Famed resort w ill serve as ASU seminar center th u rsd a y sum m er Diane Mason After driving a hot one hour out of Phoenix and a treacherous 13 jniles over a plunging and winding dirt road, ASU’s Castle Hot Springs resort, set in a mass of palm trees and greenery, looks like a mirage. But it doesn’t disappear. The famed resort which once housed the likes of Teddy Roosevelt, the V a n d e r b ilt s , C a b o ts, Rockefellers and even John Kennedy is closed down and needs work, but it’s still there. The $l-million-dollar resort complete with tennis courts, pools, a golf course, hiking trails and sleeping accommodations for about 100 is being readied as a seminar center for ASU. It is located about 60 miles northwest By s ta te p re ss Tempe, Arizona Arizona State University Vol.2, No:8 July 28, 1977 Castle Hot Springs, which was recently giveh to the ASU Foundation, Is being readied to serve as a conference center. Remodeling is being done due to a fire which destroyed part of the resort in December. It will only be open to people participating in University-related seminars. , — mm w of Phoenix near Lake Pleasant. Dr. Mae Sue Talley donated the resort — the largest gift ever given to ASU — in February. The resort will be used strictly for U n iversity-related con­ ferences, said Denis Kigin, director of University extension and spmmer sessions. The resort normally will operate from September to May and close down for the summer, he said. This year, the resort is scheduled to open in October. Castle Hot Springs was given officially to the ASU Foundation, a corporation of community leaders which accepts gifts for the University. The foundation, which is funded mainly by gifts and grants, has been supporting the resort since February and will retain ownership, p said Allen Rosenberg, foundation board chairman. It is now being maintained by a small main­ tenance and security crew, he said. No visitors are allowed on the grounds without clearance from the University or the Foun­ dation, according to one employe on the grounds. A State Press reporter and photographer had difficulty obtaining permission to get on the estate to take a pic­ ture. Kigin said he did not want pictures taken during the summer because the grounds were not being irrigated and some shrubbery has turned brown. He also said because of remodeling — the result of a fire last winter — the resort is not as attractive as usual. The resort was damaged by fire in December and sub­ sequently was closed down. Palm House, the building that housed the kitchen, dining room, library and 22 gu est room s, ,was destroyed by the blaze. A guest cottage also was demolished. “We’re taking one of the current buildings and remaking it into a dining fa cility ,’’ R osenberg said. A fter remodeling, the ground floor of the administration building will serve as a food service. The foundation also is remodeling a small theater to serve as a meeting room for about 50 people, said Kigin. Ernst and Ernst, an ac­ counting firm, is auditing the resort’s books so the foundation can set a budget for the resort, Rosenberg said. He said he does not expect the study to be completed until mid-September. The foundation intends Castle Hot Springs to be self-supporting by charging seminar participants registration, occupancy and food fees, Rosenberg said. He said he will not know what the fees will be until the audit is completed. Last winter, when the resort still was operating, it cost $75 for single occupancy and $115 for double occupancy each night, said Cal Kempton, an official of Talley Industries. The charges included three full meals per day. “It was a resort for the very affluent people in the East for years,” Kempton said. Since the resort opened its doors in 1896, it housed a number of famous and wealthy people. But registry books dating back to the 1890's were destroyed in the fire, Kigin said. Kempton said the resort remained popular through the years and when the fire occured, “We had reservations for the whole season.” Before the fire, Castle Hot Springs had a staff of 75 in­ cluding groundskeepers, cooks, etc., he said. Occupancy ranged from 20 to 110. When the oc­ cupancy lowered, there were up to three staff members for every guest, Kempton said. Castle Hot Springs got its name from four hot springs which feed three natural pools and a swimming pool. Kempton said the water leaves the springs at about 120 degrees but cools off as it circulates. The resort also has four tennis courts, a nine-hole goft course, trap shoot and rifle range and “miles and miles of walking and hiking trails,” he said. Owners unite C o u n t y m a y g iv e p a r lo r s th e ru b By Louis Legazpy Maricopa County’s estimated 55 massage parlors — many located in the Salt River bed area near the ASU campus — are facing the stiffest legal challenge yet to their existence. After years of debate, the Arizona Legislature passed this year a law giving the counties power to “make and enforce necessary rules and regulations” for massage parlors in unincorporated areas. The new law goes into effect Aug. 27. Since Arizona is one of the few states not to outlaw prostitution formally, massage parlors often are found on the edges of city limits, outside the reach of municipal ordinances and any law enforcement. Maricopa County officials have looked upon the legislation as a means of driving prostitution out of the massage business. The most talked about proposal that has been con­ templated by the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors would be to require parlor customers to sign a register. Sheriffs deputies would then be allowed to interview patrons to determine the type of service they received. Massage parlor owners, fearing the new law may jeopardize their livelihood, have organized an association designed to minimize its effects. The Maricopa County Massage Parlor Association has attempted to self-police Massage parlors in Maricopa County — (Iks this ons — will be forced to comply with new laws some of the purported abuses in the business, said Howard since the Arizona Legislature passed a bill that gives counties broad powers to regulete these palaces of pleasure. Thirty-eight Maricopa County parlors are banning together In an effort to Klein, the group’s lawyer. continuad paga 2 regulate themselves. Summer State Press July 28,1977 M ore about Computer serves M a s s a g e p a tr o n s By Marsha Ronnie 'with handicapped parking. A state-owned computer is available at walk-through In addition, the committee will registration, Aug. 22-26, and in being used to cjonnect commuting seek a lower price on parking departmental offices during the students who wish to form car stickers purchased by ride­ pools with persons living in their fall semester. sharing participants, he said. When a sufficient number of neighborhoods, according to the ASU commuters are carpooling, coordinator of the program. Within two weeks of sub­ Bruce Gross said the service is Gross said the parking com­ mitting a computer form, the m ittee will ask the ad­ free to potential carpoolers as applicant will receive a list of the costs will be shared by ASU m inistration to set aside names and phone numbers of 10 reserved spaces and lots for the and Project Pool-It, a branch of persons living within a twoValley Forward, a civic carpoolers, in a manner similar square-mile area. to what presently is being done organization. Contrary to former parking r : plans that included pooling as one facet of the program, the latest pooling plan has gained some support from ASU President John Schwada, Gross said. Students, faculty and staff who wish to form car pools may obtain forms from the in­ WITH THIS COUPON formation desk in the . Memorial O ffS ^ o o d th ro ü g h  ü ^ T l9 7 7 . Coupon good only during attendant Union and from the Campus hours: 9-6 Mon. thru Sat. Limlt.1 per customer. Affairs Committee office, MU COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY 208-J. The forms also will be continued from page 1 The association represents 38 massage parlor owners. (A large concentration of the county’s parlors is located northeast of campus, from Rural Road east to Price Road and from University DHve north to Princess Drive.) Some of the abuses the association will try to police out of the establishments include the sale of drugs, harassing customers, creating noise and disturbances — and shootings, Klein said. He added another abuse is hiring the “hard-core hooker” at the parlors. In 1976, the legislature enacted the same bill, but ac­ cording to the Maricopa County legal staff, it was unen­ forceable because it did not detail the powers granted the 'supervisors. But in the wake of the recent legislation, James Alandar, chief deputy to Maricopa County Sheriff Jerry Hill, said, “We will have to work out the specifics, but the new law certainly gives us the vehicle to close down the ob­ jectionable activities.” Henry H. Haws, supervisor for District 1 (which includes the ASU area), said legitimate massage establishments will have no problems, but businesses involved in “illegal sex” will have “a lot of problems.” But prostitution itself still is not illegal under Arizona state statutes. The illegality supposedly comes from receiving the income of prostitutes. “Then you have to determine,” says Klein, “whether you’ve got an act of prostitution. There is no law against prostitution, so how can» you say th at an owner is per­ mitting prostitution in his parlor or he is receiving money from a prostitute if your law does not say the woman is a prostitute or there is a house of prostitution? So you decide which goes first, the chicken or the egg." The board of supervisors is in the midst of choosing members of a committee that will investigate and attem pt to regulate massage parlors. Committee members would include a graduate of a recognized massage school, a representative of the county attorney and sheriffs office, a justice of the peace, a physical therapist, a representative of the county health department and a resident from the area in which the parlors are located. The Maricopa County Massage Parlor Association is trying to put Klein on the county’s committee as the association’s representative. “I do not know if I’ll be ac­ cepted by the board of supervisors, however,” said Klein. The proposed committee has not met yet, but there have been suggestions on how to control massage parlors. The idèa of requiring customer registration clearly is the most prominent, both in terms of regulation and discouraging potential patrons. Another suggestion is that only professionals from established schools be hired. Another would regulate the clothing worn by workers in massage parlors. “There have been many proposals, hut nothing has been resolved to this point,” Klein said. “I do not believe a rule or regulation such as that would pass constitutional muster, and I think any competent attorney would be able to challenge it in court. There has yet to be a rule or regulation governing massage parlors in Maricopa County.” That, however, likely will change when the new law goes into effect next month. FREE WASH & DRY CLEANING PROFESSIONAL WASHING & DRY CLEANING DROP OFF SERVICE OPEN 24 HOURS FHA-VA from ♦150 DOWN PITI $150/ mo. and up Single Level 1-2-3 BEDROOM UNITS FROM $16,000 IV o ii& ? BlfJtWI« art nDftSSMML 1035 EAST LEMON, TEMPE Corner of Lemon & Terrace 966-5311 V« DOVE REALTY 275-4015 SUEDE-LEATHER ALTERATIONS Salesman in office daily 11-6 p.m. 25 Sold — 3 Left Brokers Welcome Eves, 248-7896 “ CREATING MANY OF ARIZONA’S FINEST JEWELRY DESIGNS” JEWELRY 6 DIAMOND CUTTING FEATURING OVER 350 ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING BANDS. Diamonds • Rubies • Emeralds • Sapphires • Opals — Rings i Earrings - Necklaces - Bracelets - Chains Jewelry & Watch Repair - Insurance Appraisals 1 3 0 EAST U N IV ER S ITY • TEMPE • 9 6 7 - 8 9 1 7 “In The Arches” • M e m ber A m erica n Gem S o cie ty — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — > ■o > in NEAR ASU ui oc < a. < in ui oc < a < in y~ z Ui 2 h OC < < a. I in b- •• RIVIERA APTS. J ac a. H 3 m z H to i'i > ■o 1 Bedroom-Furn/Unfurn POOL - LAUNDRY - PARKING 914 I. LEMON TEMPE Ul < 30 > 30 m z H in The Restaurant that meets all of your worldly needs . . . . and then some. > •o > 30 m z in H > u > 30 968-2073 m z H in < — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — 415 South Mill 'M y* * Tempe 968-42Ï / July 28, 1977 Summer State Press Page 3 From National On-Campus Report CAMPUS CLEANERS A N D — C O IN -O P L A U N D R O M A T • SUEDE A N D LEATHER C LEA N IN G • ALTERATIONS • H A N D IR O N IN G • FLUFF DRY • W ASH • DRY • FOLD A glance at student issues r Jail bail If you’ve got to go to jail, it helps to be a North­ western University student. About 40 students have táken advantage of the Student Bail Fund this year alone. The fund, established with money left over from a door-to-door bail raising effort to free a student a rre ste d for selling marijuana several years ago, serves today to free students arrested on minor charges such as speeding. In most cases, students with out-of-state driver’s licenses are arrested rather than ticketed. The service gives interest-free loans payable in one week. All assistance is con­ fidential and loans will be made only to those charged with minor crimes. “It isn’t th a t we le t convicted rapists, murderers or child m olesters out on the streets,” said one of the student administrators of the fund. The fund is supported solely by voluntary con­ trib u tio n s and th e university has no control of the bail money because those in charge of the fund fear a university freeze of the money. Religious upswing Religion is oh the upswing at the nation’s largest campus, the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities. In a registration survey, more than 40 per cent of the student body claimed a preference for one of the religious groups listed on the census card. Only 32 per cent claimed an affiliation last year, while the figure two years ago was 28 per cent. The largest gains were in the traditional religions. UM officials say other signs indicate nontraditional and m editation groups are slipping in popularity. A form er religious coordinator there, however, said the figures may only indicate-'' a g re a te r willingness to cooperate in the survey, since a few years ago students were more inclined to write “none of your business” on the preference card. Job prospects Employment in science and engineering is projected to expand much faster through 1985 than total employment. The reason, according to the U.S. Department of Labor, is the growing need for know ledge of e n ­ vironmental problems. Offbeat academia Students drink in a class at a Canadian college that teaches people when they’ve had enough. The students have been taught to estimate their own blood alcohol levels to within 10 per cent during the six-week course taugh t at Niagra College of Applied Arts and Technology. Baby boom reborn Although it will take 18 years or so to affect higher education, a new baby boom may be underway. In September 1976, the number of births surpassed the figure for September 1975, according to the U.S. News Washington Letter, marking the first such in­ crease since the 1950’s. The trend continued for the rest of 1976, giving that year a greater number of births than 1975. The trend apparently is continuing into 1977, says the report. Among possible reasons for the trend are a “renewed interest in having children” and a large number of women born during the post-war baby boom now at the childbearing age, some of whom delayed having babies because of work or later marriage. O ne Day Service on Dry Cleaning __ and Finished Shirts OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK WE ALSO DO DRAPES AND RUGS 967-9650 • TEMPI Corner o f U niversity & Rural Rd. BLOOM INN EATERY In addition to our ¡JA/LY SPECIALS: Continental Food, Sandwiches, Salads, H International Coffees, Desserts, Beverages I FREE COLD DRINK WITH ANY MEAL "Next door to Rundle’s Market" 720 SOUTH MILL JJnne Corner o f University & Mill. 9 6 7 -3 2 8 0 OPEN DAILY 7 AM-4 PM; SATURDAY 7 AM -3 PM I* * * * * 9UI ftlft* ft* Q*-ft*ft* NO RENTAL CHARGE ON OUR KEG EQUIPMENT! wÈËÈÉmmm llïiî WHERE EVER YOU CALL TO PRICE A KEG, M AKE SURE YOU ASK IF THE TAP AND THE TUB ARE INCLUDED. Vi Barrels (15.5 gals.) ■i - 1/2 Barrels (15.5 gals.) Lowenbrau D a rk ............................... 54.95 M ille r................................................ 24.50 Miller Dark .......................................27.50 25.75 Olympia .............................. Olympia D a rk ...................................28.75 P a b st................................................ 23.00 Schlitz Dark ............................... 27.50 Old M ilw aukee.................................22.95 Anheuser-Busch Lowenbrau .......................................54.95 (Classic D ark).......................... 34.99 Heineken (50 Litre) ......................... 64.95 Anheuser-Busch V* Barrels (7.75 gals.) (Natural Light) ......... 28.95 18.50 Budweiser.................... 28.95 19.50 M lchelob.......................................... 34.99 18.00 Schlitz ......................... .................. 27.50 18.00 Schlitz Malt ............. 29.50 18.00 C o o rs................................................ 28.25 Miller L i t e ........................................ 28.75 For Liquor, Wine & Beer, its JERRY'S LIQUORS 966-8655 Comer Apache & Rural (Just Off Campus) A&MNt Page 4 Summer State Press July 28, 1977 O pinion state press " if you forget everything else I've said, remember this . . . America is ..great only because America is free." Eugene Pulliam Sr. ________________________ > A rizo n a's disgrace Assaults, stabbings, gang wars, escapes and contraband. These are seemingly daily fare on the Arizona State Prison menu. State officials throw their arms up in disgust with each murder or escape, but money to relieve the atrocious overcrowding rarely is forthcoming. The Florence facility was built at the turn of the century and looks very much like a production set from an Old West suspense movie. Currently, the prison is stuffed with a record 2,200 inmates, almost double its intended capacity. Women prisoners even have had to be moved from ad­ joining facilities to make way for more men. To some extent, help is on the way. A medium security facility will open in Tucson in December and two new cellblocks housing 500 people will be built in Florence. But these seem to be temporary easements at best. U.S. attorney Mike Hawkins has warned that the U.S. Justice Department may join the American Civil Liberties Union in a lawsuit against the state over prison conditions. The courts conceivably could be forced to release some prisoners. He said an inmate’s rights should include the ability to sleep “without the fear of having your throat cut before you wake up,” Gov. Raul Castro and corrections chief John Moran have called on the Arizona legislature to appropriate $25 million for a new prison housing 1,000 inmates — about the same number for which the Florence facility was meant. But legislative leaders assailed the plan and called for a study, apparently thinking it will take more research to show the obvious — that prison conditions are inexcusable. It’s a classic case of “Arizona thinking.” As long as more and more people — in the nation’s fastest growing state — are thrown in prison, new facilities clearly will be necessary. But instead of dealing with a severe problem, legislators would rather wait until it becomes a severe crisis — then be forced to react. Legislators (and their tax-paying constituents) scream for law and order, but are too cheap to pay the con­ sequences. And this comes in a year when the state has a cash balance of $28 million more than had been expected. Prisons either should be reserved strictly for the most dangerous criminals, or dramatically increased funding should be provided to make conditions inside the walls more livable. G o d 's fie ry w ra th Farmers, consumers, businessmen and cities with short water supplies all have been lamenting the lack of rainfall west of the Rockies. • But Spencer Kimball, president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, has found a unique cause of the problem. The spiritual leader blamed the Western drought on what he perceives as the growing Mormon tolerance of homosexuality. . Enough said? ...And speaking o f prisons SStSteor: I am presently an inmate fri the Attica Correctional Facility in New York State. To an inm ate, correspondence plays a vital role in relieving th e monotony and boredom of incarceration. But to an inmate such as myself, with ho family or other relatives, correspondence is almost nonexistent. I would ap­ preciate receiving letters from anyone interested in corresponding. Sincerely, Terrance E. Knox 76-C-347 Box 149 Attica, N.Y. 14011 mwiiiHWiiHimniiiniiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiniiimnmiiHiiiiiiimnminiiimiimiiiiniiiiiB Summer State Press Staff ftJMoi ............................................................................................ Mike Tulumello R eporter........................................................................................... Diane Mason Photographer...................................................................................Greg Crowder Contributors ........................... ................................................... Roberta Bender Mark Freistedt Mark Scarp Tom Gibbons Chet Barfield Scott Simpkins Jack Lavelle BBWtHWtainninHimiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiimimiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiHiii No nukes are good nukes By Marie Reader [Dr. Reader' is an associate professor of political science at ASU and a leading antinuclear spokesman.] With the Confusions surrounding the November elections’ nuclear safeguard initiative receding, it may now be possible for people on every side of the nuclear power controversy to hear the voices of those many thoughtful people who have recently begun to wonder if the human species can expect to live with nuclear energy if any of its guises for very much longer. While scientists, engineers, businessmen, administrators and politicians continue to zero in on technological problems associated with nuclear power plant and nuclear fuel cycle safety, many plain people are beginning to suggest neither they nor their children want, or will be able, to live with a proliferating source of energy whose radio­ active by-products: —Kill in amounts as infinitesimal as 1/10,000 of an ounce if inhaled (and cause lung cancer in even smaller doses): —Can be turned into atomic bombs with a critical mass of somewhere around 15-20 pounds of plutonium; —And which must be locked away from their physical environments for as long as 250,000 years, or else risk contaminating their lifesupport systems. Increasingly, these people seem to be con­ cerned that in order to contain the plutonium and cesium and all the other radioactive materials generated as waste at the site of nuclear power plants — but which must be shipped and stored somewhere in this world — they may have to fashion the sort of life which they can neither attain nor endure. Most certainly, they are afraid the spread of nuclear power plants around the world increases the prospects of nuclear war, creates the per­ manent danger and incessant anxiety of nuclear terrorism and blackmail, and pretty much assures the maintenance and extension of already bloated standing armies and domestic intelligence net­ works as a hedge against nuclear and “related” contingencies. For these people, there is more than a ring of truth to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute's prediction the world will suffer its first nuclear war within 24 years as the nuclear capacity spreads to between 40-60 nations. Throughout the past year, opponents of the plutonium economy have been warning that people would have to give u p ' their precious freedoms to guard against the unnecesary and unwanted risks of nuclear accident, theft, sabotage and problems of waste disposal brought into being by that economy. Thus, in the 30th year after the bombing of Hiroshima, 2,500 scientists declared that proposals “for satisfactory plutonium safeguard procedures appear to require special pervasive security apparatus incompatible with American traditions of freedom, an apparatus which could take the United States a long way down the road to a police state.” The Atomic Energy Commission itself, in the Rosenbaum Report of 1974, hinted nothing less than a police state will suffice. ‘T he first and one of the most important lines of defense against groups which might attempt to illegally acquire special nuclear materials to make a weapon is timely and in-depth intelligence," says the report. “Such intelligence may involve electronic and other means of surveillance, but its most important aspect is infiltration of the groups themselves." (emphasis added) Such infiltration would be undertaken by the FBI, CIA and the National Security Agency. And shortly thereafter in a report prepared for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the Mitre Corp. was recommending in-depth information about terrorist and “other threatening groups” should ^ be obtained by intelligence agencies including any information indicating a potential threat to the industry or a specific company.” We have made the decision to “go” nuclear without attending sufficiently to the social set­ tings in which these plants must operate. Arizona, for instance, doesn’t have the sort of social climate needed to safeguard nuclear power and protect our liberties in the process. Arizona has a high crime and drug rate and is riddled with Mafia-type lawlessness and political extremism, thereby creating insoluble security problems for those charged with protecting the Palo Verde plant. And with accusations of substandard building in the housing industry and even in schools, with a transient ^population, with high incidence of railroad accidents, etc., there is every reason to suppose , the state cannot put together the knowhow and will necessary to build and operate the Palo Verde plant during its 40 years of use and then maintain it for an indefinite decom­ missioning period. continued page 19 ■HMraKilttMflBSM lim i ■nimm. ^.yntmnarJtra^mjiViHlr July 28, 1977 Summer State Press Page 5 Tom Gibbons ■¡«er T e d o u t , g i m m i c k s in a t 1 2 On camera, Ted Brown was a when Brown had a fly that kept smiling, round face and a landing on his face. He tried hard resonant voice. In real life, Ted to ignore, and just keep grinning Brown was a smiling, round face ear-to-ear, but the fly kept and a resonant baritone voice. crawling on his face. He did flick You may have noticed that it away a couple times but it Brown, who used to do the sports came right back. on Channel 12, hasn’t been doing When it came to delivering it the past two and one half com m entary (which KTAR weeks. incorporated in its newscasts After 12 years as KTAR sports fairly recently) Brown didn’t give director, Brown got the ax. Red Smith too much competition. When I heard Ted Brown got His style was strictly “boost, not fired I had mixed emotions about knock.” the whole thing. Now I only have Of course, Brown can be bad feelings about it. excused if he wasn’t the best I was saddened because I do a commentator or interviewer — pretty fair Ted Brown imitation because Ted didn’t seem overly and it was . . . well much the knowledgable about sports. He way Rich Little must have felt didn’t come across as being too when Nixon resigned and Little knowledgable on TV — and in wouldn’t have him to kick around person he came across even anymore. worse. I also had a feeling of loss, • Probably the best illustration because even though the Mary of Ted’s understanding of sports, Tyler Moore Show won’t be on was relayed to me by George next fall, I thought I could still McCaskey. see the closest thing to Ted Last fall when McCaskey was Baxter for five minutes each assistant sports editor of the State P ress he was sitting in the weeknight at 6 and 10 p.in. But at the same time, I had press box at a football game next some good feelings about local ' to Brown and Tim Tyers of the television n e w s. . . at first. Gazette. One team was on the That was until I found out why opponent’s goal line and Tyers KTAR got rid of Brown. said, “Pass to the tight end over Now if you read about this the middle.” Which is what subject in the Phoenix papers happened. Anyone who has more than a last week you might get the impression that Brown was just a rudim entary know ledge of journalistically solid sport- football knows that play in that scaster, who got shafted for a situation is far from unusual. flashier, “upbeat” sportscaster But, McCaskey said Brown was with more pizzaz. absolutely amazed that Tyers Which is only partly tr^ie. had been able to predict it. As far as being journalistically (McCaskey was jsut as amazed at solid. . . Brown as Brown was at Tyers.) In short, Brown was probably Ted did a fine enough job putting together wire service the worst sportscaster in town reports and finding enough verbs with th e exception of Ed for the scores (i.e. using topped, Bradford of Channel 3’s weekend clipped, nipped, w alloped, editions. (He also doubled as a ripped, tripped, edged, routed, lousy rep orter.) The b est whitewashed and blanked, to probably is Ron Brooks — break up the monotony of beat, Brown’s assistant who does the defeated and shutout) despite weekend editions on Channel 12. occasional errors like calling Bill Brooks will remain as the assistant sports director. Walton Larry Walton. But Brown w asn’t fired He w asn’t anything e x ­ ceptional. But at least he was a because he was a boob, and a “stra ig h t” sp o rtscaster (as lousy sportscaster. He was fired opposed to being overly cute, because he wasn’t enough of a boob. He was fired because — and overly clever). As far as reading copy, Ted besides his smile and resonant Brown grinned and resonated his voice — he didn’t have a gim­ way through every broadcast mick. He wasn’t flashy enough. Probably the worst thing without incident. E xcep t. . . One evening when his baritone about the firing (even worse than voice got a frog, and Ted tried to the reasons) was the method in grin his way through (even as he which Brown was let go. No one was turning green — on black- at 12 was going to tell him — a and-white TV even) but, unable friend called Brown and told him to resonate, couldn’t make it. the Phoenix Gazette was coming The camera cut back to -a out with the story that af­ giggling Ray Thompson who ternoon* He confronted the general said, “It happens to the best of manager, who fessed up. us, Ted.” Ted stopped smiling. He And then there was the night walked out. Right then. . I said earlier that for a moment — when I heard they got rid of Brown — my opinion on local broadcasting went up. In the end it went down. But my opinion of Ted Brown, after he walked out, went up one helluva lot. 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N o . 117 - 967-8483 A IN TIM A TE RESORT K N O W N FOR IT'S U N H URRIED SOUTHW ESTERN C H A R M " T ira to in n PRESENTS TH E * w hatever w WHATEVER the reason . . . . — Banquet rooms available for all ASU activities — ASU Students & Parents Welcome —A mini-vacation before school begins eekend // WHATEVER YOU want to do . . . — Listen to live entertainment nightly in the KACHINA LOUNGE - D in e in “ THE OTHER PLACE" —Or just relax and be pampered by the Southwestern hospitality o f the Fiesta staff Priest Rd. & Broadway - Tempe WHATEVER YOUR needs or desires, the Fiesta Inn w ill help you fu lfill them. Located V4 mile o ff 1-10 less than 10 minutes from the ASU campus. SPECIAL GUEST RATES for ASU students A parents with this ad thru 9/15/77. FOR RESERVATIONS PLEASE CALL Single— *12 D ou b le— *15 Children under 14 free. Add’l occu­ pants — $4 each. Discounts on area attractions.' 967-1441 ESBB i n n p „■imfTwainirrtirtw iuwir inäiMliMitrr HIIMMBMMMMMMnali Page 6 Summer State Press July 28, 1977 Abortions w ill no longer be supported by county County funds will no longer be used to finance, abortions for. “social, economic or lifestyle” purposes at the county hospital, the Maricopa County Board of Supervisors ruled last week., Following weeks of heated debate, the board tentatively decided indigent women could obtain free abortions only in cases where their life or health is threatened by the pregnancy, or if the pregnancy is a result of rape or incest. The ruling came after the U.S. Supreme Court decided states were not obligated to pay for abortions. In cases of rape, the board decided a woman must file police reports or charges within five days of the incident. Also, formal complaints of incest must be filed prior to the abortion request. The only unresolved issue is whether an un­ wanted pregnancy’s adverse effects on a woman's mental health could qualify her for a countyfunded abortion. County Attorney Charles Hyder previously issued an opinion which said state law requires the hospital to provide services to indigents when physical or mental sickness exists. Supervisor chairman Bob Corbin said there is a question as to “what constitutes mental health,” and said a study group will work with Hyder in determining a legal definition of mental illness. Some Maricopa County Board of Health members had recommended to the supervisors individual physicians be allowed to decide Whether abortions were necessary for their patients’ physical or mental health. But Ed Pastor was the only supervisor of the five to agree. Supervisor Henry Haws proposed appointing a five to seven member committee to submit regulations and guidelines to the board deter­ mining what specific circumstances would merit free county abortions to indigents. The proposed committee would include members of the health board and county hospital medical staff as well as private citizens. Corbin stressed some aspects of the board’s proposals will require more study before a final determination is made. zfluG QoMen cAge RESTAURANT - COCKTAIL LOUNGE Serving Greek-American Food Your Host? — Peter Reveliotis • Mike Manbs FINE GREEK-AMERICAN CUISINE MENU SPECIALS P IK ILIA (C o m b in a tio n Plate) R oast Lam b w ith D olm a des, M o usaka, S pa n a ko p ita , T y ro p ita , P a s tic h io , P otato and R ice $475 GYROS SANDWICH Served on P ita Bread o r French Bread w ith O n io n , T o m a to e s and O u r Fam ous S aziki Saucé ^ “GYROS” SI 75 WE CATER TO SMALL & LARGE GROUPS. ROAST LEG OF LAMB Served w ith R ice P ila f and P o ta to e s $3«5 Fleetwood Mac tickets on sale Tickets for next month’s Fleetwood Mac concert in Tucson are on sale at the Associated Students office, Room 208- J of the Memorial Union. The concert, which also fe a tu re s th e M arshall Tucker Band, Kenny Loggins and Arizona, will begin at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 27 at the UofA football stadium . The show is designed to raise money for th e A m erican H eart Association. Stevie Nicks of Fleetwood Mac has pushed this concert in coordination with her fa th e r, Je ss Nicks of Paradise Valley, a former heart disease victim and past Chairman of the Board of the association in M aricopa County. The association hopes to make $350,000 from the show, the la rg e st am ount ev er donated to the group by a rock concert. Nicks, along with her p artner, Lindsey B uckingham , joined Fleetwood Mac two years ago and since then the band has risen from near ob­ scurity to one of the most popular groups in the United States and abroad. Their record “Rumors” was the top album of 1976. All tickets are general admission — either for field or grandstand seating — and are priced a t $8. C oncert prom oters are shooting for a sellout crowd of 60,000, which would be the largest crowd in - the state’s history. The ASASU office is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. Tickets also are available at Select-A-Seat outlets State Press Advertising th ro u g h o u t th e Valley, Odyssey Records, Bill’s Records, Cheap Records, World Records, Rolling Stone Records, Circles and Paraphernalia West. B a n q u e t R o o m A v a il a b le O p e n 11 a .m . - 1 a .m . Every D a y 1123 S. Rural Rd., Tempe, Az. BANQUET FACILITIES FOR 5-50. IT T A K E S C O N F ID E N C E T O S A Y Y O U 'R E G O O D W E 'R E G O O D ! ! CHECK US OUT Haircut & S ham po o.............” . . . . $8.001 Haircut, Shampoo & Blowdry (for m en).. . . . . . , ..................................... $ 1 0 . 0 0 1 Haircut, Shampoo & Blowdry (for women, long hair e xtra ). ..,...........$12.50 Permanent Waves . ..................... $30.00 NEW UNISEX HAIRSTYLING STUDIO 1041E. 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II 11"9*iTii^ewxtei«k«vkftfrtriiÉfóMiifffNìliNBMÉMMMEESMÉE Page 8 Summer State Press July 28, 1977 Forced move could disrupt tribes, Indian scholar says Betty Gilbert is a young Navajo woman about to experience America’s first forced Indian relocation program of the 20th cen­ tury. For her, the experience is cooly professional, and on another level, wrenchingly personal. Gilbert recently com­ pleted her Master’s degree in Social Work at ASU with a thesis titled “Navajo-Hopi Land Dispute: Impact of Forced Relocation on Navajo Families.” She was born and brought up on a part of the reser­ vation known as Coal Mine Mesa, where her family has raised sheep, cattle and horses for more than four generations. A recent federal court ruling is forcing her family, 3500 other Navajos and 32 Hopi individuals to move. And on the strength of her research, Gilbert was appointed a member of the governm ent’s specially form ed H opi-N avajo Relocation Commission, charged with making the move as painless as possible for those involved. The court’s February, 1977 decision resolves a century-old dispute over almost two million acres of •semiarid, mineral-rich land , in northern Arizona, of­ ficially known as the Joint Use Area. The quarrel has been between the Hopi, who claim the land under the provisions of an Executive Order issued by President Chester Arthur in 1882; and the Navajo (the nation’s largest tribe), who have lived there for more than a hundred years. The ruling moved Mrs. Giblert — emotionally and professionally. Gilbert’s thesis does not question the justice of the There IS a difference!!! V • PREPARE FOR: I MCAT s DAT Ì LSAT 3 I GRE GMAT E OCAT CPAT FLEX ECFMG NAT'L MED BDS$ Small classes Voluminous home study materials » 602-967-2967 the first time in their lives,” she commented. U nless th e coming relocation effort is handled differently, Gilbert said, “The end product could very likely be the creation of economic dependency, the perpetuation of inadequate housing, and a host of longrange administrative and social welfare problems.” She recommended one or more Navajo speaking persons with professional training in social work, act as part of a team main­ taining contact with each family until a successful adjustment has been made — no m atter how long it takes. “There must be a battery of social agencies prepared to provide all the necessary services,” she added. We don’t drown your ears with talk about products like some shops do. W e give you what you came here for: a haircut. If you want to know what to use on your hair we’ll be glad to tell you. But we won’t force it on you. So if you want a haircut, cut the way you want it, and no B.S. about products, then come see us. W e’re specialists in cutting hair, not sales talk. 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Instead,, it reviews the problems forced upon 14 Navajo families already evicted and recom m ends a social assistance plan that could prevent a repeat of those problems in the coming relocation of 3500 more Navajo. “Homes are sacred to the Navajo,” she said. “Their umbilical cords are buried there. They feel deeply united with the spirits of their land, with ‘Mother Earth’ and ‘Father. Sky.’ “Many of,, the people cannot comprehend that the signing of a document in Washington D.C. could.have any effect upon their rights to land on which they have lived for generations.” Studies quoted * in Gilbert’s thesis indicate forced eviction and relocation have predictable psychological, physiological and sociological effects upon people from any culture. “First, they want to fight for their homes," she said. “Then they feel victimized, ineffectual and anxious; they lose faith in their leaders, and finally they grieve for their lost homes just as people grieve for dead family members." In her thesis, Gilbert describes the upheaval of the 15 Navajo families evicted in 1972. “They lost their homes, incom es, ' roots and livelihoods,” she said, “and nothing has replaced them.” She said four years later, 14 of the 15 families still are unsettled, dependent and despondent. “Some of those people are truly alone for WE GIVE HAIRCUTS FREE T-SHIRT & FREE FRISBEE w ith an y in s ta lla tio n 19 W. BROADWAYi Hours: " M ww# Mon. - Sat., 10-6 PM Broadway and Mill Phone 967-2192 ..iiwinii )/' July 28, 1977 Summer State Press Page 9 Idealism refreshes PR IN TIN G 'L a M a n c h a ' liv e s a g a in ; Q u ix o t e 's v o ic e f i l l s s ta g e August seems to be the has also played in “The only dry entertainment Father Kino Story,” seen month in the Valley, but the here in the last two years on best local theater group television. around is adding a summer Director Michael Vetrie, production of “The Man of known as a “details La Mancha” that plays until director,” seems to focus August 6. If it isn’t t as more on visual details than refreshing as rain, it is at o th e r kinds. F o r each least as comforting as a , character, the costuming, breeze. f gestures, and personal type Phoenix Little Theatre’s were wisely chosen and productions are lavish in heightened. But Vetrie’s execution Since the acting attention to audial details is is nonprofessional (that is weak, and his casting of not paid), PLT has to be Marlene Saens as the slut content with whatever the Aldonza who , is seen by waves b rin g in. F o r­ cavalier Quixote as the lady m ust * be tunately, people with talent Dulcinea and theatrical ambition questioned. Saens, a very attractive wash in fairly frequently. Saturday night’s per­ woman with singing ability, formance of the now classic was cast into a role unsuited musical comedy of Cer­ for her. Not only did she vantes’ “Don Quixote,” gave have to strain to be a wellaudiences a chance to see used woman, she strained to th e ran g e Steve Carry, a special gift of m eet the sea. Not given to this requirements of each song. Vetrie’s casting of Buster kind of thing, I would almost attend a second time just to Quist as Captain .of the Inquisition was co rrect see Carry . P l a y i n g C e r v a n t e s visually. Quist, an athlete thrown into prison during and model, was a formidable the Spanish Inquisition, and figure at the top of the in to th e Alonso Quijana, a nobleman draw bridge who,imagines himself to be dungeon, seeking prey. But Don Q uixote, C arry ’s Quist’s words were wooden, delightful portrayal was and the opening moments of magnified by his clear, the play are his, moments strong and melodic voice. when the audience most His performance lacked needs assurance the evening polish only when he rushed will be filled with fine lines and left us wondering. carving, not the stiffnes of But his lyrical baritone was stilts. The accoutrements of the completely articulated. His perform ance e x ­ production added im ­ perience extends beyond measurably to the evening, this stage. Having run the John Clegg’s orchestra, gamut between opera and Kenneth Kloth’s set design, radio-TV commercials, he Richard Stitt’s lighting, and And the other characters, especially th e ta le n ted Edward Dunn as Sancho Panza and Rick Grove as the Padre, warmed our hearts. And that’s what the whole play is supposed to do after all. It largely succeeds. The idealists and the realists of the world are poked at in ‘T he Man of La Mancha,” and whoever sees it will be jo stled , re fre sh ed , and refilled. The PLT version of the play is not perfect, but it is a good evening’s en­ tertainment and only the first of a series. —Roberta Bender •Resumes SELF •Calling Cards SERVE 10% discount on all printing with any student ID PRESS 988-2469 Pllof#copI. , 5« — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS (O Iz Hi S hCC < Q. < (0 H Z Ui oc < CL < TOWNHOUSE STYLE APARTMENTS 2 BEDROOM - 2 BATH POOL - LAUNDRY sc*f i ^ch (0 Iz UI z tK < CL < I (0 Iz SAN MIGUEL Inside the. M all at Tower Plaza (38th St. & Thomas - 267-0900 Foothills Shopping Center (Central &. Southern) - 276-8729 Valley West Mall (59th Ave. & Northern) 939-0800 910 E. LEMON TEMPE - NEAR ASU I > •a > m z H to > ■o > 30 966-4713 m z to - APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — 'teafeo'Tâàs IS GONN A SAVE YOU MONEY. ITEM IN THE STORE W e've G o t: • • • • Name Brand Shirts Levis for Guys Levis for Gals Levis Bells (uttie&Big) Boot Jeans Straight Legs Cords (Straight & Bell) • • • • Tops for Guys Tops for Gals Painter Pants Lee Coveralls VICEfcOY LEE LEVI A SMILE HUGE STOCK OF SIZES & COLORS TELL A FRIEND THE MORE WE SELL, THE MORE YOU SAVE. • PARAPHERNALIA Papers • Bongs • For the Discriminating IF Y O U NEED IT( W E'VE G O T IT FOR LESS. EARS PIERCED 'te fld s ^ ’ííils INCLUDES EARRING STUDS 514 S. M I U A V E • 968-0006 W ITH TH IS COUPON HOURS: 10-8 MON.-SAT.; SUN. 12-5 Expires 8/11/77 IlC O U P O N a H M " « riMMw to I > ■o > 30 H zm z H 30 s JE W E L E R S 3134 S. MILL AT SOUTHERN > ■o > 30 H s m CO h OC < Q. P I/ sto re ONLY ^ 5 ^ 9 - $io.oo PIP 326 810 S. Ash Tampa, Az. 8S281 20% OFF ON ANY 966-0042 TEMPE T O *# ! Ui T R U C K IN ' it G E M S t o T E M TOAéh- In /ita n t the voluptuous costuming all were attended to with considerable finesse. SOUTHERN AT MILL W e ’r e PDSTAL W W i iw ituptiirf - -, - aimtvxm*omunOtonuMMi ... mimi« ■wwwiii'iitT —iHrr--kkJgMa*fcai ¡SÊÊÊÈ Page 10 Summer State Press July 28, 1977 Leisur TEMPE CAR WASH STUDENT SPECIAL $1.25 WASH FU LL I 8C SA ERRWV IC ASH $200 MON. THURS. m [Just Show I.D. Card] 916 E. Apache Blvd. Mon. - Sat. 8 : 3 0 - 5 p.m . Sunday 9 - 3 p.m. APACHE AT RURAL, NEXT TO MOBIL GAS BankAmericard, Master Charge, Mobil, and Stancfard Credit Cards Accepted R a g tim e b rin g s o ld day: to be taken back to when they were 10 or 12, to days when entertainment was not piped into every home, but was homemade right in American parlors. Ragtime piano, made accessible to respectable families via sheet music, was part of living. The “King of Ragtime,” Morath must be 60 himself. He puts on a good fast-paced twohour, one-man show. A visual cross betw een Nelson Rockefeller and John Wayne, he sang, hoofed, joked and played those rags and made a lot of people happy. Not many of the tunes are familiar, but the twohanded melodies were fun, and Morath’s banter was a cross between a short short course in American popular history and a spot on the Merv Griffin Show. Believing that, “Our music labels our history more than our w ars, more th an our politicians,” Morath opened with words whose sound is familiar but not their meaning. Phrases like “cake walk,” “Grizzly Bear,” “Chatauqua,” “Lydia Pinkham ’s ,” and “ ‘McGuffey’s Reader.’ ” He spoke with awe of “two There was more grey hair in the audience last Friday night at Gammage than I have seen since Sun City. For good reason, the longer you live, the farther back you can go for your nostalgia. They could have known ragtime music first hand and came to feel it again through “the reincarnation of the old-time all­ round ragtime entertainer,” Max Morath. Morath is not only a ragtime showman but a musicologist with a nightclub patter. His oneman show slipped easily into and out of the ragtime time warp. When it came out, it was much less easily enjoyed, but that wasn’t often. The septuagenarians who saw Morath wanted (so one told me) The T o r t illa Factory Taco Takeover steps,” “syncopation” and “the old pink ‘Police Gazette’ ” whose pages recorded baseball scores, ragtime record-cutting contests and pictures of pretty girls. And we can imagine the awe and the innocence of those who’d ex­ perienced for the first time the Victrola: “Caruso in your parlor. —Never mind the scratchiness. It’s just like being there.” After all, what makes us sophisticated is time. The period of ragtime in American history began just before the turn of the century, about 1895, and ran to around 1920. It was preceded by the music of the “Gay Nineties,” for instance, “She’s More to be Pitied than Censored,” and was followed by jazz. It is popualr music, but in the hands of formally educated composers like Scott Joplin had classical elements. Considered “music of the underworld,” it was America’s first popular craze. Composed mainly by blacks, and debuted in brothels, its flow ran as fast as the Mississippi and along the same course — Chicago, St. Louis, and on downstream. It was often thought obscene, but MEMORIAL UNION MOVIE HOUSE FREE HORS1D’OEUVRES M o n d a y th ru F rid a y • 4 to 7 p.m . Miniature Tacos, Burros, Tamales. Shrimp, meatballs, barbecue cocktail iranks, cheese balls, assorted cheeses THE BLOB Thursday M a tin e e 2 p.m. Tickets 50* r "IT IS A JOY!" —Judith Crist, N M ew ewYork V< Magazine I They met at the funeral of a perfect stranger. From then on, thingsgot perfectly stranger and stranger. Paramount Pktur.s Prosante HAROLD and MAUDE Color by Technicolor* A Paramount Picture Ww Thursday & F riday The T o rtilla Factory In M a c a y o S c o t t s d a l e • 7 0 0 5 E. C a m e l b a c k • S c o t t s d a l e ( a c r o s s t h e s tr e e t fr o m F a s h io n S q u a r e ) P h o n e : 9 4 7 -7 6 4 1 7 & 9 :3 0 p.m . $1 w /S u m m e r ID C h ild re n u n d e r 12 — 50" th foi ca cit Uh ag H< Sc sti pe Ht ra Jo M ah be ye en ite re an pr bl wx COI COI ce: ga tic be thi fei rc**“ ”"***^^ u, | July 28,1977 Summer State Press Page 11 usure Knitting Supplies — Yam lays b a c k and “the ” whose ill scores, ; contests jirls. And e and the dio’d extime the lit parlor, itchiness, e.” After listicated jtime in gan just century, 0 around 1 by the ties,” for e to be and was i popualr lands of imposers classical of the imerica's omposed debuted n as fast ilong the ago, St. ream. It :ene, but the one music critic Morath found who paid attention to it called it “the folk music of the city,” with known composers like Joplin (who died 60 years ago), Willie Josephs, Ben Horney, Irving Berlin, James Scott and Eubie Blake (who is still writing rags). Each of these men had a personal musical style. Ben Horney wrote in 1896 the raucous and raunchy “Mr. Johnson, Turn Me Loose,” as Morath says, “the first song about getting busted, thus beginning the 20th century four years early.” M orath m entioned “the entertainer’s obligation to bring items of contemporary social relevance to our material.” If anything it is this that made his production pale into the blandness of a TV talk show. For his effort was to join new with old, and contemporary content does not always fit comfortably in turn of the century forms. But what he gave far repaid the price of the ticket, even if you might have been bewildered wandering through the phrases of a dif­ ferent time. —Roberta Bender C a le n d a r J u ly 2 8 - A u g u s t 3 Today, “ The B lo b ,” MU Movie House, 2 p.m . Today and Friday, “ Har­ old and M aude,” MU Mqvle House, 7 and 9:30 p.m . Today through Saturday, Bob A ltm a n ’s “ N ashville” and “ Rancho de L ux,” Valley Art Theatre. Tuesday through Sun­ day, running ind efin ite ly, Forrest Tucker in “ Hanky Panky,” W in d m ill Dinner Theater, curtain 8:30 p.m. Today through Sunday, “ G eom etric A b stra ctio n s,” Matthews Center Gallery, M^F 8 a.m .-5 p.m. Today through Monday, B astille Day C o llection, M atthews Center Gallery, M-F 8 a.m .-5 p.m . Now through A ugust 6, “ The Man o f La M ancha,” Thursdays through Satur­ days, w ith a matinee! July 31, 8 p.m . Today through August 14, B uffa lo B ill’s W ild West Show, M cC orm ick Ranch Equestrian Center, S cotts­ dale, 8 p.m . show tim e. Friday, Peter Nero, Gammage, 8 p.m . Free to the university com m unity w ith I.D. Running in d efin ite ly, M onty Python’s “ Jabberw o cky,” Camelview Theater and C hristown Theaters. Running indefinôely, “ Mary, M ary,” Paul Shank’s French Quarter, 8:30 p.m . Im prom ptu cast show, 10:45 p.m ., Thursdays through Saturdays. Running ind efin ite ly, “ The Return o f Mata H arl,” a M errim elodram m er Pro­ d u ctio n , Pinnacle Peak Steak House, d in n e r6 p .m .,’ curtain 8 p.m. Needlepoint — Crewel FREEINSTRUCTION ON KNITTING, CROCHET AND NEEDLEPOINT (With purchase of material) neya m Studm - ^ DANELLE PLAZA SOUTHERN AT MILL 3300 S. MILL ^ „ Suite 39 967-2962 Every night is party night a t the Sun DevilDisco Lounge. Join thefünf If w e ju s t c u t y o u r h a ir, w e 'd b e lik e e v e ry b o d y e ls e . A good haircut and healthy, shiny hair can change your looks. At Long Hair, Inc., we start by giving you a natural, easy haircut that fits best into everything about you. 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Party W ith The D evil Tonight Rural at Apache, Tempe im■>liiiiia'iiiiiritiliiilï'TiiiiVrrtiMiiwaiwiNUiiiiirinri'iiwiriiai Page i 2 Summer State Press July 28, 1977 Eldridge says to Lord, 'Just call m e boy, boss' THE W A X THREAD SANDALS— BELTS By Reginald Major Pacific N ews Sendee •-jrr Cleaver still faces charges of assault and [Reginald Major, author of one of the attemtped murder stemming from an earliest books on the Black Panther Party, April, 1968 shootout with Oakland police. “H ie Panther Is A Black Cat,” and His trial is expected to begin in Sep­ “Justice In The Round,” a book on the tember, A ngela Davis trial, is a member of the The former radical — who may soon foundation-funded PNS urban task force.] become the Reverend Eldridge — has “We are involved in spiritual warfare consistently denied all charges of collaboration. “I have not made a deal with anyone except Christ,” Cleaver declared before an all-black congregation of San Francisco’s Providence Baptist Church in mid-June. But though Cleaver dates his conversion to Christianity to a vision he experienced while still in exile in Paris (when the face of Christ replaced those of Marx, Mao, and Castro on the moon), his initial appeal following his return was to American Jews. His defense committee was headed by Bayard Rustin, chairman of BASIC (Black Eldrige Cleaver Americans for a Secure Israel Committee). between God and the devil,” declared And one of Cleaver’s, first published ar­ E ldridge C leaver, explaining th e ticles was an attack on the United Nations missionary zeal behind his newly launched for passing a resolution equating Zionism “Eldridge Cleaver Crusades.” with racism. “ ‘Crusades,’ ” he says, “captures the When he declared Castro’s Cuba urgency which I feel. I seem to hear the displayed a form of racism more insidious Lord saying to me, ‘Against these evils, than South Africa’s, critics became con­ thou shalt crusade.’ ” vinced that Cleaver’s statements were Thus far, the chief evils against which bought and paid for. the former Black Panther Minister of But apart from small contributions to Information directs his rhetoric are communism and black militancy. And , the defense committee, by March 1976, Cleaver — still in the Oakland jail — had among the chief supporters of the in­ yet to find a constituency with enough corporated crusade are some of the leading resources and power to support his legal luminaries of the predominantly white, battles. new right evangelism. Looking like a preacher and sounding He found it in Arthur DeMoss, a like a politician, Cleaver dishes out a Philadelphia millionaire who is chairman of hearty blend of old-time religion and the board of the National Liberty Cor­ fundamental, conservative politics. And poration and a top financial contributor to his mission — apart from keeping him out the ultraconservative Campus Crusade for of jail — appears to be bridging the wide Christ and the Christian Freedom gap between , the black and white Foundation. evangelism movements — a feat that, if DeMoss visited Cleaver in jail following accomplished, could cement a powerful contacts that indicated the former Panther new conservative political coalition. might be ready to become a born-again The anticommunist nature of Cleaver’s Christian. DeMoss provided $100,000 for new crusade has renewed charges among Cleaver’s bail and sufficient living ex­ his critics that his actions and statements penses to maintain a $100,000 home in the since his return from exile in November plush Los Altos hills south of San Fran­ 1975 are basically “opportunistic,” clever cisco. strategems designed to win him public continued page 18 approval in his bid for freedom. FREEWAY AUTO SUPPLY ^ Ä Ä 3 3 0 0 S. 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LEATHER SHOP_ jf * * *■ * * * * * * * * * 967-1228» ♦ ¡¡¡I m m h Ü Ä IÄ M É i i9qDsmrmn9MI July 28,1977 Summer State Press Page 13 Album Review Tuneful new trío reminds one o f earlier legendary ensemble By Scott Simpkins There are times when a beginning m usic review er stumbles upon a band that has just set out on the path of their calling too. Many times these bands, the ones just starting out in the cut­ throat competition of modern music, put out a first album that's unbelievably good. Such recent examples as Boston, Foreigner and H eart have started out in this same instant success manner soon after the release of their first album. Well, this might just happen again with a new band that goes by the name of CSN (Crosby, Stills & Nash) for they’ve recently released an album that may mark the beginning of a tremendous career for them. Unlike anything I’ve heard before, these three guys — David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash — have put forth an album of incredible melodic ramblings and harmonies that are so smooth they intertwine among each other’s voices like two octopi in heat. Looking first at Stephen Stills, we find the driving force behind the majority of the songs on this album. “Dark Star,” a Stills song featu rin g a background of acoustic guitars and keyboards, has som e m ore-than-decent guitar riffs by Stills who also sin g s, possibly about the relationships among CSN: “I am curious, don’t want to hurry u s/ Tm intrigued with u s/ Ain’t this song a bust/ I don’t care, dark star.” Some of Stills’ other songs, "Run From Tears,” “I Give You Give Blind,” and “Fair Game” are fast-moving and amply accented by kick-ass guitar work. Graham Nash wrote some of the more laid-back tunes on this album, with innovated’ dif­ ferences that set them apart from each other so that no two are alike, Several of his songs on the album, “Cathedral, “Carried Away" and “Just A Song Before I Go,” move with a haze of melancholy which is accented by GUIDED EVENING RIDES (2-3 hrs.) ONLY $5 PER PERSON A ls o H ayrid es, C o o k o u ts , P rivate P artie s, P a tio P arties TEMPE OFFICE SUPPLY has just about everything you need, including C u s to m M ade To Y o u r O rder We also have an office furniture section featuring . . . LAY-Z-BOY office chairs, HON furniture and chairs, ANDERSON desks and chairs, OLIVlYYl, SNUYH CORONA and VICTOR office machines. Delivery Service 616 MILL AVE TEMPE AZ 85281 free problem pregnancy co unseling 968-8621 abortion referral Lw FREE CHRISTIAN CONCERT FRIDAY ~ JULY 2 9 8 RM ALL SAINTS NEW MAN CENTER COLLEGE AVE. & UNIVERSITY DRIVE. 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Clip a coupon and come on downl G ood.thru Aug. 31, 1977 3339 South Rural Road !C # 1 K | Tempe ÏÏIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHllllllllllllllllllllillllllHHIIIIUIIIHIIIIHIIIIIIUIIIII mm I ♦ ►f ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ -♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ I 968-8622j CiyyyumMv r ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ■ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ►Complete Office Supplies «Gift Supplies ►School Supplies •Greeting Cards •Attache Cases ►Wedding Announcements! & Gifts ♦ •Rubber Stamps !— P €A C € THIS FALL IN OVER 60 COUNTRIES. Room 144, Division of A gricu lture , 1-5 p.m . dirge-like keyboard effects or floating harmonica licks. David Crosby has flavored many of his songs on the album with bits and pieces of cyncism and an underlying pessimism that seems to seep through his lyrics as they reverberate and fade out. “Anything At All” and “In My Dream s” alm ost languish beneath the tone-arm in certain places when the easy listening style of Crosby hangs still, but when his songs start moving along, such as in “Shadow Captain," a new and rejuvenated Crosby appears. I predict these guys are headed in the right direction and that within the next couple of years, we’ll all be hearing about them. Oh yeah, I just remem­ bered an album my older brother used to play that sounds a lot like CSN. I think it was Bosby, Hills, Hash Bung — or something like that. frëe pregnancy testing WE DO. 1 I At The Entrance to South Mountain Park The Bar and Stables on the Right For inform ation about: 1 GOTANY | I DYNAMIC, I EXCITING PLANS I FOR THE NEXT i COUPLE OF YEARS? I LET’S TALK ABOUT ASSIGNMENTS BEGINNING S C O R P IO N G U L C H B A R 8 6 6 -1 0 1 0 jazz sound. His association with RCA Records produced 23 albums in eight years and two Grammy Awards. His subsequent move to Columbia not only brought more Grammy nominations but a. coveted gold record for his million-selling “Summer of ’42.” Among his own com­ positions are “His World,” a three-movement piece for piano, rhythm section, full orchestra and rock group; “Anne Frank,” which also com bines rock and traditional music as well as narration; and “Suite in Four Movements,” for piano and orchestra. “Mr . Nero is something of a keyboard enigma,” a Toronto critic reported. “He isn’t jazz, pop or classical. Yet somehow he manages to combine the three. The result is simply fantastic.” Tickets are on sale at the Gamamge box office and Diamond's Select-A-Seat I A L L W E S T E R N STABLES Call SIGMA Nero combines jazz, classics at Gammage Pianist Peter Nero, who has been called the Horowitz of the popular field, will appear with his trio in a concert at 8 p.m. Friday in Gammage Auditorium. His piano virtuosity and imaginative arrangements have won an enthusiastic following. Not only is the versatile artist a wizard at the keyboard, but he also has proved himself as a composer, symphony conductor and arranger. By the age of 14, Nero had received a number of piano awards and a scholarship to Juilliard School. Breaking away from his classical roots was no easy task, but he determined to establish himself as a jazz pianist through night club ap­ pearances in’New York and Las Vegas . Once he attained success as a jazz artist, he started developing his own distinctive style by com- BAR 276-0824 STABLE 276-5862 à u ra m Ê Ê È m JÊ É Ê ■ ^« ¿ ja t^iW iW^ ^ lriiiw aililTllwrii lwiMitaMÌIi iii'iiimfìWiiOTmilwwiii I ' 11 "imnnnmTi Page 14 Summer State Press July 28,1977 ■ wm K How to put on a concert; the realm of the 'roadies' A Led Zeppelin concert is more than just four musicians. It involves dozens of “roadies” (the traveling road crew), local technicians and miscellaneous hangers-on. Preparations for the Tempe concert began at m idnight Tuesday when local “riggers” began hanging cables above the previously assembled stage. Clinging precariously to the rafters, the crew spent the entire night hanging the wires and cables used to lift the lights and sound equipment. At 8 a.m. Wednesday the lighting “roadies” took over, and with the help of the Gammage technical staff se t up th e speakers and huge banks of lights. The stage was finally set by late afternoon, and was im­ mediately taken over by the \ sound technicians, who tinkered with the equipment until right before the show. Some twenty hours after the work started, Led Zeppelin took the stage. f i .*»«m ¡8» tim m ■m . ä,\V.-. (Top) Riggers do their balance beam act near the ceiling. (Above left) A roadie stands next to a small portion of the light system. (Above right) One of the mirror balls is set In place. (Left) Roadies check one of the hundreds of elec­ trical connections. • ■ s M l w ImSiS Photos by Ä fft Greg H 'ä s HS? mm? 'IMS* tiW&Y: WÊB& m Mm ■mm WmL Crowder yiuylftiwiwiii miam■ininmuu July 28,1977 Summer State Press Page 15 Concert review Zeppelin nearly crashes; Page, Plant keep it aloft Led Zeppelin had an admittedly off night in the A ctivity c e n te r last Wednesday. Singer Robert Plant had some early voice problems, and guitarist Jimmy Page appeared to have a severe case of “road fever.” Despite the obstacles, Led Zep offered flashes of musical brilliance as bright off their latest albums. as the laser beams that were Presence and Physical used for special effects. G raffiti. The hard-rock The show got off on the anthems from the first wrong foot by the band’s albums were not performed, late arrival. Fans began much to the dismay of the entering at 6:30, but the set fans who came expecting an didn’t get started until 8:45. evening of full-blown, The majority of the songs powerhouse rock and roll. performed during the two Zep’s newer, mellower and one-half hour set were style was reflected by the number of acoustic songs which w ere used to showcase the range of P la n t’s voice, and th e virtuosity of Page whenever his hands touch anything with strings. Page’s musical skill is amazing considering how completely wasted he ap­ pears to be on stage. He needed assistance changing guitars, stormed off the stage at one point, and appeared to have trouble remembering song titles since Plant would announce one song and Page would begin playing a different one. Still, one of the highlights of the show was his solo. Encased in a green laser beam . pyramid,' Page ravished his g u itar producing some of the weirdest sounds imaginable. Plant is nearly a parody of himself. He obviously is pleased with himself as he struts around the stage. He alternately taunts and flirts Jim m y Page with the crowd. He can Robert Plant scream with the best of of “In My Time of Dying.” The show ended with them, and was at his best with the heavier numbers their greatest hit, “Stair­ such as “Nobody’s Fault But way to Heaven.” Though Mine.” He seemed amused th e crowd yelled and by Page’s antics and joked clapped for more, the band with band and crew was already piling into the members throughout the limousines to get back to their hotel, and then on to a performance. Drummer John “Bonzo” series of concert dates in Bonham, and keyboard and California. The sell-out crowd of over bass player John Paul Jones 15,000 fans filed out at for the most part stayed out midnight. Many w ere of the limelight, but do somewhat disappointed, in provide one of the msot solid that they held Led Zeppelin rhythm sections in rock. to be living legends, and it is Jones’ keyboard work very hard for legends to live was spotlighted during a up to their reputations. —Greg Crowder very nice, extended version DAX has swim trunks 125 East 7th Street, Tempe • 968-3585 • 1 block north of ASU HMjMWUPPH1 WII"1H |||p i «NMpiwKWlt! -irn'rtN>rrrmtBTmrH i - ^ r f r * astK gg® Page 16 Summer State Press July 28, 1977 S c o tt Sim pkins That Plaster Place helooked like a guard!' A COM PLETE LINE OF '...But After the Led Zeppelin concert (a very decent concert indeed!) last Wednesday at the Activity Center I trudged over to the dorm room of some of my friends to see if their opinion of the previous night's entertainment matched mine. “Hi Ralph!” I said, as he opened the door to his dorm room after my resonant knocking. “Hi Steve! What’s wrong? You look a might dow ncast this morning. Homework got you down, or something?” “Oh . . . nothing like that.” Steve mumbled, not looking up from his fixed glare on the can of beer he cradled between the palms of his hands. “H ey,” I said, getting away from the imminent gloom that Steve was putting out, “How about that 'Zeppelin concert last night? That Activity Center was packed tighter than a . . . ” Before I could finish, Steve let out a piteous low moan and gave me a stare that made me shift about uneasily in my chair. “Aren’t you going to tell him about the concert, Steve?” Ralph said, starting as if to twist the knife that I’d stuck into Steve’s back. Steve's glare, which first locked on my eyes, roamed about the room until they found Ralph. But Ralph, undaunted by Steve’s y o u -h ad -b etter-lay-off-q u ick look, continued on with childlike glee. “If you aren’t going to tell him, I will,” he said, a smile settling upon his lips. “Yeah, come on . . . tell me, you guys. What happened?” I said. “W ell,” S teve said, recognizing the futility behind trying to keep his escapade quiet. “We partied a little before the concert, you know, and I kind of forgot my concert ticket back here at the dorm room so I had to walk back over here from the Activity Center, just minutes bfore concert began. . . .” Steve stopped his explanation short as Ralph burst into laughter, and waited for his insolent friend to resume a degree of respect. “. .,. So, before I started walking back to the concert, I figured I might party a little more first. After about a good half hour or so of serious par­ tying I looked at the dock and decided I better get going ’cause it was almost eighty-thirty by then and the concert was sup­ posed to start at eigh t. . .” Ralph started giggling again but this time he shut himself up frlfr * * * * * before anybody had a chance to say anything. “Well, go on,” I pleaded, anxious to hear what could’ve been so damned funny. “What happened after that?” “Don’t rush me!" Steve said in mock-defiance. “And you,” he said, pointing a finger at Ralph. “Why — you, you son of the great . . .” Ralph began but he finished just as quickly, nodding his head towards Steve to signify that hfc-should continue. “After I left the dorm,” Steve began again, stopping to sneak a glance at Ralph who was trying to look as innocent as possible, “! decided to party a little more on the way over to the concert, you know, to settle things down a little and. . . .” “And, so he goes up to the Activity Center, see,” Ralph cut in ,'“and he’s so ’settled down’ that he can barely walk, see, so he goes up to the front doors. . . and can you even believe this? . . . some guy walks up to him and says, ‘Can I see your ticket, please?’ and he gives it to him — just like that. A representative w ill be on the campus AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT AMERICAN ORADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Thwnderbird Campus G lendale, Arizona 85306 50| F L [R eg. $ 1. 09] A 50 Flavors to Choose From 89 each f ilT C H I B 50 F LA VO R S TEMPE MESA 340 W . University 915 E. Broadway Rd. Broadway at Rural Rd. Country Club I University Luehy Shopping Contar 966-8950 * * TO PROTECT THE UNBORN AND THE NEWBORN THtS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER P A P P p p A A A IU g U U g g U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U U V M U U U U U W U U U U U U U IR M W R R R fU U U U U U U U U MOPEDS GITANE CL200 1 9 5 1 TEMPE BICYCLE SHOP Hours: 8-6 Moñ.-Sat. • Tues. & Thúrs. Evenings til 8 p.m. 834-9876 KITCHÍES VI-RAY LAUNDRY b 21st CENTURY FOTO 903 f. Lemon W A S H E S — 15* LB. INCLUDES DRYING & FOLDING! DISCOUNT PHOTO FINISHING 17*a p r in t Lim it 4 With This Coupon. Good through Aug. 4,1977. 10 A .M .-1 1 P.M . 11 A>M. • 11 P .M . Metrocentor Lower Level near Sears 997-6090 ¥ \v w Qfifi-7702 * A A T i i vPAr O F F IC E OF CAREER S E R VIC E S & FLOATS * 21 CORNER SOUTHERN & MILL 602 So. M ill A v e . • 966-6896 Interviews may be scheduled at SHAKES, MALTS * S U IT E (Regular $449.50) and job opportunities in the fie ld o f LARGE SODAS, * 3 4 0 0 S. M I L L — D A N E L L E P L A Z A M a rc h o f D im e s STATE PRESS is published by Arizona State University Tuesday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter at Tempe, AZ 85281. ★ Tops in Economy $ 4 ★ Tops in Efficiency WEDNESDAY AUGUST 3 , 1 9 7 7 to discuss qualifications for advanced study at KITCHIES * * * * * * * 8 Sign Up for Tole Classes Now! at the special introductory price of ¥ ¥ R S CUSTOM FINISHING AVAILABLE “What?” I asked, barely able to believe what had just been said. “I said, ‘I guess it was an excellent concert, though,’ ” he replied. SEE THE * * V O UNFINISHED STATUARY ARE HERE! INTERNATIONAL CAREER? * ¥ F After I quit laughing, I looked over to Steve, who had his head cradled between his hands and sported a sullen look that would’ve hardened Jello. He just looked at me and mumbled something unintelligible. “Fifteen minutes later, Mr. Intelligence over there discovers that he’s given his ticket to some pimply-face kid who ran inside to ¥ i Spedali * pO see the concert. For free! “And what does our boy genius do? Why, he stands outside for about three hours in this drugcrazed fog and then wanders off and ends up sleeping in somebody’s back yard,” Ralph said, chuckling loudly at beating his roommate at his own story. “So, he never even got to see Jimmy Page! Can you believe that?” ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ P R O F E S S IO N A L D R Y C L E A N IN G FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY Hours: 8-6 Mon. thrii S a t. (attendant on duty) LAUNDROMAT OPEN 8-11 7 days â week PANTS 7S* CLEAN ft PRESSED mtmm A- uc t Ë« tttftBjrHeMuei iii»a W É f â É T - >»Ùeï^'&KïièrX* ;ájí|; July 28, 1977 Summer State Press Page 17 H ig h e r-p ric e d season tic k e ts to s e ll b e fo re fo o tb a ll o p e n e r Football season tickets for students, priced $5 higher than last year, will go on sale Sept. 6 at the Sun Devil Stadium ticket office, according to the athletic ticket manager. Terry Wojtulewicz said the $15 tickets will be sold on a firstcome, first-served basis until Wednesday, Sept. 14. After­ wards, a lottery system will be used to sell tickets game-by­ game for $2 each. The single­ game price last year was $1. In the past, season tickets were sold months in advance of the football season, but students could not pick them up until school began in the fall. The Bulls can 't land ASU's rebound ace The derision is definite — for the moment anyway. All-WAC basketball player Mark Landsberger will return to play out his senior year at ASU. Landsberger was drafted this year by the Chicago bulls and has spent most of the summer deciding whether to accept a lucrative no-cut offer by the pro team or return to ASU. But the Bulls have not come up with an offer high enough. “I set my price and the Bulls haven’t met it,” Landsberger said. “As of right now I'm going back to school. “If they (Chicago) come up vnth the right price I would go,” he added. Landsberger said, however, that he is not actively negotiating with the Bulls. “They said they’ll get back to my father. If they want me and they want to m eet my price, they can call my father,” he said. Landsberger came to ASU two years ago, transferring from the University of Minnesota. He did not play until lari; year, because he was forced to sit out’a season after the transfer. Last season the 6-8 centerforward set a school rebounding record with 14 boards per game. He also was th e last player cut from th e 12-man Olympic basketball team last summer. system was changed to allow Nov. 5 ....................... Wyoming time for students to pick up their Nov. 1 2 ..........Brigham Young new identification cards and Nov. 2 6 ........................Arizona because, “You only have to make An average of about 7,200 one trip instead of two," students attended last year’s Wojtulewicz said. games, with about 1,800 buying Students who bought tickets in season tickets. groups frequently used to request seating changes when they discovered or dropped girlfriends, boyfriends, etc., in the time lapse between ticket sales and pick-up, he said. “We’d do so much shuffling, it would slow down the work,” he said, adding the new procedure probably will be used in the future if it works this fall. in the STATE PRESS Football attendance will no through the longer require an athletic HD, as Classified Column. the controversial card was TEXTBOOKS FOR SALE dropped after 'one season. $1.00 — First 14 words Stadium expansion, however, 5c — Each additional word. helped cause the leap in ticket Place ads at A111 Stauffer prices. Hall or Memorial Union The seven-gam e home Information Desk. schedule reads as follows: Sept. 1 4 ......... .Northwestern STATE PR ESS Sept. 2 4 ............ .. Oregon State Oct. 1 ...........................Missouri 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 Oct. 2 2 ...............Texas-ElPaso Electrophonic Stereos K elvinator R efrig era toi s A t cost A t cost 3 — Rooms of Furniture com plete fo r $399.95. $5 down, $20 a m onth. Easy credit, fre e de live ry and free setup. Now a t 2 Locations 17 S. Country Club, Mesa 833-8204 1340 N. Scottsdale Rd., Tem pe ( Woolco Shopping Center) 944-237« MEAN MACHINES 50 Different Games BRING IN THIS AD GOOD FOR 3 FREE GAMES 620 COLLEGE AVE. PHONE 966-4796 Morchie Schwartz ü CORNER 7th ST. 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Chest 129 95 Bunk Beds com plete 149.95 Sofa and Choir Herculon 9.95 Odd lamps 159.95 5-pc Bedroom 239.95 Sofa and lo ve se a t Herculon Corner Units 199.95 Reclining chairs $ 99.95 Swivel rockers $ 99.95 Captain's bed. com plete $129.95 M A R C H IE'S SELL THEM YOURSELF Homemade Minestrone .. ECONOMY FURNITURE 8 .35 .35 ALLTHE SPAGHETTI YOU CAN EAT 2.50 PER PERSON!! r SAUSAGES OR M EATBALLS 25*“] EXTRA PER ORDER J HAPPY HOURS: 2-5 & 10-12 daily PITCHERS $1.00 C00RS & BUD mm 1035 S. RURAL > Hours: 11-12 a.m . Mon. thru Thurs. 11-1 a.m . Frl. and Sat. Closed Sundays 'IsäBSk■ IM m M M lil Page 18 Summer State Press July 28, 1977 More about FIESTA LA U N D R Y Eld ridge adopts white face continued from page 12 Along with Cleaver and his wife Kathleen, DeMoss is an officer in the Eldridge C leaver C rusades C or­ poration. Since then, Cleaver has gone on the religious lecture circuit, appearing at some 30 colleges, more than 20 churches and virtually every major religious TV talkshow. ' He and Kathleen were baptized in October, 1976 and placed th ei r two children in a Los Angeles Christian school. “I don’t want my children corrupted by bearded teachers who don’t agree with me,” said Cleaver. C leaver’s first ap. pearances were limited to white evangelical groups who responded en­ thusiastically to his “testimony” about how an ex-communist and black militant had become one with Christ — even though there is no evidence Cleaver ever was a communist. When skeptics charged that he was avoiding black audiences, Cleaver began appearing at all-black churches such as the Providence Baptist Church, whose pastor, Calvin Jones, is a locally well-known conservative and a sponsor of the Eldridge Cleaver Crusades. His reception there, while not overly was a p ­ enthusiastic, proving. During . his testimony, C leaver criticized San Francisco Sheriff Richard H ongisto and state Assemblyman Willie Brown for campaigning on behalf of gay civil rights in Florida. With a bitterness that seemed to contradict his claim to love everyone, including his enemies, he d i s m i s s e d C a l i f o r n i a ’s leading black politicians — including Brown, Lt. Gov. Mervyn Dymally and Los A ngeles Mayor Tom Bradley — because, “They did not lfit a finger to help me. T appeared before Lionel Wilson, a black judge, and he raised my bail from $50,000 to $100,000,” Cleaver complained. Judge Wilson, ironically, has since become Mayor of Oakland, with the full support of the Black Panther Party. Cleaver also said his friend Billy Graham had told him he was glad that black people were receiving the evangelical m essage because, “White people won’t listen to white people anymore.” Says one long-time black activist in Oakland who has follow ed C l e a v e r ’s byzantine career from the TEMPE CENTER \jp State Press Advertising 965-7572 State Press Classifieds EXPERT HAIRCUTS BLOW DRY PR IM S ★ TERRY CLASSIFIED ADS *2.00 OFF WITH THIS AD ON ANY HAIRCUT AND BLOW DRY . PATRICKS 965-7572 7th St. (7th Cr M ill) 968-9860 ★ — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS Z OC < Q. < CO I- z UJ oc < a. < I CO *- z 1 BEDROOM APARTMENTS POOL - LAUNDRY - PARKING - JO 1/2 PRICE SALE — Ladies’ sandals. Back Door Shoe Shop. 707 South Forest, Tempe. 966-1772. 8/11 m z MARIJUANA, SEX, and Health. A scientific report. $3. Health Reports, 59-215-V Kenui, HI, 96712. .7 /2 8 H CO I > > FREE ENERGY: Collect and use the Free Energy that we have all around us w ith a Pyramid Energy Kit from Pyramid Pioneers of Az. Stop by and see how you can get this Free Energy. 1055 West University. Drive, Tempe, AZ 85281.966-5208. 8/11 TJ 3D m z H ★ CO ROBIN LYNN UJ I > u > 3D < Q. < 1026 E. SPENCE I CO H Z UJ oc TEMPE - NEAR ASU £ ★ m z H CO I > TJ > 3D £ 966-1989 < a < _ APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS m z H CO — -Hut. BUY ANY P i£ & -Hut. LARGE PIZZA AND GET *2.00 OFF Offer valid with coupon only July 28 thru Aug. 3 Announcements____ ALTERNATIVE LIFESTYLE fo r you? PreMar experiment discussion group. If inter­ ested, call 276-1552. 8/11 P ic e i -Hut 955 E. U n iv e rs ity 968-3989 P iZ Z f* -Hut ROOMMATE TO SHARE N.E. Phoenix house, 15 minutes from ASU. $95 per month. Paul, 955-1788 evenings or 955-1148. 7/28 ROOMMATES TO share furnished 3 bed­ room house with pool. $95 - $105 plus 'h utilities. Located NE Phoenix, 15 minutes from ASU. Paul, 955-1148 or 955-1788 evenings. 8/11 ALTERNATIVE LIFESTYLE for you? PreMar experiment discussion group. If inter­ ested, call 276-1552. 8/11 ★ Autom obiles ’66 LEMANS super sharp, mint condition, perfect body-interior. Bored 326, rebuilt transmission. New tires, mags, paint and much more. Built to move! Cali 967-8566. 7/28 1973 VOLVO 164E factory air, sunroof, stereo, loaded. Excellent condition throughout, original owner. 968-3151 ext. 13 or 967-1441 ext. 217. 7/28 ★ Typing FAST* ACCURATE TYPING. Experienced w ith term papers, theses, manuscripts, resumes. Reasonable rates. Call Ginny. 839-3042. 8/11 NEAR ASU. Research papers, theses, dissertations. English degree. Editing. Work guaranteed. 7 years experience. 967-4443. 8/11 GUARANTEED: Dissertations, theses, business, legal papers, etc. Broad format experience. Near ASU. Patti, 967-4937.8/11 ENERGETIC, RELIABLE teenager w ill babysit your house, wash your car, run your dog, manicure your lawn, whatever. References. Ted, 966-3328 or 965-7572. 8/11 GRADUATE EXPERTISE — Guaranteed! Dissertations, theses, research papers. (Business, Humanities, Nursing, Psychol­ ogy, etc.) Nearby. Debby, 967-2305. 8/11 Recorded HORSEBACK RIDING. $3 per hour. Morn­ ings and evenings. Hayrides, $2 per person. Tempe Stables. 1104 West 1st Street, 968-5568. 8/11 For Rent/Lease EFFICIENCY APARTMENT, Paradise Val­ ley. $100 month, horse privileges. New corral, tack room. Phone996-5028. 7/28 DELUXE SOUND CONDITIONED duplex. 2 extra large bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, pets must be one year old. Appliances, refriger­ ation, private patio. Extra outside storage, carport. Limit 4 persons. Owner serviced. One mile east of ASU. Lease. References. Extra charge for 4th person or pet. 273-7655 or leave message at 967-0537. 7/28 Help W anted ______ ADDRESSERS WANTED IMMEDIATELY! Work at home — no experience necessary — excellent pay. Write American Service, 8350 Park Lane, Suite 269, Dallas, Tx 75231. 8/11 HUMAN GENETICS tutor mediately. Call 834-8321. UNIVERSITY PIZZA HUT Roommate W anted message. 7/28 HAYAY SHALOM. 942-6479; 249-9234. * WITH THIS COUPON W anted WOMEN. To participate in Psychology experiment. Three hpurs in solitary en­ vironment. Unique experience. Call 9472926, late evenings. 7/28 H oc For Sale HOMES FOR SALE near ASU. Call John Stickelman, 966-4909. Ken Shook Realtor, 968-3636. 8/11 > ■o > 0) KUJ Drop-Off Laundries Only 25c Per Pound. (Includes Everything But Hangers.) Must Be In By 11 AM for Same Day Service. ATTENDED HOURS FOR DRY CLEANING • KEYS • DROP-OFF LAUNDRIES, 9 a.m . - 5 p.m . MONDAY - FRIDAY. ★ Pfc&p & DRY C LEANING beginning, "E ld rid g e’s religious mesage seems to be one of convincing blacks to chain themselves to the rock of ages after they steal away to Jesus." In fact, Cleaver’s brand of Christian activism is closely related to the kind of evangelism that in the past has been characterized as decidedly antiblack. Some of his key supporters among the leading white evangelist powers have carried the anticommunist zeal to uncritical support for the white minority govern­ ments of Rhodesia and South Africa. ★ FAST, ACCURATE Typing on IBM correct­ ing Selectric. Former legal secretary, 7 years experience. Heidi, 839-5651. 8/11 TYPING MANUSCRIPTS, term papers, etc. Professional secretary, accurate, spelling corrected, edited, reasonable rates. 9499207. 8/11 WESTERN SECRETARIAL SERVICES — Special rates for ASU community on term papers, manuscripts, resumes, disserta­ tions, and theses. 55 cents per page. No . extra for footnotes or setup. IBM Selectric II with variable type styles. Close to campus. 968-5159. 8/11 ★ Services VOICE LESSONS for beginning students. Call after 3:00.966-7397. 7/28 ROCKY MOUNTAIN EDITING: Disserta­ tions, theses, papers for publication. 966-2274,966-0312. 8/11 TOUGH HOUSEHOLD chores? Reliable, energetic teenager w ill do any kind o f work. References. Experienced. Call Ted, 9663328 or 965-7572. 8/11 needed im­ 8/4 Roommate W anted FEMALE ROOMMATES, share 3 bedroom house near ASU/Los Arcos Mall. $100 month plus Vi utilities. Donna, 834-7105. 7/28 WEDDING. SONGS WITH GUITAR1 Erich Sylvester Call for song list. 943-7229 973-1655 (day) 8/11 (night) mm M H July 28,1977 Summer State Press Page 19 Local singer hopes to make big splash with “ Tubin''45 B y Chet B arfield A local musician is singlehandedly promoting a song he hopes will make a big splash in Phoenix. The man is Ted Winches­ ter, and his tune is about kicking back with a six-pack and a favorite lady and floating down a river on — what else? — an inner tube. Although the song was written by Kim Carnes, W inchester bought recording rights to the song and released “Tubin” as a single three weeks ago. W inchester did the arranging and sings lead on the record, and is backed up by othér Valley musicians, “friends who wanted to help out,” he said. Currently playing at the a irp o rt Holiday Inn, Winchester said hiring a professional promoter to sell his record is too expensive. “Right now, I just don’t have the bucks,” he said. Instead he is personally carrying his disc to area radio stations, hoping they will play it. “The main thing to sell records is to get radio air play,” he said. Somewhat cynical, he called the record industry “a political game.” “The whole thing is a vicious cycle. The radio stations watch record sales, but the record stores sell the songs that get the most air play,” he said. So, he has recruited some friends to help boost those sales. Winchester said his friends call the stations requesting the song, and visit record stores asking for “Tubin.” More about Nuke's drawbacks examined by prof “This approach is , very common, and it usually works,” he said. Winchester said KBBC is the only station playing the song regularly. KDKB and play it “oc­ KUPD casionally,” he said. He said other pop stations in the Valley are waiting for a reaction to the song before picking it up. “They only like to play ‘the hits.’ They want the other stations to test it first and see how it goes,” he said. Winchester said he would be thrilled if the song was a national hit, but he realizes the chances of that hap­ pening are slim. Because of the novelty of the lyrical content, “it’s more of a regional song for the southwest,” he said. “When I heard the song, I realized this would be the perfect market area for it. People can identify with it. They can say, ‘Yeah, I do th at,’ ” he said. It came as no surprise when I read in the Arizona Republic on February 24,1976 that several citizens who were attempting to raise the level of public discussion on some problems they associated with the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station near Phoenix were already being spied upon by state and local police. The story read in part: “Police gathered intelligence on some Equal Rights Amendment backers during a Jan. 30 protest at the State Capitol, a legislator charged Monday. “Rep. Art Hamilton, D-Phoenix, said at least four plainclothes police officers admitted to him they had taken notes on and pictures of some citizens passing out ‘left-wing, radical literature.’ “ ‘The demonstrators were distributing literature protesting America’s involvement in Angola and nuclear power plant con­ struction in Arizona,’ Hamilton said.” Such acts of surveillance are not confined to Arizona alone. Anyone who reads the morning newspapers or watches the evening news on television is aware that surveillance has become a way of life in this country. And one of the prime reasons for government lawlessness — and more recently industry hysteria about security — is that we have developed and are beginning to proliferate a source of energy that threatens to do to us what we did to the Japanese. Seemingly, what both the nuclear industry and those dependent upon it for both their income and status — as well as the rest of us — have to learn is 'that any energy alternative bears significant social costs. All concealed social carrying charges have to be spelled out in clear and bold type in advance of sale, and policy-makers everywhere must try to choose those energy alternatives which contain the lowest and most humanly supportable price tags. Regrettably, when judged from this social standard, the human community can no more afford to live with nuclear power plants than it can with the atomic bomb. Live Entertainment Every Nite T ill 1 AM | Beer on Tap | G a l. P it c h e r s , $ 1 .5 0 RALEIGH MOTOBECANE NISHIKI PANASONIC (In The Arches) 10-speeds 3-speeds $QOOO 7 0 and up SALES SERVICE ACCESSORIES (WITH PURCHASE) COLLEGE CITY CYCLERY \ M u g s 35c 5 968-4812 TIRES & TUBES M O UNTED FREE M o n . t h r u F r i. 3 t o 6 p .m . University & Forest B u y in g & Trading A ll Day S aturday 1-5 T u e s.-F ri. BICYCLES Happy Hour | Live Entertainment! I 11 E. 5th Tamp«, Arizona 85281 Phona 968-2557 407 MILL AVE. —Carryouts— | % THE BUFFALO EXCHANGE OFFER GOOD THRU AUGUST 4, 1977 - W in e NO MIN. — NO COVER Dealing in new and used — the best in handcrafted, imported, and vintage clothing (also arts, crafts, jewelry and miscellany). BUYING • SELLING • TRADING • CONSIGNMENTS 20% OFF ON ALL SANDALS WITH ANY STUDENT I.D. 1 Light & Dark The Buffalo Exchange CUSTOM LEATHER WORKS sandals, clogs, belts, purses, garments iillllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIB c& E cltT O R 6liO t t S E Lots o f people are at Euphoria Leather continued from page 4 1 1 Would you buy a used slip from this man? OPEN DAILY 10:30 am to 12 pm; = Fri. - Sun. till 1:00 am s 9 6 6 -7 7 8 8 — T e m p e iiiiiiiiiniHiiiiiiiiiHiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiHNiiiiimmiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiumiiiuiiiiimriiiiM “ , 909 E . L E M O N H o u r s : 9 - 5 : 3 0 M o n . th r u S a t . 966-0842 Page 20 Summer State P ress July 28, 1977 After Inventory Leftovers, at the Tempe Location ONLY, Listed Below (15) ( 2) SUPERSCOPE (6) Speakers ...................... MEDALLION 63.259 C ffG on ve rter ..................... : ( 2) 291.80 SANKYO 1410 PIONEER CS-99A In-dash A M / F M stereo w ith push button and b u ilt-in 8 - t r a c k .................................. (3) 94.00 199.95 (4) MEDALLION 65-562 TEM PI 913 SO. MILL AVI. 894-9113 TEMPE CINTE* STORE HOURS: Thurs. 11-8 Fri. 11-8 Sot. 10-6 79.95 9.40 24.80 JIL 846 In-dash AM / FM stereo w ith 8-track . (3) JIL 804 In-dash A M / F M stereo w ith cassette (5) 65.00 JIL 517 Car stereo FM u nit w ith 8 -track ................................................... "WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD CUSTO m hi-fi 59.95 A M / F M stereo w ith b u ilt-in 8-track in-dash u n i t ......................................... 8 -track u n it f o r the car . . . Top loading cassette deck with d olby ............................................ (2) ID MEDALLION 65-564 SANSUI 771 A M / F M stereo receiver. Big on power and sound ...... ................ ( 2) 7Q fill PEC0M3D A uto m a tic turntable w ith wood base and d u st cover. Com plete with Shure M9SED cartridge ^ (2) (1) P.E. COM 20 A uto m a tic turntable w ith wood base and dust cover. Com plete w ith Shure MEDALU0N 65-554 IR Q fl 40.00 tw Discouru center WESTSIDE OTHER LOCATIONS 35th A NORTHERN w areho use 16th A INDIAN SCHOOL 937-1335 264-4717 NEXT TO ALPHA-BETA NEXT TO FRY'S