thursday* g a te p r e s . Arizona State University V o l 58 N o . 106, A p ril 29, 1976 ■ V 1 Tempe, Arizona J Committee approves bill to equalize staff salaries ■, * r , £ \ ••• ; By B ritton Bloom The House Education Committee ap­ proved a bill W ednesday calling for th e Arizona Board of Regents to form ulate a plan to equalize salaries and standardize job descriptions for staff employes a t th e state’s universities. The bill, SB 1222, was passed by the Senate in March. But th e original bill was expanded by an am endm ent by Rep. John W ettaw , R-Flagstaff. The am endm ent hot only calls for a plan to create uniform job descriptions and equal pay, but also for th e implementation of th e plan. W et'taw’s am endm ent calls for 25 per cent of th e universities’ employes and supervisory personnel to be brought to pay parity by July 1, 1977. T hereafter a quarter of th e employes would b e phased into parity every six m onths until all employes receive equal pay for th e same job by July 1,1979. , “We’re asking th e board of regents to take a look a t the situation a t th e universities and to rep o rt back to th e legislature,” Rep. Jam es Sossaman, RHigley, chairm an of th e Education Committee, said. “We’re asking them to design a plan to phase (staff employes) in (to pay parity) over a tw o-year period.” Sossaman added th a t Rep. Anne Lifideman, R-Phoenix, suggested th e local wage rates be taken into account when th e _ - regents form ulate th eir pay recom­ m endations. By using the local wage rates and cost of living to base»»the new wage scale on, Sossaman said he felt th e legislature could avoid creating an inequality betw een th e universities’ employes and th e outside labor m arket. Having passed the Education Com- . m ittee, th e bill will be heard in the House G overnm ent O p eratio n s and R u les Com mittees before th e whole House acts , on it. Sossaman said he feels th e bill has a good chance of passing th e House. Since i t ' has been amended after th e Senate passed it, he added, th e bill will have to go to a joint comm ittee w ith the Senate to gain the upper cham ber’s approval of th e changes. J But Sossaman said W ettaw , th e amendment’s sponsor, already has Spoken to m em bers of th e Senate and reported they have no objections to his am endm ent. The bill will not become p a rt of Arizona’s statu tes, Sossaman said. Instead it will become a session law, which is a statem ent of in ten t by th e legislature having the pow er of law, he said. A fter th e regents subm it th eir plan next A student in Crafts for the Elementary School Teachers year, th e law will have served its purpose [ARE420] launches a makeshift kite Tuesday near the art and will “self-destruct,” Sossaman said. building. H igh flig h t Legislator blasts organization ; ,'■■■ ' f*®' V - , Skel/y wants gays' dance halted - •- By Greg Smith A dance sponsored by a campus gay organization is planned Saturday night at ASU, but Rep. James Skelly, RPhoenix, wants University of® ficials to stop it. Skelly also says the Committee to Form a Gay Campus Organization should lose its recognition as ~ an official , , * ‘ ’ | ' - ^ University club. Greg Carmack, executive director of the group, said Skelly has intimidated members of the University Scheduling Board and has advocated ¿he violation of civil rights laws. •Carmack, however, declined to name those he says Skelly in­ -, . lip , jgj! •• ' . ,4- * * 'I i • •* y--jL-.« Skelly was not available W ednesday to answ er the charges. • •-.i WELCOME WAGON INTERNATIONAL An Equal Opportunity Emptoyer__ TO FINANCE YOUR GRADUATION G IFTS Sum m er Sessions 1976 AFRICANS CHALLENGE KISSINGER KINISHA, Zaire — Black Africans challenged Secretary of State Henry Kissinger to make good on his pledge of opposition to white minority regimes Wednesday. f FORD KNOCKS REAGAN FORT WORTH, Tex. — President Ford, in . a campaign speech, questioned whether his Republican challenger, Ronald Reagan, is capable of the responsibilities of the presidency. DOG TRACK CIRCUIT CHALLENGED PHOENIX — A. proposal to break up the Funk Greyhound -J Racing Circuit’s control of Arizona’s six dog-racing tracks and a horse track was approved Wednesday by the House 47-10. . HUMPHREY GAUGES CHANCES J W/kSHINGTON — Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn.rsays he may authorize an “exploratory committee’’ to assess whether or not he should become an active Democratic presidential candidate. MOSCOW WARNS OF MIDEAST ERUPTION MOSCOW — The Kremlin declared Wednesday that the Mideast is fraught with the danger of a “new military explosion and called for a “radical political settlement” of the Palestinian situation. ' KENNEDY BREAKS PROMISE WASHINGTON — Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., broke a promise to keep Sen. Ba?iry Goldwater, R-Ariz., posted on an Indian water-rights bill before it was introduced, Goldwater said in a Senate speech Tuesday. off varying lengths during the months off June, July & August Liberal Arts courses in psychology, international relations. archaeology, religious studies School of Business Administration seminars and course work for the BBA and the MBA programs . . . School of Education coursework. workshops '" «uch a re « as credentiahng. M.Ed., in Counselor Education, or Special Education . . . Special Symposia . . . law yer’s Assistant Program— Certificate Program Certificate Program for the Development Specialist .. . . Hahn School of Nursing A Allied Health Sciences courses. I 966-6226 618 S. COLLEGE, TEMPE 968-1233 AT DEALERS COST U m J S ^ €& FREE R _ C - E D WATCH & JEWELRY SERVICE CENTER 20 YEARS OF SWISS TRAINING & EXPERIENCE I s a a c N e w t o n 's it Rock & Roll Restaurant ★ p re s e n ts HANS H ottest Rock Band rln the Southw est Thurs. thru Sun. O One Man B lu es Band on Monday and Tuesday Ladies Nite Tonrte L a d ie s E a t Er D r in k f o r 34 P r ic e You’ll Like What You Seel Valley West Mall Metro Center C o m e over and try our new san dw ich es . . . They’re O R G A S M IC ! If you like i; &“D r.M ’s ” , you’ll love our prices . .................................. ■ V'.:'■•■i,■'■ 10% *C0ME & MEET "Leslie" — farmer Playboy Bunny, bartending from 4-6 daily - S t u d e n t D is c o u n t at ; /;/■ STANDARD OPTICAL • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I TO FIT ALL BUDGETS "GtOFREi" — 10% p HANDCRAFTED JEWELRY N ® /f WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY OF OUR HANDCRAFTED SETTINGS STANDARD O PTICAL mwm mmM One Block North o f ASU Jcfife C'ene r e JEWELRY Vjeorae£ D Come Into Tower Plaza South Plaza Christown 704 S. College Ave. Per veer Seamer gettieas ‘74 f effefle eleeae ceff: 291-6480, ext. 221 e r write H : SUMMER SESSIONS *76 4 UNIVERSITY OF SAN DIEGO A tcali Park San Diego. California 92110 SOVIETS TRADE WITH EGYPT MOSCOW — The Soviet Union announced that it formalized a one-year, trade agreement with Egypt worth about $575 million, despite the low ebb in political relations between the two countries. Los Arcos .Tri City - y Undergraduate & Graduate Programs. Workshops. Seminars—Day and Evening Courses ★ P.S. We're featuring the New Rolling Stones Album Fri. £ Sat. A remember, we're open Sunday js l .... ■ 1 p . * I 8 A A Q N E W T O N S , 1 0 1 5 S . R u r a l, T e m p e budget objection By Nonna Cofle The A rizona S tudents’ Association (ASA) board of directors probably will meet by Friday to decide if it will provide administrators with a more ,detailed breakdown of its budget request. “We will probably meet before the University Budget Com­ m ittee meets Friday, since this seems to be some sort of ultimatum situation,”- A1 Senia, ASA assistant director, said Wednesday. The ASA board of directors is composed of the student body presidents of the three state universities. D r. George Hamm, ASU vice president for-'student affairs, said Monday a breakdow n provided by ASA is inadequate. He said the budget committee won’t approve ASA funding unless it sees a more detailed breakdown. HI called Hamm Thursday (April 22) and said if there was any problem with the break­ down, I’d be glad to talk with him about 'it,” said Craig Tribken, ASASU president. “He indicated there wouldn’t be any problem." Senia and Tribken said Hamm had not told them the breakdown is inadequate. Hamm was not available for comment. He will be out of town until Friday. ASA has requested $5,000 from each of the three univer­ sities. The proposed breakdown is: office expenses, $1,850; salaries, $8,400; travel (central staff), $1 ,100; newsletter, $800; ASA conferences, $400; secretarial, $900; local campus accounts, $1.500; contingency, $550. Total: $15,000. “If there is a problem with the budget, I really don’t like being notified of it by Dr. Hamm through the State Press, Tribken said. Fire causes $ 100 damage in Anthropology basement An electrical fire in th e Anthropology Building Tuesday caused approxim ately $100 damage to a basem ent airconditioning unit. ^ Chief Philip Van Dyke of th e Tempe F ire D epartm ent said two fire engines and a rescue truck responded to a 4:30 p.m . call.' “The air conditioning in the basem ent of th e C wing froze up and caught fire. I t caused some smoke b u t th e fire didn t spread,” Van Dyke said. D a x S a le ! ¥y¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ S ta rts W e d ., A p ril 28 th J e a n s & C a s u a ls Lee, Levi, A-Smile, Hang T en K n it s NOW 5 . 9 9 Valuesto $18.00 NOW Long & Short Sleeve D r e s s S h ir t s * Ç O (nylon and polyester print) Ç 1 O r I OSS Roland, Chemise, Kennington r The fire departm ent w as called after Minabell Laughlin, the building fire m arshal, alerted U niversity Police. S p o r t “Several faculty m em bers told me about smoke coming out of th e air conditioning vents so I called cajnpus security,” Laughlin said. Police w ere already a t the building when th e fire departm ent arrived, but th e building w as not evacuated, Van Dyke said. Lee, Madm an and Kennington ATTENTION SOPHOMORES GOING TO BE A TEACHER? ♦ S h i r t s Va,ue^ $2°-00 $ 6 $ 1 0 J a c k e t s Reg. to *24.00 Lee, Woolrich In the Outreach program you can take your S w e a t e r s Sem ester. For inform ation c a ll Dr. M. Haddock Scenics and Solid Colors * 9 9 . 9 * 9 8 .9 9 ♦ Reg. to »27.50 required courses w hile actually w orking w ith children. A p p lica tio n s now being taken fo r F a ll e * u‘ * 9 . 9 9 or less (965-7766) or Dr. M. Kam in s (965-6988). S h o e s Summer Job Interviews values to $35.00 * 1 4 . 9 9 or less Dexter and Verde work out-of-state, *21125 a «nek 3 hours graduate or S la p s undergraduate credit through Colum bia C ollege , Women's and Small Men's (Regular Qualify) Discontinued Shape in M issouri 1 pm or 4 pm B u y E a r ly ! IIM u . , Wed. - Thurs. 10 am -9pm April 28 - May 1 pr j .. 5^ 10 am - Apm _ _ “ Please note: .During sale, ...... _ alterations extra. Q IS R X A ll sales final: FRIDAY, A p ril 30 Language & Lit. Bldg.« Rm. CI33 Limit Rights Please Be O n Time I 5 .9 9 Reserved One block north of University and Forest, Tem pe O p in io n J u d g e n o t , th a t y e b e n o t ju d g e d . sta te p re s s M a t t h é w 7 :1 Editorial in error Appeals chief wrong this time in th e car in many ways and don’t prove he drove th e car. The other bit of “evidence” was a ticket placed on th e car in question th at someone tried to palm off on another car nearby by forging th e sticker, num ber. Tobey said th e num eral “6” on the forgery resem bled Agnew’s handw riting. — Now th a t’s silly. Can you charge someone $204 on th e basis of a num eral th at looks similar? Such evidence would never stand up m ' court and Tobey adm itted th a t to Agnew when he finally told him th è tickets would be dismissed. But to try to make Agnew pay on such tenuous grounds is a shabby attem pt. The same standards of evidence th at apply in a courtroom should apply in Tobey’s decisions. - . Tobey has a right to be mad th a t someone ripped off th e U niversity for $204. A pparently th e real culprit(s) will never be identified. But even out of his frustration, Tobey h»s no right to pin th e debt on a handy student on th e basis of sue*1 wea^ evidence. T erry Tobey is th e adm inistrator who hears appeals for parking tickets. A person in his jo b has to make difficult decisions and take a lo t of abuse — much of it unw arranted. B ut a recent case involving a student finds Tobey in a gross erro r and over­ stepping his bounds. The m istake could have cost Ralph Agnew $204 and, did hold up his enrollm ent and his application for a loan. The U niversity billed Agnew for $204 in parking tickets on a car he didn’t own. Agnew discovered th e tickets — dating back to 7 4 — by accident, claiming he was never sen t a bill. Agnew adm itted th e car was owned by his form er girlfriend, a nonstudent, who he said loaned th e car to m em bers of his fraternity. Phi Kappa Psi, and others. Agnew claims he never drove it on campus. Tobey first denied Agnew’s appeal, on grounds th a t w ere shakey a t best. W hen officers ticketed th e unstickered car, they reportedly saw letters inside bearing Agnew’s name. — Such le tte rs could have been placed ,I U I i P I W I I I ___________ _____________________ public, is attached to our Editor: Wednesday’s State Press minutes, and is available to editorial regarding the Arizona anyone who requests it. Second, while it may be true Student Association budget and Student Affairs Vice President that state law, as currently George Hamm is one of the most -interpreted, gives university incredible pieces of writing that administrators the right to has ever found its way onto the regulate student funds, this does pages of a student newspaper. It not mean they have-the right to illustrates a complete lack of emasculate student budgets and understanding of the inequities censor - stu d en t program s inherent in the university’s whenever the spirit moves them budgeting process and the ways to do so. ASA dues have been that process w orks to the approved by students. Students are paying for them. There are detriment of ASÜ students. Student leaders at ASU have no accusations that the'money is decided th a t the stu d en t being spent illegally. So it seems association should become * to us the burden of proof must lie dues-paying member of the with the administration and not Arizona Student Association. the students. Students are . The university administration appropriating student monies to has reserved itself the right to students. This seems to be a veto any portion (or all) of that point State Press keeps missing. State Press might better dues payment if it sees fit. This strikes us here at ASA as a spend its time exploring the pretty amazing position. Yet this basic unfairness of a system very basic point was ignored in where administrators reserve the editorial, which instead themselves the unilateral right criticized ASA officials for not to supercede the actions of providing the administrators elected student representatives with adequate information and without any explanation. Why - aren’t any students included on explanations! First, Vice President Hamm the committees that do the “real” has not requested any additional apportioning of monies? It’s their information from us. You can’t money that’s being apportioned. deny information from someone That's the real issue in this who hasn’t asked for any. He controversy. Unfortunately, it’s has, how ever, received a an issue the student newspaper budgetary breakdown as ap­ seems happy to ignore. John Ridgway proved by ASA’s Board of Executive Director Directors, This information is ____;-------- ;---- -------- — ----- . . ; ---- -— ?----- “ --- Hard drinks and thoughts in M U Bar-N-Grill Jackson shifted his stool forward to the bar at the MU Bar-N-Grill and looked over to the dock. Nine-thirty. Still time to finish his last Bloody Mary and make the nine-forty class. He sipped at his drink. Tuesday. That meant class would be over an hour long. He thought about sitting in Psych for over an hour and laughed at himself for a moment. Tuesday. Monday war gone, then; he’d missed classes Monday. He tried to remember if any tests had been scheduled but he couldn’t think. It’d been a long weekend, starting when Linda, the girl living in the room next to his at Irish Hall, had taken him apart Friday night. He looked around the lounge to keep from thinking of that. The football squad had already ripped one of the beer kegs-out from the bar and were taking turns passing it to each other, drinking from a hole where the spigot used to be, Viking style, and cheering when one of them got too much and fell over. The business administration corner was deserted, as usual. That must be the first thing they teach in the business college, Jackson thought: Never before noonJDccasionally a rogue management major would be there this early, but that meant he was having trouble ynd probably wouldn’t last too much longer. ■' Even Simin«« was in today. Simmons, the political science prof, was on the way down and wouldn’t last at the University, Jackson knew. He didn’t care about teaching and never watched his TA’s, so they always tied up the poly-sd computer with chess programs. He’d already lost a big research grant for the college, and the other teachers had exiled him from the facultyJounge; so he had to come to the MU for breakfast. The next step was the Mag’s Hamblin down University Drive. . Nine-forty-five. The bartender walked by and Jackson tapped his glass. .;t _ “Let me have another one,” he said. The bartender looked at the three empties in front of him. “Starting kinda early, aincha?” “Yes, Mom.” * The barkeep shrugged and pulled a Vodka bottle from under the bar and poured a shot into a glass, added the tomatoe juice and slid it to him. Jackson watched him with fascinated con­ centration, as if he were watching the bartender dissect him in a surgical amphitheater. _ “Tests?” he said. So there were tests yesterday, Jackson thought. His mood became ugly. “People who drink before tests are idiots.” Jackson hated people who drank before tests ever since some freshman girl threw up half a bottle of wine on him and his own te st paper and the teacher flunked him for it. “Amateurs,” he said, but the bartender just shrugged and walked away to try to keep the football squad from ripping another keg out. To hell with it, he said to himself. It’ll be alright soon. Come the millenium it’ll all be okay. Come the millenium the spaceship&'Will arrive and the aliens will teach us how to cure the flu so it won’t knock you out for a week every year; come the-millenium the aliens will fix everything so you won’t have to play anymore. M Come the millenium the aliens will show us other possibilities so no one will be stuck with nowhere else to go, noone will have to tie himself in an office for eight hours a day and watch his soul dribble out in stacks of busywork. • “Got a good crowd today,” Jackson said to break the silence. “Yeah, it’s the tests — we always get a big group during the tests,” barkeep said and fished out the change to pay for the drink from the cash Jackson had left on the counter. Come the milleniupi the aliens will teach us to fly faster than light and take us to the planets of Alpha Centari to hear new music, show us pictures painted under red and whité stars; -take us to hard, young planets you have to fight on to survive and build something. Come the millenium. - jG tf b 1 « m s! fiWMMTiiT)nnnrnfîirnnni™***********>*>***1‘**<***“ ^‘****>*************"***J**********M*****#‘M—" T f1—*™*11****1 Craig Tribken An up-beat note instead o f year-end blast If you do not know me or of me I'- President Scbwada is still too or if you haven’t listened to uncommunicative. B ut, he also anything I’ve said this year, do does an excellent job getting not read this column. It will only high appropriations for ASU bore you. Hell, it might anyway. from the legislature and the Student body presidents and regents. State Press editors are supposed . Dr. Hamm can still be devious. / to go through a year end ritual in But he als^uiuillLi TDd>e sincerely which, Commenting on the trying tifiijetter student services events of the year, they bore and programs at ASU A everyone within earshot to d e a th . v There are still plenty of Jfie are able, at the close of the irritatingly petty bureaucrats at *ylar, to say all those things ASU. But somehow the records which disaster prevented us of 33,000 students are kept in from saying before. In keeping good order. with tradition, I was all ready to The Health Center still has spit out my venom at petty some doctors who don’t really bu reau crats, unresponsive seem intent on caring for administrators and others. students. But they do manage to Then something nice hap- give hundreds of students per pened. I filed for graduation. day health care which students ' Thomas Gray wrote of the “still small voices of gratitude.” As I struggled with lines, forms in ~ trip lica te , tra n scrip ts, payments, etc., etc., I found If ever y o u s e e a s u s p ic io u s myself, smiling despite the ch a ra cte r — s o m e g u y h a n g in g • trouble. No amount of seemingly a ro u n d a b ik e rack o r lurkin g by a d o rm — c a ll th e U n iv e rsity unnecessary bureaucracy could P o lic e at 3456. N o n a m e s ruin my good mood. n e c e ssa ry . Too often we grumble about A n d n o v ic tim le s s c rim e s , the bad and forget the good. We pleaseforget about the tremendous things ASU offers and the relatively good, honest, hard­ working people at thin univer­ sity. ' ; 3456 3456 How to write letters Type letters. Type them short, no more than tw o pages doublespaced. Write simple, direct sentences. The *********** ***“ * JT lo only one or two points. Sign your letter. Bring it to the State press in Stauffer À-137. wouldn’t "get if the Health Center was closed. There still is a parking problem. But Jack Penick and others are truly attempting to make the tough decisions which need to be made if we are to find a solution. Nonathletic entertainm ent on campus seems hard to find. But if you look, there is an over­ crowded Lyceum which has tremendous, theatre productions and a Memorial Union which does a fantastic job putting on every thing from * movies to much the same story as the administrators. But I doubt it. The point is, sure there are proverbial baby and the bath­ problems at ASU. But there is an water. I haven’t a tirade left — only a awful lot at ASU which is good also. We" must not forget to sermon. Something I had to say. temper our criticisms with All is not well, but ft’s not really praise. If for no other reason but rotten either. Now that I’ve completed my because it maximizes the impact of those criticisms which we do end of th e year student body president ritual I will go away have. " So that’s my summation. Its (unless I don’t). Indoor and Outdoor Mini-Rental Storage ASA my still be closed by STUDENTS Store your goods for the Summer SUMMER JOBS JOBS JOBS College trained men and women will be considered to supplement our permanent staff in district offices throughout the U .S. These positions are full time summer jobs. We are searching for appli­ cants who are ambitious, depend­ able and hard working. Excellent opportunity for advancement. You may continue to work on a part time or full time basis next fall if you desire. For district office ad­ dress, or for appointment with our local manager, call Robbie after May 3rd, 9 a.m .'to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Books Skis • Hi Pi • Household Goods • Boots, Campers i Clothes • Sporting Goods t Vehicles, any kind \ 5*x 10’ 5’ x 12’ 10’ x 10* 10’ x15’ 10’ x 20’ 10’ X 30’ 838-2106 AD IN PH O EN IX C A L L *SA>*6 8 8 0 OH © **! iS l MO 277-6249 or Art Wiedoff A*»0 MANAGER 1601 É. SOUTHSHORE DR.. TEMPE, ARIZONA 85283 LOCATED AT THE LAKES "OPEN TO THE P U B LIC " 273-1106 S e ll th e O ld M a n ! C / To you he’s old - all used up. It’s the end of the semester and you have no use for him anymore. • fjm mm*- f He could sit on some shelf and collect dust but lie’s still worth something. T h e S tu d en t B ook C en ter w ill buy him back and not only pay you cash but give you a valuable g ^ certificate as well. When you sell your used books for S20.00 you get S20.00 cash and a gift certificate for S2.00. If you get S30.00 for your used books you’ll get a gift certificate for S3.00. > You can use this gift certificate now to save on a gift for yourself or a friend. Or you can hold on lo.it till next semester and save even more by buying the books you’ll need from the supply of used books the Student Book Center will have on hand. Either way you’ll make out better when you sell your used books to the Student Book Center on College Avenue one block porfh of campus. ’ §fg "• ■evf. ■ _ Do yourself a favor - ” SELL THE OLD MAN, HE’S WORTH IT i i—- 7 q4 g College Avenue One block North of ASU . C966-6226 «SP*#*! PRICES EFFECTIVE AT WOOLCO TEMPE ONLY THRU SUN. want to be your favorite store AVENGER COMBO ONTINENTAL l COMBO In th e Sun On th e Lake A t th e Court by Igloo AM /FM AUDITION PORT. RADIO AC/DC #2205 A p ril 29,1976 State Press Page 7 Tvknevi/sbroadcasts imitate show business 1,600 candidates will attend riles The banners of ASU’s 11 colleges will fly May 14 as 1,600 degree candidates march to com­ mencement ceremonies in the University Activity Center. About 5,000 others are eligible to attend commencement, but of those only a few will be. able to purchase remaining caps and gowns in the bookstore, James Creasman, director of Special Events Programs, said. Those who earned degrees last August or December are eligible to attend the ceremonies along with about 3,000 candidates for May degrees. Rep. John J. Rhodes (R-Ariz.) will receive an honorary doctorate at the event and will present a speech entitled, “Expectations: The World Ten Years From Now.” ASU’s -class of 1926 will have its golden an­ niversary reunion at the ceremonies. The visitors will wear caps and gowns and receive honorary degrees. Bachelor’s degree candidates will wear black caps and gowns. Master’s and doctoral candidates will wear hoods displaying their college’s colors on the outside and ASU’s colors inside. Official says lack o f 3 R s hurting By Rosemary Noriega The student struggling with m ath problem s in * th e E d u c a tio n a l O p p o rtu n ity Program (EOP) office is one of a newly discovered breed of disadvantaged students — those deprived of the three Rs in middle-class high schools. B ernard Jackson, EOP director, said the program, ■a tutoring service in Matthews Center, was created in 1969 to meet what were thought to be the special academic needs of - minority students. But since that time, he said, th ere has been increasing recognition of the fact that academic trouble cuts across ethnic lines. He said the program has grown from a large minority Television news broadcasts are becoming more like show business, com plete w ith rating games, local media professionals told ASU jo u rn alism students la st weekend. ■ Bill Stull, commentator and re p o rte r for KTAR-tv, channel 12 expressed concern about this trend at a meeting of the society of professional makeup to a more representative cross section of students. EOP has no income requirem ent for stu d en ts seeking help. Thirty of its students come from local high schools representing middle or high incomes, he said. Such students, many of whom were considered high achievers in high school, have the same academic, problems as students from disadvantaged back­ grounds, he said. “Right now, a lot of the major schools are beginning to admit they have problems,” Jackson said. He said Stanford and Harvard also have set up study skills centers because many students are deficient in the basic educational skills. W mt to hd(i? C a l l US# N eig h b o r. journalists, Sigma Delta Chi. “Now we aré having more singers and . dancers than reporters,” he said. Live television news also poses a danger, according to Jim Ryerson of KOOL-tv,. channel 10, “Now Fm afraid we’re going to show a lot of immediacy instead of quality news," Ryerson said. DON’T LEAVE ASU BROKE! EARS Pierced SELL US YOUR BOOKS FREE GET SOME SPENDING MONEY by p rofession ally trained registered nurses. WE EXCHANGE C A S H FOR B O O K S PLUS 10% GIFT CERTIFICATE Tomorrow, Friday April 30, 10-5:30 ON ALL BUY-BACKS OVER $10.00 w ith purchase of f $8.95 su rgical steel posts ¡d e n T MERLE NORMAN COSMETICS 707 F o re st Ave., Tempe 966-1737 704 8. College Ave. One Block North of ASU 986-6226 ■ s a g g i O B fflE R "Pittsburgh'smy home—that's why I left’ Are you really a topless waiter?" "When Calvin Coolidge died. Dorothy Parker asked, 'How can they tell? 4455 SOUTH BttBAL BP. • TEMPE THURSDAY NIGHT MAIN EVENT “Do you know the feeding habits of an ant?" "No. but hum a few bars and I'll fake it! "Remember Howdy Doody?" “Is he here too?" "You look like the marrying kind.' "Wrong:1 W hen you’re in the neighborhood'drop in. K Beautifully cooked boneless whole trout stufled wWi a spiced crab dfessbis. Tender-hearted rice, butler-mailing bread, and a fresh, crisp salad. V Next ¿rip, take a dip. All Vagabond Motor Hotels offer luxurious heated pools. Or, if you prefer, head for bed. Youll find it s queen size an d comfortable—just like our rooms. And the thing is, you don't pay first-class prices for the first-class treatment.- No way. In fact, Vagabond costs the least o f all our leading com pe­ titors. And we don't skimp on a thing... especially service. Our m anagers are all couples who live here. It's their home. And they're great at making you feel it's yours too (nice feeling when you re on the z road). There are other things money can't buy at a Vagabond-* Like free color TV. Free ice. Free local phone calls. See, you can get w et as you like at a Vagabond. The point is, you'll never g et soaked. Managors: Tom and Pat Baird Phone (602) 968-7798 Within California (800) 522-1551 Outside California (800) 854-2700 Wfctrail yoo Hi* yotfre coudai hack. f l Communication expert believes U.S. free speech unique American freedom of speech is m ent, w hile th e o th e r is tremely aware” of television violence, citing “Canndn” as the an international rarity, and privately owned and operated. Wiio said Finnish broadcasting most violent program currently Americans do not realize the systems have become “exaired. extent of their- freedom, ac­ cording to an international authority on mass communications. training Dr. Osmo Wiio, a Finnish communications researcher, said Tomorrow's Monday “society-controlled" freedom of speech is prevalent throughout the world. He said Technicians the U.S. is the only country in the world with freedom of speech D IA L controlled totally by the in­ dividual. Wiio, speaking in an in­ ternational communication class, put mass communication systems throughout the world on a line AUTOMOTIVE DIAGNOSTICS-* ELECTRONICS ranging from decentralized ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTING if* ,r^ ,: N - ?>*. (individually owned freedom of speech) to centralized (society Phoenix Institute of technology • 244-8111 owned freedom of speech). He 2555 E. University Dr. — Phoenix, Ariz. 85034 said the United States and China are the extremes. The press in Scandinavian countries is decentralized, but COLLECTED T O O M A N Y TREASURES the broadcasting systems are controlled by society,” Wiio said. THIS T E A R ? There are two television networks in Finland, he said. One is owned by the govern­ BELT. • . nrv y BIG-T-111 Basket case Photo By Andy Gordon Gary Epstein, an accounting major, gets a free ride to the library from Tom Matson, a psychology major. Gary was weak after finishing an extensive research report. Ideology, answers lacking In free world, official says By Jayne Clark ;w ; If th e spread of communism is to be stopped, the United States m ust attrac t the oppressed peoples Of th e world w ith a more idealistic ideology, an official of the Unification Church said. “Communisip has a philosophical, economic and political base...answ ers for alj the problems of mankind. Democracy is only a political form. The free world has no answ ers, no ideology,” said D>an Fefferm an, secretary-general of th e Unification Church’s Freedom Leadership Foundation (FLF). He is also editor of a church new spaper. The Rising Tide. " Fefferm an told a group of about 15 people in th e MU Arizona Room Tuesday th a t Am ericans need to unite to create an international movement “in covenant with th e Almighty.” He said if the country does not unite against communism, “We won’t have to come up with any other solutions. The Hope for a world of freedom would disappear.” The FLF hopes to be the catalyst for creating th e movement th a t is the answ er to communism, Fefferm an said. The foundation will work th is sum m er to organize a group on campus which would be “amicable with CARP (a campus group which recruits students for the Unification Church),” he said. _ 'P ’iûéU tH ' S fU x te d i WE PAY CASH for BOOKS 10% GIFT CERTIFICATE ON ALL BUT-BACKS over no.oo < § tu d e n r ¿ B o o k * Q e n tS r* 704 S. College Aye. OneblockHortbol 1SU 966-6226 AAÁROON & G O LD FOOTLOCKERS ^ • 12” CHECKERBOARD ARMY-NAVY STORES 1126 W. MAIN-MESA r~ ‘ ~~ A lD iM eo te TH E M EM O R IA L UNION FILM CO M M ITTEE PRESEN TS.. . TONIGHT at 7:00 and pan. s Also Fri¡day and Saturday at 1M and 930 And Sunday at 2:00 aid 7:08 ^«KiinuCK« lW >«WCOI.WItow r un 9Jforever urn mfetum PETER SELLERS CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER CATHBHNE SCHELL HERBERT LOM to Forever’s lead guitarist A1 DiM eolahas already made his mark. | i j j ¡¡¡| - N gj Guitar Player Magazine has named him i BLAKE EDWARDS Now A l’s fir st so lo album is h ere, an d it Tickets are now on w ill d e lig h t g u ita r ists an d non-, g u ita r ists alik e. “ L a n d 0 f the Midnight Sua.” A1 DiMeola shines, on Columbia Records & Tapes sale at the MU Activities Center for *1.00 w/I.D. «-COLUM BIA'^M ARCASR CG©1976CBSINC ì UnitedArtists ODYSSEY RECORDS •216 E. University Tempe *1227 E. Camelback Phoenix \ -April 29, Î37ft State P re ss Page 9 Ju n io r w o n 't p a y Retiring faculty to tie lauded $204parkin& riném ÊËÊÊÊ^ Sixteen faculty members,-who collectively have completed 319 years of teaching at ASU, will be honored May 5 during a luncheon in the MU Turquoise Room. By Nonna Cofle Among the retirees are Norris while driving it to Phoenix, he J . Steverson, who has taught at said. ASU 44 years, and Margaret Agnew lost his first appeal. Klann, a member of the faculty The decision, signed by Terry for 31 years. Both are associate Tobey, assistant comptroller, professors in the department of said, “Penalty as stated is h ealth,. physical education and confirmed. It is true you do not recreation. own the vehicle, but you were Also included in the list are driving it on campus.” tw o form er university Tobey dropped the fines in a presidents: Dr. Minard W. second appeal Tuesday, although Stout, professor of education, he told Agnew he had cir­ who was president' at the cumstantial evidence of his guilt. University of Ntevada from 1952According to Agnew,, Tobey 58, and D r. Gordon B. Castle, said, “I guess we're going to drop professor of zoology, who was it. I couldn’t get you into court acting president at Montana anyway, and if I did I couldn’t State University in 1958-59. make it stick. But Pm surp you’re responsible for at least The faculty members and the part of these.” dates of their original apAgnew said Tobey implied he - pointments at ASU are: Dr. W alter G. Becker, 1955, had tried to get out of paying his fines by changing license associate professor, finance; numbers and putting his tickets Idelle Lee, 1962, assistant on other cars. “Look at how dose professor, elementary education; your sixes are to the forged Carmen O’Brien, 1959, and Dr. “Maybe some of ; her other sixes," Agnew said Tobey told Cameron Olmsted,. 1956, both associate professors, elementary ■ friends got the tickets,‘ but I him. , education. haven’t driven that car on “That kind of ‘proof really ckmpus,” Agnew said. She has parked the car at his fraternity freaked me out,” Agnew said. He said Tobey’s other evidence house in the past, he said, but he was that Agnew’s mail was “never saw any tickets.” supposedly in the car. He added,“It seems like since this girl wasn’t a student, they Tobey refused to comment had to find somebody who is to Tuesday. “Every case is con­ pay.” fidential,” he said. Agnew was told by a secretary TA TE PR ESS is published by Arizona he was tracked down through the SStatb University Tuesday through Friday Division of Motor Vehicles. He during the academic year, except holidays was traced to the car because he and examination periods. Entered as wi once received a warning ticket second class matter at Tempo, A Z 85281. It took two appeals, but a student who had been told he must pay ?204in campus parking fines — even though he doesn’t own a car v won his case Tuesday. W I don’t own a car, and I’ve never .driven any car on cam­ pus,” said Ralph Agnew, a junior political science major. Agnew said he applied for a loan several weeks ago and was told he must pay 28 parking fines, supposedly accumulated over two years. A secretary in the. University cashier’s office told him the decal number of his nonexistent car. Agnew eventually tracked ’down the car he was accused of parking illegally. It belongs to his former girlfriend, whom he said lends her car frequently. The girl has never been an ASU student, he said, and there is no decal on her 1967 Chevy. Dr. Minard W. Stout, 1968, professor, educational ad­ ministration; Margo M. Smith, 1963, associate professor, music; D r. H arry Wood, 1954, professor, art; and Lucile B. Kaufmàn, 1950, assistan t professor, technology. D r. Paul M iller, 1947. professor, geology; Dr. Dorothy Deach, 1967, professor, and Margaret Klann, 1945, and Norris J . Steverson, 1932, both associate professors, all health, physical education and recreation. > Dr. F rauds G. Yale, 1952, associate professor, phyrics; Lura Henze, 1962, assistent professor, sociology; Dr* Gordon B. Castle, 1962,_ professor, sociology ; and Naomi Harward, 1956, professor. School of Social Work. SAMURAI-FESTIVAL K u ro sa w a 's Kurasawa's Yojimbo Rashomon April 28-30 M a y 1-4 plus 5:30 & 8:00 plus Martial Arts Demo April 28 Lea Bros. Studio April 30 Ariz. Karate Assoc. Martial Arte Damo May V Ariz. Aikido-Kai May 4 Shito-Ryu School of Karate 5:30, 7:45. 9:40 $1.00 before 5: 30. M on.-Thurs. rVE GOT TO GET BACK TO THE EYE-LANDS* SYSTEM 548* $269.95 225.00 100.00 40.00 20.00 $654.95 $548.00 $106.95 Sansui 5 5 1 /R E C . ESS Tempest 3E/SPK. Garrard 770 M/TT.Shure M-93 E/MAG. CART. Garrard BDC-5/B8tC •JERRY'S PRICE SAVINGS ^ -L e o n Russell SU R F L IN E O F H A W A II Detailed Hawaiian print shirts. Easy to put on and take off. Many glorious colors. P A IN T E R VS SH O R TS T u cso n — 1037 N . P a r k 622 7407 P h oenix — 334 E . C a m e lb a o k R d . 263 «410 ’ T e m p e — 120 E . U n iv e rs ity D r . 968 3491 Whan you'«« outgrown yo ur first sound you're r««dy fp^ Jerry's Speetaele Bhsppe Th e sensation of the nation Features loop for hanging your hammer or your thumb through, when you're not using them. Four colors: Red, Light Blue, Off-White, Dark Brown and Navy. SLA PS The strap of our slap is guaranteed one full year. You* can't hate that. They're layered for extra smooth­ ness and taste. *Leon’s been getting back for years. u n lim ited U n iv e r sity R reR es iso e a s t u n iv ersity tem pe «rison a s s s s i S S 6 -S 4 4 Ô □nx 1 Block North of University on Forest in Tem pe, 968-3585, M on. - Sat.. 10 to 6 (Thursday till 9) _______ . - Page 10 S ta te P re s s A p ril 29,1976 Y ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT at A S U A two-piano program is sche­ duled today at 6 p.m. in the ASU Music Theatre. The con­ cert is free to the public and will feature music by Brahms, Arensky and Britten. ☆ ☆ ☆ . Final presentation of the Lyric Opera Theatre’s production of Verdi’s “Falstaff” will be Fri­ day and-Saturday. Tickets for the production are on sale at the Music Theatre box office and Diamond's Select-A-Seat outlets. * The ASU band, directed by Dr. Richard Strange, will give a free concert Sunday at 8 p.m. in Gammage Auditorium. The University Choir will join the band in Jerry Bilik’s “In­ dependence,” narrated by Dr. Andrew Broekema, chairman of the ASU music department. The Men’s and Women’s Choruses of ASU will give a performance at 2 p.m. Sunday In the ASU Music Theatre. The show is free to the public. occasions, work and hunting as well as such indoor winter activities as sewing and story­ telling. This will be the final program this season by the ASU choirs. The art work of ASU graduate David Sklar will be on exhibit May 9 through June 15 at the Matthews Center Gallery. On­ going exhibits include the Lewis and Lenore Ruskin Col­ lection of Renaissance and Baroque Art, and the Oliver B. James Collection of American Art. Gallery hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. Dr. Douglas McEwen will con­ A Free Jazz concert will show­ duct the ASU Choral Untonr case the musical talents of the Concert Choir and University ☆ ☆ ☆ University jazz program from Choir in a performance of 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the MU Haydn’s oratorio, “The Sea­ Rendezvous Lounge. The sons” at 8 p.m. May 7, in The world premiere of Edward “Jazz-a-Thon” will be under Gammage Auditorium. Free to Madden’s “Concerto for_Jazz the direction of Dan Haerle the public, the concert will Ensemble and Symphonic and will feature 12 «mall feature the massed choirs of Band” will be at 8 p.m. groups of instrumentalists ASU joined by an orchestra Sunday at Gammage Audi­ from the University jazz pro­ made up of ASU music faculty torium. The' ASU Jazz En­ semble will join the University gram. and professional musicians Symphonic Band in the per­ from the Valley and is co­ formance. Several other Mad­ ☆ ☆ ☆ sponsored by the Phoenix den works, “March Festivo,” The final run of “Anyone Can Federation of Musicians. “March Symphonique” and Whistle,” will be at 8 p.m. Haydn’s “Seasons” con­ “The Eye of Saint Agnes” will Saturday and Sunday in the be presented on the program. Lyceum Theatre. The musical sists of a series of scenes and The latter number, after a is directed and produced by landscapes which picture the poem by Keats, will be per­ ASU students to raise funds life and activities of rural folk formed by the ASU Concert for scholarships. Good seats as affected by the seasons of Band under Dr. Robert are still available at the Ly­ the year. Included are planting F i e m in n ’ s direction. and harvest, storms, festive ceum box office. The last showings of the Lyric Opera Theatre’s production of Verdi’s “Falstaff” will beat 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday at the ASU Music Theatre. Tickets for the classic tale are on sale at the Music Theatre box office and Diamond’s Select-A-Seat outlets. Robert Neufeld [top left] portrays Falstaff along with his rascally friends Batdolph [Bruce Worthy, top right] and Pistol [David Purdy]. '3rd genitalia' is theme Class to give X-rated puppet show ByDanWinkel A search for th e “th ird g e n ita lia ” f w ill be th e dom inant them e of an Xrated puppet show being pro d u ced ,b y th e ASU th eatre departm ent. “ B lu e b e a r d ,” w h ich ap p eared a s an off* Broadway play in 1970, is being staged in conjunction with a puppetry class in the th eatre departm ent. Max B renner, a teaching assistant in th eatre and the voice 1 of one of th e characters, said th e play is **fun, ~ humorous and p er­ verted. ' “It is pure, straig h t­ forward entertainm ent. A lot of hokey things. I t’s a melodrama of sorts.” Brenner said th e play is X -rated because th ere a re “a lot of sexual overtones.” She said th e puppets are “sexually designed. They are basically kind s of ab­ stract designs with abstract features.” She described one puppet as ju st “tw o big boote.” D r. D o u g l a s - S c o t t Goheen is producing and directing th e play as a se m e ste r p ro je c t for students in his puppetry class. The play originally used hum ans portraying the characters, but Goheen th o u g h t th e play w as flexible enough to change the characters into nonreal figures. Goheen said the story revolV es aro u n d a “depraved scientist search­ ing for the third genital organ.” He said th e play was originally conceived by the T heatre of th e Ridiculous in New York and does not gut involved w ith philosophical them es. “The m eaning of th e play is w hat you get out^of it, Goheen said. “B lu eb eard ” w ill b e presented May 7 and 8, a t 8 p.m . and m idnight, a t th e Lyceum T heatre. films The ASASU Cultural Affairs Board will present the following films in Neeb Hall throughJhe remainder of the ^ “The Groove Tube,” labeled the ultimate statement on America’s largest leisure industry, television, will be shown at 7, 9 and 11 p.m. April 30. Admission is $1 with ASU ID. “Love and Anarchy,” directed by one of the hottest new , female directors, Lina Wertmuller, will be shown at 7 p.m. May 1. No admission will be charged. “Harold and Maude” will be featured as a Ten O’clock Special May 1.’ Admission is $1 with ASU ID. “She” and "The Old Dark House” will be shown at 8:40 p.m. May 2. One of eight original versions, "She" stars Randotf Scott and Nigel Bruce. The latter is a classic horror film starring Boris Karloff and Raymond Massey. Both films are open to the University Community. “The Wizard of Oz” will be shown free for the benefit of all the munchkins and scarecrows in the University community at 7 p.m. May 3. ... The “Oz” film will not only be the last of what you see of ToTo, it will also be the last film of the Neeb Hall series presented by the Cultural Affairs Board. r*. Imported and Bottled by Hiram Walker “Bluebeard” the puppet gate a trim from Ida operator, Dick Phillips, In P ^ £ * lon «.»tad nuDMt show In the Lyceum Theater. The puppeteers ter the show are students^ Dr. Doumas-Scott Goheen’s puppetry class. Performances of the adult only production will be at 8 p.m. May 7 and 8. & Sons. Inc., Peoria. HI, San Francisco. CaKf. Tequila. 80 Proof Product of Mexico. Page 12 State Press A p ril 29,1976 In adetective novel Murder is a m ust By Ann Inskeep Peter Davidian was twentytwo vears old. That’s young to die. But Peter Davidian, barring a last-minute miracle, surely mould die within a week. He would die the bad way, in a steel chair wired with enough voltage to light up a good-sized town, with his head shaved and his pants legs slit. They say you don’t feel it, but at twenty-two I guess you feel it now and then while waiting. The situation described above is a familiar scene to Dr. Thomas B. Dewey, an ASU English professor. In fact, Dewey has had an instrumental role in at least 37 murders. Dewey w rote the above passage in one of his 37 detective novels published since 1944. “You almost have to have a m urder,” Dewey said. “ A detective novel without a murder is not really a detective novel.” Dewey will teach a course on detective novels in the fall. It’s a Subject close to his heirt. “I started writing detective, stories during World War II. I’d written several novels of a serious nature but couldn’t sell Beware jobs out of U.S., director says Students should beware of offers for summer jobs in foreign countries, said an assistant director for student part-time , and summer job placement. “I think some of the claims that some of these people make that say travel Europe, have a wonderful summer, expenses paid sounds as though you just go over, get Sl }1 CÓ IUj concerned with saving on operating expenses. The STATE PRESS composition service can provide significant savings in almost every instance. Work is done via Inter-departmental requisition. Jobs may be sent direct to STA TE PR E S S Com posing, Room A-14S/Stauffer Hall, accompanied by a coded requisition. Upon completion of typesetting and camera-ready material, jobs CO may be taken to the Bureau of Publications for printing. Further information may be obtained from Edward H. Peplow, Jr. N manager of student publications, A-111 Stauffer, Ph. 7572, or Robert < o < S. Szoradi, production manager, A-145 Stauffer, Ph. 4853. 2 FORMS anything s et in typ e BOOKLETS 3D m GO Bring this coupon ahd receive the next sm aller pizza free (same nufrtber of ingredients) with the purchase of any size, any type pizza. [One coupon per visit please. Valid thru May 14,1976. Stale Press. 3 964-1471 Page 2Ò State Press A p ril 29,1976 Under New Management and New Ownership RESERV A TIO N S N O W BEING TAKEN FÖR SU M M ER A N D FALL I——--- - Special Low Summer Rates--- -----★ Studio . . . . . . . . / . . *$ÉD ★ 1 Bedroom . . ..... *145 ★ Standard 2 B R . . . *1 / b ★ Large 2 B R ---- . . . * 1 9 5 These apartments are all furnished and utilities included at no extra charge LA MANCHA OFFERS: ^Easy walking and biking distance . . T *1- - * to A M X iX • Private parking • Pool • Sauna • Universal gym • T V room •Billiards • And much more . ' ’ ’ If ^ / ‘,'u \ *- i < ! * . * ~ ^ , fo r further inform ation call 967-2011 APARTMENTS 909 S . T e rra ce R o ad , T e m p o D irectly E a st o f th e A S U C a m p u s