th u rsd a y CD £ E Arizona State University co V o i.. 2 , N o. 9 A u gu st 4 , 1977 s ta te p re s s Inside Tenants tra/n p led ........ P-6 Banana biters................ P-8 Nimble Nero.......... ....... .......... p. 10 Legal linguist................ .......... P-12 A rizona . S ta d iu m p ro je c t n e a rs d e a d lin e The construction crew is working frantically to get the new seats Installed in Sun Devil Stadium before the Sept. 17 football opener against Northwestern. These workmen are struggling with the new sections on the north end zone, where there is the most work left to be done. By Mike Tulumelio Construction workers are scampering to finish the mammoth expansion project at Sun Devil Stadium in time for next month's season opener. Athletic director Fred Miller said expanded work crews laboring extended hours are expected to finish nearly all of the project by Sept. 8 and allow ASU officials to begin preparing for the ASU-Northwestern game Sept. 17. (ASU’s first three games are at home this season.) “Our total assumption is that the stadium will be ready,” Miller said, adding spectators should be subject only to minor first-game inconveniences. , The first phase of the $9.1 million project — handled by Mardian Construction Co. — will increase seating capacity from just under 51,000 to nearly 58,000 by enclosing the north end zone and adding a cantilevered upper deck to the west side. The expansion is being funded by $6.5 million in state approved revenue bonds (to be paid back by ticket buyers) along with a $2.5 million loan by the Sun Angel Foundation. In return, the foundation is selling about 6,000 season tickets priced from $35 to $500. Gene Felker, executive director of the foundation, said when the project is completed after next season, his group will be generating about $750,000 per year in ticket sales — enough to earn back the loan by 1981. * About 1,700 tickets remain unsold, Felker said. “That represents mostly the 35 and 45 dollar seats,” he said. The $500 seats are sold out. • “People in business are buying most of the tickets,” he said. “They’re the ones who can afford it.” The more expensive tickets also can be reasonably afforded because they are tax-deductible. The tickets buy a membership into the foundation — a non-profit organization which boosts the athletic department and provides student scholarships. “We’re a charitable organization, much like a church” or other philanthropic grOup, Felker said. “All our funds are dedicated to A SU .” The nearly-finished west upper deck will effectively end a tradition for hundreds, of Valley football fans: The hike up Tempe Butte, “Pikers’ Peak,” to watch ASU games for free from above the stadium. Determined hill-climbers braved fences and occasional tough-talk from administrative and law enforcement officials to make the trek ever since the stadium was built in 1960. But the view now has all but been wiped'out. Another spin-off of stadium expansion, although less clear in its effects, is that of the increased desirability the stadium will possess for pro football interests. As one of the largest metropolitan areas in the country without a pro football franchise, Phoenix has long been considered a prime target for National Football League expansion. An enlarged stadium could increase pressure on ASU to allow the pros to use the stadium — a move long apposed by administrative, athletic and student leaders at the University — if Phoenix ever lands a franchise. U niversity co m p etes A S A S U c h ie f: C o n c e r ts in ju r e d n a n a M a a n n By (Diane Mason C o m p e t it io n b e tw e e n Associated Students and the U n iv ersity , both of which schedule rock concerts in the University Activity Center, has hurt the rock concert program at A SU , said the A SA SU president. Mark Barnes said because ASASU and the University try to schedule the same rock groups for approximately the same dates, “outside promoters and agents have stated they’re confused as to who has the authority to book facilities at the U n iv e r sity .” He said th is discourages promoters from working with ASU. One major concert may have been lost already this year, he said. He also said there is a problem in obtaining a tentative okay from the University to book concerts in the UAC. ASASU must, get a tentative approval before applying to the University Scheduling Board. ,p|PP|$PÌ »1 He said sometimes it takes three or four days to get the okay although "generally that’s not true.” He said promoters often need to know within 48 hours and they will not wait. “I t’s a p ossib ility” that University officials are in­ ten tion ally w ithholding the approval, he said. Warren Sumners, managing director of Gammage Auditorium and the UAC, said sometimes approval cannot be given im­ m ediately because the U n iversity has a program tentatively scheduled for that date. But, he said he reserves the date for only three or four days. “Then if something is not resolved by then it would be released,” he said. Sumners said, “It’s a. com­ p etitiv e situation” but, “I wouldn’t say w e’re having problems. “We’re jumping at the same dates at the same time. It’s just a matter of clearing the channels of communication,” he said. He said there would be Jess conflict if they told each other when they were working on a concert so the other one would not interfere. Barnes said he would like ASASU to set up all the hardrock concerts at the UAC. He added the University “would not& be financially hurt at all” because Grady Gammage and the UAC have a “sound and stable” ¥ budget. ASASU needs to bring in at least $10,000 in concerts to balance its budget, he said. About three concerts minimum would be needed and about 10 would constitute a lucrative concert program, he said. “I don’t think we can do that now with this arrangement,” Barnes said. possible,” he said, adding that it would depend on w hether financing and staffing changes could be worked out. He said he would rather work with ASASU than compete. He said it would not cause a Sumners said he would be willing to work out a compromise where ASASU could book all hard-rock concerts. “I think it’s ns..................... ...... ............. uiiiiftwiwwiwwmpiipM»^ n m M i > i i i » i . m i wiiiiìwiiiiimiw hardship on the University to allow ASASU to schedule the hard-rock concerts and accrue the profits. “Our program is as large if not larger than other ones at Berkeley, Stanford or UCLA,” he said. tili -•^ sSSïS Page 2 Summer State Press August 4, 1977 m Gam mage draws crowds during summer program •JH» Wk i§|§ 8 m m M St m m * m M m mgEm ' “Summertime an’ the livin’ is easy.” It was made a lot easier for students, faculty and staff by Gamm age A u d ito r i u m ’s providing free en­ tertainment six times this summer. The University’s price of admission was simply to show ASU identification, m The total attendance for these events was 9,099, with an average attendance of 1,517 per performance. The “percentage increase of average attendance,” ac­ cording to Ed Hunter, the floor manager at Gammage who did the computations, was 18 per cent for this summer over last summer’s attendance. The event which drew.the largest crowd was the Massenkoff Russian Folk Festival with 2,630 in at­ tendance. Peter Nero was second with 2,617; 1,000 of them from the University community. The least well-attended concert was Tom Taylor as Woody Guthrie, which, said W arren Sumners, the Director of Gammage and the Activity Center, “was a case of selling an unknown.” The attendance for Taylor was.only 550, with 246 from the University, but Taylor’s fee was also the lowest, $1,200. Sumners said during the summer the upper budget limit« per concert event performer is $4,000, which was paid to both Nero’s three-man group and to the Massenkoff dancers. Nero was paid less than his normal fee to be able to accept th e Gammage engagement. Dennis Kigin, dean of summer sessions, has the POSTAL InA ant PRESS •Resumes •Calling Cards SELF SERVE 10% discount on all printing with any student ID 968-2469 PIP 326 Photocopies 5* ■ 810SAA#h Tempe, Az. 85281 continued page 16 TEMPE OFFICE SUPPLY A SU dean accepts chancellor position Dr. Delbert Weber, the dean of .ASI/s College of Education, has accepted an appointment to become the new chancellor of the University of Nebraska’s Omaha campus. Weber, who has served in his present ASU position since 1969, will assume his new duties at an annual salary of $48,500. “It’s a dynamic, growing university in an urban area,” Weber said. “It will give me a chance to expand my ad­ ministrative role and accept a professional challenge.” In' addition, Weber has deep roots in Nebraska. A native of the state, he holds doctorate and master of education degrees from the University of Nebraska and a bachelor of arts degree from Midland College in Fremont, Neb., where he was graduated cum laude. Weber, 45, first came to ASU in 1962 and served on the College of Education faculty until 1965, when he accepted the position of assistant to the president of Cleveland State .University. He was named ASU’s acting dean of education in 1969 to replace Dr. Harry Newburn, who was selected as acting president of the University at that time. Weber said he is most proud of PRINTING \ has just about everything you need, including •Com plete Office Supplies »G ift Supplies •School Supplies . »Greeting Cards •W edding Announcements •Attache Cases & Gifts •Rubber Stamps C u s to m M a d e To Y o u r O rder D r Delbert Weber the faculty he has assembled during his tenure as dean, calling ASU “one of the best places to study education in the nation.” Weber also pointed with satisfaction toward the offcampus focus of his college. “I think we’ve really taken our skills out where the people are,” he said. “The College of Education has led the entire university in that respect.” We also have an office furniture section featuring . . . LAY-Z-BOY office chairs, HON furniture and chairs, ANDERSON desks and chairs, OLIVETTI, SMITH CORONA and VICTOR office machines. Delivery Service 616 MILL AVE. TEMPE, AZ 85281 968-8621 968-8622 M E E T B A S K I N -R O B B IN S ’ M O U T H B O G G L IN G MEMORIAL UNION MOVIE HOUSE TH E BLO B Thursday M a tin e e 2 p.m. Tickets 50* aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHHiiniimniiiiiiniiiinimniiiiminiiiimiHiiimmniiiiiiimiiiiniiiiniimiiiiiiiija I ‘t t t E ct $ m E R o u s e Live Entertainment Every Nite Till 1 AM NO MIN. — NO COVER H E* OuW'd e i o m in i i Light & Dark Beer on Tap | | - W in e —Carryouts— | Happy Hour | Live Entertainment! Mon. thru Fri. 3 to 6 p.m. V2 Gal. Pitchers, $1.50 Mugs 35c f University & Forest (In The ArchëS) 966-7788 — Tempe O P E N D A ILY 10:30 am to 12 pm: F ri. - S u n . till 1:00 am Introducing four tart ’n tangy yogurts. Very Strawberry. Apricot Brandy. Blueberry Cheesecake. With chunks of fruit in every scoop. And, crunchy Granola Vanilla! Tantalizing and spicy. Try ’em in a cup, cone, shake or hand-packed for home. The taste will boggle your mouth! B fts m - & o s B i8 8 ICE CREAM STORE 809 MILL AVE. IN THE TEMPE CENTER ,.V197.7 BASKIN ROBBINS ICE CREAM COMPANY *iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir'iiiii |f |? wm- nom »— >'iWm.KWiunwfwui t.iá iMaKKtHpMrifcrifMMMMMmMMttMM'nMAiraMiHianMiiato August 4,1977 Summer State Press Page 3 Suspect nabbed in brutal murder Bulletin Tempe police have booked a 25-year-old Mesa resident with the weekend murder of an ASU student. David Leroy Buelcer, an optical firm employe, was hit with an open charge of homicide. Police said Bueker had known the victim, 21-year-old Susan Marie Green for at least six months. not clean cut. She really fought back.” Police said a trail of blood led from the kitchen to the living room where the body was found; Eloy Ysasi, an in­ vestigator for the County Medical Examiner, said evidence indicated Green had not been sexually molested. “The victim was found fully clothed, and there was blood on the outside of the clothes, which indicates she was not molested sexually,” he said. Ysasi said, however, a sperm test was positive, indicating the victim had intercourse “within hours” of the murder, but not necessarily with the killer. Police are searching for clues in the murder of an ASU stu d e n t found stra n g led , b eaten and stabbed in an east Tempe home Sunday. The body of Susan Marie Green, 21, was discovered at 1633 E. Fremont, where she was living for the summer. There IS a Green died of manual t i t •} difference!t! strangulation, although her » body was covered with • PREPARE FOR: Over 35 years of experience numerous abrasions and and success stab wounds, said a Small classes spokesman for the Maricopa ■ County Medical Examiner’s V o lu m in o u s h o m e s tu d y m a te r ia ls Office. ■ Green and an unidentified Courses that are constantly updated roommate were “house­ sitting” the home for the Tape facilities for reviews ol class I H erbert Argabright family, lessons and for use i of supplementary • ’ who were spending the materials • summer in Colorado. ■ * Make-ups for ? Tempe Police Sgt. Jerol missed lessons Z W arren said G reen’s 3 roommate had left about two weeks ago to visit relatives in Oklahoma. He • SAT-VAT 1 said she was being sought for questioning. g 6 0 2 -9 6 7 -2 9 6 7 Warren said there were no signs of forced entry into the home, and robbery 1 apparently was not the m PM N motive for the killing. • E “This is not a ‘normal’ I 1000 E. Apacho, Svita 216 homicide,” he said. “They’re Tampa all brutal, but this one was ^ Branches in Majo* U S Cities s MCAT DAT ISAT GRE GMAT OCAT CPAT FLEX ÍECFMG •NATL MED BDSî d u c a t io n a l cen ter He said the victim had been stabbed ¡repeatedly with “a sharp, two-pronged barbeque fork,” which was found in the vicinity of the body. Police "said a blood- semester. She had been covered rock also was found enrolled as a part-time nearby. t student and had taken 12 Green had been pre- hours of business courses registered and admitted as a during last year’s summer stu d e n t for th is fall sessions. A RESTAURANT & GARDEN UNDERGROUND theSalt Cellar IE OR FILET MIGNON DINNER THURSDAY ONLY Includes: Salad, Baked Potato, M arvelous Celery & Sour Dough Bread. lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIimHIlHlimilllllllllHHIIIimillllimilllllllllllHIINIMHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIiaillllM *595 FRIDAY& SATURDAY ONLY G IAN T INDIAN OCEAN SHRIMP Includes: Cole Slaw, Baked Potato, M arvelous Celery, & Sour Dough Bread. H APPY HOUR 1 0 :3 0 PM TO CLOSING EVERY N IG H T OF THE WEEK *3.88 BONES NOW A p p e a r in g in TEMPE, DINNER SUN. & MON. ONLY BBQ BEEF BACK RIBS Includes: Cole Slaw, Baked Potato, M arvelous Celery, Sour Dough Bread* 3 1 3 4 S . M ill, 9 6 6 - 0 0 4 2 Comer Southern & Mill (in the Smitty's Shopping Ctr.) ir a i H É IB JE W E LE R S SCHUBACH 1900 Inside the Mall at Tower PI a/a 138th St. A Thomas! 276 0900 Foothills Shopping Center (Central A Southern) 276-8729 Valiev West Mall 159th A^e. A Northern) 9390800 20% OFF ON ALL SEIKO WATCHES WITH THIS AD ALL YOU CAN EAT 947-1963 C ALL FOR RESERVATIONS (Offer expires 8 /1 0 /7 7 ) RIGHT ON THE PRICE, RIGHT ON THE CORNER OF SOUTHERN & MILL 550 N. HAYDEN RD. imp'ieMi'Hff.....« T ffiir r v tif « w H WÈ w m m Page 4 Summer State Press August 4,1977 Utilities' bedfellows The Arizona Corporation Commission is the state’s most important regulatory agency, but until a recent series of investigative stories in the Arizona Republic, it rarely has operated under much public scrutiny. The commission is elected by the public and is supposed to give a fair shake to both corporate and consumer in­ terests. "But often, the stories pointed, the relationship between commissioners and the utilities they regulate resembles two teenagers at a drive-in movie. Utility interests have filled as much as one-third of the campaign chests of commission candidates. And campaign workers for successful candidates have been rewarded with lucrative technical positions with the commission. (Some of these childish bureaucrats shielded their faces or even threatened photographers while their pictures were taken.) The motives of the Republic series have been debated, particularly in light of the newspaper’s decision not to run the much more significant series on crime and corruption in Arizona by the Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc. Much of the Republic series is based on old information and is concerned with the “appearance” of wrongdoing, rather than actual illegalities — two of the paper’s favorite arguments against the IRE stories. And political influence­ peddling and related activities are not unique to the cor­ poration commission. These arguments, however, can be used to some degree against any investigative work and should not detract from the importance of the subject matter. The local news media should continue to examine the commission. Hopefully, it will lead to a more well-informed public at election time, and not — as some politicians and even the Republic itself have argued — result in an ap­ pointed commission. That would take consumers even farther out of the utility rate-setting process. One need not be a crook to be elected to the commission. Jim Weeks’ victory last November was a big step in the right direction. Who knows? Even in Arizona, the prospects of electing honest public officials may not be an impossible dream. O pinion \ ŸV. \04— \ 'l*r\caP V*es'«rrnc. U Jimmy's six months Jimmy Carter’s victory over Gerald Ford in last November’s presidential election wasn’t a popular one in Arizona and throughout the West. But after his first six months in office, Carter seems to have succeeded in convincing a great many people his election was not the disaster many conservatives would have liked the electorate to believe. That is not to say the everyday nuts-and-bolts decision­ making of the presidency has remained the same as under Ford. While Carter has not proven to be a fire-breathing social reformer, his politics appear to be much more pluralistic than Ford’s one-sided emphasis on helping big business. Some instances where Carter’s election has made a difference: —The minimum wage will be raised soon from $2.30 per hour to $2.65, with graduated increases thereafter. Business attempts to set a lower minimum pay scale for young people appear on their way to failure. —The Central Arizona Project will be built but without its worst feature, Orme Dam. —Strip mining legislation, which would require mine operators to reclaim the thousands of acres which are ravaged annually, is now law. Congress narrowly missed overriding Ford’s vetoes on similar legislation. —Funds for the Clinch River Breeder Reactor in Ten­ nessee were eliminated — despite a heavy corporate lobby — after pressure by the Carter Administration. Approval would have signaled European countries, whose nuclear industries have slowed recently, that the United State is resigned to a plutonium-based economy. One’s opinion of Carter obviously depends on his or her own political beliefs. But one thing seems clear. The often repeated complaint during last fall’s campaign, that “there’s no real difference between the candidates,” seems more cliche than fact. Summer State Press Staff Editor . . . noportor . ..........................................................................MlkaTulumollQ ............................................................................. Diane Mason ...........................................................................Greg Crowder C o n trib u to r*........... ........................................ .Roberta Bandar Mark Freiatedt Mark Scarp Tom Gibbon* Chat Barfield Scott Simpkina JackUvaHa WM m- state press \£v* \ Mark Scarp W rite your own column Throughout the course of time since I began writing these bits of “literature” for page four of the State Press, a problem posed itself to me. You see, no matter how hard we try, there are still many people who never will enjoy the feeling experienced when one sees one’s name in print, followed by one’s own opinion, revealed to all, and subject to no-holds-barred scrutiny from the body politic. Perhaps it is this last premise about writing one’s own column that scares people off. On a personal note, perhaps it is hardest of all to attempt to write something with a light or humorous air to it; for while many of the same things are serious business for most, each and every one of us finds humor in something different. So, for those of you who desire to write under the banner of columnist, particularly of the lighter nature referred to as classical Scarpism (I am the only one who refers to it in this way), I have provided the way out — to provide you, the reader, the opportunity to become you, the columnist. All you have to do is fill in the blanks with what you think about the issues facing the ASU community today. And remember, you have the choice either to show it to everybody or nobody, and that is the advantage you have over me. START HERE. All in all, the situation at this University is generally_______ The ASU football team w as_______ largely due to it s _____ in the areas o f ______ , ______, and ----------.If I didn’t read in the State Press that ------- ------------- and ______ were g ettin g ______ grade point averages and were receiving______ credit from so-called _ _ _ _ _ courses, I never would have believed their ______ won-loss record. W ell, maybe this year we can ______ again. Saga Food is th e ______I ever have eaten and should be _____ to th e _______ I - j—.—. walk-through registration because all of the ASU registration personnel are so eager to ---------everyone’s class schedule. Why is every­ one complaining? The wait is only hours long, and that’s just to get you r. Free Spirit is an organization o f ______ who only want,______out of their fellow students. If they want t o ___ _________ , and ______, it’s totally their business and ASU should not stand in their way. Ned Wulk could have______Brooklyn’s Albert King to play basketball for ASU if only Wulk had offered him ______, ______ _ a n d ______ King would have g lad ly______ Wulk’s offer if Wulk informed him of the fact that every player on the Maryland team w a s_____________ , and______ My tuition is too ______considering the quality of education I’m getting at this University. I call for either an im m ediate______of tuition or a more im m ediate______of the quality of ASU academics. One way to achieve either of these goals is to totally ______ the budget of that gluttonous department, th e ______ department. Hayden Library, the Memorial Union and Sin City all should be o p e n ______hours a day to better serve the student body at all stages of the academic experience. President John Schwada is a man about____ _ feet, --------- inches tall, weighs approximately ______pounds, h a s______ color hair an d ______ eyes. (N.B. No one actually knows these statistics, since nobody ever has seen Schwada, but good old-fashioned conjecture is basic to any opinionated work.) Associated Students would do a lot better job if they’d get t h e ir ______ together, s t o p ______ pursuits such a s ______t h e ______ department, ---------the administration and get down t o ______ for th e --------- , the job they w ere ______to do. The State Press is a publication whose intentions are honest, and they are ---------accurate in their reporting. I have one comment, though, that should be heard. Every­ thing should----- i— except for that Mark Scarp character, who should b e ______ a n d ______ for h is ---------writing skill. He d eserv es_____ l for what he’s done for this U niversity. STOP HERE. Gohimnist’s rule number one: Always go out on a limb. You’ll always be assured o f privacy. m m xi K fl ^ » r n r n n r n r n r n r n r n im m m m m m m m m . DiKirrmn■n’M rttTirfifnvttfttlmilmt\irtiliwifcl"friiififl1Tf*,llt*T ii1miw h r w iin i r w i nnfwiin*— n August 4, 1977 Summer State Press Page 5 SmaH-town college finds 'prestige' bands are pain in the . . . When a smaller college can sign a big-name rock group to appear, it’s con­ sidered a coup and a m atter of school prestige. But at the 6,000-student Nprtheast Missouri State University, school officials must have wished they could forget the whole thing when they read over their contract for a combined campus appearance of REO Speedwagon and Firefall. In addition to the com­ bined $9,500 fee for the bands, the contract called for the school to provide limousines, one gallon of milk, several cases of soft drinks, one gallon of “pure orange ju ic e ,” one-half gallon of apple juice, several cases of beer of specified brands, two fifths of white Bordeaux, two fifths of red Bordeaux, one fifth each of rum, tequila, cognac, and whiskey of specified brands, barbecued ribs and chicken, deli spread, fresh fruit, yogurt, three vegetarian dinners, one diabetic dinner The concert committee did its best to comply, but since university regulations prohibit alcoholic beverages on campus, those items had to be scratched. And rather than limousines, the bands had to make do w ith university staff cars. —Collegiate Headlines M IM I BIRKENSTOCK SANDALS COMFORT FOOTWEAR N O W O N SALE A T THE G O LDEN TEMPLE RESTAURANT! 415 South FOR A UNIQUE Blood services to visit campus Arizona Blood Services will have a mobile unit on campus untO 2 p.m. today in the Pinal Room (215) of the Memorial Union. With Arizona’s population dim inished by sum m er vacations, the current blood supply is dangerously low and help from th e University community is needed greatly , blood service officials said. ; EXPERIENCE TRY THE BUFFALO EXCHANGE —Im p o rte d — 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. H a n d c ra fte d ECONOMY FURNITURE LA-Z-BOY Recliners $149.95 Swivel Rockers 99.95 Recliners from 89.95 Box spring & m attress 49.95 tw in or full 4dr. Chest 29.95 Bunk Beds com plete 129 95 Sofa ond Chair 149-95 Herculpn O dd lamps 9.95 5pc Bedroom 159.95 Sofa ond Loveseat 239.95 Herculon Corner Units 199.95 Reclining choirs' Swivel rockers Captain's bed, com plete Vintage $ 99.95 $ 99.95 $129.95 WATERBEDS ON SALE NOW - STOP & SEE Electrophonic Stereos A t cost Keivinator Refrigerators A t cost 3 — Rooms of furniture com plete for $399.95. $5 down, $20 o m onth. Easy credit, fre e delivery and free setup. Now at 2 Locations 17 S. Country Club, Mesa 431-4204 134« N. Scottsdale Rd., Tempe (Wooke Shopping Center) • 444-2374. ■ li.mniiiw im ii —R«*«!» www »iwininwn 111 111111 wMfliramuiiwmiipfflrfiniifHiwiBiii^rw ^ 1wr w ^ ipi y irT I m J mm « f t Page 6 Summer State Press August 4,1977 CAMPUS CLEANERS' Director rehired Tenant group feels pinch of houseseeking students By Diane Mason About 35,000 students are expected to attend ASU this fall and many of them will need to find housing and roommates. The A ssociated Students Tenants Association already is beginning to feel the influx of students. About 75 people come to the association every day for help, said Mickie Kass, acting director, who is. taking over for Mitch Braddon while he is on his honeymoon. “It’s super busy and it’s getting worse every day,” she said. About three employes at a time man the MU office to an­ swer students' questions about housing vacancies, renting, leasing and finding roommates, Kass said. Just in time for the fall influx, an in-house dispute was settled. The association’s director, Mitch Braddon, was rehired July 13 after being fired a week earlier. Mike Tansy, campus affairs vice president, said he fired Braddon mainly because he insisted on running “major activities” without approval. Braddon accused Tansy and the new AS ASU administration of being nitpicky about rules. He said the two previous vice presidents he worked under “pretty much gave me the reins to do what I wanted. And 1 got the job done.” Tansy said he rehired Braddon “so as not to cripple Associated Students or any part of it.” Tansy was accused of leaving the association in the hands of unqualified people after firing Braddon. The three people who were left in the office had been hired one week before Braddon was fired. Tansy said, “I still feel entirely justified in what I did.” He said he will insist that Braddon follow bylaws and policies. However, how the bylaws will be interpreted has not been settled. Braddon said, “His job (Tansy’s) is to give me the tods to do my job.” “I hope it works out. From my viewpoint it can," said Dr. Leon Shell, dean of students. Besides working with a dif­ ferent ASASU administration, Braddon also will have to work with a decreasing availability of housing in Tempe, Kass said. “More and more places are hesitant to take students,” she said. She said although the student market used to dominate Tempe GUNS Tackle & Leather Reloading & Supplies Camping Accessories Racquet & Handball [SUPER DISCOUNTS] SPORTSMAN'S c l e a r in g R o u s e in c . 1325 W. University Dr. 968-7481 housing, an increasing number of winter visitors and families have been seeking housing, and landlords prefer them. “The students are going to have a harder time finding a place to stay,” she said. “Right at this minute, it’s hard to find a studio or one-bedroom apart­ ment for a low price (in Tempe).” The association puts out a weekly vacancy list which in­ cludes houses, apartm ents, .townhouses and mobile homes. The association also helps students in student-landlord disputes. Kass said the association spends most of its time helping students get deposits back. She said landlords sometimes fail to give the deposits back unless the tenants ask for them, and unknowing students do not ask. Other times, students will not follow a state law requiring Jog* x o r i $wèet ‘Lungs (cigarettes areTQlIers! One Day Service on Dry Cleaning and Finished Shirts OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK WE ALSO DO DRAPES AND RUGS tenants to give a 30-day notice on the day a rent payment is due before moving out. She said students will lose their deposit and must pay another month’s rent if they do not follow the law. “Sometimes we must tell a student, ‘Sorry, but you didn’t live up to your responsibilities,” she said. Another problem students face is trying to break leases. “They don’t understand that signing that lease is a legal responsibility for one year (if the lease is a oneyear lease),” Kass said. Students also have had dif­ ficulty forcing landlords to fix broken air conditioners and heaters, she said. The association puts out a sheet with advice in obtaining housing and a shopper’s guide which describes 95 local apart­ ment, com plexes. It also maintains a file of people looking for roommates. 967-9650 • TEMPE Corner of University & Rural Rd. There's no AXD ia l-A -Style " at Long Hair, Inc. There is a b e st haircut for you. Not this month's special—but the haircut that's right for the way you live. The way you want to look. Easy. Natural. No-nonsense. Only at Long Hair, Inc. will you find pecfple who get really interested. Who take time to know you. Then explain what really is proper hair care. Try us next time you want it right. Long Hair. The people who developed Conceived by Nature. IO M G H N R , IN C . TEM PE CAR W ASH Sm itty's P laza M ill & Southern K-Mart C enter D obson & Broadw ay 9 6 8 -7 4 2 1 8 3 4 -0 9 3 5 S TU D E N T S P EC IA L $1.25 W A S H MON. T H U R S . '• [Just Show I.D. Card] 9 1 6 E . A p a c h e B lv d . Mon. - Sat. 8:30 - 5 p.m . Sunday 9 - 3 p.m. APACHE AT RURAL, NEXT TO MOBIL GAS BankAimricaid, Matter Charge, Mobil, and Standard Credit Catda Accepted // MR. DOLLAR SAVER / / * BEDROOM SETS* T U R N S THE TIDE O N C O N V E N T IO N A L W ATER BED'S W ITH M O R N IN G SURF, FEATURING: 7 PC. SPANISH COMPLETE W ITH •AQUA GUARD waterbed problems) TWIN......*195 •66% LESS WATER FULL.....*245 •USE REGULAR SHEETS QUEEN....*295 •NO HEATER REQUIRED KING.... *345 •STANDARD HEIGHT prices inc. every­ •FITS REG. HEADBOARD b FRAME Above thing you need. •LOOKS LIKE REG. BOX & MATTRESS QUEEN SIZE SPANISH SET ★ 10 YEAR WARRANTY ★ •Also other Hide-a-Beds, Recliners, available at Discount Prices. *1Sa A N D — C O IN -O P L A U N D R O M A T ] • SUEDE A N D LEATHER C LE A N IN G • ALTERATIONS • H A N D IR O N IN G • FLUFF DRY • W A SH • DRY • FOLD • Instant Credit Available • All Major Credit Cards Honored Hours: 9-8 Mon thru Sat 12-5 Sundays 945-0956 FULL SIZE BED. REG. $349 .........................$155 KING SIZE SPANISH SET COMPLETE W ITH BEDDING. REG. $575 . $270 COMPLETE W ITH BEDDING. REG. $625 . $220 SPANISH 5-DRAWER REG. $ 6 5 ___ ._.................................................. $30 COMPLETE GROUP— SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR, O TTO M AN, LG. ASST. OF HERCULON COVERS, ALL 4 PCS. REG. $595 ........................................................... $245 LAMPS DECORATOR STYLES 78 TO CHOOSE FROM . . . . . $10 TWIN MATTRESSES ..................................$27.50 each piece D O LLA R SA V ER D IS C O U N T FURNITURE S H O W R O O M 80 21 E. ROOSEVELT, SCTSDLE. [Corner of Roosavelt & Hayden Rd.] Plenty of Front Door Parking Delivery Available ■.***?**&*rwmtaNm m& August 4,1977 Summer State Press Page 7 Movie review Latest M onty Python not too bloody funny Jabberwocky is a socio-political satire gone wrong. It’s not even a true Monty Python movie, since only two of its members are involved in the production. Terry Gilliam co-authored and directed, while Michael Palin has the lead as Dennis Cooper, a medieval English barrel-makers apprentice who leaves his rural home to seek his fortune in the big castle. After a series of nearly fatal misfortunes Cooper ends up accidentally killing the neighborhood monster, thus win­ ning half of the kingdom and the beautiful princess’ hand in marriage. Unfortunately, Cooper’s true love is a huge, disgusting peasant girl, and the city’s economy is dependent on the monster’s campaign of terror. _, The very loose, simple plot provides the opportunity to set up elaborate take-offs on a variety of subjects. Religion, modern industry, and unions all become targets. Every now and then there are flashes of the crazed humor that made Monty Python justifiably popular. The castle has a unique doorbell system, whereby a rope hanging outside the door is tied to the throat of a peasant inside. Also, with food at a premium, vendors at the big jousting match peddle “rats on a stick. ” A man decides to go into the beggar business by chopping off his own foot and displaying it in front of himself as he waves his cup. Later in the film he is shown with both feet lying next to the bloody stumps of his legs as he happily solicits from passersby. This is only one example of the heavy use of shock tactics in the film. The monster eats people alive, spitting out a bloody skeleton with only the head intact. Literally gallons of Technicolor blood is shed during the course of the action. Despite this, one of the highlights of the film is the ex­ cellent photography provided by cinematographer, Terry Bedford. The characters and time period are made to seem completely realistic. AU in all, the laughs are few and far between. Only a true Monty Python fanatic would sit through a two-hour film for only 30 minutes worth of jokes. —Greg Crowder 7 4 e V* I* * I> *> V * * * ^aàt Ëapaa* CLASSIC & CURRENT STYLING MENS STYLING PRECISION CUTTING BLOW DRYING "PERFECT TOUCH" PERMANENTS ALL FACETS OF HAIR COLORING WIGS & HAIR PIECES 10 HAIR STYLISTS TO SERVE YOU DURALASHES D avid Fullerton • O wner 966-5254 EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENTS 53 E. SOUTHERN AV., TEMPE (VALLEY FAIR CENTER) Hours: 9-5 Mon. thru Sat. x Q P P ____ Every night is p a rty night a t the San D evil Disco Join the . S ta te Press A d v e rtis in g 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 SUMMER SALE SAVE 20%DURING AUG. O N ALL 300 STYLES OF WEDDING BANDS Sunday: NO BOOZE BOOGIE Live disco action for all 15-18 year olds. D ance contests, pinball tournam ent, giant screen TV and the best music in the \folley. 5-11 every Sunday. MondavrlSlLLY CARTER NIGHT C oors b eer 25C from 5 p.m. ’til closing. Free peanuts. Beach Boys and Beatles music all night. N o cover. No ffiinimum. Tuesday: TEQUILA TUESDAY 55C for all Tequila shots and drinks. Sunrise mugs and Margarita pitchers a few pesos m ore. Free taco chips and salsa. Wednesday; SINGLES NIGHT Short-shorts contest. Thursday: LADIES THURSDAY LADIES ONLY with all drinks 25C from 7:30-9 p.m. M en’s “sex appeal” contest with weekly winners. Friday & Saturday: EARLY BIRD SPECIAL FREE DRAW ING O N D IA M O N D HEART PENDANT - Value ’100 C oors o r C ham pagne 25C /glass 7:30-9 pm. WEEKLY PINBALL CONTEST Anyone can enter anytime. W inner an n o u n ced midnight on Friday. JEWELRY "In th e T30 E. University 967-8917 A rc h e s ” Party With The Devil Tonight Rural at Apache, Tempe mi p W m BHMNÉMiaiiigj Page 8 Summer State Press August 4,1977 Bar patrons drool over banana eaters » Photos by Greg Crowder It’s raunchy, degrading, sexist and downright disgusting. Perhaps that’s why the Bushwacker, in Danelle Plaza at Mill Ave. and Southern — with its various “contests” — is one of Tempe’s hottest nightspots each Wed­ nesday. ^ Young ladies are judged on their ability to draw An audience reaction to their legs, and in a more objectified game, the victor is the woman who bites the greatest number of inches from a banana. Winners receive $20 in th e legs contest and $10 for the most prolific banana eating. And everyone who enters is awarded a free pitcher of beer. The men have their chance to prance on stage too in a hairy chest contest. But there’s no doubt which sex draws the most interest (and money), since males are hit with a $1 cover charge while women are admitted free. The State Press in no way condones this weekly exercise in the animalistic side of human nature. But for introductory sociology students who need a topic on which to observe and write a paper, the Bushwacker would fit nicely. Top: The three finalists of the evening strut their stuff. Directly above: A young lady hikes up her pants leg in an effort to draw more reaction from the crowd. Above right: A banana eating contestant psychs herself up before going for the big one. Right: The male dominated crowd shows its approval for a legs contestant. mi w 11w h t um August 4, 1977 Summer State Press Page 9 China's ex-Red Guards flee to pursue American dream EXPERT HAIRCUTS BLOW DRY PERMS TERRY By Todd Carroll Pacific News Service "Todd Carroll is a Bay Area freelance w rite r who specializes in Chinese affairs and is fluent in Mandarin. SAN FRANCISCO - Since 1970, hundreds — perhaps thousands — of China’s most radical youth from the Cultural Revolution have been streaming into the United States, driven by political disaffection with the Peking government and inspired by the American constitutional guarantees of freedom and individualism. They have swum the shark-infested waters of the South China seas, lived by their muscles and wits on the streets of Hong Kong and scrambled for coolie wages in the soup kitchens of San F rancisco’s Chinatown to open a new chapter in the convulsive movement they launched more than a decade ago in China. These Red Guards in pursuit of the American dream are perhaps the most paradoxical of all the waves of immigrants to penetrate the United States. To the China watchers of the West, the. Red Guards were a bizarre and con­ fusing lot. Following Mao’s in structions, th e Red G uards w ere stu d en ts released from school to rove the countryside organizing m assive dem onstrations against the entrenched bureaucracy of the Com­ m unist P a rty and the government. “He wished to produce a g eneration th a t would throw off the habits of obedience fostered by both traditional and Communist Chinese society,” says author Nancy Milton, who ta u g h t a t the Peking Language Institute in the 1960’s and whose three children were Red Guards. “Mao wanted a generation who would challenge those in authority and make their own political analyses — or according to Mao’s own aphorism — ie a r n by swimming.’” One of those who learned to swim in the choppy waters of the Cultural Revolution is Henry Lee. He is 28. He rents an 8xl0-foot room in an old brick Chinatown roominghouse. He has a single bed, a suitcase, several cardboard boxes and a rack of clothes. Canned food and tea fill the shelves he built over the door. His most expensive possession is a new stereo that sits on a metal rack next to a few bookshelves and a small desk. He takes home $60 each week, pays his bills, saves a little and wires the rest to his family in China. By day, he studies English at an adult school and he works at night in a Chinese restaurant. In Chini, Henry Lee led another kind of life. In 1966, he and his high school classm ates from Canton formed a Red Guard brigade and began a twoyear trek that took them throughout the densely populated eastern provinces of China. They were part of the “link-up,” a national movement that encouraged millions of Chinese youth to journey around the nation and experience the ways of the Chinese revolution. Many of the young rebels, said H enry, fancied themselves as the vanguard of China’s continuing revolution. To save the fruits of the revolution, they attacked persons th ey *2.00 OFF W ITH TH IS AD ON ANY HAIRC UT AN D BLOW DRY . PATRICKS deemed to bourgeois in thought and deed. Their targets mostly were middleaged persons, teachers and local party officials, and they subjected them to harsh criticism and physical abuse. But in the fall of 1968, when they returned to Canton, about half of the Red Guards were sent to work clearing rocks, hoeing fields and installing irrigation pumps in rural communes. Lee’s frustration over THE W AX THREAD * SANDALS—BELTS BAGS— I LEATHER SH O P] 34 E. 5th, TEMPE Hours: 9-5:30 Mon.-Fri. • 9-4 Sat. • Closed Sun. continued page 13 “CREATING MANY OF ARIZONA’S FINEST JEWELRY DESIGNS” * JEWELRY & DIAMOND CUTTING > z111 s h DC < Q. < I CO I- z Ul cc < Q. 1 BEDROOM APARTM ENTS POOL - LAUNDRY - PARKING - Diamonds • Rubies • Emeralds • Sapphires • Opals — Rings - Earrings - Necklaces - Bracelets - Chains Jewelry & Watch Repair - Insurance Appraisals EAST U N IV E R S ITY • TEMPE • 9 6 7 - 8 9 1 7 i “In Tha Archas” 1 M e m b e r A m e ric a n G e m S o c ie ty SWING SOUTH OF THE BORDER LABOR DAY - OR ANY TIME - AT FABULOUS SAN CARLOS BAY, SONORA, LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE MEXICO - 947-0065 NOT A TRAVEL AGENCY We Offer. . . Just 255 miles from Nogales 3) □ Tennis on new lighted championship Laykold courts □ Deep Sea & Bay Fishing □ Water Sports & Skin Diving •Ocean View Accommodations □ Horseback Riding on the Beach •2 Breakfasts 3> □ Beach Parties for Everyone •Unlimited Country Club Tennis m □ Fresh Water Pools H □ WHITE SANDY m z H at I > ■o > z CO I- I > ■o > JO H Ul oc < Q. < CO 1026 E. SPENCE oc < CL < BEACHES, (based on db|. occupancy) INCLUDES •YOU OR YOUR GROUP WELCOME BLUE, WATER - Sand Dunes □ Gourmet Dining s □ TOTALLY Casual Atmosphere zH □ Let the charm of Old Mexico Enchant You □ Outstanding Shopping - A bargain hunters paradise □ ONLY 32 MINUTES BY AIR □ THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS, WHERE THE DESERT MEETS THE SEA m at TEMPE - NEAR ASU > •V > 966-1989 s Ul 3 DAYS, 2 NIGHTS *39.00 □ > at z / •a < ROBIN LYNN * FEATURING OVER 350 ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING BANDS. — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — (/) t- 968-9860 7t h S t (7t h f t MHO m Z H at — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — S a n e a rlo s C O U N T R Y CLUB Guoymqs, Sonoro, Mexico Page 10 Summer State Press August 4, 1977 Leisure, 968-3663 aSV " In t h e A r c h e s " 10% OFF ON ALL PAPERBACKS aä With ASU ID 20% OFF ON ALL RECORDS it ALBUM S WITH ASU ID (Offers good thru 8/10/77) Nero's jazz is box-office, slickness not authenticity CHRISTIAN BOOKS Records - M usic G ifts - Cards 122-B E. U n iv e rs ity D riv e Mondav - Saturday. 9:30 to 5:30 WE GIVE HAIRCUTS WE ALSO G IVE YOU what you come in for, not something you didn’t want. Some shops make you pay for services you don’t need (like a shampoo with a haircut). Not everybody needs a shampoo when they get their hair cut. So if you want the best haircut in town, a shampoo, or both, come to us and get only, the service you want. SUN DEVIL HAIRCUTTERS “The Arches Plaza” Forest & University 966-5462 P e te r N e r o “ ‘Dat Nero, what a pianist!” the man from New York sitting behind me said exuberantly. Almost everyone else in the crowd of 2,617 at Gammage Auditorium Friday night felt the same. I Peter Nero’s articulate piano fingers have made him a big name for years. With his drummer and bass guitarist, they play well known music for an audience that likes to hear it again. His five-song tribute to Duke Ellington, his own rendition of Erroll Garner’s “Misty,” his m edley of Gershwin w ere brought only a little nearer to contemporary composition by three songs from the Broadway show “The Wiz.” These were the meat of the evening, since Nero’s jazz style flesh es out m elodies w ith abundant em bellishm ents, turning a song into an opus. Nero’s piano style is ripe with quotations and playful allusions. Inside the first number, “Never Can Say Goodbye,” were strains from “Green Dolphin Street,”, “The Hucklebuck,” “Shortnin’ Bread” and ‘Tm Beginning to See the Light.” Sometimes this method works better than others. At its best, it contributes to a unity of mood. At its least effective, it creates a melange, a collection of parts related mainly by juxtaposition. Some of it happens by Nero’s listening to what he plays. As h e , ad libs, a phrase will trigger a memory and lead into the next quotation and the next. With this handling of music, much of your pleasure depends on your own exposure to piano bars and cocktail music. Or to your years of being in and out of places where jazz is taken seriously. The Ellington numbers ap­ pealed to me on that last account. A good 45 minutes of “I’m Beginning to See the Light,” “Don’t Get Around Much Anymore,” ‘T ve Got it Bad,” “Satin JDoll” and “A-Train,” took me back to Howard Rumsey’s Lighthouse, where the Modern Jazz Quartet played Ellington, to Shelly’s Manne Hole and to the Old Balboa Pavillion — all famous West Coast jazz houses. The jazz there, however, seemed more authentic than Nero’s exhibit of it on stage here. Nero’s work seems as slick as his cream colored suit and brown satin shirt with his sun-lamp tan next to his silver hair. His jazz seems geared for the gang at Motorola stopping work (TGIF!) a bit early Fridays for cocktails. It is jazz that no one can take AOOOX TELEX MUDA AKAI SH A RP SALES • IN S T A L L A T IO N S • SERVICE Stereos, CB, TV, Tapes Cars, Vans, Campers, Boats. You name it. All Repairs A ll M akes & Models offense. As such, it is bland and impersonal. What it isn’t is creative or inventive. But that’s not really a fault. Not very long ago, none of the interpreters of music wrote it. And Nero still operates in that tradition. These three men are simply musicians doing what they do best. His only invention was in “the encore portion of our program,” a number, he said, done for the Bicentennial. “It may well be THE love song for the next 200 years.” With all the flourishes of the “Theme from ‘Love Story,’ ’’ he laid out the music from the McDonald’s hamburger ads. And that was about the speed of his humor. For instance, he named the first three songs the group played as “Never Can Say Goodbye” by Billy Carter, “Could It Be Magic,” by Dr. Renee Richards, and, giving the last one straight, “Nothin from Nothin Leaves Nothin." , The audience loved it. They loved the music, the easy jokes, the embellishments and the allusions. They loved clapping. Nero would signal the end of a piece with the wave of a hand, they’d clap, and then the group would play another conclusion and they’d clap again. But the evening with Nero made me think nothing much has happened in jazz for the last 15 years. But is that so bad? A lot of us would like to stop time. —Roberta Bender Calendar, Ak Today, Emmylou Harris, couniry western singer, Celebrity Theater, 8 p.m: Today through Saturday, “Man of La Mancha,” Phoenix Little Theater, 8 p.m. Today through Saturday, “Friends” and “Harold and Maude,” Valley Art Theatre. Today through August 14, Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show, McCormick Ranch Equestrian Center, Scottsdale, 8 p.m. showtime. CANCELED. Today through August 20, "Mary Mary,” comedy by Jean Kerr at Paul Shank's French Quarter, Safari Hotel, Thursdays through Saturdays, through August 20. Today through August 21, Forrest Tucker in “Hanky Panky,” Windmill Dinner Theater, 8:15 curtain. Today through September 9, “Western; $2 ° ° u nd w ith an y in s ta lla tio n 19 W. BROADWAY Hours: Mon. - Sat., 10-6 PM FHA-VA from ■ --------- T-SHIRT & FREE FRISBEE Off List Broadway and M ill hii»i|i1 2gBMgpajgMmm Phone 967-2192 O mel 6 p.i Advertising 9< W ith A N Y S tu d en t ID 8 -t r a c k a CASSETTE S and T Coli T “Sn H.,’ T Fog Aue S ta te Pr« 10 % OFF O N A LL MERCHANDISE TAPES Art Mu: F Pon F Niel The •150 DOWN PITI $ 1 5 0 /mo. and up Single Level 1-2-3 BEDROOM UNITS FROM $16,000 Salesman in office daily 11-6 p.m. 25 Sold — 3 Left Brokers Welcome DOVE REALTY 275-401S Ev m , 248-7896 ■ ■ R R P + August 4, 1977 Summer State Press Page 11 R o b erta B en d er r* Creative w riting faculty puts pow er in ASU's tank The permanent arts are constantly available to fill our leisure time, and none of them more so than literature. Every university faculty has members who study short stories, poetry, and novels, and some who make them. I talked with the new chairman of ASU’s English department, Marvin Fisher, about the creative writing faculty, to get some sense of their energy and the directions they might take the creative writing program. A t least seven members of the ASU faculty have centered their lives around creating verbal art. Pamela Stewart, Norman Dubie and Roger Weingarten in poetry, and Campbell Black, Richard Erno and Bernard Kaplan in prose. Miles Swarthout (son of Glendon Swarthout who wrote “Blessed are the Beasts and Children”) teaches film and television script writing at night. Perhaps the most emminent is Norman Dubie, a regular faculty member, who has received a Guggenheim Fellowship for his poetry and will be in residence at ASU in the fall. Each of the writing faculty has an im­ pressive bibliography, with many works being anthologized and reviewed in mainstream publications like the N ew York Times, thé N ew York Times Book Review, and the Atlantic Monthly. But are these people concerned with writing the fictive works that you or I are likely to contact in our leisure time? Fisher says, “Fiction always has a wider market than poetry.” Citing Dante and T.S. Eliot as successful poets, he con­ tinues, “There can be significant poetic productions only in societies where there is a greater unanimity, a greater sense of cultural coherence, and shared values, and where the populace is not bombarded by such a variety of entertainment options. “To a regrettable extent today, poets are writing for other poets. They are less concerned with what the average reader thinks. Poets cannot, after all, really live off their royalties. Even our best poets live off the appointments and awards th at their poetry brings.” Citing Rod McKuen and Kahlil Gibran as commercially successful poets, Fisher says, “A poet who is commercially suc­ cessful is suspect” by the literary establishment, basically a universitycreated and centered force. A poet’s success in the university has to do with factors widely disparate from mass appeal through mass sentiment. Fisher says over the last five to six years, for instance, “ . . . a major poet would draw fewer people at an ASU poetry reading than much lesser poets have drawn in the past year.” The reason: “We have a great many more students actively interested in writing poetry, and these now possess a considerable sense of community.” Attending the readings, which are open to the public, are “a healthy mixture of younger students, former students, faculty and retired faculty.” Next year, thé English Department has “a very impressive schedule of visiting poets,” including Galway Kinnell, Mark Strand, Ross T alariéo,Stanley K unitz, and possibly W.S. Merwin. continued page 17 FREE WASH 1i I i i i i WITH THIS COUPON Offer good through Aug. 1 0 ,1 9 7 7 . Coupon good only during attendant I hours: 9-6 Mpn. thru Sat. Lim it 1 per customer. COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING PROFESSIONAL WASHING & DRY CLEANING DROP OFF SERVICE OPEN 24 HOURS SUEDE-LEATHER ALTERATIONS stir smtci pwnssMtL 1035 EAST LEMON, TEMPE Corner of Lemon & Terrace 966-5311 £ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ *********$ ★ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ♦ ¥ ¥ ¥ ♦ ♦ * * * * * * * WALK IN AUTO PARTS f ★ AU G U ST S P E C IA L * |* 10% OFF ON ALL AUTOMOTIVE PARTS ACCESSORIES WITH ASU ID b! * ♦ i♦ » ★ (Expires 8 /3 0 /7 7 ) SPEC IA LIZIN G IN ♦ American & Foreign Autos »Sporting Goods & Guns £ 3300'S. Mill-Ave. ♦ D anelle Plaza » * ★ ♦ } (M ill & Southern) Hours 8-9 Mon. thru Fri. 8-7 Saturday ___ ¥ ¥ * * 968-788111 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A ******************* auntry Bp.m: of La p.m. Is” and eatre. o Bill’s Ranch ! p.m. "Mary t Paul Hotel, tirough ’orrest indmill estem: Art from Valley Collections,” Phoenix Art Museum. Friday, “Renaissance,” with Jean-Luc Ponty, Celebrity Theater, 8 p.m. Friday, "Pilgrim’s Progress,” Ted Nichol’s opera group, ASU Music Theater, 8 p.m. Sunday and Monday, “Monty Python and the Holy Grail,” Valley Art Theatre. Tuesday, Emerson, Lake.and Palmer, Coliseum. Tuesday and Wednesday, Truffaut’s “Small Change” and “The Story of Adele H.,” Valley Art Theatre. T uesday and W ednesday, Dan Fogelberg and Fool’s Gold, Gammage Auditorium, 8 p.m. Ongoing, “The Return of Mata Hari,” melodrama at Pinnacle Peak Patio, dinner 6 p.m., curtain 8 p.m. ate P ress ising 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 M EN U 8 6 6 - 1 0 1 0 F or in fo rm a tio n a b o u t: fre e p re g n a n c y te s tin g fre e p ro b le m p re g n a n cy c o u n s e lin g * a b o rtio n re fe rra l EVERY WEEK A LL THE SPAGHETTI Fresh Rolls Are Baked Daily For The Italian House SOUP Homemade Minestrone................... $ .69 APPETIZERS Salad Supreme with a choice of our specially prepared dressings. Italian House Blend, Blue Cheese, Thousand Island. Small..... ........... .74 Large ................... 1.38 Garlic Bread .......... .45 ITALIAN SANDWICHES For A Warming Treat Meatball .......................................... Italian Sausage ............ P a s tr a m i............... ...................... Italian Beef................... .............. . Steak Bits with onions, tomatoes. and cheese ................................... Vegetarian Delight Assorted Cheeses . . . . ; ................ hotpT i DSHES Spaghetti with Sugo Italian« Spaghetti with Meatballs Spaghetti with Sausages Baked Ziti A1 Forno t I H i l l I I f I tL . | 1-59 1.69 1.89 1-89 BAMBINO PLATES A For children under 12 J JtBKk I spaghetti With Sausage r u Spumoni . DESSERTS . . ........... 35 Tortoni ............................ .35 ' eEVERAd« | 5 &. 1.89 1.59 Fruit Punch. . . . . . . . . ...20 35 Pepsi, Diet Pepsi. Teem ., .20 &.35 SANDWICH DELIGHTS 159 1-59 1.59 159 (Combination of A ll Subs) ................... 1 .6 9 A ll submarines deliciously and completelycovered with tomatoes, onions, lettuce, and Italian House Blend Dressing. ^ ■=2 Coors or Budweiser Wines TP I I Special attention given to all phone-in orders. f l . j K g D C D P P R s f lN ■ C ll S A U S A G |S L I I ■■ OR M EATBALLS 2 5 « ! EXTRA PER ORDER J * HAPPY HOURS: 2-5 & 10-12 daily U I PITCHERS *1.00 C00RS & BUD 1035 S. RURAL SIDE DISHES Meatballs ......................... ............... . , .60 Sausages... ; . . . . . . . . . .75 I Spaghetti with Sugo Italiano .69 Spaghetti with Meatball.........................94 Parminiana $.23 extra Ham and . . . . ........................ Salami a n d ....................................... Capocollo a n d .............. Mortadelio and ........... Antipasto Hero .......$1.09 ....... 1.59 1.99 . 1.99 Above Orders Served with Garlii: Bread Salad served with pasta.. $.2J Your choice of American. Provolone, or Mozzarella cheese. C a ll SIGMA SPAGHETTI WEDNESDAY PARKING IN REAR r, Augst 4-10 utn!' 29« * } # Q A JLf%£L 7 0 0 * 4 0 1 1 0 ,iw'iinii*«i.iiu»iiii«ier»iiuiiime«ri'»i iiiimiiMmniiiiii i m...... " '"i t — ; Hours: 11-12a.m . Mon. thru Thurs. 11-1 a.m. Fri. and Sat. Closed Sundays Page 12 Summer State Press August 4, 1977 P ro f savors law career, b u t w ithout client hassles By Chet Barfield Why would a successful attorney give up a highpaying career in private practice to become a law professor at ASU? “In the end, your clients will drive you crazy. They can be very demanding,’’ said William Canby, an ASU law professor who recently gained national attention by successfully arguing a case in the U.S. Supreme Court that lifted the ban on lawyer advertising. Canby said he enjoys teaching, even though it pays less, because he is interested in law as a “discipline to solve in­ tellectual problems.” “ S tudents are more u n d e r s t a n d i n g ( th a n clients),” he said. “They don’t call you up in the middle of the night to ask you a question.” Canby said he likes having some time to him­ self, and teaching presents those opportunities. “In private practice if you’re successful, you’re often too busy to think,” he said. Canby assumed his position at ASU 10 years ago after working on Vice President Walter Mondale’s 1966 S enate campaign. Mondale is Canby’s brotherin-law. He admitted at times it is “inconvenient” being the vice president’s brother-inlaw, but for the most part they are like any other family. After graduating from law school in Minnesota in 1956, Canby spent two years as an Air Force Judge Advocate. He then worked as a law clerk for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Charles Whittaker for one year before practicing from 1959 to 1962 as a private attorney in St. Paul. Canby joined the Peace Corps in 1962, and spent the next four years in Africa. Canby and his family were living in Uganda when Idi Amin’s rebel forces over­ th rew a Ugandan dic­ tatorship. Canby said the people of U ganda re sp o n d ed favorably to Amin and his troops, and initially he was a SÉmm r S T A B LE 27*6-5862 ♦ B AR 276-0824 f ALL WESTERN STABLES SCORPION GULCH BAR < ♦ ♦ « ♦ At The Entrance to South Mountain Park The Bar and Stables on the Right ♦ ♦ ♦ GUIDED EVENING RIDES (2-3 hrs.) ONLY $5 PER PERSON ♦ ♦ ♦ A ls o H a y rld e s , C o o k o u ts , P riv a te P a rtie s , P a tio P arties J 74c Sye (face P “iace, William Canby very benevolent leader. Canby said he accepted th e invitation to ASU because the law school just had been born. “I liked the idea of getting in on the ‘ground floor’ of a new institution. You don’t g et a chance to s ta rt something new very often,” he said. He also said he had no qualms about leaving chilly Minnesota for the desert climate of Arizona. “T hat warm African weather spoiled me,” he said. One of Canby’s chief concerns has been the protection of the First Amendment of the Con­ stitution. His most prominent case began last year when he was approached by two former students — attorneys John Bates and Van O’Steen — and asked to represent them in challenging the 69-yearold ban on legal advertising. For 10 years, Canby had set his legal practice aside except for occasionally acting as a consultant for several Valley lawyers. Bates and O’Steen had tested the ban last year by placing an ad in, the Arizona Republic detailing low fees for standard legal services such as divorces, wills and bankruptcies. But a fte r hearing arguments such advertising would lead to quackery and deception in th e legal profession, the Arizona Supreme Court upheld the ban. Canby took the case to the U.S. Supreme Court in January, arguing that legal advertising was protected by the First Amendment. A fter 16 months of fighting, Canby won the case when the Court ruled in two attorney’s favor in June. Canby admits it may seem peculiar to people when they first see legal ads. “The public will have to get used to it. They already are used to seeing other forms of advertising,” he said. Canby said he believes legal ads will be accepted by the public because “most people don’t draw a line between lawyers and other I Ed & Gloria Simkins A COMPLETE LINE OF UNFINISHED STATUARY CUSTOM FINISHING AVAILABLE Sign Up for Tole Classes Now! 3400 S. MILL — DANELLE PLAZA C O R N ER SO UTHERN & M ILL 966-7702 •Christian Dior •Avant-Garde •S ilhouette •Yves Saint-Laurent •O scar De La Renta • Diane Von Furstenberg E y e w a r e F o r T h e E n t ir e F a m i l y a t R e a s o n a b le P r ic e s •Prescriptions Filled •Lenses Duplicated • Frames Repaired •Contact Lenses Soft & Hard »Contacts Polished fW 3218 S. Mill Ave. Smitty’s Shopping Center Tempe ' 967-3075 continued page 14 r " v7-ra 7 la u n d r y & 21st CENTURY F0T0 B R IN G T H IS A D A N D R E C E IV E 1 FREE W A S H ! (Offer Expires 8 /1 0 /7 7 ) T h a t P la s te r P la c e F a s h io n Eyew ear (8-6 M on.-S at. only) WE'LL WASH, DRY & FOLD YOUR P A Y FOR LAUNDRY - T H E M A C H I N E S ! j u s t 903 E. LEMON (Just East of Rural Across from ASU) Hours: 8-6 M on.-Sat. (attendant on duty) LAUNDRO M AT O rE N 8-11, 7 DAYS A WEEK WNpwnp 968-5291 ■ H I August 4, 1977 Summer State Press Page 13 M o re a b o u t J A C K 'S China's ex-Red Guards c o n tin u e d fro m p a g e 9 paying jobs. Nearly all are full-tim e or p art-tim e students. Their teachers say these Chinese immigrants ap­ proach education more aggressively than those from Hong Kong or Taiwan. “The ones from China are more systematic about how they learn,” says Wayne W ang, education coor­ dinator at the Chinatown R esources D evelopm ent C enter. “ They have a tendency to be more clear about their motives for learning English.” “They’re more inquisitive and less accepting of simple answers to their questions — they’re always asking, ‘Why?’” A former Red Guard who ta k es au to mechanics courses at a junior college in Alameda goes to class every day with a list of questions about his work — detailed points he insists on un­ derstanding thoroughly. He is puzzled by the absence of enthusiasm and the lacka­ daisical approach of some of his classmates toward their studies. “What I fear most,” he said, “is wasting my time — not learning something new each day.” Most of the Red Guard im m igrants 1 live in Chinatown, which, they say, cushioned their transition to American society. But many are anxious to get out of Chinatown and away from the Chinese living there. “I think our experience of living in this world is deeper than the American-born Chinese,” says Sally Low, a 26-year-old accountant at the Bank of America who has lived in San Francisco two years. She keeps a onebedroom apartment a mile 9 0 S E. L E M O N APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE from Chinatown with her Hours: (E a s t o f R u ral R o a d ) two brothers and a sister — 966-1391 8:30 - 5:30 Tue. thru Sat. all of whom swam away from China. “We’ve had a big change in our lives,” she says. — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS - APARTMENTS “Everything in their lives (0 Ihas been smooth.” z “Generally they think LU freedom here is really good s I— stuff,” says an American- oc < born Chinese social worker CL in C hinatow n. “Their < concept of freedom is based on the seeming availability (0 Iof education. Many came z Ui here because they saw no future in China where they oc weren’t able to pursue their < a interests.” < to The former Red Guards I especially are fascinated to > I with American concepts of z •o > civil liberties, individual UI 3D freedom and the structure of the legal system. oc m z One Red Guard, sensitive h■D that after the Cultural Z > Revolution the average UI 3D H person was at the mercy of z m whatever forces gained ■o > 30 H 2 m W O M EN’S SWIMWEAR: 50% OFF CO Head, Jer Sea, Elisabeth Stewart and Ego. Surfline Hawaii. m Head, Loomtogs, Rally Rags, SergioTachini. 2 z H TENNIS ACCESSORIES: 50% OFF Pantys, Hals, Wristbands, etc. TENNIS BALLS: $ 2 .2 5 /c a n m Hiking boots: 50% off (limited selection), sm Alpenlite packs: 40% off (3 only). North Face Dandelion 3-man tents: 25% off (3 only) CO WATERSKI: UP TO 40% OFF I ‘> TJ > 30 966-4713 W O M EN’S TENNIS SKIRTS, DRESSES, TOPS, SHORTS ETC.: 50% OFF > ■o > z H TEMPE - NEAR ASU MEN’S SWIMWEAR: 40% OFF > u > 30 H 30 910 E. LEMON TENNIS A N D RUNNING SHOES: 50% OFF Puma, Tiger, Head, Kepa, Dunlop, Adidas. Great selection of ladies a nd youth sizes... men's selection not total. z CO SAN MIGUEL Tony Trabert. Yonex, Yamaha, PDP, Wilson, Slazenger, Dunlop. Kennedy, Fisher a n d Sjoaulding. m z H CO Spaulding, bancroft. BACKPACK GEAR: UP TO 50% OFF EP Com p 1:40% off, EP Super II: 30% off Western Wood Doubles: 40% off, all other skis: 25% off. American Cup waterski vests: reg. $29.95 now $18.95 # S K I H A U S A C T IO N S P O R T S IN D IA N SCHOOL STORE ONLY! 2304 E. Indian School Rd. — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS — APARTMENTS IWIRfimUiMiUll—WRI*1*W iM .?»■ - WMMIinHÍ«Iink WMI ITTfTWnr»1KWJTpili1WWg*iWi^lltWW*iY^ 'j T 1■"■■■■"■I ■■■■"■■''■nmunntnc i Page 16 Summer State Press August 4, 1977______________ _____________ ___________ _ ATTENDANCE STATISTICS, GAMMAGE AUDITORIUM 1976-77 Season, with Activity Center Addendum Celebrity Series, 5 events Total attendance--------------12,229 Average attendance per e v e n t ........ ............ 2,446 Percentage increase of average attendance over 1975-76 season............ 15% Best attended event: San Francisco Ballet’s “Romeo and Juliet” .............. 2,893 Fine Arts Series, 5 events Total attendance.................. ........ ....... . • .11,348 Average attendance per event.......... ........................ 2,270 Percentage increase of average attendance.......... 2 V2 % Best attended event: “A Little Niaht Music.” ........ 2,824 Orchestral Series, 6 events Total attendance......................................................... 8,343 Average attendance per event............ ..................... 1.391 Percentage i ncrease of average attendance .......... 0 % Best attended event: Eugene Ormandy’s Philadelphia Orchestra, June 4 performance........ 2,082 M o re about G am m age continued from page 2 total authority over which groups are booked and their funding. Still, . Sumners said, Kigin works in a spirit of complete cooperation with the Gammage staff. The selection of e n ­ te rta in e rs to play th e Gammage summer stage, according to Sumners, has a lot to do with budget and with summer availability. Very few choose to tour in the summer, or if they do, they usually tour to a cooler climate than central Arizona provides. The booking philosophy for summer is based on an assessment of the summer student population which Sumners figures to be about four years older on the average than the student population during the regular academic year. That puts them, he said, in their mid-20’s. (Ed Hunter said th a t by his visual assessment 65 per cent of regular attendees are over 45 years of age.) Sumners is well aware the summer audience “wants to be entertained” but that a “young audience wants all kinds of entertainment. They do not want to be relegated to rock music alone.” He continued, ‘There wfere 2,200 studepts for Carlos Montoya, for instance. They want to see dance,’‘everything.” When Gammage books ethnic dance, like th e M a s s e n k o f f co m p an y , Sumners is banking on ethnic identity to bring in audiences. “We see grand­ p a re n ts bringing in grandchildren, to show them that this is how it was.” Gammage sees the 18 per cent increase as a clear indication of the success of the summer series. “Six or seven years ago,” Sumners said, w ith probable hyperbole, “there could be 27 people in an audience. A couple of years ago, 1,000 people was fantastic. Now if we get that, we ask what’s the m atter.” W m- Everyone’s Talking About Conserving Energy. How Abont Your Dance Series, 5 events Total attendance............ ....... ....................................7,421 Averiage attendance per event.......... ....................... 1.484 Percentage increase of average attendance............. 23% Best attended event: San Francisco Ballet's “Romeo and Juliet” ...................... 2,957 Documentary Film Series, 5 events Total attendance....................................................... .6,258 Average attendance per event.................. ............ 1,282 Percentage increase of average attendance.............71 % Best attended event: “The Story of the Grand Canyon” . .......................... .................... • .1,936 Theater Series, 4 events Total attendance.........................................................6,084 Average attendance per event........ ............ 1,521 Percentage increase of average attendance...............0% Best attended ever t: “A Little Night Music” .......... 2,001 Activity Center Events, figures not included in Gammage totals. The Eagles........ .......... 13,453 Eric Clapton and Charlie D an iels.............................6j669 Am erica........ ............................ .................... • ■^4,157 Elvis Presley.......................................... 13,949 ZZTop ......... 9,182 Led Zeppelin (1977-78 fiscal year) ......................... 13,363 ♦ * * * * * •5 * * * * * * i ♦ * * * * +■ * * ♦ I ♦ * * * * ♦ ♦ * * ♦ * ♦ ♦ * * 24 HOURSERVICE FO U K X WAYS O C E A N CAR W A S H 28 West University 9 6 7 -3 5 2 4 in t e r n a t io n a l CARWASH ASSOCIATION 7 :3 0 .am • 6 :3 0 pm MU DRSJt LUiftV'S.N F ixest ttàmes iKi casvw- wea ft. : * * * * * * * * * * ** * * T£/0 SWfcTWf LA&ortA AtiiOAS wtUTf STAC» uwt fctóSU-L (jSm VtoftT* Svs 4 ífcRTÍ I LO C K AND S A F I S E R V IC E * * * + *• * * * +. * * * * * * + * * * * + * * * * * 1035 W. UNIVERSITY TEMPE HOURS: M on. thru Fri. 8:30-5:30 Sat. 9:00-1:00 Closed Sundays We can save you a lot of elbow grease by washing your car the professional way. Save oh water, too. Our modern, automatic equipment will put a smile on your car. 966-4505 n jfe e fö itii sporting goods 968-7725 Tempe Center - University and Mili Ave. Mon. - Fri. 9-9, Sat. 9-6, Sun. 10-5 ................................ .. GOT ANY DYNAMIC, l EXCITING PLANS FOR THE NEXT COUPLE OF YEARS? BUY ANY LARGE PIZZA AND GET *2.00 OFF O ffe r good w ith cou p o n o n ly thru 8 /1 0 /7 7 . MONDAY IS 5 - 8 PM H A L F - P R I C E IM IT E A n y P iz z a Y* O f f 5 - 8 PM TUESDAY IS WE DO. P €A C € ► a m LETS TALK ABOUT ASSIGNMENTS BEGINNING THIS FALL IN OVER 60 CQUNTRIES., Room 144, Dlvision of Agriculture, 1-5 p.m. m i "1 I I I I I SAVE $$$ on yóur favorite Pizza. F A M I L Y IM IT E I WEDNESDAY IS | All You Can Eat I- Thin ’N Crispy Med. . . .*3.49 *2.44 Large . . *4.49 *3.44 M U N C H IE N IT E 1 .5 0 955 E. University 968-3989 MVMfVMMMMmM ... mml— j I I _■ I (Does not include | tax or drink.) | UNIVERSITY PIZZA HUT »mrnmmimmmamm I -I Thick ’N Chewy 9 - 11:30 PM P fe Z J* I -I I I ^ August 4,1977 Summer State Press Page 17 More about Faculty publications draw graduates Black’s play “And They Used back, “Maiden’s” movie rights graduate students from across t6 Star in Movies” uses Walt were bought by Lili Tomlin, who the country. And it may be one of As for fiction, it “more easily their books, a new book from a possesses the quality of being Disney’s Mickey and Minnie wanted, according to Fisher, to play the 30-year-old virgin who is Mouse as main characters. translated into television and film” to reach a wider than Harold Pinter wanted to direct it the novel’s central character. normal market. “A successful in London (but didn't), and it Director Robert Altman was also novel,” Fisher says, “has to have may be directed in Los Angeles interested in the film rights. Since the rest of the literature a combination of eternity and next year by Ellis Miller. Miller faculty invests its time in the did the movie version of Carson currency w ith th e greater McCullers’ “The Heart is a investigation of literary works, emphasis on currency.” one might assume that they My sense of the matter is that Lonely Hunter.” might be involved in similar most writers in the university Despite the fact that com­ writing in order to have first aim for the eternal, with only mercial success means that a enough currency in a work to aid work is widely read, even with hand knowledge of the making of in setting a scene or establishing fiction, Fisher said, it “is literary art. Fisher would not say that they a character. As for their goals, sometimes a danger or a liability. are encouraged to do fictive they hope for appreciation by Eric Segal may well have gotten literary critics and ultimately for tenure (at Yale, where he was a writing, but only that “they are the kind of academic con­ professor of Classics) had it not not discouraged” from doing so. sumption that will allow their been for the fantastic commercial It is widely known, however, works to be studied in univer­ success of ‘Love Story.’ ” During that they are encouraged to do scholarly writing on the literary sities 30 years hence. 1976-77, Segal was a visiting C onsidering th is, F isher professor at two universities, works of others. It isn’t likely then that the hesitated to “speak regarding Dartmouth and the University of beaches will be filled with people these men’s values.” But he Tel Aviv. reading a paperback written by added that “Erno, Black and one of our professors. The The closest anyone directly Kaplan have all published with faculty is probably not aiming for connected with ASU has come to major publishing houses in the that market. Still some of us may United States or abroad. And popular success is Cynthia read them, see them on the Buchannan, an English major while Erno has had a work stage, even on television. But picked up for television here who graduated in the late their .works will get their best ’60s. Her novel “Maiden” is “a production and Black has had one readings from colleagues and play recen tly produced in satirical depiction .of the students of literature, some here pleasures of the LA singles Lopdon, none of them has had and some across the nation in the kind of success that a motion scene.” Out in hardback and paper­ other universities. picture production would bring.” The creative writing program at ASU has grown its roots in a time when it is bound to flourish. Its faculty currently draws continued from page 12 Fogelberg generation of new writers, thait will be read both by professors and us faceless thousands. tperform Contemporary pop artist Dan Fogelberg and his band, Fools Gold, will perform in tw o concerts at Gammage Auditorium next week. The programs are scheduled a t 8 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday. Son of a bandleader father and singer mother,' Fogelberg was born in Peoria, HI., and started playing in bands while still in grade school. He was studying painting at the University of Illinois when he realized music was his chief interest. “Home-Free,” his first album, was recorded and produced in Nashville. A fter his second release, “Souvenirs,” he sold his Tennessee farm and moved to the mountains near Boulder, Col., where he paints, does photography and composes classical music when not touring with Fools Gold or recording. Tickets are on sale at the Gammage box office and Diamond’s Select-A-Seat outlets. The Tuesday concert virtually is sold out but plenty of good seats remain for the Wednesday program. E uphoria L eath er CUSTOM LEA THER WORKS sandals, clogs, belts, purses, garments 20% O FF ON A l l SAN D ALS WITH A N Y ASU I.D. OFFER GOOD THRU AUGUST 11, 1977 Bank Am eaicud 968-4812 407 MILL AVE. SCHOOL DAZED? T a k e a b re a k a l B o n an za. Sirlo in “ " ’ ^ Steak Dinner Dan Fogelberg NATURAL FOODS CO-OP OPEN TO THE ' PUBLIC 968-4831 38 E. 5th Tempe Hours: Mon. - Fri. 10-7 Sat. 9 -6 Sirloin Steak Dinner . . tender sirloin done to a perfect turn. $069 Hi• with coupon con Good thru Aug. 31,1977 f Bonanza ^ Burger Platter . . . world’s favorite cooked the Bonanza way. 99 with coupon Good thru Aug. 31,1977 Tempo Only j Both served with ail the extras... baked or French Fried potatoes, Texas Toast, and crisp, green salad from our salad bar. Clip a coupon and come on down! Good thru Aug. 31, 1977 3339 South Rural Road Tempo mum ii«iniiiiwini ea»,—M M'«».W W W FW W ÜH mwnUt Page 18 Summer State Press August 4, 1977 by Garry Trudeau DOONESBURY : WELL, MARX,EVER SINCE I WAS A u m e TYKE, I HAVE FOUND THE SENSATION OF OXYGENAND SUGAR DEPLETION A PLEASUR­ ABLE ONEI ONE DRY I JUSTDE­ CIDED TO SHARE THAT WITH PEO~ \ yZ ^R L E ! MUSS, IN THE LAST TEAR, YOU'MS BECOME ONE OF THE NATIONS LEADING ADVOCATES OF RECREATIONAL RUNNING! WHY IS TH IS? / GOOD EVW HG , BOVS AND GULLS! 'M AM O O S’ M m HO Z, AND I'M TALKING U fTH M A. 1 MUSS POTASH, AUTHOR OF THE 1 RUNMNG CULT CLASSIC, 'JO G G E R A G O N IS T E S ’ i m AND r fs BEEN BOUousts see SIN C E! M oooeeeeooooeoooooo o & o o o s © ö o e o o a s e o ö o o o c c e c a 9T(ie Qodden cAge YEAH. I GUESS I ju s t s p u c k A NERVE. FINE GREEK-AMERICAN CUISINE § Your Hosts — Peter Reveliotis • Mike Manos AUTHENTIC GREEK COOKING f— lì Q lP S Q ASICE FROM CONDITIONING THE ALL-IMPORTANT CARDIOVASCULAR. 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Call John Stlckelman, 966-4909. Ken Shook Realtor, 968-3636. . 8/11 UNMARRIED COUPLES who live together wanted to Interview for new publication. Call 9567110. Ask for Elizabeth. 8 /4 V i PRICE SALE — Ladles' sandals. Back Door Shoe Shop. 707 South Forest, Temps. 966-1772. 8/11 ENERGETIC, RELIABLE teenager will babysit your house, wash your car, run your dog, manicure your lawn, whatever. ReferendW Tad, 986-3328 or 9667572. FREE ENERGY: Collect and uee the Free Energy that we have a ll around ue with a Pyramid Energy KH from Pyramid Pioneers of Az. Stop by and see how you can get this Free Energy. 1056 West University Drive, Tempe, A Z 86281.966-5208. 8/11 HORSEBACK RIDING. 13 par hour. Morn­ ings and svsnlnga. Hayrtdee, 82 par person. Tempe Stables. 1104 W eal 1st Street, 9666658. 6/11 ir Room m ate W anted ★ Typing ALTERNATIVE LIFESTYLE for you? PreMar experiment discussion group. If inter­ ested, call 276-1552. 8/11 * 8/11 V FAST, ACCURATE TYPING. 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W rite American Service, 8360 Park Lane, Suite 269, Dallas, Tx 7524l. 8/11 FAST, ACCURATE Typing on IBM correct­ ing Selectric. Former legal secretary, 7 years experience. Heidi, 8365651. 8/11 'A HUMAN GENETICS tutor mediately. Call 834-8321. needed im­ 6 /4 ★ R e e l E state ROOMMATES CAN QUALIFY! You don't have to be married to enjoy tax-investment benefits and good living at Casitas Tempe. Grab your roommate and see the beautiful 2 and 3 bedroom minimum maintenance town houses we offer only a m ile from the ASU campus. Each Casitas Tempe townhouse In­ cludes special security features, car­ peting, draperies, refrigeration, dish­ washer, energy saving construction, covered parking, pool, clubhouse. Buy before September 1st and we’ll throw in a refrigerator. From $29,750. Phone 894-1959 or 956-8110, then see THE CLOSEST NEW HOMES TO ASU Casitas Tempe at University and McClintock in Tempe. gw * Announcem ents_______ ALTERNATIVE LIFESTYLE for you? PreMar experiment discussion group. If inter­ ested, call 2761552. 8/11 TYPING MANUSCRIPTS, term papers, etc. Professional secretary, accurate, spelling corrected, edited, reasonable rates. 9 4 6 9207. 8/11 WESTERN SECRETARIAL SERVICES — Special rates for ASU community on term papers, manuscripts, resumes, disserta­ tions, and theses. 55 cants per page. No extra lor footnotes or setup. IBM Select rlc II with variable type styles. Close to campus. 9665159. 8/11 ★ S ervices ROCKY MOUNTAIN EOTTING: Disserta­ tions, theses, papers for publication. 9662274 ,96 6 03 1 2 . 8/11 TOUGH HOUSEHOLD chores? Reliable, energetic teenager will do any kind of work. References. Experienced. Call Ted, 9 6 6 3328 or 9667572. 8/11 WEDDING. SONGS WITH GUITAR Erich Sylvester Call for song list. 943-7229 973-1655 (day) 8/ 11. (night) August 4, 1977 Summer State Press Page 19 African coffee: Bitter Classic opera to be staged in music hall “Pilgrim’s Progress,” an Based on John Bunyan’s Seminary in Portland, Ore. is sponsored original opera by Ted classic work of the same taste fo r better price Nichols that premiered last name, the fully staged and byThelocalprogram churches. General By Charles Ebel Pacific N ew s Service If today’s skyscraper coffee prices are driving you to instant in­ stead of fresh-brewed, chances are the South American accent to your morning cup has turned to a slightly bitter aftertaste — thankc to the African robusta bean. And, if Americans grow accustomed to African coffees and prompt increased planting there, the result could be a coffee glut by the early 1980’s that would send prices plummeting to record lows. With coffee giant Brazil’s exports falling — and world prices still at near-record levels — African coffee producers are taking up the slack. Africa’s most commonly grown coffee, robusta, is the cheap, naturally harsh variety used largely in the making of instant coffees. While it is a hardier plant that yields more beans than most South African varieties, robusta also lacks the familiar delicacy of Brazil’s arabica bean. _ Instant coffee now accounts for about half of all sales in Britain and North America. And African robustas are used more and more as extenders in the less expensive roasted blends, replacing the onceplentiful arabicas, which were devastated by a killer frost in Brazil. U .S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) statistics show robusta imports rose from 12 to 32 per cent between 1960 and 1974 — the bulk coming from Africa and Asia. At the same time, Africa’s share of the total U.S. coffee market rose to 33 per cent, equal to Brazil’s output at its peak. And while Brazilian coffee production has slipped from over 25 million bags in 1972 to 9.5 million last year, Africa’s output has held relatively steady around 19 million bags —; despite numerous ob­ stacles encountered in the past three seasons. In Angola, once the world’s third largest exporter behind Brazil and Colombia, the Portuguese exodus and the ensuing civil war have cut production by as much as 75 per cent. Tanzania — a producer of fine arabicas as well as robustas — has suffered declining yields since' 1974 due to poor weather. Uganda has been plagued with smuggling. And Ethiopia, the birth­ place of coffee, has been forced to watch production drop because its coffee-growing provinces are the scenes of serious guerrilla in­ surrections. Yet despite these setbacks, prices have been so good that most exporting countries have still enjoyed increased earnings. The Ivory Coast — now the world’s third largest exporter — and Cameroon are setting the pace. Further incentive for stepping up production is that all producing countries are currently engaged in competition to determine their share of the world market in the event of a price plunge. Under the International Coffee Agreement (signed by all major producers and consumers), export quotas will be imposed on producers if prices fall to an unsatisfactory level. Since this mechanism doesn’t take effect until 1979, the quotas will be based upon a country’s export performance during this interim period. But there are pitfalls as well in the world coffee market that have led many African countries to hesitate about putting their coffee production into full gear . There is now massive replanting under way in Brazil. Since it takes at least three years for newly planted coffee trees to mature and bear fruit, Brazilian production is expected to return to normal levels by 1980. That increase in supply alone could bring coffee prices down to li975 levels. If all producing countries stepped up their coffee acreage, however, 1980 could bring an enormous coffee glut that would trigger an even steeper drop in prices — especially if sizeable numbers of Western consumers had already turned away from coffee for lower-price«! alternatives. There may be an even bigger catch, however. According to a recent USDA study, robusta coffee has not gone over well with American consumers. The report alleges, in fact, the increased use of robustas may account for much of the long-term 40 per cent decline in American per capita consumption of coffee since the end of World War II. May in Helsinki, Finland, will be presented at 8 p.m. F rid ay , in th e Music Theatre. costumed opera will be admission tickets, priced at performed by a 27-member $2, may be reserved by company from the Western calling English professor Conservative B a p t i s t D.G. Kehl, 948-1885. 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