Legislation opens books to citizens, but closes police files to the press By Walter Kelley To protect the private citizen, Congress is opening some books but closing others. Recent legislation has made many government files accessible to the public. However, a new federal law has closed police files that have been a traditional source of information for the press. As of the first of the month, names of suspects and persons arrested are deleted from police reports, Tempe police Capt. Dale ' Douglas said Tuesday. Local police departments still are attem pting to sort out implications of new laws known as the Privacy and Security Acts, he said. Members of the press may not check a person’s record or refer to their prior arrests which did not result in convictions, Douglas said. “This will cause an end to such comments in the press as, ‘Mr. So-and-So, arrested four times for murder and never convicted,’ ” Douglas said. The laws are the result of a fear that information banks will be used for credit reference, Douglas said. There were some severe but isolated abuses, he said. Tempe police Lt. Robert Carpenter said, “That law is the result of people like the ACLU (A m erican Civil Liberties Union) and other bleeding h e a rts in th e country.” A staff worker of the ACLU office in Phoenix said, “I’m sure the law is well-intentioned but it could do more harm than good. It sounds like censorship to me. “If press (reporters) want they can protect victims. All they have to do is exercise editorial discretion. “I would rather see them do it than the government,” she said. D ouglas ad d ed ,“ W hen you turn the government lose on something like this you create a real monster.” The law has caused W e d n e sd a y March 14, 1978 Arizona State University Voi. 60 No. 90 problems for Detroit, Mich., police, who work closely with Canadian police in the city of Windsor, Ontario, Douglas said. Since Canadian police are not prohibited by law from disseminating information, the Detroit police can no longer share th e ir in ­ form ation w ith th e ir Canadian c o u n te rp a rts, Douglas said. Penalties for breaking the new law are several, he said. “You can be denied access state press Arizona to further information. Our whole system is built on access to information. We depend on it for our day-today operations. “If we were denied access to state-information, we couldn’t check a car re g istra tio n , a d riv e r’s license or o u tstan d in g w arrants,” he said. The police departments have draw n up u s e rs ’ agreements with the state to cover access to state information, Douglas said. To protect itself, a police department could become so rigid, nothing could be found out, he said. The problem for departments in the Phoenix area now is to develop a uniform method of an­ swering this law so the press does not single out any one department as being too restrictive with information, he said. W ithout approval O v erlo a d s to be fe lle d by co m puter By Kate Cummings Liberal arts students carrying more than 18 credit hours without dean’s ap­ proval will find their class load lighter when administrative action is taken next week. Overboard Taking a break from his classes to enjoy the sun­ shine, Bob Locke practices some turns on his skate­ board on the mall. The freshman graphics design major says he practices at every break. [State Press staff photo by Rhonda Prast] Students who have not answered warning letters sent them by the liberal arts college will automatically have their loads reduced by Doris Dewey, liberal arts academic adviser. “The University feels a responsibility to students to keep them within a range (of class hours) they can handle,” said William Haid, associate registrar. After warnings were sent students, the overload list dropped from 423 to 249 stu d e n ts, said M arilyn Theodosis, secretary to the dean of liberal arts. Acting as a “loco parentis,” ASU makes restrictions to benefit students and insure quality education, Haid said. “Students taking 22 or 23 hours, getting by on C’s or D’s probably will be lacking the appropriate grade point average at graduation,” he said. The overload report also helps students whose drops have not been filed by the registrar or students who forgot to drop a class during drop/add, he said. While students carrying 18 or more hours pay the same amount for tuition as students carrying fewer hours, getting more education for their money, Haid said the hour restrictions have no economic basis. “If the University wanted to make more money, they would encourage the students to take more hours. Our funds. (from the legislature) are appropriated according to the number of credit hours students have enrolled in.” Page 2 State Press March 15, 1978 the nett's briefly 44 DIE IN PRISON RIOT BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Inmates at Argentina's largest prison attacked guards and set fire to bedding and furniture Tuesday, and police said 44 persons died and 30 were injured seriously before the riot was crushed. It was among the worst prison riots on record, surpassing the death toll of 43 at New York's Attica Prison in 1971. Prison officials said the dead were asphyxiated as flames spread through a cellblock housing 161 men at the crowded Villa Devoto Prison, 10 miles north­ west of the city center. CHLORINE FUMES ESCAPE STEUBENVILLE, Ohio — An explosion and fire at a manufacturing plant Tuesday unleashed chlorine fumes which sent 38 people to hospitals and prompted the mayor to evacuate all down­ town streets of Steubenville. Hospital spokesmen said all the victims were treated for inhaling chlorine gas fumes. Authorities said the explosion at the Famous Supply Co. heating firm touched off a fire which spread to the National Colloid Co., manufacturers of industrial water softeners. GUNMAN SURRENDERS LOS ANGELES— A gunman dressed in black, who stalked the ledge of an exclusive 32-story downtown apartment building firing shots and threatening to jump, surren­ dered quietly to police Tues­ day. There were no immediate reports of injuries. The gun­ man, identified as Thomas Simmons, 25, was despond­ ent over money problems and left a suicide note before climbing to the roof of the Bunker Hill Towers, police said. UTAH PLANS EXECUTIONS SALT LAKE CITY — The Utah State Prison, where killer Gary Gilmore was executed by a firing squad 14 months ago, is preparing for the simul­ taneous firing-squad execu­ tions of two convicted killers next week. Lawyers for both men say they will file neces­ sary appeals and are confident the executions won't be carried out as scheduled at sunrise March 22. If the execu­ tions are carried out, they will be the first in the nation since Gilmore died Jan. 17, 1977. His death was the only execu­ tion in the country in nearly 10 years. MAN SWINDLES FOR DYING WIFE CLAYTON, Mo. — Melvin Wagner, convicted of swin­ dling his boss out of nearly $100,000, said he did it to buy nice things for his wife be­ cause, “I knew she was going to die, and I wanted the last two years of her life to be happy.” Wagner, 58, who was convicted on Jan. 24 of oper­ ating a phony company to steal $97,000 from a soap products plant, said he began the operation after learning in 1973 his wife, Lea, had termi­ nal cancer. On Monday, St. Louis County Circuit Court Judge James Reddy sen­ tenced Wagner to eight years in prison but then reduced the sentence to five years’ pro­ bation. ISRAELI TROOPS CROSS INTO LEBANON TEL AVIV — Israeli forces are operating in southern Lebanon, military sources said Tuesday. The sources refused to elaborate on the terse announcement. It con­ firmed reports from in Wash­ ington and from Palestinian guerrilla sources in Beirut that Israeli forces had crossed into Lebanon three days after a Palestinian terrorist attack along the Tel Aviv-Haifa road in which 33 Israelis were killed. In Beirut, a Palestinian spokesman said an undeter­ mined number of Israeli forces crossed into southern Leba­ non and were massing in areas controlled by right-wing Christian militias, which Israel has supported in the past against Moslem leftist forces. SUSPECT COMMITS SUICIDE TUCSON — Authorities Tuesday were trying to iden tify an armed robbery suspect who shot and killed himself as law enforcement officers closed in following a 35-mile chase along Interstate 10. The suspect died at Kino Com­ munity Hospital about 12:30 a.m., an hour after shooting himself in the head with a .22caliber pistol, officers said. The shooting occurred after a car carrying the man and a companion hit a guard rail and stopped on 1-10 at Rita Road on Tucson’s southeast side. The two had led officers from three jurisdictions on a 90 mph chase from Benson, officers said. CRASH VICTIMS IDENTIFIED BENSON, Ariz. — The three reserve Army officers killed in a light plane crash near here were identified Tuesday as two California men and a Mississippi man. The men were killed Sunday night when the Cessna 182 they were fly­ ing went down 5V2 miles south of here en route from Tucson to Fort Huachuca. a te d Press SENATORS’ SUIT DISMISSED WASHINGTON — A federal judge declared on Tuesday Sens. Barry Goldwater, RAriz., and Howard Metzenbaum. D-Ohio. were not in­ jured parties in a Navy pur­ chase of 22 light airplanes and dismissed their lawsuit. The senators had challenged the $21 million contract on grounds that it was not arrived at through competitive bid­ ding. They claimed they had “standing” to sue because they were assumed in floor debate the contract would be opened for competitive bid­ ding. When it wasn’t, they said, their vote was nullified. EASTER gifts are not “usual” when they come from us. See Jewelry, Boxes, Seri Carvings, Sculpture, Baskets, etc. . . . from 50c up. (u p. U p . UP!) ITHE GALLERY STORE Matthews Center, 2nd floor 12 to 4 weekdays ^jg a c g g a a c a a g f ia g s s c g a g « SHABBAT DINNER - Friday, March 17 > STATE PRESS is published by Arizona State University Tuesday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter at Tempe, A2 85281 PRINTED AT SUN PUBLISHING CO. Tempe, Ariz. featuring Delicious Crepes 6:00 P.M. — $1.50 — R.S.V.P. Hillel 967-7563 SERVICES at 8:00 P.M. Program Follow ing Services at 8:30 P .M . "N E O -N A Z IS M AND TH E FIR S T A M E N D M E N T ' A debate featuring a member of the local A .C .L .U . and a m em ber of the Phoenix Jew ish C om m unity. Baker Center — 213 E. University Dr. 'W & & A ST. PATRICK'S DAY SALE M & a r c h 1 6 - 1 7 - 1 8 25-50%OFF , ALL MERCHANDISE “ TOPS • SLACKS • SKIRTS 1 2 2 E. U N IV E R S IT Y - TEMPE (in the A rches) O p en M on.-Sat. 9-6, Sun. 11-5 9 6 8 -1 3 3 9 f r i March 15, 1978 State Press Page 3 Trilie to become extinct if Orme built, Indian says By Melissa Coons Construction of Orme Dam could mean the end of the Yavapai tribe in Arizona, a representative from the Fort McDowell tribe said Tuesday. “If that small tribe is moved again, they will face extinction," Carolina Butler said. Butler and Dixie Lee Davis spoke as part of Native American Cultural Days at ASU. Davis said construction of the dam would mean the relocation of 356 Yavapai Indians to an area northeast of Fort McDowell. “We can’t live in that area. There is no farmland, no roads and no water,” she said. Both said they also oppose the dam because they believe it is not safe. “It would be built on faults. Stewart Mountain, Horseshoe and Bartlett Dams are not safe now. They have cracks in them. When those dams go, we will have something worse than Teton,” Davis said. Butler said the communication between the tribe and political representatives has been inadequate. “To this day. Congress has never heard what a Yavapai Indian has to say about relocation,” she said. Davis said, “No one has come out to speak with us. Our former chairman has met with representatives, but they skirt the issue and just pat you on the back.” Butler said the recent floods in Arizona have added to the Indians’ problems by increasing public support for flood-control projects. “The politicians have seized the opportunity of the flooding to get the Yavapais out of there (Fort McDowell), so the other cities with people living in the river bottoms won’t have to lift a finger to protect themselves from floods,'' she said. Davis said she is not concerned with Mayor Margaret Hance or Rep. John Rhodes, R-Ariz., who both favor Orme Dam,. “It's a little late for Hance to start worrying about flood control,” she said. “ T h e y ’ve ( p o li ti c ia n s ) been trying to get Orme Dam for years. My tribe has constantly refused. We’re not moving. They O ne FREE M EA L W ith This Ad “Is it fair that the government should move the Indian again ju st for white society's progress?” she asked. The confusion surrounding the upcoming Associated Students elections has been resolved through a 10-4 vote by First Council Monday night to retain the current Articles of Association. The council upheld President Mark Barnes’ veto of the proposed changes, which would have gone to the voters in April if approved. The proposals would have eliminated the presidential veto power, established atlarge elections for First Council members and would have separated the office of executive vice president into two offices: financial and legislative. Although today was to be the deadline for turning in nominating petitions, Gary McClellan, elections coordinator has extended it until 4 p.m. Monday due to the recent confusion. Nominee hopefuls must submit 500 signatures. Executive offices available include president, executive vice president, vice president of campus affairs and activities vice president. Since the propositions were defeated, the upcoming elections will be conducted as in the past, Barnes said. Students who took out petitions for either legislative or financial vice president instead will compete for the present office of executive vice president, if they wish, he added. The council also approved the elections code, amending it so it will be optional for First Council representatives to compete in at-large elections. According to the present constitution, council members are appointed through independent measures determined by the individual colleges. Those interested in running for First Council should contact McClellan to find out if their college is par­ ticipating in elections. Barnes said First Council will begin an extensive re ­ examination of thè present and proposed constitution at a First Council meeting at 5:30 p.m. Monday in the MU Mohave Room. All students are invited to par­ ticipate, he said. j o o L e y ’s 9 6 8 2446 CONCERTS * **. f Thurs., Mar. 16 JO H N STEW ART f- Tues., Mar. 21 , Direct from Jamaica! ROOTS O F C R EA T IO N The Valley's first reggae spectacular $4.50 in advance Mon., Mar. 27 $5.50 a t the door _ ____ . ^ KEITH C A R R A D IN E (Star of "Nashville" and "Welcome to L.A." | and LE BLANC and CARR $4.00 in advance $5.00 at the door kurs., M ar. 30 _____ , ____ j | I 1__________________________ I ______ LO U REED and IA N D U R Y 5 5 .5 0 in advance I----------------------------------------| You are invited to be | our guest for a at the I Baptist Student Center 1322 S. Mill Every Friday at 12:00 Butler said local officials favor the dam because it would be paid for by federal funds. “All the taxpayers would pay for it, not just those in Arizona. T If you’ve got it, why not use it? That is the rationale of students who operate mopeds with the motor running on campus. Having to pedal the moped around campus is like trying to stay on a diet, they say. University Police Chief George Bays said Tuesday, University policy requiring mopeds to be pedaled when on malls or bikepaths will be enforced. “The first time around, the rider probably will be warned,” Bays said. “If they were driving erratically on a mall and en­ dangering lives and property, more stringent measures would be taken.” Bays explained mopeds are held to the same laws that govern other motorized vehicles when the motor is running. When the moped is being pedaled, it is treated as a bicycle. FREE LUNCH can take their money and build it somewhere else," she said. Carolina Butler Mopeds must be pedaled on campus ! Articles retained by First Council $6.50 at the door FR ID A Y St. Pat's Special Fri., M ar. 17. A very special Irish Party in the Dooley's tradition. Drink Special: green beer and 50c for Irish whiskey. 3 p.m.-7 p.m. ______________ CALL FOR DETAILS _________________ Concert times 7:00 & 10:30 p.m. Tickets available at Odyssey Records and Dooley's. I Page 4 State Press March 15,1978 \ Opinion It is easier to fight for principles than live up to them. —Alfred Adler ✓ Docu-dramas: Fact or fiction Television’s much-heralded season of “The Big Bad Docu-drama’’ is nearly finished. Critics have been telling us that programs like “King” and “Ruby and Oswald," among many others, simply give a pulpit to Bolsheviks and Birchers set on imposing their ideologies on the populace with warped historical perceptions. By blurring the line between news and en­ tertainment with a mixture of historical oc­ currences and dramatic license, the Washington Post said, "Television undermines its greatest public service: letting people see and hear history in the making or in retrospect.” But merely wishing docu-dramas would go away doesn’t throw much light on the subject. In truth, docu-dramas have been with us in one form or another for years, whether they were made for television or for the cinema, later to be shown on the tube. In the 1950's it was Jimmy Stewart in “The FBI Story.” The 60’s had “PT-109," the tale of John Kennedy’s World War II heroism, while the ’70’s TV-drama “The Missiles of October" analyzed the Cuban missile crisis. These programs produced relatively little criticism, either because they were extremely well-produced and/or the politics behind the show didn’t particularly offend anyone at the time. Most people felt these shows passed the test of attempting to portray their subjects with a degree of honesty. Even the first epic movie, the notoriously racist “Birth of a Nation,” was a form of docu-drama. This 1915 classic was a sort of “anti-Roots," telling the story of Southern civilization and the Civil War from the Confederate point of view. And what about Orson Welles' “Citizen Kane,” often called the greatest American movie? With the success of the historical drama format on the wide-screen, the move to TV was only natural. Who's to.say one medium should use more dramatic license than another? The latest round of debates about the nature of television, journalism and history came in the wake of NBC’s much-publicizeid, but littlewatched three-part series on the life story of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. King's life story is a remarkable saga. But unlike “Roots,” the ratings indicated most people couldn't wait to change channels, no matter what NBC program preceded "King.” That’s not surprising. While even the most Stephen Schack — conservative white person can chirp, “I always thought slavery was wrong,” the same cannot be said about the 1960's civil rights movement. The shame, the guilt, or whatever constitutes that unmistakable feeling, still lingers. We’d just as soon forget. One of the most frequent knocks against “King” was the sometimes confusing interplay of newsfilm with dramatic interpretation. But this criticism seemed rather hollow after a late night broadcast of a movie on a similar topic, “The FBI: Attack Against Terror,” a few nights later. This 1971 made-for-TV production, produced in the narration style of “The FBI" television series, did a much better job than “King” in separating fact from fiction. But the context of the “facts” made them more fictional than fiction. The program revolved around the bureau's attempts to track down the murderers of three young civil rights workers in the midst of a lunatic mid- 60's Southern atmosphere. The show pictured J. Edgar Hoover in earnest conversations with President Johnson, while the announcer solemnly intoned that Hoover had called out hundreds of agents, and that he would make every effort imaginable to capture the killers. Let’s allow Mr. Hoover the truthfulness of the film’s account. The problem is that the entire picture drawn by the production made Hoover and the FBI appear as dedicated to the cause of human rights as Martin Luther King himself. Now that’s fiction. The answer, however, isn’t to ignore docudramas because they sometimes contain questionable details or a Arrow perspective. Each production should stand dm ifp own merits, its own ho'nesty. The viewer should try to figure out the point the production is trying to make, along with the underlying motive. Is it informational, does it try to exploit prejudice and violence, does it offer new insights or is it simply out to make a buck at every artistic expense? The other solution is to turn the channel. But as long as the docu-drama has a niche in contemporary broadcasting, we might as well learn something from them. For all their faults, they at least have the habit of concerning themselves with serious topics, a characteristic normally foreign to commercial television. —Mike Tulumello . ^ [UTEKUATlomL # T E K R O K IS —Fur YoilK cause The AE? A T i- A W E ... ...ß o M D A G U5 ... •• • O K J 5 E R A IL A T T A I N / guT OoNT ^ O KA n S o M i L NOTT&.» - .rt7 8 © S T A T E P R E S S . How to write letters Type letters. Type them short, no more than two pages double-spaced. Write simple, direct sentences. The most effective letters make only one or two points. Sign your letter. Bring or mail it to the State Press, Stauffer A-137 an alternative vietv Nixon: The hatred persists To all of you political science, sociology, psychology, mass communications, and other interested students I have an idea that, if properly executed, will assuredly gain you a great deal of favor. Some day while you are in class listening to the significant utterances of your learned instructor proceed upon the following course of action: Drop your pen suddenly as if startled by a loud noise, then abruptly stand, throw up your arms, shake as though possessed by a demonic spirit, and at the top of your lungs, with a bit of hysteria in your voice, scream the words Richard Nixon. Upon hearing the frightful and vulgar cry, your professor immediately would end his discourse and inform the class that an intellectual exorcism appeared in order. After all, this ominous scene proved once and for all that the spirit of Richard Nixon had not passed away with Watergate, but instead lingered on to haunt the psyches of not-yet-enligljtened undergraduates. Clothing himself in the robes of righteous indignation and liberal morality, the professor would make his way to the blackboard and commence his appointed spiritual function by writing, in bold letters, the word NIXON. However, as swiftly as he wrote the abhorred epithet, and as if to symbolically destroy the wretched Nixon, the impassioned professor would proceed to violently erase it from the board. After these ceremonial preliminaries had been performed the exorcism would continue by an in­ vocation of the “catalogue of evils”, an exhortation that would invariably involve the following charges: As everyone now knows, but as only the most per­ ceptive (i.e. the intellectuals) could at first divine, Nixon embarked upon his Hitlerian career while associated with the ultra-rightist House Un-American Activities Committee. Operating within the fogged atmosphere of McCarthyism, Nixon proved his true unsavory bent when he fancied to “get” poor Alger Hiss. After performing the task of liberal-radical witchhunting with an historically unprecedented zeal (and actually believing that a Communist could exist) Nixon continued to remain in the public spotlight as he gained increasing sympathy from backwater America — from the majority of Americans who in taste and intellectual demeanor resemble yahoos, rubes, and idiots who are unflinching in their disdain for avant-garde socialist ideas. Managing to ultimately waggle his way up the political ladder and into Ike’s presidency, Nixon decided that he enjoyed life and power at the top, so vowed to try for the kingship himself. Thank the sainted Marx, however, that the American people, unaccustomed as they are at showing good Democratic sense, voted instead for JFK. (Just think that we could have had tyranny as early as 1961.) This defeat was only a temporary setback for Nixon who continued to struggle toward the day when he would become Der Fuehrer. The dark day finally arrived in 1968, and one could accurately claim that from that point on, the Republic began its rapid and inexhorable drift into the grips of fascist control. For, as our professor would delightedly continue, Nixon systematically proved that the preservation of civil liberties ranked low on the list of social priorities. Through his tirades against the news media, and through his vice-president’s fulminations against the intelligentsia, Nixon demonstrated not only his hatred for reason, but also his entrenched reaction. Ultimately caught up in an immoral war and in the incessant violation of civil rights, Nixon perpetrated the biggest atrocity against humankind in Watergate, the consequences of which are paralleled only by Adolf Hitler and Joe Stalin. (Yes, you read correctly. A minor American president associated with a legacy of untold human misery and destruction.) Nixon was indeed a totalitarian! On that statement the exorcising would cease, the class period would be over, and the rarefied climate of academe would be once again restored to its pristine, progressive, and un-spiritual state. And all of this simply because you uttered the two words Richard Nixon. Someday when you desire to witness liberal humaneness and compassion at their visceral best, do what I have suggested today. As foreshadowed in the above tale, you will indeed be treated to a spectacle. A spectacle marked by historical fabrication, philosophical blindness, and moral insanity, a drama for which our intelligentsia is most renowned. March 15, 1978 State Press Page 5 Campus A ffa irs C om m ittee B u ck B ox F e e d b a c k Q: Why can’t anyone in the Tenant’s Association ever be reached? How can they possibly help students when they are never available? D.M. A: New office hour* have been posted for the Tenant 's Association. Office hours are 10:30-12:30 Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 8:30-5:00 on Tuesdays and Thursdays. However, applications are available for the director's position and case workers. Anyone who has a GPA of 2.2 and above and carried a minimum of 7 hours last semester is eligible to apply for these positions. Applications may be picked up at the Matthews Center. We strongly recommend anyone who is eligible and interested to apply. Q: What is the procedure for helping disabled students in an emergency situation? Who is responsible for their safety? R.B. A: 7he Campus Affairs Committee contacted the Sta'.e Fire Marshall and discovered that the University has the responsibility to insure the safety of all disabled students. Presently, the University fire marshall is drawing up plans to delegate authority for disabled persons' safety. Q: Why aren't there any bike racks at the Packard Stadium? K.C. A: We have contacted Mr. Fails and he has assured us that bike racks will be installed in the very near future. Q: Why aren't the typewriters in the MU available after 6 p.m.? M.S. ¿4: We have contacted the Assistant Director of the MU and were informed that they presently are considering alternative areas in which to make the typewriters available after 6 p.m. Currently the entire area in which the typewriters are located is closed after 6 p.m. For several years, we were informed the area was kept open but the interest was insufficient to 'justify the costs. We need to know if there is enough demand to keep the library open later on Fridays. It now closes at 5 p.m. but if enough demand is shown, we will work on the situation. Please drop off this form in any Buck Stops Here box or -208J of the Memorial Union. NICKEL BEER with purchase o< any sandwich and this coupon at the submarine factory only at these locations: •4 E. UNIVERSITY DRIVE •79th ST. 8r MCDOWELL O FFE R EXPIRES APRIL 15. 1978 This offer not good with any other coupons. C O U P O N M ■■■CO UPO N■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ coupon oM ooooooooooooeoooooaooooooooooooooooeoon I WOULD LIKE TO SEE HAYDEN LIBRARY OPEN LATER ON FRIDAY NIGHTS. Yesl If yes, 8:00D No! how late? 9:00D 10:000 L e tte r s to t h e E d ito r Sports Editor:' As a member of Arizona State’s men’s swimming and diving team I am discouraged and disappointed over the State Press’ total lack of coverage of our WAC championships (March 2-4). I have always assumed that the function of a school news­ paper was to keep the students informed of all the current and interesting happenings that affect the school. If this is so, I believe the State Press has been naive throughout the entire year in covering the ASU’s men’s swimming and diving team, a group of athletes that has entertained and packed bleachers at all their home meets. We have a large, loyal following of fans, mostly students, who have been denied coverage of our most important team effort of the year. Through the State Press' failure to properly cover our championship meet, I believe it has failed to live up to its responsibilities as a school newspaper. March 23-25 will find the ASU men’s squad in Long Beach, California for the national meet and I can only hope that the State Press will provide adequate coverage of this meet. In the future I Sincerely hope that the newspaper will show a little more concern for one of the up and coming sports at Arizona State University. Jim Green Men's swimming and diving team the article entitled, “Bloodbath in Iran.” If the Shah of Iran is such an oppressive tyrant than how are dissident Iranian nationals permitted to pursue educations in the United States? I can’t ever recall encountering any dissident Soviet or Red Chinese students at ASU. Perhaps the Soviet Union and Red China are truly what one could label “proletarian paradises” and the airtight borders that seal them off from the intervening world are there to keep people out, not in! Charles E. Lurch, ID College of Business Administration Iranians Editor: I have a simple question that I would like to pose to the Iranian students who recently authored At a loss for a Mother’s Day gift? Want to know why your Prof’s putting on weight? Where can you find a recipe for Rattlesnake Enchiladas? How can you contribute to the ASU Student Loan and Aid Fund? The ASU Faculty Wives Club Cookbook answers all these questions . . . Buy RECIPES TO CH EER ABOUT for $3.50 at the ASU FWC “Fiesta on the Mall’’ March 18 on Cady Mall, or the ASU Bookstore. All proceeds from the Cookbook sale benefit the ASU Student Loan and Scholarship Fund. i c o eoooceaaacecoeeoeaocoaeooooooooooooaoocoo o F • Green Beer • Irish Coffee • Corned Beef & Cabbage When you order 3, the 4 th is free S t. Patrick’s Eve PARTY Limited tim e offer on KODAK Color Prints made from your favorite slides. ERIN G0 ÖRAGH •Get one print free when you order four. »Ideal for photo albums or photocubes. •Carry extras in your pocket or purse. »Offer ends April 26. »Act now and be sure to ask us for Color Processing by KODAK. Thurs., March 16 Thru Fri., March 17 PIONEER CAMERA Tempe Center 967-4662 966-8363 FOOD BOOZE BOOGIE •( 01*1« COLOR PROCESSING „ . Kodak 530 West Broadway Tempe, Arizona 85282 (602)894-1375 * i t =fS Page 6 State Press March 15, 1978 D .A .T . Navajo reservation life to be explored by KAET By Mary Gillespie Life on A rizona's sprawling Navajo Indian reservation, which houses the largest native American culture existing today, will be explored by KAET-tv, Channel 8 in a 10-part series to be distributed across the country through the PBS network. “ The purpose of th e project is to make the general public aware of the Navajo lifestyle, as well as o th e r asp ects of th e pluralism that is America,’’ said Patricia Barey, director of program planning for KAET. In January, Channel 8 received a $102,000 grant from th e N ational Endow m ent for th e Humanities to fund the series. That gift was the second in what the station hopes will be a three-phase endowment, culminating in the production of the 10 segments. Last y e a r, K A ET received $20,000 to conduct a feasibility study to determine if the project could be produced. T hat stu d y , which b ro u g h t to g e th e r representatives from the Navajo Nation as well as scholars and technicians, a p p a r e n tly c o n v in c e d everyone that the project was worth pursuing. Currently, Channel 8 is interviewing w riters who will work on two scripts and the outlines for eight more Physiological research is topic o f talk D r. S tan ley A. Rasmussen, an expert on th e m edical effects of jogging and the biochemical properties of muscle fiber, will speak Friday at ASU. R asm ussen, associate p ro fesso r of physical education at NAU, will discuss re se a rc h in to c h e m ic a l s ta in in g techniques and hum an physiological experiments. His speech will be at 8 p.m. in the Bateman Physical Sciences Center, room B100. (funding for which was included in the most recent NEH grant.) The w riters will live on the reservation for ex­ tended periods during script p re p a ra tio n s, as will production technicians after on-location shooting begins. "We’re planning to base each segment on life crises of the Navajo. Each show will look at an individual and the special problems he or she ex p erien ces throughout life. We feel these universal themes will appeal to everyone and will humanize the shows,” Barey said. A proposal for production funds will be submitted to NEH by the station soon, thus putting the earliest possible production date somewhere in 1980, said KAET Program Manager Peggy Hughes. "Besides syndicating the finished series th ro u g h PBS, we also hope to distribute i t through school systems and other agen­ cies," Hughes said. The projected filming budget is set at between $1.5 and $2 million, but inflation may drive up the cost by the time production begins, Barey said. T h e r e IS m d i f f e r e n t e " PIAN MPI e d u c a t io n a l 1000 E. Apache #216 CENTER UNIVERSITY STUDY Interested in earning university credits while exploring a new land in all its aspects? Why not consider a summer, semester, year, or degree proyam at one of Israel's seven leading universities. Reliyous studies, humanities, the social sciences and a host of other courses are offered in either English or Hebrew with special emphasis on helping you get a grasp of Israel. Whether it be in Jerusalem, Haifa, Tel Aviv or the Negev, a study program at an Israeli university will give you a new feeling about Israel and yourself as well. Write for a brochure giving information about all the universities and the programs they offer. Council for Advancement of Study Pro grams at Israeli Universities, dm 1 515 Park Avenue, Near York, Near York 10022, (212) 751-0070 of the fraternity, said. “A few minutes later, a crowd of guys from n earby fraternities had gathered in the parking lot to see what h a p p e n e d .” A lth o u g h University Police and the fire marshal arrived a few minutes after the incident to put out the fire, they could not determine the cause of the blast. “I suspect it was a half of stick of d y n a m ite ,” Anderson said. “The noise was too loud to be caused by firecrackers.” Although there are no suspects at this time, recent pranks at the SAE house indicate the incident was probably fraternity mischief, Anderson said. 0 : cStivnüßu-R 9 6 7 -2 9 6 7 Early morning blast rocks fraternity row An ear-shattering ex ­ plosion shook fraternity row early Tuesday morning, b re a k in g w indow s and drawing a crowd of halfclothed spectators. The 1:10 a.m. blast sent bottles and papers flying more than 50 feet from a garbage dum pster in the back parking lot of Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity, 706 Alpha Drive, ASU Fire Marshal Sylvester Ander­ son said. Although no one was injured, three windows were shattered and the damage could have been severe if anyone had been hit by th e flying debris, Anderson said. “It sounded like dynam ite,” Jeff Meyers, a member of the fraternity said. “I looked out my window and saw a huge ball of fire ignite from the garbage can," Meyers said. “There were no cars going by and I didn’t see anyone around.” “I was lying in bed and all of a sudden I heard this huge e x p lo sio n ,” Bill Goodheart, another member •w w C la sse s starting soon! H urry! LAST CH A N CE to p rep are for A p ril exam . f 4 FRE BIKE TOURING m iM BY ANITA H O m N S MARCH 15-17 H o w tx T ra v e l L ig h t nd TEMPE CENTER < ^ H o w to JEW ELERS P a c k It FOR ALL YOUR JEWELRY NEEDS Diamonds, Watches 14k Chains, Pendants Sorority-Fraternity Jewelry Watch & Jewelry Repairing 966-7587 [ H I o t u ^ o / L . 1043 E. LEMON 968-2712 HOUSEPLANTS 2 0% O FF O u r Entire G reen h o u se Stock BEING RIPPED O FF ON PHOTO FINISHING PRICES COLOR PRINTS DEVELOPED & PRINTED 12 Exposures. $2.44 v 20 Exposures. . $3.40 24 Exposures. . _ . $3.88 36 Exposures. $5.82 Phone: 968-5667 “The DARK ROOM” at R O L L IN G S T O N E S 202A University / Tempe, A rir to ASU Students with I.D. Cards GREENTREE GARDENS NURSERY 48th Street & Van Buren 1 March 15, 1978 State Press Page 7 ASU winsaward for intern program By Mark Scarp A student intern program developed by the ASU elem en tary education department in conjunction with several Valley school districts, was selected to receive the “Distinguished P rogram in T eacher Education Award” from a field of more than 450 nominees. The award is the only one of its kind given by the A ssociation of T eacher E d u cato rs, a national organization, according to Carl Wallen, department chairman. The program, coordinated by D rs. M erri Schall, Martin Kamins and William Ray, is entitled, “Outreach: A Cooperative Field-Based Teacher E ducation Program.” It was a joint effort between ASU and the C handler, Tem pe and W ashington School Districts, Wallen said. The program provides student teachers with intern experience in elementary classrooms, and has its roots in a 1970 agreement be­ tween representatives of ASU and the Chandler district. “This gives the students an o p p o rtu n ity to tr y themselves as teachers in a variety of situations, with different aged children, different ethnic groups and different settings,” Ray said. “It gives the school districts a long overdue opportunity to participate in th e te ac h e r education process as well.” Approxim ately 150 student teachers opted for “ O u tre a ch ” experience rather than campus-based education classes this year. The award gives a degree THERE J§ A DIFFERENCE! EASTER gifts are not “usual” when they come from us. See Jewelry, Boxes, Seri Carvings, Sculpture, Baskets, etc. Q eltyfÜ ters check our DAILY SPEC IA L . . . from 50c up. (u p . U p , UP!) THE GALLERY STORE Matthews Center, 2nd floor 12 to 4 weekdays 111 E. UNIVERSITY O A A 0 A 7 0 T O U 'T ,t # T M A N Y SUBS AVAILA B LE ON R EQUEST Philadelphia Hoagies Super Hoagies N Y. Sicilian Pizza Party T rays FREE DELIVERY — Sun. Only ($5.00 minimum) M on. - Frl. Saturday Sunday 11 a.m . - 7:30 p.m . 11:30 a.m . - 6:00 p .m . 12:00 p .m . - 6:00 p.m . SSSSSSSS9SSSSSSSSSSSSSSS ou can’t fly ontinenfal, y o u ll miss our takeoff. I OUR ß( fiS z v n & u -H . f Aid available for victims of flooding |40th| Offset y s H IK " of prestige to the depart­ ment, Wallen said. “There are over 1,500 elem entary education programs involving student teacher programs like ours in the United States. This award recognizes us as having the best program in the country,” he said. Tempe or South Phoenix residents who suffered personal or property damages due to storms and flooding between Feb. 28 and March 6 can apply for financial aid today and Thursday at a temporary Disaster Assistance Center at the Tempe Armory, 322 E. Sixth St. Federal, state and private agency representatives will be on hand to answer questions and take applications for aid including housing assistance; farm and ranch damage repair; Red Cross assistance; low-interest loans to businessmen, homeowners, farmers and ranchers; food stamps; disaster unemployment assistance, and grants to handle serious needs not covered by other programs. The center will be open noon to 7 p.m. today, and 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday. Additional information is available at 1-800-352-5431 (tollfree). M PUN edu cational CENTER TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 Visit Our Centers And See For Yourself Why We M aksThe Difference Call Days, Eves & Weekends Information Available on Foreign and American Medical Schools _967-2967—I Continental's Discount Fares are easy on your pocket. There’s a fare for night people, and lots o f special prices for going home or just getting away from it all. And only Continental has Economy fares everywhere we fly. To make it even easier, charge it all on our ‘Let Yourself Go" credit card. Fly now and pay when that letter comes in from home. Check with your travel agent, your campus rep or Continental and find out how you can take the easy way out. W e really m ove our tail for you. CONTINENTAL AIRLINES # The Proud Bird with the Golden Tail NIGHT COACH: Travel between 9:00 PM and 6:59 AM to selected destinations. WEEKEND EXCURSION: Leave on a Saturday and return the same weekend or any Saturday within 30 days. Minimum 2 day advance purchase. COACH EXCURSION: Minimum 7 day advance purchase and reservation. Return not earlier than 1st Sunday nor iater than 30 days after departure. Limited seats available. Page 8 State Press March 15, 1978 Take a GIANT STEP O pen-book tests may better student attitudes, prof says in th e M arch of D im es W ATOLK ATH O N PROTECT THE UNBORN AND THE NEWBORN By Maren Bingham Open-book tests may be more effective than the standard memorization methods of testing, an ASU professor said THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER Monday. Allowing the use of the book during tests can also create better student attitudes, and allow for traditional grade distribution. Dr. James Becker, has just about everything you need professor at the Center for Public Affairs, said. •C o m p le te office supplies •G ift supplies “I require that students have a •S c h o o l supplies •G re etin g cards book and use it, because the book •A tta c h e cases •W e d d in g announcem ents •R u bb er stamps — custom made has something to offer,” Becker and gifts to your order said. "But I do not like to impose We also have a large selection of office furniture. memorization of things that do DELIVERY SERVICE not serve a purpose beyond the end of the term .” 616 MHI Ave., Tempe, Az. Becker decided to test his open book theory last semester in his 968-8621 968-8622 statistics class. “I had used an open-book s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s ^ s s s s s a s s s s a s a s s s s is s if i» ^ TEMPE OFFICE SUPPLY theory throughout the semester, so when it came down to the final exam the big question was, 'Will the test be open-book?’ ” Becker explained. Previously, Becker said, his finals have been half open-book, and half closed-book, because there were some things that he expected the students to know without the help of the book. But last semester he decided to experiment. First he gave his students the exam, and did not allow them to use books, then the same students took the same exam, only this time he allowed books. “The people who got most of the answers right had little chance to improve their score, but the people at the other end of the distribution had a great chance to improve their score," Becker said. For students who like this form of testing, Becker has a warning. “A semester test with the book open can be a deadly thing,” he said. “The person who studies and knows the book is going to know where to find the answers. If a student doesn't study, when he opens the book, he might as well be looking at a book in another subject.” Becker said this method of teaching improved the attitude of students about the class. “They’re not scared about needing to memorize the dickens out of everything,” he said. SPEND SPRING BREAK IN MAZATLAN from only *75.00 per person/quad. MARCH 2 5 to APRIL 1 8 Days - 7 Nights - 5 Nights in Mazatlan INCLUDES: We Can Handle All Your Other Travel Arrangements — Round Trip from ASU — Round Trip Rail — Round Trip Transfers —5 Nights Beachfront Hotel (Hotel Posada de Don Pelayo) —Welcome Cocktail Party —Hotel Taxes \A L L E Y T fW E L 707 S. Forest Tempe CLOSEST TRAVEL AGENCY TO CAMPUS 9 6 7 -9 4 0 3 SSSSSSS8S8SSSSS p i ue (goat ¡P u b presents 50° DRAFT H E IN10 E KENS oz. Glass 7-11 p.m. Monday £t Wednesday Nights ALSO 10* BEER Tuesday & Thursday Nights 7-11 p.m. Spring Break :i Trip M a rc h 2 5 - A p r il 1 CRESTED BUTTE, Colorado Trip Includes: 6 days of lift tickets, 5 nites lodging (choice of lodge or condo) — Transportation by BUS *180 ° r — *210 (depending on accommodations) DANCE UNDER THE STARS ON OUR OUTDOOR PATIO ARIZONA’S #1 COUNTRY-BLUEGRASS BAR ALWAYS LIVE ENTERTAINMENT 9 1 0 N. H A Y D E N TEM PE 9 6 6 -4 8 8 0 SV cure For more info — The Club meets Wednesday night at 7:00 p.m. in Dooley’s Lounge. March 15, 1978 State Press Page 9 Change in lifestyle may affect weight By Brace Tret hewy Most college students are at an age where a tremendous gain in body weight can occur, the chairman of the health, physical education and recreation department said Monday. Dr. William Stone associates weight gain with a change in life­ styles for many college-aged students. Many people in their early 20s are getting married and for males it may mean three solid meals a day for the first time since they left their parents. Stone said. He said males are likely to gain more weight without taking action to prevent it because social pressures are not attached as for females. Women are treated worse in our society if they are obese, he said, and they generally try to prevent a weight gain. Stone said a balanced diet, which would include the basic four food requirements, and an increase in physical activity would help alleviate an over­ weight problem. There is a difference between being overweight and obese, Stone said. “A football player, who ac­ cording to height and weight charts may be overweight, is certainly not obese,” he said. The definition for obesity has to do with the amount of excess fat the body carries and not with the weight of the body, he said. The most accurate measure for obesity is from the body density test. Stone said. This test is a weight difference test where the subject is weighed dry and then weighed again underwater. Since fat is lighter than water, the difference between the dry weight and the wet weight in pounds is figured into a per­ centage of body weight, he said. If the percentage is more than 20 percent, the subject’s fat percentage is considered unacceptable, Stone added. Stone said there are other methods to measure but body density test is the most accurate. Children who are inactive are more likely to become obese than active children. Stone said. “About 95 percent of the case studies of obesity in female children show the child was inactive and did a lot more sleeping than the normal child. C’s Ninety percent of the male children are the same way.” “Surprisingly,” he added, “80 percent of those children con­ sidered themselves active." A program in the Mesa school system, begun by ASU in­ structor Dr. Robert Pangrazia, is geared for children to become aware of obesity at a young age. The theory behind Pangrazia's program is to keep people thin while they are young. “The tendency to become obese is firmly established while children are still young,” he said. "Treatment for a 12 year old has a 20 percent chance of succeeding in reducing the obesity tendency. The percentage changes to only 5 percent by the time a student reaches 18.” Stone has a grant for research on obesity and is using it to work with retired citizens who have an obesity problem. Stone said, “Obese people may be cued more by sight and smell than a true hunger urge.” External cues play a large role in the creation of an obese person, he said. Stone added force of habit can be a reason an obese person eats at certain times. “He may not be hungry but notices it’s two o’clock and thinks to himself ‘it's time for my af- UA professor w ill discuss mass makeup The Memorial Union Presents A Series of Informal Non-credit Classes Designed to Give You a Personalized Approach to Non-traditional Educational Programs. DAYS COURSE Ballroom Dance Section II Intro, to Bellydancing Section II Country Swing Section VI Crochet Non-Loom and Macra Weaving Beginning Rock Climbing Section 111 Self-Hypnosis for Personal Section III Section IV Self-Hypnosis for Tensioi Section II Intermediate Self-Hy[ Section I Section II 4 /3 -5 /8 4/5-5/10 FEE TIME m $12 00 5:15 p.m $12.50 ^45-10:45 p m 00-9:00 p.m 7:00-9:00 p m $14 00 $14 00 7:00-9:00 p m $21 00 00-4:30 p.m. 30-8:00 p m $ 20.00 00-7:30 p.m $20 00 8:30-10:00 p m 3:00-4:30 p m. $20 00 $20 00 $12 00 $20 00 More in-depth information on specific courses is included in the Short Course Brochure. They are available in the M .U . at the Information Desk and in the Activities Center Register today in the MU Activities Center with VALID ASU I.D. M ore info — phone 965-6649. DISCOUNT LIQUORS has. •T H E BEST keg beer prices in the Valley. Iced kegs in tubs (ice included in price) All tapping equipment furnished at no rental charge. All beer stored at 29° F. W e're looking for instructors. Following is a list of alternative classes that could be offered for summer and next fall. If you or someone you know is qualified to teach in any of the following areas, contact Ray Wells in the M U Activities Center or phone 965-6649. Sorry, full-time staff members cannot teach because of state personnel regulations. COURSE ALTERNATIVES •T H E LARG EST and finest domestic and imported wine and beer selection in the Valley. •T H E LARG EST selection of liquor and liqueurs in the Valley. •IC E FO R “Internal Structures of Uranus and Neptune" will be discussed today by Dr. William Hubbard, of the Lunar Planetary Sciences at the University of Arizona. Sponsored by ASU’s geology department, the speech will be held at 3:40 p.m. in the Physical Sciences Building, room F-166. 1c PER BAG (limit two per customer) Chess Personal Financial Management Folk Cuitar Classical Cuitar Languages (French, Russian, German, etc ) |azz Cuitar Aerobic Dance Massage Foosball (Table Soccer) lob-Hunting Techniques Indian Rug Weaving •A L L of your party needs at low discount APPLY NOW FOR YOUR ASU AND MESA C.C. STUDENT AND FACULTY SPECIAL DISCOUNT CARD IN THE ALPHA BETA CENTERS TEMPE MESA 1847 N . S c o tts d a le R d . (at M cK ellip s) 1945 W . Baseline (at Dobson) 945-2064 839-9261 ARIZONA'S FASTEST GROWING LIQUOR CHAIN Speed Reading Time Management 8mm Film-making Techniques Pregnancy Care Indoor Gardening Frisbee Income Tax Preparation Insurance Astrology Alternative Energy Sources Classes Requiring a Facility Outside the MU prices. “OUR SERVICE CANNOT RE SURPASSED' Leathercrafting Bio-Feedback Relaxation Training Backpacking Arizona Kundalini Yoga Cross-country Skiing Desert Survival Bridge Needlepoint Embroidery Meditation Horseback Riding Golf Bartending Ballet Furniture Re-upholstery W ine Appreciation Ceramics Motorcycle Maintenance Basic Woodworking Antique Refinishing Stained Glass Techniques lewelry Making Bread Making Woodcarving Cheese Tasting S i Page 10 State Press March 15, 1978 DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau COULD YOUDIRECT ME TO THE SECURITY COUNCIL CHAMBER? I'M AFRAID It s NOT IN SESSION RIGHT NOW, SIR . BUT REST ASSURED. THE STRUG­ GLE FOR PEACE GOES ON EVERT DAY! \ | th at 's rr does? RIGHT! AROUND THE CLOCK! FIRSTPOOR \ UMiFRF ON YOURLEFT. II la w s ? WYEA R G r B78xl3 SMALL C O M P A C TS P IN T O • V E G A • DATSUN \ 078x14 F78x14 WELL,HELLO! YOUMUST BE WHY, YES. AMBASSADOR THAT'S N6UYEN VAN RIGHT! PHRED, FROM I VIETNAM! 50R95 $0795 D A R T *V A L I A N T DATSUN* TOYOTA T 0 R IN 0 *N 0 V A C A M A R O * M USTANG PLUS 2.09 F.E.T. PLUS 2.42 F.E.T. L78x15 H78x14 H78x15 G78x14 G78x15 $2895 $2995 $3295 C H E V *F O R D *C U T L A S S F U R Y » C A T A L IN A F 0 R D *C H E V *0 L D S B U IC K *P O N T IA C PLUS 2.58 OR 2.59 F.E.T. PLUS 2.73 OR 2.79 F.E.T. C A D IL L A C *B U IC K C O N T IN E N T A L PLUS 3.09 F.E.T CUSTOM POWER CUSHION ■sit] lid f iV I E78x14 G78x14 A78x13 F78x14 31 36 39 40 PLUS 1.25 F.E.T. P IN T O *V E G A D A T S U N 'T O Y O T A WELCOME TOOUR BENIN? LITTLE WORKSHOP UM..ARE FOR PEACE,PHRED! WE ON I'M VICTOR PINTO, GOOD AMBASSADOR PLENI­ TERMS? POTENTIARYFROM L BENIN! \ m WELL, OF COURSE! WE’R E IN THE SAME VOTING BLOC! / FORGIVE M E. I LEFT MY BRIEFING BOOK ON THE PLANE, S EE .. I H78x14 PLUS2.26 F.E.T. PLUS 2.42 F.E.T. N O V A *C H E V E U E C AM ARO* DART T O R IN O *C U T LA S S M U S T A N G *C H A R G E R | H78x15 G78x15 PLUS2.58 F.E.T. LEM A N S *C U T LA S S F O R D *R O A D R U N N E R L78x15 43 42 45 48 PLUS2.80 F.E.T. PLUS2.65 F.E.T. PLUS 2.88 F.E.T. PLUS3.12 F.E.T. F 0 R D *C H E V W A G O N S * P O N T IA C G A L A X IE *V O L A R A F U R Y *C A T A L IN A F O R D *C H E V *O L D S B U IC K *P O N T IA C C A D IL L A C * IM P E R IA L C O N T IN E N T A L *B U IC K BELTED RADIALS Exciting finishes start at 8 p. GR78x15 HR78x15 PO LYSTEEL PO LYSTEEL Exciting greyhound racing is now even more exciting. Try the Trifecta. Just pick the first three dogs to cross the finish line, in their exact order of finish. If you win, you win big! $ 4 9 9 5 Phoenix Greyhound Park w/W HITEW ALL Plus w/W HITEW ALL Plus 2.90 F.E.T. 3.11 F.E.T. Wed. thru Sun. 8 p.m., E. Washington & 40th St. —273*7181 Admission 75c, Clubhouse $1.50 $ 5 2 9 5 A SK ABOUT OUR EA SY PAY PLAN Clip here ONE FREE ADMISSION TO GREYHOUND PARK E. Washington at 40th Street — 273-7181 This coupon good for one General Admission. Offer good through Sunday, March 19,1978. STAUFFER TIRE MESA 62 So. Contar 8 3 4 -0 2 12 T E M P E 2 0 7 7 So. Hardy 9 6 7 -S 7 5 S March 15, 1978 State Press Page 11 M eet the regents C h ie f's d ay s ta rts e a rly First in a series By Mary Beth Von Driska As president of the Board of Regents and co-owner of a cattle company, Dwight P a tte rso n begins his schedule at 5 a.m. each day. “I don’t like to talk about my accomplishments much," Patterson said as he sipped a cup of hot chocolate in the kitchen of his ranch, the Baseline Cattle Co. A native A rizonan, Patterson was born in Tempe, where he spent his childhood growing up on his grandfather’s livery stable. He began his campus activities as a student at Northern Arizona Univer­ sity. As sports editor for the campus newspaper, vice president of the student body and a member of the football and track teams, he became involved in the operations of the Univer­ sity. Patterson worked as the assistant football coach for NAU for three years after his graduation in 1934. After leaving th e University, he returned to Chandler to establish his family c a ttle company, where he has worked for the last 40 years. In 1940, Arizona did not have a Board of Regents. Patterson, interested in establishing a unified board to coordinate funding for Arizona’s three colleges, became chairman of a committee that established th e Arizona Board of Regents. In his third year on the board, he was appointed president by then Gov. Raul Castro. He served nine years on the Mesa Public School Board and 13 years on the Maricopa College Board as chairman of the organizing committee and as an exofficio member of the State Junior College Board. An avid Chicago Cub fan, Patterson was chairman of the committee that started the Cub spring training program in Mesa 25 years ago. “Baseball is my favorite sport,” he said. Having followed and supported the Cubs for the last 25 years, Patterson was presented with "The Good Guy Award" from The C hicago A m erican newspaper on one of his trips to Chicago. cheons, priced at $3.75 and banquet tickets, priced at $10.50, are available. Further details about the three-day Bolivian con­ ference are available at the ASU C en ter for L atin American Studies, 5127. TODAY & TOMORROW ONLY He's a cross between Hudolph Valentino and Steve McQueen. She s loaded with otibeat glam our and pizzazz. They manage to be sexy, intelligent and funny. ^ •Memorial Union Activities Board DOUBLE FEATURE He has devoted much of his free time to coaching Mesa’s Little and Pony Leagues and many high school football and basketball teams for the last 25 years. P a tte rso n also is a member of the Samaritan H ospital Board, an organization currently conducting research in kidney diseases and spinal injuries. Racing horses is one of Patterson’s hobbies. “I hope someday to race one of my horses in the Kentucky Derby,” he said. Students today have a lot going in their favor, said Patterson. “ The m ost important qualities I admire in a student are personality and sincerity,” he said. and 1984 TODAY — 3:00 & 7:00 p.m. M.U. Movie House $1 with ASU I.D., $1.50 without cernina: Native American Cultural Days MARCH 14-17, 1978 mm Three Traditional Dance Groups Six Current Films will be shown on Tradi­ tional and Contemporary Aspects of the Native American. “The Effects of the White Backlash of the 1:30- 3:00 p.m. 215 Pinal Room (M.U.) Native American” Senator Hubbard — “The 1978 Long Walk to 3:30- 5:00 p.m. 217 Coconino Room Washington, D.C.” (M.U.) “All Tribes Potluck Supper" — Santa Rosa 6:00- 9:00 p.m. Student Center 1322 Mill Avenue, Tempe Singers and Children’s Choir. Sponsored by the American Indian Crusade. 10:00-11:00 a.m. S.E. Lawn of the M.U. 12:00- 3:30 p.m. Pima Room (M.U.) □ m Mu Indian Art Paintings by Gus Niften Displayed at Law Building. Book display in Hayden Library courtesy of Yaga Bookstore, Scottsdale. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 965-6268 or 965-5728. □ Sponsored by: Native American Student Association at ASU Y O U ARE INVITED - T O THE BIGGEST EVENT OF THE YEAR S e v e n B e a u t ie s FRIDAY, MARCH 17th Swept Away Doors Open at 11:00 a.m. —< STARTS FRIOAY FOR ONE WEEK inthe REALMOF THE SENSES AFILM(VNAGÜAOSHtMA § TODAY’S EVENTS — ST. PATRICKS DAY ► □ Theme: “Progress Through Preservation, Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow” Bolivian conference begins at ASU today Scholars from Bolivia and the United States will meet today through Friday at ASU for a conference on modern-day Bolivia. Sponsored by the University Center for Latin A m erican S tu d ies, the session will meet from 8 a.m. until 5 p.m. daily in the MU Mohave Room. There is no registration fee. Tickets for noon lun- H I A l f ilm s I re se n t Green Beer!! Irish Music!! Live Band Dancing — and Lots of Blarney!! m 19 LONNEGAN'S 7436 E. M cDow ell • 1 blk. E. of Los Arcos • 947-3304 □ Page 12 State Press March 15, 1978 Women Vandy, runners Brooks vs. USC lead Devils By Susie LomeUno The ASU women’s track team confronts USC in its first dual meet of the season Saturday at Sun Angel Stadium. “We’ll have to respect USC in every e v e n t , ” assistant women’s track coach Sue Humphrey said. “They could come in with somebody we don’t know about. Frankly, I’m con­ fident with what we have.” “Two freshmen, Rhonda Brady and Brenda Calhoun, are national class hurdlers,” Roger K err, women’s head coach, said. “That will probably be our best race, since the USC competitor, Patty Van Wolverlaere, set the national record last year with 13.18. Brady’s personal best was 13.26, but we haven’t timed our hurdlers this year yet. “The sprints and field events Eire strong for us, too,” K err added. Last year, ASU’s Val Boyer placed second in the 100-m eter and fourth in the 200-meter events at the AAU Junior Olympics. In the javelin, Celeste Wilkinson had a personal best this yesir — 170 fe e t. L ast y ear Wilkinson w e is rated No. 7 in the country. “Our relays silso have to be the best in the nation,” Kerr said. “The national record for the 440 is 45.95 and we expect to run fsister than th at in every meet. “In the mile relay, we have Avis Mailey,” Kerr said. “She placed fifth in nationals last year with a 54.08. W herever we put her, shell be rough on people.” Humphrey ssiid, “I’m not counting on ju st three or four people, though. I’m depending on E ill 22 mem­ bers.” “We need everybody for depth reasons. Second and third plEice points are silso needed to win a meet, not just firsts,” K err added. IS R A E L A CTIO N C O M M ITTEE M iddle East Issues Conversation Every Wednesday at 1:30 Baker Center 213 E. University M arch 15 M arch 22 “Israel 4 Sovla« Jewry' “The P alestin ian R efugee P ro blem ” Hubie Brooks’ two-run single in the sixth inning broke a 3-3 tie and gave the ASU baseball team a 5-3 win over LaVerne College Tuesday at Packard Stadium. Tom Van Der Meersehe hurled his first complete game of the season, as his performance gave the Sun Devil bullpen a needed rest. Brooks’ single scored Dale Efler, who reached on an error, and Mike Parkinson, who doubled to right. A triple by Ed Irvine followed by Steve Michael's homer gave the Devils a 2-0 lead in the first. slammed a home run to ruin Vandy’s shutout. Brian Embrey then doubled, and Pat Proulx singled Embrey in. Bruce Hines’ double scared Proulx to wrap up the scoring. Van Der Meersehe held LaVerne scoreless until the fifth, When the visitors exploded for their three runs. Jimmy Pearson Brooks extended his hitting streak to 23 games with his single. The Sun Devils now stand at 23-3 this season. ANATOMY OF A SLAP. GETEM WHILE IT S HOT! T his N o t This * T h e S tr a p o f t h e S la p : G u a r a n t e e d n o t t o p u ll l o o s e fd r o n e fu ll y e a r . S iz e : c le v e r ly p r in te d o n b o t t o m . QKi -4 F ile t o f s o le : 2 o r 3 l a y e r v e r s io n s , a ll t h e c o lo r s o f t h e r a in b o w s h o w n h e r e In b la c k a n d w h i t e . T ou gh o u t e r s o l e , s o f t in n e r s o le la y e r s m a k e fo r s m ilin g f e e t . 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SCHEALL DRIVEAWAY 991-5533 178 East 7th Street, Tempe 968-3585 Monday thru Saturday 10 till 6 (Thursday till 9) 1 Block North of ASU March 15, 1978 State Press Page 13 Swimmers dive into NCAA meet By Karen Andrus The largest ASU swimming and diving team invades Long Beach, Calif., next week, hoping to up its 21st place finish in the NCAA championships last year to a top 10 finish this year. A team of 12 swimmers and two divers will compete in the championships, to be held March 23-25. Earlier this month, March 2-4, the team competed in the WAC championships, where they placed second behind UA. The swimmers agreed they did quite well considering they swam the meet without 1977 WAC champion in the 100-yard backstroke Franz Szymanski, out with a broken elbow, and also were plagued with sickness. A healthy team and the ad­ ditional points Szymanski would have made probably would have narrowed the 27-point spread between the Devils and the Wildcats. Sun Devil WAC champions include senior Tom Lundgaard in the 100-yard butterfly, senior Dan LaSarge in the three-meter diving, freshman Sam Hewson in the 100-yard backstroke and junior Brian Mosher, who regained his title in the 200-yard individual medley (IM). Making the trip to Long Beach in their favored events are fresh­ men Trent Lyght - breaststroke, Jim Green - butterfly, Hewson IM and backstroke, sophomores Kerwin Gober - breaststroke, Mike French - freestyle, Blake Johnson - IM, Shannon Varner freestyle, Sam Jones - freestyle, juniors Paul Asmuth - freestyle, Du wan Erickson - diving, Mosher - IM and seniors Tom Townsend - butterfly, LaSarge diving and Lundgaard - free­ style. Basketball coach for women quits Linda Spradley, ASU women’s basketball coach since 1975, has quit, athletic director Fred Miller an­ nounced Tuesday. Spradley has been ac­ cepted to the staff of Campus Crusade for Christ, and will be part of the CCC’s Agape Movement. She has requested teaching and coaching duties in South Africa. Spradley had a 19-38 record in her three seasons as coach. Last year, the women’s team finished 6-16 overall and 3-10 in the Intermountain Conference. Applications for a new coach are being accepted by the Athletic Department. It is a part-time position. Women boot UA ASASU A late goal by Anne Fox gave ASU’s fledgling women's soccer club a hard fought 3-2 win over UA —- the first victory of the season for the Sun Devils. ASU started the game with as much solar energy as Mother Nature provided in Tucson Saturday. A 20-yard shot by center half Sandy Notsinger gave the Sun Devils an early 1-0 lead. After the Wildcats knotted the score, ASU’s Adele Sevcik took a shot that deflected off a UA defender and into the net to put the Devils in front before the half. Ten minutes into the second half, the persistent and tenacious Wildcats evened the score. C U LT U R A L AFFAIR S B O A R D ANNOUNCES THREE KINDS O F W ORDS "A Prose and Poetry Contest" Rules and entry blanks may be picked up at the M .U . Information Desk Deadline April 10 For more information call 965-S658 “Nobody puts leather together like Dingo” Q J dngc Take it from O.J. Simpson. He demands just as much from his footwear off the field as on the field. So he wears Dingo. The leathers are tough-stitched; the design pure and simple. Casual leisure boots, but with a flair. O.J. Dingo. A special style of boot for a special kind of man. Netter attributes success to team By Perry Sams Alan Waldman of the ASU men’s tennis team does not consider his 13-0 individual record “unlucky.” He still changes his socks and shoes after every match and insists he doesn’t do anything special to keep his winning streak going from match to match. Besides, he can point to the “lucky” 7-0 record the team has overall. The way the team has been playing leaves no room for luck. Waldman captured the No. 3 singles to help the ASU tennis team to third place in the 16team San Diego Intercollegiate Tennis Championships, defeating Woody Supple of UA 6-0, 6-3 in the finals last weekend. The junior Liberal Arts major says he has improved this year because, “I’m in better shape. I played tennis all summer. The competition is better, but I am more confident.” Waldman uses a strong twohanded backhand to “outsmart” his opponents. He said since he batted lefthanded while playing baseball in high school, the stroke comes natural to him. Coach Marty Pincus says Waldman has played very well recently. “He is a winner, he has a winning attitude. He makes the shots he has to.” BENEFIT- UNITED JEWISH APPEAL OLDtfS 6 0 1 M IL L A V E N U E T E M P E , A R IZ O N A B S 2 B 1 AL S E R R A N O , OW NER 9 6 B -7 4 2 7 Dialing direct is fast and easy For calls inside the state dial 1 then the te le p h o n e num be r For calls o u tsid e the state, dial 1 then the area c ode then the te le p h o n e nu m b e r If you don t know the area code, look on the area co d e s page in the Call G uide that appears in the fro n t of the w h ite pages of yo u r te le p h o n e d ire c to ry Ä Mountain Bell SAT, WAR. 18 8 - 12pm Maricopa Rm. M.U. A.S.U. Memorial Union s SU m w Page 14 State Press March 15, 1978 W alter B erry Devils roast Angels Hubie Brooks expected it. David Glkk feared for the worst. D yar Miller prayed for a stalemate. And Earthell Buckner didn't even know who Dyar Miller was. Where did all this chicanery originate??? Monday night baseball — Sun Devil style. If you missed it, don’t get your keister out of kilter. ABC wasn’t there “live," “up close,” or “personal." Neither was Don "Big D” Drysdale, Dick “Sports Challenge” Enberg or A1 W isk'— whose voice and surname sound like a famous brand of laundry detergent. Bob Prince, Warner Wolf and Bob Uecker left themselves, their egos and their collection of pithy phrases and anecdotes at home. Howard Coselll, as usual, was a no-show in both mind and matter Guests fall victim But sans the artificial glitter of television and radio and in front of a less-than national or even capacity Packard Stadium audience, the Devils treated the Angels to a celebrity roast . . . with the guests becoming the host’s majn course. Yes, those were THE Angels that ASU beat 7-6 Monday night — the Anaheim property of California cowboy Gene Autry, he of both saddle bag and yodeling lore. But no, the “Big A" inhabitants didn’t quite perform like salaried professionals. The collective pitching efforts of Angels' Dave Frost, Luis Quintana and Miller was just one iota shy of being, labeled putrid. Emotional high ASU coach Jim Brock wasn’t up in arms over the matter, though. "The win was a super plus for us in several different ways," he said. "It was an emotional high for the club and served a lot toward building closer team unity. “It was also a great chance for kids like Casey Lindsey, Chris Bando and Bob Horner to show the scouts what they can do now, as opposed to what they have done in previous years. It can’t do anythng but help their pro chances. “Still,” Brock hedged, “the game was the kind of thing where you didn’t take it seriously until you see you have a chance to win it." Bad start For the first three innings, ASU appeared to approach “it” as a game they wanted to win badly, but didn't know how. After Steve Michael walked, stole second and scored on Bob Horner's double in the Sun Devil first, the Californians lit up southpaw starter Larry Eiler for five fourth inning runs on six hits. Ken Landreaux, former ASU home run slugger, started the deluge by reaching on Mike Parkinson's infield bobble. Ranee Mulliniks singled him to second and when rightfielder Greg Stahl couldn’t find the throw ing handle, both runners moved up a base. RBI singles by Gil Kubski (who???), Willie Mays Aikens and Bob Clark were sandwiched around three walks. Exit Eiler, on the short end of a 5-1 score. Burly portsider Enter Casey Lindsey. The burly portsider from Billings, Mont., held the Angels in check until the Devils could recover, which was precisely one inning later. Stahl, a transfer from Harbor Junior College in Los Angeles, opened the fifth the hard way be getting hit by a pitch. Parkinson and Buckner fused back-to-back base hits to plate one run before a balk and Brooks' fielder’s choice plated another. ASU knotted the score at fiveall in the sixth when Jamie Allen drew a walk off Quintana and Bando rocketed a two-run homer to left, which landed just a stone’s throw away from the rejuvenated Salt River. Horner followed “Sal’s” suit in the eighth with a tape-measure solo shot to center to put ASU ahead by a run. That settles that It didn’t last long. Floyd Rayfield, “Van" Clyburn and Jimmy Anderson all singled to tie the game at six and ap­ parently send the game into extra innings. The BucknerBrooks and Glick show settled that in the bottom of the ninth. Buckner, a diminutive reserve second baseman out of Compton, Calif., fisted a two-out, two strike fastball into rightfield and was immediately replaced by pinchrunner Glick. The son of The Best In The West The “Best In The West” BasebaD Tournament, some­ times lovingly referred to as the “Worst In The West" by Sun Devil head coach Jim Brock, opens today at Packard Stadium. Six teams highlight the 1978 edition. Besides ASU — who has won the annual .tourney in all three years of 1 6 s r its existence dating back to 1975 — the competitors in­ clude UA, Grand Canyon College, Eastern Michigan University, Northern Arizona University and Waseda. The Sun Devils, 23-3, open with the Wildcats tonight in a 7 p.m. game at Packard. Brock has selected sophomore righthander Jeff Ahern [4-0] as his starting pitcher. XEROX ASU football secondary coach, Fred Glick, had plans of his own. “I was supposed to be stealing, but I couldn't get the good jum p," the freshman from Tempe said. "If Miller had showed me his good move right away, I would've gone." ß alpfe iraikiifi UNIVERSITY ARCHES 122 E. UNIVERSITY 968-7821 ß e C ß [ ß ß £ For Sole Lost/Found RACQUET STRINGING machine — excel­ lent money maker lor a student. $225. Call Al, nights, 967-0973. 3/15 LOST: Great Dane (M), large fawn, black mask Weimaraner (F), medium gray 966-7128 ' 3,22 FOR SALE Handmade western leathercraft, Navajo handmade silver jewelry. All made to specific orders and designs. Call: 268-4493 Buy direct from the sitversmith. 3/24 LOST: TWO women's class rings One gold ASU and one silver East High. Left in women's class restroom in new Physical Science Bldg. Reward. Call 275-1252. 3/13 No time As things turned out, Glick didn't have time to doddle and second-guess himself, as senior shortstop Hubie Brooks — the owner of a 22-game hitting streak — lined a double to right centerfield to chase home the game winner and send the Angels head scratching. “It was a slider up in the strike zone. It’s just what I was looking for from a righthander," Brooks said. “I hit the slider better than any other pitch. I got it, and got it good." The prospect of upstaging professionals didn’t seem to faze the ASU players in the least. H elp W onted_______ Angels human too “We weren’t in awe of them. No way,” co-captain Bando said on behalf of his mates. “We thought we were capable of beating them. They have two arms and two legs. They’re human just like us.” Only Gene Autry knows for sure . . . A n nouncem ents OVERSEAS JOBS — Summer/year-round. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia. etc. All fields, $500-$1200 monthly, expenses paid, sightseeing. Free information - Write: BHP Co.. Box 4490, Dept. AD, Berkeley, CA 94704. 3/15 PHONE SALES: Evenings, hourly rate, nice office, great for extra income. 968-4853. 3/23 SALESMAN, full or part-time. New -pro­ duct. Broad market. Immediate high earn­ ings: For appointment call 946-6610. 3/17 WANT TO SPEND this summer sailing the Caribbean? The Pacific? Europe? Cruising other parts of the world aboard sailing or power yachts? Boat owners need crews! For free information, send a 13c stamp to Skoko. Box 20855, Houston, Texas 77025. 3/17 ANAMATER 266-1031 for new company. Mike, 3/17 P ersonal SHALOM! Recorded Please phone 249-9234. Bible Message. 5/5 Pets FREE. GERMAN Shepherd mix Approx. 60 pounds. Spayed and shots. Needs farm or enclosed area with lots of room to roam. 967-1887, Mon -Fri before 4.00 p.m. Excellent guard dog for home or business. 3/21 P oom m ate W anted FEMALE ROOMMATE, share three bed­ room townhouse with female. $137.50/ month. Sue. 964-1604. 948-2741. message. 3/17 S ervices $100. DRIVE MY car to Chicago. Driver pays gas. Mrch'29 - April 1 . 265-5505. 3/16 RESUMES — IBM typeset and litho­ graphed. 100 copies, $8.50. Resumes Incorporated. 2500 E. Thomas Road. 956-7220. 5/5 FRONT DESK assistant, work study pre­ ferred. 20 hours weekly. Educational research, interesting position. Will chal­ lenge and satisfy motivated person. 9657161. 3/17 PROOFREADING and editing of your paper, thesis, speech, etc. Tabb, 965-4918. 8:00-5:00 3/16 T ron$portotion_____ A utomobiles STUDENT SUMMER Engineering Aides, Department of Transportation, approxi­ mately June 1 te September 15. Requires completion of one year or more preengineering education (30 hours). Multiple vacancies statewide. Contact: Doyle Dunn, Arizona State Personnel Division, 1831 West Jefferson, Phoenix (602-271-3851). 3/16 Trovel 74 FORD CUSTOM 500, V-8, power steering, power brakes, air, stereo. New tires. $1400. 968-1690. 3/17 FIRST CHURCH of Christ Scientist, Tempe will hold auditions for organist. Please call 838-4364. 4/11 SKIERS, DIAL 1-800-525-5510: Spend Spring Break at Vail, Colorado. 100 runs and 17 lifts. 966-3311. 3/16 MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIPS. Over 500 medical school scholarships for entering or enrolled studeots Immediately available. Call Navy Medical Team, 261-3158 Collect. 5 /5 1969 OLDS Vista wagon. Super shape. One owner. 70,000 original miles. TLC all its life. All new brakes. Good rubber, air conditioning, full power. See to appreciate. $1000 firm. Cali 966-4838. 69 BUICK SKYLARK custom. Power steer­ ing. new tires. Runs good. $595. 991-4500 3/22 after 7:00. 7 6 CHEVY EL CAMINO, 25,000 miles. Excellent condition. Loaded. $4,600. 9471876. 3/17 59 CHEVY half-ton pickup, V-8. 3-speed, 3/17 $650. Call 967-2291. WAITRESSES NEEDED part-time days and nights. Pizza Hut, 48th Street and South­ ern. Must be at least 19 years old. EOE 3/16 AMATEUR PHOTOGRAPHER seeks attrac­ tive female model for figure photography, top salary — TR, 265-1601. 3/15 GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY FOR STERLING PERSON Student representative needed to show entirely new and exotic line of tur­ quoise class rings. Equal opportunity: U S. and foreign post-grads also. Call Michael at Traditions West 271-9721, Nights, 957-2247. 3/17 D ime-A*Line THERE WAS an aspiring priest who desired a lady to feast. But, she said with a flair, you just don't compare, cause Flynn has you definitely beat. 3/15 LOUISE, ALL the happiness in the world does not compare to the feelings you bring me. I’m yours for all time. Mike. 3/15 SPRINGER SPANIEL puppies $30 Nine weeks old. Call 967-0431 between 6:30 and 9:00p.m. 3/15 TABLE & CHAIRS for sale: Unique wood 36” square table with blue top, four woven seated wood chairs, nutmeg stain sharp! Will go fast. 967-6388. 3/15 Instruction PARACHUTE 10 miles from Tempe! $10 off with'student ID. Mention this ad. 275-0010. 5/5 PRE-MEDICAL pre-dental students, MCAT, DAT comprehensive review manuals, $6.00. Money-back guarantee, free information. Datar Publishers, 1620 McElderry, Balti­ more, Maryland 21205. 3/15 M otorcycles DON WEEKS BOOTER MOOSE: Thanks for being such a wonderful roomie. PJ. 3/15 KAWASAKI INC. VULTURE AND Lord of the Flies: I know who you are, and I saw what you did! Lady of P.V.E. 3/15 W here the action is! 35mm CANON. Excellent cond. Takes beautiful pictures. $45 or best offer. SCHWINN varsity 10-speed, very good cond. $75 or best offer. Call Dean after six, 968-7163. 3/15 F or Rent/Lease ONE BEDROOM furnished apartment $153 3/24 no pets Call 966-9530 or 838-3668. For Sale MOTORIZED HANG-GLIDER (Conquest) with Rotec Engineering power plant, 3/23 $1500. 968-3287 or 967-4250. WE STOCK over 100 books on solar, wind and alternate energy sources. J. C. Young Co., 4215 North 16th Street, Suite 2, Phoenix. 266-7441. 3/15 FOR SALE: Ibanez electric guitar, brand new, must sell soon. Best offer. Call John, 949-8582. 3/22 KZ 200 *795 KZ 750 *1595 Mesa 969-9107 1339 W . University Phoenix DRIVE CARS free to ell points U S A. Must be 21 years or over. We are ICC licensed and insured. 991-5533. 3/24 SPEND EASTER in the White Mountains. Fly from Sky Harbor Airport, stay at' Sunrise Lodge for three nights — ski three days. Only $88 per person. Air, lodging, transfers and free parking at airport. Leave March 23, 5 p.m., return March 26 at 4 p.m. Call Gayle or Marie at 967-1854, 248-0638. 3/15 T yping IBM CORRECTING Selectric typing vice. Four years experience in own time business. Usually 75c per page. Alison for appointment. 967-6869. ser­ full­ Call 4/4 FAST AND accurate. Carbon ribbon — very neat copy. Term papers, theses, and statistical. 964-4846 . 4/6 CAMPING SEASON is here! Buy our like-new 42" shell camper, fully paneled/ irtsulated, double back doors. New $600, will sacrifice for $375. 967-6388. Hurry! 3/15 c o p ie s Z OVERNIGHT 4* W H ILE YOU W A IT L ß 9 9 7 -7 1 4 8 9001 N. 7th St. We trade for used cars. NEAR ASU. Research papers, theses English degree. Editing. Work guaranteed. 7 years experience. 967-4443. 3/17 TYPING. IBM Selectric, dissertations, theses, term papers. Seven years exper­ ience. Jean, 277-3602. 4 /6 FAST, ACCURATE typing on IBM Correct­ ing Selectric. Dependable. Former legal secretary, 7 years’ experience. Heidi, 839-5651. 3/23 PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Quality paper. Business College graduate. By appoint­ ment only. Experienced. Anita. 966-9088. 4/7 TYPING and/or translations by multi­ lingual professional secretary (English, French, German, Dutch). Reasonable rates. Call Marita, 973-5423. 3/17 TYPING THESES, term papers, etc. Pro­ fessional secretary, accurate, edited, spell­ ing corrected, reasonable rates. 949-9207. 5 /5 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Dissertations, theses, research papers, etc., using ap­ propriate style manual. Work guaranteed. 967-4937. 3/23 EXPERIENCED TYPISTS using correcting IBM Selectrics. Reasonable rates. 992-6420 or 955-5790. 4/14 TYPING. LEGAL Secretary with 10 years experience. Pick up and delivery ASU. Spelling and grammar corrected. Pat, 966-4911. 3/24 GRADUATE EXPERTISE — Guaranteed to meet graduate college requirements. Dis­ sertations, Theses, Research Papers. Debby. 967-2305. 4 /5 TYPING — IBM Correcting Selectric II, also automatic typing. Dissertation, thesis, research papers. Rosemary Vance, 9679143. 5 /5 March 15. 1978 State Press Page 15 A n ic ic h 's baseball ta le n ts r sh in e fo r A S U D evils By Robert Petrie WE BUY. SELL and TRADE FINE QUALITY USED RECORDS No other offers Be surprised Open Monday - Saturday at price, quality 10-7 and guarantee. ROCKJAZZFOLKBLUESCLASSICALSHOWS A funny thing Anicich came to ASU from Cordova High in Rancho Cor­ dova, Calif., frankly, because no one else wanted him. “ASU was the only big college offer I got,” he said. “None of the big schools in California, like USC, offered me anything, probably because I had no publicity in high school.” Anicich broke his collarbone during his junior season, and came back to hit .400 his senior season, but he claims most college scouts take their best looks at high school prospects during a player’s junior year. Sun Devil assistant coach Pat Kuehner saw Anicich in a high 7th and S. College 1620 S. College) in Tempe 966-4158 After displaying his baseball talents in such nondescript places as Red Deer, Alberta; Fargo, N .D .; and Rancho Cordova, Calif., Mike Anicich is finally getting a chance to play at ASU. And, it has been a long time coming for the 6-foot-2 junior first baseman. “Since I came to ASU, it was the first time I hadn’t really played ball in my life, and I got to feel kind of let down," said Anicich, who hit .118 in 17 scattered plate appearances for the varsity Sun Devils in 1977. This season, in his starting role at first base, Anicich is hitting .357, with two homers and 16 runs batted in. Not bad for a guy whose last name sounds like a well-known brand of pain reliever. And the funny thing about it is, Anicich wasn't even supposed to be in the starting lineup at the outset of the 1978 season. “Dale Eiler was supposed to be the DH (designated hitter) for our opener (vs. Cal State-Northridge), but our other catcher Randy Whistler was ineligible to play then," Anicich said. “So we needed Dale to back up (Chris) Bando, and I filled in as DH.” Anicich went four-for-five in the game, and was a fixture in the Sun Devil lineup until last Tuesday, when he pulled a ham­ string muscle running out a grounder against Chapman. He has since been limited to pinchhitting duty. “Last year I just got into games in certain situations and I really didn't have the confidence in my hitting,” Anicich said. “But this year, my confidence has improved with playing regularly." BIRDS RECORD EXCHANGE ATTENTION J J Early Bird Pre-Registration for Fall 1978 Mike Anicich school all-star game after Mike's graduation, and recruited him for ASU. Personal revenge Anicich drew personal revenge against Southern Cal for not recruiting him in the recent ASU-USC baseball series at Packard Stadium. He cracked both his homers off Trojan pitch­ ing — including one off The Sporting News Pitcher of the Year Bill Bordley. “He’s a good pitcher, but he wasn’t at his exceptional best (ASU “touched" Bordley for eight runs). I think he can throw a lot harder than what he showed me.” To keep from completely rusting away on the Sun Devil pine, Anicich played semipro ball the past two summers. He played for the M&K Generals last summer in Red Deer, Alberta, and spent the summer of '76 playing in Fargo, N.D. Forgetting Fargo Fargo, N.D.? “Don’t remind me of that, I keep trying to forget about Fargo," Anicich said. “All I can remember are the tornado warnings, and that the ballfields were built way out in the sticks. Some of them looked like someone dropped dynamite into the woods and blew all the trees out." But why Fargo in the first place? “I went with the advice given to me by our coaches,” Anicich said. “They pretty much arrange for it. Steve Michael and Larry Eiler played with me in Fargo, so that was pretty good. “When I played in Canada last summer, we took a two-week trip through Alaska, the best place you can play as far as money and competition goes," Anicich said. r W iNo Preference Students in th e Liberal Arts C o lle g e Starts on M arch 2 0 Make an appointment now in Social Sciences 111. Come in or Call 965-2954 GRAND OPENING •W r r HAPPINESS BEGINS WITH FITNESS ty U d e ti S pa & % J? ¿L R acq u et A COMPLETE FITNESS CENTER Racquetball Swim Sauna Steam Exercise Relax in the W hirlpool Handball Tennis Jog on our Track Volleyball Basketball SPECIAL! TO ASU COM M UNITY WITH ASU I.D. FREE IN ITIA TIO N FEE With This Ad — Offer Expires 3/24/78 ___________ !9i If you’re a senior majoring in education, English, French, business, nursing, home economics or liberal arts, we’ll promise you the world. Or, at least part of it. Ask about two year assignments in Asia, Africa, Latin America or the Pacific. March 13-17. 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at our information and application table across from Danforth Chapel. ___________ ñ S tA 'S * & Racquet 107 S. MacDonald, Mesa A 8 3 4 -9 3 4 7 Page 16 State Press March 15, 1978 ■ , 111 r« ■ , 1 i « l ■ Memorial U ■ Wed., 22 Las! Resort A Documentary on Seabrook N. Hampshire Nuclear Power Plant. Pro and Con viewpoints concerning nuclear energy. Showings, 3 p.m . Movie House. 7:00 & 9:30 Pima Room. Ideas & Issues A special thanks to all of those who supported Roots in the past two weeks. TODAY Animal Farm/1984 Double Feature Thurs., 16 Two-Bit Flicks' FREE!! Morse Code Melody, Closed Mondays, and Beachcomer Fun With Dick and lane Thurs.-Sat. 16-18 West Side Story Black Cod, White Devil Catch-22 Alan Arkin and Jon Voigt Two-Bit Flicks FREEH! Mel Brooks' the Critic, Song of the Prairie. Sun., 19 Mon., 20 Tues .-Wed. Thursday M arch 16 & Friday M arch 17 10 a.m . - 3 p.m. Live Entertainm ent Everyone Invited w ant to sell your crafts? call: 965-6649 21-22 Thurs., 23 Deliverance Thurs.-Fri. Burt Reynolds, Ned Beatty, Jon Voigt 23-24 More info 965-5728. Have a nice break March 15-26 Dina Yellen ceramic sculpture and wall hangings, Gallery. Thurs., 16 Gallery reception for artist, Dina Yellen 7:30-9:30. Sponsored by the MUAB Hostess Focus Event ir Gallery ' MARCH 22 11 am -1 . rp.m. . MU East Lawn •Egg Coloring Thurs., 16 Saxophone Quartet Thurs., 23 Tuba Euphonium Et Cetera A bi-weekly news magazine produced by CCTV A.V. Services Today-Sun. 11:30-12:30 Montgomery Lounge . r - T «Egg •Egg Toss »Giant Easter Basket Drawing •Live Entertainment Recreation POP-UPS CLIO AWARD WINNING TELEVISION I COMMERCIALS - Wed & Fri 11 a m. and 12:30p.m. Thurs. 11 a m only. M .U . Movie] Ffouse. SUN VALLEY BOYS — Country Swing Band Wed., 15 INTERPRETERS THEATER CLUB — Informal! Thurs., 16 Theater. Noon-1 p.m. M .U . Courtyard. VOLKSLIEDERSANGER — German Singing | Thurs., 16 Group. 1 p.m .-1:30 p.m. TEX WOUNDED FACE AND IOE M A N U ELFri.. 17 Solo Guitarists. Performers for Native American Student Association Cultural | Week. IA Z Z I A M SESSION - 3:30 p.m .-5 p.m Fri., 17, 24 ENTROPY: FOLK//AZZ DUO Tues.. 21 All POP-UPS are held from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. in the M .U . Rendezvous Lounge unless otherwise listed. Today-Fri. W ednesday Night Live JUMBO FRIES W EEKEND MEALS B uy O n e $1.00 o ff a n y m e a l A M S s i i mu SÊÉÊÊÊÎlÊÊÊÊÊÊïïMSiâ p j g p g i p ¿n. ELAN Bluegrass Band 8 :3 0 p.m .-11:00p.m . M U. Club Free Admission Food items available for purchase Dinner 4:30-5:30 All you can eat dining Valid thru 3 /2 4 /7 8 P P J 'j j S g - : MAR. 22 Brunch 10:30-12:00 Save 45" i GRAND JUNCTION Top 40's Band G e t O n e Free ■ MAR. 15 i■ i„ Valid thru 4 /2 /7 8 ■■■■■[ Limit: One per customer :’c MEMORIAL UNION