who w as a direct«* of The N ational T heater of th e D eaf, en­ couraged h e r to tak e p a rt in a play. “ A fter I began to a c t,” I m et m any new people and received m uch attention and encouragem ent from both faculty and fellow students. It gave m e confidence,” she said. As a resu lt of this ex­ p e rie n c e , a c tin g in ­ structions have been in­ cluded as a p a rt of h e r course in sign language. Iren e w ill ap p ear in the KTVK-tv, Channel 3 T V ' show, “Sign Out” , a weekly program promoting education of th e deaf. “A cting brought m e out of m y shell, and now I w ant t o ' h e lp o th e rs w ith th e ir c o m m u n i c a t i o n s p ro b ­ lem s,” she said. H er sign language classes a re n o t a lw a y s g e a re d tow ard the to tally deaf. She has tau g h t FB I and CIA agents, m em bers of the W hite H ouse s ta ff, a n d people from W alter Reed hospital, who work w ith r e t u r n i n g s e rv ic e m e n .. Scuba divers learning the p ra c tic a l u se of sig n language have also been h er students Iren e said persons who sell card s bearing the m anual alphabet a re a detrim ent to b e tte r re la tio n s betw een deaf and hearing people. “Some of these people m ake up to $500 a week, but I call them beggars, not peddlers.” She said she would not begrudge anyone trying to m ake a living, but said this p ractice is m isused and fraudulent. W hile Irene feels she is needed to educate, there also ap p ears to be a strong response from persons with desire to be inform ed. H er class, num bering about 50 people, has been filled since the first week it w as offered. B ec a u se of th e la rg e e n ro llm e n t a n d la c k of space, class m em bers sit on the floor, on window sills, and on the rad iato rs. H er students have m any reasons for taking the class. Some a re studying speech p ath o lo g y or sp e c ia l education and hope to in­ crease th eir teaching skills. O thers have deaf friends or re la tiv e s an d w an t to com m unicate w ith them . One person is doing it “for the hell of it.” An elderly wom an, about to r e tir e fro m w orking said, “ By learning all I can of sign language, I can do volunteer work with the deaf and m ute, and be a useful, happy person.” A social w orker who deals w ith re ta rd e d an d e x ­ c e p tio n a l c h ild re n sa id , “This p a st week I have been aide to speak with a deaf Indian client. Before la st w eek’s class I would have had no m eans of com ­ m unicating with him . It w as g re a t.” Some students a re im -' pressed w ith the aesthetics of sign language. One said, “ I think sign language is a beautiful w ay in which to com m unicate ideas. I t’s a m usic-like m eans of com ­ m unication and ju st seem s like a neat thing to know .” A nother c la ss m em b er said, “Sign language is as m uch a language as Spanish or F rench — it is an in­ ternational language.” Irene said, “ I w ant to bring people together . . . to m ake th a n aw are.” “This is why I ’m alw ays speaking, alw ays trying to tell how im portant it is to m ake personal co n tact.” Sneak off to . . the 2nd floor of Matthew s C enter and d isco v e r a hideaway of exotic gifts at budget prices. The Gallery Store open Monday thru Friday 12 Noon to 4 p.m. CONTACTSAREA PIRES BEST FRITO • • . to u ch in g sig n la n g u a g o Contact lenses can help you look better, feel better. Our contacts are flawlessly grourjd to exact specifications. They're fitted with care by professionals. Let us show you the new comfort and convenience of our contact lenses. *80 Single-vision co nta ct le n se s: 13 CONVENIENT VISION CEN TERS THROUGHOUT ARIZONA O pen Monday through Saturday. TEMPE Tempe Center/2032 S. Industrial Park Ave. 967-7864 967-7333 Ü Optical P a B e 4 — Tuesday, M arch 27 The issue is simple By JOHN B A N A SZEW SK I Staff Writer M ore than 200 m ilitant In d ia n s a re s till en ­ tre n c h e d a t W ounded, K nee, S.D . L a st y e a r . a n o th e r m ilita n t In d ian group seized and la te r dismantled the W ashington-based B ureau of Indian A ffairs (BIA). A gainst this backdrop of seem ing sensationalism by com m ission on the p a rt of the Indians and by tra n ­ sm ission on the p a rt of the news m edia th ere m ust lay a stak e — som ething the A m erican Indian M ovem ent (AIM) w ants. Not citizenship rights A ccording to B ill D eH aas, coordinator of the U n iv e rsity ’s O ffice of Indian A ffairs, the issue is quite sim ple, quite basic: Indian rights. H e sp e a k s n o t of Citizenship rig h ts for th e A m erican Indian; those w ere federally guaranteed in 1924 (1948 in Arizona) and la te r strengthened by the Indian E qual R ights Act of 1964, a corollory of th e historic Civil R ights Act of the Johnson Ad­ m inistration. R ather, he speaks of Indian rig h ts in relation to tre a tie s negotiated with the federal governm ent by th e Indian nations. As D eH aas said : “ At issu e h e re (W ounded Knee) and in W ashington la st y ear is quite sim ply th e governm ent’s failure to liv e up to its tre a ty o b lig a tio n s m ad e w ith Indians, and extending full Indian rig h ts to all our people.” A tre a ty is based on the m utual in terests of two g ro u p s a n d th e un­ derstanding th a t it will be m aintained in the form al sense of a co n tract, he said. Need for arbitrator When one of those groups does not honor its con­ tra c tu a l obligations, then th ere is a need for an a r­ b itrato r, D eH aas said. And th at is w hat has been asked for a t Wounded Knee. At no tim e should one p arty u n ilaterally divest its e lf of its tre a ty obligations. In a sense, he said , th is is w hat the g o v e rn m e n t h a s done when, a t one point in h istory, it m akes a tre a ty and, a t a la te r point, breaks it by declaring p a st tre a tie s null and void. “ Individual persons in th e com m unity should live up to th eir obligations and th e U nited S tates govern­ m ent, a s a m em ber of the w orld com m unity, should also have to do th is,” D eH aas said. The innocent peoples Indian rig h ts have been extended only to a certain point — and th e govern­ m ent alw ays determ ines th at point of extension, D eH ass said. He said th e historicalg e o p o litic a l n o tio n s o f Im perialism and M anifest D e stin y c a lle d fo r th e expropriation of “innocent peoples,” and the Indians happen to be one of those groups. S u p erp o w ers h a v e a tendency to absorb other peoples and lands. Tlie U n ited S ta te s is a superpow er, and the In­ dian people a re one such absorbed group. He a n a lo g ize d th e U.S .governm ent to th at of N azi G erm an y in th e sense, and only in the sense, th a t both violated tre a ty obligations. B ut th e Allied Pow ers sto p p e d N azi G erm an y fro m c o m m ittin g its tyrannous acts. There is no such potent physical force to be used ag ain st the U nited S tates to force it to honor its tre a ty obligations w ith th e Indians. H ow ever, th e re a re m oral forces w hich can be used ag ain st th e federal governm ent. The incidents a t W ounded K nee and the BIA a re exam ples of such conscience m otivators. To make public aware F urtherm ore, D eH aas, said , th e sole intent of those events is to m ake the A m erican public aw are of th e issue a t stak e, and then hope th e p u b lic b ack s In d ia n s a tte m p ts at negotiating w ith respon­ sible governm ent officials. U nfortunately, he said, “ th e Silent M ajority is often not only silent buy in a tte n tiv e . ’’ W ounded K nee and th e BIA incident rep resen t attem p ts by th e In d ia n s a t g e ttin g th e public’s attention and then e d u c a tin g th em ab o u t issue a t stak e — Indian rig h ts. In lig h t of th e relativ e tran q u ility of the Indian nation over thfe p ast few d e c a d e s, th e s e tw o in ­ cidents m ay appear in­ consistent. M o reo v er, a c u rso ry e x a m in a tio n of th e in ­ c id e n ts m a y re v e a l to som e th a t they a re no m ore than th e attention getting stu n ts of a few. D ispelling such views poses a problem for the A m erican Indian M ovem ent. To achieve full extension of Indian rights they m ust use those very tac tic s of attention-getting to educate the public. • When th e governm ent does not deal d irectly w ith th e m ilitan ts’ dem ands, th e In d ia n s b ecom e fru s tra te d . T hey th e n becom e infuriated by this indifference and, in a t­ te m p ts to re g a in th e g o v e rn m e n t's (a n d th e p e o p le s) a tte n tio n , do som ething crazy — like secede from th e Union, as w as done re c e n tly a t W ounded K nee w ith the* b irth of th e independent O glala Sioux nation. Such a c tio n s g a rn e r th em th e la b e ls of “ tr a ito r s ” a n d “ s e n ­ satio n alists.” The public, fed daily on these super­ ficially attention-getting events, becom es alienated from th e Indian cause and aligns itse lf w ith th e m oredocile federal governm ent. The paradox plague Consequently, through doing n o th in g , th e g o v e rn m e n t has e f­ fectively clouded th e rea l issue and turned th e tab les on the Indians, m aking them out to be th e villains. T hat is a paradox which plagues the m ilitan t Indian m ovem ent. Core issues ignored D eH aas, who also served fo r tw o y e a rs in W ashington w ith th e N a tiv e A m erican E m ­ b a ssy a n d th e c e n tra l office of the B ureau of Indian A ffairs, said a m ajo rity of th e Indian students he has talked with on cam pus a re in sym ­ pathy w ith the issues a t stak e a t W ounded Knee but express concern over the confrontation tactics used by th e m ilitants. He also said he hopes th ere is no physical b attle b etw een th e In d ian dissidents and th e federal m arsh alls stationed out­ side of W ounded Knee. The governm ent probably does not ca re one w ay o r another. It can fight o r it can w ait. In the end, it will m ost likely com e out sm elling like a rose. Tactics of frustration This is accom plished by the governm ent’s use of, a s D eH aas calls them , the tactics of fru stratio n and infuriation. In oth er w ords, D eH aas s a id , th e g o v e rn m e n t sim ply causes fru stratio n on tiie fringe issues so the c o re issu e is n e v e r d isc u sse d and not resolved. How ever, D eH aas feels th ere will be “ continual trouble” w ith th e federal governm ent if it does not liv e up to its tre a ty obligations which, from the beginning, has been the core issue involved. He said th e Indian rig h ts m ovem ent is being reborn w ith a new generation of younger Indians m otivated by the an cestral p rid e of th e ir n a tio n a n d th e dynam ics of th e ir religious heritage. D eH aas s a id th e takeover a t W ounded Knee is “ round two” of a d irect response to th e BIA in­ c id e n t la s t y e a r in W ashington. If th a t is the case, then th e governm ent and th e Indians could be in for a grueling 16-rounder. Tuesday, M arch 27 — Page S Viewpoint The main issues at stake at Wounded Knee seem confused and changing. Initially, the demands of the American Indian Movement (A IM ) leaders revolved around an in-depth investigation of the Bureau of Indian Affairs (B IA ). They also desired a review of all Indian treaties and the honoring of those treaties. Later, the A IM leadership called for the removal of Pine Ridge, S.D., tribal council president Dick Wilson. Wilson is considered a moderate and is the elected chief of the Sioux reservation there. Other issues involve the U.S. Justice Department's handling of the A IM members when they lay down their arm s at Wounded Knee. complications arise State Press M anaging Editor Rick M ahrle was in Nevada last week, This is his report. By R IC K M A H R L E Under the cover of darkness a small band of Indians carrying supplies tiune down through a mountain pass. The caravan of 16 traversed the pass about 2 a.m. They didn’t like traveling at night,, but the supplies were for their beleaguered brothers in the north. As they neared the bottom of die pass they were surrounded by the cavalry, captured and their supplies held. No, this isn’t the opening to a western, it is what happened just outside of Las Vegas, Nev., on Saturday morning, March 17. The only script changes are that the Indians were driving trucks and vans carrying medicine, food and clothing to Wounded Knee, S.D., and the cavalry was the FBI. The members of the American Indian Movement (AIM) caravan were charged with violating the federal anti-riot ( “Rap Brown” ) law which makes it illegal to cross state lines with the intent to aid or participate in a riot. This is the same law the “Chicago Seven” was charged with violating. Group leader Archie Fire said the supplies, including $1,000 worth of badly needed insulin, were being taken to Wounded Knee a t the request of the National Council of Churches. Fire, a Sioux who has ancestors buried at Wounded Knee as victims of the 1800 m assacre, is the son of the chief of both the Oglala and Rosebud Sioux reservations. Dean Breeze, chairman of the Las Vegas American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), is helping to defend the Indians. He called the charges in the case inappropriate. “This is a relief mission conducted under church aupsices,” he said. “They are not sup­ plying m aterials of violence.” It seems the federal authorities had been ready for the Indian band from the time it left the Los Angeles area. According to federal authorities, the Indians were followed from departure. AIM made no secret of the group’s departure. It was televised over two LA stations. The National Council Of Churches publicly solicited support for the group, and churches donated much of the clothing and food. On March 19 bail was set for the band. Sammy Davis Jr., who is appearing in Las Vegas, offered to put up the bail money. He said, “If they are guilty or innocent, that ain’t my business, but somewhere along the line, somebody has to try to do something for somebody who tries to help.” Davis arranged to provide 10 per cent of the bail money and the Indians were released. Wednesday, a Grand Jury was convened and indictments were handed down in 13 of the 16 cases. The three not indicted were minors who were on the trip as part of a school project and were traveling with their parents’ permission. The remaining 13 Indians will be arraigned in Las Vegas on April 6 before U.S. D istrict Court Judge Roger Foley. Did federal authorities over-react? From some of their initial announcements, it seems so. On Monday m orning,; two days after the arrests, Asst. UJS. Atty. Paul Goldman, said the Indians were carrying contraband. He refused to/ say what that contraband was. Goldman also denied any knowledge of the insulin the group was carrying. Federal authorities have yet to release the exact contents of the three vehicles confiscated, but have backed down on their initial reports oi contraband. Fire said the possible contraband could be in his medicine man bag. It contained ground up . leaves, roots and herbs used for religious ceremonies. Officers might have thought it to be m arijuana, he said. Fire and others insist there are no weapons or ammunition in the vehicles. Shirley Thundershield, 37, a Nez Perce from Laveen, Ariz., said federal authorities forced two of the vehicles in the arvan to cross the state line before the arrest. She said the other vehicles saw the first car in the group stopped. -Die other two vehicles were sbrrounded and force to cross the state line by federal officers, she said. Federal authorities would make no comment on the arrest procedure. Lawrence Martinez, 23, a member of the Mission nations from Lakeside, Calif., said federal authorities made no attem pt before departure to warn AIM or the National Council of Churches that their well publicized relief mission may have been in violation of the law. Asked why the Indians were sending supplies to Wounded Knee, Fire replied, “They are my people, and they needed my help, it’s as simple as that.” John Thundershield, 34, a Pima-Apache from Laveen, said AIM is a peaceful movement and will remain peaceful unless provoked. In a press conference Wednesday, John Thundershield said the National Council of Churches is still attempting to get food and medicine to the Indians at Wounded Knee. The next caravan will be non-Indian and unannounced.” We will see if that one gets stop­ ped,” he said. It is hard fewthe government to admit it when it has made a mistake, several of the Indians said, but this is a big one. All of tiie group members feel they will be freed when their case comes up in April. In the mean­ time they will continue to raise money and sup­ plies for the Indians at Wounded Knee. Even if the Indians are convicted — maximum penalty is five years imprisonment and a $10,000 fine—it m ay prove to be a Pyrrhic victory for the government. The government may win the battle, but in doing so, may increase support for the Indians at Wounded Knee. The av erag e lifespan of Indian people is 44 y ears; 20 y ears less than non-Indians. The average Income of A m erican Indians is still only $30.00 per week, fa r below th e poverty level. The unem ploym ent ra te for Indians is 10 tim es th at of non-Indians; the infant m ortality ra te is three tim es the. national average. The suicide ra te is seven tim es the national av erag e; and the drop­ out ra te of Indian school children is tragic. P ag« Tuesday, M a rch 27 t — Earthline airs series on ecology problems E arth lin e, an ecology new s program aired on KAET-tv, Channel 8, has sta rte d an “ Eco-B riefing” series designed to sep arate the issues from the rhetoric. Jo, C aplan, producer of th e series, said she hopes a discussion of the basic facts will enable people to m ake up th eir own m inds on w hat is cu rren tly happening, w hat can be done and w hat should be done on the ecology scene. The series concerns itself with problem s of w ater supply and flooding, energy needs and resources, housing, the b attle for clean air, the tran sp o rtatio n and com m unications dilem m a,. Solid w aste disposal, and visual and noise pollution. | Earthline poll K l. Is th e re a need for long-range lan d use planning for A rizona? $ •••*' r i B esides raisin g issues, E a rth lin e intends to follow up its program s w ith a poll in S tate P ress. The poll w ill be used to determ ine view er opinions and tran sm it them to p o lic y -m a k e rs in v a rio u s le v e ls of governm ent. The series will be a ired every Tuesday a t 8 p.m . for 10 w eeks. T he first show of the series w as seen la st week. T o n ig h t’s show w ill fe a tu re ta p e d interview s w ith Gov. W illiam s, arch itect Paolo Soleri, Rep. M orris U dall, and Hugh Downs discussing th e need for long-range land use planning in A rizona. | S | Si % g: gi & | g 2. Who should do th is planning fo r Arizona? a ) The fed eral governm ent? b) The state? c) The counties? d) The cities? e) P riv a te groups? 3. Should Arizona have an environm ental control council w ith veto pow er to reg u late new d e v e lo p m en ts p o te n tia lly d a m a g in g to th e environm ent? £ £ $ £ Send in answ ers on a postcard to: EARTHLINE KAET-tv Tem pe, Arizona 85281 Legislators introduce Fall registration begins next week food stamp restrictions By G R E G H AG AN A bill urging the U.S. Congress to amend the Food Stamp Act to make college students and “hippie” com­ munes ineligible has been in­ troduced into the Arizona legislature. Sen. David K ret, RScottsdale, sponsored the bill which was introduced by the Public H ealth and W elfare Committee. The bill is on the agenda to be heard today. It claims many misguided applications of the Food Stamp Program exist. “The way the thing is written and the way they are giving out food stamps now, they go to people who really don’t have need,” he said. “It is a m atter of getting on the bandwagon.” Kret said according to a court decision, “need” for the college student is based on his allowance from home. The people of the state are already subsidizing students, he said. “We are supporting the students a t the university because we want them to im­ prove their ability to produce and to contribute to our society,” he said. “I think about 80 per cent of the costs of die universities are being picked up by the state,” he said. “ College students whose parents can afford to send them to school should not be eligible.” In regards to the “hippie” communes, Kret said he was not sure if “hippie” was a very proper word. “Some of these people are unwilling to work and I do not think they should be supported on welfare or food stamps either,” he said. “In other words, I think it should be purely on a basis of need.” He said he tjiinks that a person should be willing to work instead of living on a dole. “ I think college students whose parents are not in a position to send them without aid should get food stamps,” he said. Pre-registration for the fall semester will be from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., April 2 to April 8. Course request cards can be picked up in moat of Hayden Library. C A R P ET S P E C IA L S " mav Biots • - caour siats «• SIMMS LISSOM« - CUKXS AVAILAM.I ■'«MTU MO«SIS SO« BI64NMCSS V tOAIWMS A A Challenge for the Bold as a PILOT or NAVIGATOR STARTING SALART over $9,000 30 Days Paid Vacation annually. See your local AIR FORCE Representative or Phone 261-3344 CLASSIFIED ADS Classfi«d advertising m ust be paid tor In advance either In person or by mall to tbs State Press, ASS MS, two days in advance a t publication. No ads will be accepted over tbs telephone. Office hours a rs ( a.m . to 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 4 a.m . to noon Friday. Phone WS-MS7. Rato: St for threa lines and Me to r each additional lino. SO per cent discount for consecutive additional days. Thera will bo no refunds for advertisements placed with the State Press. .m JL i 10APercent OH to T T ffri ASU Students Mon. thru Fri. 9 x 12 used rugs-$5.00 A ll Sizes In Stock C A R P ET HOUSE " ea rfr- 964-9793 624 E . F im a, Tempe North of Sun Devil Stadium 1516 E. V an Buren, Phx. Dance Concert— Invite Only— Festical Seating TICKETS ON S U E NOW! m e se • ANNOUNCEM ENTS • SERVICES PHI SIGMA KAPPA Centennial Founders Day banquet awards and dance. 8:00 March 15, Arizona Country Club $6.50 per person. Housecleaning - thorough - dependable • reasonable 2.00/hr call 967-3444. (3-30) PRTMAt. & REAM ; group sessions. By appointment only. Donation $4. Tues.Sat. 7:30 p.m. 244-1896. (4-20) • WANTED WANTED — YOUR WRITE-IN VOTE FOR f JE F F KILGORE FOR FIRST VP ON APR 3-4 HE HAS HELPED THE STUDENTS. (44) Immediately female roommate will have own room $67 pool utilities paid 1224 E. Lemon. Call 968-1409 after 3 p.m. • TYPING Typing—term papers, report«, letters, ft resumes composed. Call Laura, 9444157. NNMMK SYlVfHERÌfflEINUMI 1UCS0N COMMUMIY tENIER SAT. MAR. 3 1 8PM T ickets $3.75 in sdv. / $ 4 0 0 a t th e door T i c h m t M d a M M M M l M O H i n . n i o a r 791 « K C ira l >t ill I m Off«, iK M io m . A k s E I C w SAoprm, C«AU(. Oava Mgnthsn Ai. Fwc, & Fort Huachucs. la PIi m i m : T k k m t n l i k l t a l t> Oiamend Community Rex Offices Far tnlermeiien c«N 277 8205. P ro d u c ed by CONCERT ASSOCIATES ( » 0) Specialize in thesis, dissertation, and manuscript typing, IBM Semetric. 9462472. (3-14) Professional typing. Term papers. Re­ search, Reports, stc. Reasonable rates. 9554047.______________________ (4-14) PROFESSIONAL TYPING. IBM Seltctric. Minor editing ft corrections. Rea­ sonable. NE Phoenix. 9S4-79S3. (54) TYPING—IBM SELECTRIC PICA TYPE, ROSEMARY VANCE TEMPE 947-9143. (5 4 ) TERM PAPERS, RESUMES. THESES DISSERTATIONS. PROFESSIONAL, GUARANTEED WORK, IBM. MAXINE MULLEN 9550743. (run) • FOR SALE Ampax 1455A open reel tape deck w/sos ft echo, see It a t my apt. 1224 William, by Woolco PI. • INSTRUCTION Sport parachuting Instruction. Llconsod. 15 yr. experience US Parachute Service Mesa 985-3940. (run) • RENT Clean 2 bedroom unfurnished apt. Refrig­ erated. See at S3) Transvaal-Tempa or call 9453333. (3-14) Roommate—your half $64/mo Bel Air "Apts. — Move in now — pay rent start­ ing Apr. 1 Rosie 968-5868. Home needed for ugly but lovable dog will furnish food if could keep for 2 months call 266-7065 after 6:00 evening. Special Guest Star Experienced editing, form and style. IBM Gothic or standard type. Near ASU 945 1444. (run). • FOR SALE 150 A MONTH and you've gor your own place) Lovely custom built 1971 "K it" mobile home, 24X45. 2 hr, 2ba In "Mesa E ast." Bsautlful clubhouse, all extras Included. Worth 530,000. Must sell so will take any reas­ onable offer. Call 273-7105 or 9451041. Proper Development Corporation. (4-3) Language tutoring 948-2413 no answer call 942-9053. (5M) Ballet—beginners thru professional. Rec­ ommended for children, teens, adults and ASU dance malors. Qualified Instructor: Mary Adams, LRAD, AISTD. Arizona Academy of Dancing. Tampa: Valley Fair, 95 E. Southern. Phx: 3802 E. Ind. Sch. (Run) TUTORING—French ft Spanish transla­ tion servlet. Call 948-2913 before 7:30 a.m. or nights. • AUTOMOBILES 57 Chevy w 44 327 cu In autO new liras— 40 series runs great call Jeff after 4 pm 9451523. (524) 49 mobile home 12X40 In Tempe Park uniquely furnished must sea 439-3007 be­ fore noon. (3-M) '44 LtMans fully squlpptd air PM etereo beautiful condition m ust sell call 945 2374. (5 |1 ) 3 bdrm. home walk to ASU custom built, family rm study refrig, carpet, custom drapes dbl carport, low 30's 9473250 owner-agent. (520) • HELP WANTED : Make otter 10* X 50' mobile homo, ex­ tra clean, many extras near campus, call 940-3423. (517) £ & £ Evening students may pick up request cards April 3 from 6 to 8 p.m. in the lobby of the Moeur Building. F a ll class schedules are available in department offices. COLLEGE SENIORS AND GRADUATES! H O R S E S F O R R EN T PA PA G O STABLES Handicapped students may call the Registrar’s Office (9656308) to have their cards made available in the Moeur Building. Calls must be made before Friday. • Do you Ilka paoplaf P art time contact work provides good money end Inval­ uable sxpsrltncs for thoite who quality call 993-2474 or 992-2474 tor Intervlow. (3-4) Diamonds, Wholesale prices every dia­ mond guaranteadaln writing send for 119orafuro. Haskell Jewolors « Box A Little­ ton, N.H. 03541 (530) good paying part-time lobs reliable people wanted to work In Phoenix In connection with the Phoenix JC 's 4hrs par day at 12.43 p/h r plus Incentive pay. Depending on capabilities evening work only 59 tor Intv. 3455914 mon-frl 1-5 pm. (4-4) Good used books. Out-of-print search Mrvice. Dollar Sign Books. Alma School Rd. a t University, Mesa 942-4257. BORID9 Put Pkdtem tnt Into your Ufa with a challenging lob. 434-0479 must bo ,1 1. Mt(523) Tuesday, M arch 27 — Page 7 Spooking out sports s ta te Wait until next year..."? press u JIM l l i l FINN n ilk l By Tennis team pulls off 'dream' upset over USC ASU’s tennis team, 15-4 this season, grabbed the ‘‘biggest upset in NCAA tennis history” last week with a 5-4 win against Southern California on the USC courts. The Trojans are perennial contenders for the NCAA title and were ranked third in the nation a t the time of the upset The Sun Devils opened the m atch Wednesday, Jumping to a 3-1 lead in singles competition before rain delayed the match. The Trojans and Devils continued the match the following day and the ASU ne tiers held on for the stunning win. The m atch went down to the final minutes when Barry Young and Bill Ray teamed up to beat USC’s John Holladay and Dave Borelli in the last doubles m atch of the day. Young and Ray were down in the third set but rallied for a 2-6,5-3,64 decision. ASU coach M arty Pincus said the real hero was freshman Glen Hbfrqyd who came through to win his singles match Thursday under the pressure of playing the final singles m atch for the Sun Devils. “This is the kind of stuff you dream about,” said Pincus. “I would say that win would be comparable to the haolrothaii team beating UCLA.“ USC has lost about six dual matches in its history said Pincus. “Their tradition is incredible. We were a nothing in comparison. They Just misjudged our ability. Even When they were down going into the doubles, they were cocky and confident that they would win.” The USC upset was the tenth win in a row for the Sun Devils. UCLA, ranked numb«* two nationally, broke the win string Saturday, beating the Sun Devils 8-1. The next regular action far the ASU team will be April 7 when the Devils host New Mexico on the ASU courts. Gym nasts place second again The ASU gymnastics team and second in floor exercise finished second to New Mexico with a 9.18. for the second consecutive year Sophomore Gary Alexander in the WAC 'Championships, defended his title in toe floor staged last weekend a t Colorado . exercise with a 9.3 score. State. L .J. Larson scored a 9.4 in the The conference title was toe side horse for toe cham ­ fourth straight for toe Lobos pionship, while ASU freshman who outscored the Sun Devils Steve Isham placed fourth. 318.25-308.80 in winning toe Jim Furcini took third and team title. Dick Dalton was fifth in toe high Colorado State finished third bar. Greg Bian finished fourth followed by Arizona, Brigham on parallel bars and Rick Curtis Young and Utah. , took second in still rings ASU had individual cham­ competition for the Sun Devils. pions in three of six events, but Utah’s Roger Haldeman won the New Mexico tandem of Jim toe rings event, New Mexico’s Ivicek and Dave Repp led the Jon Atiken won the high bar powerful New Mexico squad to competition and New Mexico’s toe title with toe top two allIvicek topped the field on the around scores. parallel bars. Senior Myron Tucker led the The top WAC performers Sun Devils, finishing first in toe move on to the NCAA cham­ long horse vaulting competition . pionships April 5-7 a t Eugene, for the second straight year Oregon. with a 9.13 (on ten point scale) » ASU’s basketball program will have to be considered a factor in the future as the one to finally stop UCLA. The Sun Devils got the jump this year that could send toe program back up to the level of ten years ago when the Devils were ranked third nationally. This season’s appearance in the NCAA playoffs and the new arena being built m. to Sun Devil Stadium give the program the boost which could send the Sun Devils to the top as early as next year. The Sun Devils lost starting guards Jim Owens and Mike Contreras for next year, but with Rudy W hite, Jam es Brown, a possible junior college recruit and Duane Goodman up from the frosh team, the Devils should be able to nuke up the loss. With Ron Kennedy, Mark Wasley, Ken Gray and Gary Jackson returning to the front line, the Sun Devils should match up with almost any other inside trio in the country. Jade Schrader will also return and 610 Scott lioyd, who sat out this season after breaking an ankel will be back to strengthen the inside game. Freshman Nate Drayton will be another hot prospect for a forward spot. This national exposure gained from playing UCLA and toe new arena will be a major help when the ASU coaches head out on their recruiting missions this season. Ned Wulk said just playing the Bruins was going to be a big boost for his program as long as file Sun Devils didn’t get blown out of Pauley Pavilion. The Devils made a strong impression as they led 21-16 m idway through the first period, outrunning file awesome Bruins. The UCLA strongmen overpowered the Devils inside to pull out the win, but behind Contreras and Owens, ASU threw in 81 points, the most against the Bruins this season. The consolation 88-84 loss to third ranked Long Beach State was another good showing for the team which was supposed to finish last in the WAC. The Sun Devils jumped out to lead 14-4, but again failed to stop the inside power and faded in the second half. Contreras totaled 39 points for the two games, picking up alltournament honors. The im portance w_pf toe a new land...a new hqpe...anew dream Î UNDER THE SEA PLUS WAITPISNEYS SHOWTIMES Wed. thru Sun. Sword 3:24-7:13 Leagues 1:00-4:40-8:30 Mon. A Tuts. Sword 7:00 Leagues. 8:25 Nominated for Four Academy Awards including Best Picture M a x v o n S y d c w -L iv U llm a n n T h e E m ig r aBroadway n tsE ast of Rural N e. à _i------ EroMMiy KeltoTEirfll *" 1 h w ip « ........ M7-7SSTJ, $ “H Tempo“ SHOWTIME! *WKO « r u SUN. 1:1S-S:SS-7:SS MON. B TUES. 8:88 P.M. Technicobf* From W arnef Bros, A W arner Communications Com pany • 987*7857 PG national reputation was emphasized by the officiating a t the tournament as UCLA and Long Beach received some obvious, lenient treatm ent The Bruins play a rough NBA style game, getting away with pushing and holding like no other team. Maybe it was just a one gam e thing in both instances, but Long Beach came away shooting 32 free throws to just 7 for toe Devils. Despite toe tendencies of the officials, the Sun Devils were fortunate in just getting toe experience of toe postseason tourney. When the 73-74 season is winding up, the Sun Devils could easily be putting that experience to use in another attem pt a t knocking off the UCLA Bruins. ASU faces tourney hex By LEONIDAS PELEKOUDAS The ASU baseball team will try to disprove claims that it doesn’t have the ability to win toe “big one” as they partici­ pate in the Riverside Inter­ collegiate Baseball Tournament this week in Riverside, Calif. The Sun Devils have had their problems in the past, particu­ larly with the Stanford Car­ dinals (formerly the Indians). The last two years ASU has entered the tourney as favorites and gone into the championship game as favorites. Both times they lost to Stanford. In 1971 it was 7-5 as toe Californians scored six times in the ninth. Last year it was never close as the Cards won 9-2. Stanford is backtodefend its championship this year. This y ear’s situation is similar as the Devils go into the tourney with a 25-2 record. In 1971 they were 18-3 and in 1972 they were 18-1. And fills year ASU will have to cope with an additional pair of Pacific Eight schools in WashingtonState and Southern California. The Devils disposed of Rod Dedeaux’s Trojans in a three game series here recently but as proven in the past, anything can happen in Riverside. In fact, one of ASU’s six losses in 70 gam es la st year cam e against Cornell University in Riverside, 3-1. ASU opened the tourney against the Trojans last night and results were not available at press time. A ... H I... aaOl fa The other four teams partici­ pating are host University of California-Riverside, Hawaii, Massachusetts and Vanderbilt. ASU faces Riverside today and Massachusetts and Stan­ ford tomorrow. The game with toe Cardinals will be broadcast on KOOL Radio at 8 p.m. The Sun Devils face Hawaii Thursday, W ashington State Friday and Vanderbilt Satur­ day. The eight teams are divided into two divisions with the winner of each division battifftg for the championship Saturday. ASU coach Jim Brock takes his team to California with a 16 game winning streak, against college competition. The Devils have a loss squeezed in among the 16 wins but it was against the Oakland A’s in an exhibition game Thursday, 3-1. ASU beat toe California Angels 3-2 Thursday night and the Milwaukee Brewers 9-7 Tuesday to make them 2-1 against m ajor league com­ petition this year. Eddie Bane went the distance against the Angels, striking out nine and allowing four hits. Saturday ASU beat Oklahoma in a doubleheader 98 and 4-3, with bofii games going extra innings. Other games which are a part of the 16 game winning streak were wins over Weber State on Friday, Colorado Tuesday and file three game series sweep over defending NCAA Cham­ pion USC, March 15-17. « < _____ tojoin.#»e — — ,— . . Acontemporary religious community serving the people of America communicating the Christian message: in the city, on the campus, in the parish, an radio add TV. Dispelling uncertainty and imparting peace, cele­ brating the hope of the people of God and speaking on issues that concern the Church, As an hK&vkhssi. you can develop and share ; with others. As a mendier of the Community, you will ex­ perience the encouragement and support of fellow Paulists. W r e interested, if you i For mom information write: Father Donald C. Campbell, le a rn W L Raulist lathers. 415 West 59th Street New York. N.Y 10019 P a g e 8 — T u e sd a y , M a rc h 27 Collage Today Lunch sponsored by H IL L E L , 11:30 a.m . to 1 p.m.. Baker Center. Fifty cents. AW S W om en's A ffairs meeting, 2:30 p.m., M U 271, A ll representatives of w om en's organizations invited. Israeli folk dancing, 8:30 p.m., M U Cochise Room. Everyone welcome. Cultural A ffairs Board meeting, 3:30 p.m., M U Room 244. Everyone invited. A W S Executive Council, 8a.m ., M U 244. Open to all. U.S. A ir Force Recruiting for the School of M ilita ry Sciences for O fficers, 9 a.m . to noon. Career Services Com m ercial Division. Call 985-3612 for inform ation. "P rim a l Scream ," 7:30 p.m. Attendance by appointm ent only, due to lim ited space. $4*Call 244-1896 for inform ation. "T h e Keys to Success," by D ick Dickson, 8 p.m., M U /Mohave Room. Sponsored by Delta Sigm a P i business fraternity. Wednesday, M arch 28 Botany and m icrobiology sem inar, 4:30 p.m., L S A C496. Dr. M ilton Som m erfeld speaks on "A n unusual plant life c y c le alternation of m orphological phases without sexual reproduction." "M a s h ," 7 and 9:15 p.m., Neeb H ail. Sponsored by Little Sisters of the Nile. Tickets are $1 on the M all. M U Duplicate Bridge Club, 7:15 p.m., M U Alum ni Lounge. G L A D — G ay Liberation Arizona Desert, 8 p.m., Lutheran Cam pus Center, 1414 S. M cA llister. Free coffeehouse with m usic, dancing, refreshm ents. G ives ga y people a chance to meet one another. C all 967-5084 or 833-2774 for inform ation. W om en's Week m eeting, 7:30 p.m., M U Sidew alk Cafe. Geology colloquium, 3:40 p.m., A g 150. Dr. Frank Swartz speaks on searches for gypsum and special lim estones in parts of the U.S., M exico and Canada. Thursday, M arch 29 E C K A N K A R , 8 to 9:30 p.m., M U Greenlee Room . The ancient science of soul travel. C A B film , "Jad e G oddess," 7:30 p.m., Neeb Hall. A Chinese film with English subtitles. W inner of the best film aw ard in the 15th annual Asian film festival. The story is a rom ance set in 18th century China. Home-cooked m eal, 11:45 a.m .. Baker Center. Prepared by women from valley United .Methodist churches. Scientology d rills and lectures, 7:30 p.m., M U Y avap ai Room Everyone invited. A W A R E — Association for W om en's Active Return to Education, noon to 1 p.m., Ed 212. Rock concert, 7 p.m. M U Arizona Room. Fifty cents donation for m uscular dystrophy. Sponsored by Kappa Kappa Gam m a. Featured are Katie W allace, Liz R ussell, Andy W hlght and Ed Flores. Special education offers fellowships Applications for fellowships and graduate assistantships in special education are being accepted by the department of special education at ASU for the 1973-74 academic year. Information and application forms are available in ED B301. Deadline for completed appli­ cations is April 1. Williams opponents file recall election petitions By B IL L RO SS Staff Writer P e titio n s file d y e s te rd a y w ith th e S ecretary of S tate calling for th e rec a ll of G overnor Ja c k W illiam s contain m ore than enough sig n atu res to force a special guber­ n ato rial election, according to J e rry Pollock, candidate for governor. Pollock estim ated th e petitions contain m ore than 171,000 signatures. A to tal of 103,000 signatures, one-fourth of th e to tal num ber of votes c a st for governor in th e la s t gubernatorial rac e , a re req u ired to force a special election. “F rom sam ple checks, w e estim ate th a t invalid sig n atu res a re running a t no m ore than 15 p e r cent, so we can easily m eet th e req u irem en t,” Pollock said. Although G overnor W illiam s offered to hold th e rec a ll contest a t th e N ovem ber 1972 election and save th e cost of special balloting, Pollock said th e rec a ll m ovem ent refused th e offer because W illiam s would have won on P resid en t Nixon’s coattails. W hile s ta te officials have estim ated the election w ill cost Arizona tax p ay ers a h alf m illion dollars, Pollock said he believes th e cost w ill h e only one-tenth th a t am ount. “E ven if it does cost $500,000 dollars, it will be th e best investm ent, m orally and financially, th e sta te ever m ad e,” Pollock' said. “We ca n ’t afford another year-and-a-half of ru le by W illiam s,” Pollock said . “We ca n ’t afford to w ait until th e next scheduled election to oust th e right-w ingers in th e C apitol.” Although A rizona voters elected W illiam s for d ie second tim e in 1970, Pollock said th e governor’s actions since then have an­ tagonized s ta te residents so m uch th a t the decision they m ade in 1970 is no longer valid. Pollock said th e governor h as shown disregard for th e dignity of A rizonans by refusing to se t up a m ass tra n sit system . Instead, m ore freew ays h ave been built, so pollution h as increased, he said . The environm ent is also being dam aged by th e governor’s refu sal to enforce the m ines to com ply w ith s ta te and national regulations. “We don’t w ant to d o se th e m ines; we m erely w ant to m ake them m ore ecologically responsible,” Pollock said. Pollock said he is especially angered by the fa c t th a t A rizona is th e