S > r —• Wednesday stale Pesi Tempe, Arizona Legislator says the bill w on't fly By B ritt«« Bloom Rep. Torn Goodwin, (R-) T ucson, ch airm an o f th e H o u se A p p r o p r ia tio n s Committee, has introduced a bill in the state legislature to appropriate $20 million for new construction at the-three sta te u n iv e rsitie s, - b u t he doesn’t have much confidence th at the legislature will approve said there was little chance th at the am ount. ASU would get the $8,807,000 “ The state doesn’t have $20 it requested. m illip n » fo r new c a p ita l outlays,” Goodwin said. ASU will probably get utility m oney to re p a ir cam pus services, such as the water supply or sewer system, but no new building^ will be built, he said. Goodwin said he didn’t know ,.. how m uch each university would receive, but Arizona Stale University VI suspect there woii’t be any new buildings for any State "agency,” he said. Voi. 58 No. 55 January 21. 1976 Last year, the legislature m ade no capital outlays ap­ propriations for the univer­ sities. class space dwindling i , ». * ■•• ■ • Business m ay lim it students By Ron Hickman Students and faculty members of die College of Business Ad­ ministration will meet today/and Thursday to discuss the possibilities of Uniting enrollment in the college. ^ The Long Range Planning Committee of the college was directed by Dean Glenn D. Overman to look into the question oflimiting ehrollment, said Dr. William B. Werther, committee chairman. Faculty members will meet at 3 p.m. in BA 413, and students will gather Thursday at the same time and places “The situation is that enrollment is growing at such a fast rate, it is outstripping the physical facilities of the college,” said Werther, an associate professor of management Dr. William Huizingh, associate dean of the college, said student enrollment in the college has been growing at a 15 per cent rate for the past three years. “Classrooms are being utilized on the average of 48 hours per week," Huizingh said. “And the number of students enrolled in these classes has been, on the average, 85 to 95 per cent of the seating capacity.’^ Normal use of classrooms usually averages 30 hours and 60 per cent capacity per week, he said. Swelling enrollment has forced the college to schedule 58 sections at locations “spread all over the campus,” Huizingh said. Additionally, the administrative services department, with a faculty of approximately 26, has been forced to move from the college’s building to offices at Irish Hall A, Huizingh said. This year, the faculty for the College of Business Administration in­ creased by 31, he said. “And we still have no unused capacity in this building,” he added. Werther said the hrarings would be conducted as open meetings. The ERA: T. . Tilm an Crance, ASU director o f budgets and in­ stitutional studies, said the ASU request is needed to meet the size and quality o f AS,U program s. If the money doesn’t come through, ASU can get by, but it’s going to hurt, Crance said, U ltim a te ly , w hen th e classroom schedules are as tight as possible and classes are crowded, th e state will have to appropriate more money for buildings, or'classes will have to shut down, he said. In the past, the state ap­ propriations for ASU averaged $4 to $5 million a. year, which were always below the am ounts requested, Crance said. “ I think th e state’s attitiide is th a t teachers are necessary for operating, so their salaries are, appropriated. B ut new capital outlays can be deferred if tim es§are rough. And you can do th at until th e backlog catches up with you,” he said. Photo by Ktwry Cannon T he b ack lo g fo r new buildings is substantial, he added. ^ Another tequila sunset An unsuspecting studant aHhouattas tha stops and skyline o f the Bualnaas buHcHng. Spring aamaatar sunny aklaa and warm w eather provides a scenic studying situation. continuad paga 2 Legislator s a y s ERA could cause ‘untold m ischief1! f -.¿A*** . am endm ent booster denies claim in M U d eb ate Statu representative Juanita Hareleon (R-Tempe) . argues against ratification o f tha ERA w hile Jean Hunnicutt, president-elect o f tha American Associa tion of University Women, w aits her turn to reply In favor o f tha amendment. Tha debate took place Tueeday aftam oon in the M U Pima Room. By Ann Inskeep . The Arizona State Legislature rejected the ERA in February, 1975. The ERA m ust be " State Legislator Juanita Harelson called the ratified by three-fourths o f the states to Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) “ a needless am endm ent th at could cause untold m ischief’ 41 become the ^ 7 th am endm ent. The exact wording o f the ERA is: at a debate Tuesday in the MU Pima Room. 1. Equality of rights under the law shall not Jean H unnicutt, who described herself as “ a be denied or abridged by th e U nited States or housewife — by profession and by choice” by any State on account o f sex. presented pro-ERA argum ents in the debate 2. The Congress shall have the power to sponsored by the W omen’s Affairs Board of Associated Students.. <¡3* en fo rce, by a p p ro p ria te le g isla tio n , th e provisions of this article. H unnicutt is presidentelect of the American 3. This am endm ent shall take effect two Association of U niversity. Wòmen, which years after the date o f ratification. supports the ERA. t H unnicutt said the two-year period included H unnicutt and Harelson spoke before about in the third article o f the ERA would give 60 persons, five of whom were male. states tim e to clean up their existing laws to H unnicutt said the ERA would invalidate comply with the am endm ent. laws th at restrict rights to one sex, and would H arelson said the wording o f the ERA does extend laws protecting only one sex to protect both. not d istin g u ish betw een unlaw ful “ 1976 is the year o f thè ERA,” she said. discrim ination and lawful distinction between “ This is the year to think about our freedoms.” the sexes and th a t no one knows what Harelson said existing legislation guarantees ram ifications the am endm ent may have. H unnicutt outlined what she thought the equal treatm ent of the sexes. i ■ “ W hat is really needed is, better rein­ ERA would and wojuld not do. forcem ent of existing laws,” Harelson said. “ T h e , JERA will not affect personal The proposed constitutional am endm ent relationships,” she said. “ It will simply mean was passed by Congress in October, 1971. th a t laws passed m ust be consistent with in­ Since then, 34 states have ratified the ERA. dividual freedom o f opportunity and choice.” Page 2 January 21, 1976 State Press B-l bom ber slide presentation sparks discussion j ” ... . « ‘.V ..V? ■.y-v°,; ■ , '. ' ■ 8 S . . Tucson — 1037 N . Park 622-7407 Phoçnix — 334 E. Camelback Rd. 263-9410 Tem pe— 120 E. Universily-Dr. 968-3491 #«(£/ presents - gf « -- ‘r&e&iecv (ZkU A tccuuttyA N A N A L Y S IS O F TH E JE W S FOR JE S U S PH ENO M ENO N A N D OTHER C H R IS T IA N M IS S IO N S TO TH E JE W S featuring: Prof. B .Z Sobel, Dean o f the Faculty o f Social Sciences a n d Associate Professor o f Sociology" a t H aifa University, Prof. Sobel wHI analize the historical and sociologies aspects o f Jew s fo r Jesus. TH U R S D A Y , JA N ,2 2 8:00 P.M - BAKER CENTER Legislator sees no chance for $20 miilioncapital bill Last year, with no state close classes (if the money is appropriations, ASU had to not appropriated) is kidding ; Most o f ASU’s requests for postpone new projects, enlarge yourself. You can take certain new buildings ate longstan­ classes beyound optim um ^measures to get by. You can d ing, according to V ice cap acity an d tu rn away tighten up the schedule for President for Academic Af­ students, D annenfeldt said. classroom, cut out certain fairs, K arl D annenfeldt. “ W e request and th e state things considered beneficial “ W e’ll get by as best we can. does what it can, and we roll b u t not necessary».like cam pus We just won’t build any new with the lim itations,’’ he said. organizations using rooms or buildings,” he said. “ To say th a t we’ll have to lecture halls,’r he said. continued from page 1 Business school grows fast wK&yp mw:' y Although inform ation on this semester’s registration is not yet in, a spokesm an for the In s titu tio n a l S tu d ies office ex p ects th e business college to be the fastest growing in the University — if last sem ester’s growth trend continues. According to spokesman D r. Clarence Bajley, the num ber of students enrolled in the business college last sem ester was up con­ siderably. i ”• "Does Anybody Care” Beco Volunteer New! CARPET SP E C IA L S I, '.IjjOOv. vjp '. j Ü C A R P IT N O U S! Academic Services Building, Room 111 ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY 965-6305 Live A t llweoBnsInn The COLLEGE IN N has a few rooms available fo r the Spring Sem ester 401 East Apache, Tam pa P - 1516 E. Van Buren, Phx. / •2 0 m eals w eekly •W e e k ly m aid service bed linens fu rn ish ed •P riv a te p arkin g lo t He said enrollm ent, last sem ester in the economics departm ent wax up 45 per cent, while enrollm ent in the m arketing departm ent increased 25 per cent. m A ll Sizes In Stock COMMUNITY SER V IC ES PROGRAM Bajley said the two departments within the college th at increased the fastest last semester were the economics departm ent and the marketing department. (Sk 9 x 12 used rugs - $7.50 Services include: Inform ation’s $91.5 billion figure. W hatever the total costs, the A ir Force’s 1971 $36 million estim ate per plane ballooned to $86 million by 1975. M ost o f this increase is attributed by the m ilitary to economic inflation. C ritics o f the bom ber say th e final product will be 25 per cent heavier (and hence, slower) and carry a much sm aller bom b payload as was originally anticipated. Provisions for a pilot and crew escape capsule were also scrapped for stan­ dard ejection seats in order to cut costs. The B-l is also opposed by ome en­ vironm entalists who fear th a t the earth’s protective ozone layer would be threatened when the plane flies at high altitudes. Although th e advertised purpose o f the slides was to show th a t the §b-l is a poor product for its price, a question and discussion period afterw ards ended up in a debate about m ilitary spending and disarm am ent between M ancini and two of the handful o f listeners. By Bill Jndeon A fter presenting a slide show about th e Air Force’s planned B-l bomber Tuesday in' the M .U. Arizonans for Peace co-director Ben M ancini summed up the cas against the ajrplane: .‘The gripe is $92 billion, p u r and sim ple.” He said other critics of the plane object to b uilding a bom ber th at takes five o r six times longer th an a missle to reach a target. As early as 1962, Defense Secretary Robert M cNam ara stated th a t bombers were obsolete, b u t th e Air Force feels th a t since a nammed plane can be'called back after being launched, it has potential as a threat th a t can be made ■and retracted, M ancini said. Literature, passed out at th e total cost o f the B-l fleet, L iterature passed out a t th e presentation gave conflicting estim ates o f th e total cost of the B-l fleet, ranging from a $20.6 billion Air Force estim ate to the C enter for Defense •R e creatio n al fa c ilitie s in clu d in g pool •L au n d ry fa c ilitie s •P riv a te phone connections availab le Phone 907-7828 i THE FIEL OF A WATERBEO WITHOUT WATER! ' \ The Inflate-A-Bed, a new breed of bed, reinforces and supports your body weight. Yet, there are no hard spots as with conventional mattresses. . It’,s completely washable and can be used with regular or fitted sheets. Great for Vans. It’s portable. It weighs less than 10 lbs. so you can take it anywhere. And it’s perfect for apartment renters who Bannot have waterbeds. TWIN, DOUBLE, CiUEEN, AND KING S I Z E ^ SEE IT A T Bedroom Interiors Everything fin yottiiSeiliuMHii 1450 North Scottsdale Road, Tempe 949-1007 (2 blocks south of McKelllps Rd. in Martin Plaza) Offering our exclusive “Try Before You Buy” waferbed purchase policy. > Page 3 State Press January 21, 1976 cause Laymen «him technocrats Nuclear battle averted By M ike TalameUo “ The G reat Nuclear Energy D ebate,” as advertised by the MU Ideas and Issues Com” m ittee, m il not be a debate at all. Arizonans for Safe Energy (ASEW) declined to/debate two nuclear scientists ' hired by W estinghouse Corp. to tour the country and speak in support o f nuclear energy development. A public relations firm hired by W estinghouse arranged th e deBfcte, and the Ideas and Issues Committee agreed to act as. sponsor. The program , now term ed a “ presentation,” is scheduled for 3 p.m . Thursday in the MU A rizona Room. The committee sent out publicity calling the program a debate before ASE answered the invitation, said Frances R ead er, e d u ca tio n a l c o o r­ dinator for the energy group. “ ASE is not anti-nuclear per se and does not wish to debate the pro-con issue o f nuclear energy by itself,” said Reader, an anthropology m ajor. She said the group is more con­ cerned with placing th e issue of nuclear power generation on th e ballot in i976 through an initiative drive. T he pro p o sed in itia tiv e would require num erous safety guarantees before a nuclear power plant can be built in Arizona. Construction o f the Palo Verde nuclear plant 40 miles west of Phoenix is due to begin this spring, pending licensing hearings. > A SE spokesm an W ill M anzer, a political scien ce m ajor,, adm itted his group would be overmatched in a debate with the W estinghouse scientists over the technical aspects o f nuclear enerev. “ W e’d get chewed to pieces and we know it,” said M anzer. “ W hen you arg u e w ith technocrats, you lose. They’re equipped with an answer for evewry question, all o f which sounds fine to the average laymen. “ Sure, it looks like we’re chickens,” he said. “ We’re in th e position o f ‘You’re screwed if you do and you’re screwed if you don’t.* But we’d be playing their game if we debated. We’re simply citizens asking th a t the question o f nuclear energy be decided by th e people.” M anzer said the safe energy group is more interested in the so c io -p o litic a l. asp ects o f nuclear energy development, rather than die-technical side. G reg M cDonald, program adviser to the Ideas and Issues Committee, said. "Things would have been a little dif­ ferent if we would have had a little more tim e.” M cD onald said arrangem ents for the debate were “ a rushed deal,” and the sc ie n tists w ould only be available in late January. “ I see their (ASE’s) point,” he said. “ But I think it would have been a good program had they accepted.” M cDonald said a safe energy group in Tucson opposed a sch ed u led d eb ate M onday night, b ut changed its position a fte r m eeting w ith th e scientists. M cDonald said the lack o f a debate may lessen student interest, but he expressed hope the program would still be of educational value. ASE plans to attend the presentation to pose questions to the scientists, M anzer said. No student money was spent sp o n so rin g th e p ro g ram , M cDonald said. fo r science building Delays in construction and late arrivals of lab equipment have set back the completion date of*an estimated $8 million addition to the Physical Science Building till early this summer. John R. Ellingson, director of Physical Plant, said construction should be completed by February, but the lab equipment is just now arriving. “There has been lots of delays, as there are during any construction,” said Ellingson. “We have the mechanical orders on the shelf now, and the lab equipment is just now arriving.” The construction began March 6, 1974, at an estimated cost of $6.24 million and was to be completed originally in July, 1975. Ellingson said when the addition is completed, it will contain mostly laboratories, but will also have nine classrooms and four lecture halls with folding risers. Head of the Construction Committee, Dr. Richard G. Stoner, said that the delay has caused no problem with student placement or overcrowding classrooms. “ We hadn’t anticipated having the building ready until next fall, so there has been nothing unusual,” said Stoner. Stoner said he understood that part of the delay is because the con­ tracts for construction of the building and of the laboratories, are separate. “The main contractors are due to be completed in a month or two,,r said'Stoner. “Then other contractors will put in the sinks and cabinets.” Construction of the new addition to the building is being done by the Del Webb Construction Co. under the direction of Tom Hight, the ASU inspector. Ellingson said there is much construction coming u p on sports and recreational activities. Construction on Joe Selleh Track Stadium Began last October and is expected to be completed by March at an estimated cost of $295,000 by the Mardian Construction Co. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ M o re a b o u t b u sin e ss continuW from pog. 1 committee will solicit the opinions of alt' persons on the growth problem and the question of. /limiting enrollment he said. Following the two hearings, the 10 committee Inem bers will discuss the alternatives and make their recommendation to the dean accordingly, Werther said. Eight faculty members, one graduate student and one un­ dergraduate student comprise the planning committee. FRIENDSDON’Tin EMENDS DRIVEDRUNK. BOX 2345 ROCKVILLE. MARYLAND 20852 I want to keep my friends alive for the next party. Tell me what else I can do. - —* ■■■ .... Starts V\fednesctay Jan. 21! - Better G ab ard in e Slacks E uro -C ut..............................Reg. $60 NOW Traditional........................... Reg. $45 NOW Dress Shirts Short & to n g Sleeve ...........Buy O ne. G et V ............................................ .. .BuyTwo,Got DRUNK DRIVER. DEPT. Y Mv mum*.¡k_ . ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ..... Vh O ff $40 $30 Vb O ff 16 O ff sC a lifo rn ia L u th e ra n C o lle g e ' PRESENTS Florence H en derson ^ So u n d s Alan Paine S h e tla n d s ..................... Reg. $22.50 NOW ' Byford M e rin o .............. ‘ . Reg. $25 NOW Byford Lambswool Sweatshirts .................. Reg. $27.50 NOW C a b le K nit......................... Reg. $ß0 NOW Shoes Verde. . . . (several styles a v a ila b le in e a c h cloth) C orduroy. . . . : ............ Reg. $22.50 NOW Ties W o o l. Suits ....................... , R e g .$22.50NOW F |p n n e l. . . • ...................... Reg. $16 NOVdjT $ 1 3 .5 0 $ 2 1 .5 0 $ 3 2 .5 0 $115 $ 4 2 .5 0 k b to 1 6 0 ff C h a m b ra y ....................... Reg. $20 NOW T railb ìazèr..................Reg. $32.50 NOW Jackets ■ Vested Twill...................... R^g. $200 NOW Special G roup of Vested & Non -Vested -... SportGoats Flannel B lazers.................Reg. $MJTN< Corduroy J a c k e t . . . . . . . . Reg. $65 NOW C am el HairOutershirts . . . Reg. $85 NOW Leather Jackets C S * ' 8 PM THURSDAY, JANUARY 2 9 Grady Gammage Menu trial Aik lit<)rium Arizona State University-Tempe Box Office 965-3434 for Tickets... or any of the Diamond Store Ticket Outlets ^ .00 f t t a t * O ff to 1 6 O ff Special G ro u p ................... Slacks..k b B i ■«« D U V c I a m m GARMENTEUR,LTD. Forest a n d University Tem pe if il M Jl 2 .5 0 B la z e # ............................... Reg 585 NOW Suede Sport C o a t .........Reg. $175 NOW c^ c $20 5 0 % O ff 50% O ff 16 O ff $135 V b to 16 O ff Nunn Bush Knit/Collared A JA Shirts................................Reg. $18 NOW Y ■ ■ Sport Shirts _ /. ip _ uc l'- _ $15 $16.50 $18.50 Sweaters n y : January 21-24 Wed..Thus..Frl., 10am -9pm Sat.. 10 am -6 pm Please note:. During sale, alterations extra. All sales final. Page 2 January 21, 1976 State Press B-l bomber slide presentation sparks discussion By Bill ladson A fter presenting a slide show about the Air Force’s planned B-I bom ber Tuesday in' the M .U. Arizonans for Peace co-director Ben M ancini summed up th e cas against the airplane: ’The gripe is $92 billion, pur and simple.” He said other critics o f the plane object to building a bom ber th a t takes five o r six times longer than a missle to reach a target. As early as 1962, Defense Secretary Robert M cNam ara stated th a t bom bers were obsolete, b u t file A ir Force feels th a t since a nammed plane can be called back after bring launched, it has potential as a threat th a t can be made and retracted, M ancini said. L iterature passed out a t th e total cost o f the B-l fleet, L iterature passed out a t th e presentation gave conflicting estim ates o f th e total cost o f the B-l fleet, ranging from a $20.6 billion Air Force estim ate to th e C enter for Defense Tucson — 1037 N. Park 622 7407 Phoenix— 334 E. Camel hack Rd. 263-9410 Tempe — 120 E. University Or. 968-3491 ' NIllEl PRESENTS- - - Legislator sees no chance tor $20 million capital bill Last year, with no state appropriations, ASU had to M ost o f ASU’s requests for postpone ,new projects, enlarge new buildings are longstan­ classes beyound optim um d ing, according to V ice cap acity an d tu rn away Prendent for Academic Af­ students,' D annenfeldt said. fairs, K arl D annenfeldt. “ W e request and th e state “ We’ll get by as best we can. does what it can, and we roll We ju st won’t build any new with the lim itations," he said. buildings,” he said. “To say th a t we’ll have to ieentinuMl from pogw 1 tie t3 t& T u fa ? A N A N A L Y S IS O F THE JE W S FOR JE S U S PH ENO M ENO N A N D OTHER C H R IS TIA N M IS S IO N S TO TH E JE W S featuring: Prof. B.Z. Sobel, Dean o f the Faculty o f Social Sciences a n d Associate Professor o f Sociology a t H aifa University, Prof. Sobel w ill ana/ize the historical and sociological aspects o f Jew s fo r Jesus. TH UR SDA Y, J A N , 2 2 8.-00P.M - BAKER CENTER "Does Anybody Care” Becoi Volunteer Row! S 3 PIE Inform ation’s $91.5 billion figure. W hatever the to tal costs, th e A ir Force’s 1971 $36 million estim ate p er plane ballooned to $86 million by 1975. r M ost o f fliis increase is attributed by the m ilitary to economic inflation. Critics o f the bom ber say the final product will be 25 per cent heavier (and hence, slower) and carry a much sm aller bom b payload as was originally anticipated. Provisions for a pilot and crew escape capsule were also scrapped for stan­ dard ejection seats in order to cut costs. The B-l is also opposed by ome en­ vironm entalists who fear th a t th e earth’s protective ozone layer would be threatened when th e plane flies a t high altitudes. Although the advertised purpose o f the slides was to show th a t th e §b-l is a poor product for its price, a question and discussion period afterw ards ended up in a debate about m ilitary spending and disarm am ent between M ancini and two o f the handful o f listeners. close classes (if the money is not appropriated) is kidding yourself. You can take certain m easures to get by. You can tighten up the schedule for classroom , cut out certain things considered beneficial b u t not necessary, like cam pus organizations using rooms or lecture halls,,r he said. Business school grows fast Although inform ation on this semester’s registration is not yet in, a spokesman for the In s titu tio n a l S tu d ies office expects th e business college to be the.fastest growing in the University — if last sem ester’s growth trend continues. According to spokesman D r. C arence Bajley, th e num ber o f students enrolled in the business college last sem ester was up con­ siderably. *- Bajley said the two departm ents within the college th a t increased the fastest last semester were the economics departm ent and the m arketing departm ent. He* said enrollm ent last sem ester in the economics departm ent was up 45 per cent, while enrollm ent in the m arketing departm ent increased 25 per cent. CARPBT S P E C IA L S 9 X 12 used rugs - $7.50 A ll Sizes In Stock COMMUNITY SERV IC ES PR0GRÄM Academic Services Building, Room 111 ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY 3 966-6306 CARPRT NO RSK 1516 E. V an Buren, Phx. ”#T Live A t HieGolenehn -S 7 The COLLEGE IN N has a few rooms available fo r the Spring Sem ester Services include: •2 0 m eals w e e k ly •W e e k ly m aid service bed lin en s fu rn ish ed •P riv a te p arkin g lo t 401 East Apache, Tempo •R e c re a tio n a l fa c ilitie s in clu d in g pool itL au n d ry fa c ilitie s •P riv a te phone connections availab le P h o n e 967-7828 The Inflate-A-Bed, a new breed of bed. reinforces and supports your body % weight. Yet, there are no hard spots as with conventional mattresses. It’s completely washable and can be used with regular or fitted sheets. Great for Vans. It’s portable. It weighs less than 10 lbs. so you can take it anywhere. And it’s perfect for apartment renters who cannot haves waterbeds. TWIN, DOUBLE, QUEEN, AND KING SIZES. SEE IT A T Bedroom Interiors Bue/iytking fw youA/BecfruMHiL 1450 North Scottsdale Road, Tempe 949-1007 (2 blocks south of McKellips Rd. in Martin Plaza) Offering our exclusive “Try Before You Buy” waterbed purchase policy. Stale January 21, 1976 P age3 Press Laymen shim technocrats Nuclear battle averted By M ike Talam ello “ The G reat Nuclear Energy D eb ate/’ as advertised by die MU Ideas and Issues Com* m ittee, will not be a debate at all. A rizonans for Safe Energy (ASEW) declined to/debate two nuclear scientists' hired by W estinghouse Corp. to tour the country and speak in support o f nuclear energy development. A public relations firm hired by W estinghouse arranged th e deBfcte, and th e Ideas and Issues Committee agreed to act as sponsor. ^ The program , now term ed a “ presentation,” is scheduled for 3 p.m . Thursday in th e MU Arizona Room. The com m ittee sent out publicity calling d ie program a debate before ASE answered the invitation, said Frances R ead er, e d u c a tio n a l coor* dinator for. the energy group. “ ASE is not anti-nuclear per se and does not wish to debate the pro-con issue o f nuclear energy by itself,” said Reader, an anthropology m ajor. She said the group is more con­ cerned with placing the issue of nuclear power generation on the ballot in 1976 through jan initiative drive. T he p ro p o sed in itia tiv e would require num erous safety guarantees before^ a nuclear power plant x a n be built in A rizona. Construction of the Palo Verde nuclear plant 40 miles west of Phoenix is due to begin th is spring, pending licensing hearings. A SE spokesm an W ill M anzer, a political science m ajor, adm itted his group would be overmatched in a debate with the W estinghouse scientists over the technical aspects o f nuclear energy. ■“ We’d get chewed to pieces and we know it,” said M anzer. “ W hen you arg u e w ith technocrats, you lose. They’re equipped with an answer for evewry question, all of which sounds fine to the average laymgn. *• “ Sure, it looks like we’re , chickens,” he said. “ We’re in th e position o f ‘You’re screwed if you do and you’re screwed if you don’t / B ut we’d be playing th eir game if we debated. W e’re simply citizens asking th a t the question o f nuclear energy be decided by th e people.” M anzer said th e safe energy group is more interested in the so cio -p o litic al asp ects o f nuclear energy development, rather titan the technical, side. G reg M cDonald, program adviser to the Ideas and Issues Committee, said. “Things would have been a little dif­ ferent if we would have had a little more tim e.” M cD o n a id said arrangem ents for th e debate were “ a rushed deal,” and the sc ie n tists w ould only be available in late January. “ I see th eir (ASE’s) point,” he said. “ B ut I think it would have been a good program had they accepted.” M cDonald said a safe energy group in Tucson opposed a sch ed u led d eb ate M onday night, b u t changed its position a fte r m eeting w ith th e scientists. M cDonald said the lack o f a debate may lessen student interest, b ut he expressed hope th e program would still be o f educational value. ASE plans *ttf attend th e presentation to pose questions to the scientists, M anzer said. No student money was spent «sponsoring th e p ro g ram , M cDonald said. ~ ' V • fo r science Delays in construction and late arrivals of lab equipment have set back the completion date of an estimated $8 million addition to the Physical Science Building till early this summer. John R. Ellingson, director of Physical Plant, said construction should be completed by February, but the lab equipment is just now arriving. “There has been lots of delays, as there are during any construction,” said Ellingson. "We have the mechanical orders on the shelf now, and the lab equipment is just now arriving.” The construction began March 6, 1974, at an estimated cost of $6.24 million and was to be completed originally in July, 1975. Ellingson said when the addition is completed, it will contain mostly laboratories, but will also have nine classrooms and four lecture halls with folding risers. Head of the Construction Committee, Dr. Richard G. Stoner, said that the delay has caused no problem with student placement or overcrowding classrooms. “We hadn’t anticipated having the building ready until next fall, so there has been nothing unusual,” said Stoner. Stoner said he understood that part of the delay is because the con­ tracts for construction of the building and of the laboratories, are separate. , ’ , “The main .c o n t r a c t o r s are due to be completed in a month or two,” said"Stoner. “Then other contractors will put in the sinks and cabinets.” Construction of the new addition to the building is befog done by the Del Webb Construction Co. under the direction of Tom Hight, the ASU in sp ectin g ^ Ellingson said there is much construction coming up on sports and recreational activities. Construction on Joe Selleh Track Stadium began last October and is expected to be completed by March a t an estimated cost of $295,000 by the Matdian Construction Co. Garmenteur’s M o re a b o u t b u sin e ss continued from pog* 1 committee will solicit the opinions of all persons on the growth problem and the question of limiting enrollment, he said. Following the two hearings, the 10 com mittee tiiem bers will discuss the alternatives and make their recommendation to the dean accordingly, Werther said. Eight faculty members, one graduate student and one un­ dergraduate student comprise the planning ccffnmittee. FRIENDSDONTLETFRIENDS M M DRUNK. Starts Wednesday Jan. 21 ! K jp ff $15 Sweaters Better G ab ard in e Slacks Euro-Cut • Alpn Paine S h etlan d s..................... Reg. $22.50 NOW ..................... Reg. S60 NOW Traditional..................... .Reg. $45 NO W Dress Shirts $40 $30 BOX 2345 ROCKVILLE. MARYLAND 20852 1 want to keep roy friends alive for the next party. Tell me what else I can do. M y n s n u i is. Knit/Collared Shirts........................... Sport Shirts Vz w l ■ Off ^ 4 4 .R ^g. $18 NOW v I™ (several styles a v a ila b le in e a c h cloth) _ / . i p -------- W bol................................Reg. $22.50 NOW ^California Lutheran College PRESENTS Florence H en derson _ So u n d s » F la n n e l................................ Reg. $16 NOW C h a m b ra y .........................R eg.$20N O W Jackets Corduroy J a c k e t...............Reg. $65 NOW Grady Ciammage \ \t ?roortal AuctiU >rium Arizona State Uni versity-Tempe Box Office 965-3434 for Tickets... >r any of the Diamond Store Ticket Outlets Nunn Bush Verde — $20 C am el Hair Outershirts . . . Reg. $85 NOW Vbto JéOff ........ •••• Suits S pecial Group of Vested & Non-Vested Sportcoats . ____; B la ze rs ....................... .. • • • Reo. $85 NO\Af Hannel B lazers R e g $145 NO W $42.50 $100 S pecial Group VhtolfcOff Slacks Y a tO fe O ff Buy Early! GARMENTEUR,LTD. Forest a n d University. Tem pe 'M a m V-' p • ■ Vested Twill....................... Reg. $200 NO W ¿Mil Mm\ feO ff $ 4 3 5 Vsto t* Off Ties ........ 115 $ 1 0 .5 0 $ 1 3 .5 0 $ 2 1 .5 0 $ 3 2 .5 0 $115 $ 4 2 .5 0 $16.50 $18.50 50 %Off 50 %Off Shoes Suede Sport C o a t ...........Reg. $175 NOW 1 Leather Jackets 8 PM. THURSDAY, JANUARY 29 C a b le Knit.........................Reg. $30 NQ W T railb lazer..................... Reg. $32.50 NOW 1 , CLC - «9 C orduroy.......................Reg. $22.50 NOW ' AililriHW Y Byford Lambswool Sweatshirts . . . . . . . . Reg. $27.50 NOW 1 /L O f f Short 8t to n g Sleeve ...........Buy O ne, G et f ........................................ Buy Two, G et T5RUNYDRtVfttl)Eft!r Byford M e rin o ................... Reg. $25 NOW January21-24 Wed., Thurs., Fri., 10am -9pm Sat., 10am -6pm Please note:. During sale, alterations extra. AH sales final. r January 21, 1976 State Press Page 4 ■ .y * V-7\ ' S ' _ -v”' r fi ¿""V O pin ion . . . 1 state pre« K -: . .. -«j “ I t t h i n t h a w e k t r e a n l i k m a k o e e t . s b I t h * e ' s o % y s t d r s e t h i f f e r a S a m t w r e c n e c e s e o h o f u o j k l d p i n a i f v v - : l l i o n a i n s . " . _■ • M a r k T w L_____________________________________________ ___________ 1_______ _ LETTERS Ban bikes from m all Why don’t they ban bikes from th e m alls? Why don’t they ban cars from the roads? Both pose safety hazards. Few,however, are killed on the malls of the campus. Yesterday’s State Press carried a story in which M urray Sirkis, chairm an o f the bicycle safety sub­ committee, suggested th a t bikes be -banned from the malls. “ Wholy for safety reasons,” he said. The problem is, M r. Sirkis, you can’t look at the problem from only the safety aspect. There are other factors such as tim e spent traveling between classes. A lot of it. Now if the University were to come up with an alternative solution to this problem o f transportation, than perhaps we could look more favorably upon your solution. But I doubt it. The University has, o f course, been putting down bike paths across the campus. Bumpy, narrow, difficult-tonavigate bike paths. They are responding fo the problem, but it seems their hearts ju st aren’t in i t Instead, this great resort spends its money building totally unnecessary sidewalks (perfectly smooth and very wide) across from the library where once there was grass and firisbees. They can take away our green spaces with the comforts they provided, but,'F riends, they can’t take away our bicycles. And should th e University decide to ban the riding of bikes on the m alls, all hell would break loose. An issue such as this might be just die thing to unite the student body behind a cause, som ething that heretofore has been thought impossible. Imagine a giant rally when, at a given signal, 10,000 student, staff and faculty bicyclists rode south on Cady M all past the fountainr and parked underneath the window o f President Schwada. There is no dpubt th a t some, perhaps many, bikeriders neglect the safety o f others on their excursions across campus. But t h r answer to th is problem lies not in th e banning of the bike. Instead, why not try my solution for ridding bike paths o f pedestrians? As I ride up behind someone sauntering along on the little green path, I wait until ju st th e right moment Mien my mouth is perfectly alligned with th e transgressor’s ear and scream at th e top of my lungs, “ G et your a-s off the bike path!” . Half the books; twice the bucks W hat went wrong? It was a good idea and has had trem endous success on other campuses, but, somehow, here it fell flat bn its okole. \ I’m talking about the book exchánge. A noble ex­ perim ent that nobody ever heard of. ASASU spent 52,297 of our money, and it m ust all have gone to salaries of those who worked on theproject. The money could not have been spent on advertising, or if it was, those in command utilized the wrong advertising medium. The great book exchange failure cannot be explained away by claims that, because it was not a new project, it did not excite or stim ulate volunteer workers. T hat’s absurd! Why begin any new project if you know in ad­ vance it won’t work a second tim e due to a lack o f en­ thusiasm ? Twice as much money was spent this year as last year, while only half as many books were collected. Poor planning all the way around was the cause o f the failure, j 7 The purpose of this editorial, however, is hot to lam bast the planners of the book exchange. Instead, we would urge the folks upstairs in the MU (ASASU) to start planning NOW for the next one. It’s a good idea, one th a t could save students a considerable am ount of money, if only they knew in advance of its existence. Now you can lie on the sidewalk Editor: Our campus is growing, as all of us know. It is growing too fast for many of us, not fast enough for some. With the growth we ate experiencing come some problems that affect our campus, both physically and mentally. Sheer numbers of students pose a variety of strains cm our physical limitations — parking, overcrowded classes, claustrophobic walks on the mall at 9:35, and on and on. We are fortunate that we have on our campus areas where you can sit around and just relax — the lawn in front of West Hall used to be such a place, in front of the Ag Building, behind the M.U. and Old Main Park (behind the Language and Lit Building on University Drive); but now we stand to lose part of Old Main Park to a fate similar to the West Hall lawns. Our campus aesthetics are about to fuccumb to the pressures of growth again. Bike paths will scar Old Main Park. We need the bike paths, but not across the lawns. They can be built in a far less obtrusive location. With such sanctuary areas in short supply, efforts should be made to plan and construct needed improvements around, not through diem. We students should demand this consideration — it is beneficial to our campus’s mental state to have these sanctuaries. The asphqjt isn’t m yet but will be soon. We can saye Old Main Park for casual concerts and good old relaxation space by simply re-routing the bike paths. It is something that should and can be done, We, the students, must demand i t Let’s do i t , Mike Callahan Associated Students Campus Affairs Vice President W here is m y te a c h e r ? Editor: The epitome of bureaucracy has surfaced at ASU again. I, like thousands of other students, have been enrolled in and completed course work for a course whose department (and even teacher) I cannot locate. The instructor of the class tends to change every semester and many times every other class meeting. The class is a popular one which enjoys the highest percentage of .’A’ grades in file whole university. The class is, of course, Buffoonery 307. woodwork and remain unnoticed. Here at ASU, though, it won’t get you much. That’s why you must be getting just what you seem to be worth. The ASASU Tenant Association and those who line up en­ tertainment for the M.U. (and there must be others) continuously flunk Buffoonery 307. You seem to be doing an excellent job of aiding, Type letters. Type them informing and entertaining. Too short, no more than two pages bad you stick out so conspicuously. doable-spaced. Write simple, No conclusion to this . . . draw direct sentences. The most your own. effective letters make only one or two points. Sign your letter. / JonH . Elsen Bring it to the State Press in Business Administration Stauffer A-137. The Board of Regents collec­ tively exhibits their expertise in this field. Continuously, they fight the generally accepted practices of using logic and reason by not allowing alcohol, co-ed dorms and ± birth control services on campus. After all, they do not want us to lose sight of the objectives of this state’s universities: to boost the economy by,giving them jobs. But the teachings of Buffonery 307 do not stop here. The Athletic Ticket Office also shows us many fine examples of buffoonery in our midst, strictly for academicpurposes.. Why else would they ^institute unannounced procedure changes, confiscation of student ID ’s without' explanation or authority to do so, and a general discourtesy towards students buying tickets? We, again, must not forget that they are not here to serve us, the students, but to make mpney. How thoughtless us. And you, State Press and other representatives of the students, where are you? Many times I’ve read articles about speakers AFTER they already appeared on campus, with no mentimi of them beforehand. ‘Collage’ is a" neat little column but rarely very in­ formative “Member of Student Council” is a nice line to have in your resume, if you plan to work for the CIA. They need more people with the ability to 1 crawl into the STATE PRESS STAFF Editor , Managing Editor News Editor City Editor. Asst. City Editors Chief Photographer Special Assignments Copy Chief Sports Editor Asst. Sports Editor Staff Reporters Rewrite Reporter-photographers Photographers Staff Artist Manager of Student Publications ^ Advertising Manager Production Manager Jim Boardman Greg Smith Jeff Lettow Pat Denley Paul Lorentz Paul Havill DeniceBacher David Jensen Tom Cruise ' Tom Gibbons Mike Natter Susan Leonard Mike Tulumello Britton Bloom Ron Hickman Ann Inskeep Hal DeKeyser Duane Mattson Marcia Prouse Keary Cannon M ark Hanly Ed Peplow Hal Hubele Bob Szoradi The State Press 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 -lll, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, 85281; • telephone: 965-7572. wmm State Press 1976 Page 5 Police grant grace period Seek truth, then job to campus parking violators New,..V dean advises N -i. •• .. .. - .. /. ...1 ■ . The Austrian-born W eigend came to the United States in 1939. Although he left Austria in 1938 to 'liv e in Bulgaria, W eigend would have been drafted by the army of Nazi G erm any because o f h is A ustrian citizenship, Instead, he came to the U nited States and earned a bachelor’s degree .in geography from th e University o f Chicago. W eigend was not eligible to enter the m ilitary in the U.S. By Hal DeKeyser Finding a job should be a by-product o f a liberal arts education, not the m ajor goal, said D r. G uido W eigend, ASU’s new College of Liberal A rts dean. “ It’s really training how to .think, ask questions, analyze problems and how to write,” W eigend said. W eigend rep laced D r. Charles W oolf as dean Jan. 15. He said issuing citations for moving Parking violators this week will be. given violations is up to an officer’s personal warnings rather than citations, Police Chief discretion. “ For example, if . a num ber of George Bays, said Tuesday. ' “ moving violations occur at a certain in­ Bays said the one week grace period will tersection frequented by accidents, the chances allow students to acquaint themselves with o f an officer issuing a citation rather th an a university traffic regulations. Bays added th at warning become greater,” Bays said. traffic citations will be “issued next week. University parking regulations state th a t faculty, staff and students m ust register Bays said parking is a “ critical problem ” and parking violations comprise the m ajority vehicles to park on cam pus. Parking decals of the traffic citations issued. Bays said cost $5 and are availalbe at the Accounts citations m ust be issued to prom pt compliance Receivable Office in the Adm inistration Building. with parking regulations. Reading Course Increases Comprehension and Speed I Do you want to learn how to comprehend more of what you read? Would you like to read faster w ith' improved comprehension? Would you like to study more effectively? If your answer is YES, the Arizona State University Reading Center has a highly systematized reading improvement course that is designed to fit your 1 needs. \ ¡1 The six weeks non-credit course can be taken by anyone who pays the $30.00 fee. Registration begins Jan 26 in the Reading Center, Room B112 of Payne Hall. Further information may be obtained by calling 965-7766. Pick a class that fits your schedule from the list below: m tf photo ny h»i DaKeyMr Dr. G udlo W eigend W oolf became dean of the G raduate College. “ In the past 10 o r 15 years, people have gotten the idea th a t a liberal arts degree should be job-oriented,” said W eigend. “ There should We no d ire c t conn ectio n betw een education and jobs.” A liberal arts education does not train students to be a specialist in any one field like a vocational education, he said. “ If you learn how to think, you can apply th a t to any field,” he added. , W eigend urged students to pick a m ajor that is personally exciting, not one designed to find a job. “ It’s in this four-year period people have the most liberty in search in g fo r tru th s a n d knowledge,” fie said. “ Never before o r again will th a t liberty exist. The art is to make , foil use o f It.” v 'v-* ' “ If your m ajor is something you love, you’ll do well,” he added. “If you do well, your eventual goal will come.” r w because o f his status as ah enemy alien. He convinced his draft board to review his status, however, and served in the U.S. Army from 1943 to 1945. A fter the army, W eigend earned his Ph.D . from the University o f Chicago and became an assistant professor at Rutgers University in 1949. In Ids 26 years at Rutgers, W eigend has been visiting p ro fesso r a t several U .S. u n iv e r s itie s , in c lu d in g C olum bia U n iv e rsity ,..New Y ork U niversity and th e University of Hawaii. He was also a visiting professor in the N etherlands in 1970-71 while doing research on a Rutgers Faculty Fellowship. H e h as also been th e g e o g ra p h y d e p a rtm e n t chairm an and an associate. dean at Rutgers. STA TE PR ESS is published by A riion a S ta te U n iv e r s ity Tu esd ay through F rid ay during 'The academic year, ex c e p t h o lid a y s and e x a m in a tio n periods. E ntered as second class m atter at Tempe, AZ. 8S2BI. X c Third Sossion - February 2 - March 12 Section Section Section Section Section Section 7 8 9 10 1t 12 X M night T night W night Th night T a n d Th M -W -F 7:00 - 9:30 p.m, 7:00 - 9:30 p.m. 7:00 - 9:30 p.m. 7:00 - 9:30 p.m r 10:40- 1t:5Ba.m . 9:40 -.10:30 a.m. DESCRIPTION OF 1HE COUEGE READING PROGRAM The College Reading Program is a comprehensive fifteen (15) hour non-credit course designed to increase comprehension, speed and retention of reading m aterials. The course focuses on comprehension as the key to rapid and efficient reading, Reading is defined as an active decision-making process whereby the reader selectively looks for those clues which w ill enable him to reconstruct meaning from print. Therefore, no special eye or finger jnovem ents are stressed. Within the? fram ework of large group, small group, and individual experiences, the student w ill actively participate rather than be lectured to by an instructor. Students can benefit from the program as study becomes more productive through increased speed and comprehension. Also, those students who m ay h iv e to take aptitude or qualifying examinations w ill find that increased speed'and comprehension aids them in sections where reading ab ility is tested. ' On the basis of past experience and research, improvement in reading’ is promised by the program . Classes in the past have attained average Increases of fifty (50) to one hundred th irty (130) per cent. The question is not whether the student can improve but how much he can Improve. EXCLUSIVE PUBLIC SHOWING “TM & BASEBALL EXCELLENCE IN ACTION” numbers game. With the 0-1200.“ Figure out taxee, discounts, mark-ups and ratios easily with percent key. Easyto-read 8-diglt display, negative sign, overflow _____________ Indication.' ' # f; Convenient portable size. Other handy features. WATCH LARRY BOWA — PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES JIM LONBORG — PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES WILLIE STARGELL — PITTSBURGH PIRATES BILL FREEHAN — DETROIT TIGERS DEL UNSER — NEW YORK METS TELL HOW TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION« HAS IMPROVED THEIR rf ENDURANCE m SPEED m REACTION TIME m STABILITY Tomorrow, J a n . 22,8 pm — M.U. Arizona Room TM2QQ1 % 1 2 .9 6 *\ Texas In s tru m e n ts electronic calculator STUDENT BOOK CENTER 704 Si CoMeg* Ave. A FILM INTRODUCTION TO THE ' Transcendental Meditatioi . n technique Dynamic A ction Through Deep Rest J IFREE — \ OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Page 6 State Press January 21, 1976 F o r L a t in s t u d ie s c e n t e r Registrar considers fee card elimination N e w director chosen By Lany Phillips D r Jerry R Ladman has been nam ed director o f the Center for Latin Am erican Studies (CLAS) a t Arizona State University succeeding D r. Lewis A. Tam bs who resigned in June because o f a salary dispute. Ladm an is an associate professor o f economics and has been on the ASU staff since 1967. His directorship is listed as a half-tim e job with the second h a lf devoted to te ac h in g econom ics. x ’B u t,” says Ladm an, “ when considering two half-tim e jobs the sum always seems to come up greater than one.” I t w as th a t type o f m ath em atics th a t led to Tam bs’ resignation. His tim e was divided be­ tween duties o f the CLAS d ire c to rsh ip an d te ac h in g history and the total tim e required for both jobs exceeded w hat is norm ally expected.,fo a fu ll-tim e em ployee, T am bs said. T he A rizona L eg islatu re a p p a re n tly ' ignored1 e x tra dem ands on the tim e o f some p ro fesso rs an d refu sed to include money for m erit raises in th e ASU budget. Tam bs said, “ it ju st got to be too m uch work for the'm oney.” A lthough he resigned in June, he rem ained on th e job until th e end o f 1975 when Ladm an was nam ed as his replacem ent. Tam bs became director o f the center in June 1972 and lu n c h ed an am b itio u s jr,am to g ain n a tio n a l recognition for the program . One o f the accomplishments o f th e CLAS u n d e r his directorship was a broadened publication policy. * The center’s first hardback p u b lic a tio n , “ T he S p atial Evolution o f G reater Buenos Aires, A rgentina, 1870-1930," by Charles S. Sargent, was published in August 1974. Several h ard b ack s an d num erous soft cover books have been published by foe center since then. A plan is being considered to elim inate fee card pick up and ID validation, according to ASU R egistrar Enos Underwood. Underwood said one problem with foe present pre-registration system is th a t some new pre-registered students m ust participate in walk-through oecause they are required to have an ID picture taken and pick up fee cards to vobtain a parking perm it. U nder foe new plan, Underwood explained, all University offices, Hayden Library and foe student ticket office would be hooked into a m ini-com puter circuit. To check out a book, buy football tickets or use any cam pus service, the student would simply have his I.D . card read by a scanner. A m ain com puter wotdd check the student’s identification num ber to determ ine if his fees have been paid. », Underwood said foe m ini-com pute plan will go into effect in th e near future, but he could not determ ine foe exact date or cost. Underwood wishes more students would preregister — an advantage to both foe student and foe registration office. The student who pre-registers is likely to get foe class he wants without waiting in line during walk­ through, he added. D epartm ent heads are encouraged by Underwood’s office to increase class sizes and open new sections when classes fill up.. “ If there are 54 people signed up for a9:30 class with a lim it o f 50, we encourage foe departm ent to up foe lim it because a certain percentage o f pre-registered students do not pay th eir fees by foe deadline,” Underwood said. The Latin American Digest has grown from a newslettertype publication to a 32-page magazine. O th e r accom plishm ents indude a student exchange program with Latin American countries, a summer school session in G uatem ala, and p rom otion o f conferences including December’s Con­ ference on U.S. Policy Toward Latin America. NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY $3000 MICROSCOPE ON DISPLAY s ty lu s , X 'V l c a r tr id g e & tu r n ta b le v C L IN IC Audio Specialists will check your stylus cartridge and turntable FREE! And present you with a free gift of a stylus pressure gauge. Why ruin your fine record collection? Have your equipment checked out now — FREE! And TEM PE ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ { $ T h e A m e r ic a n F b e e d o m T r a in Î } IS PR00D TO PRESENT IN PERSON Î ‘ SPECIAL BENEFIT CONCERT BY * pick up your free gift. A f S S i .^Clinic held M onday to Friday 838-3611 I. • AUDIO Women’s Studies The curriculum of Women's Studies aims to give clarity and organization to existing data on women, to increase research in new and neglected areas, to cultivate women's awareness, to generate and evaluate theory, and finally to make this knowledge available to both university and community women and men. Through an interdisciplinary approach, the curriculum of Women's Studies emphasizes the development and evaluation of positive strategies for social change. fe a tu rin g TheCash The Ad Hoc Chartering Committee of W omen's Studies at Arizona Sfote University is pleased to announce the following courses available Spring Semester 1976. Men and women are en­ couraged to register. ' SPF 496/515 EDUCATION OF W OMEN Profs. A. Metha & S. Shafer 3 Units Mon. 6:40-9:30 p.m. SPF 494/594 COM 494/496 FAS 498 W O M ANKIND KAET Extension 1-3 Units W F 12:30-1 ¿30 p.m. 10:00-11:00 p.m. ARE 498 W OM EN'S VIEW OF ART Prof, M . Zimmerman HUM^ 494 COM 294 ENG 494 JUNE CARTER TOMMY CASH £ CARTER FAMILY TENNESSEE III I Added Attraction Johnny Western ^ DON'TM IS S m s SPECTACULAR* W OM EN BECOMING & BEING Prof. S. Suchman \ W O M EN'S COMMUNICATION Prof. B. Eakins MODERN BRITISH & AMERICAN W RITERS OF FICTION Prof. M .J. Lightfoot WKKQI 4» TUES. JAN. 27 it 3 Units Thu. 6:40-9:30 p.m. at 8:00 P.M. A.S.U. ACTIVITIES CENTER 5 J 3 Units Mon. 4:40-7:30 p.m. III Sea!« Reserved 3 Units Mon. 6:40-9:40 p.m. .„*• ALL -AM ERICAN SHOW!, 3 Units M W F 9:40-10:30 a.m. FLA 420 FRENCH W OMEN & ART Prof. D, Loose Units TTh. 12:40-1:55 p.m. HIS 494 W OMEN IN U.S. HISTORY Prof.. M .A . Rothschild 3 Units MWF 1:40-2:30, p.m. i *7.50 - *6.50 - *5.80 -K TICKETS AT CANNARE B U OFFICE £ > ALL SELEGT-A-SEAT LOCATIONS • FOR £ TICKET INFORNAnOR CALL 24A-3444 TRAIN m iL BE AT SUN DEVIL STADIUM SAT.JAN. 29 thru IDED. JAN. 28 • TICKETSU N SALEAT ALL AREA A.J BAYLESS MARKETS • INFO. 968-7743 T January 21, 1976 Page 7 State Press No 'dirty rats' in psych school By John Edman The rat, that fearless inhabitant of theshim and sewer, star of film, idolized in song, a creature whose very name spart» visions of the, tetanus shot, has taken up per­ manent residence in the third floor of the ASU Psychology building. Actually, the rat has played an integral part in ASU pscyhology experiments since the depart­ ment’s inception, according to Steve O sborne, a bearded psychology graduate. “ All physiological work is done with rats. If it weren’t for the rat, we wouldn’t have a physiological program here,’’ said Osborne. “Their digestive system is closer to humans than that of monkeys.” Due to the “ incredible” restrictions placed on animals confined for experimentation, the rat, according to Osborne, is ideal for the job. The animal is basically stupid, requires little cage space and is thé cheapest animal to maintain. “ Another advantage of rats is . their immunity to infection,” said Jim Smith, a senior psychology major. “This makes recovery after operations very successful. We lose less than half our rats.” Smith said. the “ASU rats,” which are bred bn campus at the Animal Resource Center, are very sterile, but a possible rat bite warrants a precautionary tetanus shot, good for five years. “Their teeth are very sharp,” said Smith, “and their bite can dte»» i »IWCBMV d u fte t/ *** •auetn/Mir sues easily go to the bone. It feels like needles from two sides going into your finger. The biggest damage comes when you yank your finger away.” Pat Fleming, senior psychology major, works in the lab with the foot-long rats three times a week. There are six rats in the room, each equipped with a long wire cable called an electrode, which juts from die top of the animal’s head and lodes suspiciously like a second tail. The electrode is implanted in the brain with dental cement and Yesterday’s PROPHECY Today's CURRENT EVENTS KNCS Radio, 1010 ke Weekdays 10 JLM. continued page I O N E W E E K ONLY ^ J A N . 2 1 -2 7 FIVE E asy PIECES 5-30 •- 8-55 mm p l u s n /t te R 7:15 films rcited: ÜP $ 1 .0 0 b e fo re 5 3Ç M o n . ThufS, 0 NfolleyArt BOS S M « Awe. • M 7 S S S 4 Dorm popularity up; available space down / Dormitory living is more popular than ever because stu d e n ts are m ore academically serious, John H. Schuh, assistant ASU housing director, said Thursday. But* available dorm itory space has decreased despite ah increase o f re q u e sts fo r cam pus housing, he said. Schuh said the most recently lost dorm itory space was Irish and Gammage Halls. “ These halls were tran s­ fe rre d from th e h o u sin g jurisdiction because of the lack fice space for faculty. As student enrollm ent increases new faculty is added, which creates a need for more office space,” he said. Schuh said more dorm space will be available this semester than last fall because some students have quit school or transferred to a community college. “ N ational trends indicate, in the last three years, a return to cam pus living. “ Nationally, the cost of living on cam pus is less than off-cam pus living. Also, there is a different life-style in the residency halls titan there is off-cam pus. ” BTRRTREK c r e a to r o » ** PATIO C I TREES I JW ELLO W , ÊO NG A ( f t QENE noDDENßEnnr the Z Æ . ** M ^ 5 * WELCOMES YOU BACK W ITH BAABfiBAOttft 7 7 ' and BAABBABASA 0 N .^ “C P R I 4+0 LOW PRICES JANUARY 2I WEDNESDAY T O O p m GAMMAGE AUDITORIUM ■ HALF- PfelCE/ ALL0R,NKSFRIlWr JAN. 23 4T IL 1 ! JAN. 23 4 T IL 1 JAN. 23 4TIL1 !! m m r Tickets $2.50 6 $ 3 0 0 f$.50 discount with ASU IDJ| Available a t Gammage Box Office& Diamonds S electaS eatO u tlets TWO BL’KS WEST OF ASU STADIUM *S T 4 FOREST Sponsored by ASASU Cultural Affairs Board January 21, 1976 Pages by Garry Trudeau DOONESBURY maurr semis?!- YUP, ANP YOUMANTMETO w a n JUST j 6 0 THEMEN A LL THE K & N 1 THS GARBAGE? N IH 6 UUP envo yship ... be / WHEN YOUPBBSHHERB, U E 'U BE GMN6 YOUA COMPLETE 8RIEFIN6 ON THE CENIRAL COM­ MITTEE MEMBERS*THEPROVINCIAL LEVEL PARTY COMMUEES, RL.A. COMMANDERS. A W m s im council. OH. NOR ..AH O THESEARE SCOSSARE, PHOTOS OF THE 2 ! CAVEME MEMBERS OF THE AEREAR, A ftC . POLITBÜRO. JONAS.. ÍP ADVISE YOU TO \, OOMMTTWEIR FACES TOMBMORY. NO WAYC ANTEE PONE. PURE,THEY ONLY DRESS AU RE-N O W GET THAT THROUGH YOURHEAP! \ C L A S S IF IE D A D S >Help Wanted ALCOA — now hiring 3 shifts. 9-1; 1-5; 5-9. 400 M O N T H . P A R T -T IM E interview at 1000 Apache Suite 113 Wed. orThurs. 3p .m . 1-22 Address envelopes at home. $800 per month, possible. Any age or location. See ad under Announcements. 2-4 Wanted: W riter for special projects to research and w rite reports, contract and bonus; several fields, also 2 or 3 book assignments available. W rite: Box 1462, Mesa, A rlz. 85201. 1-22 OVERSEAS JOBS — tem porary or per­ manent. Europe, Australia, S. America, Africa, etc. All fields, $500-81200 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free infb. — W rite: International.Job Center, Dept. AD, Box 4490, Berkeley, CA 94704. 1-22 *For Sale K IN G S IZE Im erspring Mattress, box / springs, still in. package. 8189. Queen $159. / Usually home. 838-1907,937-4003. 2-18 Homestead, 640 A cres— Millions of acres of public land still available) Government Land Survey 115 Laws-20, Uklah, California 95482. 2-12 100 percent Down jackets. Reversible. N avy to orange — O.O. to orange and Camo to orange. W ith hood and stuff bag for only $32.95. Checkerboard A rm y-N avy Stores — 1126 W . M ain — Mesa. Open 9-9 $ 12-5 Sun­ day. 2-4 and vjwvet lined. Two Spalding paddle ball raquets. Best offer. 968-9606. 1-27 House for salé. Three bedroom, refrlg.. Mesa. Two bedroom, evap., wood floors and new paint. Big yard, quiet neighborhood, close to ASU. 277-9595. 1-27 M E X IC A N E M B R O ID E R E D S H IR T S , BLOUSES, DRESSES, and the new bulky knit sweaters. Phdenix Greyhound Swap Meet every Sat. $ Sun., Space 371. Bring ad for 10 percent discount. 2-24 Checkerboard A rm y-N avy Stores at 1126 W. Main in Mesa has parachutes, sleeping bags, tents, gloves, boots, jackets and a thousand other things Including lice powder. WOWI Save with G. I . surplus bargains. 2-4 Brand new M ercier 10-speed— $95.00. Still in original carton. Only 3 available. Call Dennis 248-0020. 1-30 Drafting table, 6 ft., lights, stools, h new price. Always buying furniture or w ill trade for most anything. Butler's Used Furniture, 225 W. University No. 112. 966-8498. DISCOUNTS TO STUDENTS. 2-4 SKATEBOARD HEADQUARTERS. C O M P LE T E BOARDS & PARTS. Centurion (rated best buy) & Peugeot bikes. Bikes ‘n Things where quality isn't expensive. 1020 S. McClintOCk. 968-4511. 1-23 E le c tric U nderwood T y p e w rite r, o ld e r, model but works fine. Asking $75. Also portable manual O lym p ia'typ ew riter, $3p. 966-9828 evenings, weekends. V 1-21 English Bulldog puppies. AKC registered, champion lines. 967-7212. 1-21 Water bed, king size, complete with heater, liner, mattress — $150.00 — Cost $450.00 1 year ago. Butler's, 966-8498, 225 W. University No. 112. 1-27 Wanted: Roommate to share luxurious four bedroom house with pool, completely fu r­ nished. 967-5320. 1-27 •For Rent 4 bedroom house. 3 blocks from ASU. $325. Carpet, drapes, a ir conditioned. 947-3698.1-27 •Lost $50 Reward. Lost 1-2-76 Shephard-Husky m ix, " D U K E " 90 lbs. 994-4051. 1-27 SEX goes well with music) Stereo com­ ponents, c a r stereos ^ re p a ire d , v e ry reasonable. Steve 968-0022. « 2-6 Free lecture on Transactional Analysis. 1-2176, 1:30 and 6:30. Call 945-1279 fo r reser­ vation, y.21 Astrology books, charts, magazines, classes and calendars at The East-West Bookshop, 4225 E. Camelback, Phoenix. 1-27 P p rcn n o! • P yram id Meditation Tents $30. Others from $3 to $100. East-West Bookshop 4225 E. Camelback, Phoenix. 1-27 Gurdjieff Ouspensky Center now accepting students. 991-4867. 1-24 Perm anent h air rem oval. Face, arm s, body. Gall W alke r, Electrolysis of Scottsdale. 9454245. 3-11 Typew riter service 8 sales. Clean, oil & adlust your manual portable for $10.50 with new ribbon. Sim ilar savings on other models. Buy, sell $ trad e typewriters. 9685564. 2-24 Tune-ups. brakes, auto rep a ir, best work, best prices, fast service (m obile). 966-3185, a.m . • 2-24 Typing Typing: Term papers, manuscripts. Double space 75 cents. Dollar single space. 267-1706 East Phoenix. 4-30 •Wanted Free $50.00 Savings Bond. We are doing a vehicle -survey In this area for pollution control under an E P A contract. We are especially interested In testing certain 1975 models: Domestics, Imports and Vj ton pick­ ups. If we can use your vehicle, we issue a $50.00 Savings Bond, a full tanlj of gas, and the use of a loan car while yours is being tested. For further details call 966-6243 — Monday thru Saturday, 8 a.m . to 5 p.m. 1-27 *Roommate W anted Three fem ales to„share four bedroom home. Utilities, furnished, $75.00 a month. 508 S. E rn ie P I., Tempo. 966-2182. Non-drinkers only. Call a fter 3:00 p .m , 1-23 T E R M P A P E R S , R ESU M ES, TH ESES, D IS SE R TA TIO N S : Professional, guaran­ teed w ork. IB M M axine Mullen, 955-0763. 4-30 •Announcem ents Address and stuff envelopes at home. $800 per month, possible. Offer-details, send 50c (refundable) to: Triple " S " , 699-P23 High­ w ay 138,¿»Inon Hills, C A 92372. 2-4 One word per box. Abbreviations and groups of numbers are words. I RATES: $1 m inim um for firs t 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. «*. ** , Return this form with check to: The STATE PRESS, Room 111-A Stauffer H all, or the M em orial Union, Room 208, Arjzona State University, Tempe, AZ 85281. The STATE PR ESS reserves the right to refuse any copy. * j Nam e: ...................................................... ............................ (Please check one) Address: ................................................. ............................. For S a le ......... For Rent ......... Help W a n te d ......... L o s t....... . F o u n d ......... A u to ......... M o to rc y c le ....... w / Transportation . . . . . Wanted ......... ....... ........ • •• -0 ........................... — • •• ........................ P h o n e:....... ............................................... ............................ Check enclosed for $............................... .................. a Run a d ................................... days. I m NOTE: Although a law degree in England is an undergraduate degree, the study of law there is “roughly sim ilar” to the study of law in the United States, according to a visiting professor from England. “ The foundations are the same,” said David Jackson, who is on leave from the University o f Southam pton to teach law at ASU for one semester. Jackson said methods o f teaching law in England are different because courses are n o t .g e a re d tow ard a professional career in law. A law degree there is comparable to a degree in economics or history here. “ T he m ajo rity o f law students go on to qualify as professionals, but many go into governm ent o r in d u stry ,“ Jackson said. He said students who go into law as a c aree r ta k e professional courses after they graduate. Law is a’ three-year undergraduate degree, as are m ost field s o f study in y ie v David Jackson^ England. Jackson is here on an in­ form al ex ch an g e betw een ASU’s College o f Law and the University o f Southampton. ASU professor John Rose is teaching a t Southam pton now. Jackson traveled for three m onths in the U nited States in 1969 to study legal education., He taught for one year at the University of Chicago in 1954 and worked for the New York B arAssociation in 1955. Test results are recorded in a back room, which is Stuffed with a mind-boggling array of machines and piles of connecting wire. “ When this particular ex­ periment is Finished the rats will be sacrificed (killed),” Fleming said. “ They’re. injected with phenobarbital which puts' them totally out. Then, slices of the brain are cut up to determine exactly where the electrodes were implanted.” “ Each rat will be tested for IS According to Fleming, the rat’s minutes, twice a day. The tests life lasts only as long as the show how much effort (motivation) particular experiment' is con­ they’re willing to put out under ducted. However, as long as there differing ICS intensities,” said is a psychology department, there Fleming. ’ will always be rats, or vice versa. should not be pulled out or “you’d take some of his brain with it, and the, rat would die,” Fleming said. Through the electrode flows electric current, called ICS (Inter Craneal Stimulation). Today, Fleming is ex­ perim enting with, the ra ts’ hypothalamus, an organ in the brain which controls the animal’s motivation. STUDENT N unes Needed! Typing: 11 years experience. Term papers, theses, dissertations. 60c page. /Medical background. Janet, 834-0893. 3-12 --------- — CLASSIFIED AD ORDER FORM—-------------- ft B y A n n Inskeep continued from page 7 'Services Instruction English law study not job-oriented M ailed classified ads w ill appear in second edition A FTE R COPY A ND CHECK-ARE R E C E IV E D IN OUR O F F IC E . RN’s - LPN's - N A 's - N . Students A ny shifts, an y days, and w eeken d s. W e pay w e e k ly — no fe e . A ssignm ents in yo ur ow n a re a . Nurses Central Registry 2536 East Indian School, Phoonix • 957-9031 RENT A DORMITORY „ SIZE REFRIGERATOR For this Spring Semester LARGE 5 CUBIC FOOT? Call ua to vorffy low rates D fo r com plote Info — Typing — Personal .. Instruction -Services . .. Roommate Wanted . ROMANO’S IN C . 7845 E. M cDowall SCOTTSDALE 947-3721 SALES — SERVICE — RENTALS St January 21/ 1976 Page 9 State Press Faculty awards coming March 10 ASU’s annual Faculty, Excellence Awards mean more than the copper plaque and $500 grant m ight imply. D r. Robert D. Strom received the Alumni Association’s Faculty Achievement Award in 1975, and while “ certainly gratified,” on a personal level, he feels the award’s prim ary function is to spread good teaching techniques and “ make people look into what you’re doing.” Formal recognitioon for outstanding teachers, he says, “initiates a sharing process th a t I think is very im portant.” The ASU awards also allow the University to “initiate a. process o f recognition for ASU th a t must begin locally.” ASU is often underrated, Strom feels, with most national recognition focused on W est Coast schools and the East’s “ Big Ten.” TTie awards, which will be\ presented M arch 10, were started in 1963, and are given in two categories. The Faculty A chievem ent A w ard hon o rs o u tsta n d in g research , publications and community service. The D istinguisnea Teacher Award recognizes excellent classroom performance and interest in students. Nominations for the awards are accepted from students, faculty and staff, and the final selection is m ade by an ad hoc committee of faculty and students representing the various colleges within the University. W hile the awards offer the University publicity and recognition, the reactions of th e professors themselves are -sometimes deeply personal. Professor Richard W. Effland, of the College of Law, received th e Distinguished Teacher Award in 1970, and sjill speaks o f the honor with emotion. “ Everyone looks back at some point and wonders if they’re doing the right thing, especially when it doesn’t make a lot of money. For me, the award was a really significant event. Personal recognition is im portant at any age.” M ost im portant, he said, is th at “ it came from the students.’’ . » Strom feels his aw ard was “ a kind gesture and one th at I appreciated,” but cautions th a t “one shouldn’t be over­ whelmed by it. It’s im portant to bear in m ind th a t there were others equally deserving.” Nominations ffrr this year’s awards will be accepted through February 2. Nomination forms are available in all departm ent offices and at the Memorial Union inform ation desk. V ie t students' tu itio n waived Vietnamese students attending ASU are eligible for a temporary tuition waiver, the Airzona Board of Regents ruled Saturday. The temporary waiver will be in effect until the state legislature rules on a bill to provide financial help to needy Vietnamese refugees. If the legislature does not pass the bill, students will be required to make arrangements with the University for repayment Vietnamese students on campus must pay out-of-state tuition totaling more than $750. Suzanne Steadman, foreign students advisor, said students state press CAM PUS CLEANERS &■ COIN-OP LAUNDRO M AT One Day Service on Dry Cleaning & finished Shirts ☆ Alterations . ☆ Suede & Leather Cleaning ☆ Fluff Dry • Wash • 965- With students back on campus there are more bikes to be stdj more dorm rooms unloctedand more valuables left inceis. All of which provides .temptation td would-be thieyeC he said. Stolptfmkes, traffic and parking arjdrpetty thefts are,the biggest problems police face on .campus, he said. ☆ Hand Ironing Dry • Fold O PEN 7 D A Y S A W EEK WE ALSO DO DRAPES AND RUGS Phone 967-9650 Tempe • Corner of University ft Rural Road Intramural Basketball!! ENTRIES AVAILABLE AT: Intramural Sports Office Men's Gym Lobby 965-5638 |i ] w w a > MEN'S Class "A ", "B" and 5'10” Leagues $10.00 deposit per Team Eijttries only accepted at mandatory team managers meeting Thursday, Jan. 22nd 3:30 pm Memorial Union, Room 218 S tu d en ts r e tu r n ; th e ft up Crime on campus was low during the Christmas vacation;but it is up now with the return of students to campus, said University Police L t Tom Godbehere. eligible for the waiver must go through the financial aids office first. A student who can pay will not be allowed to waive his fees. Vietnamese students attending ASU enter without transfer credit but may test their prior knowledge and receive credit, Steadman said. Godbehere suggested students "lock their bikes witl}/a casehardened padlock, Jock their cars, lock valuables iirihe trunk of the car and lopk'oorm rooms even if leaving^for only a few minutes.” recovery rate for stolen ''goods is poor, Godbehere said. "Most thieves come from off campus and many students are not aware of when something is stolen from them,” he said. “Too many students do not haver the serial number of the article stolen.’* Many crimes are solved with the University Police and the Tempe .• pojice working in cooperation. W OMEN'S $10.00 deposit per team Entries taken thru Wed. Jan. 21st A t intramural Office CO-REC First Time offered. $10.00 deposit per team Team consists of 2 men and 3 women Entries taken thru Wed. Jan. 21st A t Intramural Office INTRAMURAL ACTIVITIES COMING SOON: sp o p o Year Bid Sale Adidas Warmups Court Casual Warmups White Stag Warmups Pile Lined Jackets Flannel Lined Jackets Nylon Shell Jackets Rugby Shirts M EN'S R $3 *2 *3 W OMEN'S $1 *1 ENTRIES TAKEN i PLAY BEGINS BÓW LING POOL TABLE TENNIS RACQUETBALL SINGLES FREETHROW BICYCLE RACE Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. 15-21 19-30 2-11 2-11 9-18 17-25 Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. 28 9 23 23 25 and 26 29 RACQUETBALL POOL BOWLING FREETHROW BICYCLE RACE Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. 15-21 15-21 26-Feb. 4 9-18 17-25 Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. 26 28 9 25 29 POOL BASKETBALL BOW UNG SPORTS TRIVIA BOWL BICYCllE RELAY INNERTUBE WATER BASKETBALL Jan. 15-21 Jan. 15-21 Jan. 26-Feb. 4 Feb. 2-13 Feb. 17-25 March 1-10 $9 $8 CO-REC ass't Sizes Cotton Sweat Shirts & Pants TTY $4 25 • 3 OO Assorted Brand Nam e _ Tennis Shirts & much, much more Tem pe Center University & Mill 966-1633 Jan. 28 Feb. 1 Feb. 9 Feb. 23 Feb. 29 Arranged ¡gl ■ v Page 10 State Press January 21/ 1976 ■ Devils edge SC By Tom Gibbons USC was supposed to be thé team with the deliberate patterned offense in ASU’s 71-69 win last night at the University Activity Center, but it would have been hard to tell late in the game. W ith about nine m inutes remaining in the game, the Sun Devils, norma|ly a fast break team, decided to sit ôn à 63-54 lead — a move whichalmost cost them the game. To that point the Devils had been dominating the second half, aftep a very even first frame which saw ASU up 33-30 at the in­ termission. But- after stalling out nearly three minutes the strategy back fired and the momentum shifted to "A nito o f theatre you w o n 't forget! SHOLEM ALEKHEM, PEREZ! Featuring Zachary Berger FREE - . NO ADM ISSIO N CHARGE A dram atic program o f selections introducing some of. the m ost mem orable a n d lovable characters created b y Shoiem Aleichem and Yitzchak Leib Perez. Saturday, Jan. 24 — 8:00 PM ROSS HALL, 215 5. Univ. Party follows performance Sponsored by Hillel the Trojans, who knotted die game at 65 with 3:15 remaining. From there the lead see-sawed with both clubs choking op­ portunities io put the opposition away before ASU finally took the lead for good. Perhaps the most detrimental choke came with 41 seconds remaining in the game and the score tied at 69 apiece, when USC’s Cleve Porter missed an un­ believably easy lay-up that would have given the Trpjans a two-point advantage. However, the Devils evened the chokes seconds later on the other end of the floor, putting four shots up and coming down empty handed. But the Trojans were able to literally kick the game away one more time. With 32 seconds left, Marv Safford who had been SCs main man ail night became the goat by allowing a loose ball to bounce off his shin out ofbounds. The Devils were by no means done choking, though. Rick Taylor and Gary Jackson both missed shots, before Taylor finally canned a short one with 16 seconds le ft ' Photo by Marcia Provsa Sophomore guard Rick Taylor grimaces as USC guard Casey Jones applies defensive pressure. You'll enjoy the deference... BILL GROVERT Sales Representative /r / /T fT H A V E N U E % W E S T C A M fL B A C K R E S. 9 5 6 -6 5 9 8 Large Selection of R O A D • P H O E N IX . A R IZ O N A B U S . 242 -55 55 CHEVETTE'S In Stock Now INCREASE YOUR READING SPEED Gain reading flex ib ility . Spend less tirpe studying. Take tests and make better grades. Remembering what you read. Take effective notes more quickly. As a student R EA D IN G is the name of the game. ARE YOU READY?? FOR SUCCESS D Y N A M IT E IN TR O D U C TO R Y S E M IN A R <\ ■ Thursday January 22, 7 o^8:30 p.m . Howard Johnson's Lodge, 225 E. Apache Blvd. Call for Resv. 279-6377 or be there early Valuable door prize awarded m Ranked gymnastics teams A-State, So. Illinois meet w . ü l \ 1 mm 1 r . 1 mm air ■ Mi W: if : L J . Lereon, w ho Dev« gym neetlce coach Don Roblneon cels the bast In th e w orld on the side horse, shows his specialty. By Tom Gibbons Southern Illinois University is to gymnastics what Notre Dame is to football and what ASU gymnastics coach Don Robinson believes his team is to gymnastics — a national power. The Devil gymnasts will have an opportunity to prove Robinson right tonight at 7:30/ when the men’s and women’s teams square off against SIU at the University Activity Center. Robinson calls it the most important gymnastics meet ever held at ASU. SIU’s men’s team finished third in the nation last year and the women’s team took the-women’s national title. .T he Southern Illinois men were one of the two gymnastics teams that beat ASU’s men last year. The ASU men’s team, which took the WAC title and finished- •H e a rtb re a k H o te l b y Tom G ibbone eighth in the national cham­ pionships last year, is 4-0 this year after a recent meet road swing. “ I think SIU is probably just as strong as they were last year,” Robinson said. “But I think we can beat them this year, in both the men’s and women’s contest.’’ One of the reasons Robinson was so optimistic is the home advantage his team has tonight. “In gymnastics, tile home team has a big advantage because of the crowd,” Robinson said. “ Getting the crowd behind you is always a big boost to an athlete,” Robinson said. "It’s especially big in a sport like gymnastics where the judges subtract points intangibles. So fan support is a very big thing.” Robinson has another reason for optimism. “We have a good product,” he said. “The people you see out there tonight are among the best gymnasts in the world. And their performances are among the best you’ll ever see — that includes in the Olympics.” “In fact” Robinson added, “in L.J. Larscm we have the best ride horse man in the world, in my opinion.” Tickets for tonight’s event cost $1 for students (with I.D.) and $2 for non-students. Telluride « Few feel sorry for Lobo coach January 23 - Very few people are feeling sorry And that makes the WAC race a as significant as they would have for New Mexico basketball coach whole new ball game, so to speak. been five years ago. Norm Ellenbarger — except for For one thing, those two road For another— I hope — neither those provincial enough to feel wins of New Mexico’s are not quite is that one home loss ASU has. sorry for anyone who has to live in New Mexico. And why should they? Includes: Things are going very well for Transportation ^ Norm’s team right now. .Mg After all, they are tied for the 1 nite lodging (condominiums) conference lead (actually ahead 2 days - lift tickets o ffe rin g because they have two wins on the road, which is quite a feat in the SPONSORED BY M en 's H airstylin g WAC). (Regular Barber Service too) But I pity Ellenbarger — and SNOW DEVILS SKI CLUB QAA a e g o Insist on this sym­ not because he lives in New bol for quality ser­ call: 965-4228 Mexico. 1336 Apache Blvd., Tempo vice. I pity him for those two road wins. It’s not that I feel sorry for any WAjC basketball coach who is doing well. And I don’t feel sorry because I think there is too much pressure on the WAC front runner. Arizona’s No. 1 BluP £rass Bar It’s just that poor Norm and his team may be beaten out of a WAC title that in past years would certainly have been theirs with two road wins. And, worst of all, it is because of structural interference. Almost every school in the WAC offers — all but UTEP — have aban­ doned their cracker-box gyms, BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL - "DRINK AND DROWN" where the fans in the BACK row THURSDAY JANUARY 22 were right on top of the players, for new, more modem facilities (And Beer -25$ Pitcher - $1 Hot Dogs • 15* (complete) •UTEP has plans to build a new one.) Pizza - $2.25 Large Cheese • $2.50 Large Pepperoni Not that there is really anything wrong with having sparkling new arenas where fans can sit through an entire game without emerging •% ;>• drenched with sweat. It’s just that these new facilities rii give — shudder —- the visiting teams a chance to win . . . oc­ casionally. no cover Now,' mind you, that doesn’t mean the WAC is getting soft on LIVE ENTERTAINMENT 7 visiting teams—no way. It’s just NIGHTS A WEEK Wed. that several teams may win games on the road. * 5 5 0 0 UNIVERSITY BARBER SHOP BLUE GOAT PtJB Country Rock by Coyote" if 1 Normal Bros. Fri.-Sat. -Joshua Stone « i» " * « * j\910 N. Hayden Rd. 9664880 (Tours & instruction R. M .S .I.A . C e r tifie d In s tru c to rs W rite for F re e Brochure 4 0 6 & Beaver F la g s ta ff 8 6 0 0 1 I - —r State Press Page 12 January 21, 1976 iBOBETTE GORDON ENGER PRESENTS I Refs, rules | hurt cagers in M adrid ■w ■ m JBT r .................. • •—-'n—ü— i-n if him- ni— I ■ I ■ I ■■ • By Nike Natter While most students were chiefly concerned with the Nebraska Comhuskers bn Fiesta Friday, the the ASU cagers were in distant Madrid, Spain, with quite a different task at hand. ASU Coach Ned Wulk’s crusaders spent their Christmas holidays representing the University and the nation in the International basketball’s finest teams; European pro champ Real Madrid; Sao Paolo, Brazil. The Devils went 1-2, topping the Estudiantes 94 - 85, losing to Real Madrid 120- 95 and Palmelras 92-84. The results do no affect ASU‘s NCAA record. As is the case in moist international competition, there is more to the story than just the scores. Controversy in and out of the international arena has become quite fashionable this decade. This time, the Devils were fortunate. The controversy was confined to the arena. The ASU athletes were unanimous in their praisefor their Spanish hosts. “The hospitality was extraordinary,” said Wulk. “There were no off-court problems or incidents,” said guard Rich McCutchen. However, the ASU representatives told quite a different story about the games. ”; A basic problem, according to Wulk, was a series of rule changes the Devils didn't have time to prepare for. v “They have a wider foul lane which limits the effectiveness of our big man,” said Wulk. “ In the backcourt, the ball can be inbounded without the referee's check. We had a lot of points scored against us before we were set up. “Basketball in an American invention,” Wulk commented. “The international rule changes are deliberate attempts to limit the strong points of our game.” “We’re just as talented,” said McCutchen. “If we played- here, there's no doubt we'd beat them.” According, to ASU forward Tony Zeno, inconsistent officiating, enhanced the international style, and at the same time reduced ASU's effectiveness. % f . “Their players lack the finesse and quickness of our guys. As a result, they play a very physical game,” Zeno said. “The refs tolerate holding and pushing which hurt our ability to work the ball inside. . “Things really got confused when we retaliated, and they started calling us for holding. We tried complaining, b u t it didn't help—the refs only spoke Spanish”, said Zeno. “The refs were very quick to call fouls on the outside,” Zeno added. “This helped them because they do a lot o f outside shooting. We were always in foul trouble because we went outside and tried to stop them. It would have been a different story over here.” “Goaltending is legal in Europe. After playing American ball for so long, it was impossible to adjust to having our shots pulled off the ■ rim,” Zeno said. “The smoke in the arena was another problem. “It was so thick we couldn't see the length of the court” However, Devil center Scott Lloyd saw things a bit differently. “Sure the refs called an inconsistent game,J>ut that and the rate changes weren't what hurt us,” Lloyd said. “ We let the changes affectr us — that’s what threw us off our game. We’d be behind and would start* to play their ‘ran and gun’ style instead of staying wifi) our strengths. “1 think we went over there with, the wrong attitude.” Lloyd said. “We knew the games didn't count, so we didn't set any goals. We weren't a bit upset when we got b e a t” “Overall, it was a great experience,” Zeno added. ‘The team matured quickly playing against guys with their experience. We traveled to a beautiful part of the world and grew together at the same time.” .V . NOMINATE A . Liberal Arts TEACHER for the 1975-76 QUALITY TEACHING AWARD Nominees should be Assistant or Associate Professors under forty in the College of Liberal Arts. Send nominations and supporting evidence to Prof. A. Johnson, Comm, on Quality of Instruction, c/o Office of the Djean, College of Liberal Arts, before February 18. 1976. 125 E. 7th 8 t.r Tempe Inside D A X — Corner of 7th St. & Forest, 1 block N . of U niversity H O URS: Mon.-Sat. 11:30-5:00 Yhurs. 11:30-0:00 M ake It! For yourself, fo r a friend. Each necklace is individual &- you m ake It th at w ay. 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