mm W ed n esd ay Arizona State University Vol. 59, No.7, Septem ber 1, 1976 state press inside Waylon, W illie............................. 9 Woman Rising........................... 11 Parking squeeze........ ........... 12 Full C irc le ................................. 13 A rizona , indecision couid delay stadium expansion Athletic department considers bids By Nina Bondarook Sun DeM Stadium expansion could run Jensen said delaying construction into problems if cost cutting decisions are decisions could . increase construction not made soon, the project architect said costs. ‘T he prices (quoted for proposed Tuesday. construction) hold for approximately 30 But Ross Jensen of Hubbard, Wad­ days and generally a contractor would sworth & Jensen said decisions on Resign extend them another 30 days (if awarded and construction modifications needed to ithe job),” he said. lower construction costs to the $8.6 million However, Jack Penick, vice president for available for the project should be made by business affairs and athletic director Fred the end of the week. Miller said ASU has not selected a con­ “It has to be decided, because I think tractor and will be calling for more bids. there are too many other problems that “We have made the decision to request could occur,” Jensen said. the regents to reject'all bids, until called Jensen said he is most concerned with for modification of design is completed, the proposed work schedule which dictates and (we) will call for new bids at a later material delivery, construction and date,” Penick said. project completion. “The $6.6 million (the money backed by “If there was a delay (in the decision) it student activity fees) is what we’re going could delay completion. I think it will be to go with,” Penick said. “We’re going to determined Thursday as to what can be review those (original) plans, cut out some done,” he added. On Thursday Jensen will be meeting - of those things In the. original bid and maximize the seating we can get for the with ASU representatives and spokesmen money.” for M. M. Sundt Construction to discuss The Sun Angel Foundation will provide plans. Sundt was low bidder for the up to $2.5 million. stadium expansion contract. It is the same Miller said he is optimistic there will be firm that had planned to work with ar­ no construction delays and completion of chitects On plans for the Kush-Miller hotel the first phase of expansion from 51,000 which was to be constructed on the seats to 56,000 will be on schedule. northeast corner of University and Rural. ASASU may sue over ID dispute By DanWinkel Associated Students will sue the athletic depart­ ment, if necessary, to uphold a contract concerning student seating at ASU football games, the president of ASASU said Tuesday. Dave Braaten said the contract between ASASU and the athletic department was broken when the athletic department failed to consult ASASU about the issuing of the new athletic ID. The contract states the agreement is binding “until changed by mutual consent of the parties contained herein.” Braaten said the athletic department failed to comply with this provision. Athletic Director Fred Miller said the agreement was not violated because it was a “management decision” of the athletic department to issue the ID, and ASASU did not have to be consulted. But he said there is a “legitimate difference of opinion” between ASASU and the athletic department concerning the interpretation of the contract. Miiler said the athletic department was looking for a better method of distributing tickets to students, and the ID was the best solution. “The students are better off,” he said. Braaten said going to court would serve two main purposes: 1) The existing contract will be upheld, but more importantly, future contracts will not be violated. 2) ASASU wilTdisplay to the University community it is “growing up” and cannot be overlooked as a student group. “Going to court is not meant to back them into a corner or threaten them,” Braaten said. “The last thing we want to do is go to court. But I believe the students will back us if we do.” , ' ' Braaten said if the existing contract can be violated, it poses questions about the validity of future con­ tracts made by ASASU. m m I 1 si® 1- I% ■¡P I Confirmation delay may impede Eagles' concert ! m m By Leslie Green Student leaders say they will likely fail to schedule a concert featuring the Eagles because of delays caused by the director of Gammage Auditorium. Warren Sumners, Gammage Auditorium director, said he was unable to confirm until Tuesday there would not be a Gammage concert'on Oct. 15 to conflict with a proposed Associated Studentssponsored Eagles concert in the U n iversity A ctivity Center (UAC). . v / But student leaders said they had confirmed via telegram several days earlier, on Thur­ sday, that no group would be coming to Gammage on that date. The University Scheduling Board meets today at 2:30 to determine if, in fact, ASASU can schedule the concert. Dean of Students Leon« Shell began organizing that meeting as soon as he received confirmation on Tuesday that University =eoncert-facilities will be free Oct. 15. Dann Bowley, the new Arizona Students Association (ASA) concert coordinator, said, “If the scheduling board meets . . . at 2:30 (as scheduled) and approves the thing by 3 p.m., I think our chances are, at the very most, minimal that we still could pull the show off.” Bowley said the Eagles may not appear as he told them he - would confirm the concert date by Monday, but was unable to do so. Bowley, who was, along with ASASU, attempting to arrange the Oct. 15 Eagles concert, said he received the telegram and informed student leaders there was no concert in Gammage on that date — but he did not inform Warren Sumners, director of Gammage, about the telegram. But Bowley said he and two other students met with Shell Friday and showed him the telegram. Shell said he did not tell Sumners about the telegram because he had told student leaders in the Friday meeting he would not use the telegram “as leverage”. He said Monday morning he mentioned the telegram to Vanleer and Vanleer told him Gammage would still have to have theCarpenters Representative they were dealing with, confirm the Carpenters were not coming Oct. 15. Bowley said he did not inform Sumners of the telegram because, “It’s not my job to do Warren’s work.” Sumners said" he had been trying to confirm by phone “for Several days” whether“ a vten­ tative , Gammage concert featuring the Carpenters would occur, and thus conflict with the Eagles concert in the UAC. mimanw T. fjfaLr, If: wwiwwyy Sumners said he had not been able to reach the Carpenters’ agents by phone to confirm whether or not the group would arrive at Gammage Oct. 15. Sumners said he did not communicate with the agents via telegram because they usually confirmed engagements over the phone. Suiriners said Bowley called him Aug. 19 and informed him ASASU wanted to schedule a concert Oct, 15. He said he received the formal request for the Eagles concert from ASASU Friday. Sumners explained that he knew Aug. 1 that the Carpenters might come to Gammage on Oct. 15 and had informed Bowley Aug. 19 he was holding the date open for them. Bowley confirmed he was aware Sumners was holding the date open. Bowley said he has been waiting since Aug. 19 for Sumners to determine whether the two concerts would conflict. Sumners said even if there would only be one ASU concert on Oct. 15, he still had reser­ vations about ASASU scheduling the Eagles because Gordon Lightfoot will be appearing at the University Oct. 16 and Lily Tomlin Oct. 18, and three big ccntinued page 3 fW iqf>'W ( mjkxM ' Em m ft Ifc m ft> » ■ f t ■1 Page 2 State Press September 1,1976 IjjlltllllllllllllllllllllMIIHIIMIIIIMIIII.MMIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIimillllllllMIMIIIIIIIIIIliyi In the news . . . briefly From the Associated Press HAYS MAY RESIGN WASHINGTON — Rep. Wayne Hays (D-Ohio) will announce this week that he is, resigning from Congress in the wake of the payroll-sex scandal, a reliable source said Tuesday.* The House Ethics Committee has decided to begin hearings on the payroll-sex charge against Hays on Sept. 16 despite a plea that he is too mentally depressed to defend himself. LABOR BACKS CARTER WASHINGTON — Top labor leaders promised Jimmy Carter Tuesday to stage “the strongesf, most effective getout-the-vote campaign ever conducted by the labor movement” this autumn. But the chairman of the Council of Catholic Bishops, Joseph Bernardin, expressed personal disappointment that the Democratic presidential nominee would not support a constitutional amendment banning abortion. = What is Woodrow Wilson 1 1 1 E. University Tower Center Behind Baskin-Robbins 1 T h e “I N S P O T ” j f o r G u y s ir G a ls. I • at 8:30? Pi Its Come by and see for yourself. O Q e i DooLëy's I Custom I Skirts 1216 East Apache,Tempe <3 blks.east of Rural) r e i* r~Jc Levis Co/(°rs) And our ever popular Re­ -\V e ste r n cycled Denim Jeans at 4.99" S h ir ts and Cutoffs at 2.49 “We Discount Everything99 1 966-7083 L E V I s t r a i g h t s $ 8 .9 9 Mon.-Sat. 10-6 HARRISES SENTENCED LOS ANGELES — William and Emily Harris, denouncing the American judicial system and vowing allegiance to revolutionary ideals, were sentenced Tuesday to a term of 11 years to life imprisonment. They were con­ victed Aug. 9 of kidnapping, robbery and car theft. HEROIN ARREST * PHOENIX — Jose Jesus Urias, 50, a Phoenix auto rebuilder alleged to be a major heroin trafficker, has been arrested on charges of selling 30 ounces of heroin to federal agents. Urias was ordered held in lieu of $25,000 bond, said Phil Jordan, agent in charge of the Phoenix office of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. G et your books off your back! T he all new Bike T ote is a hand to te , to o ! The Bike Tote is a durable vinyl carry­ all that fastens securely to the frame of any 3 ,5 , or 10 speed lightweight boys bicycle, where it is safely out of the way. It’s as light as a feather, but large and sturdy enough to zip in just about any­ thing you’d need to carry, including text books. And the Bike Tote is waterproof so it cleans inside and out with only a damp cloth. TO: Bike Tote • 610 W. Broadway, Suite 205 • Tempe, Arizona 85282 Please send me Bike Tote(s) at $13.95 each including postage and handling. Enclosed is my check or money order totaling $ _ Indicate quantity and color(s) you want. Allow 4 to 6 weeks for delivery. ---------- white--------— black — -------- light blue________ light yellow Your Name A d d ress City. Sfate Our American Economic System is ugoodbad. -------------------------Z ip A L-8...TH E WORLD’S FIRST FRACTION CALCULATOR Standard Deviation. • Sexagesimal calculation (hour, minute, second or degree, minute, second). (check one) Most Americans (about 80%) believe that our ' economic system—with its individual freedom—is the best in the world, yet some changes are needed. To help give you a clearer picture of our system on which to base decisions, a special booklet has been prepared. For a free copy, write: "Economics',' Pueblo, Colorado 81009. ^ (WÇy The Bike Tote is a hand tote, too! It comes off your bike as easily as it goes o n . . . in seconds. When off, the Bike Tote is a handsome, easy-to-carry hand tote with dozens of uses. Use this attrac- , tive piece of luggage as a book bag, a swimming, tennis and skiing bag, and it’s perfect as an overnight bag. So take the load off your back today, and put it in a Bike Tote that’s a hand tote, too! Special Intrpductory Offer: Only $12.95 plus $1.00 for postage and handling. POLICEMAN CLEARED IN SHOOTING TEMPE — Officer Anthony Canning has returned to duty after being cleared of any wrongdoing in the shooting of a woman, her child and the woman’s boyfriend. The wounded pair, Floyd Evans, 36, and Patricia Long, 29, will be charged with murder in the earlier shooting death of Mrs. Long’s estranged husband, Charles Long, 29, police said. f • Square root and remainder calculation in division. • Percentage for mark-up & discount. • Independent memory with four-key and grand total 5 memory, • 8 digits with large bright green display. • AC or two penlight batteries (included). • AC adaptor (Type 2-2Q00) is available as optional ¡trim. $24.9 $ .c 1 A public MTvic* IOMM4* ol The A d i____ . Council and U S. Department of Commerce pt»earned by ihia New»pap»t STATE PRESS Is published b y A rtz o n a ' State University Tuesday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter at Tempe, AZ 85281. i miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini TWELVE TRAPPED BY VAPOR BLAST POINTE-A-isITRE, Guadeloupe — A massive vapor explosion on La Soufriere volcano Monday trapped 12 scientists near the rim of the fissure and two were injured, authorities on this French island reported. Authorities said it was not an eruption, as was earlier reported. It was, nonetheless, the biggest explosion since La Soufriere began spewing acrid fumes and ash in July. There have been no deaths. SWISS TAKE WRONG TURN, INVADE NEIGHBOR BERN, Switzerland — A Swiss army unit of 75 soldiers and 50 horses took the wrong path at a junction and ac­ cidentally invaded the tiny principality of Liechtenstein Tuesday. i | University ^• k*FkW vvW«‘,'öri£A,-w,'¿ere. Page 4 State Press September 1,1976 r O p in io n L.__________ ----------------------------------------- sta te press 1 Look! Here’s your chance to enlighten eVeryone who reads the STATE PRESS with your favorite sentiment. Bring or mail current, catchy or ¡napping quotations to the editor, State Press, Stauffer A137. The author’s name must be included. III pay (1. Funny quotes, especially unintended ones from politicians, get preference. PD _________________ A What are you waiting for Fred? ASASU President Dave Braaten says it’s a m atter of principle. He’s right. He’s talking about the dispute between ASASU and Fred Miller, athletic director. Braaten wants an admission from Miller that the athletic department was wrong, that it b**bke the contract for student football tickets. * . Miller has started making concessions, but not on the basic issue of his right to institute the card. Miller’s agreement to drop the $1 late charge was aimed to undercut one of Braaten’s arguments — that the ID adds to the cost of tickets. But Miller can hedge all he wants to — the “binding” agreement still says nothing about athletic IDs. Braaten has him dead to rights on breaking the contract, and Fred must be starting to sweat. If he admits he broke the contract, he will admit ASASU has the right to review and decide whether to cancel the ID program. But Fred is talking out of both sides of his mouth if he won’t admit ASASU nas the right to cancel the plan. Because that would mean Miller doesn’t really believe the IDs help students get tickets faster. ' '— ‘ Why would ASASU cancel a plan that time proved was beneficial to students? Braaten is fighting for recognition that ASASU .is not a “doormat.” Miller wiped his feet on it this summer by springing the ID plan. Fred is quick to say, “We honor our commitments.” That looks doubtful just now. He can prove it though. He knows ASASU won’t cancel the ID program if it is as good as he claims. ASASU is even willing to compromise. What are you waiting for Fred? X X SI j r / • © s / . . . ' No offense, ticket ladies I picked up my own athletic ID Monday. Went in about 9:30 a.m. There were no lines, probably because of the time. My photo looks ridiculous, largely because I put a silly grin on my face when the picture was snapped. Now I don’t like the way the athletic officials went about implementing the IDs, or the charges they tacked on. But I have no hassle with the women running the operation. They were friendly and we all laughed at my picture. However, when somebody said I was the editor, I realized they were unhappy with me and the State Press. One woman said the paper had been “had-mnut.ln’ng us.” Another said she h&d seen only one “good editorial” about the ticket operation. » Ladies, the State Press has nothing against you or anyone. We’ve been printing news stories and-editorials about the ID controversy. When a story says the athletic department, it’s safe to assume the reference is to decision-makers. The State Press often gets blamed for what people say in news stories. We’re not complaining, that’s the way it is in the news business. There’s nothing to be gained from an “us vs. them” outlook. Maybe a lesson on the difference between an “editorial” and a “news story” will help. Editorials are statements of opinion found on thia page. Nowhere else. (Reviews of cultural or art events are ex­ ceptions.) News entries make up most of t he paper. They’re ha. .. . .. HEWLETT-PACKARD PRESENTS THE FIRST FAMILY OF ADVANCED CALCULATORS. ♦ Performs all standard log and trig functions (in radians or degrees). ♦ Performs rectangular/polar conversion, register arithmetic and more. ♦ Two selectable display modes: Fixed point and scientific. ’ ♦ Lowest-priced HP Scientific calculator. HP-2 2 Business Management $165.00* The HP-22 easily handles the kinds of calculations you face in business courses today, in management tomorrow. Breeze through business math calculations. Build existing statistical data into reliable forecasts. If you’re going into business administration, this is the calculator for you. ♦ Combines financial, mathematical and ^ statistical capabilities. ♦ Performs complex time-value-of-money computations including interest rates. ♦ Performs rates of return and discounted cash flows for investment analysis. ♦ Performs extended percent calculations, accumulated interest, amortization, etc. ♦ Ten addressable memories. ♦ Full decimal display control. HP-25C Scientific Programmable with Continuous Memory. HP-21 Scientific. New low pnce. $80.00* The HP-21 makes short work of the technical calculations even so-called “non­ technical" cpurses require. If you need a cal­ culator for more than simple arithmetic —this is it—especially at its new low price. ♦ 32 built -in functions and operations. ♦ Addressable memory. • $ 2 0 0 .0 0 * The HP-25C is our keystroke program­ mable. It can solve automatically the repetitive problems every science and engineering - student faces. What’s more, its Continuous Memory capability lets you retain programs and data even when it’s turned off. ♦ Continuous memory capability, ♦ 72 built-in functions and operations. ♦ Keystroke programmability. ♦ Branching, conditional test and full editing capability. ♦ Eight addressable memories. ♦ We also offer the HP-25, (without the Con- . tinuous Memory feature) for $145.00? HP-27 Scientific/Plus $ 2 0 0 .0 0 * The HP-27 is for the science or engineer­ ing student—whose course work extends into business administration. The reason: It features every pre-programmed scientific function we’ve ever offered, plus comprehen­ sive stat and financial functions.That’s why we’ve dubbed it our Scientific/Plus. ♦ 28 pre-programmed exponential, log and trig functions, 15 statistical functions, 10 financial functions—53 in all. ♦ 10 addressable memories—20 memories in all. ♦ 6 selective clearing options give you flexible use of memories. ♦ Fixed decimal, scientific or engineering display formats. What to look for before you buyan advanced calculator. X* M >, >* >Ut< filH CO$ G3 £9 s i m ImSSSrntMmMm H E W L E T T -P A C K A R D fto&tärrnm'& *■**$'sim«o ■?■f’UBBßXy’ programmability Accissomes '* vwuf. •>ERVkt ii'AARRANT> MANUf Ai. 11IRl P S Kt.f’l K >\ Sales and service from 172 offices in 65 countries. Dept. 658G, 19310 Pruneridge Avenue, C upertino, C A 95014‘ Suggested retail price, excluding applicable state and local taxes—Continental U S., Alaska and Hawaii. 616/29 704 S . College Avenue One block North of ASU 966-6226 ¡Pjpl Page 6 State Press September 1,1976 First aid course offered to students Two medical technicians have organized an ASU short course in emergency medical technology, partly in reaction to the death of a student in a chemistry lab explosion last year. The course’s organizers and teachers, Tim Urell and Ken Hoffman, said they saw the need for an emergency medical service on campus after chemistry student William Engle’s death in April? s' The 10-week course wfll cover first aid techniques, in c lu d in g e m e rg e n c y tre a tm e n t for cardiac arrest, shock, hemorrhage, burns, airway obstruction, overdose and childbirth. The instructors also plan to Class to h ear candidates . John Rhodes and Pat Fullinwider, candidates for the U.S. House of Representatives from Arizona’s first district, will be featured speakers in a political communication class at 9:15 a.m. Thursday. The class will be held in the Education Lecture Building and is open to in­ terested students. Rhodes will speak with the class by familiarize students with job opportunities as' paramedics. At the end of the course, optional exams will be given for Red Cross certification. Urell and Hoffman are certified emergency medical technicians and American Red Cross instructors. The class will meet one night a week, with sections offered on Wednesdays and Thursdays from Sept. 15 — Dec. 2. It is open to anyone with an ASU ID card. Registration fee is $10 per student. An additional $4.50 is required for materials.Students may register at the MU Activity Center, lower level. long distance Washington, D.C. telephone Rhodes and Fullinwider will discuss their roles as candidates and the way they communicate with the electorate. The class, taught by Dr. Robert Hirsch, is designed to teach students to better understand and utilize political communication. D ouble cross a frie n d S R -5 6 The super slide rule programmable powerhouse ...w ith 10 memories and 100 program steps. $ 10995 aPSS l > The SR-56 is a tremen­ dously powerful slide rule calculator. Yet you can pro­ gram. it whenever you’re ready. T h ere are 74 p r e p r o ­ grammed functions and op­ e r a t i o n s . You can do arithmetic within all 10 memories!. It has AOS - a unique algebraic operating sysfem that lets you handle problems with^up to 9 levels of parentheses. There’s also polar to rectangular con­ v ersio n -b u ilt in. Mean. Standard deviation. De­ grees, radians, grads. And, it works with TI’s new printer —the PC-100. Chances are, you’ll be pro- „ _ m Unì urn / 0 5' 3 0 7 - V 9 K slfl! \»»Nl V tog In s MV ctex CTO Mmt bat 1 st NOP K/S CP Ï W: M it AST SR SO io * i* Irrt M s in CM* EXC I to Sx le í fix ces' •ubr IT rtn I ì m* m */« tü r PROD sui Vf y pause B 7r gramming. That’s what pro­ fessionals in your field, are doing—right now. And with an SR-56 you’re ready. It has 100-merged prefix pro­ gram steps. 6 logical deci­ sion functions. 4 levels of subroutines. You can decre­ ment and skip on zero to iterate a loop as many times as you specify. There are 4 levels of subroutine to let you use your program steps to maximum advantage. And, you can even compare a test register with the dis­ play to make a conditional branch. So you can check an intermediate result for convergence, or q, maximum. The edge you need. Now. And in your career. Texas Instruments will rebate $10.00 of your original SR-56 purchase price when you return this coupon and your SR-56 customer information card post­ marked no later than October 31,1976. To apply: 1. Fill out this coupon 2. Fill out special serialized customer information card inside SR-56 box Name Address City State 3J Special Campus Offer P.O, Box 1210 Richardson, Texas 75080 ‘ Suggested retail price, f 11 with ttie T-register. © 1976 Texas Instruments Incorporated from Name of SR-56 Retailer SR-56 . Serial No. (from back o f calculator) Please allow 30 days tor rebate T exas In s t r u m e n t s IN C O R PO R A TED mmí September 1,1976 State Press Page 7 tt Sounds Incredible BUT EVELYN WOOD GRADUATES CAN READ JAWS IN 41 MINUTES At That Speed, The 309 Pages Come Across With More Impact Than The Movie. In Living Blood, You Might Say. You can do it, too. So far almost 1 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0 people have done it. People who have different jobs, different IQ ’s, different interests, different educations have com­ pleted the course. Our graduates are people from all walks of life. These people have all taken a course developed by Evelyn' Wood, a prominent educator. 'Practically all of them at least tripled their reading speed with equal or better comprehension. Most have in­ creased it even more. Think for a moment what that meians. All of them— even the slowest— now read an average novel in jess than two hours. They read an entire issue of Time or Newsweek in 3 5 minutes. They don’t skip or skim. They read every word. They use no machines, instead, they let the material they’re reading determine how fast they read. V „ And mark this well: they actually understand more, remember more, and enjoy more than when they read slowly. That’s right! They understand more. They remember more. They enjoy more. You can do the same thing— the place to learn more about if is at a free speed reading lesson. This is the same course President Kennedy had his Joint Chiefs of Staff take. The same one Senators and Congressmen have taken. Come to a free Speed Reading Lesson and find out. 1t is free to you and you will leave with a better under­ standing of why it works. Plan to attend a free Speed Reading Lesson and learn that it is possible to read 3 -4 -5 times faster, with better comprehension. SCHEDULE OF FREE SPEED READING-LESSONS ltou,ll increase your reading speed _______ 50 to 100%on the spot! SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY 4:00 P.M . OR 8:00 P.M . PHOENIX TEMPE DEL WEBB’S TOWNEHOUSE 100 West Clarendon Near Indian School & Central HOLIDAY INN Corner of Apache Blvd. & Rural Road i! Page 8 State Press September 1,1976 ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT A free film that you must see if you have the time is “Shadows of Our Forgotten Ancestors.” Thé Cultural Af­ fairs Board will show it in Neeb Hall this weekend. Billed as an avant-garde saga of a 19th Century Rus­ sian Romeo and Juliet, it is referred to by many as the MU MOVIE HOUSE The Lost Honor of KathSeptember arina Blum 13 7 p.m. Preview of Fall Film Sch­ Blazing Saddles edule 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m. 9 and 11 p.m. Free admission. Shadows of Our Forgot­ 24 NEEB HALL ten Ancestors The Sunshine Boys September 7 p.m. 7 and 9:30 p.m. 3 Blazing Saddles Free admission. 7-11 7,9 and 11 p.m. Nashville* 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. All tickets for Neeb Hall and the MU Movie House $1 with ASU ID card: $1.50 without except where indicat­ ed. Advance tickets available with ID card at the MU Activities Center for films marked *. Four tickets may be as taught by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi purchased with one ID card. There are no refunds or ex­ changes on movie tickets. VALLEY ART THEATRE M.U. Cochise Room September ( 12:40 PM and 7:30 PM 1-14 The Magic Flute Antonia: Portrait of the Woman 4 Throbbing Thrillers (midnight showing only). greatest Russian film since the days of Eisentein. It stars Ivan Nikolaichuk and Carisa Kadochnikova. See the listing below for show times. 4 Free Lectures TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION™ PROGRAM Wednesday, Sept 1 Advanced Lectures for S.I.MS. Members 3SÏS Sunday Eves starting Sept29| 11 M.U. Coconino Room 7:30 PM Ladies and Gentlemen, The Rolling Stones (midnight showing only) Admission is $1 before 5:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday; general admission, $2; students with IDs $1.75; children 1 2 . and under,$1. First movie starts at 5:30 p.m. daily. ASU MUSIC THEATRE September 7 The Jazz Arts Quartet, headed by pianist Dan Haerle and saxophonist Bob Miller, for further info call 257-8611 p fi= l deep dish pizza, juicy burgers, giant salads, homemade ringers, taters, and golden mushrooms - 15c hot dogs on Fridays 3:30-6. will give a performance free to the public at 8 p.m. MEMORIAL UNION EVENTS September 1 Short course fair/picnic with instructor demonstration and displays, tours of the MU; 10 a.m.-1:30 p.m..west lawn. Fair admission free. Picnic items for sale. Activities Committee gettogether, 2:30-4 p.m., Alumni Lounge. Admission free. 2 Music Moods: Gabriel Gr­ uber, viola. 11:30 a.m"., Mont­ gomery Lounge. University community invited. Video tape of artist Judy Seigel at work. Showings at 2, 2:30 and 3 p.m. in Rendezvous Lounge. Hostess membership re­ ception, 2:30-4 p.m., Alumni Lounge. 4-19 Nashville Clothing and Gear, MU display cases. May be viewed during building hours. OTHER PLACES TodaySept.5 Paul Shank’s French Quar­ ter dinner theatre at the Safari Hotel in Scottsdale is offering “Barefoot in the Park” every evening (except Monday) at 8:30 p.m. Cocktails start at 6:30 p.m: with buffet dinner at 7 p.m. Cast party after the show is at 11 p.m. Sunday, and Tuesday through Friday. Tickets are $10 per person; on Saturday, $12 per person. Reservations are suggested at 945-9529. New Bergman film opens at Valley Art A special benefit performance of Ingmar Bergman’s newest film “The Magic Flute,” will begin at 8 p.m. today at the Valley A rt Theatre, 509 Mill Ave., Tempe. The film is an adaptation of Mozart’s spirited opera. Shown along with the Bergman film will be “Antonia: A Portrait of the Woman,” an award­ winning picture filmed by Judy Collins and Jill Godmilowv Proceeds from the premiere showing will benefit the Phoenix Symphony. Refreshments will be served at intermission. Tickets are $4.50 in advance; $5 at the door. For further information, call 277-7291 or 967-6664. frothy beer in frosted mugs, frozen fruit daiquiris, special prices during DOOLEY HOURS, Mon. • Thurs. 3-8 p.m. to a live band EVERY night. No cover charge on FIDO [Friday is DOOLEY DAY[ from 3:30-6. Watch a professional light show, cartoons, slides and flicks. Pitcher of COORS $1.75 SELF SERVE 6 FU LL SERVI GAS UNIVERSITY EXXON ~*ssi DooLeys 1815 E, University Cor. McClintock 967-4905 1216 East ApacheTempe (3 bibs.east of Rural) •FRO NT END ALIGNMENT •TUNÉ-UP •R EFRIGERATION SERVICE • BRAKES- — •GENERAL REPAIRS »TIRES & BATTERIES Entertainment starts at 7:3u P I I I I I I *1.0 0 O FF O N A N Y P IZ Z A Offer valid thru September 10,1976 - MUST PRESENT COUPON - I I I I I I I STUDENT DISCOUNTS O N REPAIRS SERVICE IS OUR “P R ID E ,” QUALITY W ORK OUR “M O TTO ” Buck Pierce, Owner — 29 Years Experience iiaMoruMii ■ ;Iim.n« IIP—»I. «HI Un ...in... 1 ££«¡¿5 September 1,1976 Stale Press Page 9 Way/on, Willie wowed 'em A great portion of the Coliseum crowd Saturday night could have been characterized as kung-fu cowboys, as most sported lohg hair and Stetsons. But no matter. The hundreds of pick-ups in the parking lot gave testimony to the popularity of the four artists slated to perform: Tompall Glaser, Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and his wife Jessi Colter. Of late, Nelson and Jennings have opened up country and w estern music to a la rg e r audience. One gets the feeling that this might have happened without planning, as both approach their music with straightforwardness, a refreshing change from com­ mercial Nashville sounds. They don’t seem to be out to squash the Nashville establish­ ment, just make it move over to include some new music. Both of them have collaborated successfully to develop the Texas sound they are noted for, and have won over even many of those who shunned C&W music. ' Glaser appeared first. His voice comes across as graced with many a shot of whiskey rough, sandpapery, suited to his assortment of Texas rock tunes.' The crowd seemed most pleased by his “T for Texas” and roared when he perform ed his an ­ tiwomen’s liberation song, “Put Another Log on the Fire,” written by Shel Silverstein. Willie Nelson was famous for years among professionals for his work as a lyricist before his success as an individual performer. His classics include “Crazy,” “The Night Life,” “Hello Walls,” “Funny How Time Slips Away,” and most recently, “Blue Eyes Cryin’ in the Rain.” His appearance (white overalls, t-shirt and headband) belies the class his lyrics bring to C&W music, which can be excessively mushy about boozin’,, divorce action or illicit love affairs to the point of being ridiculous. Nelson’s eloquent lyrics cut through th e usual Nashville phraseology. He coins new phrases, more familiar and easily identified with by listeners. The . crowd’s response was overwhelming at times — wails pierced the air. « A few rowdies were led away by security guards during his version of “Up Against the Wall, Redneck Mothers,” which just goes to show the effect his music has on people. Jessi Colter, originally from Mesa, is best known for her “I’m Not Lisa,” and “I’m Looking for Blue Eyes” singles, both of which she performed Saturday. The former is much stronger in emotional impact than the latter but both reveal the headstrong feelings of the singer-songwriter. Colter performed only a half hour before she was joined by her husband, Waylon Jennings. Jennings is a favorite of the Arizona C&W scene. It wasn’t so long ago he was playing to packed houses at the old J.D .’s, recently destroyed by fire, on Scottsdale Road. Still, it’s taken a few years to get where he is. . Jennings’ appeal lies in his in­ te rp re ta tio n of music. His repertoire includes such diverse works as “MacArthur Park,” Chuch B erry ’s “Brown-eyed Handsome^. Man” and G regg Allmans’ “Midnight Rider.” The Phoenix crowd certainly made it clear they claim much of the responsibility for his success. Although this show featured performers recognized ,as the leaders of progressive C&W music, I felt it was too long. The individual performances by Glaser and Nelson could have been shorter. NATURAL FOODS RESTAURANT and HONEY ICE CREAM PARLOR Complete Natural Food Menu ▼ CUTS - f f l fUo lr WE c ut olor url are $ Y I1U6. 0 U0 U W ITH S TE P H A N IE , G A IL, — -IT BR IN G S OUT YOUR V N A TU R A L H IG H LIG H T Mon. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Tuea.-SaL 10 a.m.>12 midnight Sun. 12-12 ■- B A R B A R A . OR R ICARDO -D IP ILITO R Y W AXIN G ALSO -M A N IC U R E S W ITH “ LO V E " -A R T IF IC IA L N A ILS LOUIS AN TH O N Y HAIR DESIGNS 5th Ave s CUTS GUYS & GALS BRING THIS AD AND GET BE A "HENNA" GIRL a 965-6640 All ASU students welcome to attend. CUTS - BLOW STYLE C orn er o f 5 th S t. and M ilt PO *P-U P A U D ITIO N S F rid a y, S epte m be r 1 0 th, 11:00 a m .- 5:00 p .m . M .U . R endezvous Lpunge M u s ic ia n s , m a g ic ia n s , dancers, or o.ther ta le n te d e n te rta in e rs. ‘ A u d itio n in fo rm a tio n available in th e MU A c tiv itie s C enter CUT CONDITION GOLDEN TEMPLE 4 X 5 S . M ill, T e m p e ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE PRESENTS SHAMPOO ^ a y s awaiahle Largest Selection of Birkenstock Sandals in Arizona r t WEDGE'S - BOB'S - NOVA'S East Indian Itafian American Mexican Chinese G O LD EN T EM P LE THE M.U onsult Sandwiches, Lunches, Dinners Fruit and Vegetable Salads Honey Ice Cream Parlor Pure Fruit Flavors And considering the many times the roadies darted onstage to fiddle with equipment during those performances, I was disappointed they couldn’t achieve a change of equipment from Glaser to Nelson in less than half an hour. The length of the evening was compensated by the quality of the music, but still left many fans exhausted by the end. A. Mabante GRAND OPENING GOLDEN TEMPLE No Sugar . No Preservatives . No Artificial Color . No Artificial Flavor Photo by Diane Dickson Waylon Jennings performed Saturday at the Memorial Coliseum. k OvL 3rd Ave. ▲ ¿Indian School 4 1 6 1 N . C R A FTS M A N CT. SCOTTSDALE 9 4 7 -8 3 8 3 O P E N M O N - SAT 9-9 k qfltCNMMMNMKPMMKW Page 10 State Press September 1, 1976 Parking chaos swamps police By Rosemary Schabert Within a 90-minute period Tuesday morning, about 70 people, most of them ASU students, lost $1 to the city of Tempe in parking tickets in the neighborhood just north of campus. And if the violators procrastinate, the $1 figure could mushroom into a $35 fine and an arrest warrant. The harmless looking tickets were affixed to windshields from University to 5th Avenue and from Mill Avenue to College, and all the sidestreets in between. m This area accounts for about 70 per cent of the tickets given by M.S. Grider, the parking en­ forcement officer who patrols the downtown area. The parking ticket business for Tempe booms with the start of fall semester. During the first three days of school, Grider issued about 500 citations bn his beat. The average has since slackened to about 120 citations per day. Mornings bring the day’s big harvest in parking violations, • Tempe Police Lt. A.W. South said. Most of Tuesday morning's violations were for parking in zones which are closed off between 7:30 and 9 a.m., with about 10 per cent of the tickets given for meter violations. ‘T ve got them just about all written by noon,” Grider said. The parking problem improves in the afternoon, that’s when the meters begin to expire. Most of the meter violators have popped into a store in the area, planning to spend just a minute, but stayed much longer, Grider said. After patrolling the area last year, Grider found that the parking problem was worse in the fall than in spring. “In the fall they’ll park anywhere — on the street, in lots. As the semester wears on, they find alternative ways to get to school, or find places to park," he said. By spring, he said, most students know the ropes con­ cerning parking. Some parking violators, how ever, remain regulars throughout an entire semester. . “I can recall writing tickets to people in the same place, five days a week,” Grider said. “I have three or four right now that I write tickets to every day,” he said. Most of the regulars just pay their tickets, the officer Said. “To some of them, it's worth a buck a day to be close to classes,” South said. People prefer the $1 city fee to the $2-$5 fine they can get in a private lot, he said. Grider said in spring he had about a dozen regulars he gave tickets to every day. TEMPE TRADE-A-B00K “One lady I talked to said she just didn't want to hassle with finding a parking place. So she’d just park in a meter space, and not put any money in, and just come by every day and pay the ticket. “I figured out we (the city) were losing money on the deal,” Grider said. If too many students tried to park in meter spaces, however, police could get tough, Grider said. Legally, drivers are only supposed to park in a meter space for two hours or the duration of the meter, and then move. Police haven’t been enforcing continued page 11 Oea/pod 4455 SOUTH RURAL RO. • TEMPE THE WORLD’S FAVORITE BED-TIME STORY IS FINALLY A BED-TIME STORY. . . O for SAME COVER (EXCEPT SCIENCE FICTION) Trade 1 Science Fiction for 1 of Any Other Category, Same Cover, Free (Limited Offer) (Free Websters Dictionary To The First 50 People To Ask) 824C S. MILL AVE. — 968-0915 — MON .-SAT. 10-9 Down The Hall From Gino's Pizza From the producer; of Flesh Gordon, BILL OSCO’s. V&nderiarid AN X-RATED MUSICAL COMEDY Have a wale of a time. Vicky Vaughn makes it easy in this zip-up jumpsuit, topstitched at collar, yoke gathers, button-tabbed pap sleeves. Stretch cinch belt. In polyester/cotton pinwale corduroy, machine wash-dry.. Cream with Brown or Navy topstitching; 5 to 11. $42°° CELIA’S Fashions X STARRINGPLA YOOY'S COVER GIRL KRISTINE BE BELL WITH LARRY GELMAN • ALLAN NOVAK • TERI HALL AND JASON WILLIAMS, STAR OF “FLESH GORDON” DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY JOSEPH BARDO LYRICS AND MUSIC BY BUCKY SEARLES ARRANGED AND CONDUCTED BY JACK STEARN & PETER MATZ ASSOCIATE PRODUCER JASON WILLIAMS PRODUCED BY WILLIAM OSCO • DIRECTED BY BUD TOWNSEND MANN THEATRES Daily at 1:00-2:30-4:00 5:30-7:00-8:30-10:00 CHRISTOWN GQ a n MOUTH19thAVIWUt A GENERAL NATIONAL FILMS RELEASE State Press September 1,1976 Page 11 Valley's feminist newspaper seeks increased circulation By Jayne Clark In May, a group of women published the first feminist newspaper in the Valley. Five issues later, it is still largely unknown. problem coming up with new ideas for things to write about, French said. “We want this to be a newspaper for women in the Valley. I feel there is a lot of work to be done to make women aware of what is available here,” she said. French said Woman Rising is exclu sively for and about women, “but in a certain context. It’s not like Family Circle.” The paper, Woman Rising, said in its first editorial its purpose is to “celebrate the diversity of lifestyles... found among women today,” and to “present an alternative to the narrow image of women per­ petuated in the male-oriented media.” The paper tries to include “some politics” in each issue, but the collective emphasized it is “not a journal of political rhetoric seeking to establish ‘th e’ feminine line.” “We want to write about candidates up for election. We hope to be able to write about how they feel about the ERA (Equal Rights Amendment) and other women’s issues,” French said. ASU Women who are looking for a way to get involved on campus Woman Rising is also a forum for women to express their views, said Hannelore French, an A SU graduate student who helped found it. Come to M.U. Hostess Membership Reception The paper accepts reader contributions and has gotten some response, “but not enough-! -we wish there were more,” French said. Thursday, September 2 2:30 p.m. - 4 p.m. M.U. Alumni Lounge Woman Rising is published monthly by the Woman Rising C ollective, an independent nonprofit organization. It depends on subscription and newsstand revenues for support. The collective has not had any •\ Usher at M.U. movies Assist at M.U. Information Desk Plan social and service activities Usher at Grady Gammage Memorial Auditorium Fay Smith P* * ° byM*re‘* Joy Prou" M ore about Parking chaos Woodrow continued from page 10 the law, however. “We figure one ticket is enough,” Grider said. The majority of students pay their tickets good-naturedly, the officer said. “But some of them say, ‘To hell with the tickets,’ and we end up giving them a warrant,” said South. Once in a while, an ASU student really gets in trouble with the city. .*?. “If we find a particular vehicle with a lot of tickets outstanding, we locate the person with the help of the University,” said South. “We leave a note on the. windshield: ‘You have X number of outstanding parking citations from the city. If these aren’t taken care of in a day or two," I will appear in room 208, your biology class, and personally escort you to the Tempe Traffic Court.’ ” The student must then make an appointment to come down to ojthe station, South said. One student who owed about $120 in tickets was finally tracked down. But police rarely have t o , resort to school records and class schedules to apprehend a violator, said South. South defended the 7:30 - 9 a.m . parking lim itation, however. “At that time of the day, our priority is moving traffic to ASASU group services school or work or wherever they’re going, not parking,” he said. Some people resent the time limitations enough to remove the signs, South said. Twice people have been caught in the act, he said. Ron Krosting, assistant traffic engineer for Tempe, said the signs were posted years ago to give residents “an equal shot at getting parking.” Residents requested the limitation to get parking spaces after night shift work or for visitors, Krosting said. Parking meters are a way of ' dividing parking betw een stu d en ts, and shoppers in commercial areas, he said. . South and Gilder recom-» mended students park in the neglected area between the Activity Center and the tennis courts. According to University Police, any student may obtain a free pass and park there. Wilson is peiforming live on the lounge side 8:30 pm - 1 am N o c o v e r c h a rg e — DooLeys 3 -8 (M o n .-T h u rs .) 1216 East Apache,lempe (3 blks,east of Rural) * A great dance band — Carousel playing on the entertainment side every evening. EVERY WEDNESDAY N IT E IS M UNCHIE IMITE 9:00 P M 12 MIDNIGHT All the Pizza Thick and Chewy* and Thin and Crispy’, (D .. . ... % Spaghetti, and Cavatini You Can Eat. Plus One Glass of Coors or Small Glass of Coke. SPECIAL STUDENT PRICE OF for consumers An organizational meeting for the consumer services division of Associated Students will be held at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the ASASU offices, MU room 208J. ^ wmm H a p p y H o u r p rice s in e ffe c t 955 E University, Tempe 968-3989 «WW» ìy -'a m m ♦1.50 Rage 12 Stale Press September 1,1976 Lecturers to discuss advances in academia The honors program of the College of Liberal Arts will sponsor a series of lectures by a group of ASU scholars and lecturers, Dr. Richard Jacob» director of the honors program, announced Monday. — Professor Charles M. Woolf, dean of the Graduate College and vice president for graduate studies and research “Genetic Counseling and Genetic Engineering” Sept. 7 at 1:40 p.m. in P S F 173. — Professor Leonard Goodstein, chairman of the department of psychology “Advances in Sex Research and Sex Therapy” Sept. 22 (time and place to be announced) — Professor Mark Reader, department of political science “Crises of Survival” (time and place to be announced). Drivers beware: Parking squeeze is getting tighter ■ By John Marquart The parking squeeze at ASU is about to get a little tighter. closed now for demolition work (at Goodwin),” said John Ellingson, ASU The construction of two improved director of planning and construction. parking lots on the south and east sides of “The other areas will be closed when work campus will soon require the temporary is scheduled after bids are called in three or four weeks,” he said. closure of more than 500 parking spaces. Faculty and staff who normally park in The areas subject to closure for four to lot 19 will have to find space in Other five months include the dirt portions of faculty and staff areas in the center of student lots 40 and 42 on both sides of campus, said Ellingson. Lemon Street, east-of the College of Law, Dormitory students living in Best, and lots 18 and 19 between the stands of Hayden and Irish Halls who park in lot 18 Goodwin Stadium, south of the College of are expected to use lot 17 south of Apache Business Administration. Boulevard when construction begins, “A third of the spaces in the stadium are Ellingson said. COLLEGE GRADUATES Why settle for a job when you can choose a career? You may qualify for a challenging profession as a LAWYER’S ASSISTANT A limited number of applications are still being accepted For more inform ation w rite: The Paralegal Institute 3201 N. 16th St. Phoenix Suite 11 Dept. C. Phoenix, Ariz. 85016 or Call (602) 277-4877 or 264-2218. y°u now can d riv e a racing car! G R A N D P R IX G R A N D P R IX F O R M U L A I R A C IN G 1616 N. Hayden Rd., Tempe 949-7265 FOUR LAPS FO R ____ ONLY $2.00 W ITH THIS AD AND STUDENT I.D . Valid drivers license required. Limit 1 ad per person. Offer expires December 31, 1976. STP7-76 ■■•••: . J**************************************************** . « 4C * * ♦ * * * * * ♦ * * * MEMORIAL UNION 4C * * 4C * * ■k * * * * * * * •S SHORT COURSE FAIR & PICNIC TODAY! * * * 10:00 AM -1:30 PM * + 4c * * * * « at the Memorial Union Rendezvous Lounge & * •k * ■k * * * * * West Lawn ALL A.S.U. STUDENTS, STAFF & FACULTY ARE INVITED 4c 4c * * * * { •k * * * ♦ f * * I •k * -k * * * * * I •k * * * * * * * ♦ •k *k * * * * * * 4c 4c 4c 4c • 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c 4c ■k 4c 4c -k •k FREE GUIDED TOURS of the M.U. by M.U. Hostesses at the Informa­ tion Desk. : 4c Short course instructors with dis­ plays and demonstrations. 4c 4ç 4c 4c 4c 4c i FREE FOOTBALL FILMS and a Preview of the Fall Film Festival in the Memorial Union Movie House. Concessions with hot dogs, corn on the cob, cotton candy and drinks. 4c 4c 4c 4ç 4c 4c 4C 4c 4c f i * * * * * **^ *****¥¥¥¥****¥*¥¥¥****¥¥*4L **¥*¥^ **********£ September 13,1976 State Press Page 13 Tempe counseling service provides individual therapy By Taska Kostantacos . A need for counseling services for young adults in Tempe is one of the reasons the Full Circle Drug and Alcohol Abuse Unit was developed: -« Since the timé of its opening at Desert Samaritan Hospital two years ago the unit has acquired a staff of counselors with tra in in g in a re as from counseling psychology to psychiatric nursing. These skills are used to help people find goals and attain them. Full Circle, located in Tower Center on University Drive, offers individual, family, group and marital counseling. It is not limited to drug and alcohol abuse problems. People who seek help at Full Circle may have problems ranging from personal relationships to school-oriented problems, according to Barry Slutsky, counselor at Full Circle. Every Tuesday and Thursday coun­ selors speak with people to study the problems which have brought them to Full Circle. “Basically we get a feel for the person and what their goals are,” said Slutsky. STEREO S & CO M PO NENTS PLEASE CHECK BOX FOR ITEM ORDERED CALCULATORS AWDCR RADIOS ADD 82.00 FOR HA»DL1KG AND SHIPPING H EW LETTÿ T e x as Instrum ents electronic calculators WAS SALE S R -5 2 ........... $395 $224.95 PC-100............$295 5219.95 SR-56 . . . . . . $180 $ 84.95 SR-51A . . . . $120 $ 59.95 SR-50A . . . . $ 80 $ 45.95 TI-5050M . . . $130 $ 92.95 TI-5040 . . . . $150 $109.95 Above prices Include A/C Adaptor/Charger, Carrying Case, and full one year factory warranty. □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ D □ □ O □ □ □ PACKARD W rite fo r our prices. CB RADIOS CRAIG 4101 . . . CRAIG 4102 . . . CRAIG 4103 . . . CRAIG 4104 . . . JOHNSON 123A M ID L A N D 882 . M ID L A N D 882 . M ID L A N D 888 . SHARP 700 ___ SHARP 800 ....... REG. . $156 S180 $240 $200 $160 $130 $180 $205 $140 $170 SALE $106.95 SI 14.95 $149.95 5129.95 $99.95 $ 89.95 SI 14.95 5129.95 S 94.95 $109:95 STEREO ee (Add 3% for Credit Card Orders) RECEIVERS ÛDPIO N EER REG SALE FA S T SX-1250 . . . . ----5900 5584 SX-1050 ....................... $700 $469 D E L IV E R Y SX-950 ..................... 5600 $402 SX-850 ......................... 5500 $347 G U A R A N T E E D with certified check only SX-750 ...................... 5400 $279. SX-650 ...................... 5300 $213 Pa. residents add 6% sales tax SX-550 ....................... $250 $178 SX-450 ......... . . '. . . 5200 $149 (Add 3% fo r C redit-C ard O rders) R EC EIVER S Hollow Core Doors (Slightly Damaged) M ake G reat D esksl! Complete Line o f P aint, V I 1171 S. RURAL RD. TEMPE We sound better. REG SALE 4400 ............. $1350 $879 4220 ...................... 5330$219 5800$578 2325 . . . I ............... PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED 2275 . . . . ............. . . . 5650 5469 O N L Y W IT H 2250B .................... 5550$367 C R E D IT CARDS 2235B ...................... $450$295 2225 $370$249 2215B .................... $250$166 814-237-5990 -^STEREO WAREHOUSE Stains, & Accessories HOURS; Mon.-Fri. 8-6 Sat. 8-5 Sun. 11-4 Add 4% for Handling and Shipping SEND FOR • FREE CATALOGUE Decorative Cem ent Blocks Particle Board Shelves MR.DURE,LETMEASSURE YOU, YOUHAVENOTHmiO FEAR. ALUNE HULL D O IS INSERTA FEW NEEDLESINTO YOURLE6 ANDSIDE, AND CON­ N EC T THEM TOA LOW -i VOLTAGE C A L C U L A T O R S , C B R A D IO S Enclose payment in full with order, or remit 20% with order, balance .C.O.Dv After cases are discussed by the staff in order to get several viewpoints, recom­ mendations are made for the type of therapist who will work with the in­ dividual. “Individuals are then told of the recommendations, and we see if they are willing to get involved in the therapy,” Slutsky said. “We make sure that before a person leaves, they know what the next step will be, and that they are comfortable with it.” Because of the variety of training backgrounds of each of the eight coun­ selors at Full Circle, therapy . is ap­ proached from different theoretical viewpoints. “We bring a multiplicity of disciplines into social work. If we can’t help a person, we will refer him to someone who Ian,” said Slutsky. Full Circle, a United Fund agency, depends on fees from people, which are charged on a scale based on income and family size. But inability to pay will not keep a person from receiving services, he; said. DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau 0 3 1 WE'RE 60tN 6 TOADMINISTER THEACUPUNCTURE iANAETHESIA NOW, I DONT I Cto / SUPPOSETHERES ¡UNBELIEVABLE SAVINGS 2 I 307 W. BEAVER AVE., STATE COLLEGE, PA. 16801 967-3386 r Levis EXPUSHN! Levi's for *9.80! On SALE through Labor Day. .¡ f t .-.JrYOUWILLFEELSOME - V V D 4 ^ -I - - m VIBRATIONANDA SUENTNUMBNESS, BUTACUPUNCTURE PRODUCESNO OH, YEAN! HOURSTT The famous Levi heavy­ weight denim Bell Bottom jeans. These jeans mean comfort, durability and style. In ail sizes. O NLY $ 1 ) 6 0 The popular leader in to­ days fashions . . . Levi's Big Bell The pre-shrunk fit and style that made Levi's famous. In all sizes. ONLY $ | 2 M REGULARLY $16.00 REGULARLY $15.00 The original shrink-to-fit Levi blue jean — copper rivets, red tab and all Made just as tough today, as they were 100 years ago. In all o n ly S. $980 REGULARLY $12.75 • 1019 S. Rural Rd., Next to La Mancha, Tempe »3285 E. Mc­ Dowell Rd., Phoenix «194 Valley West Mall, Glendale *12410 N. Cave Creek Rd., Phoenix *7620 E. Indian School Rd., Scottsdale *1322 S. Country Club Dr., Mesa •3977 N. 33rd Ave., Phoenix JEANS GALORE will be open this Saturday, Sunday and Labor Day! O v is fo r fe e * W ith this coupon, you get $5.00 OFF when you buy any pair of Levi's , For Feet. Now through September 6, 1076. Päge 14 State Press September 1,1976. State Press Cfossfffeds * For Salé Classifieds Start Here I ★ Personal ★ Pets IRISH SETTER puppy, female, 4V2 months old, first shot. House trained. Mother and Father w ill be shown. $50.00. Call 9687131. ' 9-2 Take Off Your Clothes! And get into something cornfortable, like our recycled jeans and cut-offs. We have the best quality vintage clothes around . . . Hawaiian and western shirts, silks and satins, old velvets and antique Oriental goodies. ★ For Rent/Lease FOR RENT, Large house. 3 bedrooms, old fashioned brick, near State Capitol, Phoe­ nix, ideal for 3 or 4 students. $140 month, utilities extra. 247-8600. 9-1 R&M GENERALSTORE SMALL HOUSE. Refrigerated, furnished. Two 6locks from ASU. Call 967-3885. 9-3 Rural at University [Next to Bo-Jo] FUNKY-TO-SWANKY OLD CLOTHES FOR GUYS & GALS 9-9 .. ★ FILL THOSE EMPTY SPACES with a plant. 10% off on ail plants with student I.D. The New Leaf, Miller and Indian School Rd., Scottsdale. 48th St. and Southern, Phoenix 10 SPEED bike, washer., dryer, $60 each. and Baseline and McClintock, Tempe. 9*S ' Contact John 955-8736. 962-0242 (work, 12-9 p m.). SENIORS, GRADS: Plan your future fi­ GOLD SMITH-CORONA typewriter, manual nancial security. Free Information. Rick with power space bar, excellent condition. Rapaport, ASU Rep. University Key. 957994-3587. 9-2 3393. 9-2 EARN $80.00 weekly at home* spare time, addressing envelopes. Information: Rush 25cents and stamped self addressed envelope to: Valley Service, P.O. Box 27986. Tempe, Arizona 85282. PARACHUTE 12 miles from Phoenix! $5.00 off with student ID or this ad. 275-6010. "MODERN LITERARY ARABIC” instruction. Contact Prof. Richard Martin, Re­ ligious Studies, 204 Gammage Hall 9657145 from 8 to 5. 9-3 MEDITATION HIGH SPEED READING AUTOSUGGESTION By Tom Gibbons While Sun Devil wrestler and 1976 Olympic contestant Bill Rasado didn't really distinguish himself in Montreal, he does have one claim to notoriety from the Games. The 106-pounder was the only competitor in the Games to have his nose broken by an ABC television announcer. Frank Gifford (of Monday Night Football fame) was the culprit. While doing the wrestling play-by-play, Gifford told millions of viewers that Rasado, who had a bandage on his nose, had a broken nose. • ♦ “I just, had a bad cut on my nose,” said Rasado, pointing to a gash on the bridge of his nose. “I was only wearing the bandage so the blood wouldn’t get in my eyes when I wrestled.” Despite the gash on the snoz and losing his two matches, Rasado enjoyed the Olympics. “I was a little disappointed in my performance,’,’ he said. “I didn’t really think I’d get a medal, but I was hoping to. place in the top 10.” “But the atmosphere of the Olympics was wonderful,” he said. And he’d love to'go back again. “I’m not sure that the Olympics will be the same in Moscow — they probably won't,” Rasado said. "But I'm going to try and go again.” The Olympics will probably be different for Rasado in at least one positive way — he should do better in competition. “I’m only 21, and the prime age for an international wrestler is about 27,” Rasado explained. I should haye two or tnree more Olympiads ahead of me,” he added. Another thing which should help Rasado is the added experience in international competition he plans to pick up between now and 1980. “I already have quite a bit of international experience though,” Rasado said. “I’ve wrestled in the Junior World Championships and for the World Cup. That was a big aid psychologically. The first time you wrestle someone from another country . . . it’s a little different experience.” Rasado was the only ASU wrestler to make the Olympic team — but he may have a more difficult time making the ASU team. The lowest weight class in college wrestling is 118 pounds. Rasado normally weighs only 115 pounds. Most wrestlers Mcut” weight, and wrestle between 10 and 12 pounds under their normal weight. The style of college wrestling is also a little different from in­ ternational freestyle wrestling. “In international wrestling you never start a period with the wrestlers in the down position. You’re on your feet more,” Rasado explained. “I wrestle better on my feet.” • “But I don’t think I’ll have any problem adjusting," he said. Rasado, a junior college transfer from Phoenix College, red-shirted last year and did not compete for the team. The Quidnunc Q: Long before anyone thought of the Houston Astrodome, a pro football game which decided a •R ead 3-20 X F a ste r »S tud y and take exam s ea sie r »T ension and fa tig u e reduced CLASSES BEGIN SEPT. 7, 8, 9 CALL 833-7584 Private School Mesa SELF DEFROSTING refrigerator and single waterbed complete, 966-2314. 9-1 TEXTBOOKS WITH notes; QBA 161, MGT 463, CIS 302, HES 100, AC i b l , AC 102, SOC 305, and others. 944-2481 evenings. ; ________ 9-8 TEXTBOOKS WITH Notes: ADS 233, ACC 201, CIS 402, MGT 432, MKT 411, ACC 541, MGT 591, MGT- 522, MGT 434, etc. 944-2481. 9.4 D-N-B TV REPAIR. Used blk. and whites and color sets for sale. Discounts for college students. 1248 E. Valerie Dr., Tempe, behind Big Surf at M iller and Val.erie, 947-6212. 9-8 ANTIQUE light Oak Table, brass trimmed, 46x47, carved fan design on massive legs, expandable. Must sacrifice for $350.00 cash. Call 838-3800after 4 p.m. 9-2 - RITA MAE BROWN’S new novel "In Her Day" just arrived! WOMANSPLACE, 9 E. 5th S t., Tempe. 966-0203.____________ 9-2 1972 MAZDA RX-3,4-speed, AM/FM radio, tape deck, mags, vinyl top, looks good, runs good. 959-3048. 9-3 HIKING BOOTS, Ladies Vasque 7’4 N — $30. Queen Waterbed Fremei, accès. — $60. Sony 252-D Stereo tape deck — $100. Koss Pro 4A Headphones — $35. 968-1456. 9-1 One Class Only TYPING. BUSINESS College graduate. 65c per double-spaced page. By appointment. Anita 966-9088. 9-16 Call George Boyd - Any Time ASU 965-3770 Home 966-7654 SPEEDY AND accurate. Elite or pica type. Good bond paper, carbon ribbon, grammar and spelling corrected if desired. Call Jane 968-9828. Near tennis courts. 12-3 DISSERTATIONS, THESES, Business, and Legal Papers, etc. Broad format experience near ASU. Patti 967-4937 1,2-3 ★ Services FEDO Mtrs. We come to you Complete Tune-Up & Repair -24 hr. Service . Foreign 964-1194 g /17 ★ Announcements "ASU NATIVE American Calendar” — Get your free copy today at AIC student information table. 8-27 ARTISTS: "Join my co-op gallery" (Sçottdale) Save on commissions, write - T.L. Art. Box 26805, Tempe, Az. 85283 9/29 MUSICIANS WANTED for Jewish holiday services: french horn, flute, celiow, piano, harp/ guitar. Singers also. To Volunteer, call Rabbi'Lee 967-7563 or 968-9922. ARE YOU Jewish? For free information on all Jewish activities on campus call Hiliel 967-7563. Free mailing list. No obligation. ★ Roommate Wanted SELECTED STYLES Vi off iadies sandals. Back Door Shop. 707 South Forest, Tempe. ________________________ 9-30 SKIS — 195 Head HRP’s, 180 Olin Mark IV’s, Nordica boots 8V2 Med. Best offer for one or all. Call Greg, 949-1188. 9-1 LATIN TEACHER WANTED ★ Typing TYPING. IBM Correcting Selectric. Invis­ ible corrections. Reasonable. Editing by professional writer, extra. Darshan, 2547554. 9-3 STEREO LP ALBUMS - Rock or Popular. Each factory sealed. Yours for o n ly $7.50 for 5 LPs or 12 LPs for $15.00, our selection. Original list price $6.98 per LP. Also, inquire about volume orders at extra special low prices. King Tapes, Dept. G, Box 4084, Mesa, Arizona 85201. 9-17 FANTASTIC OPPORTUNITY! Invest $10.00 and make $3000.00 in tw o weeks. Send to N.M. Publications, P.O. Box 173, Albu­ querque, New Mexico. 87103. 9-10 AUDITIONS, Sept. 4, 5. St. Barnabas, 6715 North Mockingbird La., Scottsdale. Benefit for the Arizona Leukemia Foundation at Scottsdale Center for the Arts. Dancers, tap and jazz. 11 a.m. Sept. 4. Singers and individual performers, 2 p.,,.. Sept. 4 and 5. Information 959-1550. 9-3 12 STRING GUITAR, perfect condition. $250.00 or best offer. Call after 6 p.m. 273-6602.________ _ __________ 9-1 GTX-10 DELUX 10-speed. New. Cost — $127.00, sacrifice — $89.00 Perfect con­ dition, 1 year old. 948-7722. 9-1 WANTED, Full Time Waitress. Pleasant working conditions. Apply in person. 2 p.m. ttf” 4 p.m. Monday thru Thursday. Dooleys, 1216 E. Apache, Tempe. (3 blocks east of Rural). 9-23 5211 E. WASHINGTON IF YOU WANT A GOOD DEAL OR CALL 275-4444 MAGOO'S AUTO SALES INC. 9-30 NEED SOMETHING TYPED, reasonable rates, call Donna, 968-6840. Also do embroidery. 9-3 " HOUSEKEEPER WANTED house­ cleaning, stay w ith tw o children (9 yrs. & 11 yrs.) from 3 - 5:30 or 6 p.m. M-F, cook supper. Must have car, tw o work ref­ erences. $25/week plus suppers. 838-1643, or Jerry 267-4788. 9-3 GOOD MONEY fo r few hours in spare time? Seniors and grads, call Rick, 957-3393. 9-7 We pay top dollar for any clean vehicle. We w ill buy your auto outright or you can trade down for lower payments. Come to: •1970 VW, red, ma^ wheels, good cond. Call Liz after 6 p.m.., 994-1789. Price negotiable. _________ j y .............. ' FREE LARGE private room with bath plus meals in lovely Scottsdale home in exchange for ironing and light house work. References required. 945-8135. 9-1 Guitar player wanted for Bluegrass Band. Acoustic only, Must sing lead and harmoney 967-8532. NEAR ASU. Research papers, theses, dissertations. English degree. Editing. Work guaranteed, 7 years experience. 967-8155. 9-1 ★ For Sale ■ J L L Z O PIONEER stereo turntable witty ' Shure magnetic cartridge. $75. 966-0203, 1 2 a .m .- 2 p.m . weekdays. 9-2 championship was played indoors. Where and when was this game played? Answer on Thursday. LIQUOR SALES, 20 to 25 hours weekly. Must be pleasant, well groomed, and have at least 3 semesters remaining. Store in good area, N.E. Phoenix, Call 248-9615. 9-3 ★ Wanted GUITAR LESSONS, inexpensive, popular and rock, given by experienced musician. ‘ Call Scott, 967-7624. 9-1 Grappleraims for '80 Olympics EVENINGS: FILM processing sales pre-set appointments. Must have car. $T50.00 to $300.00/weekly. 279-4101. 9-14 AIM FOR M O R E !!!!! it Instruction Billy Rasado, ASU wrestling star and 1976 Olympic contestant, grapples with Pete Ruccio during, a practice session. Help Wanted_ _ _ _ _ _ _ American CHILD CARE in my house — all working and student mothers. Daily or hourly. Call 967-9249.________________ 9-3 PIANO LESSONS, experienced instructor, all levels, reasonable, call 967-0913. 9-2 LEATHER HAND, crafted bookbags, brief­ cases, belts, haltertops,. etc. Custom orders. Wayne, 267-7967 evenings, Phoenix._______ _________ _ 9-3 INTERESTED IN tutoring Greek language. Available in evenings or by appointment. Please call 966-0078. Ask for Nick Kostopouios. ^ g_3 PIANO LESSONS! Classic, Modern, Jazz. Call Linda at 839-3904, experienced tea­ cher, church pianist, accompanist. 9-8 PHOTO DARKROOM and Studio Rentals. Efficient, spacious, clean. Open 7 days. ALL Photography Inc., 1521 S. Indian Bend, Tempe. 9 6 6 - 8 1 0 4 . ___ 9-14 ★ Pets 3RD ROOMMATE wanted to share large house on acreage, one mile from ASU, Doug. DAYS 6:00-2:00. 994-1656 or 9660867. _ 9-3 FEMALE WANTED to share new 3 bdrm Tempe home with teacher and two chil­ dren. 838-5175. 9-1 ROOMMATE WANTED, 3 bedroom house near ASU. $130.00 month. 834-7361. 9-1 ★ Motorcycles '72 NORTON 750cc, mileage, 834-1961. make offer, low 9-2 1976 YAMAHA XS500 twin, mag wheels, disc brakes, 2200 miles. Excellent con­ dition. 1-866-4214. 9-3 1973 HONDA 500cc 949-8734. ★ Chopper. $1,100. 9-15 Automobiles 1971 DODGE. COLT — 4 speed trans­ mission. air conditioning, new tires. 968-1675. ■ ______ 9-14 1972 TOYOTA CARINA. 1 owner. Auto­ matic, air, radio, 55,000 miles, 26 MPG, radial tires: 993-8841,242-8041. 9-8 1972 TOYOTA CORONA Mark II. 4-speed, red, A /C. 39,000 mU$8, 4-0oui, $1695.00 838-2916. 9-3 MUST SELL, 1972 Monte everything. 967-5740. Carlo, has 9-1 FREE, 2 kittens grey and-white, Siamese. Also mature Siamese. A ll females, 968195Q or 965-3502. 1974 PINTO. Super sharp, new Michelin radiais, radio, factory air, 2300 engine, $2.290, 945-2114. FREE BEAUTIFUL 7 month .old, half Airdale/half Shepard, hbuse trained, dog that needs home. 967-4001. 9-2 1974 260Z, $500 below blue book, A/G, Stereo, low mileage, mags, excellent condition. Call 965-7105 or 839-2064. HELP! Please save loving loyal year-old male dog from the pound. Handsome, housebroken, homeless, freee. 966-0312. 9-1 i iTiri>ii»i'ii«'iwMii|i imumimnn September. 1 , 1976 State Press Page 15 FfSIKRi mmm. Drop usa line We received absolutely no letters this week. But we haven’t given up — we’re going to try again next week. Starting next Thursday, and each Thursday af­ terwards, throughout the semester, the State Press Vtc will be running sports letters. The rules are simple: All letters must be typed, double spaced. Deadline for letters is 1:00 p.m. Wed­ nesday. Letters should be brought or mailed to Stauffer Hall A-137. Letters may deal with anything about sports. [ino |lolion foods Your Hosts: @ Lucy and Jim Riazzi NOW OPEN 7 DAYS MM» by M m Onte Snake bri 2 . Luncheon Specials Served 11-4 M on.-Frl. KJ,sh [cbnler] holds a snake up to Ted Brown's microphone for Mon. thru Thurs. 11 A M -11 PM, Fri. 11 A M - 1 A M Sat. 5 P M - 1 AM, Sun. 3 - 1 0 PM _____ 5238 E. Van Buren 275-1332 TOE ORIGINAL HOAG1E SHOP International competitor in pentathlon joins ASU By Lynda Brown A full-ride scholarship, a good coaching staff and the Arizona sunshine attracted Dana Collins, number-one girl in AAU junior (18 and under) pentathlon com­ petition, to th e ASU women’s track team. “Dana was down here last y e ar com peting in the Valley Del Sol track meet,” said Sue Humphrey, track coach. “I saw her compete and was very impressed with h e r potential. She can do a lot of events and do them well.” The 18-year-old freshman from Salem , Ore. was named state high school Woman Athlete of the Year for 1975-76, after she placed sixth at the Pan American Games in Mexico City. “The Pan Am Games were super,” said Collins. “Once you’ve made it, you’re all athletes together. We traded shirts and ,pens • • WITH COUPON AND PURCHASE OF GAS TANK FILL-UP EXPIRES DEC. 31,1976 Hours 10AM - 2AM CLOSED SUNDAYS MENU $1 75 miles three times a week. Regular (Pressed ham, cooked salami, Italian cheese)...................... $1.50 She works on her drills and Salami and cheese . : ....... ........... .................. ___$1.65 techniques the other two ................................................................ $1.65 Ham, cheese and Cappacolla days. Ham andcheese.................... ..............................................................$1.65 “It’s no secret that I’m $1.75 constantly preparing for the Turkey........ ........... 1980 Olympic trials,” Collins Roast Beat (Eastern)................................... $1.85 sta te d . “A lthough the Tuna fish................. $1.65 Olympic Committee has Italian cheese (Provolone)......................................................... $1.25 substituted the 800 meter Bologna and cheese....................................................... run for the 200 meter dash, I Chicken s a la d ____ W : ............. .............. ............. ............. $1.65 should be at my peak Potato salad Daily Dessert Special “Homemade"* performance by then.” Macaroni salad Assorted Beverages There are two other Alarge part of training for CATERING the pentathlon consists of pentathletes on the ASU track team , concentrating on one or two women’s We’re open til Celeste Wilkins and Carol events at a tim e to 2 a.m., to calm Hancock. However, Collins strengthen a performance. those midnite D.IWU« P i n “Probably my weakest sees herself as ASU’s top munchies. event is the shot and my prospect.. Authentic Philadelphia Hoagie “Celest and Carol are strongest is the high jump,” TAKE O U T 968-3309 explained Collins» “I’ve also good, but I’ve run against “Unique and Friendly Atmosphere’’ got to keep working on the them and can beat them,” Located at 144 Danelle Plaza • Mill & Southern hurdles. I t ’s such a said Collins. Sandwiched between Saguaro Communications & Bushwackers psychological event that you can’t lay off.” Collins is on no special diet, but she does lift weights and runs three ■ Ü 10% OFF! SPECIAL OFFER FOR A .S .U . STUDENTS SAVE Tempe Rejoice! The original hoagie has arrived Thai great sandwich of Philadelphia lame containing tomatoes, onions & lettuce, sweet or hot peppers, salt, sage & oil with the freshest meat (only Eastern Beef), vegetables & seasoning Italian Special (Ham, Italian cheese, Genoa salami, Cappacolla) with the other teams.” Collins also placed fifth in the Olympic trials out of the nine female pentathletes competing, and is rated one of the top seven women in AAU pentathlon com­ petition in the U.S; The pentathlon event consists of the 100 meter hurdles, long jump, high jump, shotput and 200 meter dash. I COUPON! •Car Washing •Hot Spray Waxing •Simonizing FORMERLY OF PHILADELPHIA, PA. . (W here Hoagies Originated) 20% OFF •Engine Cleaning •Vinyl Top Cleaning •Interior Shampoo HITCHING POST CAR WASH 3006 N. Scottsdale Rd. 947-5751 co u po nH H B B PRE LAW STUDENTS NEW EXPANDED LSAT REVIEW COURSE M axim ize your LSAT score by taking review course. Course for October LSAT w ill be held in Phoenix from 7:00 - 10:30 P .M . on Septem ber 20, 21, 22, 23, 27, 28 and 29,1976. C all, in Phoenix, 264-0234 or 949-5786. W rite, 4008 North 15th Avenue, Phoenix, Arizona. 1 I I I BACK TO SCHOOL SALE! TO WELCOME NEW AND RETURNING ' ASU STUDENTS, HIGH ADVENTURE IS OFFERING A 10% DISCOUNT ON ALL ITEMS WITH PRESENTATION OF*THIS AD. • OFFER VALID FROM AUG. 25 to SEPT. 3 •PACKS • TENTS •H IKING BOOTS • TOPO M AP, •RENTALS •SBW IT-YOURSELF KITS H iG H Ä a D v e n t u R e 1043 E. LEMON TEMPE 968-2712 SH O P 3925 E. INDIAN SCHOOL PHOENIX 955-3391 ,$1.50 Page 16 State Press September 1,1976 Sun Devil guard stay s o f f team, Kush declares Zack DiBreli would likejto missing practice without an rejoin his teammates on the excuse, according to Kush. ASU football team, but isn’t about to initiate any action DiBreli said the reason he to that end. missed practice was that he “I’d like to get back on the had a 104-degree tem ­ team,” DiBreli said Monday. perature as a result of having a tooth pulled on “If he (head coach Frank Aug. 20.. 'Kush) wants me back he has to come and get me.” Asked why he didn’t call the team doctor to report But Kush said there was “absolutely rib way” DiBreli his condition — a team rule would be allowed back on — DiBreli said, “I don’t the team. OLIVER DiBreli, a senior middle guard, was dismissed from the squad last week for B e g in n in g n u rs in g s tu d e n ts as w e ll a * gradua tes, any s h ift, any n u m b e r o f days, a ls o w eeke nds. H ig h e s t pay — no fee. A s s ig n m e n ts in y o u r ow n area. Earn while you learn democrat FOR Soccer Club opens season against Mesa The ASU Soccer Club will open its season at 3:80 p.m. Sunday on the field behind the men’s gym, against the MesafYMCA. The “B” team will, play Saturday in Mesa. The Mesa ¿fMCA team is composed mostly of 18- and 19-year-olds who play together often and are very well coached, a soccer club spokesman said. MODERN JAZZ DANCE with Marco Poshar New York Teacher 95 E. Southern Ave. In V a lle y F a ir - S h o p p in g C e n te r Call 946-9677 Your Hohner Harmonica is a true friend Easy to play. Easy to carry. Always ready for a good time. Inexpensive, too. And available at music stores everywhere. M. Hohner, Inc., Hicksville. N.Y. • Hohner Canada Inc . Don M ilk Ontario State Press News H *Ufêck Pledged to low ering the cost o f operating th e County G overnment Nurses Central Registry 2536 East Indian School. Phoenix / 957-9031____________ “If I get back on the team, fine. If not, I ’ll go somewhere else and make my money,” he said. Served oh the M aricopa County Zoning and A ppeal Board Community Leader Real Estate Developer Brood Business Background W o rld W a r I I Veteran Insurance Executive lucerne Tax Consultant Factory W orker Landlord • Real Estate O w ner Life Long Dem ocrat M arried ■ Two Daughters A ffilia te d w ith The M ethodist Church Arizona Star N U R S IN G S T U D E N T S N E E D E D ranks Devils No. 1 in p oll ASU’s football team has been ranked No. 1 — by a daily newspaper in Tucson. That’s right. From deep in U of A Wildcat country comes an admission of the Sun Devils’ worth as a football team. The Arizona Daily Star, in a story written by Bob Moran and published last Sunday, predicted ASU has “the horses and the schedule to win the national championship.” But, the Star warns, “the road to the national title is never easy, and it won’t be for ASU.” Included among the Devils’ obstacles are UCLA, California, and a WAC schedule which includes Brigham Young and a “well-coached” Arizona squad. U of A was not included in the Star’s “Top Twenty.” The Star boasted that its preseason poll of last season finished third overall nationally — ahead of the polls of Sports Illustrated, Football News, AP, and UPI — according to the “Wyatt Summary of Pre-Season Pigskin Picks." have time to hunt him down.” SUPERVISOR