C a stro to a p p o in t P ayn e w ith o u t S e n a te a p p ro va l Regent nominee to skip hearing By Mike TahuneDo Gov. Raul Castro has Atty. Gen. Bruce Babbitt’s decided to directly appoint ruling Wednesday afternoon Dr. William Payne ttí~ the th a t-th e governor is not Arizona Board of Regents, bound to submit regent bypassing the traditional nominations to the Senate. S e n a te c o n firm a tio n Payne’s nomination was process. scheduled to go before the The decision followed Senate Education Com.——r -T-" .. -y **• f - - "'VV i..--: ^ ' i . ■Y . ^ thursday sBrie press â r lv A it a Tempe, Arizona T n —» « e Arizona State University Vot. 58 N o. 95 A p ril 8 , 1*7« V mittee this morning, The nomination has now been withdrawn from the committee, said Senate Majority Leader Alfredo Gutierriz, D-Phoenix. Payne’s nomination has been criticized by Gutiérrez and Chicano 'activists because of Payne’s service on the Tempe Elementary School Board. The board has been involved in nuníérous legal battles with local Chicano parents who have accused' the board of discrimination. Senate President Bob Stump, D-Tolleson, and Gutierrez released a joint s ta te m e n t d enouncing Castro's action and saying they would “explore every legal and legislative rem edy” to overturn Castro’s décision. They said the withdrawal of the nomination from the committee “comes amid rumors the nominee does not have, sufficient support to secure Senate con­ firmation.” The governor, they said, has submitted two regent nominees to the Senate in the past, and should not “fail to submit a nominee when he feels, for whatever reason, that they do not have sufficient .support to secure Senate confirmation.” Ted Rushton, Castro’s press secretary, declined comment. Braaten, Bitter win primary in A S A S U presidential race Presidential candidates Susan B itter and Dave Braaten Wednesday won the Associated Students primary in which only 5 per cent of the eligible voters turned out. The top two candidates in each office will compete in the general election April 13 and 14. Mike Callahan, election coordinator, termed the election the best primary ASASU has ever had. “It was not a light turn out,” he said. “We have never had over 1,000 vote in a primary before.” He said 1,166 voted. Matthew Martin, the presidential candidate who was eliminated, said he encourages all 134 people who voted for him to vote for Braaten in the general election. B itter received 584 votes, while Braaten got 420. Kevin Dahl and. John Connell won the campus affairs vice presidential cam paign elim inating Brad Schkl&ir. Dahl got 429 votes compared to Connell’s 380. In the activities vice presidential race, Keith Leoffler slaughtered Ralph Agnew with 698 votes compared to Agnew’s 281. However, both will be listed on the general election ballot. Bruce Mortenson beat Chad Krewson almost two to one, getting 666 votes while Krewson received 345 in the executive vice presidential campaign. *- Police report 9% dip in' ASU may drop from top-15 list B y Ron Hickman Although the University is feeling the pangs of economic inflation, it is benefiting from a crime recession. University Police statistics indicate the number of crimes at ASU in 1975 decreased about 9 per cent, from 1,463 in 1974 to 1,287 incidents reported in 1975. This may help the University stay off the top 15 university crime list on the FBI’s Uniform Crime Report for 1975, said University Police Chief George Bays. Of 54 universities, ASU ranked No. 12 in 1974, he said. Figures are based on the number of crimes reported. Violations vary from arson, theft and rape to malicious mischief. ■ ' k, *Y' Charts mounted in Bays’ office show the police are primarily concerned with theft of personal property, bicycles, and state property and the number of arrests. Red, orange, green and black blocks show monthly progress in targeted areas. Since Bays’ arrival as police chief this academic year, from August through March, there has been a 8.6 per cent increase in arrests, from 79 to 92, compared to the same period last year. Personal property thefts have decreased 15.5 per cent, from 429 to 362, and bike thefts are down less than one per cent, from 251 to 249. But thefts of state property have increased about 3 per cent, from 63 to 65. For the calendar year 1975, private property reported stolen from students, faculty and staff has dropped 9 per cent, from 999 incidents in 1974 to 914 in 1975.. In this category, bicycle thefts went from 466 to 341, other thefts from 589 to 508, and second degree burglary (those burglaries committed in the day) dropped from 31 to 10. ' * Yet the total value of property stolen declined only two per cent, decreasing $2,592 from $140,773 to $138,181. Another violation that decreased was illegal possession of marijuana. Incidents reported dropped 36 per cent from 33 to 21. However, reports of stolen state property jumped 37 per cent from 78. to 107. And the total value of state property stolen soared 81 per cent or $13,795, from $16,976 to $30,771. This week Bays said he initiated a sector-patrol system, dividing the campus into one north and one south section. Security vehicles are assigned to patrol a single area, Bays said, pot the whole campus as was formerly dime. “This way we’ve saturated the campus with visible patrols,” he said. “Assistance should be more immediately available.” Also, assigning responsibility for rising or decreasing crime will be easier. There will be less “buck passing,” he said. The crime prevention teams have been another asset in controling crime, he said. Bays said the teams are assigned to areas with high crime ratios.. If an unusually large number of thefts are occurring in one of the dormitories a team is assigned to patrol the area in plain clothes, he said. Cooperation from the campus com­ munity is another factor in receding crime, Bays said. “People are calling in good tips,” he said. Page 2 State Press A p ril 8.1 9 7 6 'Focus '76' to examine juvenile justice issue in thenews-.. •briefly Wings may yet perform here Associated Students Activities Vice President Rick Clark sJd Wednesday ASASU will “work as hard as we can to M AO AXES VICE PREMIER TO KYO — C hina’s Chairm an Mao Tse-tung d ism issed first V ice Prem ier T e n g , H slao-p lng f r o m a l l . ,h i® Sua governm ent p osts W ednesday and eleyated A ctin g Prem ier Hu Kuo-feng to prem ier and party firs t vice chairm an, ^ H e 'L ^ a s ^ n ^ r ia s n ’t^ e ^ e te rm in e d for the concert. ‘‘I think somebody on campus will do it if we (ASASU) A study of the abuse of can’t. Right now I don’t see any reason why we cant, children’s rights and of the inequities of juvenile justice C1He said he expects to hear today or Friday if Wings will will be the topic of the sixth DPS WRONGDOING ALLEG ED film in the “Focus 76” Departm ent of p u b lic Safety D irector Vernon i S i S S K S S reschedule its concert in Phoenix this summer. documentary series at 3:30 W ednesday m isappropriation o f state su p p lie s and use of state C laris said if it gets a date for the concert, ASASU must p.m. today in the MU Movie labor tor^w rsonal benefits have resulted in an nvestigation of determine if the University Activity Center will be at least 12 DPS o ffio ia ls and the suspension of three others. available, if the center’s staff will be available.and if there House. , will be adequate ASASU staff to coordinate the concert. “This Child is Rated X FEW M OURNERS ATTEND HUGHES RITES deals with children who HO USTO N — B illio n a ire Ind ustrialist Howard Hughes was have committed “children’s b u rie d W ednesday a fte r short, secretive In a n crimes,” such as truancy, exclu sive cem etery w est o f dow ntow n H ouston. There were few THE SOUND OF and youngsters who have m ourners at the service, and there w as no eulogy for the been apprehended for eccen tric recluse who died M onday of kidney failure. serious crimes. Although HIJACKERS DEMAND CASH , PRISONERS their offenses are entirely M AN ILA, The P h ilip p in e s A u th o rtie s reieased two different, these two types of p o litica l prisoners and said they were co lle ctin g *3W 0 0 a in children often wind up ransom m oney W ednesday to meet dem ands of three hijackers sharing the same juvenile who threatened to k ill 76 hostages aboard a P h ilip p in e s A irlin e s IS COMING SOON detention facilities. The film, which won an ^ P H O E N IX — ^ A 'a tte m p ri(^ a d m o n '^ ^ G ^ * R 8 u l Castro^ or Emmy Award and other honors, also was cited by the American Bar R ules Com m itee. . Association for its approach FORD TH REATEN S AID BILL VETO ,, . a to the problems of juvenile W ASHIN GTO N — President Ford to ld congressional leaders crime and detention. W ednesday there is "a very strong p o ssib ility ” he w ould veto a It is open to the public S5 6 b illio n foreign aid b ill if It inclu des an extra $550 m illio n to H ouse R epublican Leader John R hodes. free of charge. A fter th e film, Jim STRIKE SETTLEM EN T UN FORESEEN Beauchamp, supervisor of c a n FR A N C ISC O — A strike by m unicipal craftsm en entered field services for Maricopa Phoenix - 334 E. Camelback Rd. 263-9410 County Juvenile Court its eighth day W ednesday w ith negotiators trading Insults, the Tempe - 130 E. University Dr. 968-3491 threat of a general strike loom ing and a bleak o u tloo k for C enter, will head a citize n s forced to do w ithout city, transportation. Tucson - 1037 N. Park 622-7407 discussion of the topic and of UDALL CLAIM S M ORAL VICTORY new methods of juvenile M ILW AU KEE - Rep. M o rris U d all. D -A riz., who prem aturely rehabilitation which might For college students preparing for careers help alleviate some of the claim ed a victory in W isco n sin ’s dem ocratic prim ary that In the visual and performing arts problems created by in­ belonged to Jim m y Carter, said W ednesday he has stopped carceration of young of­ “the Carter la n d slid e." fenders. P m a n / B M M m l Genesis 3456 C Iris IpproUKtUpt s o /u n e tá o n / LIQU OR S If ever you see a su sp icio u s character — so m e g uy h a n g in g around a bike rack or lurking by a dorm — ca ll the U niversity P o lic e at 3456. No nam es nec­ essary. A n d no v i c t i m l e s s crim es, please. P LA N N IN G A P A R T Y ? 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' ) I Enjoy a semester in New York, the arts and communica­ tions capital of the world, offering museums, galleries, cinema, theaters. fà s c e I Audit, free, any two of the more than 1.000 courses offered by Parsons and The New School-w hose faculties include an impressive list of New Yorks leading professionals. For more information, mail the coupon below or call collect (212) 741-8975. P a r s o n s / N e w S c h o o f A p p r e n t ic e s h ip Programs In N e w Y o rk P A R S O N S S C H O O L O F D E S IG N . 66 Filth Avenue. New York. N Y. 10011 JE W E LR Y Please “sen d me more.,information about the Parsons/New School Apprenticeships Programs in New Y ork ' £r DIAMOND CUTTING 130 E. UNIVERSITY DR. M E M B E R A M E R IC A N G E M S O C IE T Y “ IN THE ARCHES"' I am interested in the □ 967-8917 * “ c u ttin g makers t h e diffe re n ce in th e b rillia n cy of your diam on d.” Name Summer 76 P Fall 76 or □ Spring 77 Semester ■ ' • '■■■'>V*i Equality for senate is prim presi T h . Continent*! Walk lo t Di»»rm«ment major project cl the off»»», I g ” J g l organizations, arrives m Phoenix w«ik designed to link communities, to raise w The president-elect of the have difficulty getting competent attend regular campus classes," * SIP Faculty Senate, Dr. Susanne faculty w ithout i t .” F u r­ she said. thermore, tenure is essential to Shafer, says equality for women and minorities is one of her top- academic freedom, she added. Shafer said the power of the priority issues. S hafer, a professor^ of Faculty Senate depends on the secondary education, was the style of its president. “Per­ first chairman of the University suasion, compromise and Board on Equal Opportunity for dialogue — im portant. tools of Women in ' 1971-72. She will democracy — can be utilized to succeed D r. William English, a make the body effective. "I am looking to a politics of cooperation, not confrontation, between such groups as the faculty, the Arizona Board of R egents and th e sta te legislature,” she said. Shafer said she is also con­ cerned about the admissions policy and whether ASU is expanding too rapidly. . “As the University has con­ tinued to grow, the tasks of the faculty members have grown in greater proportion,” she said. “We really haven’t added as many faculty members and facilities as .we have students. I Susanne Shafer am interested in ways for th e music professor, as president of faculty to have time, space and facilities for th e research the Faculty Senate in June1977. “T he question of pay necessary if knowledge is to be - (discrimination against faculty advanced.” B etter counseling m ight women) remains, although some reduce the number of students adjustments have been made,” w ith false s ta rts in th e Shafer said Wednesday. "There is only one woman in a University system, Shafer said. The controversial night-class top University administrative post (Dr. Joyce Foster,- assistant teaching proposal is an area to the academic vice president),” where the faculty should work she added. “And in th is together to find satisfactory d e p a r tm e n t, (s e c o n d a ry alternatives, she said. education) we have no female “We are certainly interested in chairmen, although, juany of our serving the; community, in* teachers and stu d en ts are eluding those people who cant women. This makes me think the § situation still isn’t up topper.” Shafer said she was one of four ' developers of the KAET-tv, Channel 8, telecourse "Womankind.” She was also co­ developer of a course on the education of women. She said the antitenure bill, which was defeated yesterday in the Arizona House Education Committee, would be damaging toA SU . “Tenure protects the faculty S a tu rd a y 10 P M & 12 P M GOLD SEAL _ ■m em ber in his search for 91.00 a t N e e b H a ll knowledge, w ewwould ouiq knowledge,” she said, said. “We 'f n . ^ relationship between the arms race and militarism with socuu injustice, hunger and poverty, left San Francisco on January 31The walkers have come through the cities, mountains and ItC aM om ta. T he, entered A rizen, west < * * ““*■*> on March 28 and will be walking Thev are scheduled to arrive in Washington, D.C. in eany October. They will be joined for links on the hy^people i“ t h e communities through which they pass and by feeder walks, likeCthe one begun on,A pril 4th. the anniversary of the assassination of M artin Luther King, in New O rle^s which was organized by the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Arizona*« for Peace, the Walk’s sponsor in Arizona, has invited citizens to join the Walk along Grand Avenue as the walkers approach the State Capital on Wednesday, State Press 965-7572 FUN! FOOTWEAR SALE Star Trek B loopers.. .and Reefer Madness **★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * * *★ Ü ** il |SUEDE LEATHER LADIES' TENNIS SHOE naB m ad e to s e ll FOR 19.95 IIoo If ■Ventilated lightweight suede leather uppers. Padded cuff & terry lined insole. ADIDAS ^ "SLUGGER 400" RASEBALL SHOE CONVERSE TRACK STARS REG. 6.95 Padded ankle and heel. Oxhide uppers & pressure-free nylon sole. W ith metal cleats. #7920 Flexible molded sole with ripple grip. Canvas duck uppers, molded rubber toe cap. MOWHAS PEPSI LIGHT " J E T TR A CK SHOE ON THE MAIN LEVEL O F THE SUEDE LEATHER” BASKETBALL SHOE 5 ALL PURPOSE SHOE * REG. 23.95 THE HUB I W I N G S '- ^ é S SP0T-BILT ADIDAS 17“ ' J chrome tanned leather uppers with • wrap-around ankle support. Cushion Rugged blue nylon uppers. Padded J Insole with molded cleated sole. "ankle collar. Cushioned heel wedge. Synthetic half-sole with 9mm spikes. MADE TO SELL FOR 14-95 J • Hi or Lo-top In blue swede leather uppers. Padded ankle support A I cushion insole. MEMORIAL UNION WE'VE GOT A TO OFFER HOURS: 6:30-4:30 M-TH 6:30-3:30 FRI 7:30-1:00 SAT OPEN W EEKDAYS 9 AM TO 9 PM OPEN SUNDAYS 10 AM to 5 PM -v ' rj r * i c * i r * * * i c k * * r k * * In Tempe 921 E. Southern In Phoenix In Phoemx 3107 3518 W . Northern Indien School M . Page 4 State Press April 8,1976 ------------ ----------------^ O p in io n L______________ state p ress “ There comes a time when a man must take the b ull by the ta il and face the situation.” W.C. Fields ____________ _________ Bla, bla bla vote for me The utterly miserable voter turnout during the past two days of the Associated Students primary election indicates ASU students do not believe the candidates. Students do not believe the current crop of office-seekers can accomplish coed housing or get beer and wine on campus. Most students could care less who.represents them because they know it makes no difference who it is. They (the students) are not blind to the fact that administrators fa n sim ply ignore the student officers 100 per cent of the time. Student officers have no real power to influence the administrators. The weak voting turnout indicates that the campaigns are not touching any nerves. The candidates' platforms are vague, little more than lukewarm air. But who’s fault is it? Is it the candidates* fault? Probably not. Each year a myriad of candidates promises coed dorms and campus liquor sales. It might be the fault of the system. Perhaps it is time for a long, hard look at the structure of traditional student government for purposes of fundamental restructuring. An attem pt Was made to decentralize Associated Students two years ago, but it did not go far enough. We would Idee to see the candidates scrap their issueless campaigns along with the entire facade, and really look for an effective means of student participation. Students recognize bullshit as bullshit. If the potential voters believed the candidates had any real power to initiate the programs they advocate, turnout would be larger. The record speaks for itself. As long as the current system continues, turnouts will be scant. D e v il o r a n g e l, s tra w b e rry tu n e “Strawberry shortcake, cream on top/spell me the name of your sweeheart.” Marathon rope-jumping, anyone? “Devil or angel, please say you’ll be mine. Love me or leave me, please make up your mind.” Name that tune. These and other activités will be featured in the second annual Red Eye Special to be held from 9 a.m. til 4 a.m. Friday, April 9, in the MU. The MU Entertainment Committee is sponsoring the event with a little help from its friends. As a m atter of fact, this event is probably one of the most successful efforts at committee coordination this campus has ever seen. Be it bingo, kino, food contests, treasure hunts, spelling bees or paper airplanes, the Red Eye Special has something for you. The whole affair is dirt cheap — 25 cents admission for most of the major events — and should be good fun. So give your wallet a break this weekend and come out to the Red Eye Special. Girls make good Congratulations are in order for eight members of the ASU women’s swimming team. Eight girls were named recently as All-American. Karen Andrus, Cappi Siefarth, Libby Tullis, Sally Tuttle, Melissa Belote, Jo Fredrickson, Pam Rodgers and Theresa Brookbank are the stars that were honored. ASU has, and has had through the years, many out­ standing women athletes. Congratulations,,girls. Letters from the candidates * Will Susan Bitter preserve and protect student rights? Editor: Will Susan B itter protect and maintain student interests as president of ASASU? The answer is a flat no. At a recent ASASU budget meeting B itter introduced a motion th at, if it had passed, would have eliminated all future ASASU funding of, the Campus Coalition for the ERA. Specifically, B itter said “...I move th at we expressly zero line Of the students Editor: Keith Jacobson and the “administration” deserve credit for financing and expanding the intramural program to the prominent position it -has on campus. But, “let’s set the record straight.” The competence of the program and its staff is not the issue. The issue is student control of student programs. Mr. Jacobson never mentirais the manipulation of the Associated Students budget, which led to the “administration” becoming “involved” in intram urals and other ASASU areas. Between 1972 and 1975, the ASASU budget was decreased $70,000 (while fees and enrollment increased) because of “lack of available funds.” This budgeting cut directly influenced the decision to let the “administration” become “involved” in funding intramurals instead of ASASU. It seems that each time ASASU develops a program that is by students, for students, the “adm inistra tio n ” gets "involved.” There is already talk of ASASU Tenants’ Association having its budget and programming transferred from the student offices of ASASU to the “administration.” Is this another example of “involvement?" It's time students stopped allowing this erosion of student programming. At this University, p ro g ram m ing equals funding and funding equals power. ASASU is constantly giving up this source of-legitimacy and power to the “administration.” While ASASU keeps neutering itself, the “ad­ m inistration’’ is “developing” w onderful programs. Why shouldn’t the administration fund those programs which have become its windowdressing. If intramurals was still an ASASU jprogram, I seriously question the extent to which the “administration” would allow the funding of handbàll courts. Too often, ASASU student-run programs are the handballs of ASASU and adminstration struggles, with the 'administration holding funding as a sleeper. It’s time ASASU stopped coming up on the short end of the score . DaveBraaton Graduate, Speech Communication 127 (Campus Coalition for the ERA).” To “zero” means to cut off all funds for the following year. In supporting her motion. B itter said that the Campus Coalition was a “partisan” organization, that 'it has a political nature. Cindy Brillhart, president of the College Council of Fine A rts, argued that it was “not a partisan organization, that it does not deal with a particular political pqjrty.” In fact, the Campus Coalition recently passed a resolution stating that it would not endorse any political candidate. When asked for the official status of the Campus Coalition, Manny Figueroa, from the Office of Student Affairs, sta te d , “ ...it is a re g istered stu d en t organization...The ERA falls into the category of special interests, general.“ W hether ode agrees or disagrees with the purposes of the ERA is not the issue. The fact is that the Campus Coalition for the ERA represents legitimate interests of a substantial portion of ASU students. Bitter’s motion would have effectively eliminated the representation of those interests at ASU. This indicates a total lack of judgment and responsibility by B itter. It also indicates that Susan B itter will not protect and maintain legitimate student interests as president of ASASU. Matthew Martin Candidate, ASASU President Martin sh o w s his ignorance Editor: V It seems unfortunate that a candidate for ASASU president is so misinformed that he must try and discredit his opponent with erroneous charges. I did not vote against funding the Campus Coalition for the ERA. In fact, my motion on the floor of the Associated Students First Council was a move to solidify the fact th a t we would fund the Campus Coalition, as we needed to have a firm show of support since we were ignoring one of our standard budget guidelines. In effect then* my motion was an attem pt to make the F irst Council state definitely that even though the Campus Coalition was a political group, we did indeed wish to fund it. In the future I suggest Mr. Martin check his “facts” and his “quotes” to make sure th at they are correct before he opens his mouth. I would hate to see such ignorant remarks coming out of the mouth of a potential ASASU president. Susan B itter Candidate ior ASASU President 4L Apri» 8 ,1 9 7 6 S tate P re ss Page 5 \ Craig Tribken Cheshire-puss and A SA SU elections “Chesktre-Ptu8... would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?" "That depends a good deal on where you want to get to," said the Cat. "I don't much care where, " said Alice. "Then it doesn’t m atter which way you go," said the Cat. "So long as I get somewhere, " Alice added as an explanation. "Oh, "Oh, you’re sure to do that, ” said the Cat, “if only you walk long enough. ” [.Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland]. As ASASU elections approach next week, like Alice, ASU students don’t seem to care where they go as long as they get somewhere. The elections will determine who will speak for you to the legislators, the regents' and our ad­ ministration. You may feel that ASASU can’t accomplish much, but think of the damage the wrong person can do in office. Let me explain. I represent ASU students frequently at banquets, meetings, conferences, etc. I have been confronted several times this year by various not so well-wishers who wanted to attack my credibility by attacking low voter turnout. Once the president of the Arizona Board of Regents used low voter turnout in front of the House Education Committee to argue against the student-regent bill. While reeling from the attack, I still argued fervently and somewhat successfully that I do indeed represent students because everyone has the opportunity to vote even if they .don’t exercise it. I then gave my arguments to the committee; my credibility tarnish«! but hot dead. The fact of the m atter is people believe that I do represent you because the office has inherent credibility. The point is, next year you could have someone stand before the legislature or the regents and, with the inherent credibility of the office, argue that (1) football should be a higher priority than academics, (2) students should not have any voice in their University, (3) the State Press should be censored by unfriendly administrators, (4) we should have mandatory ROTC for all students, or (5) there is no parking problem. Whoever you elect has plenty of opportunity to actually make a n asso u to f you as a student! He IS the student representative to the community, the legislature, the regents and to the administration. If you sit on your hands this election day, you’ve asked for it. H you don’t want to vote because you don’t feel that ASASU can help you, at least vote because Fire story they can hurt you if you are saddled with the wrong officers. Alice went timidly up to the door and knocked. “There’s no sort of use in knocking," said the Footman, "and that fo r two reasons. First, because rm on the same side o f the door as you are; secondly, because they’re making such a noise inside, no one could possibly hear you"... "How am I to get inf" asked Alice.. "Are -you to get tq at all?" said the Footman. "That’s the first question, you know. ” How many times have you heard that you should vote because ASASU has over $125,000 to give out and “it’s your money so you should care." That’s all very true. „ . . . But those arguments have'been used every year that I have been at ASU, and they have not brought out great amounts of voters. I doubt then old arguments will work this year. I honestly don’t know how to get students to care. I have used my office this year as a platform to voice student concerns — hoping that I would strike a sensitive nerve. Fat chance. I’ve tried to shed the yoke of an administration that distrusts students and will not grant to them any real decision making power. I’ve worked for students because Tm sickened and angered when I see faculty discounts at the ASU bookstore, faculty bathrooms, priority parking for administrators, faculty-staff dining areas, etc., etc. Students are genuinely, second-class citizens. But given yesterday’s voter turnout, some people think I should have kept my thoughts to myself. Ah, but Tm not so easily deceived. Nobody could have fooled me by staying away from the polls this week. You’re all just laying ISw until next Tuesday and Wednesday when you’ll turn out in droves to choose your representatives. You just played hard to get this week. ■ ...They were running hand ta hand, and the Queen went so fa st that it was all she could do to keep up with her; and still the Queen kept crying, "Faster! Faster!”...suddenly/ ju st as Alice was getting quite exhausted, they stopped, and she found herself sitting on the ground, breathless and giddy. ...Alice looked around her m great surprise„ "Why, / do believe w e’ve been under this tree the whole time! Everything’s ju st as it was!" "Of course it is," said the Queen. “You see, it takes all the running you can do, to keep m the same place. I f you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fa st as that." [Through the Looking Glass] Tftec JEWELERS CUSTOM JEWELRY • WATCH RfPMMNG in bad taste Editor: Your article on March 24 concerning the chemistry lab explosion and Bill Engle left me shocked. I find sensationalistic journalism in very poor taste when reporting such a tragedy, May your future articles “save me” from further discomfort. Rebecca Benda cylrt Carved WATCHES BUNTZ DINNER AND PARTY for Shabbat, Friday April 9 4. *p| Learn how to make, B lin tze s at a B lin tz m aking party 3:30 p.m . Please make reservations fo r th is excitin g and d e licio u s w orkshop DINNER — featuring your favorite b lin tze s 7:15 p.m . $2.00 reservations 967-7563 SERVICES 8:30 p.m. PROGRAM 9:15 p.m. “TH E H A G G A D A H A S R AD ICAL LIBERATIO N ” PR O G R A M ” Ï THE HUB I RED-EYE SPECIAL ALL THE SPAGHETTI YOU CAN EAT * 1.25 INCLUDES TOSSED SALAD a FRENCH BREAD THURS: 4:30-6:30 PM FRIDAY 11:30-1:30 PM SPECIAL DINNER n i t !_ _ n i A . ACCUTRON • BUtOVA CARAVELLE »SEIKO TIMEX LOCKETS#PENDANTS#EARRINGS INDIANJEWELRY 988-7587 ttia.aau.Ti 4455 SOUTH miWAL HP. « TUMP« THURSDAY NIGHT MAINEVENT Beautifully cooked bonele»« whole trput stuffed with a spiced crab dressing. Tender-hearted rice, butter-melting M ead, and a trash, crisp salad. Page 6 State Press A p ril 8, 1976 Federal agencies require costly duplication By Hal DeKeyser Arizona's three universities are studying procédures used in compiling statistics required by federal agencies to deter­ mine how much money needless duplication of paperwork is costing the schools. The study is being made at the request of Arizona Regent Carolyn W arner, superin­ tendent of public instruction. At .the Feb. 14 Arizona Board of Regents meeting, W arner said many of the reports requested from the universities are “absolutely useless.” She estimated their total cost a t $3$5 million annually. Dave K urrasch, ad­ m inistrative assistan t to Warner, said the regents have sent a questionnaire to the Arizona Universities seeking specific information on required reports, including man-hours, direct costs and direct ex­ penditures involved in fulfilling federal requirem ents for statistics. Kurrasch said the univer­ sities are being asked to return the information to the regents in time for action to be taken at their May 21 meeting. The universities w ill try to determine what information is valuable to th e federal government and the univer­ sities. Blair Benjamin, advisor to the regents, said there will not be a quick and easy answer to the problem of duplicating paperwork. “You've got to define what term s you're talking about,” he said. “It’s not as if you have one man or 10 men at the university who do nothing but this (file federal reports)." The questionnaire will have to be sent through all depart­ ments in the universities, he said, .to determine how much they spend in complying with federal requirements. “What we’re really trying to find out is what it costs the u n iv ersities in term s of manpower, tim e consumed to fulfill paperwork requirements, reproduction and whatever figures out to be a cost factor,” Benjamin said. Benjam in . said many ^government agencies th a t require reports from univer­ sities are concerned with basically the same things, and this causes a duplication of effort. Many such agencies require the same information in different formats, so often the same report can’t be sent to more than one agency. “All of these things that are not completely duplicating are heavily overlapping,” he said. One solution would be for thé federal government to combine agencies that deal with the same thing, he added. Complying w ith an­ tidiscrimination legislation is one area where the federal g o v e rn m e n t r e q u ir e s duplication of information, Yesterday's PROPHECY Tod ay's M axim ize your LS A T score by taking review course taught by attorneys. C o u rse fo r LS A T w ill be held in Phoenix and Tucson on Ju n e 19, 20, 26th. -Call 264-0236 or 949-5786 In Phoenix or 882-9667 In Tucson Write, 4008 North 15th Avenue „ Phoenix, Arizona 85015 Register Now — Limited Enrollment! . KH C8 Rfttfto, 1010 ko Weekdays 10 A .M . J F youR E NOT HEARING THESE FIVE NEWALBUMS, TOO 'RE MISSING FIVE NEW ALBUMS . A SK FOR THEM BY NAME : THE EARL SUCK BAND AN EXCITING DEBUT ALBUM . FEATURING EARL SUCK, DAVID HOMES SENSATIONAL GUITARIST: AND JIM M IE M ACK, VOCALISTAND LEAD GUITARIST. WHO WROTE ALL THE SONGS WITHSUCH . PRODUCED BY HARRY M ASLiN A MODERATE PARTY POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT ETHOS ETHOS CAkoovr) , __ BRILLIANT DEBUT ALBUM BY S it-M A N GROUP delving into'M eas previously dominated b y m u s ic ia n s Ac r o s s T H E ATLANTIC. GARY HILL B006A B i l l y AIMING AT BOTH COUNTRY AND R o c k H o r izo n s in h is s e c o n d ALBU M . HILL SINGS HtS OWN SONGS, PLUS OTHERS B Y T e s s i c o l t e r a n d m e r l e Ha g g a r d . The purpose of govern­ ment is to protect people from being ripped off. When the government it­ self begins to rip people off, it's time to change it. The Moderate Party ^-intends to change the pre­ sent government, which caters to special interests, into a government which catqrs to individuals. You can help. Write The M o d ­ erate Party, 7240 E. Belleview #4, Scottsdale, A z . 85257. Tell us your dreams for a better America. W e'll tell you o u rs ., Caution: Reading Political Announcements May Be Hazardous To Your Mind. president for business affairs, said the Institutional Studies Agency is overseeing the study atASU. “We’re ju st getting started on it,” Penick said. “ItH have to be staffed all through the campus. “It’s a sizeable undertaking, so it’s going to take some time,” he said. LSAT REVIEW COURSE CURRENT EVENTS Preregistration class schedules are due Friday Fall pre registration class «schedules should be turned into department offices by 4 p.m. Friday, said Bill Haid, assistant registrar. S tudents who m iss th e Friday deadline can still preregister for next fall until June 90, he said. Only the students who meet the Friday deadline will be eligible-for early drop-add May 5-7. Students who turn in preregistration materials after Friday will receive their fall class schedules by mail sometime in mid-July, said H aid., Adv. — Benjamin said, i ‘T here already is a proposal in the federal government for a superagency in the field of discrim ination th a t would combine efforts of all such agendes,” he said. “There’s not much we can do about it,” he added. “That’s up to the federal government.” Jack Penick, ASU vice WARNING ONCE YOU HEAR ‘EM you PpUSETTE-DART BAND THIS MASSACHUSETTS -BASED BAND CENTERS AROUND SIN G ER SONGNKlTER. an d O w tar tst j o n p o u s e t t e -O a r t . THE ALBUM B A BLEND OP COUNTRY, FOLK AND Ro c k in f l u e n c e s . STATUS QUO THE NEW ALBUM BN ONE OF THE WORLDS GREAT ROCK‘N ROLL BANDS. BOOGIES ! STATUS GUO NAS BEEN TOGETHER 13 YEARS... AND SITU GROWING1 . MIGHT h ave TO HAVE 'EM. A p ril 8,1 9 7 6 State Press Page 7 Restaurant cancels CARP reservation By Paul Lorentz ’ A Tempe restaurant that had agreed to'cater a dinner for a controversial campus group, canceled the group's reservation because of its affiliation with the Unification Church, a church member charged Wednesday. CARP President David Jensen said CARP had made a reservation with the Holiday Inn, 915 E. Apache, to hold a dinner Thursday evening in one of the motel’s restaurant rooms. Pen Johnson, owner of the Holiday Inn franchise, called Jensen Tuesday evening to cancel CARP’s reser­ vation, Jensen said. Johnson said the motel didn't want to have any connection with CARP in light of the recent bad publicity aimed at the group, according to Jensen. A spokeswoman for the Arizona Civil Rights Division said Wednesday the Holiday Inn was within its rights to refuse to serve CARP. “Our public-accomodation law does not include religion. We have no control over that,” she said. “We’re concerned with our own reputation with the community,” said Johnson, “and we had decided that this isn’t a good group to be associated with.” Johnson said he didn’t cancel CARP’s reservation because “I didn’t let them make a reservation.” He said the motel didn’t want to appear to be condoning the alleged wrongdoings by CARP and the church by renting CARP a dinner room. “We could have told them something else. We chose to be honest with them," said Johnson. “This was really an insult to us,” said Jensen. “We had done nothing wrong to cause a bad reputation.” CARP had mailed about 30 invitations to University administrators, professors and church members’ parents before Holiday Inn refused to cater to the group, Jensen said. Jensen said CARP has found another place to hold the dinner event but refused to say where. “We .don’t want a lot of people showing up to harass this meeting,” he said. UNIVERSITY BARBER SHOP offering Men's Heirstyling (Regular Barber S ervice tool 966-9662 I fur quality sar* 1336 Apache Blvd., Tempe A S A liq u o r re p o rts d u e a t m eetin g Reports from the Associated Students of ASU, NAU and the UofA concerning campus alcohol sales will be presented at the Arizona Board of R egents meeting at ASU Friday af­ ternoon. The A rizona Students Association will present the three reports when it once again asks the regents to allow the sale of alcohol a t the universities, ASA Director John Ridgway said Wednesday. The last time Ridgway ap­ proached the board on the subject was during its February meeting. No decision is expected during Friday’s meeting, Ridgway said because the reports are long. The regents will most likely postpone a decision in order to read the reports, he said. Ridgway said ASU’s report was compiled last year, the Uof A’s report is an updated version of a 1978 paper, and NAU just recently prepared its report. All three reports will show th a t stu d en ts have acted responsibly when allowed to drink alcohol in dorm rooms, he said. Other points presented in favor of alcohol on campus in­ clude: * — Campus sales might foster an increased sense of community at the universities and create income for the facilities selling it. — A majority of university students in Arizona have reached the legal drinking age. — M any a d m in is tra to rs support the removal of the alcohol ban. Ridgway indicated there is no dominant reason for allowing alcohol on campus. It is more a question of “Why not?“ he said. ASA received an Informal opinion earlier this year from A rizona. Atty. Gen. Bruce Babbitt that the regents have the power to apply for a liquor license, Ridgway said. RMMAMWMMMWMMAMIMWMIMVMMWAMVIRMMMI PASSOVER SEDER W ed n esd a y APRIL 14 7:00 pm Reservations- and necessary to pay in advance 967-7563 $5 students $7.50 faculty and staff Seder at Ross Hall 215 E. University Dr. FULL COURSE TRADITIONAL MEAL AND HAGGADAH READING SPRING FORMAL GAUZE SHIRTS The coolest cloth around. Perfect for hot summer wear or, if an accident— happens tear it up and make bandages. Many colors. LEVIS and FASHION JEANS p o O Dax has the largest selection of styles and sizes in town. We take the term 'fashion jeans' seriously.. .we buy all the latest andi>est new styles as soon as they're off the sewing machines. P I m SLAPS % It Bfemondf« ¡1 1/2 Carat Total Weight Reg. $499. / f t f lf U f ? _ » • E X T E N D E D T ERM S T A KE MONTHS TO PAY e YO U TH ACCO UNTS C L A Y A W A Y ACCOUNTS • F IR S T P R IO R IT Y A C C O U N T S IE Y O U H A V I N EVER HAO C R E D IT B E F O R E • NEW C H A R G E OR BU D G ET ACCO UNTS I N V IT E O Setting ir*1,4K gold, W e A c ce p t: * Bank A m e rica rd • Master Charge • D iners C lu b I • Sh op pers Charge • C arte B lanche IN ME$A SHOP AT DANIEL S 'tri- city mall ‘ The strap of this slap is guaranteed one full year. Go through three pairs of brand X or one pair of ours. Two and three layers, all the colors of the rainbow, shown here in black and white." It doesn’t get much more formal than this around D ax. STORES IN PHOENIX. YUMA and TUCSON 4-2-06-12 1 Block North of University on Forest in Tempe, 968-3585, Mon. - Sat. 10 to 6 (Thursday till 9) r Page 8 State Press A p ril 8,1976 'Deteriorating econom ic status, ' p ro f says Committee to study faculty pay By Norma CoBe The Faculty Assembly of the College of Liberal A rts will elect a committee to study “the deteriorating economic status of the faculty and related inequities in th e salary structure,” according to Dr. George Peek, a political science professor. Peek, chairman of an ad hoc Faculty . Com m ittee on Procedures and Policies, said his committee h ad . heard of cases in which newly appointed assistant professors received salaries higher than those of assistan t professors w ith several years experience at ASU. But Dr. Guido G. Weigend, dean of the College of Liberal A rts, said, “There are bound to be occasional inequities because market conditions vary from year to year.” Weigend said, “A ' top-notch faculty candidate may have cost $13,000 a few years ago, but maybe $14,500 today. There may be special conditions raising the entering price, such as a shortage of good can­ didates.” Peek said the problem is that Isaac Newton's presents * • • HOT & NASTY ROCK & ROLL TONITE! Isaac Newtons, Arizona’s only Rock & Roll Restaurant brings “GeoFree” back for 1 week only. Thurs. Nite is Vz price drinks for ladies & prize of $10.00 for the nicest sm ile we see. Fall in Love at Isaac Newtons and dance with M cG illa if you like macho men. standard cost-of-living raises within the University do not keep pace with the marketplace and with elevated entering salaries. “Therefore someone who entered four years ago, who has a doctorate and a record of writing and productivity, may be making less today than a newly hired profess«*,” he said. Weigend said such cases do occur, but “are a reality of all businesses.” T.G.I.F. PARTY 1 RELAX AND SOCIALIZE with munchies, coolers, exotic coffees apd teas, MUSIC no charge FRIDAY, APRIL 9 2:30-4:30 p.m. Baker Center 213 E. University Sponsored by H i Ilei Greek Sing is TONIGHT! at Gammage ISAAC NEWTON'S 7:00 PM 1015 S. Rural Rd., Tem pe Tickets $2.00 Students $1.00 It is true that, in figures, the earlier candidate never catches up in many cases, according to D r. Paul Hubbard, associate dean of the college. However, “keep in vmind how much further $13,000 went a few years ago,” he said. Professors making less than the entering rate should be raised to th at level. Peek said. “We, too, are very concerned about equalization, but there is no fund upon which I can draw," said Weigend. He said he has asked every departm ent chairman to inform him of inequities. He has been able to improve situations in the past, he added. The new Committee on the Economic Status of the Faculty will study salary systems used elsewhere, including a step system a t the University of California incorporating m erit recognition as well aaJength of service. Establishment of the com­ m ittee was one of eight amendments to the Faculty Bylaws and Constitution made by the faculty assembly in recent meetings. One amendment provides for a College Committee of Review to hear complaints from the faculty, and another urges “proper sabbatical requests should be encouraged and approved.” The assembly will consider four additional recom ­ mendations Monday a t 3:30 p.m. in Murdock Hall 101. A p rii 8 ,1 9 7 6 State P ress Page 9 Professors say A SU Jacks Indian courses By C an! Kirk , • V Two A m erican Indian professors on campus claim the University fails to offer sufficient undergraduate courses dtmling with American Indians and should h ire more Indian professors. Dr. John Tippeconnic, director of th e C enter of Itftlian Education, criticized ASU for offering only 11 courses on Indian topics outside of his department. The C enter of Indian Education is part of the College of Education and focuses on methods of teaching Indian children. D r. W alter Currie, a visiting student and professor of native studies at Trent University in Ontario, said he is “shocked and disappointed at the lack of concern of this campus with its involvement in the teaching of all the native peoples of this nation.” C urrie is th e founding chairman and director of native studies a t Trent. “The few courses that are offered (at ASU), such as an­ thropology, history and religion, are too limited in their scope and do not incorporate native in­ structors,” he said. Currie said the inadequacies at ASU are magnified by the fact that Arizona has one of the largest Indian populations in the country. “It would seem to me that this University has an excellent opportunity to set itself a leader to other institutions in the country in instituting a center for native studies. One way in which the University would commit itself with its own hard money is “It would be presumptuous of me to say, yes, there are enough (courses). It seems th at the initiative as to what we need m ust come from N ative American students,” he said. “The college is willing to confer with anyone at any time. If Indians are satisfied with what we’ve got, then there is enough,” he said. He suggested that other colleges and departments be questioned. “This may not be the only college that would be of service to Native Americans,” he said. John Tippeconnic Dr. Elizabeth Bradt, assistant professor of anthropology, said hiring a staff and developing it to she was not aware of a need for a full undergraduate program,” additional courses. H er Currie said. Tippeconnic, appointed as the ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ y y ¥ director for the Center of Iwrihm THE Education last January, said his staff has not com pleted examination of the problem. He said be hoped the future in­ volvement of the center would extend beyond its present focus of educating teachers of Indian children in elementary and secondary schools. The center is operated by two full-tim e staffpersons, Tip­ peconnic and assistant professor George Gill, and two graduate assistants. U n iv e r s ity p e r s o n n e l, however, say the need for ad­ ditional courses or for a native studies program has not been expressed. Robert Bininger, associate dean of students for academic affairs in the College of Liberal A rts, said as far as he knew the L iberal A rts C urriculum Committee had not received any requests for additional courses. Brandt said the anthropology department also offers on-site field study courses on reser­ vations. She said these are often met with “ritualistic hostility” by Indians within the communities. Dr. Donald Bahr, also an assistan t professor of an­ thropology and an instructor of a course entitled, “The American Indian View of Man,” said he thinks there are plenty of per­ sons at the University with the expertise to develop additional courses. “But it’s just a m atter of waiting to be asked,” he said. He added he felt the need for ad­ Walter Currie ditional courses should come department offers five of the 11 from tribal education committees courses outside the education andofficials. college. ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ^ t e HUB & SIDEWALK« Ca f e TODAY and Î TOMORROW! Ourjet faresto European less any scheduled airline’s. $360throndi June15,ana youcapbook anytime. If you are 12 to 23, our youth fare is made for you. $360 round-trip New York-Luxembourg, through June 15; $410 June 16 through September 15. From Chicago, $401 through June 15; $451 from June 16 through September 15. Direct flights from h(ew York and Chicago to Luxem bourg in the heart of Eurdpe. Fares subject to government approval. Safe your travel agent, write or call: Icelandic A irlin e s,' 630 Fifth Ave..N.Y., N.Y. 10020. 800-555-1212 MXUUUUC CN Page 10 State a t ASU Tenor Warren Hoffer w ill be the guest soloist at the final program of the season by the. Symphony Orchestra at 8 p.m. Monday in Gammage Auditorium. Hoffer has sung with the Buffalo Philharmonic and the Pittsburg and Hartford Symphony Orchestras. Free. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Pianist Margo Sm ith, assistant professor "The Real Inspector Hound,” a farce by Tom Stoppard, will be staged by the University Theatre at 8 p.m . today through Sunday at An Alternate Space In the old Payne Lab School. In this scene, the tennis-playing stariet, Lanabeth Lunceford, greets the mysterious Simon Gascoyne, played by John Longenecker. Tickets are available at the Lyceum box office and An Alternate Space on evenings of performances. films------MU film«: A ll film« shown In the MU Movl« Hows« “Th« Front P ig« ,” th e n e w sp a p e r story set In the 1930’s sta rrin g J a c k L e m m o n a n d W a lte r M a tth a u , ru n s to d a y th ro u g h S a tu rd ay at 7 a n d 9:30 p .m . a n d S u n d a y at 2 a n d 7 p .m . T h e B ill C o s b y - S id n e y P o itie r sta rre r "Up­ town Saturday Night” ru n s T u e s d a y and W e d n e s d a y at 7 a n d 9:3 0 p .m . “T h * Q r s s t W a ld o P s p p o r,” starring R obert R e d ford in o n e o f b is better but least a p p re cia te d film s , w ill run next T h u rs d a y th rou g h S a tu rd a y at 7 and 9:30 p .m . a n d S u n d a y at 2 a n d 7 p .m . Neeb/Cultural Affairs Board Film s. A ll film s shown at Nseb H all. “The Paper Chase,” sta rrin g T im o th y B o tto m s a n d J o h n H o u s ih a n , is required view ing fo r a ll law s c h o o l g rad uates. S e n io rs c a n a ls o id en tify w ith th is sto ry o f o n e m a n ’s battle a g a in st th e c o m p e titiv e g rin d o f a ca d e m ia . A t 7, 9 a n d 11 p .m . F rid a y . A d m is s io n $1 w ith ID. S a tu rd a y b rin g s u s ”8wa«tika,” th e re cen tly d is c o v e re d .h o m e m o v ie s o f Eva B ra u n ^ an d A d o lp h H itle r in d o c u m e n ta ry fo rm . A t 7 p .m : T h e S a tu rd a y n ig h t tep o ’c lo c k a n d m id n ig h t s p e c ia l is “ Reefer M adness” a n d StarTrok Bloopers. A d m is s io n $1 w ith ID. Sunday at 7 p .m . b rin g s us How Tasty Was My Littla Frenchm an,” ah a m u s in g in v e stig a tio n in to th e m or­ a lity a n d p o litic s o f c a n n ib a lis m In 16th' c e n tu ry B ra z il. W ith E n g lis h s u b title s . “ T h e P ro je c tio n is t,” d e a lin g w ith th e fa n ta sie s a n d lo n e ly e x is te n c e o f a theatre p ro je c tio n is t, is d e p ic te d th ro u g h a c h a ra cte r k n o w n a s C a p ta in F la s h , w h o ru b s s h o u ld e rs w ith th e lik e s o f J o h n W a y n e , C la rk G a b le , G a ry C o o p e r a n d th e o ld C o m in g A ttra c tio n s . S h o w in g at 7 p .m . M o n ­ d a y. in the Valley KDKB w ill sponsor a one-day arts festival from 11 a.m. to5 p.m. Sunday in Encanto Park near the bandshell. The first annual Brillig Spring Festival and Handmade Arts show is open to any Arizona resident with a craft or art to display and sell. Performances by local musicians and the Society for Creative Anachronism w ill entertain as well as performance people selected by application. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ "Flamenco In Concert” featuring Teodoro and Isabel Morca, will perform at 8 p.m. April 24 and 25 in the main theatre of the Scottsdale Center for the Arts. The performances will feature a cross section of, Flamenco rhythms and compositions inspired by Bach. Tickets are $3 and $4 and can be reserved by calling the center box office or Select-A-Seat locations. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ The Phoenix Civic Plaza will present Marshall Tucker, with festival seating at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Exhibit Hall. Roberta Flack will give two performances at 7 and 10 p.m. next Thursday in the Symphony Hall. Fleetwood Mac will give a benefit performance for the Arizona Heart Association at 8 p.m. April 23 in the Exhibit Hall. Watch for this columnist’s interview with Fleetwood Mac’s Stevie Nicks in about a week. Hoyt Axton will make his first Vafley appearance in two concerts at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. April 21 at the Scottsdale Center for the Arts. Axton’s hits include such classics as “Boney Fingers” and “When the Mornin’ Comes.” Tickets are $5 and $6 and available at the Civic Center box office and B ill’s Records and Audio locations. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Mors Civic Plaza Concerts: Smokey Robinson will be in the Valley at 7:30 p.m. April 28 In Symphony Hall. Robinson will appear with R&B singer Esther Phillips. Tickets are $7, $6.50 and $6 at the Civic Plaza box office and Select-A-Seat locations. of music and accompanist in the music department who is retiring this spring, w ill be honored in a concert at 3 p.m. Sunday in the' Music Theatre. Student and faculty instrumentalists and vocalists w ill per­ form. Donations at the concert w ill be used to establish the Margo Smith Accompanying Scholarship. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ‘The Star Spangled Banner,!’ Mendels­ sohn’s “Overture for Band” and Leslie Basset’s “ Designs, Images and Textures” w ill highlight a Sym phonic Band concert at 8 p.m. Sunday in. Gammage. “Concerto for Bass Tuba” w ill also be featured by guest soloist Raymond Nutaitis. Nutaitis will also conduct the Tuba/Euphonium Ensemble at 8 p.m. today In the Music Building Recital Hall. The ASU Horn Quartet, directed by W illiam Strickland, w ill be featured. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Herb Johnson, a name long synonymous with jazz, w ill be honored in a concert featuring the Armand Boatman Trio, the Charles Lewis Sextet, the Pete Magadini Quartet, the Keith Greco Trio and the ASU Jazz Ensemble^at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Gammage. Johnson has worked in the valley for KOOL-FM, KXIV and KUPD and has recently retired from KXTC. Admission is $1 at the door. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Three senior dance performances w ill be held at 8 p.m. Friday in the Women’s PE Dance Studio. “Kinetics” by Connie Curtis, *"*?*• «’ ***** w t-sf* r» . - “Prairie Song" “Shades of a -Faucher w ill be ☆ by Gloria Brendle and People” by Arlene E llis featured in the works. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ "Brawny Australia,” k film that covers one of the world’s last frontiers, w ill be shown at 8 p.m. Friday in Gammage. Ken Armstrong „ who circled and criss-crossed the continent in three visits to Australia, w ill narrate the film . Tickets are on sale at the Gammage box office and Select-A-Seat outlets. ; j : . jt ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Seven bronzes by Auguste Rodin are now on display in the Matthews Center Gallery. The exhibit was made possible by the B. Gerald Cantor Collection and the B.G. Cantor Art Foundation of Los Angeles. ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ The Jazz Arts Quartet w ill be joined by the Richard Dales Chorale at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the M usic Theatre. Works by Charlie Parker, Michel Legrand, M iles Davis and Dizzy' G illespie w ill be featured. The chorale w ill present works by Cole Porter and Ira and George Gershwin. Free. Coming up: "Anyone Can W histle,” a musical by Stephen Sondheim and Arthur Laurents, w ill be staged by ASU Theatre and Players Club Council at 8 p.m. April 22-25 and May 1 and 2 in Lyceum. This is the annual scholarship benefit, produced entirely by students. Proceeds w ill aid ASU theatre students. Tickets are available at the Lyceum box office. Verdi’s “Falstaff,” one of the great 19th century masterpieces of comedy, w ill be staged by the Lyric Opera Theatre at 8 p.m. April 23,24, 28, 30 and May 1 in the Music Theatre. Based on Shakespeare’s “The Merry Wives of W indsor.” Tickets are on sale at the M usic Theatre and Select-ASeat. Vi- ... Audience 'brutally assaulted' at spectacular 'Marat/ Sade' An audience of 400 was brutally assaulted last Thursday night in the Music Theatre. They were attacked by a barrage of verbal and mimed violence in the University Theatre production of “The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul M arat as Performed by the Inmst«« of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of Marquis de Sade,” w ritten by Peter Weiss in 1964. This play-within-a-play is a semi-historical drama. In his later years the Marquis de Sade was confined to the Charenton asylum where he wrote and directed plays for the other inmates. However, the staging of the assassination of Jean-Paul M arat, the French revolutionary, is playwright Weiss’device. Weiss subjects the audience to the lunacies of > the inmates as they try to recreate Marat’s role in the revolution and his murder. De Sade gets involved in the play, cuing the actors, restraining them at times, and con­ tributing his own philosophies. The crux of the play evolves when de Sade and M arat become involved in a philosophical dialogue — de Sade as a selfish egotist and M arat a social idealist. De Sade says the revolution is futile; we all wind up on the compost heap anyway. In this production the philosophical premises of the play take a secondary role to the spectacular theatrics. Grotesque characters, mock torture, nudity, mimed copulation and ranting rhetoric prevent the audience from absorbing either Marat’s or de Sade’s ideologies. , The brutality of the play is interrupted oc­ casionally by the delightful musical score, which provides necessary relief to the tense audience. Needless to Say, M arat/Sade is an adult piece, and it was advertised as such. Nevertheless a few viewers came Unprepared for the savagery and walked out. If M arat/Sade is nothing else, it is a good exercise in bizarre and impactive theatre. N ew m an C e n te r to h o s t — Keary Cannon ' ' The Newman Center will present “Superstar,” based on songs from the rock opera “Jesus Christ Superstar" and Bible scriptures, at 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at the Newman Center, University Drive and College Avenue. The cast of more than 40 in­ cludes m usicians, dancers, soloists and choruses. Scripture readings will tie the production into the start of Holy Week. The production is free. •TATt Plw aS Is published by Artmna SUM University Tuesday through Friday riuttng the academic year, except holidays and examination periods. Entered as second dess matter at Tampa, AZ. S62S1. Jrian Judd, who plays the part of Jo su s.C h rist in the Newman Cantor production of "Superstar,” practices his part with the Apostles. The production will be presented at 8 p.m . Saturday and Sunday at the Newman Center. A p ril 8 , 1976 State P ress Page 11 A n t it e n u r e b ill d e fe a te d b y c o m m it t e e By Britton Bloom The Arizona House Government Operations Com-, mittee defeated a bill Wednesday th at was designed to eliminate tenure a t the state’s universities. The bill, sponsored by former Arizona Board of Regents member Rep. Elwood Bradford, D-Yuma, would have removed "any restrictions in terminations in employment.” The vote to defeat the measure, HB 2186, was 8-4. Bradford told committee members the bill would eliminate some of the “deidwood” teachers and force professors to put more effort into their Rep, Larry Bahill, D-Tucson, called the bill “very unfortunate. He said the bill was an effort to eliminate a “certain person” who has cost the state several thousand dollars in court costs, apparently former philosophy professor Morris Starsky. To get rid of that one person, Bahill said, the bill would destroy the entire higher education system. “There are methods to elinnnate dead wood. If there is some deadwood, use those methods, But let’s not make % possible to get rid of a teacher who just isn’t popular with administrators,” he said. Lawrence Woodall, executive director of the Arizona Board of Regents, said the bill would give ad­ m inistrators “an open season on professors.” Woodall said the bill would eliminate all restrictions on the Bring of teachers, which means professors could be fired for any reason from a personality conflict with their superiors to an improper haircuts He said good teachers will not come to Arizona? universities if they know they can be fired if, for example, the department head who hired them is removed. Dr. Glenn Overman, dean of the ASU College of Business Administration, said the ASU administration opposed the bill because teachers would not crane to Arizona as long as they could get tenure at other universities. ASU does not give automatic tenure, Overman said. There is a five-year probationary period fra* new teachers, and professors are “let go” every year, he said. Legislator claims enrollment hikes branch-campus need By Mike Tuhunello ASUV bulging enrollment has ' would not require expensive lab monument to sit in to have a heightened the need for a branch equipment or library facilities, quality education," she said. campus in west Phoenix, a state she said. “Bricks and mortar don't maka a legislator said. “We’re not talking about a full­ school worthwhile; it’s the Rep. Anne Lindeman, R- blown, 4-year campus,” she said. students and instructors.” Phoenix, is sponsoring a bill that “We’re m ostly • asking for She said the new school would would create a committee to classroom space where people serve stu d en ts who would study the branch-campus con­ can finish a degree program.” otherwise commute across the cept. The bill, which does not call W est-siders probably would Valley to ASU, and 8,000 public for legislative funding, has not be “fussy” about the size and school teachers who live west of cleared the House and is now some of a branch campus, she Central Avenue, many of whom before the Senate. The Glendale said. want to continue their education, City Council and Westside “You don’t have to have a she said. University Committee have both expressed support for th e T h re t day« only — A p ril 7-9 measure, Lindeman said. PETER B R O O K ’S The p resen t stu d en t population is about 34,000. Administrators estimate 37,000 may enroll next fall. “If we’re not going to limit enrollment,” said Lindeman, “we’re going to have to build HiA Shakespeare fo r somewhere. The question we have to ask is, ’Where would we best serve the public interest?’ our tim e s" “ASU has just about run out of IN N O C EN CE, T R E A C H E R Y space. When you start looking at and M AD N ESS the price of land around ASU, $1.00 before 5:30 Mon.-Thure. you’re looking at real money. There’s still a lot of vacant land on the W est Side.” lindem an said the educational 509 S MII Ave. Tw o n ig htly perform ances needs of M aricopa County by Shakespeare & Co« 5:30 end 0:15 residents have not been met, She cited figures compiled by the W estside group that show ASU SPECIAL EVENTS BOARD PRESENTS has less square footage of classroom space per student tluut NAU and the UofA despite the fact th at the Phoenix area contains 56 per cent of Arizona’s population. The type of facility the westsiders want is a senior division and graduate school which would SPEA KER : R EP. SAR AH WEDDINGTON complement both ASU and THURSDAY APRIL 8th 12:30 Arizona Rm M .U . Glendale Community College, 8:00 G R EA T HALIL of the College of Law Lindeman said. The new campus NO ADMISSION would stress business, education and liberal arts courses an< Hie Red-Eye Special Friday Nit» King Lear 9 PHI-4 AM BOOKSTORE SPECIALS ★ DUTCH AUCTION SCHÜTZ MOVIE ORGY FOOD EATING CONTESTS (Get d etails today when you register on the M all or at the MU A ctiv itie s Center) Valley Art ABORTION-THE RIGHT TO DECIDE 3456 If' ever you see a suspicious character — som e guy hanging around a bike rack or lurking by a dorm — call the University Police at 3456. No names nec­ essary. And no v ictim le ss crimes, please. Saturday 10 PM & 12 PM $1.00 at Neeb H all BINGO it PORTRAITS AMAZING HANOI: ESCAPE ARTIST (MU Ideas & Issues) TONIGHT SHOW Van Buck ROOMMATE GAME - S id C otter NAME THAT TUNE t DISCO MUSIC J.D. Freeman HORSE RACING TREASURE HUNT - $50 prize NEWIYWED GAME i Ron Brooks, K T A R T.V. // The Newly Opened AUTUMN MOON for the finest in Chinese Smorgasbord LU N CH 11 AM -3 PM — $1.67 DINNER 5 PM-9 PM — $2.15 SU N D AY 12 Noon- 8 PM — $2."15 T A K E OUT SER VICE A V A ILA B LE — O PEN 7 D AYS A W EEK - Star Trek Reefer Madness GAMES (sponsored by Recreation Com m ittee) (MU F ilm Com m ittee) 3456 B loopers.. .and TOURNAMENTS ★ r ! i i L. Half Price With This Coupon 1 Dinner Only j Offer Expires April 18/76 j 70 N. Country Club Dr. Mesa NO-TAUNT' TAUNT SHOW ORPHEUS - ROCK BAND SKOOL DAZE (MU Art Com m ittee) ALL-HITE FOOD (Saga Food Services) TRICYCLE RACES (MU Entertainm ent Com m ittee) Free Popcorn ONE FREE BAG POPCORN WITH TH IS CO UPO N C O U R TESY S A G A FO O D SER VICE Red-Eye Special * M em orial Union F rid a y ,A p ril 9,1976 9 pm to 4 am Page 12 State Press April 8,1976 Students who want first choice of Sun Devil football season tickets must apply by May 7. B est grid seats Applications received by that date will be included in a lottery for seat assignments. The seating sections within the student section will be divided vertically in half. One-half will be used for season tickets and one-half for the regular game-by-game pickup, according to Terry Wojtulewicz, athletic to go by M ay 7 siaw ★ PressC la s s if ie d A d s Help Wanted ★ Announcem ents M ODELS: Part time, full time. We are currently looking for additional girls to become a Model by Michaelson. We do swimwear, sleepwear modeling, shows, in restaurants throughout the Valley. We can schedule you around your classes, daily. Michaelson Enterprises — 279-1605. 4-16 ★ Photo by Marola Jo y Prouaa Tandy Collins of Delta Delta Delta sorority finds an unusual way to make a splash — via a dunking machine. The machine was ond of .eight booths at the carnival sponsored by the Greek Week Entertainment Committee. All proceeds from the booths benefited the Hemophilia Society. State Press to publish weekly sum m er editions The State Press will publish a weekly edition during each of the ten weeks Of the 1976 summer session, the Student Publications Advisory Board has announced. Formerly the Division of Summer Sessions published its own Summer News. Applications for the positions of editor, staff writer, photographer and advertising salesman of the summer State Press will be accepted by Edward H. Peplow J r., manager of student publications, until Friday, April 16. All positions must be filled by regularly registered summer sessions students. Candidates from all academic disciplines will be given equal considertion. Candidates should submit their name, address, telephone number, course load to be taken during summer sessions, outline of previous journalism experience and a brief statem ent of planes for running a successful weekly campus newspaper. The editorial staff will be paid fixed monthly salaries, while advertising salesman will be paid on commission. Applications should be turned in at Stauffer Hall A-lll. SINGING telegrama are back. Let us dial an occasion. Birthdays, anniversaries, “Love Gram s,” etc. 24 hour service. 9B7-1015 or 9696718._________ _____________ 4-16 DOG gone? Get your lost pet home quickly and safelyl W e engrave metal tags with your phone, city, and pot’s name for $2.50. Pet Love, 4001 North 66th Place, Scottsd a le .A Z 85251.9466865.__________ ¿ 9 COMMUNITY College teaching jobs. Excel­ lent opportunities. Information/Application $1.00: Search, Box 2652, Eugene, Oregon 97402. 4.14 SWIM instructors: Summer Employment. WSI and Experience required. Temps YM CA, 968-9286. . 4.14 WILL pay Law Student to research Arizona Law on Probate and partitioning of property. Call 968-5452 evenings and weekends.____________________ 4.9 A M A T EU R models, must be attraction with outgoing personality. I will exchange photos for your portfolio, In return for your hslp photographically Illustrating my new book, The Creative Mind. 991-4487. 4-8 SUMMER WORK If you had a Job in which you coliid clear $850.00 a month it might be worth it to leave the state and work for the summer. Olympia Brewing Company, Olympia, Washington *OLY*® ome things never change. I First hinted at in 1919 with a patent for “a tool with which to open milk and fruit cans!’ the sleek steel line of the classic beer hook had to await the invention of the beer can by American Can in 1935. When employee Dewey Sampson was detailed to invent this penultimately functional t o o l , . succeeded in uniting 30 years of thirsty ^ throats with the contents of millions of cans of Oly. It took skill and ingenuity and the result just can’t be improved upon. The same goes for Oly. Some things never change. A great beer doesn’t change. Olympia never will. S Beer doesn't get any better. * Services H AN D Embroidering of colorful designs on B lu e Je a n s , D enim J a c k e ts , .S h irts, Blouses, and Dresses. Many designs to choose from or design your own. Matai stud setting also done. Call 968-4254 for je ta ijs^ ~4-8 ★ Transportation EUROPnfromTSSoTtTA^^ r.t.) Africa (from $712 r.t.) Charter flights around the aprid. Eurail passes Inter­ continental Travel Service, 2031 Broadway, Suite 3, Boulder Colorado 80302. (44375844-23 + Lost/FniinH FOUND: Female puppy, about three months old. Vicinity- La Paz Apartments. Cream and white, no collar. C a ll 966-5808 4-8 daytime, 968-7083 nights._________ SAM O YED female puppy, all white, dark brown collar. Named Bear. Reward. Call 967-8463. Anytime, day or evening. 4-9 FO U N D March 26, near Rural and Broad'«ay. Small black poodle male. Distinguish­ ing gray markings. Five to seven years old. Call 9686688. 4.11 ★ Personal ★ Automobiles VW Bus, 1965 with 7 3 engine, Mechan­ ically sound, runs very strong, $700. 965-2051._________________ '4.13 1967 Buick Le Sabre Auto, Air, Power Steering. Runs now but needs some work. $300.965-2051. ¿13 VANS: Customized van conversions and complete line of van accessories, reason­ able prices and friendly people. Call Arizona Van Conversions, 273-1468. 4-9 Executive Positions for Graduating Women Executive Secretarial ' Placem ent 123 East University 068-9075 4-22 EUROPE-ISRAEL Student -flights year round. I S C A 11687 San Vicente Blvd. No. 4 L.A . Calif. 90049 (213) 826-5669, 8264)956. 4-30 E U R O PE AM 800-325-4867 UmTravel C harters .4-30 ' INTERESTED in No-Frills, low cost Jet Travel to Europe, Africa, the Middle East, the Far East? Educational Flights has been helping people on a budget with maximum flexibility and minimum hassle for six years. For more information call, toll free 800-325-8034. _______ 4_16 60 win ne now TYPING: IBM Selectrlc ||, Correcting, Dissertations, Theses, Research, and Term Papers. Rosemary Vance, 967-9143. 4-30 EXPERIENCED Typing In ail phases. Reasonable, neat, fast, accurate. Near ASU. Mary, 949-5638._________ 4-30 ★ Wanted WRITERS and actorsw ant3d"for'"radio drama to begin September. 833-3812, Doug Smith, KDKB. _____________ 4-15 ★ For Sale LA R G E selection of men's and ladles’ sandals. We have th e jie w multi-colored deckers. A ll sizes, In all colors. Backdoor Shop, 707S.Foreat. 966-1772,_______ 4-30 RUBBER boats $39.95. Parachutes for shade $6.95 and up. Backpacks, sleeping bags, tarps, rope, canteens, and lots of other fun camping Items at Checkerboard Arrrty and Navy Stores. 1128 West Main Mesa. 834-7047._________' 4^3 B A C K again Mexican Embroidered shirts, blouses, dresses — new patterns — more styles. Every Saturday and Sunday. Phoenix Greyhound Swap Meet. Space 371. 4-30 Puppieel Puppies! All breeds, $10. Shepherds, Dobermans, Labs, Setters, you naroe It. Protect-A-pet Kennels. 833 4 .Q RUN DLE’S: Com er of Mlll/Unlverelty. Quarts 7-Crown $5.99, Sths Walkers Vodka $3.99, Corra kegs. 4-15 U SED Yashica 35mm camera, $65 or best offer. Nancy 988-1656.___________ 4-9 HP-35 $140. Tape deck $25. Steve, 965-6166 8:00 to 5:00. 4.9 KING SIZE Innersprlng mattress, box springs, still in package. $189. Queer, $159, usually home 838-1907,937-40034-18 HIGH Security deadbolt installed in your door. $13.95 complete. Pro-tech, 968-5286 or 276-9891._________________ ' 4.31 KING size innersprlng mattress, box springs, frame, still packaged. Value $399, sail $189. Queen sized,* value $349, sell $169. Includes delivery. 838-1907. Usually home. _____ 4-9 O FFIC E space for lease. 600 sq. ft. $210 per mo. Next door to new Fiesta Inn. For Information call 967-9419. 4-8 N EAR to ASU. Huge 3 bedroom, large yard, no lease required. Kids and pets OK. $125. 968-9317. Small fee. yalley Homes. 4-9 UTILITIES paid. Spacious one bedroom home, close to class. $ 110. 968-9317. Small fee. Valley Homes. 4-9 FOUR bedroom house, 3 blocks from ASU. Carpet/drapes throughout. Available 4/1 $300.947-3698.___________ 4.14 2-Day Grand Canyon Raft Trips — Special Student Rata, $69.50 April 10/11, 12713,14/14 and 17/18 Group Discounts Call Lisa 968-6543 ____ EXPERIENCED with Turabian and Camp­ bell. Near campus. Call Debra 967-2305 or Patti 967-4937, __________ 4.30 ★ For Rent/Lease ★ Travel ★ Travel N EAR ASU. Research papers, theses,, dissertations. English degree. Editing ' Work guaranteed. 7 years experience. 967-8155._________ 4.30 INFINITY M o n ito r J r. — Prototype Speakers. Speaker contains all Infinity components — 12" woofer, 4” midrange. Peerless Midtweeter, Peerless tweeter. Full frequency range; excellent sound. Must heas to appreciate. $300. After 6 p.m. 8 3 3-5 1 6 0.________ 4.9 desires sparing partner. C a ll T w o Fingers. 4.-14 ^ ___ CHAM PION ® / 2 fa re < § ) B » jipq A ★ FIN G ER W R ESTLER Phone 946-2184 TERM PAPERS, resumes, theses, disser­ tations, Professional; guaranteed work. IBM, Maxine Mullen, 955- 0763. (Minimum 10 pagesT ' " 4^0 FO R sale: 1965 B S A 650 Custom Chopper, good condition, $1800, includes two helmets and lock, 834-3510. 4-14 A C TO R S between assignments, work In­ cognito for Time Tela-Marketlng in Tempo. If you have direct sales experience and can work evenings or week-ends, and have a friendly, intelligent telephone manner: please call 968-7249 for confidential inter­ view. Salary plus bonus, full-time summer work available.______ 4-15 C O U N SELO R S wanted for Jewish Day Cam p In Phoenix. Call Cantor Taff, 944-3350 or 246-6666. 4.9 n ess C o lle g e G rad uate. 65 c/d oub lespaced page. Experienced. Anita. 9669088.______ _. .! 4-30 4-10 1972 Suzuki TS185J only 2900 miles, like new $460. Rich 994-4868, before 3 p .m . 4-14 71 Triumph 500. Good condition. $500. 275-0463.___ _ PEO PLE needed to sell flowers.Tempe street comers. Cash paid daily. Sunshine Flowers, 256-9942. 4.22 TYPING. Guaranteed! Quality paper. B u si­ p.r TW O waitresses, two cocktail waitresses, broiler man, bartenders 19 and over. Apply at Tempo Racquet and Swim Club. Call Scott, 968-9231, 4-13 H USBAN D and wife as hquseparents for 6 mentally handicapped adults. Training/ experience in counseling, special education or psychology preferred. Room, board, salary. Contact Marc Center, 969-3600.4-14 ★ Typing M otorcycles 7 3 Sportster $1850. Call after 8 268-7513. For Rent/Lease FO U R bedroomTrefrigeratedl, double garage, patio, fenced yard. Many more extras. $325/month. Call 965-4833 o r966-0155 4t13 AiJRjcson4A Z ^572T ^^^^^^^^p *00._____________________ ¿14 O V E R S E A S Jobe — summer/year-round. Europe, South America, Australia, Asia, etc. A ll fields, $500-$1200 monthly. Ex­ penses paid, sightseeing. Free Information Write: International Job Center, Dept. AD, Box 4490, Berkeley, C A , 94704.______ 4-23 ★ $100 Reward for definite information leading to arrest o f vandals to cars on Campus lot. Contact Campus Security 4-9 Police.__________ ______________ TRY a relaxing summer in Mexico. Details from Guadalajara Summer School, U. of ATTRACTIVE Go-Go girls and waitresses. Good pay. 902 club. 252-0726 from 9:00 to S p la sh ticket manager. Students who apply after May 7 will bp assigned seats on a first-come-first served basis. All applications for student season tickets must be received by August 27. The cost for a season ticket is $10, which covers the $l-per-game charge and a $3 handling fee, Wojtulewicz said. Applications are ageilable at the Sun Devil Ticket Office and the various information desks on campus. 4-9 O N E bedroom Co-op Apt. near HaydenMcKellips. Large rooms, pool, laundry, free maintenance. Quiet. Tax deductible rent: only $121.00. Call Rick: days 967-1608 or evenings at 962-6263.__________ 4-14 ★ Instruction PAR ACH UTE Jumping Instruction. Learr safe, supervised procedures and tech­ niques at U.S. Parachute Service, ova fifteen years experience. East Phoenix, Saturday classes $19.95 with this ad. Sigr up 275-0010. 4-i A p ril 8 ,1 9 7 6 State P ress Page 13 Psychology prof savs 'Brainwashing'term false f o r C A R P in d o c tr in a tio n John Edman The Unification Church uses an effective in­ doctrination technique, but it is not quite brainwashing, according to the chairman of the ASU psychology department. People use the term brainwashing “when the effects on someone are contrary, to the way you want them to behave,” Dr. Leonard Goldstein said/ “When attitudes develop that are contrary to prevailing attitudes of society, you argue that there has to be some mysterious technique,” he said. By Goldstein said brainwashing, as'defined by traditional military standards, involves star­ vation, depriving a person of sleep and inhumane medical care. He cited the Korean War POW camps as prime examples. At a press conference last week, a Pima County deputy attorney accused the controversial religious sect of practicing a multistep brain­ washing process. He said the process involved isolates the subject from family and friends, controls rest periods and enforces a low-protein diet. Dave Jensen, president of the church’s student organization CARP, said, “I do not know of any one instance when a member of the Unification Church was forcibly kept from members of their family. Church officials urge us to w rite our parents.” Jensen said members are not forced to live in the communal church centers. They do so “because it offers a higher spritual atmosphere and affords a better opportunity for study. “There are some members of the church who are so scared that their parents are going to kidnap them, that they aren't about to come home,” he said. Responding to charges that church members' sleep patterns are controlled, Jensen said residents at the CARP Center, 228 E.‘ 14th St., Tempe, are not told when to go to bed. But they do get up together. He said they usually go to bed between midnight and 1a.m . Inventor blasts methods used to teach technology courses By Kevin Chambers Methods used in teaching technology in Am erican u n iversities are “radically w rong,” according to a researcher studying the more efficient use of technology. Dr. Jerry Plunkett, an in­ ventor and consultant, said he has worked with technology g rad u ates who can w rite, research, report and analyze technical data but lack the capacity to innovate. ~ Plunkett', who heads the National Center for Appropriate Technology in Butte, Mont., spoke in the MU Monday night in the first of a two-part series sponsored by Arizona Friends of the Earth. . The federally funded center is designed to help low-income inventors develop inexpensive and efficient methods of heating and cooling their homes. “Something is radically W ong with- the processes used in teaching technology. I have reservations about the quality of the process with regard to up­ coming students,” Plunkett said. In his speech “Research and Development for Low Income Needs in the U .S.,” Plunkett said the image of technology as a servant to th e people has become distorted. He added he “likes to think th at technological activity is highly rational,” but said too much money is being spent on fprms of technology that cannot work. “People are being -asked to adopt technological mon­ strosities that are useless,” Plunkett said. Plunkett cited the Concorde SST, the controversial Franco British supersonic jet, as an example of “technology run wild.” Plunkett said the Con­ corde is a symptomatic example of technology’s future and a “tour de force” with very few ad­ vantages. Plunkett said research and developm ent needs to be evaluated. It should first create knowledge to understand the physical world ’and then apply this new knowledge to benefit mankind, he said. Plunkett said a recent study shows technological ad­ vancement (excluding medical technology) has increased the income levels of upper — and middle — class persons at the expense of the low-income classes. This “research and developm ent m achine” has caused social instability and created economic d isparity among classes, Plunkett said. P lu n k ett described ap­ propriate technology as «-“kind of cause in which new life styles should be developed.” He added technology should be developed that would be useful to lowincome persons and would also benefit the upper —- and middle — income population. Plunkett clarified his emphasis on low-income persons, citing the effects of the energy crisis on th a t group. “Lower-income persons use about one-third as much energy as middle- and upper-income persons," Plunkett said. Plunkett added he believes lower-income persons will bè the first to be supplied with solar Loan, Buy, Sell or Trade Anything of Value — NEW or USED — SAGUARO PAWN SHOP ITS V. iifc V Diam onds, W atches, Jew elry, R adios, TVs, Furniture, M usical Instrum ents, A p plian ces, Stereos, T ools, Antiques, G o lf C lu b s, etc. In Scottsdale Plaza 2200 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale , (V4 block South of Oak) Special-Engagem ent Rings Wedding Rings *34.95 A up Phone 947-0639 energy. Hu said wood stoves are cu rrently a ta rg e t for development, adding they are a practical innovation for lowincome persons. Red Cross. The Good Neighbor. Leonard Goodstefn Tune-Up Special for VUPs Datsun's & Toyota's Plugs, Points, Condenser, Valve Adjl & Oil Change With Filter v w ......... ................. .$24.50 DATSUN.......................... $34.95 ( TOYOTA....... . . . . . . . . . $ 39.95 (Sundance » m X apa ch e il y o . TEMPE MS-7719 7 . . A lftO filO tlV e Star Trek B loopers.. .and Reefer Madness Saturday 10 PM & 12 PM $1.00 at Neeb H all certain majors to becom e Lieutenants. H O R SEB A CK R ID IN G 50* Discount to ASU Students with this ad. PAPAGO STABLES Tempe 966-9793 % M ils N . o f A S U S ta d iu m Mechanical and'civil en­ faring fult scholarships. All gineering majors . . . areooffering $100 a month space and aeronautical en­ allowance during the last gineering majors. . . majors two years of the-program. 'in electronics . . . computer Flying opportunities. And all science . . . mathematics. leading to an Air Force offiThe Air Force needs peo­ cerscom m ission.plus a d ­ ple . . . many with the above vanced education. a c a d e m ic m a jo rs . And If you’d like to cash in on AFROTC has several differ­ these Air Force benefits, ent programs where you start by looking into the Air can f i t . . . 4-year, 3-year, or Force ROTC. 2-year programs. Some ofContact Dept of Aerospace Studies At ASU , or phone 965-3181 Put it all together in Air Force ROTC. TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION™ PROGRAM ASU Introductory Lecture ^ u n d a y , April 11 :30 PM Coconino Room, Memorial Union or Monday, April 12 12:40 PM, Gammage Hall, Rm. 158 ‘ for further Info call 257-8611 as founded by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi Page 14 .State Press April 8+1976 38-7Devils take on UofA in opener o f 'rea B y M ike N atter The Devils have played 45 baseball games this year but the season actually begins tonight when ASU takes on the University of Arizona in the first game of a threegame series. T he s e c o n d - ra n k e d Wildcats will pit their 32*10 record and a ten-game winning streak against top ranked ASU’s impressive 38-7 mark in the Western Athletic Conference opener for both teams in Packard Stadium a t 7:30 this evening. - . “Arizona is definitely the strongest team we’ve faced this year,” commented ASU coach Jim Brock, “and we've played Texas, Oklahoma and Cal-Fullerton. “In previous yekrs Arizona hasn't played the type of schedule we have played and their record redly wasn't indicative, but .they have played a com­ Blonde Devil parable schedule this year. games on a swing through Their record speaks for California. But the wounds have itself,” Brock said. healed and w ith th ree After an impressive 20-2 recent wins over The start a t home, the 'Cats U niversity of Southern confronted the road and California in their pocket, some injuries at the same the 'Cats will be coming to time and lost five of eight Tempe healthy and hot. continued pag* 15 111 E. University tow er Center Behind Baskin-Robbins ÏJV SPOT" fo r Tbps an d B ottom s a t R easonable Prices O veralls, P a in te r B ants P ipes, P a p e rs a n d T hings Custom S kirts And out ever popular Re­ cycled Denim Jean s at 4.99 and C u to ffs at 2.49 Free yo-yo w ith $10.00 purchase 966-7083 M on.-Sat.10-6 Photo cyraary cannon Jim Peterson might have a lighthearted sense of humor. But with the 'Cats in town the Devil righthander is all business. IGOTMINEAT M BASE! I i I I European Ra»lro8ds,Box70 Bohcmto, Now York 11716 I m a full-time student and l'm interested in doing Europe for peanuts. Please send me your free brochure. ¡ i Name ;■■ II; Address . I ,,,ft, | taty . ;| ::State.,-........... .X.....Zip... 1■ . A terrific way to go. Europe a traina < are fast, dean, on time. And they go all d te tohd C°Yn,inent ^ n d e sm ^ tro rt 10% off April 9-16 5625 S. Central, Phoenix 111 E. University in Tow er Center, Tempe 966-4947 Special Holy Week Services ~~ A l ALL SAINTS 1 , NEWMAN CENTER i^ fa ^ ^ t^ ^ x ^ fe lh e w h ^ e ^ *j Europe by train. Warrtto stop, see towns, comb beaches? Feel free. There’s a train going your way w hen.. you’re ready to make tracks. Lots of stations even rent bikes if you'd, like to wheel it to re while. You'll have . a fantastic trip, meet Europeans, make new friends, see more and spend teas : than most any other way of going. A i -1 Student Rallpass, two months $195. j In Britain, a variety of Youth | d Passes fltim $60 to $120. B y the j M way, you buy the passes here, J fl they're not avaHabt* in Europe. JM See your Travel Agent. College Ave. & Univ. Drive Tempe PALM SUNDAY — April 11 Mass on the Grass 10:00 am, 11:30 am & 6:00 pm. Palm Procession — Drama of the Passion — Music by GOD UNLIMITED SUPERSTAR Musical Production at 8 pm Saturday & Sunday (April 10 & 11) ADMISSION FREE TUESDAY -> APRIL 13 COMMUNAL PENANCE SERVICE 7:30 pm JIM * §§|y HOLY THURSDAY - April 15 Mass of the Lord's Supper — T.30 pm GOOD FRIDAY — April 16 Communion Service and Liturgy — 11:45 am & 7:30 pm. Confessions: 5 to 5:30 pm & 8:30 to 9:00 pm HOLY SATURDAY — April 17 Confessions: 5:00 to 5:30 pm & 7:30 to 8:00 pm EASTER VIGIL Mass and Liturgy begins at 11:00 pm EASTER SUNDAY MASSES 8:30 am & Folk Masses at 10:00 am, 11:30 am & 6 pm 50c Pancake Breakfast After the Saturday night Mass and thé Sunday morning Masses JP o ¿5 m v % ÊL * ' i M m ■^wm, ^ ty i . o the great trains A p ril 8,1 9 7 6 S tate P ress Page 15 More about Arizona State Baseball Statistics (45 Games: W-38, L-7) Player Westlake Pate Landreaux Humphry Homer Colbem Phelps Allenson Peters Bando Hudgens Q Avg HR RBI AB 42 43 45 42 35 44 41 33 42 14 18 Henaerson 31 R ajsich 37 Nyman 32 Lucy 11 Hildebrandt 28 PITCHERS 45 ASU OPP App W-L 13 9-1 7 3-0 10 9-0 14 5-1 7 3-0 7 2-3 6 1-0 8 4-1 11 2-1 45 38-7 45 7-38 8 swimmers All-Americans 2B 3B TB POt. ERA H SO 1.43 57 133 2.00 15 12 3.21 75 63 54 3.84 32 3.91 32 12 42 24 4.29 4.85 15 5 24 5.30 42 44 21 6.69 3.48 376 326 7.73 527 173 38-7 Sun Devils meet U ofA continued from pope 14 The : W ildcats are a powerful offensive team with a balanced hitting attack, Brock said. Senior Dave Stegman is the Wildcats* top hitter with a .455 average. “The best thing I can say about Stegman is he*s a senior and we won’t haye to face- him again,” Brock joked. “He’s the best hitter in college baseball. I had never seen anyone as hot as Bob / Pate when he was hitting .400. Stegman has been hitting .450 the whole season. He ju st never wastes an a t bat." F irst baseman Pete Van Horn, described by Brock as the ‘Cats’ most improved player, has driven home 44 runs and has rocked seven homers while hitting .320. The Wildcats post a team batting average of .310 compared to the Devils’ .333. ASU has hit 49 home rubs. UofA has 33. Devil ace Floyd Bannister (9-1, 1.43 ERA) will start Thursday against either Steve Powers (5-2, 3.46) or Craig Gioia (7-2, 2.10) for UofA. Gioia is a sinkerball piteher w ithout over­ powering stuff, according to Brock. Gioia has had a tough time against ASU. Last year he was knocked out in the fifth inning. He has a lifetime 8.60 ERA against the Sun Devils. “They say this series is a m atter of life and death,” Brock commented, “But actually it means a lot more than that.” Trem endous Savings! Entire IP Inventory 20% OFF R ock, Jazz, C la ssica l, Easy Listening HILL'S Books • Records Posters • Newspapers Accessories 901 S. M ill • Tempo Center • 967-5243 A ll Record S ales Fin al No- Refunds — No Exchanges R a d ie M e e k r T h e ASU women’s swimming team is well represented on this year’s All-American team. E ight Devils w ere honored, and five of the girls received awards in more than one event. Karen Andrus, Cappi Siefarth, Libby Tullis, and Sally Tuttle teamed for AllAmerican honors in the 400meter freestyle jrelay, Olympic Gold-medalist Melissa Belote was named in the 50,100 and 200 freestyle events as well as in the 200 meter individual medely. Sophomore Jo F red­ rickson was cited in the 200 freestyle relay along with Libby Tullis, Cappi Siefarth and Sally Tuttle. Pam Rodgers was named in th e 50 and 100 backstroke. . Diver Theresa Brookbank was named in the one-meter event. , £:. After placing second in the AIAW championships a year ago, the Devils dropped to fifth this year. But coach Mona Plummer was happy with the team’s showing. “Three of our best girls are train in g for the Olympics and we missed them,” she said. “But the times improved and with a full team next year we’re hoping for improvement.” AN EXTRAORDINARY REALISTIC :© SYSTEM AT 9 9 90 OFF! e Realistic STA-225 AM -FM Stereo Receiver with Auto-M agic ® FM Tuning • Two Realistic Optim usSB Walnut Veneer Floor Speaker System s • Realistic LAB-IOO M anual Turntable, Base, Dust Cover, $39.95 Value Elliptical Cartridge Regular Separate Items P ric e ... 728.90 s629 . . . and you can CHARGE IT A t Radio Stack R E A R E N G IN E S L td . $ 1. 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SCOTTSDALE WAY Woolco Plaza M4-Sjn 839-4570 .TEM PE SHOPPING CENTER 917 VI*. TANDY CORPORATION COMPANY • 1813:106 BASELINE RD. M ill A v e . ' M o s t ite m s a ls o av a ilab le a t R a d io S h o c k D ealers. L o o k f o r th is sig n in y o u r n e ig h b o rh o o d . PRICES MAV VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES Regents study liquor law for fícense request review By JofcnEdman The Arizona Board of Regents is' studying requirm ents for* a sta te liquor license in preparation for its meeting; April 9 and 10 in Tempe where it will consider applying for a license. S tudent leaders have requested the regents obtain a liquor license so alcohol Can be served on campus. Although the regents have already received a report from the attorney general that they can legally make an application, board spokesmen said other questions need to be. answered. “The basic question is wbat kind of license would we need," said Jam es E . D unseath, chairman of the regents policy committee. “We assume it would be a series-six license, which covers all types of liquor (beer, wine, hard liquor). It’s a full license, which is what we wanted." Dunseath said th e series-six license is available on a quota basis and could be purchased for $12,000 to $20,000k However, no license of this type will be issued by the state for a year. "The second question is where ■■jin we sell liquor on the cam­ pus," .said Dunseath. "Can . we sell liquor in th e football stadium, in the field house, or other areas on campus? We’re trying to find out under which license moet of the campus can be served." A possible alternative is to apply for a dub license, which FREE FRIDAYI Lost something? Found anything? You may ad­ vertise it free in Friday’s State Press classified ads, courtesy of Western Savings. Today is the deadline! Pick up and fill out the form at A-111 .Stauffer or at the University Lost & Found desk, Main floor, MU. 3456 If ever y o u s e e a s u s p ic io u s c h a ra cte r — s o m e g u y h a n g in g a ro u n d a b ik e rack o r lu rk in g by a d o rm — c a ll the U n iv e rs ity P o lic e at 3456. N o n a m e s n e c e s s a ry . A n d n o v ic tim le s s c rim e s , p le a s e . 3456 “I think the prospects look good, but it’s going to take time,” said Dunseath. “We can’t work it out overnight. The big problem is getting the actual license." SUNSET'S GIANT BUYING POWER HAS DONE IT AG AIN ! Japanese official says colleges set student careers A Japanese g rad u ate’s lifestyle is determined by thè university he graduates from, said a Japanese government administrator visiting ASU to research sm all A m erican businesses. This is why Japanese universities are called “Ivory Towers,” Shaji Ógawa said. “In Japan, em ploym ent practices are very different. Once you graduate and get a job, you will probably have that job for the rest of your life,” Ogawa said. Ogawa said there are probably five times more people in Japan who want to go to school than there are facilities for them. Because of th e se ' crow ded conditions entrance exams are very difficult and students must strive to attend the better universities, he said. Ogawa said he is very im­ pressed with U.S. universities because they are integrated with society. “I attended a small business seminar in which many persons from the general society and the professors from this faculty ” held a discussion, he srid. “This kind of thing is very rare in Japan,” he added. has basically the same rights as a series-six, but is not as ex­ pensive, Denseath said. A club license restricts sales to mem­ bers of a chib, he added. 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