tu e sd a y Arizona State University Traffic trOUblQS state press Traffic congestion Is the norm at ASU during the first weak of school and the congestion Monday turned into a three-car accident on College Ave. just north of Broadway. Michael Kline (above) received minor injuries after his car was struck from behind. [State Press photo] Police plug security leaks after theft of synthesizer By Verne Niner A search for security leaks in the Music Building will be made after the recent theft of an $8,000 electronic synthesizer, ASU Police' Chief George Bays said Monday. Police discovered the APR synthesizer missing from a fourth-floor studio at 4:30 a.m., August 22. A small window on the studio door had been broken, and a set of fingerprints was found on a related piece of equipment left in the room. Bays said the crime has prompted the department to check the Music Building this week to solve its security problems. Although occasional thefts of smaller instruments are common in the building, nothing this valuable had been stolen before, he said. Bays said the synthesizer was “taken by someone who knew what they were looking for,” hinting that a former student might be involved. He said officers are not sure how many people were involved in the heist. “We are only interested in getting the property back,” Bays added. “We will not pursue a criminal investigation if it is returned.” The music department has agreed to offer amnesty to anyone who returns the synthesizer. Law student Mike Martin will act as a third party to facilitate the return of the instrument and to protect the person’s identity. He can be readied at 966-4922. August 29, 1978 Bays said th a t while amnesty is offered anybody who returns the unit, his department will not “lower its guard” or condone other thefts. Music professor David Cohen, who teaches a composition class with the instrument, said the incident has forced him to cancel one section of the class, while another section will'use a new portable model due to arrive next week. “I think it’s a former student th at was responsible,” Cohen said. “What hurts me is that the way I’ve handled this class — basically on trust — was taken advantage of.” The synthesizer had been on campus since 1971. Cohen said it is used in teaching MPC 436, Electronic Studio Techniques. Until this year, he was limited to providing one section for 20 students per semester. Last semester a portable synthesizer was ordered so another section of the popular course could be offered. Cohen said the portable, which is due next week, will save one section of the course. He said, a piece of equipment related to the synthesizer was left on top of the stolen equipment. When police inspected the studio they found that it had been lifted off the in­ strum ent’s console and placed on a counter nearby. ’They (campus police) got a good set of prints,” Cohen added. On the Inside A blind ASU student says vandals are destroying the work that took her and a coworker an entire summer to complete. Story, page 3. Students forced to park in far away lots no longer have to walk to class. A new system, begun yesterday, enables them to Tram it. __ Story, page 12. Students are urged by the ASU cheerleaders to become part of a giant human tunnel to support Sun Devil football. Story, page 13. Catfish Hunter is back in the groove again after a frustrating year and a half with the New York Yankees. But, he says, 1979 will definitely be his last year in baseball. Story, page 20. Page 2 State Preae Tuesday, August 29,1978 Overdose o f sleeping pills VIn the news briefly \ fro m the A s s o c ia te d Press NOTES LABELED 'SANITIZED' HACKENSACK, N.J. — A judge who has been trying to force the surrender of a New York Times reporter’s notes in a murder case refused on Monday to absolve the news­ paper of civil contempt charges, saying he thought files the newspaper gave him were “sanitized." He said he did not know how or by whom that was done, however. ACTOR SH AW DIES CASTLEBAR, Ireland — Robert Shaw, a British author and actor best known for his roles in such movies as 'The Sting,” The Deep" and “Jaws," died Monday of an apparent heart attack. He was 51. Shaw, who wrote several books and plays, co-starred with Paul Newman and Robert Redford in “The Sting,” and found his greatest acclaim in the role of a rugged adventurer in the movie “The Deep.” Grief-stricken Boyer takes life Boyer had died Saturday. He was found unconscious about 10 a.m. and rushed to the heart center at S t Joseph’s Hospital by paramedics. Jarvis had said Sunday that an autopsy revealed signs of heart disease. "There were signs of a previous infarction," Jarvis said then. He also said blood samples were being sent to toxicology laboratory “to determine whether he might have over­ dosed on a drug,” adding “there is no evidence of that but well double-check.” Boyer’s wife Patricia, 68, was a former English actress who appeared as Pat Patterson. They were married in 1934. (AP) — Actor Charles Boyer, romantic idol of the 1930s and 1940s, took his life with an overdose of sleeping pills just two days after the death of his wife of 44 years, Coroner Thomas Jarvis said Monday. The French-born Boyer, who would have been 79 Monday, appeared opposite many of Hollywood’s leading ladies. Dr. Jarvis said blood samples tested by a toxicology laboratory showed “he died of an overdose of Seconal — a suicide.” The coroner said Seconal is a barbiturate used widely as a sleeping pill. He said “a very small amount of alcohol” also was found. ¡versified travel Once leading figures in Hollywood society, they had lived quietly in suburban Paradise Valley for the past year. His only child, Michael, died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1965 at age 21. The Los Angeles Times reported that his wife had died of cancer and was buried in a Los Angeles cemetery. STATE PRESS is published by Arizona State University Tuesday through Friday during the academic year, except holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter at Tempe, AZ 85281. Wants You to Know: KENNEDY BLASTS CARTER H oliday-tim e reservations are fillin g fast — call us A .S .A .P . to get Super Saver Fares w hile they last! Faculty, S tudents, Group Leaders — CALL US FOR A R R A NG EM EN TS — Ski Trips, Research Trips, etc., any destination is not foreign to BOSTON — Sen. Edward Kennedy took another slap at President Carter on Monday, declaring that tying national health care to economic indicators is a denial of human rights. The Massachusetts Democrat said health care is a “basic human right” and that “a conditional right is basically not a right." us — HOMEMADE PAIN KILLERS LOS ANGELES — Some people are able to produce their own pain-killers natural narcotics — after being given a useless solution of sugar known as a placebo, medical researchers said Monday. That conclusion points toward dramatic new directions in the study control of pain and may account for maladies and cures often dismissed as being “alt in your mind.” FIRE TRUCK K ILLS WOMAN TUCSON — A fire truck with its siren blaring and its red lights flashing killed a Tucson woman Monday when it plowed into her car at an intersection, police said. Killed was Patricia Gorman, 22. The accident occurred at a main downtown intersection, about a block from the main fire station. DISABLED VET JOGS SOUTH HOLLAND, III. — Wearing jogging shorts, a T-shirt emblazoned "Super Vet” and an artificial leg he designed himself, Jerry Benson is training for a 26-mile marathon run. Benson, 28, a former Marine who lost his left leg in Vietnam, began a rigorous exercising program July 17 in preparation for the Mayor Daley Marathon Sept. 24 in Chicago. DIABETIC DEFINITION DEBATED CHICAGO — Two doctors maintain that many physicians are so confused over who is and who is not a diabetic that a new'definition of the disease is needed along with better tests to spot it. The confusion is so great, the doctors said, that half the people diagnosed as diabetics may not have the disease at all. BE A C LIP ARTIST! READ THE W ED N E S D A Y A U G . 30TH E D IT IO N OF THE STATE PRESS You too will become a COUPON CLIPPER We're * 64 EAST BROADW AY, S uite 2 TEMPE 967-9855 • 967-1900 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 1 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * PRESENTS A GUESS THE SCORE C O NTEST Guess the correct score of the ASU Sun Devils University of the Pacific Tigers Sept. 9th Football Game . . and A G R A N D P R IZ E . . . «jg S P E E D B IC Y C L E ★ S E C O N D P R IZ E * • * T V PONG G A M E * 2 - T H IR D P R IZ E S ♦50 G IF T C E R T IF IC A T E S T O T H E A S U B O O K S T O R E * PICK UP ENTRY BLANKS AT HUB NO PURCHASE NECESSARY TO ENTER ONE ENTRY PER VISIT * * * * * * * * * * * * * CLOSEST CORRECT SCORE W INS CONTEST ENDS SEPTEMBER 8, 1978 HUB HOURS MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 7 A.M. TO 6:30 P.M.. SATURDAY 7 A.M. TO 1:30 P.M. * ★ WIN, WIN, WIN! ★ M CM MO UK AL L U ON N B L D IN IN G G ME R IIA UN N IIO BU U IILD ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ★ ★ ★ Tuesday, August 29,1978 State Press Page 3 Vandals rip braille plates off buildings, students say By Mary Beth Von Driska A blind ASU student spent her summer making campus buildings accessible for other blind students, but vandals are subverting her efforts, she said Monday. Special education major Anna Gonzales worked all summer under the direction of Physical Facilities of-, ficials to install braille numbers on the doors and elevators of campus buddings. But last week Gonzales became frustrated when she said she discovered many of the plates had been pried off. “People get their kicks in a lot of ways, but I can’t believe someone thought it was funny to rip off braille numbers,” Gonzales said. “We worked our tads off to get those things up and now we’ll have to spend so much more time redoing them.” B e c a u se G o n z a le s discovered she could not perform the job alone, Jeff Hubbard, a junior chemical engineering major, was hired to perform the “sight” t>a*t of the job.T ' ' ■* Hubbard made a list of all the door numbers and read them to Gonzales so she could punch them out. on a ATTENTION VETERANS AND PERSONS WITH SUSPECTED HEARING LOSS: Subjects needed to participate in auditory research at ASU. $3.00 an hour CALL 965-7287 FOR MORE INFORMATION WELCOME GRAD STUDENTS Join us for a “THINK N’ DRINK” at H ILLEL — UNION OF JEW ISH STUDENTS Thursday, A ug. 31 st, 3:00-4:30 p.m . H ille l, Baker Center, 2nd flo o r 213 E. U niversity D r., 967-7563 . . . think about suggestions for upcoming programs X and drink some wine . . . you need not be a grad student to attend, just of grad age. » so ceeo o eo eo o seo eo sso co eo eo s« Anna Gonzales, a blind ASU student, spent the summer installing braille numbers on doors and elevators of campus buildings, but says her work is being destroyed by vandals. [State Press staff photo] braille machine to make the metal plates for the doors. Hubbard said he discovered many of the ■plates were missing last week when he was helping' Gonzales install plates in the Language and Literature Building. “ Someone has to be tearing off the plates deliberately,” Hubbard said. “They are glued on with a Very sturdy glue, which would have to be pried off.” Gonzales and Hubbard conUnwd page 6 A jovial little store featuring the best selection of hand­ crafted pottery including goblets, teapots, wizard jars, mugs and cannisters with smiling faces, n o t to mention stained glass mirrors • terrariums • candle lanterns • oil lamps* imported soaps* milli fiore candles: • planters • hardwood hand mirrors* macrame weavings • toys • sandcast candles • plants • wind chimes • hand dipped tapers • incredible selection of cards • calendars • porcelain cloud planters* • sun-catchers • FINANCIAL SUPPORT FOR YOUR EDUCATION A NEW A R M Y ROTC PROGRAM COLLEGE FRESHMEN 1. Commissioned a Second Lieutenant by the end of your Junior year. 2. Possible financial support Sophomore thru Senior years. TO QUALIFY 1. Pass physical and officer aptitude test. 2. Maintain 2.5 grade point average. HOW IT WORKS 1. Freshman year — Enroll in Military Science I. 2. Summer of Freshman year — Complete Military Science II or complete basic camp. 3. Sophomore year — Enroll in Military Science III. A. Attend 5-week summer camp. B. Financial support available — $1,500. 4. Junior year — Enroll in Military Science IV. A. Financial support available — $1,000. B. Completed ROTC (at end of Junior year). C. Commissioned as 2/L T USAR or NG (at end of Junior year). 5. Senior year — Competitive NG/Reserve position as 2/L T, make up to $2,000. 6. When you receive degree, apply for active duty or stay in NG or Reserve. THE ADVANTAGES 1. 2. 3. 4. START NOW ! Commissioned in 3 years. Experience gained with NG or Reserve. Longevity of 1 year acquired before entering active duty. You have earned more than enough to pay for your 4 years of college. A. Tuition cost is $650 for four years = $4,600. B. Possible to earn $4,500 which will more than pay for your tuition. CALL 965-3318/3319 OR STOP IN OLD M A IN , RO O M 240 Page 4 State Press Tuesday, August 29, 1978 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------\ O p in io n state press A M O is a parked m i a rm . h e L etter P o lic y The State Press seeks letters on any matter you have an interst in. They must, however, conform to some guidelines. Letters should be typed, 60 characters to the line, and should not exceed two pages in length. All letters are subject to editorial review and may need to be shortened to fit. The shorter the letter, the better. Try to stick to one or two basic points. At all costs, try to permit reason to take precedence over emotion. If you can’t be reasonable, try to be funny. If you can’t be either funny or reasonable, you might consider being brief. Send letters to Stauffer Hall, room A-137, either through campus mail or regular mail. You can also bring them by in person from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Our phone numbers are: newsroom, 965-2292; advertising and circulation, 965-7572. Faculty, course summary fallible Editor: ASASU should state publicly that the Faculty and Course Evaluation (known as the “Devil’s Aide”) for Spring, 1978 is not reliable. ‘The published results also claimed that the average grade expected by the students was an “E ”and the average grade given was an “A ”! This fact came to my attention in the case of REL 341. According to the published results, the scores on the subscale statements (‘The course was worthwhile,” etc.) were **•*, 2.71, 1.91, 1.68, 2.84, and •***. The published results also claimed that the average grade expected by the students was an “E” and the average grade given was an “A”! I asked for a “recount.” Suzi Boardman and John Pennell, to their credit, complied immediately and willingly. It turns out that the correct scores for REL 341 range from 3.15 to 3.61. ‘Who knows how m any students avoided m y course and those of others because the information published (in the ASASU Faculty and Course Evaluation) about them is not correct?’ Who knows how many students avoided my course and those of others because the information published about them is not correct? While I appreciate the cheerful cooperation of Ms. Boardman and Mr. Pennell, their personal efforts do not remedy the situation. FCEP should publicly acknowledge the unreliability of the Spring 1978 reacts and issue the correct results as soon as possible. And, as everyone will agree, this should not be allowed to happen again. Delwin Brown Professor of Religious Studies Sailing away. .. A couple of weekend sailors recently spent the afternoon sailing on Sahuaro Lake. Less than an hour's drive from ASU, Sahuaro Lake and the Salt River are favorite spots for students to go boating, swimming and tubing. [State Press staff photo] Blood and guts letter aggravates student Editor: It was quite appropriate' at this time of year to read that blood and guts letter of the righteousness of ob­ taining a four year degree. But, to steal a line from an ex-English teacher of mine, “Now it’s time I told you the truth of the matter.” ‘A fte r classes, m ost people ju s t wander . . . down to the local bar to put a head on the rigors o f a four year college education.’ The only “romance of college life” you will ever see on this campus is either behind the bushes or else playing at Neeb Hall. In fact, there is no life on this campus to speak of. After classes, most people just wander home, to work or down to the local bar to put a head on the “rigors of a four y ear college education.” And that’s the truth. obligated to burst, is that a degree denotes knowledge. It doesn’t. And that’s the truth. All that a degree signifies is th a t one has passed the obstacle course. That’s it. Afterall, out of all the Aero-Tech majors who design planes for their classes, how many of these would you care to test fly on th eir maiden flight??...(to be fair) And how many Marketing ‘Surely there must be majors would you tru st a more humane way to with that better mousetrap commit suicide. ’ that you’ve been working Another bubble I feel on for ten long years and invested your life savings into? Surely there must be a more humane way to commit suicide. Furthermore, how many students of higher education (that means college, remember?) bother to read the newspaper, world news periodicals or trade journals for their field of study? Sadly, not very many. “Not enough time” I hear the peanut gallery yell over the din of the TV set and stereo. So much for that excuse. And that’s the truth. ‘W henever someone begins to tell you “the tr u th ,” im m ediately beware . . . * ________ By the way, some advice for those of you too young an d /o r naive to know better. Whenever someone begins to tell you “the truth”, immediately beware and disregard w hatever they say. Of course, I represent the one exception to that rule...and that is the truth. Jon H. Eisen School of High Finance Tuesday, August 29,1978 State Press Page 5 ASU student chosen for top cadet honors An ASU student has been chosen top cadet at the Army’s Advanced ROTO Summer Camp at Fort Lewis, Washington at which 69 universities were represented. Dennis Hink, a senior criminal justice major was selected from 850 Army ROTC cadets attending the six-week summer camp as part of their collegiate military studies. Hink was awarded the Fourth ROTC Region Commander’s Trophy at the camp-ending Pass in Review Parade. After competing in areas such as leadership ability, w e a p o n s p r o f ic ie n c y , m o u n ta in e e r in g an d physical fitness, Hink was chosen to lead the Pass in Review Parade where he was awarded the trophy. Also cited at the camp­ closing ceremony was ASU student Cynthia Overmeyer who was selected for platoon leadership, ahead of 43 males in one of the 16 platoons at the camp. Colonel Connie Guffey, chairman of the Military Science department at ASU said this is the first time ^ I SOUND WELCOME M ore than just talk about low prices. W e w ill save you m oney on fine audio gear. Low low prices every day of the week. N ot just a few advertised item s. m I i l l JVC KENWOOD SANYO B *I*C TOSHIBA ULTRAUNEAR NIKKO INFINITY JENSEN PIONEER MOTOROLA PANASONIC MAXWELL TDK BASF FUJI SCOTCH SHURE AUDIO TECHNICA EMPIRE DISCWASHER ADC BSR AKAI NORTRONICS AMPEX ATLAS FISHER EMERSON FOSGATE MARANTZ RECORD-A-CALL NUMARK PEARLCORDER GARRARD KOSS JET SOUND MARUME MAJESTIC LLOYDS COBRA "YOU CANT BEAT THIS SYSTEM Dennis H ink ASU’s ROTC program has done this well, and said “fifty-one percent of ASU’s competing cadets finished in the top one-third in camp leadership, with eighty-six percent placing in the top two-thirds.” In a le tte r to th e department after news of Hink’s aw ard, ASU president John Schwada said, “This is obviously a prestigious award which signifies unusual leadership ability and I am certain it was accepted with con­ siderable pride. Mr. Hink’s achievement also reflects credit upon ASU and the ROTC program.” • SANYO 2100 AM-FM STEREO RECEIVER LOOKS AND SOUNDS GREAT • BSR AUTOMATIC RECORD CHANGER #2260 COMPLETE. BASE — DUSTCOVER — CARTRIDGE • ULTRALINEAR 12” 3-WAY ACOUSTIC AIR SUSPENSION SYSTEM WITH 5-YEAR LIMITED WARRANTY. MODEL “76” $90095 L U U M Dates Clubs | COMPLETE "LOADED DECK" THIS CASSETTE TAPE DECK IS A REMARKABLE BUY — LOADED WITH FEATURES — DEPENDABLE AND A GREAT PERFORMER. EVEN FEA­ TURES “DOLBY” NOISY REDUCTION SYSTEM. THIS WEEK — QLA-2 RECORD CLASSES — LECTURES — SEND TALKING LETTERS HOME TO FRIENDS-RELATIVES. OPERATES ON BATTERY OR HOUSE CURRENT. VERY DEPENDABLE AND THE PRICE IS RIGHT! WEDE UP TO OUR EARS IN HEADPHONES TOP NAME BRANDS ENJOY YOURSELF WITHOUT DIS­ TURBING YOUR ROOMMATE. EXTRA SPECIAL FROM * 5 * 4og7 25’ HEADPHONE EXTENSION COIL CORD i T SPEAKS) SPECTACULAR CAR AND HOME HUGE SELECTION — SAVE A BUNDLE OUR FAMOUS “2 FOR THE MONEY SALE” IS ALSO NOW IN PROGRESS — D O N T MISS THESE LETS GET ACQUAINTED * I I I I . LIVE ENTERTAINMENT theSalt Cellar „„ *179“ FREE AMPEX Fresh Shrimp-Bay Scallops Served with Rice Pilaf, Sour Dough Bread & Butter 55Q N . HAYDEN RD. *12995 GREAT FOR CLASS PORTABLE RECORDER TUESDAY NIGHTS SHRIMP MAUI en BROCHETTE J OTHER GREAT BUYS FROM $39.95-$1200.00 If ever you see a suspicious character — some guy hanging around a bike rack or lurking by a dorm — call the University Police at 3456. No names necessary. FOR ALL LADIES • tJHHBHOB ft f i « « = ••• UNBELIEVABLE BUT TRUE. THIS NEW QUARTZ DIRECT DRIVE HAS TO BE THE BEST IN ITS CLASS — SEMI AUTOMATIC — STROBE — .025% WOW & FLUTTER — FREE CARTRIDGE THIS WEEK. WEDNESDAY The Campus Organization for Awareness of Disabilities will hold an organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the East Cochise Room of the MU. Everyone is invited to attend. . THURSDAY Hillel will hold a “Think n’ Drink” for graduate students from 3 to 4:30 p.m. at the Baker Center. 213 E. University Dr. LADIES NIGHT 50* DRINKS ’ •E3E5 REVOLUTIONARY TURNTABLE Places Meetings 3456 l i WOW! SANYO RD-5030 11-------------------------S f EQUIPMENT Íi ROSTER 9 4 7 -1 9 6 3 Just a few blocks North of McKellips on Hayden Rd. 90 MINUTE CASSETTE TAPE JUST FOR COMING IN I LIM IT 1 PER CUSTOMER GOOD ONLY WITH THIS V ALU ABLE COUPON I____________________________________ I j^ELECTRenjCkb ™ ÏSUP€RiTlflRTf" • LAYAWAY AND WNANQNQ AVAKADU • 4019 N. 33rd Ave. on W . INDIAN SS M 274-3536 SCHOOL RD. ANO 1 M A V I. (MAYMM M A Z A W U T I IID M ZM C M IU ) I M I M t t , « ItM U tM 'A U T i M u w u a u a u u i u Page 6 State Press Tuesday, August 29, 1978 More about £NIIIIIIIIIIIII!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinilllllllllllllHllllllllllllllllllllllltlHllllllltllllllllll||«a e‘lrâtREitouse Students' efforts in vain ! *î H“Good Food and D rin k99 s I continued tram page 6 worked eight hours a day and were on the payroll of the Physical Facilities department this summer, but this fall they are trying to coordinate their free time between classes to finish the job. The plates are located approximately five inches above the door knobs and underneath the name plates on the bathrooms. Although Gonzales and Hubbard finished labeling Payne Hall and the Farmer Education Building earlier this summer, both buildings had to be redone because the heat and humidity melted the dots. Gonzales said a stronger aluminum was used to make new plates for the buildings and both buildings and the Language and Literature Buildings now have braille plates. Hubbard said they hope to have all th e campus buildings done by the end of the semester, but measures must be taken to insure vandals don’t rip off any more of them. Gonzales’ work began this summer, but Dale P a r tr id g e , U n iv e rsity safety officer, said the plan has been talked about for a long time. Partridge said a national Rehabilitation Act passed in 1973 requires schools be accessible for disabled —Light & Dark— | O utside D ining students. He said putting braille numbers on the Beer on Tap LIVE ENTERTAINMENT doors is just another im­ Every Night -Carryouts— provement the University (N oC over, No M in.) is trying to make. HAPPY HOUR Bob Butler, associate Mon.-Fri. 3-7 p.m. I director of the Physical Facilities department, said Live Entertainment | when it was announced the department was going to Wine begin the project, they $1.35 V2 Liter received a call from the 35c Glass D is a b le d S tu d e n ts Beer Organization asking them $1.35 64 oz. Pitchers I to hire a blind student to Mugs 35c | complete the project. I University & Forest “We thought it was a (In The Arches) Daily 10:30 to 12 p.m. | great idea,” Butler said. 966-7788 — Tem p* Fri., Sat., Sun. till 1 a.m. S “We are very pleased with illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIinillllllllllllllllllllllllllllirilllllllillllllllllllNIIIIIIIIIIIIIli the work Anna has been doing.” T HEY, SMARTY! If you’re a student getting “B’s” or better, you may qualify tor Farmers—in the form of special bonus lower rates on your auto insurance. Call today and get the facts on Farmers money­ saving Good Student Auto Policy. Save money on R ental's Insurance, Cal DAN At 835-1107 The search Dan Kosak, a senior history major, starts his long search for course books which can sometimes be expensive. [State Press photo by Sam Jones] W elcom e B ack! Now that school is starting, it’s time to G e t H ig h and For a Free Quotation Part Tim e Student Em ploym ent OPPORTUNITIES An equoi opportunity/afftrmotion oaion employer who complies with TW# IX of the Educational Amendments Act of 1972. D is c o v e r F ly in g Business Clerk Private Assists w ith the preparation o f financial reports, m aninroins cost and property records, m aintains hourly w age records. Accounting m ajor w ith some know­ ledge o f cost accounting preferred. Con­ tinuing position. Shop/Scenic Set Construction General ser construction for srudio and rem ote Television production, including srudio ser-up ond m aintenance. ASU students are eligible to receive college credit and super low flying rates when enrolled in Aero-Tech Flight courses. Check with the Aeronautics (Ext. 7775) Dept, or call us at: SUPERSTITION AIR SERVICE Falcon Field, Mesa 832-0704 — A Cessna Pitot Center — Production Technidon Assist w ith various equipm ent operation, studio ond rem ote ser-up ond strike, rear screen projectionist and srudio teleprompter. Production Assistant: Assists ih the planning, research ond exe­ cution o f rhe non-rechnical aspects of television production. Studio/Remofe Camera Operator: O peration o f RCA-TK-44 ond RCA-TKP-45 Srudio Camera including ser-up ond m aintenance. ENG/MinKom Camera Operator/Editor: Operorion o f Sony 1610 Camera, Sony 3250 Videocasserre Recorder, QVU-100 Videocosserre Recorder, Sony 2850 Videocossetre Recorder, TRI Editing System. In-Studio/Remote Audio: O peration o f CelrecM ulti-Channel Audio Board, Sony ECM-50 Mies, ond associated equipm ent fo r production and postproduction os w e ll os 4-rrock recorder ond Am pex single rrack recorders. Still Photographer: Still photographic w ork fo r on-air ond print m edio prom otion os w e ll os block ond w h ite printing ond slide m ounting. Lighting Technidon Assist w ith in-studio ond rem ote tele­ vision lighting and instrum ent m ain­ tenance. Required referrals for interviews ore available from the Student Employ­ ment Office in Matthews Center. We ore particularly interested in stu­ dents with previous broadcast experi­ ence in those areas outlined above. Please feel free to leave your resume with our receptionist for our follow up. KAET/Chonnel 8 Stauffer Communications Building B-Wing ---------------- 965-0506 8:00am - 5:00pm Tuesday, August 29,1978 State Press Page 7 Good news for calculating men and women! Buy one of these program m able calculators from us, and get a special bonus from Texas Instruments. If numbers is the nam e of your gam e, you'll be g la d to know th a t our salespeople know their business. 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Integrate them w ith the Master Library m odule (Program m able or w ith prewritten program s) for up to 5000 a dd itio n al steps. 125.00. G ood news: buy the 58 from us, a nd Tl w ill send you their personal program m ing book a t no cost! M i — i n M x a s - Iris I * T UU M LN t s • , li ■■ " / ff £ ^ * I — M ATRÙ , A O O IT 3 ICKJ ANO 1 2 - : 1 S B M U L T IP U C a T IO u - .« F m . • r:: 9‘ ■A'. m 1Z3 - i- : I V l o , "d; : • 1 ’ E* . C D C D ' . CP CHZI ? 'R G 3E1 i d CE3 V( D C D In s C M i . P .d . le d fSST) IU 3 e*c w E l Dfcl Énr; m (H D V'PdUSfc .x -t fc T o l m m L id rzn s ia < C O S -' a n B O Pqm . s p /.* 1 * B Drg c d Cp N tip ' l E K 3 l * i S l« g iK v n T M W EM If R -D.MS ■ m m m m — 0 -z EZÈ1 Adv m Rad M M B ’(¿Tad ir - pd . LU I In 1 C D E tc * n Is u m I • Fipt LH i m | | | ! B - Lifctv . B T l P r o g r a m m a b le 5 8 L a i;« ' ! v a • — ■■ 1 1 « « TO ORDER BY PHONE: CALL 248-3248 IN PHOENIX, ELSEWHERE IN ARIZONA CALL 800 -352-0457 TOLL-FREE OR SHOP 10 TO 9 MONDAY-FRIDAY. 10 TO 6 ON SATURDAYS AND 12 TO 5 ON SUNDAYS Page 8 State Press Tuesday, August 29, 1978 Vacancies exist w ith tight housing situation Dorms are full and the housing situation close to ASU is tight, but there are people still looking for roommates and vacancies are available but probably won’t get rented, the director of the Associated S tu d e n ts T e n a n ts ’ Association said Monday. “Traffic has really cut down this week,” Doug Moore said. “We have a 9-page distribution avail­ able listing people needing roommates and vacancies. A lot probably won’t get rented.” Moore said increased news coverage and a large M o th e r-to -b e leatherneck in o fficer training QUANTICO, Va. (AP) Laurie Glenn Jacobson, who is 574 months pregnant, is nearing the end of a grueling, 21-week officer training 0010*86 at the Quantico Marine Corps Base. For most Marines, having any woman going through obstacle courses, long marches and mock battles at the base is something of a shock. Until a year ago, only men went through such training. But it took even longer for some of the men to get used to training with a pregnant woman. In fact, at first some of the leather­ necks were almost patronizing toward the 5foot, 118-pound second lieutenant, she said. response from the public helped the situation. “We had outstanding coverage from the news media and an excellent response from the com­ munity. The problem with West, said the dorms are better prepared than last “filled to the brim” but the year so everything ran situation went much much smoother,” he said. smoother than last year. The housing office would not comment on the “We took extra John Brady, assistant situation. precautions and were unit director at Palo Verde most of the rooms for rent is th a t they are too far away for students who have to walk to school,” he said. A N A TO M Y OGETEMWK F A SLELITA P . S HOT! This Not This “They asked me if they could lift things for me. Now they don’t even bother asking,” said Jacobson, who last week shouldered a machine gun tripod and 400 rounds of ammunition during a field exercise. Jacobson, 25, is one of the first pregnant women to undergo the rigors of Marine Corps training. The only exercise she did not participate fully in was the “Three-Day W ar” — a simulated battle exercise in which combatants are exposed to tear gas. “The doctors told me not to take aspirin, so I thought tear gas would be a bad idea,” she explained. Jacobson, wife of a Marine first lieutenant now stationed on Okinawa, is one of 15 women in the 244person Charlie Company, and she is the only one who is pregnant. Marine officials said that of the 5,000 women in the corps today, 44 are pregnant and have chosen to stay on active duty. They also said that with 10,000 women expected in the Marines’ ranks by 1985, headquarters is at work on a Marine m aternity uniform. Fiiot of solo: 2 or 3 loyor vorsions, oil tho colors of tho rainbow shown here in black and w hite. Tough outer sole, soft inner sole layers make for smiling feet. Earth slaps; When you walk on the beach with slaps.the heel recesses into the sand. So when you walk on the beach you get all the laid-back benefits of having your heels lower than your toes. Bicentennial Bonus! Made in America by Californians! Slop, flop and lap-flap: The ascent of the slap has been arduous. First, the prim itive thong. Then the banana-like zorie. Followed by the pre-guilt lapflap. When the jap-flap got o conscience (manifested in its one y e a r strap guarantee) it ascended to the Slap as w e know it today. The strap of our slap is guaranteed. 706 South Forest • Tem pe • 967-8747 1 block north of University 10 to 6 • Thursday until 8:30 Clothing Merchants Tuesday, August 29,1978 State Press Page 9 DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau WKHUNCHMUrmWê iftm .Nt6Rm .m sH m m m m m pR osR N m Nimcommi.MteR&p- # NAME BRAND JUNIOR & MISSES FASHIONS AT EVERYDAY SAVINGS OF UP TO 60% O F F II jusnsp/rimnoHBFNm. ,jHatrmToont- SCALE. IHOPE HB .CONVENENCED- THE BIG 2 in thewomen’s clothing conference! NO.NO, I'M SORB NOT. yOU CAU6HT n e m o , thanks VERU MUCH.. o f course,w K W o f corco ïm s u r e m im a d o &ATERR1HC INVESTMENT iro s e o m s ! ■me m m d éc is io n , COOPT. WEAR-ELSE & SH0W0FF, have the / ‘SEASON’S EDGE’1 on the goal-winning fashions. f a . I suppose TOU N S .ID IP ,, HEARDTHSCOMPORR. UtOOPT. LACET .pmoupirens- m ourn a&fiNCfiNouR. . iHOPeyou I f SALARIES.. Q U IB w 'th poly-gab, woven, and khaki pants and . DONTBLAME HDr! NO, NO, IT S NOT TOURFAULT. TT COULDNANEHAP­ PENED SOONER OR LATER. skirts for $ 8 t o $ 1 0 TACKLE- wrap yourself with a cowl neck. Tops and assorted sweaters for $ 4 t o $ 6 SWAP- |at the assorted shirts in­ cluding cottons, wovens, polys and nylon, solids and prints for $ 5 and $ 6 In For The Touch Down | with a great assortment of fashion^ Get The____________ X-tra 2 points -¡with Levis ___ sweaters at & Faded Glory jeans - in cords, ★ and, •dor a l l '- the male coaches,we have assorted m en’s shirts 1 that sell elsewhere.- from. $ id $25 for brushed and blue denim for $10 and $12 only * 5 : - off . So gals, don’t sit on the sideline,, get in and score at; the • winning stores of; I HAVE ID tUHYl ADm , THOUGH, PONT CO TM PRETTY THINK IT SHOCKED.. UA6FAIR*. CAtfTSETOVER U B I,THOSE filMPUTFPc. m ncecuA s # *v e o ! ¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ ¡ Sn <>)) m u m m y S how O ff F A S H IO N S ONLY 2 minutes from ASU 93-5 E. Broadway Rd., Tempe Hucky'Shopping Center Broadway a' R i a1 ' 8 9 4 -9 2 3 4 ■ / f o r fa s h io n ? '• V. ' ' ' .SS : 7th Ave. & Bethany Home Phoenix 2 6 5 -4 7 6 0 SMALL CAR COMPANY ‘*2895 71 240Z ..................... 74 2602 .................. ........... .$3995 $7295 77 2 8 0 Z ........... 74 BMW 2002 ....... ------------ $5495 69 BMW 2002 ........... .......... $2495 *6495 '65 Corvette Fastback 72 Corvette T-Top .. ...-.... *6495 72 Volvo P-1800 E S ................ $6995 72 MG Midget ...................... $1895 $2695 74 M G B ........................ 7 5 M G B .................................. $3295 75 MG Midget ..................... $2795 7 6 T R -7 .................................. $4696 7 4 T R -6 .................................. $3496 7 2 T R -6 .................................. $2496 $2495 74 S p itfire ..................... $1995 72 S p itfire ................... $3495 75 AudHOOLS ......... . . . . 74 AudMOOLS ........... ........ $2896 7 3 AudHOOLS ...................... $239$ 75 Audi Fox Station Wagón . $299$ 74 Audi Fox ........................ $2996 73 Fiat 124 Spider ............... $2496 72 Flat 850 Spider ............... $ 1 (1 6 . 70 Opel GT .......................... $1666 75 Luv Pickup w f camper .. . 62466 73 V W T h in g ........................ * 696 Sm all Company Sm all Prices 5201 E. Van Buran Ph. 275-4461 FM 1O O STEREO and AM 1440 “JUST DAM GOOD MUSIC” K O PA Page 10 State Press Tuesday, August 29,1978 Woman grocery worker dies after store robbery YUMA (AP) — A woman employee died with a chain around her neck and another was shot by a robber who methodically took hostages as they arrived for work Monday at a supermarket. He escaped with the contents of the store’s safe. Jesse Garcia, manager of the meat department, said the woman who died, Laura Bohannon, had not resisted when chained but became upset when later-arriving Flora Burks, 60, resisted and was shot in the stomach and thigh. He said Mrs. Bohannon either slipped or had some sort of a seizure, possible a heart attack, and fell forward against a chain which was around her neck and a pipe. “I yelled, ‘she’s dying, she’s dying’ but the man just cussed at her, and said, ‘if she wants to die, let her go ahead and die’,” Garcia told a reporter. Police surrounded the building — one of the largest Safeway Markets in the area — and made a guns-at-ready search. The dead woman’s husband, Jack, who reportedly had heart surgery recently, collapsed in the market’s parking lot and was taken to a hospital by ambulance. He was discharged several hours later. Garcia said when he arrived at 5 a.m. two men already were chained to the pipes of a compressor. He said employees were taken hostage at gunpoint — the robber had a handgun — as they arrived over the next two hours. Some men had to remove their trousers. Hostages described the gunman as a young man wearing a mask, dark pants and dark shirt. For several hours he was believed still in the building and Fire Department trucks raised ladders to the roof of the one-story building so police could reach it. He fled after forcing a woman employee to open the store safe. Garcia said he took “a large bag of money.” There was no police estim ate of the amount missing. The dead woman was found still chained to a wall, police said. An employee reporting for work noticed her and, instead of en ­ tering, called police, of­ ficers said. Mrs. Burks’ condition was reported as stable at a local hospital. Ambulance attendants said she had “lost a lot of blood.” The robber apparently gained entrance by lowering himself by a rope after breaking a hole in the roof. The building is on the north side of town on Fourth Avenue, the main commercial street. The store normally opens at 8 a.m. Still unsolved is a recent shooting of a young Circle K market clerk here in an apparent holdup. t D a s h .In n T Lunch, D inner or After N ight Class. Cold Beer, C him ichangas Best Chips in Tow n 7 3 1 A pache Boulevard (across from th e tee pees) M O N .-S A T . 1 1 - 1 2 S U N . 11-11 TO PROTECT 1HE UN60RN/4ND 1HE NEWBORN Give to th e ma r c h of Dimes m others m arch T H IS S P A C E C O N TR IBU TE D B Y THE P U B LISH ER MwmwmmwmwmmmmmWIMWMMMWWIMNMWWWWWMWMÎMNMWWWWMIMMMNMWMMWWMMMMWMMWMWWMMWMWWMM THE CLIP EDITION OF THE CENTURY! state press WEDNESDAY AUG. 30TH Reserve . . . Pick Up . . . Grab . . . Beg . . . Borrow . . . or Steal the Wednesday, August 30th edition of the STATE PRESS. BE A CUP ARTIST - Arm yourself with scissors . . . pocket knife . . . or just a good sharp fingernail and start clipping coupons. EVERYONE'S A WINNER WITH THE A UG. 30th EDITION Tuesday, August 29,1978 State Press Page 11 ASU Dance Theatre to honor birth of key dance company The major project of the Weidman Dance Company. Arizona State. University The performance will Dance Theatre this year take place a t 8:00 p.m ., will be a festival celebration November 18 in Gammage of one of the key events in Auditorium and will feature the evolution of modern six works choreographed by dance. The occasion is the Ms. Humphrey in the 50th anniversary of the 1980s. founding of the Doris In addition to this one H u m p h re y -C h a irle s unique performance, there diversions “This# Days of the Condor,” starring Robert Redford, wilt show today and tomorrow in the MU Movie House. “The Spy Who Loved Me” will start Thursday and run through Saturday. “The Last Detail,” starring Jack Nichol­ son, will run Tuesday and Wednesday next week. Showtimes for MU films are 7 and 9:30 p.m. Admission is $1 with ASU ID, $1.50 without. “The Goodbye Girl,” starring Marsha Mason and Richard Dreyfuss, will show at 6:30 and 9 p.m. Thursday through Saturday in Neeb Hall. Late-night features Friday and Saturday, beginning at 11 p.m ., will be “Zombies of the Stratosphere,” “I wss s Teen­ age Werewolf,” and “Barbara!la.” Admission is $1 with ASU ID, $1.50 without. Robert S. Oliver’s watercolora, world travel sketches and draw­ ings will inaugurate the new Gallery of Design in the College of Architecture at ASU. The Gallery opens to the public for the first time on August 28. “Bullshot Cnimmond,” a spoof of 1930s grade “B” detective films, will be staged by the Arizona State University Theater at 8 p.m. August 31 to Septem­ ber 3 in ASU’s Lyceum Theater. General admission tickets, priced at $1 for students with ID, $2 for faculty and staff and $3 for the public, will be sold at the Lyceum box office and at Diamond’s Seiect-A-Seat outlets. Student Recital Series will feature Jane Burns, cello, at 8 p.m. September 1 in Recital Hall and Paul McDermand, per­ cussion, at 8 p.m. September 5 in Recital Hall. Admission is free. Faculty Recital Series will fea­ ture Janice Meyer, piano, at 8 p.m. September 7 in the Music Theater, and Gabriel Gruber, viola, at 8 p.m. September 14 in the Music Theater. Admission is free. Anne Murray and singerf song­ writer Larry Gatlin will appear in concert at 8 p.m. September 7 in Gammage Auditorium. Student price for the concert is $1 with ASU ID. Tickets may be picked up beginning August 25 at the Gammage box office. Upcoming event» at Gammage are Ballet Folclorlco, the Blackstone Magic Show, “OscarWilde” with Vincent Price and Neil Simon’s “California Suite.” Ballet Folclorlco Naclonal do Mexico, the 50-member troupe from Mexico City and winner of last year's International Folcloristic Contest of Latin America, will be at ASU’s Gammage Audi­ torium at 8 p.m. September 11. Tickets for the program of dance and music are on sale at the Gammage box office and Dia­ mond’s Select-A-Seat locations. will be opportunities throughout th e year to attend workshops and senior performances. The informal workshops, the first scheduled for October 9 in the P.E. East Building, offers a forum for th e work of th eatre and dance students and include a n y th in g fro m choreography to im­ provisations. The senior performances, of which there are about 14 or 15 this year, are sometimes called “baby theses.” Several evenings throughout the year are devoted to these semester projects, each reflecting a stu d en t’s work in re s e a rc h in g , lig h tin g c o s tu m in g and choreographing his own performance. The first evening of performances will be December 8; following performances are scheduled for January 26, and February 2 and 9. r FREE BREAD 1 I I I I I I I I I 15W.BROADWAYI I Present this coupon for one loaf FREE bread with $1.00 minimum purchase. Complete line of Bakery Products featuring whole grains and natural food breads and cereals. (Limit one coupon per purchase.) 0ROWEAT || at Industrial Park TENNIS, RACQUETBALL, BAD M INTO N and SQUASH STRINGING BRAD N ylon $8 , *9, $1 0 •24 hour service •2-month guarantee on workmanship & materials THAYER 9 6 8 -3 2 6 8 days or evenings H C O U P O N II ★ A A A A ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ The Biackstone Magic Show, * featuring Harry Biackstone, Jr. and a company of 25, will be presented at 7 p.m. September 14 and 15 in the Gammage Center for the Performing Arts. Tickets will be on sale at the Gammage box office and Diamond's SelectA-Seat outlets. Waylon Jennings is slated to lead off the AS ASU concerts this fall with an appearance at 8 p.m. September 22 in the Activity Center. Hank Williams, Jr. is co-billed with Jennings. Tickets should go on sale next week. The Lyric Opera Theater of ASU will open their 1978-79 season with Gilbert and Sullivan's “Ruddigora” at 8 p.m. October 6-7, 13-14 and 3 p.m. October 8 and 15. Student discounts are avail­ able. Tickets may be purchased two weeks prior to the production at the Lyric Opera box office and Diamond’s Sislect-A-Seat YOUR RESUME MAY KEEP YOU FROM THE JOB YOU WANT YES, WE ARE OPEN! Does it contain the MOST IMPRESSIVE, RELEVANT and ESSENTIAL INFORMATION the employer wants to see? REMEMBER: Your resume makes the first impression. Don’t let it deny you a personal interview. Know what your employer wants. Send for: “The Report on Corporate Resumes” (Including a survey from over 1000 of the nation’s leading companies asking them what they think Is the BEST, IMPRESSIVE, RELEVANT, ESSENTIAL and BULL) Write to: EEI/Survey Division P.O .Box 1672 Scottsdale, Arizona 85252 L O W E R LEVEL M E M O R IA L U N IO N M O NDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 A.M. TO 10 P.M SATURDAY Er SU N D A Y 12 NOON T 0 10 P.M A N Y S IZE FREE COKE WITH THIS COUPON OFFER EXPIRES SEPT. 1, 1978 Inchid* Graduation Data and i4.00/l» *o * AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA’AAAAAAAAAAAAA Page 12 State Press Tuesday, August 29, 1978 Trams take over buses to ease parking problems Suggestions for a solution to the tight parking situation at ASU have ranged from car pools to Greyhound buses, but adm inistrators believe a tram system, started Monday, will ease the ongoing problem. One tram vehicle, with a capacity of 60 riders, began running from Lot 59, behind Sun Devil Stadium, early Monday. A second tram will go into opreation on Wednesday. The tram s rufr from 7 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. daily. The vehicles leave from lot 50 at about 20 minute intervals and travel down McAllister Avenue to Orange Street to the circle near the MU and Hayden Library then return to the parking lot. An experimental shuttle bus system, begun last January, preceded the new tram system. Barry Brims, assistant to the vice president for business affairs, said the shuttle system was d is c o n tin u e d b e c a u s e drivers and routes were being changed frequently. He said the buses were difficult for commuting students to exit from since there was only one door. The trams are open air. Bruns said the trams will be more economical in the long run than shuttle buses. The buses cost $36,000 in yearly leasing fees. Trams cost $60,000 but can be run for only $25,000 a year. Tax funds will not be used for tram purchase or operation, he said. Tram driver Frank Howard said the vehicle travels at about 20 m.p.h. and stops at all designated shuttle bus stops. About 250 students rode the tram by noon Monday and most like the new system, Howard said. Bruns said student parking on campus has slowly disappeared as buildings replace on-campus lots. The construction of a (^w tfd e te “S ecudtf HAIRCUTS $5°° RED K EN PRO D U CTS F O R SA L E Men and Women Operation of a new tram, transport system began Monday. The trams run from Lot 59, behind Sun Devil Stadium , to the center of campus. The trams replace a shuttle bus system. [State Press photo by Sam Jones] oo SHAMPOO & BLOW DRY $5 REGULAR SHAMPOO & SET $4 M N ow O pen W edn esd ay & Thursday Evenings by A p p o in tm e n t Q a to to H c C * B E A U T Y S A L O N 31 E. 9th ST. • TEMPE CENTER • 967-3722 estim ated deadline is today SCHWINN \ E H R H AR D TS An commuting students have to compete for only 6,000 parking spaces near the center of campus, but an additional 10,000 spaces are 25,000 available at Lot 59. Dan forth fellowship Go Back Tb School BICYCLES new o ff ic e -c la s s ro o m building near the PE East Building eliminated 500 parking spaces. SCHWINN Today is the deadline to seek information about the campus nomination process for the D anforth Graduate Fellowships to be awarded in April. According to the campus representative, Leonard Gordon, the fellowships are open to all qualified persons who have serious interest in careers of teaching in colleges and universities, and who plan to study for a Ph.D. in any field of study common to the undergraduate liberal arts curriculum in the United States. Applicants for the baccalaureate awards must be college seniors and may not have undertaken graduate level programs of study. A fellowship is a one-year award but is normally renewable until completion of the advanced degree or for a maximum of four years of graduate study. Serving Students Since 1958. Factory Trained Mechanics. NEW & USED 716 mill ave. Ill _ ___11 L l— MILL S n r 9 6 7 -2 1 3 7 N- WHEN WAS YOUR LAST GOOD HAIRCUT? SALES & SERVICE TWO BLOCKS FROM ASU OVER 200 BIKES ASSEMBLED READY TO RIDE VENTURA now M ANY ON SALE SUPREME QUALITY 10-SPEED M 09!! Assembled •Hand-m ade Lightweight Frame •H igh Quality Components •Lifetim e Warranty ohoir £kom p REDKEN 9 6 6 -9 0 6 1 1 2 0 E. University “IN THE ARCHES” Professional Hair Care for Guys and Gals STUDENT DISCOUNT AVAILABLE M O N .-W E D . w ith ASU I.D . (N ot valid w ith any o th e r offer) Tuesday, August 29,1978 State Press Page 13 Students to create tunnel for first Sun Devil game Purchasers of student season football tickets not only get seats for six Sun Devil home games, they get the chance to be part of a human tunnel. The team will pass through the tunnel, which will stretch from the University Activity Center to Sun Devil Stadium. It is an attempt to “go for the gold” in ASU’s first year in the PAC 10, said cheerleader Gigi Gutierrez. Hoping the tunnel becomes a tradition, Gutierrez said it will be formed by “yelling at whoever is around.” The cheerleaders hope to get Devils Disciple support. The season tickets will be sold Wednesday, Thursday and Friday at the Sun Devil Stadium Ticket office. The up between 8:30 a.m. and 5 tickets in the special p.m. Monday, Tuesday and student sideline section cost Thursday, and until 9 p.m. $15 and will be issued on a Wednesday. first come basis. In addition to the human Students can purchase tunnel, the cheerleaders are one season ticket and must also promoting the idea that present their current ASU students wear gold clothes to Sun Devil football activity eard or photo ID. The reduced rate tickets games. Saga Foods, campus are also available to the food supplier, will help the spirit-building effort by spouses of students. Students wanting to sit donating gold T-shirts to be together can give someone given to th e first 2,000 else their ID to purchase student season ticket tickets for them . One buyers. “Gold shakers will be person may bring up to six available at every game,” ID ’s for that purpose. Individual game tickets said cheerleader Gutierrez, are also avabilable to “so th a t fans can really students. These can be make some noise.” purchased for $2 Monday through Thursday the week of a game. A lottery system will be used. The tickets can be picked Burglars thrive on jew el thefts CANNES, France (AP) — Summer on the French Riviera. Yachts, sun, jetsetters, and like flies around honey, a swarm of thieves. Their latest haul — a fortune in jewels from the widow of American railroad and telegraph heir Frank Jay Gould. Florence Gould, 83, was having morning tea with friends elsewhere in Cannes when the burglars came. On Monday she was receiving no callers and was reported resting after the shock. Police say they know little more about the robbery than it was a precision job by brazen professionals and that the haul was so big it will take a week just to inventory it. Armed and masked, the three thieves entered Mrs. Gould’s 42-room villa, El Patio, through a skylight Sunday, tied a maid to a Louis VI chair and spent the next 30 minutes coolly cleaning out Mrs. Gould’s bedroom. It was the second robbery at the Gould home in three months. In May burglars stripped her villa of a priceless collection of French paintings. They have not been recovered. Mail strike stalled; negotiation continued WASHINGTON AP — The Postal Service agreed Monday to bargain some more with its unions, delaying for at least 15 days the threat of a national postal strike, Chief Federal Mediator Wayne Horvitz announced. In agreeing to renewed talks, the Postal Service appeared to be conceding to union demands that key parts of a tentative aggreement rejected by union members be renegotiated. Union leaders urged members to stay on the job. Both Horvitz and the Postal Service refused to answer directly reporters’ questions about whether the Postal Service had backed down from its frequently stated refusal to return to the bargaining table. However, the announcement by Horvitz said, “The parties have agreed to a procedure to resolve their dispute over the terms of a new postal contract. . . . That procedure is in effect a continuation of the collective bargaining process.” Only hours before the agreement to go back to bargaining was reached, Postmaster General William F. Bolger had said, “As far as I’m concerned, we did our bargaining . . . . I could not in good conscience agree to anything more at the bargaining table now.” Bolger said in a statement following Horvitz’ an­ nouncement: “I am satisfied with the agreement which provides a mechanism for a speedy resolution of the issues. .The nation can now be assured it will continue to enjoy uninterrupted mail service. * ^ * *KITCHIE’S * * * * * | DOUBLE SCOOP SUNDAE * I C E C R E A M (Rag. $1.09) 76 * * I C E ea. We have Deli Sandwiches & Salads Good thru 9-5-78 Limit 4 with coupon C R E A M * BOW L AT THE MU RECREATION CENTER PIN DOWN YOUR LEAGUE NOW! Sunday: 6:30 p.m. — Sun Devil Classic Monday: 4:30 p.m. — Best Ball Doubles 7:00 p.m. — Women's Foursome Tuesday: 6:30 p.m. — Faculty-Staff Wednesday: 5:30 p.m. — Student Mixed 8.00 p.m. — Student Mixed Thursday: 5:30 p.m. — Student Mixed 8:00 p.m. — Student Mixed Friday: 5:00 p.m. — Parent-Child Monday - Friday: 12:00 Noon to 1:00 p.m. — Lunch Vi Bowl All Leagues will start in early September. Get the friends, the day, the times you want by signing up now. For more information, cail Tony Maresca at the M.U. Recreation Center, 965-3642. BOW L FOR * I * * H A V E A B A LL T H IS F A L L * 9151. Broadway Rd. 10 am-11 pm • Lucky Shopping Center • 966-8950 50 FLAVORS * •¥■ -¥• BRING THIS AD AND BOWL A GAME ON US. OFFER GOOD ’TIL SEPT. 18, 1978. A Page 14 State Press Tuesday, August 29,1978 Divorce climate improves w ith no-fault laws By Louise Cook NEW YORK (AP) Phyllis Eliasberg of Los Angeles rem em bers her divorce as “delightful . . . absolutely amicable . . . the most liberating thing that had ever happened to either of us.” James Q. of Pittsburgh remembers his divorce as “very troublesome . . . lies . . . a meaningless ritual.” Census Bureau statistics show that from 1965-1976, the U.S. divorce rate doubled; almost one of three marriages today ends in divorce. The ending of a marriage is emotional, often agonizing. How emotional and agonizing — and how easy — can depend on the law. “I t’s become more and more simple according to the laws,” said matrimonial law expert Doris Freed. California, where Ms. Eliasberg lives, was one of the first states to pass a no­ fault divorce law. Penn­ sylvania, home of James Q., is one of only three states to retain the fault concept in divorce. The others are Illinois and South Dakota. Until 1970, most states operated under laws that required one spouse to bring. charges against the other. Even in cases where both hnsband and wife wanted the divorce, where they agreed th a t no one was at fault and no crime was involved, one party had to be named as guilty. lawyer who is chairman of the American Bar Association Committee on Research, Family Law Section, said that as long as both parties agree, divorce is relatively simple even in the states where guilt must be proved. The difference is th a t these states, she said, “put a premium on hypocrisy and lying.” One party must testify th a t the other is guilty — even if he or she doesn’t believe it.” FIESTA LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING EVERYONE'S A WINNER wMi Vie WEDNESDAY Fault concept requires guilt TEMPE CENTER 15% OFF ALL DRY CLEANING WITH VALID ASU ID . AUG. 30TH “You know all these things are lies,” said James ATTENDED HOURS FOR DRY CLEANING edition of Hie Q. whose 11-year marriage •KEYS «DROP-OFF LAUNDRIES, ended earlier th is year. STATE PRESS “The law yers tell you, ‘Look, th is is the thing you’ve got to say’ . . . The notion that I was innocent ★ ★ ★ * * * * * ★ ★ ★ ★ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * and my wife was guilty . . . that’s silly. We were both * guilty.” Jam es Q. divorced his * wife on the grounds of “indignities,” a category * that can cover everything * from yelling at your spouse * in public to refusing to let * 99 your mother-in-law come * for a visit. There were no children and no complex * property settlements. * • MONDAY — ASSORTED PIES Lawyer Bob Raphael of S Pittsburgh, who is working to change the Pennsylvania * ^TUESDAY — LOAF OF WHEAT BREAD law, said the fault concept * in divorce “makes ab­ * ^W EDNESDAY - 9” CAKE solutely no sense.” As for * the “indignities,” he said: ^THURSDAY — 2 DOZEN COOKIES “In the best marriages, if * you look hard enough, you * can find indignities.” * ^FRIDAY - BAKER’S DOZEN Divorce hearings a ‘Joke’ * James Q. is bothered not only by the fact that he had * FIRST FLOOR ,,, to lie, or at least * exaggerate, but also by his * belief that no one seemed to * MAIN HALL ^ M care whether his reasons for ending the m arriage * were valid. “ I found the * hearing very troublesome,” * he recalled. “ It was a meaningless ritual . . . ■kMON. THRU FRI. 7 A.M. TO 5 P.M. Here’s the lawyer and you * BAKE 'N TAKE L O O K fo r the D aily Specials Divorce Is sim plified No-fault changed th a t. Marriages end by mutual consent. Louis Kiefer, a Connecticut divorce lawyer, said no-fault generally has eliminated the situation w here one spouse “black­ mailed” the other, threatening to file charges of adultery, for example, or refusing to agree to the divorce w ithout a large economic settlement. “For the most part,” Kiefer said, divorce is “less disagreeable." C a lif o r n ia r e c e n t l y liberalized its divorce law still further. Beginning Jan. 1, couples who have been m arried less than two years, have no children and little property, can get a divorce without appearing in court. Ms. Freed, a N e w York IWINES' BEERS I B io w m through hundrods of w in««, bo on I M quon. Look fo r tho SUPER DISCOUNT SPECIALS. sitting in this little room who, although she is a d o -it-y o u rs e lf d iv o rce with . . . a clerk who lawyer herself, was one of concept for couples involved swears you in so fast you the earliest backers of the in uncontested separations. can't understand w hat’s been said . . . Everybody treats it as a joke.” “It was so simple and so easy and th e re was no assessm ent of fault or guilt,” said Ms. Elisberg 2 4 -H O U R L A U N D R O M A T KEYS M A D E SCISSORS SHARPENED MEMORIAL UNION ^ oaTAKE SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING MAJORS: TAKE OUT INSURANCE NOW How about an “insurance” policy that your science or engineering degree will really be used? It would be nice. Especially considering the work you put into such a degree. The Air Force will use your talents. We have openings for young men and women majoring in selected sci­ ence and engineering academic fields. . .like Aeronautical, Aerospace, General and Electrical Engineering, Mathematics, Physics and Computer Technology, and many more. , , , One way to get into these jobs is through Air Force ROTC. Our AFROTC scholarship can help you finan­ cially so you can concentrate on getting your degree. AFROTC is a great opportunity to help yourself through college, and the Air Force is a great opportunity to really use what you team. Look into the Air Force ROTC program at your campus. It’s good insurance. F u rth e r In fo rm a tio n C o n tact DEPARTM ENT O F AEROSPACE STUDIES OLD M A IN , ASU P H O N E: 9 6 5 -3 1 8 1 I | VALLEY FAIR DISCOUNT 70oua. Gu m S SfUxttA In H ioV alloy F a ir Shop. C anter i Southern A J RO TC G a te w a y to a g r o a t w a y o t life . Tuesday, August 29,1978 State Press Page 15 Regent Woodall to retire; ready for the "other side' By Verne Niner After working for more than six years as the Executive Coordinator of the Arizona Board of Regents and 36 years in other local, state and national offices, Lawrence Woodall has decided to get out of government and into golf. UI think it’s time I saw what the other side of the world looks like,” Woodall said Wednesday. Woodall announced his retirement to the regents at a July meeting in Flagstaff. It will become effective Dec. 31. An advisory committee of three regents has been formed to find Woodall’s successor. Applications and nominations will be ac­ cepted until Sept. 15. After the committee recommends a replacem ent, the new coordinator will work with Woodall until his retirement date. The executive coor­ dinator is responsible for supervising the regent’s advisory staff and is the regent’s liaison with the state Legislature. Woodall came to Phoenix in 1971, and since has been a member of the board. He said he has seen Arizona’s u n iv e rs itie s g ro w dramatically. “We are really turning out a very high product today. They are really becoming quality in­ stitutions,” he said. Stressing th a t he is retiring,- not resigning, from his $52,000-a-year post, Woodall said “it has been a very enjoyable tour of duty.” Besides golf, Woodall said he has several business concerns to keep him busy Learn to Prepare Inco m e Taxes FREE Poster with this ad O in retirem en t. “I ’ll be looking after some of those,” he said. Woodall, who was born in Gurdon, A rk. in 1915, moved to Arizona in 1962. He worked with the Tucson municipal government for eight years as a deputy city manager. He worked in Washington for eight years with the D epartm ent of Defense as a legislative liaison and then as the assistant comptroller of the Navy. He has been on special legislative task forces concerning finance and taxation. cf < 0 . T icke ts fo r 9:45 p .m . perform ance tp general pu blic. §! ' Tickets: $8, $7, $6 ★ BALLET FOLCLORICO NACIONAL Monday; September 11 • 8 p.m. M FT uesday N ight Together A com pany of, 50 dancers, singers and m u sicia n s In a c o lo rfu l presentation o f the tra d itio n a l m u sic and dance from the many provinces o f M exico. Tickets: $6, $5, $4 University Discount Until 6:00 p.m ., Night of Performance. ★ BLACKSTONE MAGIC SHOW Thursday, September 14 • 7 p.m. Friday, September 15 • 7 p.m. I The B lackstone M agic S how a llo w s audiences to return fo r a few m om ents to th e w ide-eyed vision o f ch ild h o o d where n o th in g is im p o ssib le and th e w hole w o rld is m agic. Qanet Carr ^ Tickets: $6, $5, $4 Mss Caúfcrnía y 1 1 7 5 -1 *1 7 6 ' ' ★ ASASU/UAC Present WAYLON JENNINGS In Concert With Special Guest Star Door P r iz e s REFRESH/AENTS HANK WILLIAMS, JR. M u s ic Baptist Student Union 1322 South M ill Friday, September 22 • 8 p.m. In the ASU Activity Center August 29 7;30 pm Tickets: $7.50 — A ll seats rsssrvsd. Tickets on m Io----to -ASU stu(fonts «only at W Gam mWags ---------------• • • ) wie iW IIIIM ||W Box WWA O ffice ffic e beginning b s a ln n ln a T h u ru la v August im u o i v31st. io l Tickets m O Thursday, on ta le to - I general public a t Qam m age Box O ffice and Seiect-A -Seat outlets beginning Septem ber 5th. For additional Information, please call the Qammage Box Offlee. M6-14S4 Tuesday, August 29,1978 Stats Press Page 17 Despite the universal signal, there was little sign of “peace” during the last few gruelling days of Camp Tontozona for ASU head football coach Frank Kush and his 125 Sun Devil players. Three-a-day workouts under sweltering conditions made life miser* able for most of the partici­ pants as ASU gears for its Sept. 9 season opener against Pacific. [State Press staff photo] HEW LETT-PACKARD INTRODUCES PROFESSIONAL CALCULATORS FOR A STUDENTS DUDDET. THE PRICE OF EXCELLENCE NOW STARTS AT $60? They're here. Hewlett-Packard’s new Series E. Five professional calculating instruments designed for a student’s needs and budget. NEW FEATURES. Easy-to-read display. Larger, brighter LED display with commas to separate thousands. Built-in diagnostic systems. Tells you: 1) when you’ve performed an incorrect operation; 2) why it was incorrect; 3) if the calculator isn’t working properly. Accuracy. Improved algorithms give you confidence that your answers are more precise and complete. FOR SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING. The HP-31E—Scientific. $60? Trigonometric, expo­ nential and math functions. Metric conversions. Fixed and scientific display modes. Full 10-digit display. 4 separate user memories. The HP-32E—Advanced Scientific with Statistics. $80? All HP-31E functions plus hyperbolics, compre­ hensive statistics. More math and metric capabilities. Decimal degree conversions ENG, SCI and FIX dis­ play modes. 15 user memories. The HP-33E —Programmable Scientific. $100? Scien­ tific, math and statistics with programmability. Editing, control and conditional keys. 49 lines of fully merged key-codes. 8 user memories. FOR BUSINESS AND FINANCE. The HP-37E—Business Management. $75? Basic business/finance. Gives Present Value, Payments and Future Value calculations simultaneously. Discounts, %’s, mark-ups, and amortization schedules. Statistics with trend-line forecasting. 5 financial and 7 user memories. The HP-38E—Advanced Financial Programmable. $120? Solves routine and complex problems at the touch of a key—no previous programming experience necessary. Internal Rate of Return and Net Present Value for up to 1,980 cash flows in 20 groups. 2000year calendar. 5 financial and 20 user memories. Up to 99 program lines. HEWLETT-PACKARD IS WITHOUT EQUAL. All Series E calculators use RPN logic exclusively. If you’ve never tried it you’re in for a big surprise. It lets you solve problems the way you naturally do in your mind. Straightforward. Logical. No worry­ ing about complicated hierarchies or parentheses. RPN is the shortest possible distance between the question and the answer. SEE FOR YOURSELF. To help you select the calculator that’s right for you, we’ve prepared a booklet entitled, "The Student’s Choice.. . the Logical Choice" Pick up a free copy at your bookstore or nearest Hewlett-Packard dealer when you stop by to see Series E. For the nearest dealer, CALL TOLL-FREE 800-648-4711 except from Hawaii or Alaska. In Nevada call 800-992-5710. While you’re there, be sure to see our advanced programmable HP-29C and HP-19C with printer and HP-67 mag-card programmable. Do it soon. A Hewlett-Packard professional calculator starting at just $60* is something you can’t afford to pass up. H E W LE TT JlD] PACKARD Dept. 0000. 1000 N .E. Circle Blvd.. Corvallis. OR 97330 Suggested retail price excluding applicable state and local taxes —Continental US. A.. Alaska and Hawaii. Displays are photographed separately to simulate actual appearance. 371 •616/70 Page 18 State Press Tuesday, August 29,1978 [nnrumnj-inn n r u w v n i^ r r W aiter Berry and Robert Petrie *■**"-1 W O R SH IP C a m p p ro v e s a c ra m p CAMP TONTOZONA It started out as a suggestion and finished in a folly. Communication over the summer via illegal telephone calls confirmed our intentions to be in attendance for the first days of contact drills at Camp Tontozona — also known as Frank Kush’s Concentration Camp and ASU Stalag. The last thing we were looking for was an instant replay of last year’s Mike “Tummalulo” affair and rekindle the cinders of criticism. We came to stay this time. And leave of our own accord. Trip worthwhile Leaving Tempe proved a problem, however. First we had to convince Tom Gibbons — a former State P re s s sports editor, sometimes student and full­ time driving instructor — th a t the trip itself was worthwhile. “Ah, there’s nothing up there to see,” said Gibbons. “All th a t’s there are a bunch of grumpy w riters and Ed Wiggins. Gibbons was wrong. Dead wrong. Wiggins — the former Mesa Tribune w riterphotographer who is most remembered for his farting, belching and puking in the press cabin — wasn’t there. Neither was his smell. “He was here earlier in the week,” said KOOL-TV sportscaster Bill Denney. “We had to air out the place for at least two days.” Wildcat nameplate shines On the two-hour, 104mile jau n t up to Kohl’s Ranch, we had the extreme pleasure of riding in a borrowed 1964 primer grey Buick Wildcat — complete with ripped upholstery, none on th e floor, and shoddy brakes. It was the kind of vehicle you could easily get carsick in without even playing chess or getting a whiff of a pinefresh air freshener. While packing. Gibbons spied a chrome nameplate and affixed it to his cowboy hat. W ith th e word “Wildcat” flashing off his noggin, he had all the glitter of Liberace. Besides, it was bound to piss Kush off to no end. We got to camp around 5 p.m. on Aug. 21. Long way to Hog Flats All we kept reciting on the way up were the lines to the Right Guard “Stick or Spray” commercial (“It’s a long way to Hog Flats. Yeah, all day long.”) If a prospector could’ve gotten wind of us, he surely would’ve cried “U-reek-a.” Jeff Englert — a useless gate guard whose only claim to fame is being on the front page of the State Mam Press’ Aug. 25,1977 edition — let us in w ithout in­ cident. If he hadn’t, we would’ve stripped him of his whistle, hid his chocolate milk and Clearasil and gone in anyway. Tim Tyers of the Phoenix G azette was in his usual cheery mood when we walked in unannounced and raided the refrigerator. For a guy who just got his hair afroed, he should be the last person to be putting down anybody. He resem bled a convict who had just been pardoned by the w arden, one second after the switch was pulled. For th e record, ASU ronHnuad p ig ilg STUDY FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF TEMPE 4525 South McClintock Drive C0LLE6E • CAREER FELLOWSHIP Sundays - 9 :4 5 A .M . & Wednesdays - 7 :0 0 P.M . Call for Information or transportation 966-6571 839-0966 839-0926 R E C R E A T IO N i S E R V IC E BuUshot is Back! BULLSHOT CRUMMOND is back August 31 and Septem ber 1, 2, and 3, AT TH E LYCEUM. 8 p.m . $ 1.00 $2.00 $3.00 Box O ffice, 965-3437 ASCI UNIVERSITY THEATRE Warehouse pricing m eans a great deal to you! You don’t n e e d to p ay ex tra for top-quaitty m e rc h a n d ise A nd th ese Fall sp ecia ls c a n g e t you Into b ed w ith Q uality a t u n h eard of savings! The Paul Bunyan includes mattress, elevated frame, liner, header The Santa Fe includes mattress, elevated frame, liner, header $197.00 $197.00 The Carefree includes mattress, elevated trame, liner, header Take advantage oi these special savings now! Sale ends Septem ber 10th $157.00 Two Warehouse locations University ESwtUwnl Cuter M l Dayi i m in t» 1 O iila il« Last Chance to Prepare for Graduate School Entrance Exams! (MCAT, DAT, LCAT) 967-2967 For Information About Othor Contort In Motor US Oita« 1 Abroad Outside NY State cau rou mu> m m in t I Country I 1 clMb 1 Dunlap Main/Apeche & ■ j 1 i j Cave Creek Rd. & Matcherfid. i Broadway 1 I i £ / a ^ 8 X & Northern Waterbed Warehouse G et in to b e d w ith Q u a lity . Tuesday, August 29,1978 State Press Page 19 M ore about Bears getting ready fo r PA C -10 season W riters observe Devils' Stalag continued from papa 18 Sports Information Director Moon Mullins, KOOL radio’s Bob Davies and A rizona Republic sportswriter Dave Spriggs were th ere. Bud Kaatz (thank God) wasn’t. Neither were our beds. 4 hair and Channel I2 ’s backup s p o rts c a s te r “roughed” it at camp. A comb, Trac II and tooth­ brush never touched his hair, beard or teeth , respectively. Nosebleed territory Lite Beer toothpaste Gibbons was lucky enough to procure a top bunk up in nosebleed territory in a room down the hall among a bunch of the resident “big boys” of the “working” press. After a night spent watching M*A*S*H for the millionth time, we wrapped ourselves up in some cheap carpeting and slept on the floor. At 2 a.m., Tyers and a couple of his “ working” friends stumbled in from their evening at P e te ’s Place in S ta r Valley. Umpteen billiard games and “other” activities left hmgovers more powerful than if they were subjected to a Chinese Water Torture with hydrochloric acid. “You got any aspirin?” Tyers slurred on his way to the restroom . His bull­ necked friend only took one look at us and ordered us to “shut up” because he had to get up early in the morning. When we left the next day, he was still sleeping. Camp itself was another study in crumminess. The food was lousy, the com­ pany was worse and the practices all but put one to slumberland. Only Kush’s swearing and the periodic rainfalls made it in­ teresting. So did Steve Pascente. The forefather of inflato “Hey,” he said as we pulled out some Colgate from an Alpha-Beta bag, “got any toothpaste I can borrow? I’ve been here two days and using Lite Beer and my finger.” It looked like it. For the first five minutes of our conversation, we didn’t even know who the hell we were talking to. While there, we also managed to interview Mark Malone and Marshall Edwards and had numerous others lined up. Time and patience kept us from following through. “Let’s get the hell out of here,” we said to each other while loitering around the Coke rack. “We got enough stories for our issue on Thursday. It’s supposed to be a small one. Anyway, we got no more chicken left. Rick Heumann and some other jerk wolfed it all down.” We had reason to believe they ate the box, too. The re tu rn trip in the Wildcat was less than adventurous. But by the time we returned to work Wednesday, th ere was a slight surprise in store for us — namely, a record­ setting 40-page issue to fill for Thursday. Thank God for the Associated Press. MORAGA, Calif. (AP) — The California Bears are claiming two-deep strength at most defensive positions, but on offense there’s one trouble spot a freshman may have to fill. “Mike Cornell has been very impressive. But we don’t know if he can handle the pressure we may be throwing at him,” said Coach Roger (Theder. Camell’s hard-to-believe statistics as a high school senior in nearby Fremont included 2,346 yards rushing and 44 touchdowns. He may very well be the starting tailback when Cal opens its season Sept. 9 at Nebraska. ASU hosts Cal on Nov. 4. Fullback Paul Jones played only nine games last season before being injured, yet accounted for more than half, 805, of Cal’s 1,543 yards rushing. The No. 1 tailback, Oliver Hilbnon, averaged 2.6 yards per carry. The top four quarterbacks from last year, when the Bears finished 7-4, are back and the current front-runners for the starting job are senior Garry Graumann and sophomore Rich Campbell. The most dangerous pass targ e t should be Floyd Eddings, who caught 17 passes for 321 yards as a freshman in 1977. • FULLY ASSEMBLED • COMPLETE W ARRANTY •FREE 30 DAY ADJUSTMENT • LIGHTW EIGHT 27" ^ $ 0 4 95 BLOCK GENERATOR SET $100 "Different spokes fo r d iffe ren t fo lk s !’ 994-8140 Open M on.-S at. 9:00 a.m .-6:00 p.m . S cottsd ale Rd. & M cK e llip s In Tempe ® I ONLY With any bicycle purchase with this ad only. Offer expires Sat., Sept. 9,1978. Texas Instrum ents a d v a n c e d slide rule calculator with program m ability A d vertising 965-7572 WELCOME SA CK STUDENTS WE HAVE THE JOBS IF YOU HAVE THE TIME We need the following • Traffic control for ASU football games. • Ushers for Phoenix Civic Plaza performances • Workers for a major pharmaceutical laboratory • And many others IF YOU HAVE A SKILL WE CAN MARKET IT Interviews will be held Aug. 30th & 31 st. Sign up for campus Interviews at ASB-102. TI-55. Versatile slide rule calculator and “how to” book combination for statistical and mathematical problem solving—with simple programmabiiity A dvanced TI-55 cap a b ilitie s in clu d e p rogra m m in g, plus a u n iq ue blen d o f hardw are and softw a re s u p p o rt features. Easily ha ndles alm o st any m athem atical op eration, from lo g a rith m s and trig o n o m e try to m o re advanced statistica l problem s. Easy-to-understand 140-page C alculator D ecision M aking Sourcebook show s you h o w to use th e po w e r o f statistics, fin a n cia l m athem atics, an d pro g ra m m a b ility in m aking b e tter decisions, w hatever y o u r fie ld o r profession. Step-by-step exam ples cove r analyzing re la tionsh ips in data, ve rifyin g q u a lity and p erform ance, m easuring change, forecastin g trends, testing research claim s, and p ro je c tin g investm ent returns. STUDENT BO O K CENTER GREYHOUND TEMPORARY PERSONNEL, INC. Greyhound Pw im u m I Poreonitol Greyhound Tourer — P io » Pour 111 W . Clarendon, Phoonlx 248-7580 704 College Avenue One Block North of Campus Page 20 State Press Tuesday, August 29,1978 Like a fish back in water. W alk-on players Hunter tries to swim again to meet Thursday By W a lte r B erry NEW YORK — He says he’s just a “good, oldfashioned country farm boy from North Carolina” whose wealth and success could not change. But for New York Yankee pitcher Jim “Catfish” Hunter, life in the big city has left a slew of invisible scars. “Boy, this year has hurt. It just keeps going on and on. It’s been one of those seasons you’d sooner forget than cherish,” said the 32-year-old righthander. “Sometimes baseball seems like six months of spring training. Other times, it’s like a nightmare . . . a bad dream . . . a living hell. You hope you can stop the pain, break the monotony. But deep down, you know you can’t. Nobody can . . . ” Two of the last three years in the Yankee pin­ stripes have been trying ones for Hunter. The in­ juries piled up like his strikeout totals once did on statistic sheets. He was almost a $3.5 million spectator last September and very nearly a p e r­ manent one this season. His arm had deserted him. “I don’t know what happened. My ‘hose’ went south or something,” said Hunter, ever the honest, happy-go-lucky sort. “It’s kinda funny . . . well, funny-sad in a way. I was always under the im­ pression th a t sore arms happened to other guys. Not me. Never.” Hunter has more ailments in 1976, after a 22-win season with New York, Hunter started to feel a twinge in the socket of his shoulder. He persisted in pitching and notched 17 victories for a league championship team th a t won 97. Last year, Catfish labored to collect nine wins for a world championship club that won 100 games. Concerned fans sent him sure-fire rem edies. One “cure” — which required the consumption of a quart of cranberry juice a day for disolvement of calcium deposits — only com­ pounded Hunter’s ailments. “Last August, I caught some type of mysterious infection. No one could figure out what is was for awhile,” he said with a faint smile. “By th e time the CARPETS For DORMS, APTS., CARS. ALL SIZES. New ft Used. # 7 5 0 9x12 Used Rugs # CARPET HOUSE 1516 E. Van Burnt Phoenix doctors did, it was a week before the (1977) playoffs. “They first thought it was a hernia, than changed the diagnosis to a urinary tract infection. You know what it was? D iabetes. I guess I got it from drinking all that cranberry juice. I felt like a walking cocktail.” Like a script from “Bad One-Man Theatre,” there were other complications and maladies. H unter “caught” a line drive on his instep on Opening Day 1977. Later, a sore shoulder surfaced. Never in his 12-year major league career has he been 100 percent healthy, but Game Two of the *77 World Series served as a double in­ dignity. Catfish always trying I t was almost as if Hunter played the part of the sacrificial lamb. The Dodgers and Tommy Lasorda led him to slaughter. “Oh, w ell,” Catfish said, rehashing the (ess-than-impressive stint in his head. “At least the folks back home in Hertford know I’m still alive . . . and still giving up home runs.” Los Angeles took him deep three times — into the bleachers of Yankee Stadium. Only one of the taters came with the bases empty. It’s been ftg b d ; lea# than three months «nee the Inst out of the 1978 College World Series w as recorded and USC walked off Omaha’s Rosenblatt Stadium * * * * « ^ w ith their 11th NCAA baseball title at th e expense of ASU. N ow , Sun D evil head coach Jim Brock is faced w ith the task of pelrfog up the pieces and h olding anew for the fowling spring — ASU’s first in the Pac-10. The initial phase of that jo in t reclam ation and reco n stru ctio n p ro ject w ill b egin W ednesday at 3 p.m . in Room 158 of the U niversity A ctivity Center when Brock welcom es back all returning baseball players to th e program. On Thursday a t 3 p.m ., any non-scholarship (walk-on] players who w ere not part of the ASU baseball program last year are invited to attend a short m eeting in Room 158 of the UAC for th e purpose of try-out inform stion. Pencils w ill be provided. Bring your own talent. Hunter’s pet peeve “A fter th e first one homer in the first inning, I was still hoping I’d find my fastball. Same thing in the second inning,” H unter sighed. “But after the third one, I knew it wasn’t my Pabst Blue Ribbon 59 BOCK BEER La Paz $399 TEQUILA MATEUS WINE 6 Pack (12 oz.) F ifth (750 ML) $099 White or Rose A F iftr RUNDli'S LIQUORS ft MARKT 730 S. MILL • UNIVERSITY S MILL • 967-9079 Package Liquors, C oM Boor 5 W ins, O rnearles, M agazines. contbtuad pago23 BACK TO SCHOOL SALE "GETBACK INTO THESWING OF THINGS" RACQUETBALL EQUIPMENT Leach Swinger II Leach Lady Swinger Leach Bandido Leach Graphite Performer REG. $21.95 $19.95 $25.95 $34.95 SALE $18.95 $16.95 $19.95 $29.95 SPECIAL PURCHASE $18.95 $11.49 Aluminum Racquet $ 2.49 AMF Voit Rollouts $ 1.99 SPALDING TENNIS BALLS - ♦ 1 9 9 PER GAN (Lim it 10 cans per customer) ALL TENNIS RACQUETS 30% OFF Yonex Yamaha \ Spalding MacGregor Davis QUALITY STRINGING - SAME DAY SERVICE - RACQUETBALL and TENNIS M A R S H A L L 'S S P O R T IN G O O O O M 1843 N. Scottsdale Rd. 947-1095 OPEN MON.-THURS. 10-8 FRI. ft SAT. 10-6 SUN DAY 12-4 N M cKolllpa Rd. * ASU University Q UANTITIES W ILL BE LIM ITED TO ITEM S IN STOCK. SO HURRY IN FO R B E8T SELECTION. Tuesday, August 29,1978 State Press Page 21 Parklane Hosiery is the largest retail distributor of Danskin, Gym-Kin and Premiere leotards and tights and Selva/Nino dance shoes with 400 stores nationwide. These “anywear” body hugging fashions fit you and your lifestyle for class, classic or classy doings. Everywhere. There’s one near you. Dan s are not just for dancing. Pa 1 Cl t l Î 11 C T parKJane hosiery A co m p an y fo r d a n c e rs I _r. o V-neck Iona sleeve. Pettle, S, M, L *18.00. Matching tights. A, B. C, D *4.95. Top: “Free style” leotard, #1807, mock wrap, V-neck, long sleeve, S, M L » 5 0 , “Free style" wrap #1800, mid-calf, tie string. S, M. L *88.00. Center: Classic leotard #198, scoop neck, long sleeve, no zipper. S, M, L. ExL *9.00. Bottom: Soft leotard #9175, gathered scoop, low back. S, M, L, *9.00. The Parklane Hosiery store nearest you. Los Arcos Mall, Scottsdale, 602-949-5829; Thomas Mall, Phoenix, 602-959-7070; Metrocenter, Phoenix, 602-943-8498. Page 22 State Press Tuesday, August 29,1978 Devils cast o ff with optimism in m ind By Jim EJsieger O-P-T-I-M-I-S-M - The belief that good ultimately prevails over evil. The tendency to take the most hopeful view of matters. The word is extremely well traveled in the world of sports, and this year at ASU it may become a religion. Frank Kush has to have heard the rumor his Sun Devils aren't favored to win the Pac-10 championship this season. In fact, I doubt seriously if there will be a run on coffins if he doesn’t finish second. But optimism is the word. Will the Devils win it? Well, the game is still played on a field 100 yards long, and each team can only have 11 players on that Held at any one time, and it still takes 60 minutes with the team that has the most points at the end being the winner. Given those criteria any ASU football team is tough, and anyone th at can state em­ phatically they won’t win it is a firm believer in flying hippos, but will they win it? Kush’s team is in an un­ familiar role, an underdog, and underdogs have to be optimistic and wear their pants differently. Exhaustion is a way of life. The task is not simple, but the prize is singular. Kush’s immediate problems are depth and size; the Pac-10 is not the WAC. Comparing the depth to his three main antagonists, USC, UCLA and Washington, Kush may have a key. USC has the same strong running game they are famous for. Charlie White is back, as are enough veterans on both offense and defense to term both units as experienced. Washington has 45 lettermen in camp and 18 starters, their only problems being a few open defensive spots and finding a replacement for quarterback Warren Moon. UCLA boasts 42 letterm en from last year’s squad with several standouts on both of­ fense and defense. The Devils have 36 lettermen and 11 starters; impressive — but can they win it? Almost all of the teams in the conference have a promising crop of freshmen, which is to say that the Pac-10 is a recruiter’s paradise. Kush is high on his freshmen and counting on them to provide the much needed depth he desires. Even Oregon State who figures to lead the upside-down parade has 13 starters return­ ing, and key people at both offensive and defensive positions. No team could enter the Pac10 and its recruiting prowess and expect to be top dog in quality and depth. So can the Sun Devils win? Although the Trojans and Bruins and Huskies put their pants on the same way the Devils do, some of their pants run several sizes larger. It’s been reported that the state of California made some of the Trojan players get license plates. The offensive line is where the Devils fall the shortest, or lightest; almost 30 pounds per behind the Trojans. Size and depth are prerequisites to Rose Bowl fame, but I can’t think of a single conference where small players and thin units are trademarks. The underdog role doesn't wear well on Kush or his Devils, like mudflaps on a Rolls Royce. There is talent on this team, the secondary is solid, the running backs are deep, the lines, although not packed with veterans, are anchored enough so they won’t blow away. Kush seemed to have problems in Tontozona, con­ centration, consistency, balance, but they still use a pigskin, and ASU is tough when the whistle blows. The quarterbacks will do the jobs, Kush will see to it. So can they win? Well, Washington had roses in the dead of winter last year. Can they win? Sure enough. A dvertising 965-7572 Here’s one w ay to m ake the new . school ► year We'd like to help you start your new school year right. By offering you a fast, easy way to open a First National Bank of Arizona checking account. No hassles. No long tines. Simpiy fid out the form below and take it to the nearby First National Bank office shown. That’saH there is to it. AH we need then is your signature and initial deposit. And you ’ve get the best checking account on campus, or bff. Plus, time for more important things. So fill out the card below and bring it Custom C hecking: If youwrite only afew checks each month, th Custom account is ideal. The service charge is just 15® for each check you write, plus a 25® monthly service fee. Regular Cheeking: There is no service charge for Regu­ lar Checking if you keep a minimum monthly balance of $2i00.Q0 in your account. Below that, the charge is just $3.00 per month. No limit on the number of checks written. University Office 707 South College Ave. • Tempe, Arizona 85281 FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ARIZONA M em ber F .D .I.C . • Federal R eserve System r ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1 A thletes rely on n e w coach Bill A llerheiligen, who for the p ost tw o y ea rs has boon assistant strength coach at the U n iv ersity of N eb rask a, has been h ired a s head stren g th coach for Sun D evil sports. He is a graduate of Nebraska, and plans to continue his studies tow ard a m a ster’s d eg ree at A 8U . Conditioning export Jen Cole w ill continue his work with ASU sports, and w ill specialize in w ork w ith A SU fo o tb a ll players. Your name (the way you want it printed on your checks). Please Print. Your school mailing address__________ r __________________________ Your school phone number_______________________________________ Your home (parents) address___________ :__________________________ Your home (parents) phone number. Your birthplace_________________ Your Social Security Number Your mother's maiden name _ (for verification when you phone in to check your balance.) Previous bank___ —______________ _______________ ___ :____ City________________________ —State. Your occupation (if other than student) Please check your preference: □ Custom Checking □ Regular Checking Tuesday, August 29,1976 State Press Pape 23 M ore about Jim "C atfish" Hunter hopes to end career in 1979 season m m m e | | olp Wonted________ eontliNMd tram pegs 20 night.” Or year, if you want to know the truth. “I was trying, but I was over-pitching,” the five­ time 20-game winner said calmly. “I was over-striding instead of laying back and popping the ball. I know I got my brains beat out. But at least the arm felt decent.” For the most part, the reverse has been tr ue this season. H unter’s prized right appendage — which has thrown more than 3,253 major league innings — has felt “like a dead mackerel” since spring training in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. He threw in extreme pain, unable to bring his arm into cocking position. Treatment alleviates pain Everyone agreed the two-time Cy Young Award winner, th e youngest pitcher ever to win 200 games and the author of baseball’s last perfect game, was all washed up. Everybody except James Augustus Hunter, that is. “I’m a religious man. I always thought something would happen. Something th a t would allow me to come back and pitch again like I used to,” the former Oakland A’s ace said candidly in his “downunder” draw l. “I knew th ere had to be a doctor somewhere who could help. I woulda kept on tryin’ as long as my contract ran ’cause I know if my arm came around, I can win easily.” “I still have my control. It ain’t sumpin’ you forget. It’s like ridin’ a bicycle. All you need is to get back on and you remember how it’s done.” What apparently cured H unter was a unique sh o u ld e r m an ip u latio n treatment performed last month by D r. Maurice Cowen (the Yankees’ team physician) at Lennox Hospital in New York City. It has enabled him to win six straight games to date, all sans the slightest sensation physical or mental of anguish. when he bent my arm back that he thought he broke it. But all I know is th a t I couldn’t throw well before that.” Sore arm or not, Hunter’s nine toes (his 10th was shot off in a boyhood hunting accident) will not touch the rubber of a pitcher’s mound in 1980. His impending curtain call and baseball obituary will undoubtedly touch millions. “The last game I pitch in 79, even if I win 25 games again or we go to the Series, that’s it. I’m calling it a career, once my (5year) contract expires,” said the moustached hurler who is touted as a future Hall of Famer. “I’ll miss the game, but not the travelin’. Now I hate trav elin ’ so much that I get out to the ballpark by neon for a night game. That’s how bored I get sittin’ in the hotel.” “Look, I’m a farmer, and my boy’s th e son of a farmer, just like his daddy. I owe it to my family. In two years my little girl will be 10, my little boy, Todd, RECREATION OR Music Major to organize and lead young girls’ character building program, 10 hours par weak, flexible work schedule. Phone for Interview, appoint­ ment, 907-9649. 9/1 Personal_____________ He loves farming As familiar with a fishing rod or shotgun as he is with a fielder’s glove, H unter has plans for his spare tim-\ “I’ll be doing a lot of huntin’ and fishin’. Plus, I love farming as much as I love baseball. I have a perty profitable farm of tobacco, ya know,” he said, spitting some Red Man tobacco juice into a styrofoam cup. “My dad once told me I*d never make any money tilling the soil. And my high school teacher used to scold me everytim e I cut class to play ball by saying I could never make any money throw in’ baseballs for a living.” “I’m glad I grew up with a stubborn streak,” Hunter added, “ ’cause now, I ’m laughing all the way to the Chase Manhattan.” GOOD STUDENTS, Save 25% on Auto Insurance — non-smokers 15%. Ask tor Steve Lundell, 835-1480, ASU Represen­ tative, Farmers Insurance Group. 9/29 Automobiles_________ 1274 AUSTIN MARINA — excellent condi­ tion, 2,300 miles, good gas mileage. Must sell. 268-2461 or 955-8694. 9/13 CAMPUS CLEANERS & Coin-Op Laundromat 1974 HONDA CL 125. 4000 original miles, 75 MPG, $300. 1975 Kawasaki KH 400. 5000 miles. *550.996-8284. 8/30 • Suede and Leather Cleaning • Alterations • Hand Ironing • Fluff Dry • Wash • Dry 8-FOOT lighted set-up with approximately 6-foot tame Boa Constrictor. 252-5761 before 5 p.m. 8/30 Open 7 Days a Week has just about everything you need •C o m plete o ffic e supplies •S ch o o l supplies •A tta ch e cases •R u bbe r stam ps — custo m made to y o u r order • G ift supplies •G ree ting cards •W e dding announcem ents and g ifts We also have a large selection of office furniture. DELIVERY SERVICE 616 M l Are., Tempe, Az. 968-8621 968-8622 ROOMS FOR RENT. 1Vi miles from ASU. 6125/month Includes all utilities plus cooking, laundry, phone privileges. Female non-smokers only. 966-6268. 8/29 NICE TWO bedroom house (or rent near University and 8th Street, Tempe. $296/ month, 1st and lest month rent plus $50 cleaning (refundable). Call after 5:00 p.m., 966-5920. 8/29 3 Z XEROX c o p ie s n PIZZA HUT INC. Cooks needed part-time day and nght. Must beat least 19 years old. Apply at 48th Street and Southern. E.O.E. 8/29 BUSY FULLER BRUSH man needs help distributing catalogs and picking up or­ ders. Flexible hours. Have own trans­ portation. Average $3.50 per hour. Call 835-1353 for appointment. 9/1 S ta te Press alph raphics A dvertising UNIVERSITY ARCHES 968-7821 THE TEMPE Montessori School opens Sept. 5. Ages 2V4 - 6 years. Registration now. Call 966-9070 or 967-7841. AMS Certified. Licensed. 9/7 PHONE SALES: Evenings, block from ASU, hourly rate plus bonus, 1000 E. Apache, #209.968-4853. 9/15 McDonald's 965-7572 REMIND-A-DATE Calling Service: Birth­ days, appointments, anniversaries, exam dates, etc., forgotten again? Find yourself oversleeping classes or forgetting to take medication on time? Then call us today and we'll surely take the worry away. 966-7601. 9/7 ADDRESSERS WANTED IMMEDIATELY! Work at home — no experience necessary — excellent pay. Write American Service, 8350 Park Lane, Suite 127, Dallas, TX 75231. 8/30 OVERNIGHT 122 E U N I V E RS I TY S ervices_____________ HOUSEKEEPER WANTED: Clean house, stay with two children (12 years and 14 years) from 3 - 5:30 Of 6 p.m. M-F, cook supper. Must have car, two work refer­ ences. $30/week plus supper. 838-1643 or Jerry at 267-4788. 9/1 HELP WANTED ■ 965-7572 WANTED: THREE dorm girls to sell guardian self-protection spray. 275-0584. 8/29 4CW HILE YOU W AIT - , STATE PRESS LIQUOR SALES CLERK, 25 hours weekly, hours flexible, must be pleasant, well groomed and have at least 3 semesters remaining. Specializing in sale of fine wine and party planning. No experience neces­ sary. Store In good area, N.E. Phoenix shopping center. 248-9615. 9/1 WANTED: WAITRESSES and floor men. Apply In person, Dooley's, 1216 E. Apache Blvd. . 9/13 1 £ Get the point across. It works! BABYSIT TWO girls ages 8 & 10. South Tempe area. Daily 3:00-5:30 p.m. Must be dependable. 839-4960. 8/31 W e Sell Recycled Jeans 111 TEMPE OFFICE SUPPLY CLASSIFIED AD F or Renf/Leose H elp Wanted________ • Fold ^967-9650 ★ TEMPE Corner of University & Rural Road SERIOUS-MINDED MALE grad student will share semi-fumished four bedroom house with same. 834-5197. 9/1 For Sole______________ PART TIME. Small office near Mill and University needs typist 50 wpm with phone personality. 8-12 hours per week. $3.00 per hour. Steve Pierce, 968-9035. 6/1 One Day Service on Dry Cleaning and Finished Shirts P oommote Wanted M otorcycles_________ LOVELY FURNISHED room in home with pool; female student, non-smoker. Call 247-0800. 9/6 Career over In 7 9 “The doctor puts you to sleep, grabs your arm and bends it every which way to break the adhesions,” Hunter recalled. “He said there was such a big pop LIFE CLASS MODELS. Mesa Community College. $4.00/hour. Phone 833-1261, ext. 270 at 12:30-1:30 only. 9/13 eight, and it’ll be time far me to be around them yearround. I ’ll be almost 34 then, too. Hey, I’ve been playing professionally since I was 18!!! That’s a helluva longtime.” 1325 W . Broadway Tampa PART-TIME •Lunch •Evenings till closing APPLY IN PERSON Travel________________ A NEW way of Life: We're building a 60-foot Catamaran, filming a documentary and creating an island community. If you have the spirit of adventure and are willing to work, come sail with us. 278-9337. 9/1 Typing __________ PRO-TYPE & DESIGN. 3 rates, 25 years experience. Design degree. Discount typing. Sandy, eves. 838-2536. 9/13 TYPING THESES, dissertations, term papers, etc. Professional secretary, accur­ ate, spelling corrected, reasonable rates. 949-9207. 10/20 W onted______________ WANTED: MALE GYMNAST to teach gym­ nastics part-time for school located on Price and University. Hours flexible and the pay w ill be baaed on ability and/or expertanoe. Phone 968-4306 or 834-7080. School w ill open September 1. 9/13 Page 24 State Press Tuesday, August 29, 1978 5j O R L P f c ÌC « R D S ) an d I rAPESJ 4th Anniversary Sale STOREWIDE SALE AT ALL LOCATIONS TO - 50% OFF on all Records and Tapes $3 " o n N ew Releases Including: Boston/Don't Look Back UFO/Obsession Robin Trower/Caravan to Midnight John Prine/Bruised Orange Moody Blues/Octave Leo Kottke/Burnt Lips *3" x 2 ■*7.98 Per Double LP Set Storewide Sale and Grand Opening TEMPE LOCATION Double LP Set NOW AT 7 LOCATIONS! TEMPE Forest & University (B ehind th e C huckbox) 966-3381 PHOENIX 16th Street & C am elb ack 277-2659 O pen till M idnight. Every N ight WEST PHOENIX 35th Avenue 8r C actus 978-1600 SCOTTSDALE Scottsdale Road & M cDowell in Papago Plaza 946-6584 O pen till M idnight. Every N ight MESA C ountry C lub tk Southern in the W oolco C enter 964-8613 FLAGSTAFF 1 South Beaver 779-1330 PRESCOTT 1316 Iron Springs Road 778-2120.