’ ------------------------------------------------ • tuesday 1 Arizona State University ' 'Vol. 58, No. 34' October 28, 1975. ^ ' 1 ai ■17 Colley c o n f l i c t .................... 3 iax cut corn ered ...................................... 5 .... .... .... 9 ......12 th« .* « ,t h i g h t , ■Energy e n d o rsed .................... . , inside* 1 ■ Ttatpe, Arizona *** w . - ' 7 . •• Faculty union ibijys salary list; president pta\ns |public release By P aul Lorentz ♦ 7" The president, o f the ASU chapter of the American Federation o f Teachers, local 2050, said Monday the AFT will make public a computer printout list o f all faculty and staff names and salaries by the end of the week. Chris Smith, an assistant professor of history, said the AFT must pay the University $109 to reproduce the list. He stud the list will be open for public inspection. "The AFT has requested complete salary data for all ASU employes and we fully expect that this will be given to us shortly. This will give the AFT a clear idea o f salary inequities a t ASU," said Smith. The salary list is being obtained under the provisions of Senate Bill 1338 passed last June by the legislature. The law reads in part that “any person may request to examine or be furnished copies, printouts or photographs o f any public- record during regular office hours." The law states that a "reasonable fee" may be charged for copies. Thomas Hoult, an AFT member and chairman of the! ASU Faculty Assembly, said the salary data will be examined for possible inequities, such as differences between salaries o f men and women, minorities and gross salary differences between colleges. Two married addictstell what i t ’s like to be on and. off heroin far seven years Editor’s note: State. Press reporter John Edman spent some evenings with two avowed heroin addicts. H ie addicts’ names have been <*«itg~i in the following story to protect their identity. ■ anny walked into the bedroom just ahead of Lisa and turned L v on the light There were two glasses of water on the dresser, an “ Last year I tried to get into this drug program, like Synanon in California. They made me sit on this bench while the ‘family’ decided whether or not to let me continued page Tuesday, October 28, 1975 Page 2 conttnuad from pago 1 stay. I had to sit on that bench for almost 24 hours. AH this time I was .going, through withdrawal— no drugs. If I laid my head down, they told me to sit up. I was finally accepted under the conditions that I wear a sandwich sign saying ‘My Stupidity Almost Cost Me My Life. Ask Me Why.* They also made me wear a dunce cap which was four feet high. I had to wear it everywhere I went 'This went on for five days. The ‘family* had all kinds of little ‘house trips.' They shaved this guy’s head and made him wear a clown's suit ^Another guy could only wear a diaper because they said he acted like a baby. I wouldn’t treat my dog the way they treated me. I stayed there a week.” The powdered heroin had been boiled, turnidg it into a liquid. Lisa put a tiny ball of Cotton in the spoon, which acted as a filter as she siphoned the heroin into the syringe. A black residue covered the lip of the spoon. She said the residue was impurities. Impurities might be anything from face powder to cocoa. ’ Lisa held the partially filled syringe up to the light She methodically tapped the needle with her finger, to get rid of the 'air bubbles. She turned and gave the needle to Danny who was sitting on the bed. Lisa took a nylon stocking from the closet end wrapped it tightly around her right bicep. Danny grabbed her arm and patiently searched for a vein. Lisa didn’t have many veins left Most of the veins in her arm were collapsed. "Seeing Lisa shoot up is sickening to me. Nothing is worse than a female junkie. Lisa has never seen the ugiy side o f junk; when you get sick, and crap in your pants, pee on yourself, you sweat, chill, ydur body ejaculates. She’s never had to use cotton from a Tampax, or a cigarette Jitter. She never had to spit in her spoon. She’s only known the high, the euphoria o f heroin. "When she had an overdose, I had to throw her on the hood 'o f the car. I pum ped her chest, gave her mouth to mouth, and hosed her down. I couldn’t call the rescue squad because the policy would come too, and we’d get arrested. It was eight minutes before she started breathing again. I f Lisa would have died on me I would have been messed tip. I love Lisa more than anything in this life. But 4 f I don't ‘f ix ’ her, she'll fin d someone else who wUl, or do it herself. ” A stream of blood flowed down Lisa’s forearm. She wiped it up with a Kleenex. ‘‘Thanks Danny. That was a very good h it Probably the best all week. “There are certain places where I won’t let Danny ‘h it me. He shot me up in my ankle once. The needle went right through tile vein. I couldn’t walk for a week. He hates to hit me.” In a few minutes, lisa was breathing heavily, her speech became slurred, and she was losing her sense of perception. She went into the bathroom and shut the door. Danny cleaned out the syringe several times with water. He took a fresh needlefrom the black box and prepared his own injection. , Danny shot 20 ccs of 40 per cent pure heroin into his system. He said that was enough to kill me if I shot i t "When you first start shooting dope, you. flash [throw up] a lot. A fter you flash, you fe el this tremendous feeling o f euphoria. The longer you’ve been strung out the harder it is to reach euphoria. Some, people try to reach it 'every time, and end up overdosing.” "I’m a burnt out junkie. Anyone who has been shooting ju n k since his late teens has pretty well had it by my age, i f he lives that long." "The only permanent damage 1 have are scarred veins and. bad teeth. Junkies eat a lot o f candy to replenish their energy." Danny stroked his arm with a Kleenex and put the blood-soaked tissue in the ashtray. Danny has been ‘chipping1 (using the needle), and ‘snorting* (using his nose) heroin for nine years. He’s a professional addict an “ old” junkie, busted 30 times for drug related offenses, but never convicted, he claims. "I’ve done everything to get my dope State Press — from small-time burglary to breaking into railroad cart. I hocked a $700 wedding ring in Hong Kong fo r three ounces o f heroin. I t was the best dope deal I ever m ade." Lisacam e into the room, wiping her chin. She walked very cautiously over to the bed and sat down next to Danny. “ Lisa, do you want.to shoot up again? I didn’t quite get off on that one.” Before the day was over, Danny and Lisa together consumed four grams of heroin, worth more than $400 on the street Every fix went smoothly. Lisa, 25, and Danny, 33, have been partners in drugs and marriage for seven years. Their life is strictly middle class. They have a child upstairs, a dog in the back yard, two cars in the driveway and un­ suspecting middle class neighbors on all sides. "We both realize what we are. We stick it out together when times are hard. I wouldn’t make it without her. One advantage we have over other people is our intelligence." Danny has a college degree, Lisa, a high school education, he says. “Junkies are sick in the heart. We don’t want to be sick anymore. We want to have sex on our own efforts, we want to fig h t on our own efforts. This last year has been really hardfor us. We've got the ’junkie bug.’ We live with anxiety and frustration. W e’re strung out. We don't want to be strung out anymore. I f we don t stop now there won't be anything left, nothing to live fo r." . dance coors salads JBL four bars big draft peo pie earthly delights rock out cut loose rejoice groove-& bump hustle discotheque feelin alright «adapto d brew ches ú oors gam dam s p e c ifiM B Ifv ii dance hide out total strange biç hamburgers cori1WtteePefteeseburger$ fee entertainment sounds discotheque every day chess dominoes fu loony elecTronic coors games foosball eats light show repasts dan special sandwiches roast beef ham uance.Dnm c, Ear, n a y «open Every Day, 3pm-1am Apache and Rural-N ext to the Holiday Inn •Tempo State Press Page 3 Tuesday, October 28, 1975 C o m m itte e Is c ritic iz e d fo r s e le c tio n , fe e Peace groups to oppose Colley By Mike Tulumello Opposition to William Calley’s ASU speaking engagement from students and a local peace group is expected at Wednesday’s MU Ideas and Issues Committee meeting. The committee, which will meet at 3:15 p.m. in the MU Yavapai Room, has been extensively criticized for its selection of Calley — along with a $2,000 fee — for a Nov. 5 speech at Gammage. Calley, a former Army lieutenant, is a convicted killer of 22 Viet­ namese civilians in the 1968 My Lai massacre. - . “Freedom of speech is totally irrelevant to the issue of profiting on crimes,” said Nina Mohit, director of Arizonans for Peace. Mohit* said representatives of the group will urge the committee to either cancel the speech, or use the speaker’s fee for a humanitarian cause. . v He was a scapegoat “ I agree he was a scapegoat,” said Mohit, “but if he or ASU had any integrity, they wouldn’t be trying to rake in. money for his appearance.” The University will charge one dollar to students and two dollars to the public for admission. M ohit, however, said the primary issue runs much deeper than the question of charging admission. “People seem to be copping out on their moral responsibilities. I’ve never heard anyone say what Calley did was a good thing, yet if My Lai hadn’t happened, ASU wouldn’t have been interested in Calley,” Mohit said. Ghoulish attitude “ People who want to see Calley added a procedural violation would be difficult to prove. Put pressure on committee Rodriguez said the best alternative now would be to “put pressure on the committee. It’s comparable to the situation at E astern universities, where students convinced people to take back speaking invitations to Ron Ziegler (Richard Nixon’s press secretary).” About 25 tickets to the speech have been sold so far. Bus lu n c h < Dinner Doily Student foundation offers funds for projects The ASU Student Foundation is acting as an alternate source of funds for students or campus groups seeking money for projects. The foundation has $2,000 in profits from the Ballet Folklórico it sponsored Sept 22. It will allocate this money for projects to benefit or bring recognition to ASU or projects which are academically oriented, said Susan Bitter, vice president of the foundation. Any full-time student or registered organization can apply for funding at the foundation office, Matthews Center 138. Deadline is 4 p.m., Nov. 14. Applicants must present two letters of recommendation and a detailed budget breakdown and must not be receiving funds for the project from any other source, Bitter said. “The fund was started by students to help other students,” Bitter said. The foundation will be allocating money each semester. A student wishing to enter a film in a national contest is an example of a project qualifying for foundation money, Bitter said. have a rather ghoulish attitude toward violence. What exactly can he say that hasn’t already been raised?” she said. Paul Rodriguez, a senior in business administration, said he checked into various legal avenues for obtaining a court injunction to prevent ASU from paying Calley the $2,000. “ But unless the committee violated some procedural rule, we have no basis for filing an in­ junction,” Rodriguez said. He rertlet to A S U G am es r TREAT YOURSELF A SPECIAL; EVERY h UUCHTM n MON. STEAK t LOBSTER TUES. BEEF KABOBS WEB. CHICKEN TERIYAKI THURS. SHRIMP HAWAIIAN FRI. BONELESS TROUT _ SET. TERIYAKI SIRLOIN 3.50 (Mom & Kids) Happy Hour r . Un E ntertainm ent RESERVATIONS 3 7 Weekdays S i l l [..McDonaldDr.ScoHsdalo — 1910000 $500 D isco u n t! BOYCOTT LT. CALLEY’S SPEECH O RG AN IZIN G M E E T IN G 2 P.M . T U E SD A Y OCTOBER 28TH, 1975 BAKER C E N T E R LOUNGE 213 E. U N IV E R SIT Y DISCOUNT OCT. 25-31 PEN HALLOWEEN NIGHT! 1 5 -2 0 '-o n ON ALL CLOTHES! IN A D D ITIO N TO THE $ 5 . 0 0 DISCOUNT. ALL BALFOUR RINGS- ALREADY INCLUDE YOUR CHOICE OF YELLOW OR WHITE GOLD, FORTY-THREE D IFFEREN T STON ES, CHOICE OF METAL PANELS WITH 4nun STONES AND YOUR FULL NAME ENGRAVED IN S ID E THE BMJD OF THE R IN G ...............ALL AT NO EXTRA CHARGE: uesday thru Thursday W hert^ October 28, 29, 30th CERAMICS TOO! K P O LI& X 123 E UNIVERSITY SUITE nò TOWER CENTER MON.-SAT. 9:3o-6 / where: University Bookstore *10“ Deposit B A L F O U R -T H E RING P EO P LE Page 4 State Press Tuesday, October 28, 1975 ’Support Térros, save someone's life- 10,000 ¡unkies depend on ambulance than 3%). To paraphrase Mark P. Sharfman, Phoenix is to heroin what Milwaukee is to beer. Sharfman is the extremely upset grants and contracts manager o f Terros, a non­ profit drug rehabilitation and counseling center in the Valley. Sharfman and Terros are about to lose their ambulance because they do not have the finances to keep it in operation. Some people call it a “toy.” In the past two years that “toy” has saved 350 heroin overdose victims. That “toy” has kept 350 blue bodies from becoming permanently blue. Sharfman has just returned from a lobbying mission in This is NOT an editorial. It is a plea for help. It is a plea for 10,000 ugly lives in the cities of Phoenix, Scottsdale, Tempe, Mesa, Glendale, and Peoria. Metropolitan Phoenix is one of six major heroin centers in this country, challenged ohlyjby Los Angeles, San Francisco, El Paso, Houston, and New York for “junk” supremacy. Phoenix is the major import stop fqr Mexican heroin, a powdered drug that reaches purity levels o f as much as 40 percent. It is the most potent and deadly street heroin found anywhere in the United States. (The purity levels of imported European heroin in New York City is not greater Washington, D.C. Congressmen in Washington could care less about Sharfman’s ambulance. After October what funding Terros will receive for its ambulance will come from the Tempe. City Council,, a very generous $425 per month for 12 months, which still leaves Terros far short o f its needs. Terros receives no financial support from the Fiesta Bowl Organization. - Proceeds from the Fiesta Bowl are oriented toward drug abuse com ­ mercials in conjunction with the N ational C ollegiate A thletic A ssociation. You remember those Fiesta Bowl commercials, the “I don’t get high on drugs, I play football” type th in gs. It’s always reassuring to know our football heroes don’t shoot heroin. In the meantime, 10,000 sick, sick people in this community are hanging by their thumbs, with their only realistic lifeline, an am bulance, about to become inoperative. Terros is a rehabilitation center. Its function is to put human beings ^back on the street, not “junkies.” PLEASE help Terros keep the am­ bulance. Heroin addiction is a rapidly spreading social disease that must NOW be sincerely, and intelligently recognized. —John Edman Parking plebiscite 4¡¡ Friday the State Press ran a plebiscite on the editorial page asking whether student, staff and faculty commuters would be willing to pay higher prices to. park closer to campus for the academic year. Vice president for Business Affairs Jack Penick directed the Ad Hoc Parking Committee to explore the concept of variable cost parking as a means of solving the critical parking problem at ASU. We have received quite a response and are extending the opportunity for commuter input If there are any questions you have for the com­ mittee, attach them to the plebiscite when you turn it in. The plebiscite has been slightly rephrased to include a lower price and a definite .length of time. It may be returned to the State Press office in Stauffer A ll!'. Deadline for response is noon Wednesday. Results will be forwarded to the Ad Hoc Parking Committee and published in the State Press this week. « Parking plebiscite ■J S tu d e n t___ F a c u lt y .__ S t a f f ____ H o w m u ch w o u ld y o u b e w illin g to p a y to p a rk c lo s e t o 1c a m p u s fo r th e a c a d e m ic y e a r ? C ir c le : $5 #$ 1 0 $ 1 5 $ 2 0 $ 2 5 state press This is a student operated newspaper which does not necessarily reflect the opinions of the University faculty or the administration, editorial offices are located in Stauffer Hall, Room A l i i , Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, 85281; phone number M5-7572. Editor Managing editor News editor City editor Assistant city editor Sports editor Assistant sports editor Staff reporters Photo editor. Photographers Copy editor Copy desk Manager o f, ' ~ Student Publications' Advertising manager V «.Anita Mabante Greg Smith Dave Jensen Tom Cruise Jeff Lettow Marty Malone Drew Jubera Jim Boardman Pat Denley Paul Lorentz Chris Kiernan «Bill Frakes Leslie Barrett EspeM apili Dave Seibert Jason Shaw Rusty Foley Robert Friedman Paul Havill Mike Tulumello Lisa Miller Kent Ireland Ed Peplow Hal Hubele Opinion In te rd o rm n o t d a n c e sp o n so r Editor: I would like to set the record straight in regard to the dance held a t Sahuaro Hall last Friday. Due to incorrect in­ formation received by the State Press, it was reported that the Inter Dorm Council was sponsoring the dance. The dance was sponsored by the Sahuaro Hall Council, which is a division of the IDC. My congratulations to the SHC for the organization o f a very successful dance. Ed Conway President, IDC state press r. New regent will befriend ASU students, education Editor: 'Ss^ ---- —^ Concerning the appointment o f Dwight Patterson to the Board of Regents: I find it difficult to resist expressing my feeling that whatever his past record seems to indicate, my own knowledge of Mr. Patterson indicates that he will prove to be a friend of Arizona State University, o f higher education, and most im­ portantly, students. I’m sure that you share my hope that he will be a friend. Especially considering the Regents past, I strongly believe that Mr. Patterson will have a positive effect on the Board. I, for one, wish him well. 7 ............................. Sincerely, V Craig Tribken President Expose was an injustice Editor: Dwight Patterson, who will probably be our newest regent, was attacked unjustifiably in the State Press on October 17; The truth is that Dwight Patterson is a very talented individual who has always been active in supporting and improving higher education. It is doubtful that we could find a better friend or better qualified individual in all o f Arizona. Some o f his activities in support of education were listed in the last half o f the State Press article. The Press quoted the New Times in at­ tacking P atterson’s activities concerning Scottsdale Community College. This probably refers to the “Pink Artichoke Incident” which most o f us remember. Patterson has always been a strong supporter of athletics: If you propose that athletics be dropped at our in­ stitutions o f higher education, then Patterson will disagree with you. But he is very fair. He’ll let you have your say. However, he’s also, firm. |Ie is not going to let anyone come in and take over any meeting where he is in charge. Would Hal DeKeyser (author o f the attack) really have it otherwise? The Press should have thanked Dwight for helping Mesa Community College obtain a choice piece of land at a very reasonable price rather than having attacked him for selling the land to the state. The facts are clear. The land belonged to G iff Dobson (deceased). At the time, G iff was buying land to build up his farming operations. G iff did not want to sell 'any land. Dwight will take no credit for the sale, but people who knew both Dwight and G iff are certain that Dwight talked G iff into letting MCC have that fine piece o f land for much below what it was really, worth. The last half o f the article was rather factual and gives some insight into the type of man Patterson really is. This just proves that the Press can do good reporting as soon as it starts looking for facts rather than old New Times innuendoes. Let’s hope that all o f Gov. Castro’s ap- * pointments will be as good as this one. Samuel E. Craig: v'7 7 7 '7 . Prof. Engineering P.S. Just to save another expose’; I’m a shag tail relative of Patterson, but the relationship is; so distant that I haven’t yet figured out exactly what it is. Page 5 Tuesday, October 28, 1975 State Press Calls Ford’s proposal 'political gesture1 Professor fears inflat ion result of tax cut By Britton Bloom But the program is too vague to President Ford’s proposal for a evaluate at this time, he added, $28 billion tax cut and an equal Ford proposed the tax and reduction in federal spending spending cuts, but he has not could be inflationary, according tp specified what federal programs economics professor Dr. John will be cut and the amount of Cochran. money that would be cut from ASASU each of them, Cochran said. “The major decisions about the budget are not made until late December," he told. "So nobody really knows what Ford wants to do with the budget Maybe he has it in his desk drawer, but he hasn’t told the public.” ‘A Blank Cheek* Congress probably will pass the tax cut, but the reductions in federal spending will have to be studied before any action can be taken on them, he said^ “This is like an arrow shot off, and we need to know where it lands.” Cochran believes the proposal is a political gesture. Ford may the hockey budget, according to Keith Jacobson, propose budgets, but Congress has coordinator of intramurals-club sports recreation. the power over federal spending. Jacobson said the Hockey Club failed to make a “What really matters is not a necessary appointment with an ASASU sub­ speech by Ford, but what Congress committee considering budget requests and its budget passes and the President doesn’t request “was totally unrealistic.” veto,” he said. “Congress feels this “They requested about $7,000,” he said. “When is a pig in a poke, a blank check, you get a request like that, it’s hard to tell what’s and they are balking. So Ford can real.” Jacobson said his office is not trying to turn clubs into intercollegiate teams and he said the Hockey Club’s fund requests were “getting close” to that status. ASASU had $9,000 budgeted for all dub sports, the same as last year, Jacobson said. John Wadas, assistant athletic director, said it would take “a lot of money” to make hockey an intercollegiate sport at ASU. Dusak said it would cost as much to support varsity hockey as it does football, and has always considered trying to get an intercollegiate hockey team a waste of time. ■ S fl* cutsHockey Club funds By Mary Waldsmtth The ASU Hockey Club, despite an increase in members and high equipment costs, was short­ changed on funds from the University, said the club’s president Bob Dusak, club president and graduate student said the organization received $500 from the Associated Students intram urals club sports recreation fund. Last year the club received $1,000. I) *‘I tried to impress upon them how much equip­ ment costs and that our situation is unique,” Dusak said. “We have 35 players—twice as many as last year.” Dusak said the $500 only covers a month of ice time, which is about $40 an hour at the arena where the team practices. Players pay for their own hockey equipment, he said, which costs between $200 and $400. Other expenses include road trips to Albuquerque, N.M., and Flagstaff. There were two major considerations concerning run for President in ’76 against a do-nothing Congress.” Recession v. Inflation During a recession, Cochran said, the government can stimulate output by cutting taxes and in­ creasing federal spending. During inflation, the government can raise taxes and cut federal spending to keep prices stable. In F ord’s program; the stimulation of the tax cut will be cancelled by the restraining effect of the spending cut, resulting in neither stimulation nor restraint, only a transfer of resources from government to the private sector. continued page 8 "Come and get your plow cleaned aft the T fH evntan.” —Bobby Gonzales Happy Hour A PA R TM EN TS Now Accepting Reservations for the Second Semester FIRST COM E - FIRST SERVED 4:30-6:30 pm, Monday-Friday ' 11:00'pm-1:00 am, Monday-Thursday Happy hour prices in effect for Monday Night Football 5 0 $ Roast Beef Sandwich, 7 5 $ Margarita, 2 5 6 Budweiser on Tap, 7 5 6 Martini, 7 5 6 Well Drinks, 9 0 6 Any Cali D rink'O * Every Apartment at LA M ANCHA has its own individual kitchen facility. Eat W HAT you want , . . WHEN you want. ' LA M A N C H A OFFERS . . . .. STUDIO* ONE & TWO BEDROOM FURNISHED APARTM ENTS STARTING FROM $145 PER MONTH, UTILITIES INCLUDED r ...W IT H IN W ALKING AND BIKING DIS­ TANCE TO A.S.U. . . . 2 4 HOUR SECURITY AND PRIVATE PARKING. > . . . HEATED POOL - SAUN A — UNIVERSAL GYM — TV ROOM - BILLIARDS — AND N ow a p p ea rin g v “J an d G” n igh tly in th e lo u h g p . IhoTMermai■it 2152 East Broadway . (Right In front of the Tempe Racquet & Swtm Qub) * Lounge open 5pm-lam — University "2 -- 908 8. TERRACE ROAD, ACROSS FROM A.S.U. IN TEMPE f2 3 ApachcltM . C71 h • ^jggtaÉMÉNli Stete Press Tuesday, October 28, 1975 Page 6 Play it again, Defense Get Acquainted Special D on't I affectia Bobby McKinley trying to elude «bo on any haircut with this coupon .. O ffer Good till Nov. 30 in Tem pe O N L Y we condition/ cut and blow-dry Your hair into a hpad shaking, free and swinging style. . ■ _. ■ Our stylists concentrate on a cut that su itsyo^ ha.rtextu re and your life style. Call now for your appointment. You II love what we do! ______ — , Recommended bv ■■' MADEMOISELLE MAGAZINE . September ‘7$ ' Where HrGet e Oree* Helrc40for 2 wheats. 960 67S3. io2* *350.00 Peugeot PX-3W Racing Ted Spaed Bicycle. Regu la r tiros plus wheels for sew ups. S150JNOT bast offer. Phone966-1709. 10. ATTN : G UVS A G ALS! EM BR O ID ER ED S H IR T S. B LO U S E S ,' D R E S S E S FR O M M EXICO . A lio the new bulky knit sweater jacket.- Phoenix Greyhound Swap Meet every Sat. A Sun., Space 37.1 on east side or ca ll 964-5033 night or day. Bring ad for 10 percent discount. 12-5 Desperate, Help please I Assume balance 12 x 64 Commodore unfurnished, includes extras. Two m iles from ASU. no pets, adult park. 942-83*3,942-3966. 10-29 ROOMMATE WANTED Luxurious, beautifully furnished 4 bdrm. house, heated pool, u tilitie s and a ll household appliances provided. W ould consider red u ctio n in rent fo r good housekeeper. C a ll 839-1928. 11.5 RATES: $1 minimum for first 14 words or less plus 5c per additional word each insertion. 20 percent discount for same ad running in 5 or more consecutive editions, 30 percent discount on 10 or more consecutive insertions, 40 percent discount on 20 or more consecutive insertions of same ad. Female roommate desperately needed. One bedroom apartment, near ASU, $90, u tilities included. 966076* afternoons. 10-28 Brother, sister living in nicely furnished two BDRM , two bath apartment. Sister needs roomie — im m ediately If not sooner. *75.00 monthly, deposit *100.00. Call 9667843. “162* One or two fem ale roommates wanted to share to« bedroom apartment. *65.00; walking distance from ASU. Call 967-1243. 10-31 '48 Chavy Wagon, air, good cond., must soli Immodiatoly. 7ajn .. 12m id. 994^675. 11-14 Want to M ap your stereo? Let us in stall a ' 1966 VW Transportar, im m aculata, campar, izad intarlar, rabuilt angn., 24,000 ml., high security Deadbolt in your apartm ent door fo r *12JO complete. Pro Tech — \ N ».tiras. Bast offsr after 5:00. 959-6*15. 10-30 968-5564. 12-5 Return this form with check to: The STATE PRESS, Room lll- A Stauffer Hall, or the Memorial Union, Room 208, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85281. The STATE PRESS reserves the right to refuse any copy. __ Name: ......... ................. ............................ ........... (Please check one) Address: ............. ............................................... ......... - '' . For Sale . .. .. . For R e n t....... I | I I I .......................................................... .............. . Help Wanted ... * Phone: . . . . . . . . Y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . — Lost . . . . . . Found . . . . . . Auto . . . . . . . ! Check enclosed for 5 . . . . . . . ....... .................................... M o to rc y cle __ J Run ad .......... .............. days. Wanted ¿ . . 5 . | I NOTE: Typing Personal .. Instruction Services ... Roommate Wanted ., Transportation * /Mailed classified ads w ill appear in second edition A F T E R CO PY AND CH ECK A R E R EC E IV ED IN OUR O FFIC E wwmmktoim BlftlMiWMBBIIMWBMiaWIttWHMilNMHWMIMBI Tuesday, October 28, 1975 State Press Wilder play asks us to notice our world 'Our Town' cast performs flawlessly It’s hard to come out of the produced by the University Lyceum Theatre after seeing “Our Theatre, was powerful and Town” and not think about meaningful, addressing itself to yourself— not about yourself in a the fragility of life, how it goes tty purely egocentric sense, but about without most of us taking notice vourself in relation to people you because we are locked into it so love and the preciousness of each securely. What allows us to see life so moment with them. The Thornton Wilder play, clearly in the play’s setting — Vikki Carr proves to be performer with finesse Grovers Corners, New Hampshire — is that nothing ever happens there. As one of the townsfolk admits, there isn’t much- culture, but people enjoy watching the seasons go by. We see a warm town, a place where Children have loving parents and people wonder whether or not to lock their doors at night'But we» also see how easily life slips through a person’s fingers. The director, Donald Doyle, cast the characters perfectly and has created ' a tem po and movement in the play that makes it move smoothly without slow spots. He has directed the actors .to work off each other, building their relationships as the play It was a tear-jerker as Vikki the years at Gammage that have Carr came to the stage of Gam- been lacking in big name en­ mage Auditorium Thursday night tertainers. As Miss Carr said at and dramatically sang her famous one point, she hopes she can come hit “With Pen In Hand” and back to Gammage. We hope so Streisand’s “The Way We Were.” t0°* —David Jensen She deserved the standing ovation she received for the songs, as well as for the rest of the show. In fact, every chuckle and every applause was not near enough reward for such a fíne per­ formance. REPRESENTATIVE , Despite a raspy voice more COMING TO CAMPUS noticeable in her dialogue than in FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7 her singing. Miss Carr carried the shoW with a finesse uncommon in A representative of the Stanford Graduate School of university concert halls. The show Business w ill be on campus to discuss w ith interested was beyond what one might expect at a big nightclub in Las Vegas. It students the exceptional educational opportunity .of was more like a performance to be the Stanford M BA Program. given before royalty, as Miss Carr Appointments may be made through has done in the past The Career Services O ffice Special credit goes to Miss Carr’s medley of south-of-theThe Stanford M BA program is a two-year general border songs. She sings them with management course o f studies designed fo r highly a touching sensitivity and a native qualified men and women who have majored in flair that comes from her Mexican liberal arts, humanities, science, or engineering, and heritage. The medley, about love, is skillfully interspersed with Miss wish to develop management skills to meet the broad Carr’s translation of the songs. responsibilities which w ill be required in both the Fortunately, the number was the private and public sectors in the future. only one where the 23-piece or­ chestra didn’t drown out Miss TH E STAN FO R D U N IV ER SIT Y Carr. During other songs the band G R A D U A T E SCHOO L O F BUSINESS .sadly upstaged the soloist Stanford, California .94305 During . Miss- C arr’s per­ formance Thursday Night, comedian Mike Neun gave Miss Carr a break and gave the audience a chance to laugh at some really fine, natural and unrehearsed humor (or so ' it sounded that way). The show was one*that refreshed Stanford MBA progresses. The acting is flawless, without exception. George Cayley, who • plays the stage manager, flits in and out of the play — one minute playing a character in Grovers Corners, the next playing an impartial arbiter for the audience. He makes the transitions with professional adroitness. Stephen Houtz (George Gibbs) and Sarah Fisher (Emily Webb) are excellent in their portrayals of adolescent sweethearts. Both display expected clumsiness and inarticulateness in a 9 touching scene as they sit at a soda founjtain together. He likes-her and she likes him and they sit nervously staring into their strawberry sodas bet­ ween admissions of their mutual attraction. E thel Ty$on and Richard Phillips .as Emily Webb’s parents are equally good in .portraying the relationship of a warm couple whose love. for each other has grown over file years., : The ultimate feeling-one gets feom the play is not pessimism, as the theme of lost time might suggest, but optimism, for the play shows the basic decency of man, despite his faults, and seems to be saying that we all still have time. V —Jason Shaw ' G et hi* S h ap e For INTRAMtJRAL SPORTS Football ^-Wrestling — Wt. Lifting Balance of / Semester SOQOO i¡¡¡ ■ ■ m ^ 'C" • - Team & Group - Discounts Available TEMPEHEALTH STUDIO 300 M ILL A V E . C A LL TODAY . 906-4111 M tm THANKSGIVING Small Car Co. November 27, 28, 29, 30 Saturday, November 1,1975 Four D ays of Skiing $17.00 per pefcrort V, v 1966 Corvette $2295.00 1968 Corvette 2995.00 1963 Corvette Coupe 2695.00 1961 Morgan 3595.00 •ALTA 1967 M GB-GT 1595.00 1969 M GB-GT 1995.00 •BREIGHTON 1970 Triumph GT6+ 1995.00 1969 TR-6 2195.00 1971 TR-6 2595.00 1968 TR-250 1995.00 1968 TR-4 1495.00 1965 TR-4 995.00 1973 Capri V 6 2895.00 1962 Austin Healy 3000 1995.00 1968MGC6cyl. 1895.00 < 5431 E. Van Burén SALTLAKECITY •PARK CITY •SNOWBIRD . Transportation Lodging Lift Tickets wine, bear and cheese iOO SNOW D EV ILS SKI CLU B Meetings — Wed. 7 :3 0 VARSITY INN For more-info — CALL, 965-4711 or 968-5846 Depart ASU at 8:00 A,M.r Nefcl (Sat.) Arrive Las Vegas at 4:00, f.M., Nov. 1 Leave Las Vegas at 8:00 A.M., Nov. 2 Arrive at ASU at 3:30 P.M., Nov. 2 You must sign up at the intramural office in the men’s gym lobby by 4:00 P.M., Thursday, October 30. For further information, ca ll 965-5638. a ir " ! .. ’ Tuesday, October 28, 1975 Page 10 Devil defenders pave way again By Marty Malone You can’t always. judge a book by its cover . . . just ask any o f the 46,257 ASU fans who watched the Sun Devils •fumble their way past Texas-El Paso last Saturday night by t » score o f 24-6. For although the Devils may not have, looked like a best seller, they’re sitting bright on •top ¡ o f the ratings — ASlI’s victory oyer the Miners coupled With Arizona’s loss to New Mexico has left the' Devils the only undefeated team in the WAC. ASU is .now 4 -0 j in conference play while Ithe Wildcats fell to*2-l. The script in Tempe read pretty much the same way it has all season long as once again the defense held ASU together while the offense struggled to put some points on the board. For a time it looked like it wouldn’t. While the. defense busily went about its job of suffocating the Miners, the offense couldn’t gef anything going. The result was an atypical ASU halftime score of when they drove 71 yards in nine vplays -for a touchdown. Quarterback Fred Mortensen, who replaced starter Dennis - Sproul in a turn-about from the Colorado State game, got continued page 11 Double trouble T h e M in e rs o f Texas-El P aso m u st have th o u g h t there w ere P e te rs e n s e v e ry w h e re la s t S atu rd ay Hi th e ir gam e ag ain st ASU. Photos by Bill Frokes 0-0. It wasn’t until early in the third quarter that the Sun Devils finally got untracked FLATIGNUM ITALIC SET Contains afountain ten. five JJtalic hifs, andinstructicm manual ail for only $5.00... 1 A t art material&pen sdops, . -cofic/jc foot stores ...or send cHeci to ‘VrntaCic Corp., 132 West 22 sr, N.y„ N.y. toon Add so cents for Handling, ■ ACCO UN TIN G AND FIN A N CE M AJO RS LET US HELP YOU TO BECOME A CPA CPA REVIEW PHOENIX (602) 264-9794 C O U R SES BEGIN M AY 26 A NOV. 24 1/3 °FUSA 111 E. UNIVERSITY •TEMPE •966-5192 CUT • SH AM PO O • STYLE regular price $15©° student price $ IO °° : OPEN ttt 10p.m . State Press State Press Tuesday, October 28, 1975 Page 11 Devils stay perfect^'Cats fall continued from page 10 Miguel Alvarez, the defense the score from one yard out took over again. This time it after setting it up with passes of was linebacker Tim Petersen 18 and 20 yards t6 wingback who did-the honors by picking Larry Mucker. A side from th at single legitimate offensive thrust, it was all defense for ASU. Less than two minutes after that initial score the Sun Devils hit paydirt again following a Chris Lorenzen block and recovery of a Miner punt attempt at the four-yard line. Fullback Mark off a Bobby McKinley pass and rambling 48 yards for the final score o f the game. Petersen was sprung by a block from strong safety Alex Stencel and then accompanied down the sideline by twin brother defensive end Rob Petersen. The ASU secondary, the only portion o f the Devil defense to receive any criticism all year lon g, was virtually im ­ penetrable against Texas-El Paso. The ASU pass defenders allowed Miner quarterback M cK inley only one com ­ pletion on the night while picking off two o f his passes. Corherback Mike Martinez intercepted one o f McKinley’s tosses to compliment the one Petersen picked off. Despite its lack o f scoring punch, th e Sun D evils managed to roll up 443 yards o f total offense. Tailback Fred Williams was responsible for a large chunk o f that as he ran for 194 yards on 23 carries, with fullback Mark Lovett tacking on 99 more on 19 totes. In the teeter-totter quar­ terback situation, it was Fred Mortensen’s turn to shine. Starter Dennis Sproul could hit on on only one o f four passes and had one picked off, so Kush went to Mortensen who responded with seven-of-nine passing for 139 yards. Split end John Jefferson caught three passes for 75 yards, Larry Mucker three for 59 yards, and Williams grabbed two for another 17 yards. ASU, which hasn’t allowed a rushing touchdown all season, was brutal once again along its defensive lin e. End Rob Petersen assisted on 17 tackles, Lorenzen ^ blocked and recovered a Miner punt, and middle guard Tom Sieper capably replaced injured starter Zack DiBreU. Arizona, meanwhile, saw their undefeated status slip away as the Wildcats fell to the aerial attack o f New Mexico quarterback Steve Myer. The Lobos dumped Arizona 44-34 as Myer completed 26 o f 38 passes for 351 yards and four touchdowns, all o f diem going to different receivers. The loss ruined a tremen­ dous individual effort by U of A quarterback Bruce Hill, who completed 21 o f 34 passes for 406 yards (a school record) and two touchdowns. 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M AKE YOUR 11 APPOINTM ENT ¥. ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ 8 ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ , ¥ ¥ SIGN UP NOW TO HAVE YOUR YEARBOOK PORTRAIT TAKEN Red Room — Mariposa Hall 9 AM to 1 PM & 2 PM to 6 PM Monday thru Friday For info Call 967-2133 Page 12 Tuesday, October 28, 1975 Profs ' idea spawns More than $100,000 will be spent on ASU’s first solar energy research center,. ac­ cording to John Ellingson, director o f physical plant. The research center, to be constructed atop the F wing of the Engineering building, was the idea o f Drs. Charles Backus and Bayard Wood, associate professors in m echanical engineering. It will be one o f four in­ stallations to be constructed at the state’s three universities. “We don’t have a place to do solar research, so Professor Wood and I made a suggestion for à center to Dean Thompson and now it has mushroomed into a state-wide university project,’’ said Backus. Busby and Associates o f Phoenix are now working on the plans for the installation. Alterations of the F wing will solar indude construction o f two stairw ays, two sm all in ­ strum entation room s and utility troughs, Ellingson said. Ellingson expects the final plans to be completed in two months. The project will then be put out to bid. Construction will take approximately five months, he said. ASU wilk make thè initial payment for the project, but federal funds will reimburse the U niversity, said Karl Dannenfeldt, academic vice president. Collage TODAY Alpha M U Gamma, foreign language honorary, will meet at 2:30 p.m. in the basement reading room of Language and Literature building. The ASU College Democrats hold voter registration drive all this week on the mall from 9:30a.m. to 1:30 p.m. B ruce B abbitt, Arizona Attorney General, will speak at 10 a.m. in the Great Hall of the College of Law. EN 101-102 exemption exam will be given Nov. 6 from 3 to 5 p.m., and again on Monday, Jan. 12 in room L L C-57. Power, Sex and Non-Verbal Commun­ ication, a discussion by author and professor Nancy. Henley of Lowell University, Mass, will be at 2 p.m. in M U 215. Sponsored by the Women's Affairs Board and K A ET-TV. Film “ Johnathan Livingston Seagull" has been postponed to a later date. The movie was to have been shown tonight at 7 p.m.. state press 965 - STATE PRESS is published by Arizona State U n iv e rsity Tuesday through Friday during the academic year, except h olidays and exam ination periods. Entered as second class m atter at Tempe, Arizona 85281.