t ------------------ 2 rapists attack three ASU coeds in Sin City area V________ f r id a y October 14,1977 Arizona State University Voi. 60, No. 28 By Chet Barfield ' Tempe police are searching for two suspects ' who raped two ASU students and attempted to rape a third in the past three weeks in the Stn City area. On Sept. 28,a 22-year-old woman was raped at 1:20 a.m. as she walked along Stanley Place between Orange and Lemon Streets. Two law students, ages 22 and 23, were assaulted by the same two men at 2:55 a.m. Oct. 5. Police said the two women had been up late studying and decided to get something to eat at Carrows Restaurant, 1215 E. Apache Blvd. On the way back to their Sin City apart­ ment, the women cut across an empty lot at Dorsey Lane and Apache Boulevard. Police said the assault took place in the northeast corner of the lot. The 22-year-old woman was raped, but her 23-year-old friend escaped by talking her assailant out of raping her, police said. Police are looking for two white men in their *early 20's. One is approximately 5-foot, seveninches tall, and weighs 150 pounds. He has brown hair, and is clean-shaven. Both at tackers wore dark blue or black ski hats, blue-denim jeans and no shirts or shoes in each attack. Police said they have an artist's composite sketches of the attackers given by the victims. They believe the men live in the Sin City area. stale press in s id e Gammage spends $100,000 ....... 6 14-year-old beats ol ladies......... 8 Collage..................................... 17 Athletes kill birds ..................... 20 Tempe, Arizona Castle H o t S prings o ff lim its Resort plans exclude students By Mary Connell Plans for a $1 million resort donated to the University earlier this year fail to include students, the chairman of the ASU Foundation said Thursday. Castle Hot Springs is owned by the foundation, a corporation that accepts gifts for the University. “I don’t think use of the facility ever has been discussed by the foundation board,” Allen Rosenberg said. The facility opened for University use Oct. 1. “The foundation is a non-profit organization,” Rosenberg said. “In order to maintain that status, groups using the resort have to be sponsored by the University.” If any ASU members are eligible to use Castle Hot Springs, students should not be excluded, Dave Crowley, Associated Students vice-president, said. “I am disturbed that they (foundation members) have not considered students up until this point,” he said. Rosenberg said he would include the issue on the agenda of the next foundation board meeting. The famed 81-year-old resort, located 60 miles north­ west of Phoenix, was given to the foundation in February by Dr. Mae Sue Talley for use as a con­ ference-seminar center. The resort was damaged partially by fire late last year and was closed to the public. Already existing facilities are being remodeled to replace the building destroyed in the blaze that housed the kitchen and dining room, Rosenberg said. “We’re making the dining room big enough to ac­ commodate from 50 to 60 people,” he said. “That will be the maximum number until new facilities can be added.” Rosenberg added a liquor license has been purchased for the resort. “We can’t very well hold seminars without cocktails,” he said. If conferences scheduled at Castle Hot Springs don’t generate enough money to make the resort selfsufficient, the foundation may sell it, Rosenberg said. “When it was first contributed, the immediate thought came up that we could sell it,” he said. “If it isn’t successful, we still may end up selling it. “Some of us thought we ought to give it about two years,” he added. “I think it will succeed. I have a strong feeling about it.” ASU has needed a facility for seminars for a long time, Rosenberg said. “Castle Hot Springs is such a beautiful setting. It will provide for a good exchange of ideas with no in­ terruptions,” he said. “It's only 60 miles away,” he added, “But it’s all by itself —just like it was 1,000 miles away.” The first ASU-sponsored conference at Castle Hot Springs is scheduled for next weekend by the Arizona Association of Teacher Educators. Three natural pools and a swimming pool fed by four natural hot springs gave the resort its name. The resort also sports tennis courts, a golf course and miles of hiking trails. Castle Hot Springs served as a weekend get-away for over half a century for such prestigious visitors as Presidents Teddy Roosevelt and John Kennedy, the Vanderbilts, Marilyn Monroe and the Rockefellers. Almost all traces of the 1976 fire are gone, said Kathryn Gammage, the ASU director for gifts and endowments. “Most of the rubble has been cleared away,” she said. “The beautiful palm trees that were so badly burned are greening up — growing beautifully.” Knee deep Piling up palm tree leaves and branches in front of the Administration Building, ASU employee Pete Banda isn’t trying to block en­ trance to the building. Ban­ da and others have been out in force pruning and thinning out trees and spreading fertilizer prepar­ ing for the winter. [State Press staff photo by Brian Brainerd] Page 2 State Press October 14, 1977 ECO N O M Y FURNITURE In the new s brief Ik 'THE WORKING MAN'S FRIEND" Good Furniture for Lass from the A sso cia te d Press government regained control of the Jalisco state peniten­ WASHINGTON — The best tiary Wednesday after a twoway to guard against abuse of day uprising in which the the grand jury system is to rebels reportedly killed 14 require complete transcripts trustees who the rebels of arguments made to the charged had beaten and juries and to put them under threatened other prisoners. court supervision, Arizona At­ “Things are returning to nor­ torney General Bruce Babbitt mal,” said Warden Pedro said Thursday. He said de­ Parra after guards armed with tailed rules created by courts nightsticks returned to the would be superior to legisla­ cellblocks. He did not indicate tion “freezing detailed grand whether any action would be jury procedures into statutory taken against the 400 rebels. ABORTION DISPUTES form,” as proposals now be­ DELAYED fore Congress would do. WASHINGTON — Congress CARTER ACCESSES gave itself more time Thurs­ STEEL PROFITS WASHINGTON — President day to resolve lengthy dis­ Carter, calling sagging steel putes over abortion and for­ profits “a long-standing, eign aid without cutting off chronic problem,” said Thurs­ benefits for welfare recipients day that he might negotiate and paychecks for thousands with other nations to decrease of federal workers. The House their exports to the United and Senate, moving quickly, States but added that such each passed by voice vote a action alone will solve nothing continuing resolution to pro­ and might hurt consumers. vide salaries and operating Carter gave his assessment at money through Oct. 31 for the a nationally televised news departments of Labor and conference before meeting Health, Education and Wel­ with members of Congress, fare and related agencies. AMERICANS WIN NOBEL steel executives, union PRIZE leaders and representatives of environmental and consumer STOCKHOLM — Three groups to discuss the in­ Americans, pioneers in the dustry’s flagging sales and closing plants. The steel in­ dustry is pleading for govern­ ment protection against im­ ports. But Carter and his top advisers are opposed to steel quotas. BABBITT ASKS FOR JURY GUARD study of hormones and their effects on the human body, won the 1977 Nobel prize for medicine Thursday. The award went to Drs. Rosalyn Yalow, Roger Guillermin and Andrew Schally, and brought to five the number of Ameri­ can prize winners in this year’s competition so far. The prize for economics will be announced Friday. McC a r t h y Sofa & Choir Odd Lamps 4'Drower Chest 5-Pc Bedroom 139.95 9.95 39.95 159.95 Set of Tables ( 1 end. 1 coffee) 39.95 Sofa 1 lovweot (Herculon or Velvet) Captain's Bed 399.95 119.95 Comer Units Swivel Reckon Racknars from 199.95 99.95 39.95 Box Spring & Mattress (Twin or Full) 49.95 Picture s .M Bunk Beds. complete Bar Stools 3RMS. FURN. 399* 20°°Mo. 579 N. Arizona Ave. Chandler 963-1276 m a y r u n a g a in PROVIDENCE, R.l. — Former Minnesota Senator Eugene McCarthy says he may run as an independent candidate for president in 1980 if federal election spend­ ing laws are changed. In a speech Wednesday night at Brown University, McCarthy, who ran for president in 1968 and 1972 as a Democrat and last year as an independent, said he wants to challenge the spending laws. He contends that the laws favor the twoparty system to the detriment of independent candidates. 17 S. Country Club Mom 133-1204 1340 N. Scottt ddi M. Tampa 9*6-2376 .T h e p la c e to e i\ jo y ; Delightful Menu Selections Friday Fish Fries all you can eat Sunday Brunch 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Old Wurlitzer Juke Box dance to oldies & goodies Mighty Satisfyin’ Prices 234 W. University, Tempe 894-9127 S T A T E P R E S S is p u b lish e d by A ri­ zona State U niversity Tuesday through Frid ay during the academ ic year, except h o lid a y s and exam ination periods. Entered a s second c la s s m atter at Tem pe, A Z 85281. O p e n 11 a . m . - l l p .m . 3 a .m . F r id a y & S a tu rd a y Texos Instrum ents FEE SET FOR DAY CARE PHOENIX — Budget plan­ ners for the state Legislature agreed Wednesday to a modi­ fied fee schedule for the state's day care program and said it would seek a $4.3 million emergency appropria­ tion to fund the program. Department of Economic Se­ curity Director John Huerta told the Joint Legislative Budget Committee that the state faces a serious crisis in its free day care program, since enrollment has far sur­ passed expectations. PRISON UPRISE HALTED GUADALAJARA — The Catch the *5.55 . < £ soup or salad buffet, ^ ¡0 ^ potato or rice and hot fresh bread and butter. Eight other scrumptious entrees to choose from at $5.55 .. . Top Sirloin, Shrimp Feast, Filet of Sole, Stuffed Mushrooms, Scallops Mediterranean, Teriyaki Top Sirloin, New York Steak, or Prime Rib . . . The Plankhouse 2350 E. Southern Ave. Tempe Reservations 838-8047 portable electronic calculator ~! I C O ! U * “ ~i “I I I 3 3 C Tl Business A nalyst Tl Business Analyst is a fully-portable, light­ weight, dependable professional calculator pro­ viding direct application to business manage­ ment, insurance, investment, sales/distribution, real estate, banking, accounting and personal uses: Tl B usiness A nalyst rssTi JO ? 0 ] A BUSINESS MANAGEMENT REAL ESTATE Discounted Cash Flows Profit Margin Sinking Funds Depreciation Loans Amortization Mortgages Rent Schedules Profit Margin Property Appreciation INSURANCE Profit Margin Annuities Plan Differences INVESTMENT Bond Analysis Cash Flow Analysis Annuities SALES/DISTRIBUTION Resale Markup Cost/Sell/M argin Installment Loans Percentage BANKING Loans Interest Annuities ACCOUNTING Profit Margin Interest l S i [off] ¿ fig ) g g j P "' - COM PUTE - i l g f e l ÉÊJ1 r r i i x/~ ~ § (J h j rrn n g 1S s n fi? F I fi? » IB ■ » ) B B PERSONAL USES Insurance Savings Accounts Mortgages Rent Schedules Interest Installment Loans Bond Analysis 129.95 19.95 Now Only •3120 UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE Where there are REDUCED PRICES on all T.l. Calculators October 14, 1977 State Press Page 3 Summer's last rites FREE ADMISSION Cindy Sneddon, sophomore marketing major, cools of! in the Ocotillo pool this week. Area pools are becoming considerably less crowded as Arizona’s fall weather brings more comfortable temperatures. [State Press staff pt\oto] FO R THE G R A N D O P E N IN G OF E D U A R D O 'S L O U N G E C r u s a d e r is v o ic e 2155 W. Broadway, Mesa just W. of Dobson a n d le g s fo r p o o r NEW YORK (AP) — Ned Coll spent the summer walking in protest, and now he’s making a fall pilgrimmage. Coll is headed on foot to Washington, where he hopes in 10 days to exhibit his four-foot high placard reading, “Jimmy, Don’t Freeze the Northeast.” Coll, an antipoverty worker in Hartford, Conn., left Hartford Saturday to dramatize the need for federal money to help the poor and elderly heat their homes this winter. Last summer he said he walked the length of Connecticut's coast to demand that private beaches be opened to the public. “In the Northeast we're going into this winter the same way we did the last winter,” the sandy-haired director of the Hartford Revitalization Corps said. “To put the responsibility for meeting the emergency fuel needs of the poor on the states is a domestic farce.” Coll told a news conference at St. Patrick’s Cathedral that he wants to ask Carter for $50 million in emergency fuel money for north­ eastern states. F R ID A Y a n d S A T U R D A Y N IG H T F E A T U R IN G THE LEWIS STOREY GROUP D H AKH 1A production 2163 W. 8th Ave. Mesa • 833-1095 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * SIDEWALK CAFE Open Poster Days Today, Tomorrow & Sunday * * * * * * * BUY A LARGE COKE C h o o se A ny P oster Y ou W ant * * * * * * OPEN: 9 AM-10 PM Monday thru Friday Noon-10 PM Saturday & Sunday * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Page 4 State Press October 14, 1977 r 1 O pinion * J Although I myself do not drink, I always make a point of shaking hands with bartenders whenever I come across them, because their recommendations, voiced at that moment when men's minds are highly receptive to ideas, carry much weight in a community. —Joseph W. Martin Jr. If it seem s like you’ve seen this before, you have. But it’s time again to bring up a sore point — namely, the exclusion of students from the use of the $1 million Castle Hot Springs resort that was donated to the ASU Foundation. ASU has sunk a good deal of money into rebuilding the part of the springs that was gutted by fire, and has even purchased a liquor license for drinks to be served to the big shots who will get to use what belongs to the students. There is not one good reason why ASU students should not be permitted to take the waters that soothed the likes of the Kennedys and Monroes. And there is at least one good reason, off the top pf the head, why they should. (See story p. 1.) The head of thfe foundation has been quoted as saying if the resort cannot be made to pay for itself, then it might be sold. A good way to put some balance in the Hot Springs ac­ count would be to allow the students to use the springs on weekends, and charge them a flat fee for the service. The resort is located in remote mountains on a dirt road, so traffic could be a problem, so why won’t ASU, which owns buses, run a shuttle from say, Lake Pleasant, to the site on Saturdays and Sundays and charge the students who want to use it a day rate? It stinks that students are marked for exclusion. Any comment or suggestions will be appreciated. r /£ T L A K G eR AND I I * U 5 6 £ O O ti' r^ B E T -H e w b e c o H HovM 15 ir DONE? T H A T 'S e * » s v ... South from here — Morrissey/Viso Nicaragua: the beating goes on Half of the children in the country are malnourished and the life expectancy for the whole population is barely 50 years. The Carter A dministration requested more military aid for Nicaragua for fiscal 1978 than had been given in six of the eight years of Nixon-Ford. Latin America provides an excellent example of the Carter Administration's two-faced foreign policy as it relates to human rights. Much has been made of Car­ ter’s initiatives to pressure other governments to allow their citizens freer expression of their human rights. Unfortunately, the press has played up his superficial gestures and failed to inform the public of the cosmetic nature of Carter's “crusade.” The case of aid to Nicaragua is a good illustration of how the Carter approach to human rights in Latin America is substantially no different from traditional U.S. policy in the area. From the middle of the last century until the early 1930s there were 10 major U.S. military interventions in Nicaragua, beginning in 1854 when the town of San Juan del Norte was destroyed to avenge an insult to the American Minister to Nicaragua. In 1910, the United States established political hegemony in the country by means of the Dawson Pact, and economic dominance through the terms of the Know-Castrillo Convention. Many other generous concessions were forced on Nicaragua by the BryanChamorro Treaty. Almost continually from 1912 to 1933, there was a U.S. force of occupation manned by up to 5,000 Marines. It was during this time that the United States aligned itself with the Somoza family. Nicaragua has been under the effective control of the Somoza family, father and sons, since the early '30s. This makes the Somozas the longest ongoing dynasty in Latin America. This jurisdiction has been maintained by violence and terror and includes the systematic use of torture on political prisoners. The instrument of control has been the National Guard, a combination of army and police functions. It has also been the personal army for the Somoza dic­ tatorship since 1932, when the U.S. Marines appointed Gen. Anastasio Somoza (father of the present dictator, Anastasio Somoza Debayle) as first head of the National Guard. Somoza family members alone own 25 percent to 30 percent of all arable land and control large parts of all significant industrial sectors. This distorted economy has resulted in a drastic situation for the rural poor. This group receives less than $50 per capita in a year according to figures of the U.S. Agency for Inter­ national Development (AID). Half of the children in the country are malnourished and life expectancy for the whole population is barely 50 years, This situation has persisted despite large amounts of aid from the US. AID itself admits that this aid has been directed in such a way to that, “Major benefits have generally accrued to a small group of large- and medium-size commercial farmers.” Somoza has received large doses of military aid from the U.S. to repress the discontent generated by an economy that allots 50 percent of private income to the upper 20 percent of the population and 4.3 percent to the bottom 20 percent. Somoza’s corrupt, feudal regime received funding for its National Guard through a special program begun by President Kennedy in 1962 and directed through AID. This program'provided funding for “public safety” to many dictatorhsips in Latin America even though many of the right-wing death squads were composed of offduty policemen who used police equipment and funds to carry out their terror. The Carter Administration requested more military aid for Nicaragua for fiscal 1978 than had been given in six of the eight years of Nixon-Ford. A proposed reduction of $3.1 million in the total package of $4.3 million almost cleared Congress when the Nicaraguan lobby marshaled an intensive campaign against it, and the State Department abandoned its neutral stance and pushed congress for a full military package. The Somoza dynasty — characterized by torture, arbitrary arrest, denial of political rights, lack of normal judicial procedure, ets. — once again received concrete support from American taxpayers. Secretary of State Vance has stated that the United States will not deny aid to key allies because of violations of human rights. Nicaragua can hardly be considered a key ally, but many other countries in the same category are still getting their full complement of repression money from Washington. Essentially, despite the rhetoric, business goes on as usual under Jimmy Carter. October 14, 1977 State Press Page 5 A s s o c ia tio n m o v e s Kditor: A sso cia te d Studente M em oria! U nion 206 A rizo n a Siate U n iversity Tem pe. A z 85281 (602) 965-3161 October 11, 1977 Dr. John Schwada President, Arizona S tate University A dm inistrative Building Campus Dear Dr. Schwada: As per our re c e n t conversations, I would appreciate your responses to the following questions, as I and many others are unclear as to your positions regarding these n a tte r s . Last week, an article in the State Preaa by Roger Wyer asked interested people to gather so that they might discuss issues con­ cerning the students, the faculty, the administration, and ASU in general. A small, but interested group met and talked. This past Wednesday, a follow-up article appeared calling for a subsequent meeting and again, a small, but interested group turned out'. We talked about relationships between teacher and student on a one to one basis: we brought out problems with parking on and off campus; we spoke of situations evolving form the lack of open communication. In short, we talked of anything that was considered important. I met new faces and made new friends; I enjoyed myself, as did the others (all six of them). On Wednesday Oct. 19th, at 1:30 p.m., we’ll meet again, this time on the lawn between the MU and the Academic Services Building. We need more people, students and faculty alike, to attend this gathering and talk. Please make it a point to come out and join us, and bring a friend. We’d like to see and hear you. Mike Pender NOW RE-OPENED! 1. Will you consider a student representive fo r the University Budget CUnnittee f o r F iscal Years 1977-78, 1978-79, 1979-80 on a t r i a l basis? 2. 3. IN D IA H O U SE In le rn at ion a I Rest a it ra n I Will you accept a student representative on th e Advisory Committee th a t w ill be searching fo r a new Academic Vice President when th a t position becomes vacated? Featuring Com plete India Dishes also S T E A K S ‘ S E A FO O D ‘ C O CKTAILS Do you support a University-wide Academic' appelate process? DINNERS SERVED 5:30 to 10:00o.m. Closed Sundays & Mondays We Cater to Large and Small Parties Your a tte n tio n to th e se m atters is-greatly appreciated. Reeneatfulli/ vours. 4225 E. Camelback Rd., Phoenix Reservations Advised 959-4450 or 959-2830 Mark Barnes ASASU Presiddfrt ENTERTAINMENT ENTERTAINMENT ENTERTAINMENT G E N U IN E O P A L PENtANTS OR EARRINGS ■ IN 14KARAT G O L D ttwSettCellar < h IS SPECIAL OC Ili »- A Restaurant & Garden Underground Z Ul *z 111 z E x a m p le : z < I— K 111 A ll Y o u C a n Eat ui I- z I lf z z < ►a ui H Z UJ I- z 111 z z < ► “ a UJ SUN., MON. ONLY Full % Lb. Australian Lobster Tail with Salad, Hot Sour Dough TUES. loaves, Baked Potato with Sour ONLY Cream or Butter and Vegetable. 469 Q95 SPECIAL - STEA K & BAKE % Lb. Aged Top Sirloin Steak and Baked Potato with Butter or Sour Cream, Salad, Marvelous Celery, Sour Dough Bread and Butter. z UI I- z UI z z “ Z j“ BBQ Beef Back Ribs. Includes: Cole Slaw, Baked Potato with Butter or Sour Cream, Sour Dough Bread and Butter. SPECIAL - LOBSTER I- < H CC UI 495 SPECIAL - JU M B O SHRIMP FRI., SAT. ONLY Steamed Jumbo Shrimp, Baked Potato with Butter or Sour Cream, Cole Slaw and Sour Dough Bread. 5 “ C A L L FOR RESERVATIONS ui Z z < Icc UI I- 947-1963 550 N . H ayden Rd. K Z UJ Z z < H OC 111 V E R Y S P E C IA L 00 ♦1 m z -i m 3D H > Z Z m z H m z ■H ID 3D 12 OZ. M ARGARITA Bandant $49.50 Earrings $69.60 As «set *. U*«** i . . . . * e s t e Z m z -H m z 3 m 30 —t > Z m z H m 3D H > Z Z m z H m Z H m 3D > Z m z H m z H m 3D H > m uENTERTAINMENT ENTERTAINMENT ENTERTAINMENT* Pendant , .<., $69.50 Earrings $79.50 A sa set. . , * * » . . . . $ 1 3 9 Pendant . . . $89.50 Earrings . . . . . . . . . . $99.50 As a set . . . . , , . . . . . $169 z m Z S co ttsd ale z IIJ M A Y BE PURCHASED SEPARATELY ORAS A SET. SPECIAL - BONES P e n d a n t . $39.50 Earrings $49.50 Asa se t . . ; ....... $89 Ill W É í Pendant.. . . . . . . . . $49.50 E a r r i n g s $69.50 A s a s e t . $119 í -, Illustrât tons enlarged IO show detali ' flaoreseni&tive styles not available inali stores U S E O U R C O N V E N I E N T C R E D I T T E R M S Budget A cco u n ts • Charge Plans We Accept: Visa • Oiners C lu b • Shoppers Charge • Master Charge • Carte Blanche • Am erican Express Daniel s JEWELERS IN MESA SHOP AT DANIEL'S: Tri-City Mall • Other Stores in Phoenix, Yuma and Tucson. 10-2-07-20 Page 6 State Press October 14, 1977 G a m m a g e to sp e n d $100,000 fo r tra n s is to r so u n d s y s te m Gammage Auditorium is planning to spend more than $100,000 for a new “state of the art" sound system that should be completed by summer. “This new system will have the best technology available,” said Gammage managing director Warren Sumners. “It will be 20 years before anything can be made to top it.” Sumners said the new system will create the same level of sound in the back of the hall as in the front. “Sound is like a line of sight,” he said. ‘T h e new sound system will project the same sound at the same time in the first row as well as the back." Work on the system will begin as soon as final plans are made, which Sumners said should be done by December. “We hope to start work during the Christmas holiday, and work on it in stages. We should be done by summer.” Sumners said Gammage officials had no choice except to buy a new system. “Our current system is tube-type, and parts are impossible to find,” he said. “Some of the tubes we need come from England, and it takes a year to get them here. “The new system will be fully tran­ sistorized," he added. “It will bring us as close to the state of the art as possible.” Most of the work on the system will be done by the Gammage staff, of whom all but one are students, Sumners said. “Those students are some of the best pros in the business,” he said. “We get hundreds of compliments on their work.” Improvement o f intramural area w ill take 2 months, official says The renovation of ASU’s intramural athletic field probably w ill be com pleted w ithin tw o months, ASU vice president for business affairs said Wednesday. The field is on Rural Road near Sahuaro Hall. We’ve just awarded the contract, but I don’t imagine it will take too long,” Jack Penick said. Penick said th e im ­ provement plans for the field inlcude lev elin g , fencing and installing a sprinkler system, and will cost about $63,500. He added that students involved in intram ural sports were complaining about ruts in the field caused by standing water and th e lev elin g and sprinkler system w ill eliminate this problem. Penick said sealed bids were submitted for each aspect of the improvement project and the contracts were awarded to the low bidders. by the University, Penick added. Ellingson, director of the Physical Plant at ASU, said the funding is provided by the administration through an appropriation by the state legislature. ‘‘The lev elin g and renovating of the field will be done this week. The con tractin g for th e sprinklers starts Monday, but it will be about six weeks before the fences are all up,” he added. BEFORE YOUBUY, SEE WHY PUCH ISN0.1 Being the No. 1 Moped isn't easy. And i t i not easy to explain. But we’ll try. Puch mopeds are pretty much built by hand. Each one is fully assembled, started up and tested, before it leaves the factory. Key components like motor and frame are built by Puch. Which means a moped you can trust. A moped that's more fun be­ cause you spend your tim e riding it. not bringing it back to us for minor surgery. Look them all over, before you decide which one you want. We did. Thate why we sell Puch. FINANCING AVAILABLE & i* td c4 (fyct& n y Tw o-wheel transportation sin ce 1912 C e n tu rio n S C H W IN N * NBSHtKI. 2180 E. Southern, Tempe 839-9383 QoCcbi c_Age Open 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. Every Day FINE GREEK-AMERICAN CUISINE Your Hosts — Peter Rdveliotis • Mike Manos TO PROTECT THE UNBORN A N D THE NEWBORN T H IS S P A C E C O N T R I B U T E D B Y T H E P U B L I S H E R M a rc h o ff D i m e s STUDENT DISCOUNTS S T A R T IN G AT 20% Greek & American ^ Entertainment ' belly d a n c e r s A ppearing N igh tly W ed .-S at. 9 p .m .-l a.m . PIOREER C h ef’s S p e c ia l of th e Day P ik ilia (Com bination Plate) R o a st lam b w ith D o lm a d e s. M o u s a k a , S p a n a ko p ita . T y ro p ita . $4 75 P a stichio. p o ta to a n d r i c e ...................................................................................... R o ast Leg of L a m b (A rn i Psito) $3 45 S e rved w ith n. t* p ilaf a n d p o t a t o e s .............................................................. The contracts have been awarded to the American Fence Company of Mesa, SRS Sprinklers of Phoenix, and Tierra W est Con­ tra ctin g . Som e of the ground leveling will be done S a la d s 0 ■ ■ ■ »• WE HAVE ALL YOUR PHOTO NEEDS G recian S a la d ................................................................................. G reek V illage S a l a d ........................... Z ........................................ B o iled G re e n s .. ...................................................... G y ro s Plate $1 25 $1 56 $ 95 T h in slic e s of b a rb e c u e d la m b a n d b e e f o n a b e d o f ra w o n io n rin g s a n d parsley w ith slic e d to m a to e s, s a /e k i sa u c e a n d p ita b re a d or b re a d 967-4662 Tempe Center 966-8363 $2 75 S h is h - k e - B o b ( S o u v la k i) M a rin a te d cu b e s o f p o rk te n d e rlo in s ke w e re d w ith to m a to e s g reen pep pers and o n io n s , b ro ile d a n d s e rv e d w ith p ila f o f rice a n d p o t a t o . . $3 75 H om e M ade Pies AN INEXPENSIVE ALTERNATIVE , 7 BEERS FOR *1 MUTANTft&UBT t i A ir H o c k e y T u e sd a y — P o o l T o u rn a m e n t T o u rn e y W e d n e s d a y — F o o s b a ll T ou rn ey S und ay, O c t. 16th T h u rsd a y C o lle g e N ig h t 8-10 p.m . 8 p.m . • C a sh P riz e s 10 Beers for *1 ] F rid a y S c h e d u le d In sa n ity 3-8 p.m . 1858 E. A P A C H E BLVD. Open Daily 12-1 a.m. »1 35 $1 35 S pina ch Pie (S p a n a k o p ita )............................................................ Cheese Pie (T y ro p ita)..................................................................... HAPPY HOUR after the ASU GAM E ALL DRINKS 75c HAPPY HOUR 3-6 PM EVERY DAY (Soup to Nuts!) All D rin k s-75* Beer - 50* Complimentary Greek Hors d’ouevres Take Out Orders FREE Glass of Greek Ouzo with each dinner 1123 S. RURAL R D . Across from ASU WE CATER TO SMALL & LARGE ju s t North °,Apach9 968-5662 GROUPS. Call for Reservations. Banquet Facilities for 5-50 GYROS” October 14, 1977 State Press Page 7 »aMa»oii3oa a68t36K8aao6KK8830«3aBgatsot«30t3a6i6»saw w a a c P h oen ix Christmas f C H A M PA G N E CHARTERS December 21st and 22nd NEW Y O R K $ 234.00 Return January 18th CHICAGO $ 179.00 W A l P a s le y s ASU Sierra Club climbs canyon to pick up trash By Pat Thomas If you spent two days picking up eight and one-half miles of trash in the Grand Canyon, you probably would never throw away another gum wrapper in your life. ASU graduate student and Sierra Club member, Melody Cornett wouldn't. She, along with five other club members and two park rangers spent last weekend bending over, picking up and sifting out thousands of pop-tops, cigarette butts and gum wrappers along the Tanner Trail in the Grand Canyon, she said. “We covered 17 miles roundtrip. The climbing was all straight up and down.” The flub is planning to clean up another part of the canyon sometime in November, she added. The Sierra Club is a nation­ wide organization. “Its goals are to preserve and protect our natural environm ent. The concerns of the Palo Verde group involve those environmental problems that occur in Arizona,” Jerry Kolman, Palo Verde chapter chairman, said. The Palo Verde Chapter of the Sierra Club serves all of Maricopa County. Other Arizona chapters are in Tucson, Flagstaff and Prescott, Cornett said. Most people are not aware of the delicate balance of the en­ vironment. They don’t realize SMALL CAR HURRY! TH ESE CARS W O N T LAST AT THESE PRICES! OPEN 9-7 DAILY 5201 i. VAN BUREN TIWEL 707 South Forest Tempe, Arizona Phone (602) 967-9403 how long it takes nature to heal knowledgeable on how the dif­ ferent elements of nature work damage done to it, she said. “The wilderness is very fragile, especially the desert. If you take a 4-wheel drive vehicle through the desert, the damage it does takes years to repair,” she said. “ E n v iro n m e n ta l co u rse s should be mandatory before people can enter the wilderness. “But the ranger said, 'People are getting somewhat better than they were. At least they’re NEWLY REDECORATED not throwing away any of the big things.' ” The rangers encouraged Featuring 35 Extraordinary Culinary Delights outside help on cleanup hikes, provided the group worked with the National Park Service and Fresh Fruits & Vegetables Homemade Soup & Bread that all group members had Taste Fred's huge block of cheese. previous Grand Canyon hiking experience, she said. “The experience is necessary GO BACK TO THE SALAD BAR AS MANY TIMES AS YOU so that each person can make the LIKE WITH A LUNCH OR DINNER ENTREE trip, have enough energy to clean up and get out again under their own steam,” Cornett said. SPECIAL FROZEN DRINKS Fred's Specialties The rangers said most of their (to cool you off!) ‘ Seafood rescue calls are from people who physically can make it out, but ‘ Steaks HAPPY HOUR ‘ Prime Rib are “psyched out” by the Tuesday-Friday, 4-6 PM ‘ Sandwiches Canyon. However, they added, 2 ’fer1 Drinks “It’s just a matter of talking the FRED G A N G ’S hiker up to the rim.” M onday N ight Football 1112 E. APACHE BL V D . Cornett said the Sierra Club Monday 4-10 p.m. [Next to Willy’s] was more than hiking along with 2 ’fer 1 Drinks Open F o r Lu n ch and Lounge A t 11:00 A M Dally. friends. “You learn about the flora and fauna, the formations of the Grand Canyon. You become VISIT OUR 14-FOOT SOUP & SALAD BAR FRED G A N G 'S 1.50 The Minolta SR-T 200 COM PANY 7 5 280Z ............................. 44995 7 2 240Z ............................. *3495 7 5 T R 7 ............................... *4495 7 6 T R 7 ............................... *4695 7 3 Je n sen Healey ............. $3995 ’66 X K E R oadster ............. *2695 7 5 F la t X-19 ....................... *3395 7 4 F lat X-19 ....................... *2995 7 0 Po rsch e 914 ................. *2995 71 TR6 ...............................*2495 7 0 Trium ph GT6 + ........... $1995 7 4 M G M id g e t .....................*2595 i ’69 Datsun 2000 ................. *1595 I’69 F iat 125 S p id e r ...............$1595 .71 J e e p C J -6 ..................... *2295 7 2 A u d i 1 0 0 L S .....................61995 ’68 V o lvo 144S ................... * 795 7 0 B u ic k S k y la r k .................* 595 7 2 O ld s T o ro n a d o .............. * 995 NALLEY CONTACT The M o s t P o p u la r B u d g et P ric e d 3 5m m SLR on C a m p u s Look into the Minolta SR-T 200. You’ll see why you, can’t beat a Minolta 35mm SLR for features, fast handling and solid value. A Q U A L IT Y C A M E R A A T A P O P U L A R PRICE! • Fast, easy handling—you cah compose, focus and shoot without ever having to look away from.your subject. • Patented "CLC” through-the-lens metering system— automatically compensates to prevent under­ exposure of dark areas. • Shutter speeds to 1/1000 second let you freeze the action. • Accepts the complete line of precision ground Minolta lenses from 7.5mm fisheye to 1600mm super-telephoto. • Over 150 accessories available for every photo­ graphic requirement. Minolta SR-T 200 w/50mm f2.0 ft Case. 36% OFF U S T WITH THIS A D THRU OCT. 21 WE WELCOME VISA, MASTER CHARGE & AMERICAN EXPRESS Page 8 State Press October 14, 1977 Austin halts tradition to play tennis Most 14-year-old girls spend their time listening to Bay City Roller records and dreaming of Donny Osmond. But Tracy Austin spends her time competing with and beating the world’s best female tennis players. At 5T* and 90 pounds, Austin is the youngest winning player to hit the tennis circuit since Chris Evert. Austin was the youngest player to play at Wimbledon (after officials rescinded a rule restricting play to those over 16) and advanced into the quarter-finals, where she was defeated by Evert, 6-1,6-1. She is now competing in the Talley Industries Phoenix Thunderbird Open, where she defeated Mary Struthers 6-4,6-1 Thursday. She will play second-seeded Martina Navratilova today. Austin, a high school freshman, certainly looks the part on the court in her pigtails, braces and doll-style tennis outfits. Her play, however, defies her years. Like Evert, Austin uses a two-handed backhand. Unlike Evert, she does not play a baseline game, but prefers to charge the net. Austin's parents don’t want to expose their daughter to the immense pressure a public celebrity must face. She usually stays isolated on tour, only talking to the press immediately before and after matches. When she is not on the pro tour, Austin plays in junior tournaments almost every weekend, mostly in California, and tries, as her coach Bob Lansdorp says, “to be accepted as a regular kid, not a tennis champion." Top: Tracy Austin hits a serve during her match at the Arizona Biltmore. Above: Austin uses her best shot, a double backhand. Left: After her match, Austin is confronted with a group of young autograph seekers. Photos by Hlftrtr ’.vi David Seibert October 14, 1977 State Press Page 9 S olar le g a lproblem s faced b y hom eow ners, p ro f says The grow th o f solar energy technology is causing a lot of new legal problems for homeowners, an ASU law professor says. Donald Zillman, an associate p rofessor, is studying legal problems related to soalr energy. A major problem is zoning changes, Zillman said. A solar-heated pool would be ineffective if a high rise building went up next to it. Neighborhood trees could block solar co llecto rs, causing lawsuits to crop up, he said. Zillman said many of the legal questions are being answered case by case. He said at this time only a small percentage of people are using solar energy and so the law can be somewhat unrestrictive. Zillman said, “There is a hesitancy on my part to see the government try to regulate too much at once. Police forced to administer jaywalk laws Several near accidents have forced U n iv ersity Police to enforce jaywalking laws in one area of campus, a department lieutenant said. Tom G odbehere said pedestrians do not watch for traffic when cro ssin g McAllister Drive between Lemon Street and Orange Drive. This \s the area east of the College of Law. “The whole problem is sooner or later one of them (students) is going to get rim over if they don’t open their eyes and start paying attention,” he said. G odbehere s a id jaywalkers will be issuesd a verbal warning. “If that doesn’t work, we will give them a written warning and if that doesn’t w ork, we w ill issu e citations. They will have to go to Tempe Justice Court if they get that,” he said. “ A people without reliable news is sooner or later a people without the basis o f freedom ." — H a rold J. L a s ki PREPARE FOR. MCAT • DAT • LSAT • ERE 6MAT • OCAT • VAT • SAT NMB 1 , 1 , 111, ECFMG-FLEX-VQE NATL DENTAL BOARDS NURSING BOARDS Flex ib le Program s A H ours T h ere IS mdifferente!!! E D U C A T IO N A L ! CENTER Test P r e p a r a t io n Specialists Since 1938 For Information Please Call: 967-2967 For Locations In Other Cities, Call: TOLL FREE: 800-223-1782 C e n te rs m Major U S C itie s la ro n fo P u e rto R ic o and Lugano. Sw itzerlan d We should first see what problems will arise in this area before taking action." Zillman said that setting up rigid governm ent regulations at this time would discourage many people who are now in­ terested in solar energy as an a ltern a tiv e en ergy source. “ Solar en ergy has achieved respectability and both governm ent and D is c u s s io n to fo c u s on r e p r o d u c in g O N LY private corporations are looking into it. In the future this section of the law will become important," he said. Zillman said many cases were decided with the public's interest in mind. “It’s hard to say what the public good is. When dealing with scarcities, there are a lot of hard choices. What we try to answer is who stands to gain and who doesn’t," Zillman said. Human reproduction ' will be discussed by Dr. Robert W. McGaughey at 2:40 p.m. Wednesday in Physical Science Center, room 123. His lecture is the fourth in an annual series of ASU Honors Lectures of the College of Liberal Arts. An ASU faculty member since 1971, McGaughey holds a bachelor of arts degree from Augustana College, a master of arts degree from the University of Colorado and a doctor of . Philosophy from Boston University. GRADUATE STUDENTS M .B.A.’s LAW STUDENTS N ow buy a m inim um of $25,000 worth of life insurance starting at $25 a year. That’s the sam e life insurance y o u 'll have to have 5-7 years from now at a m uch higher price. C a ll today. PENN MUTUAL OFFERS IT 258-1671 Campus Rep: PRENTICE WILLIAMS sssssssss The ASU Interfraternity Council Presents THE STEVE MILLER BAND In C oncert ASU Activity Center Friday, November 11 • 8:00 P.M. PROCEEDS BENEFIT ASU GENERAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND Tickets are $7.50 81 $6.50 and ara on aala at tha Qammaga Box Offlca. Brooksides Vin Rosé Plus Wine Glass Special . . . 25% off sale this month on regular bottle price in case lots. Our special 8 Vi ounce wine glasses are now on sale.......59c O C T O B E R SPECIAL PRICES: — Vin Rose — $1.85 per fifth $18.45 per case • W in e Tasting Parties! •5 ta ste s... on ly 25* • W in e Racks & Supplies ,-Utooksiòc •TEMPE* 1131 W est Broadway 967-9836 •PHOENIX» TASTING C E LL A R S 10240 North 27th Ave. 943-0972 Page 10 State Press October 14, 1977 A la n P ric e : Cole Porter in Gucciloafers ‘Punk rockers would never dare say anything bad about Eric Burdon. He'd probably bite them if they did. ’ —Alan Price IM ureyev's v o ic e m a rs 'V a le n tin o ' There's probably only one British rock band that today's punk rockers would never throw up on — and might even regard with some awe — the Animals. “Punk rockers would never dare say anything bad about Eric Burdon," former Animals keyboards player Alan Price said in a State Press interview. “He'd probably bite them if they did.” Price, who appeared in concert at the Scotts­ dale Center for the Arts to promote his new solo album and the Animals reunion album, said punk rock was only an extension of what the Animals did in the early Sixties. “I do feel something creative will come out of this movement,” he said. “There’s a lot of energy involved. I hear if you dress the punks up and take them out to lunch, they’re quite all right.” When Price, a British subject, strolls on to the stage, dressed in a tuxedo and Gucci loafers and bows politely to the audience, he looks like a modern-day Cole Porter, ready to croon a love ballad. What comes out is some soul-stirring blues-rock in the finest British tradition. Most of Price’s own music exhibits a controlled anger, satirizing life in the United Kingdom, not unlike Randy Newman’s musical comments about American culture. In fact, Price has recorded some of Newman's songs. Price is best known in this country for the satirical musical score he did for Lindsay Anderson’s 1974 film, "Oh Lucky Man,” which starred Malcom McDowell. Price also appeared in the film, as himself. “When Lindsay first approached me to do the film, we didn't hit it off,” Price said. “He asked me if I wanted to be an actor and I immediately said no.” “Oh Lucky Man,” an embellished account of McDowell's career before he became an actor, proved to be a success for Price, earning him a loyal, cult-like following in the United States. In addition to doing several films in England since “Oh Lucky Man,” Price recently finished a solo album, simply called Alan Price, his fourth album to be released in the United States. Also, the Animals reunion album, appropriately titled Before We Were So Ruddy Interrupted, was recently released in the U.S. “Eric Burdon recently got out of his legal tangles,” Price said, “and drummer John Steel suggested we all got back together to help Eric launch his career. We hadn't been together for about II years and Chas Chandler, our bass player, hadn’t even played since then. “We rehearsed for four days and recorded the album in seven,” he said. ‘The album is even ‘making the charts,' as you Americans say.” But, Price added, there would be “absolutely no more” Animals albums. Price, who is very popular in England, words on documentaries and television, in addition to his singing and composing. He says he isn’t particularly fond of touring the United States. His last tour here was in 1974 with the release of his “Between Today and Yester­ day” album. “It’s much easier to be successful in England,” Price said wryly. “It's an effort of will to succeed in America. It's such a large country. “However, I'm going to have to come back in March for a 12-week tour,” he added. “I don't know what I'll do with myself then. That’s three months working in America.” —Nora Burba P u n k ro c k o n ly fo o tn o te ? NEW YORK (AP) - Punk He moves with the grace of a sleek panther. His every motion is rock has arrived in America, but theatrical, graceful and sensual. A simple flare of his nostril is enough nobody's sure whether punk’s to make the pulses of an entire movie audience race as they surrender rebellious, high energy music to his screen presence. and outlandish dress will become But when he opens his mouth to speak, he sounds rather like the the musical standard of the late count from Transylvania who had a certain penchant for blood. 1970s or join glitter rock, disco This and other problems and reggae as a musical footnote marred “Valentino,” directed by of the decade. Ken Russell. Rudolf becomes Punk is a main topic of con­ Rudolph as Rudolf Nureyev versation in the music industry brings to life the public glamour and most record companies have and the private agonies of the descended on punk clubs like silent film star, Rudolph Valen­ CBGB here, the Rat in Boston or tino. the Whisky in Los Angeles the The film is a fairly accurate, way they did in England to cash though “interpreted” account of in on the British rock groups of Valentino’s life. the mid-1960s. Beginning with his funeral in Rock music magazines — 1926, aggressive reporters ques­ including the bible of the rock tion the women in his life who world, Rolling Stone — devote have attended the wake. Through flashbacks, they recall Valentino’s increasing attention to punk rise from a tea-room gigolo to become “the world's greatest lover." groups, even though membbers It becomes apparent that Valentino, an Italian immigrant who was of most punk bands give the attracted to fame and glamour, longed for the happiness he thought impression they can’t or won’t he could achieve running a citrus grove in California. read anything more complicated Through his wife, Rambova (Michelle Phillips), actress Nazimova than a comic book. (Leslie Caron) and screenwriter June Mathis (Felicity Kendal), But the bug question is Valentino’s private torment to prove his masculinity is revealed. Despite a world-wide reputation as a sensual, virile lover, he had a rather low sex drive. His first marriage was never consummated, and he was attracted to domineering women. Newspapers constantly questioned his sexuality. As an Italian, he felt as though he should always defend his honor. Although Billy Joel’s new While Valentino longed for a simple life, he rapidly became a cult album is called “The figure. Even his funeral became a three-ring circus. Stranger,” he proved to be “Valentino” is important for Nureyev because he makes the anything but that to almost transition from ballet dancer to feature film actor. In this film, 3,000 fans in Gammage Nureyev blends with Valentino, making it difficult to determine Auditorium Monday ngiht. where one actor ends and the other begins. In the first few minutes of Unfortunately, although Nureyev has perfected the physical aspects of acting, his spoken lines sound stilted and silly. The accent the show Joel broke down is neither Italian nor American — it's definitely Russian. the “performer-audience” Phillips also has problems with her portrayal of Rambova, the step­ barrier by heading offstage daughter of an American perfume tycoon. Rambova was a powerful, eccentric, fascinating woman, but Phillips hasn't the experience and into the crowd to the necessary to bring out these qualities. Her Rambova is cold and delight of many who eagerly awaited a handshake from a bitchy, without any depth. Nureyev's and Phillips’ flawed performances are magnified by tru e " en tertain er” — Russell’s excessive, obvious symbolism. The essence of the film was something Billy Joel ob­ captured in the first half hour and the rest subjected the audience to viously knows a lot about. Russell’s overpowering imagintion. It was a toss-up between Indulgent directing and all the other problems aside, “Valentino” is well worth viewing for the dance sequences, the beautiful costumes who was having a better time — Joel or his audience. and — above all — for Nureyev’s steamy love scenes. —Norm Burba whether rock music fans, who seem increasingly to prefer middle of the road sounds like Fleetwood Mac, Steve Miller and Peter Frampton, will embrace groups that generally reject melody and instrumental finesse. Fans favor the tough, rebellious posture of Patti Smith, the Ramones and the Dead Boys. Punk isn't new. It's an equal mixture of the everlasting rebellious attitude of youth and the simple, three-chord music popularized in the mid-1960s by British groups like Who and the Rolling Stones. The punk philosophy holds “any kid can pick up a guitar and become a rock ’n' roll star, despite or because of a lack of ability, talent, intelligence . . . and/or potential. “And the punk rocker usually does so out of frustration, hostility, a lot of nerve and a need for ego fulfillment,” writes John Holmstrom, editor of New York's Fhnk magazine. Punk stars like Patti Smith and the Ramones look down on the new bands arriving almost daily in New York. Guitarist Tom Verlaine of Television has a blunt assessment of his peers: “What most of the CBGB bands need is a lot of practice." His band and many other original CBGB performers now shun the punk label, preferring no label at ail or the designation “new wave” in the hope that it downplays the punk attitude and stresses music. Because of that stress on image and style over musical proficiency, punk bands compete for the most suggestive or outrageous names they can find: the Dictators, Weirdos, Zeroes, Void-Oids. Stiv Bators of the Dead Boys proudly shows off wounds received from fans throwing bottles — and those that were self-inflicted. B illy Jo el: a satisfying m eal Both seemed possessed with more energy than APS. Joel could barely keep seated on his stool while satisfying the crowd with the sw eet sounds of his piano. And in turn the crowd applauded out of their seats and on their feet. True, Billy Joel didn’t accomplish all of this on his own. Equipped with ef­ fectiv e lig h tin g , an a c o u s tic a lly p e r fe c t auditorium and an e x ­ ceptional back-up band, he gave the crowd everything that they asked for. After various requests Joel an- swered, f We’ll get to that I swear to God.” He kept his word. Between the favorites which made him famous, “Piano M an,” “Captain Jack,” “Ballad of Billy the Kid,” “New York State of Mind,” and “Say Goodbye to Hollywood” to name just a few, he introduced cuts from his new album — of the same caliber of excellence. Two hours, eight ovations and four encores later the crowd filed out, and like after a satisfying meal — knew they had gotten their money’s worth. — J u lie H e n d rix October 14, 1977 State Press Page 11 Literary public address in a soft, controlled novel By Jean W ilson There are authors whose literary voices resemble publicaddress systems. The most intimate refiextions and ex­ changes echo all the grace and nuance of a running commentary on a football game. Morals (one per story, please) and “surprise" endings are frantically foreshadowed by caution lights and red flags within the first eighteen pages. I make mention of these misdirected train announcers only to contrast the virtues of author Margaret Atwood in her novel Surfacing. The book is expertly subtle. From the opening pages of objective tableaux unfolding circumstance and character, through the emergence from a cwcible into a subjectivity so intense as to be elliptical, the “voice” remains a perfect in­ strument of perception and expression. The “surfacing" is a kid of rite de passage. The narrator, her lover, and a married couple make a weekend excursion to some unspecified backwater north of mystical notion of primieval gods, this question of the father dead, insane, in retreat — offers a rich counterpoint to the narrator's own all but insane retreat inwardThis self-examination climaxes in a strangely bitter yet beautiful way — to explain further would perhaps detract from the real element of suspense in the book. Enough to say that the poetic and nearly tragic vision of the last pages is earned through a carefully realistic and really grim “breakdown" of a civilized being. The final word must be on the language. Atwood, apparently, was an acclaimed poet before writing this novel. A poet in prose can be a dismal thing: one sometimes meets with wild and bastard metaphors climbing out of every paragraph. But Atwood keeps her poetic bent on a good strong leash, with the result that the book is brimming with strikingly wellturned phrases and images, but is never obtrusively lyrical. In nearly every aspect it is a perfectly controlled novel. ESSI READING the Canadian border. The purpose is the searching for the narrator's father, a semirecluse who has recently and suspiciously disappeared. After a perfunctory search all but the narrator settle down for a cheap-thrills holiday of roughing it. For the narrator, however, her father's disappearance triggers disillusioned questions of introspection. She refuses to believe her father dead — what then? Gone mad in exile from a world equally mad? Though eventually, and dubiously, resolved in a quasi Comment Good music, daring concerts a t A S U By Dan Winkel Lovers of good music are lucky to be attending ASU this year. Thanks to the efforts of Associated Students, a strong, diversified and, frankly, very daring concert program has begun to blossom at ASU. The first wave was felt last week with the Grateful Dead concert. Although a miserably small crowd was on hand to witness the Dead, it kicked off the concert program in high spirits. The Doobie Brothers are due at the ASU Activity Center Oct. 18, and this is a show that should not be missed. The Doobies have just released a strong album in Livin’ on the Fault Line. With the addition of guitarist Skunk Baxter and a full­ time keyboard player in Michael McDonald, the Doobies have broadened their scope of musical direction and strengthened an already legendary live presence. Those who have seen a Doobie Brother's concert can attest to the pure power of the band. Strong vocals, excellent arrangements and top-flight production all contribute to make a Doobie Brothers show special occasion. My recommendation is not to miss this one. An even bolder gamble for ASASU and the Special Events Board who handle the concert arrangements, is the Average White Band and Tower of Power concert due at the Activity Center Oct. 29. The Activity Center is a rather large auditorium to fill by bands that are not in the “super-group” category. The AWB and the Tower of Power show would be more at home in Gammage. But the show is stuck in the Activity Center, and what a show it promises to be. I must admit a certain prejudice for the AWB and the Tower of Power. The first Tower of Power show I saw was last spring when they were second billed to George Benson. Anticipating a strong performance, the Tower delivered one of the finest examples of modern music I have ever seen. It was a show where the exuberance, vitality and effervescence of the band was simply overwhelming. The damn band just grabs you and moves it. The Charlie Mingus show, presented by the Cultural Affairs Board, is a gamble that looks like it won’t pay off — at least financially. The bass playing jazz great also is booked for Oct. 18 — on the same night as the Doobie Brothers. While the crossover audience is not too large in a case like this, there is a good possibility the rock concert will hurt attendance at the Mingus show. Charles Emerson, director of the CAB, said tickets are not selling as well as hoped for, but he said sales have increased in the last few days. But this brings out an interesting point. Fikdi sinks deep in sentim ent By Nora Burba As an alternative newspaper gets a new, business-oriented publisher, its individual staff members are going through the “nearing 30 and still making $75 a week” changes. Although this may sound like something that could have happened earlier this year at the New Times, it is actually the plot line of “Between the Lines,” a comedy about the loss of in­ nocence at a Boston underground paper. The film explores the relationships and the attitudes of the staff of the Mainline as they survive the social stillness of the '70s. With consternation, they begin to realize that advertising, rather than idealism, pays the bill. A photographer, played by Lindsey Crouse, and in­ vestigative reporter John Heard, share one of the more intense continued page 15 M a rtin s h o w a lm o s t so ld o u t The two shows Friday, Oct. 28, featuring comedy’s man of the moment, Steve Martin, are virtually sold out at ASU's Gammage Auditorium. Appearing with Martin will be John Sebastian, former Lovin' Spoonful leader and a successful singer-songwriter for more than a decade. His musical style ranges from ballads to country blues to film scores. Back now with his own band, he wrote the theme for the TV show “Welcome Back Kotter.” His “Welcome Back" album contains new songs (“Hideaway” and “She's Funny") and imaginative interpretations of old favorites (“Didn't Wanna Have To Do It” and “Warm Baby”). Martin, a regular on the Tonight Show, is one of the fastest rising young comedians in the business. Until he clicked on guest spots with Johnny Carson, he had worked at Disneyland and written for the Smothers Brothers, Sonny and Cher, Pat Paulsen, John Denver and Dick Van Dyke. Now a hit throughout the country, Martin says: “I relate comedy not to ideas or jokes but to personalities.” His act is a collection of carefully organized oneperson skits on the theme of an entertainer struggling with incompetence. His manner, according to Newsweek, “is like Silly Putty that talks — in a staccato of non sequiturs.” Chicago Tribune reviewer Lawrence Kart says he speaks “to a time and an audience that no longer seem to know where normal is or whether it even still exists. You can see this . . . in his manic shifts from calm monologue to insane ‘attacks' of physical business.” The 7:30 p.m. show is sold out and tickets for the 10 p.m. show are almost gone. Tickets, if available, are on sale at the Gammage box office and Diamond's Select- A-Seat outlets. Emerson said the CAB booked Mingus because he was available and that Mingus offers exciting, excellent music. There is no dispute there. But only about 200 tickets have been sold and Emerson admits, the CAB "overestimated the jazz awareness at ASU.” Booking Grover Washington or George Benson, two jazz greats who have crossed the line to mass acceptance, would not fulfill the role of the CAB, Emerson said. Those acts and similar ones, would be prime targets for promoters to make money — and not offer the culturally stimulating show the CAB is after. I applaud the CAB’s decision to bring jazz to culturally stagnant ASU. But I question their choice of Mingus, who is a top musician, but nonetheless, will not fill Gammage Auditorium. A more popular jazz great such as Grover Washington — who is capable of filling Gammage and providing the CAB with workable funds — would seem to be a wiser decision. But, the CAB is on the right path, one that has been ignored for too long at ASU. relationships at the newspaper. They continue their on-again, off again romance, hampered by her ambitiousness and his writing blocks. The investigative reporter yearns for the good old days when the Mainline had taken an activist role in the community. Another reporter, Gwen Welles, shares his sentiment for the strikes and demonstrations of Steve Martin Page 12 State Press October 14, 1977 Play lends humor to refinement By Roberta Bender Jacq u es Offenbach’s “ La elements in it that perhaps Perichole,” the season opener for titillated a 19th century Catholic Lyric Opera Theatre (LOT), is an audience. eye-opener for people new to The “heroine” La Perichole is a things that hint of “kulture.” street singer content to “live in The last thing you could call this sin ’ with her lover/guitarist 1869 operetta in English tran­ Paquillo. slation is stuffy or hard to un­ She is content, that is, until the derstand. Its plot is a kissing Viceroy of Peru decides to install cousin to a situation comedy. Its her in one of his bedchambers. One content is all fluff and puff, of the more exotic laws of his escapist to the nth degree. regency is that whoever inhabits Saying that Offenbach was “an the room chosen for her must be accomplished composer who chose married. Tsk. to write entertainment,” Dr. P redictable in trigu es and Kenneth Seipp, th e m usical rollicking laughs occur when the director for the show, said that “La Viceroy’s men round up Paquillo Perichole” is a “sophisticated, for the “in name only” ceremony. popular work.” And so on. * Its sophistication, Seipp said, Despite the stock nature of this lies in Offenbach’s “ability to give sort of narration, there was much us something very simple which to appreciate. allows directors some freedom The all-student cast showed regarding style and design. He is a remarkable abilities for people very fine commercial w riter.” only part way through a lifetime of Outstandingly successful in training. Paris when it was written, “La Of the cast, Von Prahl as The P erich ole” certain ly has Old P risoner, Jerry W ayne T V log 11:05© Kojak 11:40© Night To Remember 12:10© Face The State 1:000 © News © When Michael Calls t h 7:00 0 Donnie & Marie 0 Gunsmoke 0 Washington Week © Wonder Woman © Sanford Arms 7:30 0 Wallstreet Week 0 Chico & the Man 8:00 0 Walking Tall 2 © Merv Griffin O Evening at Symphony © I -ogan's Run ® Rockford Files 9:00 O Masterpiece Theater © Switch © Quincy 9:30 0 News 1 0 : 0 0 0 © ® News 0 Hollyw’d Connection 0 Dick Cavett 10:30 O Baretta OThe Collector 0 Scoreboard © M.A.S.H. © Tonight Show 11:00 0 Heaven Can Wait a t e r Harkey as the Count of Panatellas, and Ann Marie Robertson as La Perichole seemed most headed up the street to stardom. Prahl is extremely vibrant on sta g e and d oes th e best charicature of the cast. His energy could well be modeled by others who have a multitude of talents but lack his electricity. When the stage was crowded with people, Harkey demanded my a tten tio n . His presence and projection, his sense of believing himself in his role simply seems to be stronger than the others. A lthough she seem s le ss seasoned, Miss Robertson shows © M edical Opinion © Disaster 5:30 0 © © Network News 0 Porter Wagoner O Wallstrcet Week 6:00 ® © © Local News 0 Hce Haw SATURDAY 0 Firing Line V Deaf World 12:00 0 Action-Theater AII Star Soccer 6:30 © C ity Talk Ninos Contentos ©Chronicle 10 12:30 O NCAA Football/? ® Match Game 1:00 0 World series ( w.coast) 7:00 © F ish © Where The Jobs Are 0 Emergency 1:30© Sports 0 Robin Hood ©The Bin Caper © Bob Newhart 2:00 0 Adventure Theater © Bionic Woman 2:30 ® Open Tennis 7:30 O Operation Pettycoat ® Spanish Programs 0 The Enchanted Arts 3 :00 © Great Adventure © We've got each other 3:30 © Kidsworld 8:00 0 Starsky & Hutch 4:00 0 Bionics 0 The Last Angry Man 0 Gunsmoke 0 Forsyte Saga O Kup's Show © The Jeffersons © Medical Center ©Think Big © Nashville on the Road 8:30 © Tony Randall 4:30 ® Untamed World 9:00 0 The Love Boat © Pop Goes the Country O Onedin Line 5 :00 © Good Ole Nashville © Carol Burnett 0 Adam-12 © Praise The Lord 10:00 0 ® © News O Washington Week FRIDAY e promise of developing evenly in her theatrical abilities and will be one to watch. After Offenbach opened his own theater in Paris in 1855, he wrote twenty-five musical satires, farces and comic operas in a three-year period. “An idol of Parisian theater-goers,” he toured “La Perichole” to New York in 1897. Later it was seen in Rio, St. Petersberg, and Algiers, among others. It has been translated into at least nine languages, including Yiddish, Swedish, Russian and Spanish — often with several translations in one language. The operetta’s appeal, then, is u n iversal. And b esid es th e pleasures this production gives, ij is a living example of “opera comique,” a precurser of musical comedy. Still Lyric Opera Theatre did not revive “La Perichole" as a relic of history. LOT revived it as “pure entertainment.” g OLetter fr. Unknown 10:15 © News 10:30 OValley of Mystery 0 Touch of Evil ©Youngblood Hawke 10:45 © Sat. Night Live 11:45 © Fame Is a Spur 12:15 © Maverick 12:30 0 Duffy 12:50 © Springfield Rifle SUNDAY 12:00 ® Indian-Americans 0 Mod Squad 0 Latina Americana 12:30 0 Mario & moving mch. 0 Gardening © N F L : Wash.-Dallas 1:00® Long. Long Trailer 0 Letter/unknown Woman © N FL : Denver-Oakl. 1:30 ®Privilege 3 :00 0 Andy Griffith 0 Jacques Cousteau 3 :3 0 © F o r you. black woman ® Big Valley 0 Amer. Short Story 4 :0 0 © C ity Talk © Great Adventure © Kush 4 :3 0 © Local News 0 Wild Kingdom 0 People are Working 5:00 ® Diwrence Welk ©W ild. Wild West 0 Austin City Limits © Sixty Minutes © Mary Tyler Moore 5:30 © laical News 6:00 ® Hardy Boys 0 Sha Na Na 0 The French Chef © Local News © World of Disney 6:30 0 Marty Robbins 0 Robin Hood © World of Animals 7 :0 0 ® Six Mill.S Man ® Anything Goes 0 Nova © Rhoda 7 :3 0 © That's Hollywood © On Our Own 8 :00 ® White Line Fever ®Courtmartial 0 Masterpiece Theater © All in the Family © Big Event 9:00 0 Evening at Symphony © Praise The Lord R e g is te r to r PÖKM P riz e s ! G R A N D P R IZ E a 10-speed , S c o t t s d a le R d . & M e g i l p s at $140. S k f' ~ b P S e P B ig S e le c tio n of . B B| C, c l , Shop! B ic ic y yc c le le s s nd 2 & 3 W h eel B s k a te b o a rd s m Our s h ° P " « R e m e m b e r , t h M* _.»t ñame- A„ o . C h a r g e to c o m . hom e! 994-8140 • 957-2767 I I ^ ” ______ October 14, 1977 State Press Page 13 By Walter R. Mears Minimum wage continues pursuit o f poverty level LA ST TIME OFFERED BEFORE CHRISTM AS THE W ORD IS YO U S A V E 40.00 ON W EBSTER'S NEW DICTIONARY ■■H Li 19.95 WASHINGTON (AP) — It started at a quarter an hour 40 years ago, and now the minimum wage is about to go to $2.65, ^with economists and politicians still arguing among themselves over its real impact on the job market. The question that hasn't been answered yet is whether a higher minimum wage is justice or folly; a boon to the working poor or a menace to their jobs. There is no shortage of studies, dissertations and analyses of that issue. They abound in the fine print of the congressional debate, on both sides. Given the facts of life at the super­ market, the current minimum wage of $2.30 an hour doesn’t add up to much of a living for anybody who makes it and no more. It adds up to $4,784 a year. Even at the increased rate, the minimum will be lower than the govern­ ment’s poverty line for an urban family of four. The minimum wage earner would get $5,512. In 1978, the poverty level is ex ­ pected to be about $6,200. That would seem to make it all very simple; boost the rate and help the lowpaid, unskilled worker. But there’s more to it, for as the cost of unskilled labor goes up, so does the prospect that employers will decide to make do with fewer workers. Econom ist Edward M. Gramlich assessed that risk in a paper published by the Brookings Institution; “As the minimum wage is increased beyond its historical range of 40 to 50 percent of the median wage, more and more workers confront the grab-bag combination of a higher wage but a reduced probability of having a job.” The younger the worker, the worse it gets. Unemployment in September stood at 6.9 percent of the labor force — but at 18.1 percent for teenagers, and at more than twice that for black teenagers. For all their differences on the broader question of minimum wage effects, the economists generally agree that it doesn’t help the youthful jobseeker. He's more likely to be unable to find a job, or to lose one, than to get the higher hourly wage. The liberal Republican Ripon Society likens it to attempts at healing by bloodletting. "Political Washington is about to adminster to young Americans a remedy just as pernicious as medieval bloodletting,” the Ripon analysis said. For while the law can raise the wage, it can’t raise worker productivity. And if the price of an hour’s work exceeds the product, the job isn’t likely to last. By a single vote, the House rejected an amendment that would have set a special wage rate, below the adult minimum, for workers under the age of 20. The Senate rejected four attempts to write in dif­ ferentials so as to make it easier for young people to get or hold jobs. Sponsors of the bUl argued that there are better ways to generate work for unemployed youths. They also contended that cut rates for young workers would lead some employers to hire them instead of adults. “It is unjust and discriminatory to assign a value less than the minimum wage to any person’s labor,” said Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr., D-N.J. But it is also unjust for somebody who wants to work to be earning nothing at all, for lack of a job. But those aren’t the only issues in­ volved. The minimum wage is a factor in the welfare equation. If welfare pays better than work, the administration’s reform package is not going to accomplish much. The arguments will continue, on those and other points, even though the law is set for at least three years, and perhaps four. Nothing to Wear? Orig. 59.95 Unabridged “Webster’s New Twentieth Century Dictionary” is an invaluable refer­ ence work. Thumb-indexed. With over 320,000 vocabulary entries, 16 full-page color maps and more. OVER 2200 P A G ES Good Thru Sunday Only With Ad No Limit While Supply Lasts TEMPE BOOKS & GAME STORE N o m a tte r w h a t yo u r circum stances, y o u 'll fin d th e best in (Formerly H ill’s Books) N EW A N D RECYCLED C LO TH IN G at 901 M ILL* TEM PE CENTER T H E B U FFA L O EX CH AN G E M-F 9-9 • Sat. &Sun. 9-5 Phone Orders Accepted 967-5243 11 E a st 5th - T em p o - 9 6 8 -2 5 5 7 WE BUY AND TRADE Page 14 State Press October 14, 1977 M arley denies planning o f Don Bolles'm urder Roberts, wife invoke Fifth Amendment By Carol Jackson PHOENIX (AP) — Millionaire liquor wholesaler Kemper Marley Sr. Thursday denied the prosecution charge that he masterminded the June 1976 car-bomb slaying of newsman Don Bolles. Marley, 70, whose name has figured throughout the investigation of the Arizona Republic reporter's slaying, made his first public statement about the case as a defense witness for Max Dunlap, 48, a Phoenix contractor. Dunlap and Jam es Robison, 55, a suburban Chandler plumber, are charged with first-degree murder in the Bolles' slaying and conspiracy to murder Arizona Attorney General Bruce Babbitt and a former public relations man for Marley, A1 "King Alfonse” Lizanetz. Marley has not been charged. Dunlap and Robison were charged in January after John Harvey Adamson, 33, a former dog breeder, confessed his part in the killing in exchange for a relatively light prison sentence. Adamson has testified that Dunlap hired him to kill Bolles and the other two men because Marley wanted them slain. Robison detonated the bomb underneath Bolles’ car June 2,1976, Adamson said. According to the confessed slayer, Dunlap told him Marley wanted Bolles killed because of newspaper articles the reporter had written that hampered his appointment to the Arizona Racing Commission. Babbitt was to be killed because of a price-fixing suit he had filed against the liquor industry in December 1975, said Adamson, and Lizanetz’ death was ordered because of derogatory letters he had written about his millionaire boss. Paul Smith, Dunlap’s attorney, said he would prove that Dunlap was framed and that Phoenix attorney Neal Roberts, a friend of Adamson’s, and the Emprise Corp., a New York-based sports con­ cession conglomerate, were behind the Bolles murder. Smith said Marley volunteered to testify in the trial because he wanted “to explain the innuendos.” He said he had known Dunlap about 35 years and had frequently loaned him money, including $5,000 in June 1976. Marley said he did not know Dunlap’s total debt to him,* but estimated it could be as much as $1.5 million. Earlier testimony in the trial showed Dunlap owed Marley that sum. SKYDIVING See up to 30 different colored parachutes at the same time. Qualified instructors and certified gear for first jump training. LARGEST PARACHUTE CENTER IN SOUTHWEST Arizona Parachute Ranch — Coolidge [602] 723-4441 ‘Absolutely nothing’ 509"mÜ| Awe., Tempe 9Ò7- 666A Asked if he had any personal knowledge about the reason Bolles was killed, Marley replied, “Absolutely nothing.” He also said he had “absolutely not” done anything to cause physical harm to Bolles and had never expressed an opinion to Dunlap or heard Dunlap say anything about either of them wanting to harm the reporter. Under cross-examination by special prosecutor William Schafer III, Marley said he and Dunlap may have had con­ versations about newspaper articles Bolles had written. “There might have been something about these articles in the paper,” said Marley. “To me he was just another reporter. He (Dunlap) might have said they are writing a bunch of stuff about you. I just said forget it. I don’t pay at­ tention to them articles.” Roll over, Beethoven. Didn’t want It The balding liquor magnate, who said his shaking hands were due to a medical problem, said Dunlap had urged him to accept a nomination by Gov. Raul Castro to the racing commission though he hadn’t wanted to take it at first. “After talking to the horsemen, I decided I would take it,” said Marley. “Max was part of the horsemen.” The nomination encountered opposition in the State Senate after newspaper ar­ ticles detailed, previous dealings by Marley. The nomination eventually was approved, but Marley resigned the post one week later. Marley also testified he had never discussed the attorney general with Dunlap, but was aware Babbitt had filed some kind of action involving the liquor industry in late 1975. “It was none of his (Dunlap’s) business and I could have cared less about it.” Babbitt has testified that Marley and his company were not named in the pricefixing suit, but were considered unindicted co-conspirators. Marley said he and Dunlap had Now Appearing at The Library . . . just east of ASU FRIDAY and SATURDAY Bruno Bozzetto's A lle g r o N o n T ro p p o co n tin u e d p a g e 16 (a full-length animated movie) jPGl SHOWS AT 7:00 & 10:15 also YELLO W SUBM ARINE ______ _____ at 8:40___________ Fri. & Sat. Midnight Movie PINK FLAMINGOS — Starring DEVINE ASASU CULTURAL AFFAIRS BOARD FILM SERIES VISCONTI'S T h e B est o f T odays S ounds! Also available for private engagements. _______ Call Dan at 967-5286. D a s h » In n Lunch, D inner or A fter N igh t Class. C old Beer, C him ichangas B est C hips in Tow n 7 3 1 A p a ch e Boulevard (across from the tee pees) M O N .- S A T . 1 1 - 1 2 S U N . 11-11 "THE DAMNED" Rated X FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, 7 AND 10 PM $1 w/ASU ID NEEB HALL JAZZ GREAT CHARLES MINGUS APPEARING AT GAMMAGE THIS TUESDAY AT 8 PM _______ October 14, 1977 State Press Page 15 F o rm e r p re sid e n tia l h o p e fu l M c C a rth y to a p p e a r a t A S U Bakke decision opponents gather for Solidarity Day Former Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, who ran unsuccessfully for president in 1968 and again in 1976, will appear at ASU Oct. 29. McCarthy will be on the campus most of the day, and will speak at 7:30 p.m. in the MU Arizona Room. “We really want to encourage professors as well as students to invite him to their classes to speak,” said Ellie Glazer, Associated Students' activities vice president. McCarthy’s appearance is being booked in conjunction with an appearance at UA Oct. 26 to save costs, Glazer said. “It is costing ASASU $1500 to bring him here,” Glazer said. “He will speak at Scottsdale Community College at noon, and they are paying $400 for that.” McCarthy was born in 1916 in Watkins, Minn. He graduated with honors from St. A national Day of Solidarity against the Bakke decision has been proclaimed for Oct. 15 by a coalition of black, Chicano, American Indian and feminist groups across the nation. A march in Phoenix will begin at 12 noon and proceed to the federal building in Phoenix to a speakers’ forum. The groups oppose a recent California Supreme Court decision favoring Allan Bakke, a 37-year-old engineer who says he was discriminated against while trying to enter the University of California at Davis Medical School. The case is currently before the U.S. Supreme Court. Bakke s argument states he was a victim of reverse discrimination because minority students were ac­ cepted into medical school instead of him, even though they had lower qualifications. Opponents say they fear if Bakke wins the case, it could set a precedent against affirmative action programs. Speakers at the march include the Rev. Robert Nesby of Black Experience, Danny Ortega, a legal aid lawyer and Gerald Richards of ASU’s Black Student Union. John's University at age 19, and was elected to the House of Representatives in 1949, representing Minnesota. He became a U.S. Senator in 1958 and was re elected in 1964, serving on the A griculture, Finance, and Foreign Relations Committees. He campaigned for the 1966- Democratic presidential nomination and won the Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Oregon, and New York primaries, but his nomination bid fizzled. He retired as a senator in 1970, and has taught at various colleges across the country since then. He ran unsuccessfully as an independent presidential candidate in 1976. " O u r lib e rty d epend s on the freedom of the press, and that cannot be lim ited without being lost.” —Thomas Jefferson M o re a b o u t Nostalgia continued from page 11 the late '60s and early ’70s. Another member of the staff, the rock music critic, played by Jeff Goldbaum, is the lovable con artist of the newspaper. Always bumming pot and money, the critic is a frustrated rock su p erstar, seeking adoration and adolescent groupies. Although the various in­ teractions among the staff members are realistic, and the yards of denim and plaid flannel instantly recognizable, the film itself has no reason for being. The theme of the '60s activists who grew up and became in­ surance salesmen has been overworked by the media. Instant nostalgia has gone to an extrem e (what next — “remember frozen yogurt and Earth Shoes?”). True, the ’60s was a decade of social change and true, the '70s are rather dull by comparison. But to wallow in sentimental dreams like . the characters of “Between the Lines” is pointless. However, the film’s mediocrity was saved by the performances of a talented young cast; par­ ticularly by the energy put into the role of the critic by Gold­ baum. "Between the Lines” is now playing at the Camelview Theater. GAYLE E. WILLIAMS Registered Electrologist, California State Licensed Permanent Hair Removal 1663 W. University Drive Mesa • 969-6954 SSSSSS WINE Browse through hundreds of wines from around the world and rap with our wine merchants: Tom, Bob, Ken or Dennis. VALLEY FAIR DISCOUNT WINES & SPIRITS Southern A Mill 967-2488 in Concert DoobiewithBothers a aO' University Activities Center A S U October I8th — 8pm Tickers on Sole at- World Records Milano's Music Stores Gom m age Box Office ______ Diamond's Selecr-a-Sear Locations An ASASU Presentation A Double Tee Production Page 16 State Press October 14, 1977 More about M a rle y denies p lo ttin g death continued from peg* 14 discussed Lizanetz about four or five years ago. Distributing literature “A bill was introduced in the legislature and a good many land developers were interested,” he said. "Max and I were out at the legislature and this King Alfonse was distributing literature that was very derogatory of myself." Marley also denied telling Phoenix Police Detective John Sellers, chief in­ vestigator in the Bolles murder, that “there ought to be a way to shut King Alfonse up.” “That’s not the conversation," Marley said. “That was Mr. S eller’s in­ terpretation.” Roberts’ ex-wife, Antje Roberts, testified Wednesday, but refused to an­ swer most questions, invoking the Fifth Amendment protection against self­ incrimination and the husband-wife privilege not to testify against a spouse. Roberts was called to testify last Friday, but refused to answer any questions, invoking the Fifth Amendment. He said his refusal was on the advice of his attorney because he faces federal criminal charges. Roberts and Robison are scheduled to stand trial in San Diego next summer for the attempted bombing of a federal building in Phoenix. Refused to answer Mrs. Roberts refused to answer a defense attorney’s question about whether her husband had planned to go to San Diego in April 1976, the same day Hotel reservation Ted Krum, manager of the Rodeway Inn in Lake Havasu City, testified that Roberts called him on June 2, 1976, and made a reservation for a man named Jim Johnson. Krum said he learned about a week later that the reservation had ac­ tually been for Adamson. “He (Roberts) said, ‘That isn’t his true name, but you don’t need to know,’ ” Krum said. Krum acknowledged he told FBI agents on June 9, 1976, that Roberts called him in the morning on June 2, but said Wednesday the call came at “dinner tim e.” Adamson had testified Roberts made arrangements for he and his wife to fly to Lake Havasu City after the bombing, but that the reservations were not made until after the bombing, which occurred shortly before noon. Smith has said he would prove Adamson and his wife prepared to leave for Lake Havasu City the morning of June 2, and that the arrangements were made by Roberts before the bombing occurred. of workshops, including one on the Bakke case. Other speakers include Mary Luevano, National Education Association president; Margo Cowen, Tucson Manzo Council; Juan Ortega, International Exhibition and Sale o f FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS 'Cf. TOULOUSE-LAUTREC A ll-d a y C h ic a n o c o n fe re n c e in c lu d e s a m o v ie , s p e a k e rs An all-day Chicano/Latino conference on deportation Saturday will focus on education, unions and the undocumented workers and governmental programs. It will be from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the MU Cochise Room and is sponsored by the Arizona Call for Action. Keynote speaker at the conference will be Jose Angel Gutierrez, a judge and founder of the Raza Unida Party in Zavala County, Texas. A documentary called “The Unwanted” will be presented in the morning session and the afternoon will consist of a series UNITED OFFER Adamson testified he went there to purchase the remote control device used to trigger the bomb under Bolles car. Mrs. Roberts said she knew Bolles was a newspaper reporter, but chief prosecutor William Schafer III successfully objected when Savoy asked, "Was Don Bolles’ name kicked around on several occasions by Neal Roberts and John Adamson about the race tracks and Emprise?” / ' ROTHKO , ' ROUSSEAU KLEE DEGAS VERMEER REMINGTON FRANKENTHALER GAUGUIN COROT LOCATION: ON THE MALL betw een Hayden Library and the Memorial Union Bldg. DATE: MON. Oct. 17 through FRI. Oct. 21 TIME: 9:00 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. SPONSORED BY CULTURAL A FFAIRS BOARD . . . Priced at $3.00 each or any 3 for $6.00 SIN CE 1971 W E H A V E BEEN LEARN IN G TO BE TH E BEST AT W HAT W E DO. Ladies Garment W orkers organizer; and Peter Camejo, 1976 presidential candidate and member of the Socialist Workers Party. The public is invited and a $2 donation is requested. BIG SAVIN G S at tUlc > PEDAL W ORLD > L0WPRICES0N Ul Û Ul Ul GC IL State Press Advertising 965-7572 KHS Bicycles Gitane Bicycles & Mopeds Repairs On All Makes PEDAL W ORLD 85 W. Boston, Chandler 963-4374 T1 30 m m O m n < in 39 ■< QToyota*Opel Owners! Rich Duncan’s is the alternative. Factory trained specialists in Datsuns, Toyotas, Opels. 7*10 years experience in each. Includes new plugs points condensers carburetor adjustment tim ing & dwell em ission adjust to meet Arizona’s standards *240, 260, 280 Z’s, 6 cyl. $29.95 1850 E 1st St 1st St . ' ¡ Goodyear store 3rd St University Harder to find, lower overhead. Complete service available engine overhaul clutch overhaul transmission overhaul rear end work brakes air conditioning suspension, shocks cooling system carburetion lights, tires good prices 9674851 Rich Duncan’s Automotive Service c * 2 '5 Page 22 State Press October 14, 1977 M ora a b o u t zzzzzszzz::-.: JV caller Bratkowski S tate Press C lassifieds ir For R ent/Lease continued from peg* 21 recalled. “I fell the wrong way with my throwing arm extended. Just a freak accident.” An all-city and all-conference choice as a senior at Abbott Pennings High last year, Bratkowski overcame his season of inactivity by throwing for over 1,000 yards to establish a league and school passing record. Scholarship offers from Pitt, Stanford, Florida St., Illinois, New Mexico, Washington State, Long Beach State and ASU crowded his mailbox soon af­ terwards. “Bob Karmelowicz (the Devils' offensive line coach 1 was up in Wisconsin to watch me when I was playing basketball my senior year. I guess he came to check out my athletic ability. Coach (Frank) Kush called me after that, said he had heard about me and wanted me to visit the campus. Two weeks later, he called back and I said ‘yes.’ I figured it was my best chance.” ‘I love it here’ State Press Classified Advertising 965-7572 * Typing APARTMENT H block from campus. Ona •nd/or two people. $85 per person 9681594. 10/14 ir W anted URGENT! Anyone who has photos of the 1976 Hayden's Ferry Arts 6 Crafts Fair In Tempe, please call Catt immediately at 9587383 If not in, leave message. 10/14 ★ Travel CHAMPAGNE CHRISTMAS CHARTERS. New York $234. Chicago $179. via United Airlines. Contact Valley Travel Mart. 707 S Forest or call 967-9403. 10/19 ir Por Sate BACK DOOR Shoe Shop. 707 South Forest, Tempe. Having a Shoe Sale! $10 and Vi off ladies' and men's sandals and shoos. 12/9 BIOMATE. MANUAL pocket computer, provides you with biorhythm Insights any time, anywhere. Send $9.95 cash, check or money order to Ochsner Enterprises, 8638 E.Cholla, Scottsdale, AZ. 85254. 10/21 NEW QUEEN SIZE bed — extra firm, custom built mattress with three sets sheets and spread. A steal for $160. Call 962-1737 after 6 p.m. 11/12 BOW AND ARROW ‘W ing presentation II" Bratkowski's decision to at­ with stabilizer and case. Like new. Morn­ tend ASU, though, was not ings 9687354. 10/14 merely a stab in the dark. “I love BRIDAL GOWN-VEIL (11), matching 3 it here. I wouldn't want to be drawer chest, night tables, Queen size anywhere else," he said em­ headboard, queen size bed, king size phatically. “Plus I can't help but waterbed, complete. 8382867 after 5:30. _______ 10/14 be impressed with the coaching staff they have at ASU. Every 21 ST CENTURY, your store for the finest In minute in practice is timed out Hi Fidelity Sound Systems and Profes­ sional Installations for the automobile, perfectly. Coach Kush knows only at 21st Century Automotive Sound what he’s doing. You just can 2687733. 10/14 tell.” Although Kush and Bratkow­ IN-DASH 8-TRACK or cassette system with M / FM stereo and Panasonic speakers, ski had never met prior to his in­ AIncluding installation, now $99.21 at 21st duction into the ASU football Century Automotive Sound. 4821 North 7th 10/14 program during the Labor Day St., 265-7733. weekend at Camp Tontozona, the THE MEXICAN SHIRT MAN is back with mid-West product was well more styles of embroidered shirts, aware of what to expect. “My blouses, dresses, sweaters and hooded dad knew of coach Kush's pullovers than ever before. Month of October, only bring add and receive 10% reputation and had recommen­ discount. Phoenix Greyhound Park and ded him highly,” said Bratkowski Swap, space #371 on East side. Saturday 10/28 of Zeke, a University of Georgia and Sunday. All-America in 1953 who played NEW PEVOX Mark Four. Less than 20 with the Chicago Bears and Los hours of playing time. 15" reels. 968-4531 10/14 Angeles Rams before backing up evenings. Bart Starr in Green Bay's glory 21 ST CENTURY’S Pride and Joy! I Kustom days. Kreations power booster, 75 watt, OH so “My high school coach was the low distortion and tons of Klean, loud complete opposite o( Kush sound only $69. Hear». 265-7733. 10/14 personality-wise, but both are disciplinarians. Come to think of ir Persona! it, so is my father.” ir Pets 64 DODGE, runs good, looks good. First $150. After 5:00, 8385825. 10/18 FREE: PUPPY to right-on person. 8 weeks, mixed breed. Cute, affectionate and spunky. Backyard preferred. Elise. 968 8396. 10/14 ★ Roommate W anted TWO ROOMMATES wanted to share three bedroom house. One block from campus. $110 a piece per month plus utilities. Jim after 5 at 9685380. 10/18 NEED ROOMMATE to share four bedroom house. $120, utilities included. 967-1506 evenings. 10/14 LARGE FURNISHED apartment. Two bed­ room, two bath. About % mile from campus. Call 967-0762 evenings till mid­ night. Will take one or two girts. 10/14 ONE OR TWO to share nice house 12 minutes from ASU. $100. Prefer female. Call David, 9689294. 10/14 WANTED: FEMALE roommate for townhouse. Roosevelt & Granite Reef. $137.50 plus V7 utilities (approx. $25.00). Call Darla 9686271, ext. 514. After 5:30, call 948 8770. 10/14 NEAT FEMALE roommate for immediate occupancy. Condominium at McCormick Ranch. $200, utilities included. Over 21. No munch out queens need apply. 9484693. 10/28 ★ Lost/Found A s A Service To The A S U Cam pus Com m unity, • W ESTERN S A V IN G S FRIDAY FR EE LOST & FOUND COLUM N REWARD FOR recovery of a set of LaSalle Law Books missing from automobile last week. Please call Art at 9682443. No questions asked. 10/14 FOUND: STAUFFER Hall. Key ring with letter “R" containing 5 keys. Pick up at State Press office. 10/14 Courtesy Of: 10/14 /10c ★ Typing Name. GALS A GUYS: Earn big money on your own free time In our direct factory sales program. Rep. Rogers Co. (tableware) to all types of outlets. Protected territories — car necessary. If you are interested in maximum earnings with minimum effort. Call for appointment (602) 9481925 Mon. Fri. Between2-5 p.m. 10/14 ASSISTANT for major record company promoter. On-the-job training for careerminded person. No cash salary. You will be compensated with albums of your choice. Cash value equal to $4 per hour. Must be 20 years old or older and have own car. 5 - 1 5 hours per week during regular office hours. Your schedule is up to you. Call 9587090. Leave number and best time to reach you. 10/14 ATTENTION VETERANS — persons with suspected hearing loss to participate In auditory perception experiment in the Psychology Department, ASU. We pay $3/hr. 9687477, 11/4 PART-TIME EVENING work for Police Association’s Annual Civic Plaza show. Work until mid-November Good hourly wages. Must be neat appearing and have pleasant voice. 894-9135 or 2482927. 10/26 HOUSEKEEPER WANTED: house clean­ ing, stay with two children (11 yrs. & 13 yrs.) from 3 - 5:30 or 6 p.m. M-F, cook supper. Must have car, two work ref­ erences. $25/week plus suppers. 8381643 or Jerry, 267-4788. 10/18 TAKING APPLICATIONS for cocktail wait­ resses, apply in person. Dooley's, 1216 E. Apache, Tempe. 10/27 TEEE-SALES: evenings, hourly rate and bonuses, nice office. Good civic sponsor Call 968-4853. 10/20 Sponsors This Leading from strength since J929 TYPING: IBM Seiectric. Disertations, theses, term papers. Six years experience. Jean, 277-3602. 10/18 /40c ir Help W anted CORSON’S SWIMMING Pools needs parttime serviceman. We will train. Must supply truck. 3009 N. Scottsdale Rd. 10/18 |WESTERN SAVINGS /30c 1964 CJ-S New 350 Chevy, extras $2800. 8389281 10/21 PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Manuscripts, etc. Proofed. Short reports out same day. Call 947-5547 after 5 p.m. 10/14 FOUND: /20c WANTED: SPORTS CARS. We also have many fine cars to choose from. Sports Car Co., 5431 East Van Buren, 267-0424. 12/9 1696 PLYMOUTH Fury III. Automatic transmission, power steering/brakes, AC, heater, radio. Good shape. $850 or best offer. Call 9480905 after 5 p.m. 10/19 LOST: Every Wednesday in the State Press. Place your ad in Stauffer A-111 by noon every Monday. TYPING: Manuscripts, term papers, ate. — Professional secretary, accurate, aditsd, 'reasonable rates. 9489207. 10/25 ir Autom obiles TYPING. IBM correcting Seiectric II, also automatic typing. Dissertations, theses, research, term papers. Rosemary Vance, 967-9143. 12/9 ir Instructio n LOST: BLACK wallet at Grateful Dead in Activity Center section P. Please return 9485378. 10/14 DIME-A-LINE W AN T A D S PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Quality paper. Business Collage graduate. By appoint­ ment. Experienced. 65 cents. Anita, 968 9088. 10/27 23 FALCON TOURING bicycle, alloy frame, Campaginoco and Cinefli com­ ponents. Excellent condition. 9684531 evenings. 10/14 PARACHUTE twelve miles from Phoenix! $5.00 off with student ID or this ad. Phone 275-0010. 12/9 SARAH: PLEASE come and get me and bring me back home. Love, Ashley. 10/14 10c for every 5 words means average savinas at 65 to 85% off regular prices. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Guaranteed. Dis­ sertations, theses, term papers, ate Speedy, neat, near ASU , 967-4937. ___________________ 11/3 NICE 18SPEED bike for sale. $70, SLB, white. Good running condition. 9682961 ! 10/14 69 CHEVY % ton camper special, V-8, sail or trade. $1600. Extras. 947-6110. 10/14 ALTERNATE LIFESTYLE. Come and ex­ plore self-awareness, meditation, companship, relaxation, etc. For more information call Libby at 834-0386. 10/19 DIME-A-LINE W AN T A D S ★ Bicycles ASU Term page Lane. 12/9 FAST, ACCURATE typing on IBM Correct­ ing Seiectric. Former legal secretary, 7 years' experience. Heidi, 8385651. 10/28 YOU CA N T get dollars off unless you use. Dollars-off. Dollars-off! Dollars-off! 10/9 TRY US — YOU’LL LIKE USI PROFESSIONAL TYPING for the community Theses. Dissertations. Papers and Resumes, 66 cants per Close to campus at 1801 S. Jan Tilly Suite C-9 Phone 9685150. GRADUATE EXPERTISE — Guaranteed! Dissertations, theses, research papers (Business, Humanities, Psychology, etc.). Nearby, Dabby, 967-2305. 12/9 NEAR ASU. Research papers, theses, dissertations. English degree. Editing. Work guaranteed. 7 years experience. 967-4443. 10/14 MALE AND female to do outside and inside work every Saturday. Paradise Valley 9<8-1<23. __________ 10/18 INSTANT REPLAY now accepting applica­ tions for bartender positions. Apply In person after noon, 1858 E. Apache Blvd. 10/14 AMERICAN PASSAGE, a nationwide mar­ keting organization, has a limited number of openings for college students to earn an excellent part-time income posting adver­ tising materials on campus. Absolutely no selling. Write for details to Michael Gross, 708 Warren Avenue North, Seattle, WA 98109. 10/14 LIQUOR STORE clerk wanted at 2331 E. Broadway, Phoenix. Rainbow Liquors. Must pass lie detector test. Salary com­ mensurate with ability. Hours can be arranged. 10/20 DELIVERY HELP wanted. Need car and know Tempe area. Cashier help needed. 9684292,834-8515. 10/21 BARTENDER — BARMAID, waitress parttime weekends. Apply in person, 1825 E. Apache. 10/21 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES: Begin at home, full or part time. 258-0662, ext. 217. Ask for Charlie J. No obligation. 10/14 PART-TIME SALES clerks, mala or female, minimum w age*. Call 945-0668 for ap­ pointment. 10/14 ir M otorcycles 1975 HONDA CL 360, 4800 miles, book rack, sissy bar, windshield, crash bar, electric start, plus two helmets, $725. 967-1720. 10/18 ★ Services DOLLARS OFF: the book that gives you Dollars-off on eats, entertainment, and excitement! 10/19 PERMANENT HAIR removal: face, body. Eternal Electronic Tweezer also available: no needles, no discomfort. Electrolysis of Scottsdale, 7033 East Indian School Road. 945-4245. 10/27 ROCKY MOUNTAIN EDITING. Academic editing by scholars. Dissertations, theses, papers for publication. Typing arranged. No "papers on file." 9682274, 9680312. 12/9 BIORHYTHMS — Judgment, creativity, health, sexuality, mood. $1 , ten days; $2, thirty days. Send birthdate, chefck to:’ Bioresearch, Box 1632, Scottsdale, AZ 85282. 10/14 ASTROLOGICAL ANALYSIS and counsel­ ing in education career relations and fulfill­ ing personal goals. Appointments: An­ toinette, 9489240. 10/14 TUNE-UPS. I will replace plugs, points and condenser, also set timing and dwell. Price includes parts. 4-cyl. $20; 8 cyl. $22.50; 8-cyl. $25. Imports may cost a bit more. Call Paul at 968-0970. 10/14 ir Announcements GALS, come to our membership tea. Oct. 23, 2-4, Mesa. Business and Professional Women's Club. 965-3355, Naomi. 10/21 URGENT! Anyone having photos of the 1976 M ill Avenue Arts & Crafts Fair, please call Catt today at 9587383. If I'm not in, leave message. 10/14 HAYAY SHALOM - recorded message. Phone 2489234. 10/ 28 ATTENTION VETERANS; Persons with suspected hearing loss to participate In auditory perception experiment in the Psychology Department, ASU. We pay $3/hr. 965-7477. 11/4 r CHANGING HANDS BOOK STORE’S RECENT ARRIVALS and titles of interest. Magic Mirror o f M. C. Eschar: A revealing look into the life and w ork o f o ne o f the m ost a s to n ish ­ ing a rtists o f o u r time. ($6.95) Birth Without Violence: Leboyer’s radical yet sim p le techniq ues fo r e asing the birth trauma and help­ ing the new born to start life w ithout pain, co n fu sio n o r fear. ($8.95) Where Did I Come From?: The fa cts o f life w ithout any no nsense and w ith illu stra tio n s. ($3.95) Divorce kits: C o n ta in in g a ll form s and in s tru ctio n s required by the latest ch an g es in A rizo n a law, these do -it-yo u rself packets for N o-fault D ivorce o r Legal Separa­ tion se ll fo r $12.95 and $16.95. CHANGING HANDS BOOKSTORE 9 East 5th • 966-0203 In dow ntow n Tem pe, ju st around the corner from the V alley Art Jh e a tre . 10/14 j October 14, 1977 State Press Page 23 More about W h e n you buy a pair of F o o tb a ll P ic k 'em continued from p age 19 Lane suffered a hip pointer in the New Mexico game and also is still recovering from oral surgery he underwent last week so halfback George Perry should see a lot of action. Ferry will be playing in front of his hometown fans since he went to high school in Colorado Springs where he was AllAmerica. Last week against New Mexico. Perry ran for 72 yards on 17 carries to pace the Devils’ running attack. Kush rearranged the offensive line last week and moved of­ fensive lineman George Fadok from left guard to right tackle and Greg Blakes moved into the left guard spot. Kush said he was pleased with the offensive line last week and will use this alignment for at least another week. Also, last week marked the First time this season the Devils didn't commit any turnovers in a game. Against Missouri, ASU fumbled three times and threw five interceptions and in the Oregon State game, the Devils threw two interceptions but had no fumbles. ASU has yet to put in two good offensive per­ formances back-to-back. With help from the New Mexico game, ASU’s offense is now. averaging 208 yards on the ground and is third in the WAC. It is also third in pass offense to place it second on overall offense. ASU doesn’t fare as well defensively in the WAC statistics as it is fourth in team defense. The Devils are fourth in rushing defense and fifth in passing defense. Saturday’s game should depend mostly on the con­ sistency of Sproul and the Falcon quarterback Dave Ziebart. Sproul is ranked high in the WAC statistics for total offense (fourth) and passing offense (fourth). Lane leads the Devils in rushing with 336 yards and averages 84 yards a game. He is the WAC^ third leading rusher. Split end John Jefferson continues to remain in contention for the WAC receiver lead with 18 catches. This is only three receptions behind the WAC leader, Todd Christensen of Brigham Young. The Jock Shop Ms. Rfcfdofl Casuals. You G al ■ $6 00 Bag FREE 45 E. BROADWAY Complete Riddel Dealer Helmets • Helmet Plaques Casual Shoes • Training Shoes Entries must be turned in to the State Press by 3 p.m. a c ce n te d paper ’ 5ThU,/er H3"' ° n,y °"# *n,ry per P«r#on will be *°P three winners wl11 be listed in Tuesday’s Groat Campus Shoo. SEE THEM AT THE JOCK SHOP Mill & Broadway 6 Different Colors. ASU D ivision o l Sunvalco Ath. Supply S ch o o l Dist. 967-5589 vs. Air Force Academy Predict the score. Visitor □ BYU □ Wisconsin □ Tennessee □ Oklahoma □ Colorado □ Stanford □ UCLA □ Delaware □ Notre Dame □ Navy □ Texas Southern □ Texas □ Iowa State □ Citadel □ Illinois □ Oregon State □ □ □ □ Home □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ Colorado State Michigan Alabama Missouri Kansas Washington Washington State Villanova Army Pittsburgh Bishop Arkansas Nebraska V.M.I. Purdue California PRO FOOTBALL Denver Chicago Washington Tampa Bay □ □ □ □ Oakland Minnesota Dallas Seattle CARPET REMNANTS Up to 12 x 9 ' 49« A ll Types A ll Sizes Smith (arpel P apago P laza 9 4 6 -3 1 8 7 First prize will be dinner for two at Jeremiah’s Steak House. Second prize is 21 draft beers for a nickel at Instant Replay and third prize is two hand-packed quarts of ice cream at Kitchie’s 50 Flavors. 1 Name Phone w it h t h is c o u p o n ASU AL F A N N SU B A R U Largest Stock in Arizona 4-Wheel Drives, Wagons, 2-Doors, 4-Doors. Large Inventory of Pre-owned Cars 1333 E. Camelback Phoenix 2 7 9 -9 5 7 5 BUY ONE GET ONE FREE! Presen t th is coupon and receive one F R E E lap of driving when you purchase one lap at the regular price of $1.25. V a lid driver's licen se required. L im it 1 coupon per person, per visit. O ffer expires Dec. 30, 1977. 1616 North Hayden Road Tempe, Arizona 85281 (602) 949-7265 SP Inext door to Big Surf I DRIVE AND COMPARE — THANK YOU! Jefferson and Lane are also tied for sixth in scoring by averaging six points a game. Weak safety John Harris and wingback Ron Washington lead ASU on the specialty teams. Harris is fifth in the WAC in punt returns and Washington is fourth in kickoff returns. ★ £ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * * * ALMA MATER Where the bold Sahuaros^^ ^ Ra'*« their arma on high, Praying strength for brave tomorrows W From the Western sky, £ J r Where eternal mountains ^ Kneel at sunaefs gate, £ Here we hail thee, -Jf fC Alma Mater, V Arizona Statel ^ State Press Advertising 965-7572 PER SQ. FT. IV With purchase off any Small, Medium or Large Pizza. Expires 10-22-77 — 1— 1 i t . 1— r - McCLINTOCK & GUADALUPE Tempe Square Shopping Center S t o p In o r C a r r y O u t Phone: 83 9-9 98 8 Hours: Mon-Thurs 11 am - 11 pm Fri-Sat 11 am - 1 am Sun 4 pm - 10 pm Coca-Cola ano Coke are registered trade-marks whi ch identify the same product of me Coca-Cola Company Page 24 State Press October 14, 1977 Thinks college Is one big time-out. Holds school record for most games played. Once managed to drop 7 passes and 3 courses in same day. Cal drinks Lite Beer from Miller because it's less filling. With his schedule he can't afford to get filled up. Today he has to be in two places at once. Insists on playing center and quarterback. Spends spare time going to class. Lite Beer fromMiller. Everything you always wanted in a beer. And less.