Arizona State University 0 £ E T h u rs d a y V o i. 1 N o . 9 , J u ly 2 9 J 9 7 6 state ■refe Inside - Liability lawsuit .................'•page 3 Poison p ed d ler ........ •*P®9* A Loggins and M essin a . ........page 7 Winsome w heelchalrer........page 8 Tem pe, Art to n a A p p a r e n t solution overlooked Emergency loan fund runs short - By Pat Denley In May the Scholarship and U niversity adm inistrators chronically short of money. S tudent Aid Com m ittee have overlooked a seemingly Every sem ester for the past four with Marin, suggested a n,ew simple temporary solution to a years, according to Dr. Eugene source of loan money to critical shortage of student loan Marin, director of financial aids, President John Schwada and money. Unless corrected; the his office has asked and received George Hamm, vice president shortage means hundreds of permission from business of­ for student affaire. stu d en ts will be denied ficials to loan out more money Marin said no reply has been emergency loans needed soon to than short-term accounts held. received - to th e proposal Marin said books are un­ pay registration fees. suggesting student parking fines W hile adm inistrators are balanced only temporarily by go to th e loan fund, instead of use attem pting to have money this practice, which he justified for parking lot maintenance. . p resently controlled by On the basis of overwhelming H«nm acknowledged th a t a * Associated Students donated to need; proposal had gone to Scnwada, “There were students backed the loan program, no one has but said the only source of money talked to ASU comptroller Steve up at the door,” he said. “What he could think of was $86,000 can you tell them?” Colby. presently unused in an ASASU Never a problem * Lean to h u d account. “This never has been a Colby said his office easily can Marin said the money would problem,” Marin said, adding arrange a temporary “loan to the not cover all th at was lost by the loans were always paid back in loan fund,” a simple transfer of change in loan policy. to straighten accounts. general funds to back up the time Student leaders said they may But starting fall semester short-term loan fund during have other uses for the money. expected peak demand during loans will no longer be given T^iey said the idea to use the unless money is actually in an fall registration. $66,000 for loans was passed The procedure would enable account. Marin', traced «the down informally by word-ofdecision to Stop the practice to the financial aids office to con­ mouth and th a t no administrator tinue what it has just stopped University auditors, and said he officially has ever said need was supported it as sound business doing — occasionally loaning out urgent. ‘ • more money than it has on hand, policy-. No action can be taken until Marin said up to 1,000 fewer the First Council meets Aug. 31. in response to student need. Unless .more money is found or students will receive emergency Meanwhile, no one has asked the - fund transfer is approved, short-term loans because of the ASU ’accountants w hether policy change. A search began money could be transferred fewer students will gut loans, th e short-term loan fund is for w a y to add to the loan fund. temporarily to cover the short­ term loan fund during peak demand at the beginning of the fall sem ester. The plan would solve th e re d problem of fund shortage, but would insure that as many students as before get loans while the search for more loan money continues. The crisis has been brewing for several years. The reason: More students need loans than money available. The emergency short-term loan fund administered by the office of financial aids contains $327,000, not a cent of it from governm ent or U niversity sources. Private donations - Private donors make available the loans* students request when confronted, with a sudden loss of income or an unplanned expense. Money can be obtained within one day, if necessary. Loans must be paid back within three months. According to Marin, the loan fund ran dry last fall and almost did again this spring. He said the loan fund has not increased substantially in four years. Marin said the current crisis started in fall, 1972, when aid to education bills, were delayed in the U.S. Congress. “It caught everybody by surprise,” he said, including students counting on federally guaranteed loans and aahnl a rs h in s . After checking with banks to be sure money would be forth­ coming when federal red tape was cleared, Marin said his office granted emergency loans to many stranded students. Precedent starter This “precedent,” Marin said, led to a flood of students at the hoginning of each semester since 1972 requesting loans to pay registration fees. “What can we do, we can’t-' leave them out in the cold,” he said. Financial aid counselors responded to the need by sometimes loaning out more money than actually on hand, Marin said. Demand is especially great at the start of sem esters, especially among out-of-state students, who pay higher fees, Marin said. Parents may have financial problem s, and som etim es financial awards of different*»* i types are delayed. In fiscal 1975, 4,128 loans were made averaging $171, Mann said, adding the total amount loaned was $707,107. In 1976, the figures w ere 3,196 loans, average $208, total $767,118. The loan fund turns over (is loaned, repaid and loaned again) about two and one half times per year.. f Fund to aid Infunerai òf ASU football back An Ainslie Washington Memorial Fund has been established to help Washington’s family pay funeral expenses. Washington, 20, drowned July 19 while swimming alongside a canoe during a Colorado River trip with a recreation class. .... Washington, was to replace All-American cornerback Mike Haynes on next years Sun JDevU football squad, "according to football coach Frank K John Rehfield, athletic department academic ad­ visor, said the memorial fund was created by four University employes because Washington s family has no insurance fS>cover funeral expenses. ... “I don’t know another way of doing it, ReMield said. “Peoplè tend to put these things out of their mind if you don’t get it done soon. “Whatever we get we’re going to send to tne family,” he added. “Our goal isn’t to come up with a large sum of money. We want tp take care of funeral expenses. Anything over that would be helpful to the W idow m aker A> tènui« Black Widow (Iwld In. padded clamps] spins Hw web that sdii M make a fu n sight. ~ f used to & Rehfield said the fund was established Monday, and thèTounders àré waiting a w eek ter see how much is donated before soliciting funds. £* à , Checks should be made payable to the Ainslie Washington Memorial Fund and sent to the Athletic Department, ASU, Tempe, Arizona, 85281. Page 2 Summer State Press July 29,1976 Tem pe P h o n e 967-9650 Corner o f University ft Rural Road jf* P r a is e /'a dynamic- chorus and al ensemble will present a Bicentennial of music on Friday, June 30, 7:30 p.m. 3irst Baptist Church, S. McClintock (immediately south of Superstition vay). Under the direction of Jim », the ensemble is premiering''W here >' Giants," A Bicentennial Cantata, tH E ORIGINAL ■ fiI all sizes » æêêêê MMm W COLORS Photo by Hal DeKeyaer J u s ta little o ff the to p , m ens W H Ê B È B m W O M E N 'S ^ ^ g J ^ : | . BACKDOOR SHOE SHOP T_ _ ms .Rnat jjj.njj D e B r p c a 's C r o w n in g T o u c h ! 4 I j r v m a l a n BATES * ■ # v | J l v MV The most potent anti-war, film because it’s made with love and tenderness. WOODY ALLEN’S $1.00 Beforç 5:30 Mon. - Thurs. JULY 28 ÄUG. 3 Valley A rt 967 6664 M ODEL REG W AREHOUSE PRICE Front Load Stereo Cassette D & k . Special O ffe r! (Clip and Redeem) (walnut com optional) LIST n u c í • $349.95 — LARGE PIZZA $3.50 ^ 5P M ED. PIZZA $2.50 W SM ALLPIZZA $1.50 Choose either a Thick 'n Chewy or a Thin 'n Crispy Pizza at these special prices, with this coupon only. (Limit of three toppings on each pizza, please) 764 Wait Main Strvet Mesa, Arizona 85201 i I WAREHOUSE PRICE The words Thick n Chewy and Thin n Crispy are registeiedtradmnrki'ot Pizza Knit, Inc. © 1976, Pizza Hut, Inc. Valid Only At This Location: . U niversity Pizza H ut U niv. & Rural Tempe — 968-3989 (OEfer Valid thru Aug?í, 1976) fully equipped warranty and seU W department in our store July 29,1976 Summer State Press Page 3 Health Foundation debts “’ l i q u o r s 6743 E . M cD ow ell R d. (C om er68th St.) PLANNING A PARTY? By Britten Bloom Call us, we offer — AHF has a net deficit of $368,000, said Sheldon Gerard, an ASU accountant and chairman of State Health Insurance Victims (SHIV). SHIV was organized to represent the 8,000 state employes, including 70 ASU employes, who held policies With AHF. After AHF could no longer meet its debts ana went into receivership March 18, some hospitals that treated patients with AHF coverage began harassing policy holders for payment. ^ ^ Tempe Community Hospital was “really rough on AHF policy holders owing moflfey, claimed. Nancy Meyers, an ASU magnetic card H typist and AID’policy holder. L* J Tempe Community sent out letters to former patients threatening to turn accounts over to a collection agency if they didn’t pay their bills, she said. „ But a court order issued March 25 temporarily Receivers of the defunct. Arizona Health Foundation (AHF), which provided health in­ surance .to state employes, are considering a $500,000 lawsuit against Continental Assurance Co. for breach of contract, according to Earl Sees, deputy receiver of AHF. Continental Assurance Co. had agreed last year to pay all in-hospital claims against AHF as of July 1, 1975, and accepted a $52,000 deposit premium. Sees said. H ow ever, C ontinental reneged on the agreement last August and returned the deposit, ))€ Sflicle Continental’s withdrawal from the contract was a contributing factor in AHF’s failure, he claimed. AHF has filed to intervene on the side of California insurance broker, Steve Strange, in a suit against Continental. Strange is suing because he failed to receive a commission, Sees said. "We came in because Strange has to prove our case to prove his own," he said. Strange will try to prove the « » tra c t between Continental and AID'was valid. With assets of $191,000 and debts of $554,000, . • Cold Keg Beer ft Equipment • Liquor «Ice • Caee Discounts • Fine W ines ft Champagne • Wine Well — C hills Wine in 3-6 Min. • Convenient DrWe-ln Window 947-2352 111 E . U niversity Tow er C enter Behind B eskin -R o bbin s The “IN SPOT” for Guy» 6 Gob. • Custom g V frtc aim !sue tSFTTHE DOC!m e up! me 60T kam! but unxnum n i earHen cambras? onameni A sm m , PBPALBRJ! ium vte imwoofTTm (omomùtLtPW cntTomumnfT m m . op iOUFKeim And our ever popii cycled Denim Jeans I and Cutoffs at 2.49 OH.. I'M AKUNDTO60 som. TDSDCnOM doc.. imembup. iman ONecm. aemw JEW ELRY 618 S. College, across from First National Bank TEMPE, ARIZONA STATE PRESS is publlshad by' Arizona State University Tuesday through Friday during the academ ic year, except holidays and /examination pèrtods. Entered as second cla ss matter at Tempe, AZ 86281. cancer scare you to C om e STANDARD OPTICAL Los Arcos Tri City I { In to Tower Plaza South Plaza Christown Valley West Mall Metro Center in a * n x : Student Discount : STA N D A R D O P T IC A L Custom Crafted Jew elry DESIGNER & MAKER OF THE 1975 FIESTA BOWL RINGS FOR OUR WAC CHAMPS IMIS SPACf CONTRIBUTED BY'THE BUBUSHER Next to the Firehouse Restaurant ^; V .i6 iiA p a c h e Boulevard^ Tempe, Arizona 85281” A P A R T M E N T S , . Phone (602) 968-2616 ALSO DESIGNER & MAKER OF THE GOLD, SILVER & TURQUOISE MINIATURE SCULPTURE PRESENTED TO THE FIRST LADY, BETTY FORD, DURING HER VISIT TO OUR VALLEY ON MARCH 9, 1976 W e h a v e th e la rg e s t f t fin e s t s e le c tio n o f D ia m o n d s f t C o lo re d G e m S to n e s . Furnished One Bedrooms - Studios i. 62 UNITS W ith the purchase of our settings, stones will be aveileble to you 3t our cost. OPEN DAILY 9 a.m. to 8 p.m 21 ONE BEDROOMS — 41 STUDIOS F A R S P IE R C E D F R E E Page 4 Summer State Press Jûlÿ 29,1976 Scorpion .farmer Curator rr Is S e e e t a e le "By Mike Grundmami and Che Du Puich Lorin Honetschlager, a beefy, plain-speaking father of five and curator for the ASU Anim al R esource C enter, has a m oney­ making off-hours interest that would make most people quiver. Visiting his home in Mesa, visitors find Honetschlager likes beer and laughs a lot. He scares rep orters who aren’t prepared when he puts a shallow tub containing a h ôp p e a «ses unlimited! U n i ^ e i 's î t y ä i *cR e* hundred scor kitchen table 1 and takes off t; This 45-ye my,” as he referring to education, rui house for anything ,J> grotesque, schlager estii the family n $10,000 tb ,$ doing it. i s o e ? * s t . u n i v e r s i l.y tempe arlxona assai S S S -S 4 4 Ö Backinl957, HonetscM sgsr displays cultivates at home. specimens Mm THE BUFFALO EXCHANGE W.W. lived in a ’55 Olds, loved bubble gum, stations and a girl named Dixie. Recycled Clothing Buying — Selling — Trading 11 E. 5th St. , Tempe 968-2557 — Closed Sun. & Mon. GINO'S PIZZA TOt *DeJUovi ; 966-4666 • 966-5542 $22 South Mill 2 Quarté of Papal with the Purchase of a Large Pizza. (Request When Ordering) COUPON GOOD THROUGH AUGUST 5, 1976 — OR” " " " GINO'S PIZZA 7 0 t V d tw i » 966-4666 • 966-5542 822 South Mill _ _ _ H i " ^9EE Individual Size Pizza with Purchase of Same Kind of Large Pizza, (Request When Ordering) COUPON GOOD THROUGH AUGUST 5,1976 Milking a scorpion. It takes vsnom Iro Loan, Btiy, Sell or Trade Anything of V alue — NEW or U S E D — SAGUAR0 PAWN SHOP Diam onds, W atches, Jewelry, R adios, T V s, Furniture, M usical Instruments, A ppliances, Stereos, T o o ls, A ntiques, G olf C lu b s, G uns, Typewriters, etc. P j| D IX X ll DANCBH Co-starring CO NNY VAN DYKE • JE R R Y R EED » NED BEATTY and ’ MHEMORkAL. U N I O rrM O V tE K O U S E “ T H U R S . & FR I. 7:00 6 9:30 P .M . T icke ts: $1:00 with Summer I D. SOcChildren under 12 $1.50 Others Advance Tickets Available at MU Activities Center M .U . S U M M E R FILM F E S T IV A L i n S c o t t 8 d a l e ^ i a z a - . . « ? * * ^ , a , "®n ® a 9 e , n o n * i ^ ? ® # 2200 N. Scottsdale Rd. Scottsdale (Vi block South of Oak) Wedding Rings *34.95 & up Stereo Units from *29.95 Phone 947-0639 July 29,1976 Summer State Press Page 5 ir m ilks A t home, a parrot is on his shoulder. H e’s sitting at the kitchen table, his shirt clinging to the sweat, on his ch est. • and shoulders, i drinking Budweiser with his daughter Lorey Jean and son-in-law Randy . He and Randy hunt for scorpions' and black widows and bring back anything else that looks interesting; like tarantulas, snakes, centipedes, etc. Lorey Jean hundred scorpions on the kitchen table tw o feet away and takes off the lid. This 45-year-old “dum­ my,” as he calls himself, referring to his 8th-grade education, runs a boarding house for ju st about anything .„poisonous or grotesque. But H onetschlager estimates he and the family make an extra $10,000 to, $12,000 a year doing it. milks venom from th e scorpions, to be” sold to r research, She can m ilk 2,000 scorpions in two days; spending eight hours each day. Lorin’s 15-year-old daughter is eagerly waiting to start her milking ap­ prenticeship. The going price for venom is $1,250 a gram, a little less than half a pipe bowl full. “I lost 900. (scorpions) in my ta r on ce,” H onetsth lager sa y s blandly. “When I got home, I found five . . . (the rest) probably just crawled out." No car quarantine for the kids or anything like that. Just carry on as usual. “All my neighbors know what I do. A lot of ’em ran around braggin’ they know eonUMMd paga • wmm in f A tray full of scorpions — to d s of Honotscftlager's trade. SEM ESTER AT SEA s a ilin g a g a in in F e b r u a r y The S.S. Universe Cam pus sets sail | February 25,1977, on a new series of Sem ester a t Sea . voyages for under­ graduate students. The Spring 1977 voyage is around-the-world from Los Angeles. takas venom from roughly 10,000 scorpions to p roduces gram of the precious fluid, worth about $1,250. ‘ >■- ,v * ' r* AJAPA Y O G A " The Song Of Breath" A ja p a Y o g a js a s im p le and s c ie n tific - ' b re a th in g and m e d ita tio n te ch n iq u e . F o r th o se in te re ste d in im proved h e a lth , in cre a se d en e rg y, p eace o f m in d , and s p iritu a l e xp e rie n ce s c u l­ m in a tin g in S e lf-R e a liz a tio n . SPEAKER : M itc h e ll R adow D ire cto r o f A ja p a Y o g a , F o u n d . GURU JANARDAN P A R A M A H A N SA y 1 f f f i ! (All Lectures Free) Thors. July 29 — 8:00 P.M. . United Bank of Arizona - Conference Room 64 E. Broadway Tempe FO R M O RE INFORMATION Please call: - 9 6 6 - 9 0 7 6 1 For information write INSTITUTE FOR SHIPBOARD EDUCATION Suite 303B, 23521 Paseo de Valencia Box 2726, Laguna Hills, CA 92653 Photos by At Kelt ■ NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY $3000 MICROSCOPE ON DISPLAY stylus, > cartridge & turntable ” CLIN IC ' A u dio Specialists w ill check your stylus cartridge and turntable F R E E ! And present you with a free gift of a stylus pressure gauge. Why ruin your fine record collection? Have your equipment checked out now - F R E E ! And pick up your free gift. TM cC ELM PE IN T O C K A T SOUTH ERN Clinic held Monday to Friday 838-3611 S o u n d B V ideo E x p e rts S in ce U S O Ü Page 6 Summer State Press July 29, 1976 More about ÈË - M ilking venom fo r fun ISJ^w Optometrist Office Near ASU Located in Apache Plaza lOOO E. Apache Blvd. No. 117 Tempo, A Z . continued from page 5 me. Dummies. When their friends come over they gotta drag’em over here — (he mimics a few- elderly fem ale oohs and ahs). Drives me up the wall some days.” The present scorpion sting count for Honetschlager and his wife Jean is anywhere from 30. to 50. Lorin was bitten twice by black widows. “She can't do it anymore,” he says. “They knock her on her butt. I don't let her come out w ith me anymore.“ . “One night we got — what — 900!“ Honetschlager asks his son-in-law. “In two hours,” Bandy says. But some nights yield only 60. “Everybody's different. What may not bother me may knock you on your ass. The larger the body,* the more w ater content," m eaning th e sm allest scorpions are the most dangerous. H e maintains, however, that 90 per cent of scorpion victims heighten their pain with fear. “I get calls from women working in their gardens,” he says bemoaning his popularity as a black widow bite and scorpion sting specialist (the Phoenix Zoo even directs calls to his home); “I tell them to go find the spider; they call bade about 45 m inutes. later —- they can’t find it. And I say 'and you’re not dead, are ya?' If you g e t b itten , for Chrissake get the animal.” Visit Our New Store I '' ¿ 2 - ■ I Double Scoop Sundae . | 49 m a ^ Your Choice of Topping Reg. 85* 15% STUDENT DISCOUNT on Frames, Lenses, and Contact Lenses. 967-8483 994-1833 Dr. C. G . Tatham Dr. Barry S. Herndon State Press Classified Ads Get Results i I {Colonial Ice Cream 1 “Light a match, blow it out and put it on your skin X — that’s what it feels like.” Across from Sun Devil Lounge Lorin can give better advice if the victim can describe the offending bug. But he hates those phone calls. Black widow webbing is used to make gunsights. It takes four strands wound togeth er to make a crosshair; a single strand is so thin it's invisible unless held at an angle to the light. And the stories about the I webbing stronger than an \ equal-width Strand of steel are true. “So you see, I get in­ volved in a lot of crazy activities. With five kids, you can’t make enough money.” Sundown to 1 a.m. is summer hunting tim e. During the winter, scor­ »★ ★ ★ » A * **★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ **★ ** ★ * » * * * » ★ * ★ pions can easily be caught I under wood, rocks or V -t ; . • > garbage, gathering in piles for warmth. The hunters som etim es use. an untraviolet lamp at night, • SUNDAES j which makes scorpions glow i •C O N ES | an eerie turquoise color if • H A N D P A C K E D IC E C R E A M * £ th eir sh ells are hard. • SHAKES ' : ‘‘ Scorpions are nearly blind but can detect the heat from Choose From Over 45 Delicious Flavors a light beamed on them — 915 E, Broadway, Tampa 966-8950 even a flashlight. They can’t ^ In the Lucky Shopping Canter detect" ‘cool’ ultraviolet J Open From 11 AM to 10 PM jL light.* i irkititiritititiritirirkititititititititititititik + ititititit* What does a scorpion ? S P E C IA L! WITH THIS C O U PO N J sting fee like? % jt J | One night Honetschlager (Good Thru. Aug. 16, 1976] ./ T recalls, “I got stung in bed, k four in the morning. Put my k k k k k k k k k k ft k k k k k k k k k k k k k k k A A irk k k k k hand under the pillow and STEVE WOLF & JIM RISSMiLLER IN COORDINATION WITH KDKB ANNOUNCE. . . •he was waitin' for me. It !V:’ wasn't the old lady, either,” he guffaws. ★ For Rent/Lease ★ instruction TUTORING M ATH, S tatistics, Chem istry, Physics arid Fortran Programming. C all 836-3374, 1 ~‘ V 7-29 M ATH TUTORING, avoid cria is \ now. Experienced part-time college professor. Sm all-groups OK. 838-4038. 6-5 8X26 AIRSTREAM . Furnished, reasonable, near ASU. 967-1912, Midway Trailer Park. 8-5 ★ Help Wanted ★ Travel INTERCONTINENTAL TRAVEL Service offers the lowest jet fares to Europe, Apia, A frica, South Am erica. Eurail passes, etc, 107 Girard B lv d .S E , Suite L, Albuquerque, NM. (505) 255-6830. 8-5 ★ W ALK TO spacious carpataci refrig, apart­ ments. Pool, laundry facilitie s, BBQ, parking. 966-2156,967-1677, A rt., 8-24 Work Wanted HOUSE SITTER. Reliable, experienced teenager w ill tend, your lawn, pool etc. w hile you vacation. References. Please phone Ted 966-3328 between 6:30 a.m. and 8:00 a.m. o r 5:30 p.m. and~7:30 p m. TOUGH HOUSEHOLD]ob? Strong, reliable, experienced teenager w ill pitch In. Wash windows, dean carport, shampoo carpets, whatever. References. Please phone .Ted 966-3328 between 6:30 a.m . and 8:00 e.m. or 5:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. STUDENTS WITH suspected hearing loss to serve in auditbry perception experiment. Approx. 10 hours/week a t 63/hour. C all 965-7267. . 8-5 W ANTED: SALESM EN and canvassers interested in Real Estate, fu ll or part-time, Contact M ike Gomez 994-3754. -8-5 STUDENT NEEDED fo r Inform ational aervices. C a ll Mr. Weaver, 279-9333, 11 k m . to è p .m . . 7-29 fE A C H E R S WANTED: west and other states. Placem ents since 1946, bonded. Southw est Teachers Agency, Box 4337, Albuquerque, N.M . 67106. ' 7-29 WANTED: YO UNG lady for sales in office supplies store. Some bookkeeping or accounting required, typing helpful. Con­ tact Frank Ochoa at 968-0203 7-29 ★ Services ★ Typing EXPERIENCED IN a ll a re a s'o f student . typing, near ASU. Accurate, fast, reasonable. Patti 967-4937.________________ TYPING, FAST, accurate. Five years ex­ perience. Reasonable rates. C a ll 273-6738. ■ __________ __________ 8-5 35M M CAM ERA OWNERS SAVE UP 10 50% ON YOUR FILM PURCHASES & PROCESSING L e t us send y o u a 20 exp . ro ll o f o u r Eastm an K o d a k C o lo r N egative F ilm for $ 1 .0 0 .T h a t's rig h t $1 0 0 N o g im m ick s, no joke T he $ 1 .0 0 le t's us k n o w y o u o w n a 3 5 M M cam era. T h is is tru ly the fin e st a nog a t ve film that gives y o u slides, or prints, or b o th at the ch o ice , The n o rm al A S A . is 100. So C 'm o n f ill o u t the co u p o n ' b elow , p u t it in an envelope w ith $ 1 .0 0 and d ro p it in y o u r closest m a ilb o x A s soon as we receive PLEA SE O N LY ONE R O LL TO A C U S T O M E R MAKE E V E R L A B O R A T O R IES t . T D P O Box 38911 H o l l y w o o d Cd 90038 {? 131 322 1001 NEAR ASU. Research papers, theses, dissertations. English degree. Editing. Work guaranteed. 7 years experience. 967-8155. _______________ 8-5 SPEEDY ACCURATE elite dr pica. Dlssertations, theses, term papers. Near campus. C a ll Jahe 968-9828. 8-5 TYPING. BUSINESS College graduate. 65c per double-spaced page. By appointment. A nita 966-9088. 9-16 ★ Automobiles 68 VOLKSW AGEN auto, stick, runs ex­ cellent, stereo $650,967-8588. 7-29 ★ Motorcycles 1974 KAW ASAKI Z-1, fine condition, fu ll dress. After 5:30 p.m. weekdays, anytime weekends, 277-6410. 7-29 ★ For Sale ■SELECTED STYLES Vi ott ladies sandals. Back Door Shop. 707 South Forest, Tampa. ★ Personal LOOKING FOR low cost jet fares with reliable service? Need inform ation on international travel? Let Intercontinental Travel Service a ssist you. 107 Girard B lvd SE, Suite L, Albuquerque, NM 87106. (505) 255-6630. 8-5 NEVER GO hungry) Lose weight real­ 1970 YAM AHA 250 Enduro. No longer is tic a lly like the Skiers do. Send one dollar to S ki Team, 10203 Santa M onica Blvd. beautiful but trustworthy. Street legal, 7-29 good condition. $225. O rti 246-4007 before 303A, Loa Angeles, CA 90067. ' 5 p .m - 959-8493 after. .......1;-/» 8-5 I n t e r v ie w e e s w a n t e d for paper on singles dating married people. C all Diane at 945-8801. , _____________ BUTLER'S U sed Furniture • A n tiq ues Buy • S e ll »Trade 1Student Discount on Reg. Price 225 W . Unlv. 968-6800 Red Cross. The Good Pp July 29,1976 Summer State Press Page 7 ATHLETESI" : ™ ARTS a ENTERTAINMENT FILMS W.W. and the Dixie Dance* kings with Art Carney, Burt Reynolds and Conny Van Dyke, will be shown at-7 and 9:30 p.m., tonight and Friday in the MU Movie House. Admission is $1 with a Sum­ mer ID and $1.50 without. will play at 8 p.m., July 31 at the Veteran’s Memorial Col­ iseum. Tickets are on sale at the Coliseum box office for $4.75, $5.75 and $6.75. Moore, star of the Broadway play “H air,V will sing at 8 p.m., July 31, at ☆ ☆ ☆ Gammage Auditorium. Tickets MUSIC are available at the Gammage Todd Rundgren performs at 7 box office and Diamond’s p.m., tonight at the Celebrity Select-A-Seat locations. Theatre. Tickets, at $5.75 and $6.75, are available at the Piano man Billy Joel comes to Celebrity box office ¿und Evo­ the Celebrity Theatre at 7 lution Recdrds and Tapes. p.m., Aug. 1. Tickets are on sale at the Celebrity box Office YES, along with Renaissance’, 1 and Evolution Records and Melba We'reReadyToServeYou! 1 I Tapes for $5.75 and $6.75. O ur expertise in the newest end latest techniques insure you o f getting the best care for you. W e’ll Dave Brubeck will perform in B help you perform better. two shows, at 7 and 9:30 Community Chiropratie Center p.m,, Aug. 1, at Scottsdale Center fo r th e Arts. Tickets ' % 3910 So.flüiralRd968-7767, are available for $6.50 and Dr. B ru cè F .tu b ltz • Dr. A . Dennis Goldberg $7.5$at the Scottsdale Center Sffm inuiHlHHim iHtlHUm UIMm H»IUiHIIHIHIim inillHHHHIItnilUIIH»IHUIll»m illlHNHi box office. - >☆ ☆ ☆ PRODUCTIONS Romeo and Juliet, will- be presented by Shakespeare and Company at 8 p.m., July 31, at the Scottsdale Center for the 'Arts. Tickets are available at the Scottsdale Center box office for $2.50 and $3. Loggins and Messina bring new angle to country music Loggins and Messina went against the grain in their farewell performance in Phoenix. ’ T hursday night a t th e Celebrity Theatre they broke tradition by exploring new musical territory. The result was very satisfying. Generally, a group that has definite plans to break up Will stick to the old reliable hits. It’s a bad idea to alienate your following before breaking up. But Loggins and Messina, proved they are capable of saying something new. They integrated a variety of music into their act, a refreshing change of pace from the country-rock they are most often associated With. Complicated arrangements gave most of the compositions a distinctive flavor. It wasn’t an evening of boogie after boogie after boogie that many expected. The backup band was one of the finest I have heard in the realm of pop-rock music. They were all capable improvisers, and each composition had a jazz flavor to it. Vince Denham, noted for his work with the Don Ellis jazz-rock orchestra, was a featured soloist i on sax and flute. He was ex­ cellent, as was Woody Chrisman, a violinist with a Ph .D. in physics front Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Kenny Loggins,’ recovering from a hand injury, looked as if he was enjoying himself to the fullest; His injury prevented him from playing tile guitar, but he kept busy on a number of per­ cussion instruments.- He is fascinating to watch on stage as he dances and laughs with the music. > Jimmy Messina turned in some superior guitar and mandolin work. He has a promising solo career- ahead of him if this performance is any indication of the direction he is headed. The encore featured mostly rider numbers; to the delight of the crowd. “Your Mama Don’t Dance” really got things going. “Danny’s SOng,” featured earlier, also drew a lot of en­ thusiasm from the audience. The Bellamy "Brothers were the warm-up act. They were mediocre and looked bored throughout their portion of the now y O U con drive a racing carl concert. With most of their compositions sounding very much the same, it is safe to say that they, are not a distinctive group. ’ 'w It’s too bad Loggins and Messina are splitting. .One can only hope that they will have as much to say on their own as they did together. Arthur Moorhead "G ood Food è D rin k * Uva Entertainment Every Friday, Saturday I Sunday f l S g • TUI 1AM No Min.-No Cover CARPET SPECIALS Happy Hour Mon. IhruFH. 3 to 6 p.m. 9 X 1 2 used rugs — $7.50 Vi Gel. Pitchers, All Slzés in Stock $1.50 Mugs 35c CARPET HOUSE University & b Forest (In The Arches) 946-7711 — Tempe 1616 N . H ayden fid ., T em p e 949-7265 "The best thing we ever did was get divorced:' “1had garlic dressing on my salad'.' . "I noticed'.' “Elliott, you're wonderful'.' "M y name is Alen'.' o llb "le a n " Zzzzzzz, “D o you like my new toe polish?" w W ITH T H IS A D A N D S T U D E N T I.D. Valid drivers license required. Limit 1 ad per STP 7-76 L if t ! "I can't believe we're married 10 years" FOUR LAPS FOR ONLY: $2.00 person. Offer expires August 15, 1976. oral MKT 11:1# Ml to 11 pi Fri, Sat, t S«. IS 1:M aa 1518 E. Van Buren, Phx. ' Gj fRAND t S SPRfIXt 1 g1 G R A N D PRIX FORM ULA I RACING Light fir Dark Beer on Tap -W ine-Carryouts- B la n k e t sta te m e n ts a b o u t V a g a b o n d . From the jnoment you check into a Vagabond, you can rest assured. Because everything you're looking for in a motor hotel is right here. Super clean rooms. Queen size comfortable beds. Änd the kind of service you can write home about. That's be­ cause Vagabond m anagers are all couples who live here. It's their home. So you just naturally feel a lot more like a house g u e s t . and a lot less like a customer. Not to mention (but we will) all the freebies we offer. Free ice.. Free color TV. Free local phone calls; All fo ra price that 11 help you sleep a' lot easier. Compare us to any of our • com petitors—and you'll find Vagabond's got just what you're looking for. A to Zzzzzz. MOTOR hotel --- M oium ti: Tom and Pat Baird Phone (602) 968-7798 Within California (800) 522-1551 Outside California (800) 884-2700 -- Wetreat younue ywtì» coming back. 1 , • "- - v-yGh A SU street will dose . Student Discount JAY'S' . . . . . . . . Mon. thru Thurs. „ A uthentin N e w Y otk' / ■ / ‘ THICK CR U ST — Ajl 6ui Pizlaa.haod-ihadiB5 TAKE O U t O R E A T HM . A portion of JOrange Street will be closed for repairs Aug. 9 through 15, according to John Ellingson , director of the physical plant. ! The str e e t from ' th e Engineering “A” wing to the cul-de-sac adjacent to the MU will bé repaired and resurfaced; ; v The MU and the . men's can be reached from south. The library, central plant and other nearby buildings will he cut off from street access. t r Yo u r d GliO.iOUS :y V:: DINNERS & SUBM ARINES ‘W Open 4 P.M.Vl A.M. Sun.-Ther*. 4 P.IS.-2XN.frl.-iS*- >; . SERVING' MtCHELOB V,. ; '> COORS • BUDWE|SER> SCHLITZ We Deliver SeeM 804 S . A S H , T E M P E Vi B lk .S .$ f University , NEW! Game Rpom! NEW! v v FR EE DELIVERY 967-9689 S ta t e P r e s s ‘News (B o th N e w N u m b e r: ’• ; t • L p p g v | è r i^ f is ) ; ; : ; 965-2292 \ s r e s c e n c ia ' ft REAR Nurse to appear inENGINES tid. w heelchairpageant VW-PORSCHE ( G a r l a n d * f ^ d 4 # C à tà (m à ) • Discount Parts—Service X - VW tHM-up 19” ®r A 31-year-old registered nurse the University of Santo Tomas in will represent Arizona in the Manila. I Parts 6 ON Included jg F ran ' 1969 until 1974, she I Rebuilt engines from $170 | M iss W heelchair Am erica » pagé&nt Sept. 22-26- in Colum-. worked at George Washington :? H ospital in « 504 N. CENTER. M ESA S bus,.Ohio, ifm oney is found to U niversity Washington, P.C . send-her. In December of *74 she moved Crescencia “Ging” Knudson to Arizona and married David , was named Miss Wheelchair Arizona in special competition at Knudson, now a senior electrical ASÙ this month. The state has engineering student a t ASU.: no regular pageant, so an ad hoc She met him while recuperating com m ittee from th e ASU in Seattle after her accident. He _ Disabled Student Services office too is in a wheelchair, and last made th e selection using year was active . oh ASU’s Bring in this au guidelines from national pageant wheelchair basketball team. of the following iti E ffo rts are being m ade directors. Knudson, a head nurse in th e ' . through the ASU D isabled. • Mascot under stone new born nursery a t M esa Students office to help Knudson • Your Birthstone : Lutheran Hospital, won the. raise funds ' for herself and -a required companion — her honor over four competitors. The winner has been in m other-in-law —. for tra n ­ 2-4 W EEK DELIVERY Arizona a year and a half, and sportation and expenses. Although support already has currently is pursuing a master's degree in family-child nursing at come' from a Phoenix hospital ASU in addition to working supply - com pany, W estern Medical Inc., more contributions fulltime at the Mésa hospital. While vacationing in Seattle, are needed, according to ASU Wash., in 1972, Knudson was Disabled Students advisor Diana involved in an auto accident Polaski. $ DIAMOND 130 E. UNIVERSITY DR. Those wishing to help should which since has confined her to a call 965-6466. r wheelchair. She was born in Mindanao in the Philippines, was. graduated from the Immaculate Conception Academy (high school) of Manila, and went on to earn her under­ graduate nursing degree and professional registration from I 833-3670 Celia's Fashions I :, Tem pe Center ''T r y C e lia 's F ir s t'' • Initial inlaid in stone • Rill name in •Fireburst stone Initial under stone ring JEWELRY CUTTING 967-8917 IN THE ARCHES'* _iOpOlfte ITORIM)#* BRAN D I N EW S T O R E tl HYPNOSIS. HELPS! IMPROVE • Memory • Concentration > Personality • Lose Weight Easily • Explore Incarnate Lives POSITIVE SUGGESTION INSTITUTE LINDSAY BRADY HYPNOTIST 968-9035 ALL ARTISTS I ALL LABELS 1 ALL NEW Enjoy Riding The Superstition Mtn. Trails. Call For Reservations 982-4040 SALE INCLUDES EVERY DOMESTIC LP IN THE STORE! LOTS OF CLASSICS & JAZZ! ★ GREAT COUNTRY COLLECTION! ALL TOUR FAVORITE FOPS & ROCK ARTtSTSAf CROUPS! A R TIS T S IN C LU D E! B e v e rly SU le, C le v e la a S O rch e stra , ! - _ r. „ . ,, .___ . .. - ________ _ _ ____\ S e lli O u w e, M e tro p o lita n O pera, L a S ca la O p era,S carce o f O peras, W illie N «lsen,J » sfc^ rW S4 rtf t^ T sa » a « y W ynette, B lv ls , Tom T . B a ll, M ick e y C llle y , 61m Cam pasi », O B vto N ew tso -Je lm ,»>so W UHaam, C.W . M e t o ll, M e rla H aaa arél M a cD a v is ,it ili t t H to, B ro th — lo i C 1 f ........ O.K. Corral Stables Ride Early Mornings, Late Evenings, or Anytime. CALL SCHWANN CAT. LISTED 6.9« LPS ARE 3 FOR $10} - K Jm W e S so îâ i^ P w . _ -, S E M E M * « » . T — M t A M A il, S P A N O M E W ,f|» « T Q U A U T Y L P s t OPEN EVERT N ITE OP THE TEAR TIL M IDNITE INCLUDING ALL HOLIDAYS O ALL SUNDAYS! W TO DS SRI SOUTH MILL AVENUE, TEMPE ------ ’ U W v o rrity & M1U A ve. ★ Tem po C ontor MASTER CHARGE iS AN KAM £RICARD| CASH