Funding questioned A SA SU approves *4,000 fo r gay awareness w eek By Susan Leonard ' Associated 1 Students appropriated $4,000 from th e ir endow m ent fund Tuesday for Gay Awareness Week 76, but it is unclear whether the—campus gay group, Free Spirit, will be able to obtain the funds from administrators. Dr. Leon Shell, dean of students, said Wednesday the ASASU First Council is not authorized to ap­ propriate money from its endowment fund and may not be able to use those funds because the University has them tied up in investments. Free Spirit spokesman Greg Carmack called the a p p ro p ria tio n >“ b o gus money” Wednesday and said he expects ASASU to give them the money from "-one of their other funds if administrators don’t allow ASASU to use endowment fund.monies. * The endowment * fund consists of ASASU money exceeding $20,000 that is left over at the end of each year. As of July 31,1976, it totaled $75,496. Shell said ASASU has never appropriated money from the fund. ASASU President Dave Braaten said Wednesday he is considering vetoing the Free Spirit appropriation and using contingency funds to pay for Gay Awareness Week, scheduled Sept. 1319. This way, Free Spirit will have an easier . time getting money from ad­ ministrators who have to approve ASASU ex­ penditures. Carmack said on Wed­ nesday morning he informed six out-of-town speakers, whom he had previously arranged to speak during Gay Awareness Week, that ASASU had appropriated the money, and they should come. . The First Council, similar to a student legislature, appropriated the $4,000 following a long debate during which they vetoed Free, Spirit’s original $5,446 request. ASASU has already given Free Spirit $910 for Gay Awareness Week. No other club this year has been given that much money, according, to Bruce Mortensen, ASASU executive vice president. The appropriation for Gay Awareness Week is 4.2 per cent of the total ASASU budget. Carmack said Free Spirit is also spending $500 solicited in donations on the event. One . F irs t Council r e p r e s e n ta tiv e , S te v e Cohen, said he felt Free Spirit had done a poor job of planning. He said he felt thursday state press Tempe, Arizona Arizona State University Voi. 59, No. 8, September 2, 1976 continued page 2 Center use okayed Eagles tentatively booked By Leslie Green An Oct. 15 Eagles concert was ten­ tatively confirmed Wednesday after the University Scheduling Board approved use of the University Activity Center for the show. The Eagles, contacted after the scheduling board’s decision, said they are still willing to begin contract negotiations for an Oct. 15 appearance, Keith Loeffler, Associated Students ' activities vice president, said. Dann Bowley, who is booking the ASASU concert, had said early Wed­ nesday the Eagles would only hold the date for a. reasonable amount of time. “We’re definitely out of that reasonable time,” he said. The Eagles had confirmed on Aug. 26 they would come to ASU if the Activity Center was available on that date, Bowley, the concert coordinator for Arizona Students Association, said. Student leaders have said they feared the Eagles concert would not take place because Warreh Sumners, director of Gammage Auditorium did not determine until Tuesday if a Carpenters concert would be scheduled in Gammage on Oct. 15. Sumners said he had not been able to reach agents for the Carpenters to confirm when the group was coming. Two big concerts on the same day would be bad booking, Sumners explained. But Bowley said he confirmed hy phone last week that the Carpenters would be in Utah Oct. 15,, and requested a telegram confirming this. He received the telegram 'Thursday from the group’s manager. He didn’t show the telegram to Sum­ ners, he said, because “it’s not my job to do Warren’s work.” Sumners said he usually confirmed dates over the phone, not by telegram. He said he didn’t communicate with the Carpenters’ managers, but with the firm booking the Carpenters’ tour. The booking firm is the first to know where and when the group would be playing, Sumners said. Although he would still have to confirm the Carpenters’ date of arrival himself, Sumners said he could have done this more quickly had he known about the telegram, by calling two places in Utah where the concert might be held. The scheduling board must approve use of the Activity Center for all ASASU concerts, Dean of Students Leon Shell said. The Activity Center now has the first day of basketball practice scheduled Oct. 15, but basketball’ coach Ned Wulk, has indicated he will reschedule the practice. Wulk has first priority over use of the Activity Center. promoted by ASASU president Photoby Brian Drake Shari Atcitty, 18, a freshman biology major, eyes the line at ASU’s new cashiering station. See story, page 10. •«¿oh fwMMMpMMnn 1 ! Development o f day care center ByDanWinkel % Associated Students' proposed day care center has community and student support, and should be developed, ASASU President Dave Braaten said in a news conference Wednesday. Braaten called members of the local media to campus to try to bring attention to the idea of a day eare center on campus. Citing a poll taken last spring by the Office of Student Affairs, Braaten said 80 per cent of ASU students favored a day care center on campus. Braaten said he received a letter from Tempe Mayor Bill LoPiano endorsing the center and has also received support from the ASU Alumni Association. m More that 4,000 parents are According to O’Hara, Ritter enrolled at ASU and it is difficult School is perfect for the day care for them to. attend school with center, and too far removed from school-age children at home, the center of campus to be Braaten said. convenient for academic and Many of the available off- administrative purposes. campus centers charge from $70 “We want to bring some things to $90 a month. ASASU hopes to keep its prices in the $20 to $25 out in the open,” O’Hara said. We want Justification on what range, he added. Pat O’Hara, ASASU press Dannenfeldt is going to do with officer, said ASASU has been the Ritter School.” Ritter currently is used by the given “vague; and nebulous’’ reasons for the administration’s campus mail system and for denial of a proposal to use Ritter storage space. Braaten said the day care School for the center. Karl Dannenfeldt, academic center may not be the most vice president, . said last week important use of Ritter School, Ritter School will be used for but wants Dannenfeldt to clarify academic purposes, not a day how the school will be used, if it is not used for the center. care center. .f t 1 I I fari ffo I, I I .S 1 W f ' I 'jP m 1 Page 2 State Press September 2, 1976 IS YOUR ROOM DULL, DRAB AND COLORLESS? GIVE IT SOME PIZZAZZ WITH A m a rim e kkd WALL HANGING In the news . •• briefly From the Associated Press U.S. HOUSE DENIES RAISES WASHINGTON — The House voted today to deny itself a cost-of-living pay raise this year, and it expanded the salary freeze to include the Senate, the Cabinet, federal judges and top federal officials. B-1 BOMBER STALLS IN CONGRESS WASHINGTON — Congressional nego­ tiators left the fate of the B1 bomber in the hands of the incoming president as they agreed today on a $104.3-billion defense appropriation, up sharply from last year. The 'principal House and Senate conferees on the big money bill agreed, in talking to reporters, that all interests were protected by allowing only limited spending on the controversial bomber until next Feb. 1. CARTER, F-0RD SCHEDULE DEBATE WASHINGTON — Jimmy Carter and President Ford will argue domestic and economic isdbes before a national television audience Sept. 23, in the first face-to-face presidential campaign debate in 16 years. CONGRESS APPROVES TAX FREEZE WASHINGTON — Congress approved extending a freeze on the income taxes withheld from workers’ paychecks through Sept. 15. Meanwhile, Senate-House conferees voted to cut off millions of dollars in tax benefits to companies honoring the Arab boycott of Israel and Jewish business­ men. GHANDI OPPONENTS STAGE WALKOUT NEW DELHI — Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s poH4ical opponents of both left and right stalked out of Parliament Wednesday and vowed to boycott debate on sweeping legislation that they said would turn India into a constitutional dictatorship. FORD DEFENDS TROOP LEVEL WASHINGTON — President Ford, declar­ ing “we cannot retreat from the front-lines of freedom,” Wednesday opposed Jimmy Carter’s suggestion that some American troops could be brought home from overseas. HAYS SUBMITS RESIGNATION WASHINGTON — Rep. Wayne Hays, (D-Ohio) former chairman of the powerful House Administration Committee, submitted, his resignation from. Congress ,* effective immediately. FORD WANTS REPORT ON FBI CHARGES WASHINGTON — President Ford asked Wednesday for a report “within the next day or so” on allegations that FBI Director Clarence M. Kelley improperly accepted gifts from subordinates. Ford’s request, made in a telephone call to Atty. Gen. Edward Levi, suggested the President wants a quick decision on Kelley’s future status. BANKS NIX ‘FLOATING’ PESO PHOENIX — Arizona banks halted trans­ actions,, in pesos, and merchants expressed concern , following Mexico's decision to “float” the peso. Mexican Treasury Secretary Mario Ramon Beteta announced the decision Tuesday to allow the peso to seek its own exchange level on the world market.. . . OUTRAGEOUS DESIGNS INCREDIBLE COLOR COMBINATIONS 7121 5th Avenue Scottsdale 994-1244 /- “ I JUDGE ORDERS BLOOD TUCSON — A Superior Court judge has ordered a blood transfusion for a teenage leukemia victim who earlier refused it, citing religious beliefs. The girl, Candy Lee Ferro,’ 13, and her mother Nancybelle Ferro, opposed the order,’ saying it was against their beliefs as Jehovah’s Witnesses. * 4 (1 9 5 For V W a ^ — Other Makes Slightly Higher — # - “ ” fU N E -U P ” were feeling,” one member said later. M ortensen announced afterw ard,. they discussed-« funding guidelines and made tap es of th e session available. . * DATSUN . *3360 TOYOTA ..*37®° % VJMTH THIS COUPON ~ 9®B-7719”' Sundance Automotive - Comptai# parte, repairs a machine service ter VOLKSWAGEN - 211» Esst Apache Bird., Tempe ■7 W E PRINT T-SH IRTS Sweatshirts • Jackets *=» ■ BARRY'S CAPEZIO S p a c c B e s iy h s — THEATRE RECREATION C 2240 A. NORTH SCOTTSDALE RD ( b e t w e e n M c Do w e l l a n d t h o m a s ) SCOTTSDALE 6 o M ( fa ...( V e /' t e M r. & Mrs. Irwin Kaufax Z IP — FR O N T L O N G SLEEVE LEO TAR D 2 for $10.00 966-1859 Plant and Showroom 2618 W. 1st s t. • Unit 6 • Tempe, Arizona 85281 • (602)966-1859 North of University Dr. - off 48th St. 0 L Æ p e Z lO S 1 for $6.00 Regular $9.00 ' = = 5 l V W ........ *24®5 N O W O P E N A T N E W L O C A T IO N smiEaa | Plugs, Points, Condenser, Valve « Carb. Adj., Oil Change with Filter. p A R T S & LABOR ASASU approves funding SUPPLIES I W IT H TH IS COUPON » continued from pago 1 dance — BRAKES .'*.•>*. * * * — / blessing to faculty who dismiss classes so that they might participate in the UCLA-ASÜ game. I do not know whether to be overjoyed _ a t this rationalization of policy or utterly dismayed at the values manifest in this collective decision. Ted Humphrey Chairman, Dept, of Philosophy xm It Sounds Incredible BUT EVELYN WOOD GRADUATES CAN READ JAWS IN 41 MINUTES At That Speed, The 309 Pages Come Across ♦o, VW 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 means. AH of them-seven the slowest— now read an average novel in less than two hours. They readi 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. With More Impact Than The Movie, in Living Blood, You Might Say. 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 it 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. It 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 You’ll increase your reading speed _______ 50 to 100% on the spot! SU N D A Y THRU TH U R SD A Y 4 :0 0 P .M . O R 8 :0 0 P .M . . •ir PHOENIX TEMPE DEL WEBB’S TOWNEHOUSE 1 00 Wèst Clarendon Near Indian School & Central HOLIDAY INN Corner of Apache Blvd. & Rural Road 1É Jr H » » f¡¡§ im t. EVEIYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS ■Æ m i p m: Page 6 State Press Septem ber 2, 1976 M ill A venue revamp hurt by federal fund squeeze m ::~ v . ■ By Britton Bloom A federal fund squeeze has reduced the amount of money available to Tempe for redevelopment of Mill Avenue, but renovation plans will continue, a Tempe city official said Wednesday. City Manager Kenneth McDonald said the original request by Tempe for $3 million to $4 million a year was reduced to just over $1 million after the federal urban renewal program was scrapped. In place of the urban renewal program, a community development ^plan was substituted, which reduced Tempos allot­ ment to $800,000, McDonald said. D espite th e reduction in funds, McDonald said Goodwin Ltd,, the ar­ chitectural firm contracted to renovate Mill Avenue shops, indicated it could begin / : . . ... »J. • Oall Ahead & Order 966-8502 r <* / - " • Mon.-Thurs. 11-11 Fri.'&Sat. 11 a.m .-12p.m Sun. 3-9 p.m. and Italian Food 225 W. University Dr. construction in six months and finish six to nine months later. Goodwin Ltd. is studying the possibility of renovating the facades of existing buddings, but the firm also has the authority to raze the buildings ancl con­ struct new ones, McDonald said. Buildings between Second and Third Streets have already been razed, except for Dana Brothers automobile repair. George Dana, the owner, said he would not sell his shop unless he had another workshop in the same area. Dana said he thought the lack of federal money was delaying the development of Mill Avenue. “It’s, my estimation that it’ll be five years before we see any spades in the ground or any buildings going up on Mill,” Dana said. BEER & W IN E (2 BLKS. W. OF MILLON UNIV.) Tempe 966-8502 We also serve Fantastic Sandwiches and Spaghetti n r i i i ! ANY URGE SQUARE PAN PIZZA WITH 1 ITEM »2. 9 5 ! With Coupon Reg. 3.90 Limit: One Coupon Per Pizza Ëxpires 9-7-76 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ LEFT B A N K LIQ U O R S ONE OF THE LARGEST SELECTIONS OF IMPORTED BEER IN THE WORLD ♦ ♦ COLD KEG BEER Employes aw ait ruling on insurance b illpaym ent 0 , ♦ ♦ ♦ A N N IE GREEN S P R IN G S ......... .............. .29c ♦ H E IN E K E N ’S B E E R .................................... $3.89 ♦ ♦ VODKA A N D GIN ( Q T . ) ..............................$3.99 C A NADIAN W H ISK EY $4.99 ♦ ♦ ‘' - t 16 oz. SC H LITZ MALT L IQ U O R ............. $1.69 I966-0941 1366 N. Scottsdale Rd., Tempe $ Ê I i 1 1 a % ft s % By Rosemary Schabert About 70 U niversity employes are awaiting a Superior Court ruling that could keep thousands of dollars in old medical bills from returning to:- haunt them. The employes were covered by Arizona Health Foundation, a private in­ surance carrier for the state. But in 'March, the firm went into receivership. A new insurance plan was found for the employes^ but it left them liable for old bills incurred before March 1, estimated to total $50,000 to $75,000. A Superior Court in­ junction issued th re e months ago protected employes from medical creditors, but expired two weeks ago, said Earl Sees, senior examiner for the Arizona State Insurance Department and receiver for the Arizona Health Foundation. When th e injunction for the judge’s ruling. Our expired, two local hospitals course of action would objected to an extension. depend on the nature of the The objections are presently ruling.” under advisement by Judge The employes may take Robert Corcoran, but the legal action against the injunction remains in effect - state, said Henry C. Koebl, until the judge makes a ASU director of personnel. ruling, Sees said. Sees said he is working on The injunction -prevents ways to relieve creditors from initiating policyholders of their old legal action against the policyholders, although they medical bills if the in­ can be billed and harrassed, junction is lifted, but would said Shelly Gerard, an not give details. accountant in the comp­ “We’re exploring every troller’s office. avenue possible to get relief Gerard said the employes to all people concerned,” he are conferring with an said. #attorney about possible All ASU employes af­ action to take if the court fected by the case have been injunction is lifted. The group is awaiting an told to send their old bills to opinion from the State Sees by Nov. 23. Sees will Attorney General’s Office then weigh the company’s about the employes’ liability assets against its liabilities to see if the bills can be in the case, he said. “We’re not going to make covered, she said. any hasty decisions,” Gerard said. “We’re waiting I ♦ • ☆ ☆ ☆ SPECIAL . • . (IN TH E W OOLCO S H O P P IN G CENTER) V “D û U H f 'l/U lc L We Specia/ae in Home Made HaBan Food COUPON ~ COUPON ~ ~COÚPON\ Lasagna Dinner *4.95 u I One Dinner FREE W ith Each Dinner Purchased Includes Salad, Meatball & Bread VIST OUR ELEGANT GRAPE-ARBORED DININGROOM TASTE OUR CHEESECAKE - YOU'LL CRY BEER - W INE Op^rf T ues^stm . 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. 2122 N SCOTTSDALE RD. SCOTTSDALE Fire your II la s s e s ' u n lim ite d Untoei‘si(.y & refíes i s o e a s t* u n i ^ e r s i u y Lempe «arisans «ss«i © @ @ -§ 4 4 © "r r j r ”7 You can move into a beautiful 2-bedroom villa -with air conditioning, pool & recreational facilities—the w o rk spay about what you’d pay for rent, and be your own landlord. In other words, the choices are just two: you can be a pawn of the capitalist power structure, ^ ♦ ♦ ♦ m Landlord. a ♦ ♦ ♦ or you can be a part of it. At any rate, when you and ASCI part company, you’re going to feel a lot better having built a little equity of your own. Take a good look at the disclosure, then check us out. You may have found a home. Cash price ...................... 21,750 Downpayment ............. 1.1QP Closing c o s ts ............ ........2 50 Loan a m o u n t...... 20,650 No. payments ................. 360 Interest rate .................... 9-1/4% Annual percentage rate . . 9.75 Principal & Interest . . . 169.90 Mortgage insurance. . . . 4.53 Tax ............... 29.46 lnsu{rance............................. 3.85 M aintenancefee . ......... 30 0 0 Total Monthly P aym ent. 237.74 2-bedroom townhomes from $21,750 T1 Rural Rd. 1-1/2 mi. South of Baseline Hours: N oon to 7 pm every day 839-5970 September 2, 1976 State Press Page 7 Instructor banned from casinos Blackjack-winning technique offered in MU short course Brett Hughes knows how to win at blackjack. In fact, he wins at blackjack so often, he was able to earn a living in Nevada for more than a year doing it. But now, since he is banned from almost all Reno casinos for winning too often, Hughes has decided to share his blackjack systems with others through the MU Short Course Program. Winning blackjack is just one of the many courses offered. Such diverse topics as bellydancing, creative clowning, terrarium-making and Scottish country dancing also are available to any student or faculty member with a valid ED. Prices range from $7 to $26, and registration for all classes is in the MU Activities Center. Hughes teaches two methods of winning at blackjack. One caters to the less serious player, while the other is aimed at the player determined to win big money. Each system depends on counting the number of cards that have been played and keeping Peter Yarrow to a id M cC arthy in M U pop-up Singer Peter Yarrow, formerly with th e folk group Peter, Paxil and Mary, will give a “ pop-up” p e r­ formance at 1 p.m. Wed­ nesday in the MU lounge. track of the cards which remain in the dealer’s deck. The average player loses $6 for every $100 he bets, he explained. But by using the easier system, he said players can be certain of winning at least $1.50 for every $100 bet. The more difficult system will pay even higher returns, with a winning percentage of 2.3, ($2.30 per $100 bet) Hughes said. Hughes is a senior majoring in economics and learned to play blackjack in Las Vegas, He said the system can be learned in two months of solid work, although it took him more than four months to master it. Hughes said he made about $15 an hour playing blackjack for a living, but more money can be made with larger b§ts. Casino winners cannot draw attention to themselves, he ’added, or they will be banned from the casino — as he was — for being big winners. L I Q U O R 6743 E. McDowell Rd. (Corner 68th St.) PLANNING A PARTY? Call us, we offer — • • • • • Cold Keg Beer In Stock At All Times Liquor • Ice • Case Discqunts Fine Wines & Champagne Wine Well — Chills Wine in 3*6 Min. Convenient Drive-In Window 947-2352 OLIVER H. t t l t Served on the Maricopa County Zoning and Appeal Board Community Leader Real Estate Developer Broad Business Background World War II Veteran Insurance Executive Income Tax Consultant Factory Worker Landlord • Real Estate Owner Life Long Democrat Married - Two Daughters Affiliated with The Methodist Church Pledged to lowering the cost of operating the County Government DEMOCRAT FOR SUPERVISOR FISH FRY ALL THE FISH YOU CAN EAT. Yarrow will be on campus to promote the independent presidential candidacy of Eugene McCarthy. French fries or baked potato He also will perform at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the MU Arizona Room. No ad­ mission will be charged. S ta te P re s s N ew s Hush Puppies IN T Ë M P E S C H W IN N BICYCLES •S T IN G RAYS • t e n SPEEDS— •3 , 5, SPEED S' w REPAIRS • PARTS • ACCESSORIES FOR ALL MAKES S A nd a ll t h e g o l d e n frie d f is h y o u c a n e a t Here’s a chance to get all the mouthwatering fish you want. Fried to perfection. With all the trimmings. At $2.59, it can’t last forever. So hurry. Our big fish fry ends Oct. 3. (Sorry, this offer does not apply to take-out orders.) Bedlobsier “ Piatte fa -seafood. 967-2137 3507 W. Dunlap Avenue, Phoenix 973-7143 5125 E. Thomas Road, Phoenix 959-6341 1628 E. Broadway Road, Tempe 968-6151 SCHWINN BIKES 11:30 a.m.-10:00 p.m. Sun-Thurs 11:30 a.m .-l 1:00 p.m. Fri&Sat 716 MILL AVE - TEMPE Red Lobster Inns of America. Inc. 1976 Page 8 State Press Septem ber 2, 1976 Two students share a pleasant M om ent under a shady pine tree. TheTeachings of Jose Cuervo: There is whiteI andthen there is white.” u 'Coed' dorm experiment still segregates sexes ASU’s experiment in coed housing at College Inn is neither coed nor new ta the University, according to the ASU housing officials. Housing D irector Russ Flaherty said Ocotillo (College Inn) can be described as “ad­ jacent living” as opposed to coed because separate dorm wings house men or womén. “Sahuaro and Best Halls had adjacent living four or five years ago, So it’s nothing new. Besides, 85 to 90 per cent of all in­ stitutions with mixed housing have adjacent living so we’resnot that different,"Flaherty said. Flaherty foresees no change in the existing policy. “It (coed housing) is a political thing. We’ve been successful with the program we have — there’s no need to change anything that’s working for you,” he said. N e w Optom etrist Office Near ASU Located in Apache Plaza 1000 E. Apache Blvd. No. 117 . Tempe, AZ. Across from Sun Devil Lounge 15% S TU D E N T D IS C O U N T on Frames, Lenses, and Contact Lenses. 967-8483 9 9 4 -1 8 3 3 Dr. C . G . Tatharh Dr. Barry S. Herndon the Honors Program of the College of Liberal Arts TUESDAY COLLOQUIUM SERIES Professor Charles M. Woolf Dean of thè Graduate College and Vice President for Graduate Studies & Research “Genetic Counseling and Genetic Engineering” If you d o n t want a ring around your drink, re­ member this. T he first white is Jose Cuervo White. Since 1795 Jose Cuervo has been the first, the pre­ mium tequila. And Jose Cuervo is made to mix best. With cola, tonic, collins, witter, orange juice, grapefruit juice, juices and etc., etc., etc. J O S E C U E R V O ' TEQUILA 8 0 PROOF. IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY 1976 HEUBLEIN. INC., HARTFORD; CONN. Tuesday, Sept. 7th, 1;40 p.m . » Physical Science Center, Rm. PS-F-173 All members of the University com m unity are cordially invited HONORS STUDENTS may pick up reserved seat tickets at the Honors office, S S 107, before noon of September 7th. ___ ..ss®? September 2, 1976 State Press Page 9 Dormitories capacity; Manzanita overflowing Dormitories are at capacity level, and there are 14 or }5 rooms in Manzanita Hall with three people in them instead of the two the rooms were designed for, the housing director said Wednesday. Russell Flaherty, housing director, said his office has been working for two weeks to get the situation corrected, and at one time only Palo Verde Main and the dorms directly on campus were free of tripling. Flaherty said the dormitories are intentionally overassigned by approximately five per cent because of spaces made available when people leave as a result of homesickness, imcomplete class shedules or other reasons. GOLDEN TEM PLE ' NATURAL FOODS RESTAURANT and *. HO NEY ICE CREAM PARLOR Complete Natural Food Menu Sandwiches, Lunches, Dinners Fruit and Vegetable Salads East Indian Itafian American Mexican Chinese Dishes always available Bike thieves'superm arket exists atA S U ,police say GOLDEN TEMPLE • No Sugar . No-Preservatives . No Artificial Color . No Artificial Flavor Honey Ice Cream Parlor Pure Fruit Flavors G O LD E N TE M P LE 4 1 5 S. M ill, T e m p e Bicycle thieves from as far away as Phoenix consider A6U cam pus _a “supermarket"’ for bikes, a University Police spokesman said Wednesday. “We arrested one person from Phoenix who had nothing to do with the Univer­ sity,” said Detective J.D . Morgan. “He told me he had been told it was easy to get bikes atA SU .” Bike thefts aren’t limited to the pros. “There are so many people stealing bicycles for different reasons that it could be anybody,” Morgan said. “The bikes are there and they’re not secure and they can be had.” . About half of ASU’s „bike busts involve juveniles, while the other half involves almost entirely students, Morgan said. “I really don’t think there’s a typical bike thief. If there’s a group of guys doing it, they’re probably from off campus,” he said. “They might come over here and make a sweep before we clamp down. When word of an arrest gets around, the thefts will taper off,” Morgan said. The experienced bike thieves usually come equipped to cut locks, Morgan said. “I arrested three Phoenix juveniles in fall of last year shopping in the racks at Manzanita Hall,” Morgan said. One of them — the shape of his chest wasn’t right. So I told him to open his jacket and he pulled out a three-foot pair of bolt cutters,” Morgan said. Serious bike “shoppers” usually descend on the campus at night, he said, but catching a thief is tougher during the day because of the masses of students coming and going. A campus officer averages two or three contacts a week with suspected bike thieves, many of whom he simply- chases off, Morgan said. In 1975, 341 bicycles were stolen at ASU, with a total value of $34,000, an average of $100 per bike, Morgan said. Morgan recommended cyclists use a case-hardened steel lock on their bikes. *. He urged students to register their bikes at the fire department. With the • bike’s serial number recorded, a national crime computer can be utilized m recovering it, he said________ . Mon. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Tuas.-Sat. 10 a.m .-12 midnight Sun. 12-12 Largest Selection of in Arizona C o rn e r o f 5th S t. and M ill I "Good Food ft Drink" Live Entertainment Light & Dark Every Friday, Saturday & Sunday T illl AM Beer on Tap No Min. — No Cover -W m e — Carryouts— I ip Happy Hpur Live Entertainment I Mon. thru Fri. 3 to 6 p.m. V i Gal. Pitchers, $1.50 M ugs 35c §■ University & Forest ( In The Arches) 966-7788 — Tempe OPEN DAILY 10:30 am to 12 pm; Fri, Sat, * Sun. till 1:00 am w5j W W oodrow LARGE 5 CUBIC FOOT s m m M % cfttEcl$mEHÔttSE Announcing DORMITORY SIZE REFRIGERATOR s¡s.i Birkenstock Sandals I f W ilson C A L L FO R RATES is perform ing live on AND the lounge side IN F O R M A T IO N 8:30 pm - 947-3721 SATU RDAY 1 am N o c o v e r c h a rg e — 9-5 DooLeys 7845 1. M c D o w e l l r d . s c o t t s d a l e Í 1216 East Apgche.Tèmpe (3 bibs.east of Rural) m 'WWfMftMiRWerW AW IBjflievpeWfitWfilieeMyreymreaM y !» H a p p y H o u r prices in e ffe c t 3 -8 (M o n .-T h u rs .) * * A great dance band — Carousel playing on the entertainment side every evening. Page 10 State Press September 2 ,1 9 7 6 by Garry Trudeau P O O N ESBURY y y y t ir N 0 .I7 B i.L Y 0 U ! NO rn s n e e d le s ' MY GOP, YOUPEOPLE CALL THIS COUNTRY A CIVILIZATION?! vic io u s u AS IT TURNS OUT, * YOU...YOU. SIR, NEMAS MEAN, YOU'VE RIGHT. V ALREADYGOT \ M E0PEN!?_ • Photoby Brian Drake Graduate student Alex Bordeleau reacts naturally to the situation of waiting In line at the cashier’s office in the Administration building. Added cashiering station fails to reduce long lines By Carol Trickett A new cashiering station designed to stream line student services is still plagued by long lines because of heavy student demand* the manager of cashiering services - said Wednesday.' “The average waiting time is approximately 21 m inutes,” Dannie H en­ derson said', sitting in the new cashier’s office that includes six tellers in a bank-style atmosphere. Henderson said the three cashier windows in the MU have been closed because, issuing parking decals, “th e MU facilities are stationed in the MU could inadequate for .check relieve some of th e cashing because of the crowding. location and the space He said another solution available.” would be increased use of the depository just outside During the first and last the cashier’s office. Hen­ few wééks of a semester derson said some bills can be cashiers are busy sellîhg paid there, through use of parking decals, cashing special envelopes now checks, handling .late available in dormitories and registration, meal tickets, administrative offices. housing fees, drop/add and Henderson estimated the other transactions, said new facility has cut down Henderson. He said ex­ th è time spent waiting in tending the time special cashier’s lines by more than cashiers, such as those 70 per cent* S tudent guides lis t candidates, STEELRADIAIS polling locations FOR IM P O R T C A R S A listing of precinct polling places and a nonpartisan League of Women Voters’ Guide are available to students in the Associated Students offices in the MU. The handouts contain in­ formation regarding polling places and candidates for the Sept. 7 primary election. “This year, with exciting contests for the U.S. Senate, both Republicans and Democrats should be eager to vote in the primary,” said Kevin Dahl, ASASU campus affairs vicepresident. “Our list of polling places is helpful for those who don’t know their precinct.” Dahl said. C A R PET VW ★ 165 SR X 15 with 12“ wheels *24.95+*1.54 1516 E. Van Buren, Phx. and all'Others with 13“ wheels 165 SR X 13 185/ 70 X T3 *27.95+»1.71 *34.95+*1.93 D A TSU N ★ 260Z ★ 240Z ★ 280Z 186 X 14 First Baptist of Tempo's College-Career Fellowship 4525 S. McClintock Drive (M cClintock South of Superstition Expressway) This SUNDAY, S ept.5 9:45 a.m . BIBLE STUDY 6:00 p.m . THE LORD’S SUPPER 7:30 p.m . FILM - “THE IMPACT OF ARCHEO LO G Y“ • For Inform ation an d /o r Transportation CALL 839-0926 or 966-6571 For the price of a movie, you’ll feel like a m illion *31.95+*2.11 *33.954*2.25 *399S+*2.24 SCOTTSDALE 3126 N. Scottsdale 949-1631 Phones Answered 24 hrs. starring W alter M atthau & G eorge Burns ¡aN eil Sim on’s “The Sunshine Boys” co-starring Richard Benjamin MEMORIAL UNION MOVIE HOUSE Thursday thru Saturday 1 9 5 /7 0 X 1 4 RADIAL Tires Are Our Business r W e lc o m e To *34.95+*1.60 R a d ia i “lin e C A R PET H O U SE \ __ t ALONE!!f 17 5 /7 0 HR x 12 also Mercedes and BMW All Sizes in Stock HEY! YOU LEAVE MY LUNGS DATSUN - TOYOTA ★ DATSUN * OPEL VEGA ★ PINTO * MUSTANG II 175 X 14 9 X 12 used rugs — $7.50 YES,SIR. YOUSMOKEA LOT, PONT YOU? PORSCHE ★ VOLVO *31.95+*2.13 HONDA ★ TOYOTA ★ 155 SR X 12 LOOK, I PROBABLYDONT EVENHAVEAPPENDICITIS/ THATLITTLE QUACKIN THE RESTAURANTONLY TOOK M Y PULSE! PHOENIX 2727 W. Missouri 242-2315 Open All Pay Sunday TICKETS: 4® w /A SU . T[T *1,50 others Advance tickets can be purchased at the M.0. Activities Center Presented by the Memorial Union Film Committee September 2, 1976 State Press Page 11 Business, nursing schools Communion offered at Danforth Chapel dismiss classes fo r game Campus religious leaders have organized a weekly nondenominational communion service, featuring instrumental groups, singing and student par­ ticipation. The service will be at 9:30 Wednesday evenings, beginning Wednesday in Danforth Chapel. The service was organized by representatives from the Lutheran Campus Center, the United Campus Christian Ministry and the Wesley Foundation of the United Methodist Church. Charlotte Hampton, a representative of the Lutheran Campus Center, said she feels the combined communion will give students reluctant to declare a religion a chance to worship with others in a “warm and caring atmosphere.” She said, “ASU is such a large community that wefeel something like this is needed to fulfill the religious needs of the students.” By Khambrel Marshall The College of Business. Administration and the College of Nursing have dismissed or rescheduled classes during the ASUUCLA football game Sept. 9, but all other colleges have left the decision up to the discretion of the chairmen and professors of each department. D epartm ent chairm en and representatives of the dean’s office at the College of Business Administration met on Tuesday and decided that: 1) Business classes starting after 4:40 p.m. on Sept. 9 will not meet, and 2) canceled classes will have to reschedule, either at other times, or for longer periods in order to make up for the lost time. Professor's a rt in o il, charcoal in ASU gallery Earl Linderman, an art d e p artm en t * professor, believes his art work can do the impossible of combining humor, sex and crime. Dr. Juanita Murphy, dean of the College of Nursing, issued a memo to the faculty dismissing classes starting at 3 p.m.The memo said, “Hopefully, time can be expanded before and after this date to make up for lost time.” Correction Dr. Delbert Weber, dean Hannelore French, an of the College of Education, has advised the chairman of organizer of the local each department to leave feminist newspaper Woman the situation up to the Rising, was incorrectly professors and the majority identified as Fay Smith in a picture in Wednesday’s opinion of (he students. State Press. “D eans don’t, cancel Persons interested in classes, we just go by contributing or subscribing University rules,” said Dr. to Woman Rising may write Jules Heller, dean of the P.O. Box 1209, Phoenix College of Fine Arts. Heller 85001, or phone 275-3979. added the instructors and students will be allowed to go to the game, but they would be obligated to make MODERN JAZZ up the lost time. A large number of night and afternoon classes will run after the scheduled kick-off time of 5:10 p.m. leading to traffic congestion. Because of the possible W hat is W oodrow W dson doin g to n ig h t a t 8:30? His works in oil, charcoal and oil pastel are on display in the Art Department Gallery. Linderman is coordinator of a rt education, and has been an instructor at ASU for 11 years. traffic hazard, Academic Vice President Dr. Karl Dannenfeldt has suggested that classes be dismissed early, and that lost time be made up at a later date. Singles I I 7.49 Doublesl 10.99 Thin Triples 12.99 DANCE THE MULTI-COLORED MULTI-LAYERED RUBBER SANDAL WITH A. NYLON STRAP GUARANTEED FOR LIFE AVAILABLE AT: with Marco Poshar New York Teacher 95 E. Southern Ave. In Valley Fair Shopping Center BACKDOOR SHOE SHOP Call 946-9677 Tempe 707 & Forest 966-1772 T H E W O R L D ’S F A V O R IT E B E D -T IM E S T O R Y IS F IN A L L Y A B E D -T IM E S T O R Y . . . Come by and see . 1 ftir yourself. 1 I DooLeys S ta te P re s s A d v e rtis in g ' 1216 East ApacfieTempe (3 bibs,east of Rural) We’ve added a new SOUP& SALAD BAR AN X-RATED MUSICAL COMEDY cFinfi Qeafpod STARRING PI AYBOY’S COVER GIRL KRISTINE BE BELL WITH LARRY GELMAN • ALLAN NOVAK • TER I 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 4455 SOUTH RURAL RI). • T'LMI’Í MANN THEATRES CHRISTOWN O Q 5707 NOffTH l» lh AVINUI ■ 249-7143 Daily at 1:00-2:30-4:00 5:30-7:00-8:30-10:00 A GENERAL NATIONAL FILMS RELEASE ill 1 ^sàâÊm ÊÊÊÊm à ' Page 12 State Press Septem ber 2, 1976 Manzarata: W here the girls are Freshmen. They face a myriad of hassles adjusting to a new environment, and most are away from home for the first time. Over 950 new college women come to live in the nine-story Manzanita dorm, affectionately known as “The Zoo.” And almost immediately, the Zoo is beset by another kind of animal — men. The first few weeks are spent tanning, checking the mail box, meeting new friends, checking the mail box, waiting for parties, checking the mail box . . . and maybe a little studying. But by the end of the first semester, they are Hardened veterans of Arizona State Resort, and are known as, “the Manzy Girls.” Photos by Marcia Joy Prouse Freshman Mary King from Glenview, III., passes the time away in her room, smoking a cigarette and waiting for a Friday night party to start. Roommate Carol Goldstein from Northbrook, III., checks the mail, an all-important ritual for the out-of-state girl expecting an important letter from home. Tanning is an essential part of the Manzy girl's life, as the two Chicago area girls find a water fight the refreshing way to beat the Arizona heat. Adjusting to long lines Is' a necessary evil for all students, as Carol and .her sultemate, Liz Woodward, a freshman from Golf, III., await their pictures for athletic ID cards. The typical dormitory shelf has all the necessities of life — food, liquor, a meal ticket, an ashtray, a scrapbook, etc. September 2, 1976 State Press Page 13 First Council backs Doctors to offer services ASU day care center in stadium a t UCLA game By Rhonda Prast For people who won’t be able to take the heat during next T hursday’s ASUUCLA football game, plenty of medical help will be available, the director of the Student Health Center said Wednesday. “The usual medical personnel will be there, plus four of my staff physicians w(ill be in the stands,” said Dr. Richard Jones. The w eather bureau e s tim a te d lOO-.degree temperatures at the 5:10 p.m. kickoff, adding it could “It’s a poor time for a reach as high as 110 game,” Jones said. “It’s bad degrees, the record tem­ for the older people — perature for Sept. 9. especially in the Sun Angel Jobes said a nurse and section.” th re e doctors from He said it is fortunate Samaritan Health Services most people here are used to will work in the first-aid •the heat. “If we had station at the stadium’s Nebraska fans here at the south end. game we would really have “The cardiovascular unit a problem,” said Jones. is located at the south end of “There’s never been a the stadium, and they have game at that time this early been at the football games in the season. It’s hard to for about the past three say what will happen,” he years,” Jones added. said. Half of voters expected to cast ballots Tuesday About half of the county’s 493,ODO voters will go to the polls Sept. 7 for the primary election, predicted Tom F reestone, , Maricopa County recorder. Freestone said of the voters registered for the primary, 239,395 are Republicans, 227,678 are Democrats and 26,431 are listed with other parties. Sample ballots for the election are being mailed to about 325,000 households. The ballot contains the names of candidates, tells the voter, where to vote and provides other instructions. STATE PRESS is published hy Arizona' State University Tuesday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and examination periods. Entered as second .class matter at Tempe, AZ 65281. Photo by Qrig Crowder A resolution supporting the plans of Associated Students’ officers for a day care center at Ritter School was passed unanimously by the ASASU First Council Tuesday. In its first meeting of the' year, the council also approved a $900 yearly salary for the director of the bike co-op. ASASU plans to start the program at the end of September. A committee also was formed Tuesday to work on another ASASU goal, the improvement of University academic grievance procedures. Student Discount PAPA JAY'S Mon. thru Thurs. A u th en tic N ew York PIZZA SICILIAN SANDWICH!! .'THICK CRUST — All our Pizzas hand made! TAKE OUT OR EAT IN TRY OUR DELICIOUS DINNERS & SUBMARINES SIX PACK COORS $1.25 Open 4 P.M.-1 A.M. Sun.-Thurs. 4 P.M. -2 A.M. Fri.-Sot. SERVING MICHELOB COORS • BUDWEISER • SCHLITZ We Deliver Beer! 804 S . A S H , T E M P E Vz Blk. S. of University NEW! Game Room! NEW! D elivery & Ta k e O u t O n ly $2.00 MIN ORDER FREE DELIVERY AFTER 5 P.M. 9 6 7 -9 6 8 9 Open Sunday 12~5pm . *r Monday-Sat 10-6pm CHANGING HANDS BOOKSTORE 9 E. FIFTH St. TEMPE 966-0203 Ready fo r high water Larry Chebowski will have dry cuffs in the rainy season in he stays atop his unicycle. Chebowski is teaching MU short courses on ‘Riding a Unicycle’ and ‘Creative Clowning.’ U C L A v s . A S U , S e p te m b e r 9th - DEFEAT m VICTORY now you eon drive a racing ear! B S S G R A N D P R IX f> GRAND PRIX FORMULA I RACING 1616 N. Hayden Rd., Tempe 949-7265 FOUR LAPS - -F O R ONLY $2.00 WITH THIS AD AND STUDENT I.D. Valid drivers license required. Lim it 1 ad per person. Offer expires December 31, 1976. ASU’s Head Coach Frank Kush: 1976 Coach of the Year, ranks second nationally in winning percentage and spurred the “Devils” to an undefeated 12-0 1975 season. Will this be the scene after ASU meets the UCLA Bruins? Read Sun Devil . FO O T­ BALL 7 6 for an in depth profile by Los“- Angeles Times sportswriter Mai Flo­ rence as he reviews, the UCLA Bruins. Sun .Devil FOOTBALL 7 6 is not just a book about ASU football. It’s a living documentary of the explo­ siveness hardships, gaity, tension, spirit, tears and success that has lifted ASU football to its present national status. Available at the ASU Bookstore, Student Book Center, Dialn o n d s , J r C T Penneys and leading sport­ ing goods and book stores throughout the valley. Sun Devil FOOTBALL 7 6 Reaching for Number 1 STP 7-76 rr— Tilf.nilaMwnwmsniwwriR "l'J1.,.I.'Mi,'1.11.l.|i WMliyiUMA»iMiiTTytrwT^vwix^ri.TT.?!^ Page 14 State Press Septem ber 2, 1976 State ftessClassifieds ★ Pets ★ For Sale IRISH SETTER puppy, female, 4 Vi months old, first shot. House trained. Mother and Father will be shown. $50.00. Call 9 6 6 7131. 9-2 RITA MAE B RO W N S new novel “In Her Day“ just arrived! WOMANSPLÂCE, 9 E. 5th S t., Tempe. 966-0203. 9-2 HEWLETT PACKARD model 65 programable calculator and accessories, $250. 967-3723. 5 tp 6 p.m. 9-10 ★ NATIONAL NEWS syndicate will hire part-time correspondent, especially Mesa or Tempe resident. Prefer seconcTyear or better journalism student. Send post card with name, address, and telephone to: Media News Services, 5305 E. Sweetwater Ave., Paradise Valley, AZ 85254 No phone calls accepted. 9-10 Take O ff Your Clothes! ★ Personal FILL THOSE EMPTY SPACES with a plant. 10% off on all plants with student I.D. The New Leaf, Miller and Indian School Rd., Scottsdale, 48th St. and Southern, Phoenix and Baseline and McClintock, Tempe. 9-8 SENIORS, GRADS: Plan your future fi­ nancial security. Free Information. Rick Rapaport, ASU Rep. University Key. 95733Ö3. 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. 9-3* ★ Instruction PARACHUTE 12 miles from Phoenix! $5.00 off with student ID or this ad. 275-0010. _________ 12-2 Freddie .W illiam s su* p*.. ***<, Star fullback hopes for yardage record By Walter Berry • When Arizona State lines up against UCLA Sept. 9, Frank Kush hopes to have all his troops geared and ready. Freddie Williams is ready now. And when number 36 says he’s ready, you believe him. Williams, entering his final" campaign as the Sun Devil fullback, has his sights set for another 1,000-yard season which would establish all kinds of national and school records. “Fast Freddie” needs 1,137 yards to surpass Woody Green as the all-time ASU rushing leader and join Archie Griffin, Ed Marinaro, Tony Dorsett, O.J. Simpson, and Green in the elit# 3,500-yard-plus category. ' He already holds the. school record for Most Yards Rushing by a Sophomore — 1,299 — and that, coupled with his 1,319 yards gained last year, gives him a total of 2,618. Frank Kush knows all about the many talents of the 5’ 10”, 192-pound Williams . . . and utilizes them to the fullest. “Fred Williams is the most consistent running back we r have," said Kush. “I keep on him pretty good because he’s in a leadership position. He proved last year that he’s toughest when the situation is toughest.” . Another- 1,000 yard season would almost certainly giveWilliams a shot at All-America, an honor which has escaped him ' in previous years. Williams is fully aware of the possibility. "Sportswriters may only see you play once or -twice around here, which makes it tough to get selected,” said Williams. “That and the fact that Ricky Bell (of USC) and Tony Dorsett (of Pittsb.urgh)'are still around,” he said. “I try not to think of how many yards I need for records or predict; how many TD’s I’m gonna’ get. I just go out there, play hard and try to win. Each game is different,” he said. The pride of St. Petersburg, Fla., and Dixie High School paused for a moment and then remarked with a grin, “But I’m sure gonna’ try to play like an All-American.” ALPHA IN S U R A N C E CENTER WE WANT YOU TO GET THE LOWEST PRICES IN ARIZONA "IF Y O U H A V EN T CALLED US FIRST, CALL US LAST." AUTO RENTER'S LIFE FOR PROFESSIONAL SERVICE CALL 838-8778 201 E. Southern Ave., Suite 115, Tem pe, Arizona 85281 "MODERN LITERARY ARABIC” instruc­ tion. Contact Prof. Richard Martin, Re­ ligious Studies, 204 Gammage Hall 9 6 6 7145 from 8 to 59-3 MEDITATION HIGH SPEED READING AUTOSUGGESTION •R e a d 3 -2 0 X F a s te r « S tu d y and ta k e e xa m s e a s ie r « T e n s io n and fa tig u e reduced C L A S S E S B E G IN S E P T . 7 , 8, 9 CALL 833-7584 9-3 ★ For Rent/Lease_ _ _ _ _ _ SMALL HOUSE. Refrigerated, furnished! Two blocks from ASU. Call 967-3885. 9-3 ROOM FOR RENT, kitchen privileges, no smoking or drinking. 968-6890. 9-3 FURNISHED Studio near downtown Mesa, utilities paid. $70. 962-6464, 244-4880. 9-3 STROLL TO CLASS! Clean and shiny 2 bdrm, fenced ^ r d , kids, pets. $140. 956-0500. Valley Homes — Fee. 9-3 FIX AND SAVE! Carpeted 2 bdrm furnished house. $75, big fenced yard, kids, pets. 956-0500. Valley Homes — Fee. 9-3 POOL A ND PATIO! A /C , 3 bdrms, 2 baths, carport, yard, kids, pets, $185. 956-0500. Valley Homes — Fee. 9-3 $85 HOUSE! Fully furnished w /p a tio , yard, kids OK. 956-0500. Valley Homes — Fee. .__________________ J9-3 BRING FIDO! A /C , 2 bdrm w /poo l, $125,. green yard, call now, 956-0500. Valley Homes — Fee. 9-3 AAA SECLUDED! 2 bdrm on 10 acres, A /C , $110, kids, horses OK. 956-0500. Valley Homes — Fee. '' 9-3 ★ For Sale And get into something comfortable, like our recycled jeans and cut-offs. We have the best quality vintage clothes around . . . Hawaiian and western shirts, silk’s and satins, old velvets and antique Oriental goodies. Rural at University [Next to Bo-Jo] FUNKY-TO-SWANKY OLD CLOTHES FOR GUYS & GALS 9-9 HOUSEKEEPER WANTED — house­ cleaning, stay with two,children (9 yrs. & 11 yrs.) from 3 - 5:30 or 6 p.m. M -F, cook supper. Must have car, two work ref­ erences. $25/week plus suppers. 8361643, or Jerry 267-4788._____________________6 3 ★ Wanted GOOD MONEY for few hours in spare time? Seniors and grads, call Rick, 957-3393. 6 7 Guitar player wanted for Bluegrass Band. Acoustic only, Must sing lead and harmoney 967-8532. 9-3 WANTED, Full Time Waitress. Pleasant working conditions. Apply in person. 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Monday thru Thursday. Dooleys, 1216 E. Apache, Tempe. (3 blocks east of Rural). 623 AIM FOR M O R E !!!!! FANTASTIC OPPORTUNITY! Invest $10.00 and make $3000.00 in two weeks. Send to N .M . Publications, P.O. Box 173, Albu­ querque, Ndw Mexico. 87103. 610 We pay top dollar for any clean vehicle. We will buy your auto outright or you can trade dovyn for lower payments.' Come to: 5211 E. W ASHINGTON IF YOU W ANT A GOOD DEAL OR CALL 275-4444 MAGOO’S AUTO SALES INC. 9-30 LATIN TEACHER WANTED Private School , Mesa AUDITIONS, Sept. 4, 5. St. Barnabas, 6715 North Mockingbird La., Scottsdale. Belief It 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.m. Sept. 4 and 5. Information 9561550. 63 DISPLACED FENCER would like to meet other fencers for regular practice. Any weapon. Call Steve at 9665700. 610 One Glass Only Call George Boyd - Any Time ASU 965-3770 Home 9667654 g / y7 ★ Announcements “ASU NATIVE American Calendar” — Get your free copy today at AIC student information table. 627 ★ Typing TYPING. BUSINESS College graduate. 65c per double-spaced page. By appointment. A nita 9669088._______ ,_____________ 6 1 6 SPEEDY AND accurate. Elite or pica type. Good bond paper, carbon ribbon,.grammar and spelling corrected if desired. Call Jane 9669828. Near tennis courts. 12-3 DISSERTATIONS, THESES, Business, and Legal Papers, etc. Broad format experience near ASU. Patti 967-4937 12-3 NEED SOMETHING TYPED, reasonable rates, call D onna,, 968-6840. Also do embroidery. 63 TYPING. IBM Correcting Selectric. Invis­ ible corrections. Reasonable. Editing by professional writer, extra. Darshan, 2547554. 63 NEAR ASU. Research papers, theses, dissertations. English degree. Editing. Work guaranteed, 7 years experience. 967-8155. 9-3 MUSICIANS WANTED for Jewish holiday services: french horn, flute, cellow, piano, harp, guitar. Singers also. To Volunteer, call Rabbi Lee 967-7563 or 9669922. 62 ARE YOU Jewish? For free information on" all Jewish activities on campus call Hillel 967-7563. Free mailing list. N o obligation. ■ ____________ ■ ___________ 6 2 ★ Roommate Wanted FEMALE ROOMMATE needed — enor­ mous 4 bdrm /3 bath home with pool, refrigeration, fireplace; 2 blocks from campus. $80 plus utilities. Prefer grad student. 965-2856 days; 968-0438 eves. 9-3 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 ★ Motorcycles ★ Services STEREO LP ALBUMS - Rock or Popular. Each factory sealed. Yours for only $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 4064, Mesa, Arizona 85201. 9-17 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, Phoe­ nix. 9-3 TEXTBOOKS WITH notes; QBA 161, MGT 463, CIS 302, HES 100, AC 101, AC 102, SOC 305, and others. 944-2481 evenings. .___________________ 9-8 INTERESTED IN tutoring Greek language. Available in evenings or by appointment. Please call 966-0078. Ask for Nick Kostopoulos. v 9-3 TEXTBOOKS WITH Notes: ADS 233, ACC 201, CIS 402, MGT 432, MKT 411, ACC 541, MGT 591, MGT 522, MGT 434, etc.944-2481. »4 'PIANO LESSONS! Classic, Modern, Jazz. Call Linda at 839-3904, experienced tea­ cher, church pianist, accompanist. 9-8 D-N-B TV REPAIR. Used blk. and whites and co lor sets fo t s a lo . Discounts for college students. 1248 E. Valerie Dr.‘, Tempe, behind Big Surf at Miller and Valerie, 947-6212. 9-8 ^J.J?hotogfaphy.^ 1972 MAZDA RX-3, 4-speed, A M /F M radio, tape deck, mags, vinyl top, looks good, runs good. 959-3048. 9-3 9-2 ".;. 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 2 4 6 9 6 1 5 .6 3 GOLD SMITH-CORONA typewriter, manual with power space bar, excellent condition. 9 94 -9 5 87 .' " 9-2 CHILD CARE in my house — all working and student mothers. Daily or hourly. Call 967-9249._______________ . ____ 9-3 P l-L ZD PIONEER stereo turntable with Shure magnetic cartridge, $75. 966-0203, 12 a.m.— 2 p.rn. weekdays. ; 9-2 • ... EVENINGS: FILM processing sales pre-set appointments. Must have car. $150.00 to $300.00/weekly. 279-4101. 9-14 1972 MAZDA RX-3, 4-speed, A M -FM radio, tapedeck, mags, vinyl top. looks good, runs good. 959-3048. 9 /3 SELECTED STYLES V? off ladies sandals. Back Door Shop. 707 South Forest, Tempe. ___ _______________________________ 9-30 ANTIQUE light Oak Table, brass trimmed, 46x47, carved fan design on massive legs, expandable. Must sacrifice for $350.00 cash. Call 838-3800 after 4 p.m. 9-2 $250 . . . /S tuffing 1000 Envelopes: HOMEWORK GUARANTEED! COMPAN­ IES NEED YOU. Details: $1, Self-ad­ dressed1, Stamped 1 Envelope: Johnson 9z419, 258 Atwood, Pittsburgh, Pa. 15213. R&M GENERAL STORE PHOTO DARKROOM and Studio Rentals. Efficient, spacious, clean. Open 7 days. Bend, Tempe. 966-8104.________ Help Wanted 9-14 ★ Pets FREE, 2 kittens grey and white, Siamese. Also mature Siamese. All females, 9 6 6 1950 or 965-3502. g_g FREE BEAUTIFUL 7 month old, half Alrdale/half Shepard, house trained, dog that needs home. 967-4001. 9-2 CUTE, LOVABLE Huskie/Beagle puppies, two months old. Call 946-6039. 9-3 1974 SUZUKI, TS185, Street Legal, ex­ cellent condition. $450.9660886. 63 7 2 NORTON 750cc, mileage, 834-1961. make offer, low 62 1976 YAM AfiA XS500 twin, mag wheels, disc brakes, 2200 miles. Excellent con­ dition. 1-8664214. 63 1973 HONDA 949-8734. ★ 500cc * Chopper. $1,100. 615 Automobiles 1971 DODGE COLT — 4 speed trans­ mission, air conditioning, new tires. 9661675. 614 1972 TOYOTA CARINA. 1 owner. Auto­ matic, air, radio, 55,000 miles, 26 MPG, radial tires. 993-8841,242-8041. ‘ 68 1972 TQYOTA.CORONA Mark II. 4-speed, red, A /C , 39,000 miles, 4-door, $1695.00. 8362916. 63 1974 PINTO, Super sharp, new Michelin radiais, radio, factory air, 2300 engine, $ 2,2 90 .9 4 6 21 1 4 . g-2 1974 260Z, $500 below blue book, A /C , Stereo, low mileage, mags, excellent condition. Call 9667105 or 8362064. 6 17 1966 BUICK ELECTRA, full power, A /C , excellent running condition, two new tires, many new parts, everything works. Re­ liable. original owner. Call Stu,' 967-2138 after 6 p.m. 63 September 2, 1976 State Press Page 15 f ELECT OCHOA FRANK G. COUNTY BOARD OF SUPERVISORS Senior leads in interceptions Devil back praises defense A q u arterb ack ’s e rra n t sideline pass bounced off the thigh of one of the spectators standing along the field and rebounded into the defensive back’s arms. He thankfully tucked it away and skipped up the sideline toward his goal line. “Nice catch, Woody,” “Atta boy, Woody,” came the catcalls. “Woody” is Michael David Martinez. He plays left cornerback for the ASU football team. And he smiles when the subject of his nickname comes up. “Chip Dean (a teammate) gave that name to me when I was a freshman. I went around a lot with no shoes and no shirt,” M artinez explained. / ‘Chip thought I was kind of a hippie and he likes to' kid me, so he tacked the name ‘Woodstock’ on me, and it stuck. It got shortened to ‘Woody’,” he said. Martinez’ free spirit doesn’t seem to affect his play on the field, however. The 6-foot, 195pound senior from Livermore, Calif., led the WAC in in­ terceptions with seven last season. He also earned first team alLWAC honors. “There’s no art to it (in­ terceptions),” Martinez said. “It’s a matter of being in the right place. I have good hands. If it's a bad pass and I’m in the area I figure I can get it,” he said. Matrtinez discounts the idea that the defensive backfield is a problem area for the. 1976 Devils. “We’re in good shape as soon as (sophomore) Derrick (Martin) comes around,” he said. “Derrick has a lot to learn, and he’s making mental mistakes. But he’s superquick. And «, Gerry (Geldien), John (Harris)' and I all have had experience,” he said. Martmez dislikes the idea of assuming a leadership role in the backfield. “I’ll say something sometimes, but I’m not everybody’s dad back there. I prepare myself my own way and they should prepare themselves their own way," he said. In preparing for the season opener against UCLA Sept. 9, Martinez must go against the Devils’ fine receivers John Jefferson and Larry Mucker in practice. “That’s the greatest thing,” he said. “I figure if I can cover them in-practice, I’D be confident I can cover anybody,” he said. As for the future, the com­ puter information systems major says that pro football is not in his plans. “If it comes, fine,” he said. “I hope to go into the computer field and make a lot of money,” Martmez said. DISTRICT NO. 1 OBJECTIVE: Representation for the people (government for and by the people). Elimination of excessive government, elimination of excessive spending, and elimination of excessive taxes. To work with other governmental units to correct the problems. QUALIFICATIONS: Audited all types of county and related offices and departments (including Board of Supervisors) in Arizona, (1961-1969), Administration, Treasurer, Accountant, Finance, and related Business Consulting duties, (1969-1976). Continuous involvement in community activities. EDUCATION: Graduate studies and professional seminars at Arizona State University after graduation from the University of Arizona. 'Under former Governor Dan E. Garvey when he was State Examiner. DEMOCRAT YOUR VOTE AND SUPPORT APPRECIATED Econom ical basics. Powerful slide rules. A nd, a programmable powerhouse. TI-1200 TI-1250 Goes where you go. Adds, sub­ tracts, multiplies, divides. Per­ centage, too. Automatic constant. .Full floating decimal. 8-digit dis­ play. Replaceable battery. Optional adapter available. > TI-lGOO TI-1650 Everything the TI-1200 has—plus. Full function memory: add; sub­ tract. recall or cle'ar with a single keystroke. Also, a change sign key. Replaceable battery. O ptional adapter available. Super slim. High-styled. Four func­ tions. Percent key. Automatic con­ stant. 8-digit display is easy on the eyes-. Use it 3 to 5. hours before recharging. AC adapter/charger . and carrying case. $1295* $2495* $995" S up e r sl im. P o we r f u l 4-key memory. A change-sign key. Press the keys just as you would state the problem. Fast-charge battery off­ ers 3 ta 5 hours continuous use. A d a p t e r and c a r r y i n g case included. $2995 SR-50A SR-51A TI Business Analyst SR-56 The classic slide rule calculator. Algebraic keyboard and sum-ofproducts capability with; single­ function keys. Versatile fnemory: add, store, or retrieve data. Set angles to degrees or radians. Cal­ culates to 13-digits, display rounds to 10. Operates on rechargeable battery pack. Even more power. Three user-ac­ cessible memories. Least square linear regression. Factorials. Ran­ dom numbers. P erm utations. Mean, variance, and standard de­ viation. 20-conversions. And more -p lu s , everything that can be done on the SR-50A. AC adapter/ char­ ger included. Saves working’ with books of tables and charts. Financial and statistical operations are preprogrammed. Handles: annuity, Simple and com­ pound interest, sinking fund, amor­ tization, cash flow, cost control and depreciation—and more.. AC adapter/charger and carrying case included. Super slide rule that’s program­ mable. A powerhouse. 10 memo­ ries. 100 program steps. 9, levels of parentheses, 4 levels of subroutine. AOS (Algebraic Operating System) lets you handle complex problems naturally, l eft-to-right. Battery pack, AC adapter/charger and Ap­ plications Library. $5995* $7995' $4995* $ 10995* Special SR-56 $10.00 rebate. Texas Instruments will rebate $10.00 of your original SR-56 purchase price when you return this coupon and your SR-56 customer informatiori card post­ marked no later than October 3 Î, 1976. To apply: -j F ill n u t th is c m ip n p ...— 2. Fill out special serialized customer information card inside SR-56 box 3. Return completed coupon and information card to: Special Campus Offer P .O .B ox 1210 *• Richardson, Texas 75080 'Suggested retail price. ' 1976 Texas Instruments Incorporated T ex a s In Nam e Address City State Zip U niversity Nam e of S R -56 Retailer S R - 5 6 _________________ s t r u m e n t s n c o r p o r a t e d • - ' ~’ Serial No. (from back o f calculator) Please allow 30 days lor rebate BKuwäasss Page 16 State Press Septem ber 2, 1976 The Quidnunc Sports shorts ’ Spartans 9-0 for the National Football League championship indoors in Chicago Stadium: Q: In 1934, Carl Hubbell performed one of the greatest pitching achievements in AllStar baseball game history when he struck out five of the top hitters in the American League in succession. Who were the five On Dec. 18, 1932, the Chicago batters? Answer Friday. Bears defeated the Portsmouth Editor’s note: A quidnunc is “one that is avidly curious and given to speculating, especially about ephem eral or petty things.” Translated from Latin, it means, “What now?” With thanks to Harry Sheer of the Chicago Tribune, the State Press presents The Quidnunc: I i f m 1 NI vM ■Æ ! < Æ ■Æ & :m m m :I ■;' im K ® 4 ■i -■-m Æ ' il i -m m m I1 §m f ‘ » f I ! Æ- I Sun Devils' poll rating questioned Editor’s note: Enclosed with this letter was a clipping from the Aug. ,27 issue of the Phoenix Gazette that ran with the headline “Nebraska No. 1 — ASU 7th in UPI.” Sports Editor: You want a reason to join the. Pac-8? How’s this? « Any time a school goes 12-0-0 and finishes No. 2, and the following year returns nine offensive starters and a similar number of defensive starters, and is picked number, seven, it’s time to question the esteem with , which the school’s program is held. ASU is a larger school than all but one in the Pac-8. It is located in a metropolitan area. It con­ sistently draws crowds of more than 48,000 to see the likes of UTEP, Wyoming, etc. The only thing holding ASU back is its affiliation with what is perceived as a slightly less than major conference. By the time UTEP, Wyoming,, New Mexico, Utah, etc., attain big time status everyone else will be “super big-time.” The WAC is a drag on ASU. PhO Motta Athletic ID, Pacific-Eight supported In the recent issues bf State Press, several articles have been published that put down this university. If you read the Friday issue, and you are a new student, you’d really be sick! The athletic ID is a perfectly good idea, and instead of “bit­ ching” about it, those students ought to be thankful. If you want to avoid the $1 late charge, go and have yours made now. It only takes five minutes. Why are some of us so confident that we thnse ID’s? This method {JfSuSi? 2?.^ guarantees that only students will sit in the student Sections. As for the WAC and the Pac-8, it is very simple — ASU should join the latter. The only reason ASU did not get No. 1 last year was the WAC. This conference is absolutely weak and helpless! When they say that the WAC is im proving, you’d b e tte r believe it. That’s because it could not get any worse. When ASU plays a WAC opponent, it’s not a m atter of who is going to win, but by how many points ASU fs going to “whack” that opponent. T here is no excitem ent generated in my blood when we beat some of those WAC teams by at least 30 points every year! A good performance against USC and UCLA is much more “ex­ citing” than beating helpless teams like Colorado State and UTEP. LET’S GO PACIFIC. Robert R. Hakim e ù v à A MEETING for anyone interested in playing in­ tercollegiate baseball who isn’t on a baseball scholarship will be held 3 p.m. Thursday in the University Activity Center, room 188. “Walk-ons are more important to us this year than ever before,” said coach Jim Brock. “Our financial aid has been cut, so where as we had room for only a couple of walk-ons a year in the past, we’ll need a whole bunch this season.” TERRY DONAHUE will make his coaching debut for UCLA Sept. 9 in Sun Devil Stadium, with hopes of snap­ ping a long winless streak. No new UCLA coach has won his initial game since Red Sanders won the season opener in 1949. Since then new Bruin coaches have gone 0-3-2 in their first giames. A MEETING today for Anyone, male or female, in­ terested in going out for the track team. For further in­ formation call 965-6128. College Dance Classes Full? ï Call Profile for Dance PAPAGO LIQUORS 834-3131 P A P A G O PLAZA Expertly taught closes, limited in size with individual attention. ' Classical Ballet: Russian Technique Modem: Cunningham Technique Jazz Dance • Exercise — Ideal for body toning, stretching, placement. [SCOTTSDALE RD. AT McDOWELL] * * * HUGE SELECTION OF LIQUOR AND WINE FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD CASE DISCOUNT ON ALL ITEMS, IN­ CLUDING SPECIALS KEG BEER IN THE COOLER, READY TO GO LARGE STORE WITH PLENTY OF PARKING Florence Maddocks Director, Credits: Broadway, T.V ., Stock, Apprentice New York City Ballet. 23 South -Morris Mesa 946-0715 itti D i\ x B A C K T O St 2 H O O L S A L E Prices e ffe c tiv e Today, Fri day,& Saturday - 3 Days O n ly JEANS DECKER'S SLAPS NOW $9 .9 9 - $14 *9 i ^ : »LEE »LEVIS •A - SMILE NOW 7*49 NOW ^10*99 NOW^12*99 Regular $10.00 Regular $13.00 Regularly $17 & $24 Girls Sizes in Jeans Good selection sizes 28-29-30 SHORT SLEEVE KNIT SHIR1* Regular $15,00 Regulary up to $22.00 N 0 W * 4 .99 »*9 .9 <9 CASUAL SUCKS Regularly to $35.00 S o " Regularly $20.00 Regularly up to $18.00 N O W * 12.99 N O W * 1 2 .9 9 $9 N^llAT LONG & SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS IMPORTED INDIAN SPORT SHIRTS KNIT RUGBY DRESSY SPORT SHIRTS - NYLON 9 9 ’ U »79 *14.99 Regularly to $30.00 SHORT SLEEVE GAUZE N O W $6 .9 9 R9 2 00 N O W *8 .9 9 hiAUf ^6.99 IW W *12.99 SHORTS A SWIM SUITS N O W *6 .9 9 mm "THE CLCT H IN G M E R C H A N TS All Sales Final Thursday, 10a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. m 1 3 5 E .S E V E IM T H T E M P E -9 6 8 3 5 8 5 OI\IE BLOCK INI. OF ASU ON FOREST &7«h —;------------- -----i —T ti Hurt flinriiilTlW liM BiilW iM PDIIIJliCI