inside
v
Devils hold off UofA . ¿ '.....p a g a li.
Special events budget ap
p ro v e d .. ...
. . . . . . . . .page 3
B asketball In p ic tu re s / .pages 6&7
ASU's friendly g re e te r. . . . . .p a g e 9'
Ârizomi State “University
TW *.l8 a stu den t-operated n ew sp a p er a n d does n o t
« • c e s s a rli/ re fle c t ttw o p in io n s o f th e U n iv e rs ity
fa c u lty tk a d m in is tra tio n . "
Tempe, Arizona
Voi. 57, No. S3
February 4, 1975
By Jim B oardm an >
T hirty Tem peans picketed
P lanned P arenthood’s birth
c o n tro l c lin ic a t 83 E .
Broadw ay to p ro te st the
clinic’s policy of treatin g
m inors.
....WP I B B
l
i
for R esponsible P a re n ts for
F a m ily
R ig h ts,
s a id ,
. P a re n ts don’t know these
services i r e av ailable to
m inors. Once they know, w e
feel tbev’ll siinnnrt ns in n v
i
P
h
e
l
e
T he g ro u p ifiten d s to
petition th e city of Tem pe
for rem oval of th e clinic and
ask th e S tate L egislature to
req u ire a .parent’s consent
before a m inor m ay be
s
by Bonnie Buhner
Approxim ately 10 persons, protesting the closeness of the Planned Parenthood
C lin ic to Tem pe High School, demonstrated last Frid ay afternoon.
Representatives from 9 colleges
to replace student senate in foil
« -,« > .
ra^
a
M
S
s &
a
s s t !
f e
r ' S
S
“ «
stu d e n t
{ residents. They w ill approve th e ASASU
Will
budget and adopt and
by-tew i
U
rep lace th e sen ate system . The new system
l i e p resid en t d r e e vino
owlW
w as voted into the ASASU constitution la st
th ree c rfte ie
d
« p ^ b y ? 1 .^ - 2 3 i vo!e r f 1b t stu d en t ty jy .
The only elected offices next fa ll w ill be
com m ittee. I t w ill d eterm ine ASASU policy,
ASASU p resident and th ree vice presidents:
consider unbudgeted req u ests and assign
executive vice president, activ ities vice
rep o rts to a ll boards; com m ittees, councils
presid en t and cam pus a ffairs vice president.
and th e S tudent A ffairs o ffice /
Council rep resen tativ es w ill be chosen by the
U nder fe e p resen t system , 40 sen ato rs a re
individual colleges.
elected o r appointed to re p re se n t icpllege
U nder New System
according to enrollm ent. L ib eral A rts, for
O ffices to be phased out a re the ad exam ple, h a s 15 sen ato rs an d th e College of
m in istrativ e .vice president and president of A rchitecture h as one. M aking up th e present
A ssociated Women Students (AWS). T heir executive council a re th e ASASU president,
functions w ill probably fall to com m ittee o r AWS president, th re e vice presidents
b o ard statu s under th e new offices, said Bob four rep resen tativ es of the stu d e n tse n a te .
P resen tly approving the c o l l i e budgets is
K enison, ASASU firs t vice president.
the B oard of F inancial Control (R FC l which
U nder the new system , each college
includes two voting faculty m em bers.
council w ill send'tw o rep resen tativ es to the
'
Continued on page 2
A
u r „
f ir s t co u n cil
S
of
18
In its p re ss re lease th e
group ch arg ed th e d im e
with prom oting out-of-state
a b o rtio n s fo r
m in o rs.'
N inety-fiveper cen t of those
seeking guidance from the
clinic a re urged to ab o rt
th eir babies, according to
tiie release.
J o e D a v is, e x e c u tiv e
d ire c to r
of
P la n n e d
P a re n th o o d o f P h o en ix ,
said , “T h a t’s nonsense. We
don’t u*ge any such thing.
We advise th e p atien t o f a ll
legal a lte rn a tiv e s.”
T he ch arg e of arran g in g
se c re t out-of-state abortions
is unfounded, according to
D avis. “ I t’s a g ain st fo e law
and We don’t do anything
ag ain st th e law .
“ Nothin g -win d isin teg rate In
a > fam ily fa s te r than an
, unw anted pregnancy an d
th a t’s w hat w e’re h ere to
p rev en t,” sa id D avis, ex
plaining th e clinic’s pur
pose. : . ■;
O ne
p ic k e te r,
M rs.
M ichael R ichard, n m other
of tw o sm all children, said ,
“ P lanned P arenthood said
they’re try in g to h elp the
college kids and they put the
clinic rig h t acro ss the s tre e t
from Tem pe H igh.”
C raig T ribken, a directo r
of P lanned Parenthood of
Phoenix, said , “H ie choice
of location had nothing to do
W ith c lo se p ro x im ity to
Tem pe H igh. I t w as sim ply
Use m ost suitable location
av ailable for our needs.”
D avis reported the .clinic
had tre a ted 210 women in. its
first eight days of operation.
Sixty p ar em it of those
tre a te d w ore ASU students.
Ten high school students
have been treated since foe
clinic opened, D avis said.
One demonstrator, an
expectant mother, felt
the clin ic infringed on
her rights as a parent.
P w fc a l Science name;
new department chairman!
■ After searching for more than a year, foe ASP poHfHil
science department has found a new chairman, said Dr. Dick
McGaw, acting chairman and professor of political science.
Dr. Shelton Simon of the University of Kentucky wffl take
over as chairman in tbe fall semester, McGaw said.
Simon is a well known author on Asian studies and win be
a boost to the Asian studies program a t ASU. “He will
enhance our prestige,” said Dr. YungHwan Jo, Director of
Asian Studies.
'
_ Thesearch for anew chairman began shortly after Dr.
Jack Holmes submitted his resignation in October, 1973
McGaw said. Holmes, who left the University of Tennessee to
come to ASU, served as chairman for two years, he said.
Dr. Stephen Walker, professor of political iodence and
coordinator for the search committee, said there were 92
applications for the chairm an's position. The committee
revtared applications and made recommendations to Dean
O iarles Woolf of the College of Liberal Arts. Woolf made the
final, selection.
-¡y***®
P a g e 2 — T u e sd a y , F e b ru a ry 4
,rr ' council' to replace
„ _ _ u d efflseñóte system
Continued from page l
*
t
The AWS president noW holds pow er
sim ilar to* the, vice presidents in th e
executive council.
AWS P resident H eather B ryan says the
statu s of the AWS next fall w ill depend on the
policy of the new cam pus affairs vice
president and if “certain women stay on” to
work on continuing projects.
Kenison says the AWS w as dropped from
executive council statu s because its budget
and m em bership w ere as sm all o r sm aller
than m any less pow erful boards p r com
m ittees it has precedence over.
ASU P resident John Schw ada approved •
the artic le s id a le tte r to Kenison la st August
w arning th a t he m ay rein state the present
system a fte r one y e ar i f the new system is
not w orking sm oothly.
Schw ada and ASASU P resident Rick
W eiss agree that, under the new system ,
certain colleges could m onopolize student
funds and u se them for projects of th eir own.
Kenison says the point of apportioning the
first council w ithout resp ect to the size of
each college is to “sh are the w ealth” an d to
prevent the larg e colleges from taking m ore
than th eir sh are of th e annual budget.
Student Control
K enison.says the m ain reasons for the
chapgeovser a re “to involve ihe* college
councils m ore ip representing the students
and to lim it council and com m ittee votin g
only to stu d e p ^ , Ip the p r e s e t BFC» for
instance, only nine of the 13 voting m em bers
a re students.
Ceramic exhibit --¿v
scheduled tit«MU
“ A irw are,” a ceraihic
Sculpture exhibition by Mike""
Fulghum and Susan Selkirk,
will be shown in the first and
second floor display cases at the
Memorial Union Feb. 10 — 26.
Fulghum, an ASU graduate
student majoring in ceramics,
has had a solo exhibit at th e ;
Shop of Art in Tempe and a duo
exhibit a t the ASU Art
Department gallery. His work
also has been included in
exhibitions in Mexico, at the
Scottsdale Public Library, the
Phoenix Art Museum and in
Tubac.
Selkirk, who is working
on a bachelor of fine arts degree
at ASU, won an award of ex
cellence at the Student Ceramic
$how and participated in a duo
exhibition in the ASU Art
Department gallery.
'mjjk
M
\lme
S
By D ebbie G riffith
An A ssociated Students
com m ittee w orking on the
fihafieial problem s of the
B u g ' Line is considering
purchasing $500 w orth of
advertising from the line as
a solution to its im m ediate
problem s...,:
...
™sag J“
P S lM t
„smmamitoœssî 't. ’
1
"-present
Tim B u rn s .a m e m b e ro f
the com m ittee, w as con
cerned with» th e risk s in
v o lv ed to th e s tu d e n ts ’
-money.' 4
*?&*
“ Students a re n ’t happy
w ith tiie w ay w e’v é r$ é en
spending m oney,” h e * a id .
“ We h av e to be cautious.”
B alfour finally ag reed to
th e p ro p o sa l,: s tip u la tin g
th a t h e re c eiv e tiie m oney
by th e m iddle o f the m onth.
The
c o m m itte e
w ill
discuss its proposal fu rth er
and w ill ta k e it before the
B oard of F in an cial Control
F rid ay . - -
other than advertising to g e t
the en tire $2,000 allocation,
the com m ittee said.
B alfour a t first objected to
this proposal, saying he did
not have sufficient tim e to
raise funds.
“ It’s a beautiful little
plan,” he said, “ b u tJ do not
have-the tim e. I think you’re
ad d in g
a n o th e r
com
plication.”
R ick W eiss, president of
ASASU, w ants to determ ine
th e a m o u n t of su p p o rt
behind the Bug Line before
giving m oney. He feels this
proposal w ill indicate th e.
am o u n t of su p p o rt a t
John B alfour, co-founder
of the Bug Line, requested
$2,000 from ASASU to keep
the line running for another
m onth. He said Bug Line
would fold in 25 days w ithout
the funds.
ASASU would supply the
a d d itio n a l $1,500 on - a
m atching funds basis a t a 2l ratio . Thus, B alfour would
have to ra ise $750 by m eans
5**;
-.V •;
'
. *;•
.?■ ' ;
w m & M sim Ê i l '
m i . -■•• pi -*•■■■'
Æïlîë;
ÄS
%
£ Im
advertising plans
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1
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.*:> *
ni ?>
ST ATE P R E S S is published by A rizp n a l
S id le U n iversity Tuesday through F rid a y ])
during .the academ ic year, except holidays!
ond exam ination periods.
Entered a sl
second class m atter at-Tem pe. A Z , 852B1.I
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f o r Information - Applications Contact
Mis. Russell Stephens. CoChairmah
Star Route 2 Box 464?
Buckeye,. Arizona 85326
Phone 372 4796
tW # '»
.a i
^ D ESSER T
Mrs. Chuck Youngker. Co-Chairman
4)0 Narramore
Buckeye. Arizona 85326
Phone 386-2565
Do-lt-YourepH ^ ,
Export Pipe Repairs' í
« P » R r M w ISMì C a n to r
Roii-your-own Supplies % Cuetomere R & R Lounge
Water Pipes
Largest Selection of
Christmas Gift Items
In U s e V a lle y
T uesday,-
Boardapproveg$4,150
;J | ' R elief is h e re in the form
kiv e ra g e « f $ i 2 a w eek, ft h e
r id e s w ith tw o o th e rs ,
students and faculty.
M alam ud said. C arpooling
C oncerned w ith parking
also reduces th e num ber of
problem s, rush-hour traffic
c a rs on th e ro ad and a ir
and the increased price of
pollution.
fiiei, P ro jec t Pool-it w as
Susan F itte r, chairperson
s ta r te d toy th e V alley
of th e A ssociated Students
F o r w a rd | A s s o c ia tio n ,
S e n a te S tu d e h t „A ffairs
com posed o f V alley a re a ' Comm itte e s is coordinating
businessm en.
th é cam p u s p ro ject.
• E r-w i n ! M a i a m u d ,
Inform ation bulletins ad d
a ssista n t m a n a g e for the
form s a ré av ailab le a t die
p ro je c t* '
s a id
th e
MU in fo rm a tio n d e sk .
businessm en’s idea w as to. F orm s w ill .b e collected
offer fre e a id in helping
w eekly and delivered to th e
V alley I re s id e n ts :T rom
A rizo n a D e p a rtm e n t o f
carpools. th è p ro ject is
T ransportation
com p u ter
e x p a n d in g
s e r v ic e
d iv isio n fo r c o rre la tio n ,
th ro u g h o u t
M a ric o p a
B itte r said.
County.
All inform ation fed into
A p e rso n tra v e lin g 20 th e c o m p u te r 'i s c o n
n d les a day m ay save an
fidential, M alam ud said. He
said stu d en ts and faculty
.w ill be m atched u p on th e .
b a sis erf hbm e location and
c la s s i^
IndiauCiriture 1
to be
stu
An em & gency session ôf
the Indian Student A ctivities
B oard h às been scheduled
for W ednesday to discuss
plans for its Indian C ulture
Week in A pril. ■'
O rganization, P resid en t
W illie , K eeto said som e of
the tentatively ^scheduled
a c tiv itie s
in c lu d e
ap
p earan ces by Gov. R aul
C a s tro . a n d U n iv e rsity
P resid en t John iS c h w a d a.
T he w eek w ill featu re
Indian dances and a fashion
show, both derived from
F o u r m ilitary can isters
several
trib e s, he said.
m ent, who w as dispatched
filled w ith b j a e k pow der
K
eeto
expressed
h o p e th a tto the scene, sa id h e “ took
i w ore discovered underneath
ti» w eek would be for
one look a t th e sh ells ^m d
a s tru c tu re n e a r . th e
m u la te d a n d p e rfo rm e d
rev ised to touch th em .” The
U jal v e r s f t y
S a tu r d a y | .
e n tire ly by U n iv e rsity
h o ig j) 11 s q u a d
m orning, U nivarsity police
students, ra th e r than out
rem oved the can iste rs an d
sources re p o rt p
siders. “ L ast y e ar w e paid
is holding diem fur in
K enneth Thom pson who is
people to come in m id
vestigation.
^cmplpycd t y A lpha House
p erfo rm ,” h e said,. " I feel
; U niversity P olice G apt.,
■Indian
stu d en ts have enw igh
^ o v ih g , w as p re p a rin g the
N orm an P eck described the?;
m utidihg'à t 815 E . Lem on to
155 m m shells a s being./ know ledge (to p erform ) ”
b e m oved when t e noticed
“ about; th e la rg e st in th e
fo u r m ilitary shell casings
A rm y.” P eck said an in
Inside die stru c tu re , police
vestigation w ill be m ade.
said.
H ow ever, th e police “have
O fficer G ary D irks of die
no id e a ’’ as .to th e origin of
U niversity p d ic e departth e can iste rs, he added.
beneath
<1. T he A ssociated Students
B oard of F inancial Control
voted im anim ously F rid ay
to approve expenditures of
$4,510 fay th e Special E vents
B o ard (BEB;y "T or ; m a il
concerts, dances and o ther
activ ities.
SEB chairm an Rick C lark
“We’rn expanding the
program to r include m ore
dances, and m all concerts.
The w hole e m p h a sis o4
Special E vents is to faster
zom m tm ity s p irit.”
W p s to L as V egas Mid
P urgatory Colò - F eb. 1447
have been arran g ed by SEB.
R ound tr ip b u s tr a n
sportation an d hotels for ’
th ree days a re included in
th e packages costs of $35 for
L as V egas and $52 for
P urgatory. C lark said.
jsaid,
‘ T he SEB/ will sponsor a
m ulti-m edia
presentation
M ard i 5 dealing w ith con-'
spiracy theories surrounding th e assassination of the
late P resident John Ken
nedy,
-
Correction
Last Friday’s S ta te P ress,
incorrectly reported the
name of the co-ed who
allegedly assaulted a
University police officer.
The cOed is Kathleen Ann
Brown, not Sara Maxwell, as
reported.
The mistake occurred in
the University police report
shown to the rep o rter.
U niversity police have
corrected this error, and the
S tate P ress
wishes x t©
apologize for it.
structure
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Vocational Education and M edical Technology are needed overseas
and in the U.S.
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LiawWWida i i iw w is a s a s t o n — tr»
wtÊÊËÊÈ!Ê&9B jm t& & & ;, r m
909 E. TERRACE ROAD, ACROSS FROM A.S.U. IN TEMPE
O p in io n
A critic has his &ay
Editor,
t
v
3'
Ad-hoc committees, like State Press staffers, came and go. A
few short years ago, I had the displeasure of serving on another adhoc committee, investigating die State Press. Convened by dial
President Newburn and chaired by Professor Cleary of the Law
College, it came unanimously to conclusions and recommendations
not dissimilar to those readied by the latest committee, however
blurred and distorted your "reporting of them has been. Triie to
administrations! form, Newburn waited until the summer to reject
our findings and proposals, thereby bringing to instant waste the
considerable time of students and faculty members alike and in
suring the fact that the whole investigation would have to be
repeated, as it has. I confidently predict a new ad-hoc committee in
the spring of 1978.
'
Why, however, this continuous need to investigate die Press?
To my mind the critical issue is obvious, despite the distracting
side issues of control and real or imagined censorship. Coldly put, it
is that the State Press is a lousy newspaper, a mediocrity whose
news and editorials can be exhausted by anyone *with normal
eyesight in the time it takes the average elevator to move from the
ground floor to a fourth floor* '
Last Thursday’s editorial is an apt illustration of this mediocrity.
Alan Faye adopts a breezy tone, the purpose of which is to
trivialize. Yet the whole is made ludicrous by the unintentionfll
irony established at the outset where he speaks smugty of *‘those in
the know” and then mistakenly locates Starsky in the Political
Science Department and promotes him two ranks from assistant
professor to professor. For that m atter in my years here the Press
has never been fully accurate in any story of which I have had
knowledge and, in one instance, its play-acting a t journalism,
turning simple announcements into elaborate interviews, might
have cost an ASU senior a Marshall Scholarship this past fall.
Further examples of inaccuracies, of triviality and mediocrity,
might near fill the space where aid past editions have been laid to
rest. Requiescant. I ask only one question, and I suspect it is the
question that brings ad-hoc committees into being. Why can’t the
newspaper of a university with some 28,000 enrolled souls be
significantly better than it is? Why can’t it rival in service, scope,
and quality the newspapers of similarly sized state universities —
of Michigan, Illinois, Ohio State, O.C.L3Ü, Texas, and lah-wnfaihly'
so, the University of Arizona?
Denali Moran
Associate Professor
P.S. Á free BIGMAC in the event of an honest and accurate tran
scription Of tlliS.
;
Editor’s note:
. !! ■
*
'f.. I won’t pack my hatch on Thursday as lH be expecting a Big
Mac. Please bring it to oar office on tltoe first floor of Stanffer Hall.
Thanks for yonr interest.
Big question unresolved
Editor,
v
I have probably been as frequent a critic of the State Press as
any member of the campus community and a t times have even
been embarrassed, by the lack of basic competence it has shown.
Newspapers which are not valid instruments for reporting news
can—and should —be ignored. TheywUlchangeor fail depending '
on their perception of how many people are ignoring them at any
given moment and en-what they dojtp elicit intelligent interest from
their readers. The first amendment to our Constitution — which is
really quite specific and clear — allows for no other course of ac- tion.
I am sure it is possible to n it pide the procedures followed by
the ad hoc committee, perhaps their selection of witnesses was not
what it might have been, but such criticism of their operation
seems to overlook the basic problem (I am, perhaps rashly,
assuming that the news media have accurately reported the issue.)
With what I am sure were the best of intentions, and without benefit
of any card-carrying totalitarians, it would seem that the com
mittee has recommended something dangerous, at least hi prin
ciple of not in practice. Further, it would seem that the pmrnnHfay»
did not resolve the fundamental question.
If ASU feels it necessary or desirable to ha v ea1newspaper on
campus, that newspaper must be free. By definition a newspaper is
guided by its readers. If ASU does not want a newspaper but in
stead thinks a four-time-weekly-information-bulletin-printed-onnewsprint is what it needs, then a committee which meets so often
and whose faculty members deserve released time to perform their
committee duties is probably what we ought to have. Sutte a
Bill McClellan
Arnold deserves
a better
had submitted to the president,
Bill Arnold deserved a much
an honest effort but containing
kinder fate. I kept thinking that
too many errors and subject to
as I sat in his office Wednesday
misinterpretation.
afternoon and reviewed the
“I bet you didn’t relish this
report his ad hoc committee had
assignment," I said.
released earlier in tee day.
“It’s a no-win situation,” he
I knew it was a monstrosity.
answered with a shrug of his
Arnold, who knows as much
shoulders.
about newspapers as you’d
A no-win situation. That’s a
expect a speech professor to
good way to put it. He never had
know and that’s next to nothing,
a chance.
still didn’t realize the ugly
Dr. William Arnold, chair
ram ifications of his com
man of the speech department,
mittee’s report. He still didn’t
respected by his peers, admired
see tee hideous defects that
by m any of his students,
adorned the baby he had just
possessor of a fine reputation in
delivered.
tee University community, had
Bid the administration had
been sailing in calm waters
never really given him a
until one afternoon several
choice. You give a doctor an
f
enemy of a free press. Which he
isn’t. ■ 'i-v '
1
Not intentionally, anyway.
mischief. Despite the best intentions d fth e cpwnrflfoM» such
mischief would ineluctably lead to a diminution of the freedom
(with the awesome responsibility this entails) that ty
to e
newa*M|Pe r* - L W 1
William H. Illglis
3‘
.Assistant Professor of Theatre s
:W
U & m ’><.
laawwfairewaMÉraaajRaaWi
I__
P
-
m ay
TO MAKI Á FORTUNK PROM YOU« COUNTRY'S
I PRKSINT, MR. JOHN
Tuesday, Fabruary 4
É Ë ^SÉ I
P ó l^ iliv / s e e ir i^ ip lliC e
Il
■attend college classes
J*<*ï
(8
By Tom Cruise
If academic credentials are any measure of a
person’s intelligence, the ASU police fo rc e isfa r
from a collection of idiots.
Dave Wilson is the principal of Cocopah Ele
mentary School in Scottsdale. He is also working
on his doctorate in educational management at
ASU. Wilson’s hobbies .include flying, hiking and
police work. Two or three nights a month he is a
patrolman on the UniverStty police force.
Lariy Williams is also a d a te ra i candidate. A
former teacher at ASU, he is now working on his
dissertation in Latin American history. Williams
holds a part time job—working four Sights a week
as an officer and dispatcher for the University
poliee:force. ¡p fjg |
ASU Police Detective, Charles Erickson, who is
working on Ids m aster’s in business ad
ministration at ASU, said, “My level of education
helps because it Assimilates me into the com
munity. We understand students more because we
are students.”
According to a government survey of 210
colleges and universities, J.4 per cent of the
“You tend to have more of an empathy in
campus security officials have conqdeted 16 or
dealing with students a t their particular traum a
more years of education.
times — exams, for instance,” he said.
TWs can 1$ cwi^Mired tio 15.6 per cent of the
Williams also believes Us education has aided
ASU police force ,according to ASU police Lt.
him “in understanding the different pressures that
Thomas Godbehere. Of the 58 persons employed
are attendant to the different levels of adunitton
by the University police department, 34 are
You have a freshman who might be a little con
presently earning college credits. Only Í0 persons
fused as to where he’s going, and then you hSvea
have no college hours whatsoever.
senior who’s excited because he’s finally g»*Hng
Officers fe d their level Of education has proved
out* *
valuable in their police work a t ASU. Williams
Erickson believes his education brings him in
believes a higher level of education has helped Úm
closer contact with both students and foculty.
to understand the différait pressures that students
“We’re actually part of the University com*
munity. It’s a little different type of rapport than,
say, a city police department would have with
their dtizotty,?’ he arid.
; s . ^ sr
Wilson has found MspoUce work, education and
J°b as a principal go hand in hand. “If anything
English courses are a great help in writing
reports, which comprise about 50 per cent of a
' policeman’s
*t s ^ •
Erickson says he would not recommend a
mmidatory level of education for policemen.
“Common sense has to be brought: into this,
besides an education. The ability to evaluate, to
?toP # d think* is one thing that mi education wifi
give you. But a person who has never been near a
sdiool can have the same quality,” he said. “It’s
just inherent hi them.” ;
Williams believes an education can give a
person the ability to comprehend law; so that it is
something a person can relate to. However, he
said, anything beyond a Ugh school « fa w h »
should be optional. He does Believe “an ongoing
in-service educational program would be
valuable.”
Wilson disagrees. He feds a police officer “has
to have some understanding of the law. And the
best way to gain that is through high«*»»
But something more than mi education level
can make or break a police department. All three
officers attribute the qualify of a department to its
policy-maker. In AStTs case, that man is Chief
John Duffy.
“H we can go out of our way to serve a student,
our instructions from Mr. Duffy are ‘You do it.’ ”
Erickson said.
Let the
SINGERS WANTED FOR
JEWISH MUSIC GROUP.
Anyone w ho likes to sing
is welcom e. Call Andrea
Shapiro 947-9762 or Hillel
Office 966-5371.
Phoenix - 334 E. Camelback Rd. 263-94J0
Tempe — tlfo E . University Or. 968-3491
Tucson - 1037 N . Park 622-7402
. ~ : ■ v:
' •V
'l 1'
.. •.*
Marantz
people
test your
stereo
for free.
.-.
W ondering about the condition of
your audio equipm ent?
Ju st bring in your am plifier, pream plifier, or receiver —
regardless o f age, m ake, o r w here you bought i t T h e M arantz
■ people w ill take it from there. ‘
*
First, they w ill thoroughly test your equipm ent (except the
tuner section o f your receiver) on $7,000 worth o f precision
laboratory equipm ent A nd they’ll tell you if you’re getting all
the Sbund perform ance you paid for.
In addition, the results w ill be plotted on a graph fo r your
records. Y ou’ll a lso get an attractive brochure that explain s
exactly what’s been done and what it, all means.
There are no strings attached.
A n d yob don’t have to buy anything. W e’re bringing the
M afontz people to ou r store sim ply to get you to know us a
little better.
'
' ' #
. . bO n't miss this opportunity at Stereo & Things in
- M artin Plaza on Wadnesday only from Noon *til 8 p.m.
Mesa — Tempe
«33-4663
C a llD a v e S m ith
100SW .SouM i.ni A v .
AND THINGS INC.
Page 6 — Tuesday, February 4
Teresa "Toots" Bolan
(upper left) lets off
steam
d u rin g the
women's
basketball
defeat by UofA. On the
„court Renee B a ile y
(22) (up per rig h t)
maneuvered her way
under the basket but
failed to score. E x
p ressio n s p re va ile d
over p o in tsi^ M a rily n
Foley bites lia r tongue
anticipating a reloum l
(im m ediate left).
Photo by Roger OXoiHior
"A Moving Force In The Southwest"
272-6317
h f n N r iiH n
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
to be on campus
TUESDAY, FEBRU ARY 11
G ra d u a te stu d y in fo rm atio n —M a s te r's d e g re e in
L e tte rs , A rts & S cien ces a n d a l t fie ld s of th e P h.D .
Contact Career Services
Academ ic Services Bklg., Room 109
PAPA JAY'S
Authentic M ew York
PIZZA
804 S. ASH, TBWPE
%
mr
2O 4304
Tuesday, February 4 — Page 7
' \%r .tf «jìPPt •,'^ M w » a a "' *llilBa‘””5*
; p$%$E0M
jK
SHw S ììeS S m I
Victory
■ ■ I
W ildcat fans had a lot
to cheer about ontil
the gam e ended.
' Phot»
™w-aevw
iii
ASU
Coach
Ned
Walk and aséistaift
Jim Carey had a lot to
yell about until the
game ended*
bv JÉM
k m a li
sesesie® lk
ow^neloilersavNwgpHii
owp -
Pittai'
ASU 's Rudy White checks out U A's G ilbert M yles following 'collision under basket
t mfM'É
!&m .lwM ^yim iW mm! l i W ^m
M&fw^' 4>IMr | |
':v.f' "
VWrSpeoial
35^i-wS&if*
UA pom pom
loader Chris Yadao stares in
dism ay after her team 's late ra lly
failed to overcome A S IL .
CURRENT EVENTS
RN's ■. Adj. - Ofl Change
for
STUDENT Nurses Needed!
4.
*24" Parts t Labor WITH Ibis Ad.
Yesterday’s
I PROPHECY
m w
r e e t
277-3331
th e
Isla n d s
r esta li r a n t
. 83« North 7* s u ..*
■BRESTAURANTTHAT
■Khtfia week
“ I H r
OPENING
TONIGHT
^SilRW OOLVMW
sky
SFSF
■*«»
*
4$•
i
w
ft
$ft
P a g e 8 — T u e sd a y , F e b ru a ry 4
gras»
Honordormgives girls a
By Lyme Gittes
The students who live at
McClintock honor dorm con
sider themselves the elite of the
dorm set. “Because of the grade
point average (GPA), we get a
bunch of girls more interested
in school,” said Tina Peckens,
executive vice president of.
McClintock dorm.
McClintock is the only honor
dorm on the ASU campus.
Admittance requires a 2.8 GPA
and m aintenance of a 2.6
cum ulative index although
there are some exceptions to the
rule.
Due to the fall housing
shortage 15 freshmen were
assigned to McClintock. Fresh
men normally are not accepted
School chief
set to speak
at conference
A two-day conference for
Arizona technical, vocational
and industrial arts teachers will
begin at 9 a.m. Feb. 7 in the ASU
Technology Center, f
Speakers at the convention
will include Carolyn Warner,
state superintendent of public
instruction, and Dr. Edward
Aguirre, ASU’s first doctoral
level graduate in industrial
education.
A dinner at 6:30 p.m. in the
M aricopa Room of the
Memorial Union is scheduled on
the first day of the conference.
Registration for the conference
will be accepted at the door or
may be made by contacting the
Division of Technology.
unless they have had some
college credits and earned a 2.8
average.
Three handicapped students
are living in McClintock
because of the ground floor
facilities.
Girls following special diets
may also be assigned to the
dorm -dire to the availability of
kitchen facilities and four
refrigerators
spaced
throughout the dorm.
Although no 'one is on
probation now, a one-semester
probationary period is allowed
any -girl whose GPA drops
below 2.6.. If by the end of the
semester the GPA is not raised,
the student is then asked to seek
housing elsewhere, McClintock
president Monica Carroll said.
The selection of McClintock
girls is made by Peckens.
Selection is based on the highest
to lowest GPA, then on class
standing
(seniors first).
Priority is also given to the giri
who transfers from another
dorm rather than one who is
moving from off-campus.
Peckens says living hi Mc
Clintock is “kind of like having
your own apartm ent;” B ut
there is still a closeknit, family
feeling, she says. “There's lots
of groups doing things
together.”
n o '°
A ° '° **
wo
«‘P
U * # * * * * c0
’- «*•***?
, 00e*® „1 C W>'
J # ***
\° c '
ï m
forK
¿ ti* s
.« to * * -
o«*68
Q \* &
ttoP• S
c
Recruitment represéntatives
w ill be o n y o tir c a m p u s
\W ls '
TU ESD A Y .
F E B R U A R Y It
w
to interview ca n d id a tes.
■*!
ARTHUR FROMMER, EUROPE ON $5 AND $10 A DAY, P. 601-
Asian scholars
here research
China politics
One of Taiw an’s highest j
ranking political science
researchers, Ying-Rsien Pi, is
working with the ASU Center
for Asian Studies to research
Chinese-Soviet border relations.
Prof.
Min Kang, head
librarian and lecturer at the
University of Dankook in Seoul,
Korea, is also at ASU to
research rela tio n s, between
North Korea with China.
PI is one of two researchers
the institute has sent abroad for
studies.
A.specialist in the history of
Russian ideology, world
economics and the history of
Soviet bloc nations, he has spent
10 years at the Institute of In
ternational Relations in
Taiwan.
Kang says he also is here to
observe American scholars at
work.
He said that the
m aterials and services of
Hayden library are very good
and he is finding ample
material, for his work.
Dr. Yung-Hwan Jo, director
at the Center for Asian studies,
said he is looking forward to
working with the two scholars,
both of whom are fat America
for the first time. Jo has also
lectured at top academic in
stitutions in Taiwan.
"You haven’t really savored the essence of the
Continent until you've chugged along in a second-class
compartment and shared thesausage-and-Chiantiof an
Italian family, or carried onabouncing conversation in
broken French, or sim ply leaned back and observed the
European in his holiday-traveling mood. .
"O h most other occasions in Europe, the tourist is
likely to be a frenzied anim al, divorced from a truly human
contact with the population. In a train, this rem oteness
fa lls away.
"A moment occurs when the sights and sounds ot
Europe become intim ate and related to p eo p le -e n d that,
to me, is a thrill which no monument or museum can
ever provide."
If you’re going to Europe, consider our trains. Our
Student Railpass gives you two months of unlimited
Second Class travel for $180. In Britain, a variety of
BritRail Youth Passes from $35 to $94 is available.
NOTE: These passes are not available in Europe.
You must buy them here before you go. See your Travel
Agent or mail the coupon below. Prices subject to change.
uropean Railroads, Department 192-2006
ox 70, Bohem|SLNew York 11716
Gentlem en, i f *
. >
•
-„V ".
Please send me your free brochure,“ Th e T rain s o f Europe.”
E
Name
y
City
;
__________ A dd ress
■
'
State
M y Travel Aoent is
THE TRAINS OF EUROPE
i A sk anyone who's bean there.
.
J iE .
■mm
/
Tuesday, February 4 — Pugq-fr
Ernie Daigneault, in
the picture at riglit,
leaves guardhouse to
gx'eet.';.. s o m e o n e
arrivlftg
at
A SIL
D aig n eau lt s a y s he
g re e ts a t v le a s t‘ 1,000
people each d a y , i n *
eluding students avid
visitors.
Cam pus geography can be contusing. Daignoault points people in the right
direction, » i,
‘
;
By Weady M bh d
being gruff with people, he says.
N ett tim e you g e ta ticketfor
“It pays off being friendly/’
jaywalking across University
says Ernie as bis lean, tan face
Avenue and you need
fa to
lights tq> with a grin.
rêstoredjn law and order, turn ¡¡g D aigneault greets ASU’s
to the man with the smiling face visiting (Hgnitaries at the guard
who occupies, thé’ guard house- house and tries to give them the
behind I the Moeur
Ad-im pression th at ASU is a „
ministration Building.
' pleasant place. He feels that
Ernte Bedgneault, a campus . this is “good R E ."
security guard, makes it his
E rnie greets staff and
habit to be friendly to everyone students by name and goes out
he meets,and sees t o point in cf his way to assist die lost
ÉË1 s
freshm an or the befuddled
viator.
âgÉ
Daigneault çame here from
Connecticut in 1972 where he
was an office manager. Hé says
he has been'happily m arried for
28 years; he has a 20*year*old
son and a m arried daughter,
He has worked at the visitor’s
I ; •.
l
I
|
parking: lot since June 1973 and
figures he knows quits A few
people at ASU ¿ -if not by name,
-then;by sight.
As Ernie says, “It pays to be
friendly.” One of the staff
members leaveshim plates c f
cookies with a note addressed to
the “friendly man,”
j gg I j
m
i*. i J i
$Y
AiM fPJ S
, AN ■D M UCH
MORE!*v■■&&•£" 4- JC*
'
; » *• ' | ,*
,s
Why settle 1er a job when yon eon
akuaan
on M in o rl Vnil m all nualifw
BRUGES WORLD %F SOUND TEMPE
IS HAVING A "MOVING SALE."
■ EFFECTIVE' IMMEDIATELY THE
ENTIRE INVENTORY MUST BE SOLD.
ITEMS LIKE? SONY, MARANTZ, TEAC,
jv C . SHURE, SpPESCOPE, P.E. AND
MIRACORD MUST BE CLEARED OUT!
N Q p R E A S p N A B L E O F F E R W ILL
SALE ENDS
;
FEBRUARY 16, 1975
TEMPE STORE ONLY!
»TEMPE
Pci
Page 10
Tuesday, February 4
à M Æ A k ê â Ê I,
by Mary Winter
A few years ago most people
put laser beams in a category f
with zap guns and tim e
machines.
Things are different today. To
physicist Arnold Ozment, 1
working with laser beams is
routine in his job at the Rocky
Mountain Forest and Range
Experim ental Station, . a
research center on the ASU
campus.
Ozment, like 24 other
scientists who work at the ex
perimental station, conducts
research -in the areas of
watershed ma nagement,
wildlife and forest fire
‘management
Ozment is currently working
on three projects, one of which
involves using a laser beam to
measure amount of rainfall for
data collection on one of
Arizona’s six national forests.
He ‘began developing the
system two years ago, and it is
now being field-tested on the
Thomas Creek watershed near
Alpine.
Practical application of the
information will start in 1976,
Ozment said, at which time a
lagging operation is expected to :
cut the frees on the watershed.
“From the laser gauge data
we’ll be able to tell just what
effect removing trees has had
on the area by correlating
amount of rainfall to final run
off,” he said.
Ozment’s two other projects
include a Study on the
relationship between snow
densjgy and tem perature
histo^Pof a snow pack and the
C a lla g e I
TO D AY
H ille l sponsored lunch, 11:30-1 p.m. a .
Baker Center. P rice 75 cents.
Danforth Chapel otters free, personal one
situation counseling week days, 955-3570
M ortar Board ap plications due a t Dean oi
Students office in M atthew s Canter.
ASU Outing Club m eeting and touring
sem inar, 7:30 p.m . In M U room 417.
W ED N ESD AY
Am erican B aptist sponsored lunch, 11:30-1
p.m. at Baker Center. P rice 75 cents.
Snow D evils Ski Club w ill have a sign up
and pay for trip to Taos, N.M . for
W ashington's holiday weekend, 7 p.m . at
the V a rsity Inn.
There w ill be a discussion of "A spects of
E C K A N K A R , ancient science of soul
•travel," at 7 p.m. in M U room 214.
ASU Veterans m eeting, 2:40 p.m . in the
M U Mohave Room.
A W A R E , Association tor W omen's A ctive
Return to Education, w ill have a brown
bag lunch, 11:40-1 p.m. In the Parm er
E ducation building, room 104.
A SU O ntology C lu b sponsors guest
speakers Nancy Goldson and Jeanne
B elter, 0 p.m . in the M U Y avapai Room
an "F rien d sh ip , or Who R eally Started
the W ar in Heaven."
M ortar Board ra ffle , 9 a.m . to 1 p.m . on the
m all in front of the lib ra ry for a S25
V alentine's Day dinner for two at Trader
V ic's. R affle through Feb. 12.
TH U R SD AYW esley Found ation-sp onsored lu n ch ,
11:30-1 p.m. a t Baker Center. P rice 75
cents.
College D em ocrats m eeting, 2 p.m . In M U
M om 213.
measurement of solar radiation
that passes through the forest
canopy.
According
to
Ozment,
overcrowding may cause future
problem s
in
Arizona’s
recreation areas. “Some of the
campsites, such as Sheep’s
Crossing in the White Moun
tains, have been forced'to close
because there were just too
many people Stomping around
and the eco-system was being
drastically modified.”
“Arizona has the capability of
producing more food per acre
Study in
Guadalajara, Mexico
The G U A D A L A J A R A SUMMER
SCHOOL, a fully accredited UNI
VERSITY O F ARIZONA program,
w ill offer June 30 to August 9,
anthropology, art, education, folk
lore, geography, history, govern
ment, language and literature.
Tuition and fees, $190; board'and
room with Mexican family $245.
Write to GU ADALAJARA SUMMER
SCHOOL, 413 New Psychology,
University of Arizona, Tucson,
Arizona 85721.
i
:
ARTIST & DRAFTING
SU PPLIES
Crafts • P ictu re Fram es
Decorating M aterial
Open Mon. A Thurs. N ights
15 P e rc e n t D iscnnnt in Students
111 E.University
—
967-4482
Inflation," R ecession, got you
down? .Wonder why your rents
keep going up? Wariit to make
some money? Make it to FAT
CITY! By buying an older home
in Phoenix, Tempe, or Mesa. Beat
the'Tnflation game. Many o f our
homes have incredible low downs.
Call Bob's Realty 906-7903 or
come to 826 M ill in Downtown
Tempe.
C A R P IT
S P E C IA LS
f x 12 u sed rugs-$S.0O
A ll S izes In Stock
C A R P IT
ROSSI
1516 E . V a n Suren# P h x.
CAM PUS CLEANERS
& COIN-OP
LAUNDROMAT
One Day Service on Dry Cleaning & finished Shirts
☆ Alterations
tv Suede & Leather Cleaning
& Huff Dry o Wash Site
is
,
Hand timing
Dry
o
fold
Dry Cleaning by the Pound
WE A LSO DO DRAPES AND RUGS
967-9660
•
Comer of University tr Rural (toad
rimWMT*
axm
BUY
/ SELL
1.
2.
X
4.
5.
5.
7.
S.
9.
the building in 1964* licElvain
said; to be' A | “ m utually
beneficial, vcaoperative
research effort” on Arizona’s
environment fay faculty And
Forest Service personnel.
gt-The governm ent m akes
gran ts available td ASU
professors to do i m i i c h
needed by the station because of
ti> program.
:
CMSSinECRADi
' Rates: The firs t day is 10 cants per w ord w ith 01.50 m inim um (15. w ords). A ir consecutive ads a fte r ttie firs t S ay a re discounted
N otification o f e rro rs is required before second publication. The State P ress w ill not be responsible fo r m ore then the flr s t ln correct insertion. :
{
- F v * * "’ “ 1 W
< I
* !t ,*;• * *
f
No refunds w ill be m ade fo r '-anceHaNons o f classifie d -a d ve rtisih g .
A ll abbreviations d r sm a ll groups of num bers count fcs one w ord. Hyphenated w ords count as tw o words.
No tear sheets w ill be provided w ith cla ssifie d advertising.
The rig h t is. reserved' to reject .any copy. i* *
Paym ent-for., a ll cla ssifie d ads is cash In advance.
«L
y i '" ¿ A IS . s y f i §¡§¡¡1 T
*
A ds w ill not be accepted over the telephone but can be pieced e ith er in the o ffices of the State Press, Stauffer B ld g ., A lll, ASU ,
Tem pe, A rlz . 85281 o r in the M em orial Union, Room 208 J . A d s a lso m ay be m ailed to the. State P re ss If paym ent is Included
w ith the term .
„
•• V
« fr
^
.
D eadline is 4 p.m , tw o days before the ad 15 to appear.
.
n •
• ANNOUNCEMENTS
. Thursday February 5, Soviet Jew ry meet
ing a t 7:30, H ille l lounge, Baker- Center.
213 E . U niversity.
(2/4)
Europe - Israel - A fric a .- O rient student
flig h ts year round. Contact: ISCA, 11587
San Vicanto B lvd . #4, l~ A. C a lif. 98849
o r T el: (213) 925-5559. 8244)955.
(5/2)
• FOR SALE
SERVICES
Teach O verseas! H ave collected over 200
addresses o f schools around, the w orldE ngllsh the language o f instruction-this
invaluable lis t yours fo r $3.50. Send
check: H enry W . M ille r, Box 550, AG SIM ,
Glendale. A z. 05305, .
(2/20)
F o r these who have the neod and desire
te r ' greatef v Saifs knowledge, aom re l ft
aw areness w ithout the u se o f ritu a l o r
hypnotic m ethods, consult A ll Alexander,
"
V
- :.Vi::>:i; ^ 4.W 12)
Prog ram consultation. T utaring m For
tra n , P L i, program flow , design, logic ft
deep bugging. s5 /h r.' 960-4313.. „
~(2/4)
12X40 AAobile Hom e. Set .up In P a rk. 2
bdrm ., A /C , m any' extras. 1008. B . Lem on,
■;
,
;
y
(2/7)
Photo Stam ps! Y our photo on a sheet o f j
188 stam ps, gum m ed and perforated.
M ade from any photo. Sam ples aVOIIabie.
'44 Plym outh F u ry II S tation w iiion .
Personalize letters, books, everything,
$200.00 945-3(24 days or 950-1(51 evenings.
photo Posters! 2x3 feet photo m ade from '
■,
any size photo, artwork#’ e tc W rite M aym ad, Box 27714, Tem pe, A z. 85282. (2/4)
K ia ss Notess e re a v a ila b le In the M U
Bookstore and -the Student Bookcenter
P ra t Free Fre e F re e l W rite fo r our in
‘ '. ^ /7)
flation fighting photo equipm ent catalog.
Com pare our w arehouse.prices on cam -,
R ecycled ' cloth in g, fu rnituro , and good:
bras, dar kroom equipm ent, and supplies.
stuff. D iscount to students. B u tle r's 225 W.
1327 A rch e r St. San LU ls Obispe, C a li
U n iversity - next to Snides P izza .
-/•;
fo rn ia 93401.
.
(2/4)
.
/_________ (2/20)
Singers wanted fo r Jew ish m usic group,
Anyone who lik e s to sing is welcom e.
C a ll Andrea Shapers 947-9742 o r H U M o f
fic e 954-5371.
(2/6)
Is your sto o d ' busted? D on't get "rip p e d
' O ff".: A lso / turn- tab les m ade Ilka .new.
Steve' 954-5102.
; ,, . (2/4)
Com plete 'au la upholstering. Foreign cars
ogr^ spedatty. Com e In fo r tre e .a n im a te .
C e rtifie d custom auto in te rio rs, 5th ft
AAeptp,_T^^(,jWi..,,qf; AAUt
JW )
S kis, K M 's , 200 C M , A terker. adjustable
U n d in e s, size 9 T y ro l to e to S lis . C a ll *
M ik e
- (2/4)*
K LA S S N O TES A R É H E R E I A t la st you
can be free Of the tedious and in e fficie n t
| task of/ "ta kin g notés." Im aginé, an an\ tiro sem ester's set o f typed lecture notes.
The follow ing lis t o f notes Is now a v a il- 1
able a t the A S U Bookstore and the Stu
dent Book Canter on College Ave., b o -ioo,
CH-101, 113, 115, 231, ES-1Q2,- EC-201, G L 100, 101, ASA-120, 121, MI-201, MI-101, P X 100. RE-251, ZQ200, 201, 202, 270. (4/14)
• HELP WANTED
C ockta il w aitresses, age 19 o r older.
M ust bo re lia b le , personable, neat and .
attractive , p a rt o r fun tim e. Good op
portunity to m ake extra money and an|oy m eeting people. A pp ly In person Mon.P r l. 12-3. F rid a y 's ft Saturdays. 025 N .
Scottsdale Rd.
(5/2)
■B ike -1 0 spaed - Peugeot - « 0 5 condition, |
(2/4)
• AUTOMOBILES 7
Individual tutoring In m atti, chem istry ,
physics, ft biolog ical sciences. $15 par 2hr. session. 272-7705.
■ ; >,
(2/20)
F re e ' AAonthl 2 bdrm . - 'a ll e le c tric • un
furnished • covered' parking. (157.50/mo.$100 deposit - ;2o m in. from cam pus. C a ll
275-7002 o r 257-7525.
(5/2)
TYPING
T yping done
JO c .a page. L in d a Bedell,
033-7585,17S2 E . 1st, St., M is a , A z. (5/2)
Experienced ty p ist can to theses, d is
- sertations. farm papers, m ed ical back
ground. JO c page. Janet, 834489ft
' ? ..
. ■: „
‘ (5/2) .
Past, accurate, professional. IB M carbon
m achine, Com plete proofreading. 2210 S.
P rie s t, S uite 102, 9573393.
.(f/13)
..
The C h ristian Science M o n ito r a t student
ra tes Is ;a re e l bargain. Subscribe new be- '
h r * the p rice goes u p in A p ril. G et the
news you naod, delivered to your door by
ceUiWp 946-0734.:
(t>W
T erm papers, resum es, theses, disserta
tions. Professional, guaranteed w ork.
IB M ? M axine M ullen, 9554753.
(5/2)
Typing • school papers, resum es, thesis,
m anuscripts, ne m inim um . 945-5555.
7?
: (5/2)
Bound 1974 A rizona H ighw ays M agazines
or 12 monthly. Issues. C e ll 967-4339. (2/s)
Pregnant? T hink tw ice about abortion. Wo
■W ANT a baby. Please c a ll us, ovaa. 942T174. . ( i S É i f l H n n i â i l ! (2/5)
*73' Opel G T , -like1; new, low m ileage; a ir
ft extras. *3,300. 2674833 nights.
(2/6)
G uadalajara
Tucson 85721
New tw o and three bedroom townhouses,
tu iiy carpeted, deluxe' appllanco*, lofts,
enclosed yards, pools, adlacont to requot
dub# from S2S0. 944-7827.
(1/26)
2 bdrm . house, refrigerated, carpeted, r
y r. old, 3 m iles from A.S.U . $215 a month.
276-4312 o r 959-8893.
(2/7)
Keeshond puppies, 3 mo. old. M ock ft s li
ver, show ft pat q u a lity. 034-1749.
(2/7)
7 3 Opal G T , lik e new, ,tow m ileage, a ir
, 1É63 Ford W indow Van, now p o tn t/flré s;
■ft axtras - $3,300. 2«7to23^mgMs.
(2/4)
tottéry# d u tch , brakes, starter. tB i,o o .,
954.5444 - F re d • jbew re 3 p.m ? .flt/A) l|
, (2/5)
The College Inn has a' tow vacancies to r
' A S U students. Services Include' 20 m eals
w eekly, p riv a te parking lot# weakly m aid
service, h eated, sw im m ing pool, laundry
fa c ilitie s , telephone connections. Conven
ie n tly located a t 401 E ast Apache - 9577029.
(2/14)
Sony TD350 open re d tapo d e ck/ta p e s;'
also 2 4.50-13, 4 mo. o ld tiro s. 945-3344w d- S2.
.
Q /4)
Lecithin) V inegar) B4I K e lp l New aH four
In one capsule, ask fo r V B 4 + , Cam pus
Dnfi)»- ■':.i
;
■'
JO/f)
fo m ffm m V ftric ife m -vwS& iu.
F O R R E N T : 2 bdrm . Townhouse, lift m l.
from cam pus, secu rity w a ll, refrlft# c a r
peted, w asher/dryer, poo), clubhouse, $250
mo. lease. 274-7438.
(2/7)
.A ll cu rren t L .P .'s end tapes a « to H O ? I y
m ain A ll sin gle L .P .'s ju st $4.90. Reg. 0tra ck tapes lu st $4.97 each. fOO% sa tis
faction o r m onty g la d ly refunded . P lu t we
pay tax, postage ft h a n d lln g lW rita: The
R a t Co., P.O . B o x AA, T em p o,'A z. 05281.
Include title of L .P . or tape ft name o f
group o r a rtist,
(2/7)
■T P 's , G rads, P ro f's earn $2,000 o r m ore ft '
F R E E 5-1 w eeks in Europe. A fric a , A sia.
Nationw ide educational organization needle
T iro s - (2) L 70x15, Inglowood H igh Per
q u alified leaders fo r H .S, and Collage
form ance, mounted on I " x l5 " 'Vette
groups. Sénd nam e, addross, phone
R lm sl $85,00, best otter, 944-3888.
(2/7)
school, resum e, leadership experience to:
Cantor for Foreign Study, P.O. Box 505,
A nn A rb or, M l 45107.
(2/4)
Tow nera ft 12X40 two-bedroom . m obile
hom e. Double-aw nings, sk irtin g , re trlgsrattan and cooler. New desert landscapiliw i.
W ould you care to p a rticip a te as a p a id ,
volim téar fo r a study o f the effects o f
O nly 5 m inutes from A S U . $5595, 9497159.
Oral contraceptives on hum an m etabol
(2>W
ism ? The study consists o f two parts: one
p a rt w hile .you a re taking b irth control
P e r w io - 1944 Chovella M altbu. ln great
p ills and th e other p a rt w h ile you a re not
condition. O nly $4W). C a ll D avid evenings
(eith er before you sta rt o r etter you have , 9596062.
gJS
stepped). Please contact -ttie Phoenix of
fice o f the N ational Institutes o f H ealth,
5444.00 c re d it on anything a t P aut ’JOhn263-1200, Extension, 401. T he Identity o f
son's Jew elers. B ast after takes P , M ust
1
ASU was chtaen àsthesitefo r
¡2 1
• INSTRUCTION
OPEN 7 PAYS A WEEK
iP h o n e
than apy other place in the
country. But We’re asking for
trouble, in my opinion, by
converting |g so - 1 much
agricultural
land
into
residential areas. This is bound
to make the (nice of land go up
so mueli thM tim iarm er may be
forced out of production,” he
said. .
The experimental station is
I? you w und m y turquolao rin g In the
M l/ d o n 't k ill m s by keeping It. Rew ard
to r Into, o r the rin g . Ja ck 955-1055.
H andicapped m an heeds person M r. lig h t
cleaning, eonte cooking. Frao room ft
poard/ possible' salary. 3 blocks from
cam pus, 257-3455■
,
(2/30)
M p lf Golden R e trie v o rw lth . w tiita on
cheat and paws across h o rn Goes'S R ési.
S at., afternoon. R ew ard to r retu rn o r In
form ation loading to return. 945-4955. SB
• , MOTORCYCLES
For sate: Honda CB189. C a ll (avanliw s
only) 965-2114.
ç f J s if iS l ¡4»
(2/12)
Tuesday# February 4 — Page Iv
By M ike Tulum ello ‘
l | frbph gam e th a t isn’t easy
to sum m arize in a short,
te rs e | s ta te m e n t, ASU’s
M ike Moon did quite well.
“ All I know js , w e won,'*’.
said Moon, whose fre e throw
w ith e ig h t seco n d s le ft
hgjped p reserv e th e Siin
Devils* thrilling 83-81 vic
tory over A rizona in Tucson
S aturday night.
T he w in g av e ASU a t- i
record in W estern A th le te
C o n ference . p la y ,
and
h a irin g a total collapse by
th e D evils, w rapped up t
seco n d WAC b a sk e tb a ll
crow n in th ree years.
.And th e Way ASU has been
p la y in g th is y e a r (17-2
overall), the chances of a
total dollapse ap p ear to be:
A) none; B) less than th at.
unglued in th e second half,
m uch to th e delight of the
record throng o f 14,521 fans.
“ We alm o st le t (hem off
the hook;’*said R udy W hite,
a fte r d ie D evils m isplaced a
14-point lead an d w ere tied
th e s ta tis tic s , b u t th e ir
guards seem ed tire d a t th e
end of th e gam e. We g o t a
couple of fa s t b reak s th a t w e
w ouldn’t h a v e o rd in a rily
gotten.” Moon said.
A fter m issing the front
Devils
lose
-- -,
Sjg •lead
The Sun D evils, In com
m and throughout m ost of
th e g a m e , n e a rly c a m e
by UofA a t 65-65.
Bid th e Sup D evils, led by
Lionel H ollins an d Jac k
S chrader, refused to buckle
under p ressu re. T he key
play appeared to com e when
sch rad er ro ared down th e
floor to in tercep t a W ildcatpass and score a layup to put"
ASU ahead, 73-67 With five
m inutes left.
end of a tw o-shot fold w ith
e ig h t sec o n d s re m a in in g
and ASU leading 82-81, Moon
h a d to cope w ith th e
scream ing UofA fans before
sinking th e second shot.
“T he first onO w ent in and
out, so I still had confidence
on dfe second one.
“T hat m akes four out .of
five th a t we!ve taken from
them since I ’ve been here.
It’s h ard to b eat th a t/’ said
Moon, who added 16 points.
“ When w e got a bucket, it
shut rill those people up
c o m p le te ly ,” s a id W hite,
who sank tw o crucial free
throw s w ith 23 seconds left.
“ I had to chew on four
s tic k f u l S pearm int to h it
th o se la s t s h o ts ,” ' sa id
White..
. . .