— W ed n esd ay October 18, 1978 Arizona State University Vol. 61 No. 30 state press ® V ________________ ____ Tempe, Arizona Bent out of shape Tracy O’Donnell, sophomore In pre-nursing, looks over her wracked bicycle after ehe collided with another student on his bicycle who refused to give his name to her [left]. O’Donnell said she saw the other cydlat heading toward Iter, but was unable to avoid the collision. [State Frees staff photo by Sam Jones] ________________________________ Protective escort service for A S U women begins By Tom Sammons University Police are donating the wheels and a campus frate rn ity is supplying the manpower for a new evening escort service for ASU women. The service will start tonight and run a scheduled route from 6:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m., Monday through Thursday, University Police Officer Roy Favre said. * Sigma Nu fraternity is training about 20 men to operate the new nine-person electric cart acquired by ASU last week. Fraternity members will ride in pairs for two-hour shifts, leaving room for seven women in the cart, Favre said. The bright yellow vehicle was acquired by ASU Thursday and is distinguished by a large “escort” sign on the front of the cart. Police said the vehicle will travel a standard route north and south on Cudy Mall, but women in dorms or out­ lying campus areas can receive a special pick-up by calling ASU Police, 965-3456. Mark Gluodenis, Sigma Nu frater­ nity, said his organization has been involved with previous short-lived escort services at ASU. “This year I think it will turn out much better, and it’s an excellent way to serve the campus,” he said. Favre said assaults and purse snatchings on campus have been cut drastically in the last year. The escort service is designed to keep that record going, he explained. “The escort service we (police) ran last year really payed off. There was not one assault on campiis,” Farve said. “It has proven very beneficial.” A previous escort service ran sporadically for about five years, he said. Education Board ignores evidence com piled by p ro f By Lori Grzeriek An ASU law professor said Tuesday he has compiled evidence that could bring disciplinary action against three government administrators, but the state Board of Education isn’t interested. Jonathan Rose spent seven months compiling a 290page report that he said indicated three administrators rigged bid specifications to give Southeast Research Associates of Albuquerque, N.M., a contract to score student achievement tests. The professor was assigned by then-Attorney General Bruce Babbitt to conduct the investigation in August 1977. Southeast Research Associates was chosen on the basis of favoritism,” Rose said. He said other competing companies received “in­ complete and vague” requests for proposals, which he said discouraged businesses from replying because of confusion. Well-known companies didn’t receive requests for proposals even after some asked for copies, he added. On Oct. 3, th e education board cleared Deputy Superintendent Jim Hartgraves, John George, associate superintendent for business, and Sid Borcher, overseer of the testing program. Members had not read Rose’s report. The board felt there was insufficient evidence to warrant disciplinary action against the administrators, board member Lynwood Evans said. Nevertheless, board member Amy Worthen said members didn’t see any reason to read Rose’s report. “We spent two days listening to (Attorney General) Jack La Sota’s report from Rose’s evidence and there seemed to be no point in belaboring it further,” she said. But Evans said the board should have read Rose’s research before voting to clear the men. He was the only one of eight board members who voted to delay action until all members had read the report. “I didn’t feel that we had been fully informed. It seemed to me that we wouldn’t be able to responsibly make a decision without more information,” Evans said. Since the decision was made, Evans has read Rose’s research and said there is sufficient evidence to warrant disciplinary action against the men. O n the Inside According to a Tempe mental health center the alcohol­ ism rate among college students is staggering. Page 3 If you have been frequenting local discos to find a true love and haven't had any luck, maybe you should join ASU's singles d u b and use its computer to solve your problem. Page 10 The first Pac-10 football game at Sim Devil Stadium was billed as 'T h e Contraceptive Bowl" — pitting the sometimes sterile ASU offense against the fault-proof Trojans from Southern Cal. But in the end, it was USC who proved impotent. Page 12 Five months ago, the left arm of New York Yankee pitcher Don Gullett hurt so much, he couldn't even lift it high enough to comb his hair. Then, he tried a miracle cure . . . that may have shortened his career. Page 13 Page 2 State Press Wednesday, October 18,1978 In the neirs briefIk Sort Out Your Valuables! from the Associated Press Operation ID is coming to campus! ACCUSED SLA YER FACES CHARGES L A S V E G A S — Peoria resident Ronald E. Lanphear who is wanted in connection with the slayings of three persons was returned to California Tuesday to face charges stemming from one of the killings, police said. N EW POPE ADVOCATES HUMAN RIGHTS' VATICAN CITY — American cardinals said Tuesday that newly-elected Pope John Paul II will be a clear and strong advocate of human rights. EIGHT DIE IN FIRE W A SH IN G TO N — President Carter stepped personally into the Middle East peace talks Tuesday, meeting separately at the White House with the heads of the Israeli and Egyptian delegations. N O G A L E S — A Santa Cruz County Attorney’s investigation of an illegal alien’s shooting death by a U.S. Custom s Service agent should be completed by this weekend, County Attorney Leigh Larson says. McCUNE SETTLEMENT REACHED SA N DIEGO — A court-approved settle­ ment in Carole McCune's six-year battle for the estate of her late millionaire husband gave the 62-year-old widow of Walter McCune an income annually rang­ ing from $10,000 to $36,000. Diamonds, Watches 14k Chains, Pendants Sorority-Fraternity Jewelry Watch & Jewelry Repairing 966-7587 BUDGET PH O EN IX — Ousted prison warden Harold Cardwell was named Tuesday as Arizona high safety coordinator. Cardwell was removed a s head of the state prison In Florence several weeks after convicted killers Gary Tlson and Randy Greenawalt escaped. OPTICAL •S o ft C o n tact L ens S1SS.0Ó •H ard C o n tact L en s S SO.00 •G en ero u s S tu d en t D iscount 832-8000 H o u rs 9 To 5 M o n . - S at. BEITEDDIN, Lebanon — The sevennation Arab conference on Lebanon ended Tuesday with a pledge to neutralize the right-wing Lebanese Christians and, if necessary, to use force to end their collaboration with Israel. ALIEN 'S DEATH INVESTIGATED FOR ALL YOUR JEW ELRY N EED S ■THE EYEWEAR EXPERTS' ARAB CONFERENCE ENDS CARTER INTERVENES TALKS JEWELERS 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. CARDWELL ACCEPTS HIGHWAY POST P H ILA DELPH IA — Screams pierced the pre-dawn silence and roused neighbors across the street, but no one was able to reach the eight members of one family trapped in a burning apartment. All eight died in the fire Tuesday that officials say might have been arson. 0 lt a c 4210 E. M ain St., M esa (In VMage Center) Vi Black W est of Sm ltty's Behind Dairy Queen INMA I E CHARGED AG AIN RIC H M O N D, Va. — A man sent to prison for five years in 1975 for threatening the life of then-President Gerald Ford has been charged with threatening the judge who sentenced him. N EW CONTRACT FOR YOUTHS REACHED TU CSO N — The state and a private agency have agreed to a new contract for the agency to handle troubled youths in the state’s care, says Department of Economic Security Director William Jamie­ son. Nurses' group urges boycott over new "not-so-soft drink" RICHMOND, Va. AP - The beer manufacturer calls its new product a “not-so-soft drink” but a nurses’ group wants it boycotted, saying it could help soda-sipping children grow into beer-guzzling adults. An amber blend of lemon, ginger and apple flavoring in a malt-flavored base, “Chelsea” is being test-m arketed by Anheuser-Busch in six markets, including Richmond and Staunton, Va. Its trouble, from the point of view of the 3,000-member Virginia Nurses Association, is that it contains about one-half of 1 percent alcohol and is packaged to look like premium beer. What’s more, says Barbara Bolton, executive director of the association, “it forms with a head on it, exactly like a beer.” But, with so little alcohol in it, it can be purchased by children. 0O 4M fii«tc Chelsea, however, is ex­ pensive for a soft drink — $2 a six-pack — and Anheuser-Busch denies both that it could addict children to alcohol or that it is even aimed at the children’s market. “The irony is that this soft drink is more pure than many others. It’s totally natural, has no caffein, less sugar and, in' that way, is probably the least harmful on “the market today,” company spokesman Joe Finnigan said in St. Louis. Nevertheless, its availability upset the nurse group's chapter in Staunton, a Shenandoah Valley city of 24,500 people in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. At the chapter's request, the state association voted last week to urge a boycott of Chelsea. Anheuser-Busch would not identify the other test markets beyond saying they are in New England, the mid-Atlantic states, the Deep South, Midwest and Far West. Mrs. Bolton said Tuesday that the nurses’ group fears that drinking Chelsea will “condition” children to consuming beer and other, stronger alcoholic beverages when they grow older. “I t’s not a toy and it's not funny to play with, but children have a great habit of preten­ ding,” she said. Finnigan, who said Staunton was the only test market where problems had arisen, said the drink is meant to appeal to “the urban adult.” A brochure included in each six-pack of the drink distributed in Richmond says “a normal 70pound child’’ would have to drink a gallon in an hour to feel any dizzying effect. “This volume exceeds the capacity of the stom ach,” the brochure says. ‘S e a u ttf. REDKEN AMD JHIRMACK PRODUCTS AVÂHABÜ 1 HAIRCUTS M EN and W O M E N $5 oo I r \ WE HAVE NO “TRAWEE* POSITIONS AT STOUFFER When you come to work at Stauffer Chemicals, you start right in as a respected— and responsible— member of our staff. You will have exposure and visibility from day one; not be stuck in an assistant position for years. If you feel your education has prepared you for immediate responsi­ bility, you owe it to yourself to explore the exciting openings available in chemical engineering, mechanical engineering, chemistry and technicalsales. W e offer above average salaries and a complete program of benefits. For complete information, meet with Richard Mitchell, our campus representative when he visits your campus on Friday, October 20. If you are unable to meet with us, write to us outlining your experience and career desires. In the meantime, see our information in the Place­ ment Office. STAUFFER CHEMICALS, Employee Relationf Department, P.O. Box 3050, San Francisco, CA 94119. SHAMPOO & BLOW DRY $550 N ow O pen W ed nesd ay & Thursday Evenings by A ppointm ent ‘gotM tO Het * BEAUTY SALON 31 E. 9 th ST. • T E M P E C E N T E R • 9 6 7 -3 7 2 2 Stauffer C H tM lC A lC An Equal Opportunity Employer/Male & Female Wednesday, October 18,1978 State Press Page 3 Drugs losing popularity Mill Avenue Student alcohrdism rate catted alarm ing expert By Joanne Townsend More college students, including many at ASU, are turning to alcohol instead'of other drugs, and th e alcoholism ra te among students is staggering, a spokeswoman for a Tempe mental health center said. “It (the ra te of alcoholism) seems to be growing among students because the drug of choice is alcohol rather than the illicit d ru g s,” said Merle Litowitz of Full Circle TriCity Mental Health Center, 123 E. University. “I would say it is growing faster among students than the rest of the population,” she said. “It is affecting younger ages.” However, D r. Tom Cummings, director of the ASU counseling services, said there does not seem to be a major increase of students coming in for counseling of alcoholrelated problems. “Although it is on the increase nationally, very few come in here with alcohol problem s,” Cum­ mings said. “We see about 2,000 students a year and if 10 of those were (alcoholrelated cases) that would be a lot.” He added» however, that many students may not be seeking counseling at ASU because they may feel mare comfortable going offcampus for treatment. No cura ia known Litowitz said her office sees 5 to 10 ASU students every month, plus many faculty and staff members. Alcoholism is a progressive disease th a t strikes one in every 10 persons. No cure is known, but it can be treated and arrested, officials said. Recovery from the disease is possible, but once a person becomes an alcoholic, he can never be a safe social drinker. According to statistics, Arizona’s alcoholism rate is relatively high, . even though the disease is on the rise nationally. However, in a report done in the spring of 1977 by graduate student Mark Kaplan, it was stated that misuse of alcohol is very common, but “alcoholism in the true sense is uncommon among college students.” But a spokesman for A lcoholics A nonym ous identified only as Zella, agreed with Litowitz, saying more younger people are being treated for the disease. T-SHIRT SHOPPE *1°° O FF (on any shirt with this ad) Mon. - Sat. Noon - 6 “Age really has nothing to do with the disease, but people seem to be finding out earlier about it. They are recognizing they have the problem earlier. I guess we’re getting through to the younger ones,” she said. A non-discriminating disease Litowitz said the disease cuts across all factions of the population. “All sectors and all social classes are affected. It is not favoring any one group. 414 So. MILL AVE., Suite B •HEAT TRANSFERS •PHOTO TRANSFERS •CUSTOM SHIRTS [Coupon oxplres Oct. 31, 1973] GRAND OPENING SPECIAL! 10% Off Anything In Stock (With T his C oupon. E xpires O ct. 21, 7 8 ) Southwest SJraJmg Company A U T H E N T IC IN D IA N A N D S O U T H W E S T E R N J E W E L R Y Jewelry Sales & Repair Monday-Friday 10-5 • 707-D So. Forest • 967*5777 conUnuad paga 6 C O M E H O M E TO Sraimv* Annie Delicious home-cooked meals at reasonable prices. Breakfast, lunch and dinner every day — for every pocketbook, every taste, every size appetite. Tem pe 1000 E. Broadway, East of Rural Scottsdale 7170 E. Stetson, South of Camefback Acateerinlawwithout lawschool A fte r just three months of study at The Institute for Paralegal Training in Philadelphia, you can have an exciting and rewarding career in law or business— without law school. i \ A s a lawyer's assistant you will be performing many of the duties traditionally handled only by attorneys. A nd at The Institute for Paralegal Training, you can pick one of seven different areas of law to-etudy. Upon completion of your training, The Institute’s unique^Placement Service will find you a responsible and challenging job in a law firm, bank or corporation in the city of your choice. f \ 'he Institute for Paralegal Training is the T nation’s first and most respected school for paralegal training. Since 1970, w eve placed over O c e a n P a c ific S u n w e a r 2,500 graduates in over 85 cities nationwide. f you're a senior of hjgh academic standing Iand looking for an above average career, contact your placement office for an interview with our representative. We will visit your cam pus on: Tuesday, October 31 Clothing Merchants Th« Institut« for Paralegal Training l l 235 South 17th Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 (215) 732-6600 Approved by the American Bar Association. 706 South Forest Tem pe 967-8747 O n e block north of University M o n d a y through Saturday 10-6 T h u rsd a y s until 8:30 Page 4 State Press Wednesday, October 18, 1978 \ O pinion state press Marriage laws, the police, armies and navies are the mark of human incompetence. — Dora Russell English writer ✓ Bike paths on streets slowly bite the dust BIKE ROUTE When the Tempe City Council decided to take bikers off the street and put them on the sidewalk, a lot of mud hit the bureaucratic fan. Professional and com­ muter cyclists screamed foul play and listed the disadvantages of riding a bike on a pedestrian walk­ way. So after time-consuming c o n sid e ra tio n , Tem pe decided to keep bicyclists on the stre e t, allowing them to compete with the traffic and travel at speeds close to that of sound. Well, following behind the Tempe example is ASU. The university has also decided to put bikers on campus streets and con­ sider them ‘another traffic unit.’ That seems fine for the professional cyclists who compete as a traffic unit, but what about bikers who aren’t as serious about biking? What about the students who just want to get back and forth to class and to their dormitory w ithout losing an arm or leg to a speeding Spitfire? Well, there seems .to be no way around the predicament. The bike lane along Forest Drive which runs b e tw e e n G am m ag e Auditorium and Best dormitories is the first path to bite the dust. The green path and the bike path signs remain, but bikers are surprised to see cars labeled ‘visitor’ parked in their way. All other paths which are located along the edge of university streets are also on death row. The university d e p art­ ment in charge of eliminating these paths is Physical Facilities. Bob Fails, director of th a t departm ent said the decision is a big im­ provement for students. “The car driver got lulled into a false sense of security when on cam pus,” Fails said. ‘They relied on the paths to keep bikers out of their way. “But not all bikers use paths,” he added, “and car drivers tended to take advantage of those bikers on the street.” The solution to this problem is similar to the p h iliso p h ical q u e stio n , “Which came first the chicken or the egg.?” Or, which comes first the biker or the car driver? Physical Facilities says while on campus streets, the biker comes first and car drivers can’t push cyclists around. In a way — the city of Tempe is saying every biker, car d riv er for himself. The city is backing away from th e situation, even though Barbara Jean Wegener lost her life June 18 on th e Tempe Bridge while riding in the street as a ‘traffic unit.’ So which does come first? We may never know, but one thing is for sure, Tempe is biker te rrito ry and more than likely' is going to stay that way. Letters to the Editor Saving a life is worth 40 minutes Editor: We at Arizona Blood Services ap­ preciate Julie Sulentic’s concern over the long wait to donate blood at ASU the week of October 2nd. The problem is one of having un­ scheduled donors walk in at their leisure during the five days versus having persons scheduled to appointment times, our normal method of operation. Unfortunately, Julie arrived at the bloodmobile site during a busy time be­ tween 10:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. As is the case with ASU, the blood- s mobile staff either sits around, idly waiting for donors, or they are confronted with a number of people arriving to donate around the same time. Optics Admittedly, it would be advantageous if all prospective donors were given appointment times, but I don’t know how this can be accomplished. Suggestions are welcome. We also never know at any given time how many people will donate at ASU. Our bloodmobile personnel and equipment are correlated to what we know the advance donor registration to be. We needed the blood, and we apologize to those people who spent more than the normal 40 minutes it takes to donate and save a life. Fred Abernethy Director of Don«* Recruitment Student sarcastically praises Dr. Miller for thoughtfulness Editor: I would publicly like to thank Dr. Fred Miller, Director of ASU’s athletic department, for the fine and outstanding job he has done serving the students of ASU. Because of Dr. Miller I was able to obtain excellent season tickets for football on the 0 yard line. Not only that but Dr. Miller was kind enough to have one entire window (not half or a quarter) open to students who wanted season tickets so that they would only have to wait in line 16 hours. I think I was also very fortunate for the fact that the only three days that the football tickets were sold happened to be during drop-add (I mean really, what’s more important, your classes or football?). If you are wondering why I waited so long to thank the good doctor, wonder no more. I thought I would go and pick up some season basketball tickets, but lo-and-behold, I was given some excellent news! There may be no student season basketball tickets this year! Isn’t that great!!! Wow, I won’t have to stand in line now or even worry about missing early drop-add for my spring classes. Gosh, Dr. Miller, what will you think of next? (Baseball is not to far away!) I think the students of ASU ought to sit down and each personally write a “Thank You” letter to Dr. Miller. Keep up the good work Fred, your my kind of man$. Brady Barnes Junior, College of Engineering V ________________________________________ ) Wednesday, October 18,1978 State Press Page 5 Geothermal energy seen as alternative, p ro f says By Dale Chavez Geothermal energy in the Phoenix area is a feasible, but as yet untapped, energy a lte r­ native, an ASU geology professor said at the Sigma Xi luncheon meeting Tuesday in the MU Gold Room. Dr. Michael F. Sheridan’s topic was “Geothermal Energy - What Role Will It Play in Our Energy Budget?” Sigma Xi is a university scholastic honorary society. “We have to seek alternate sources of energy,” said Sheridan. “In Arizona we have a tremendous resource.” The energy situation is a predictable situation, according to Sheridan. Geothermal energy is becoming an attractive prospect for an alternative to the dwindling energy resources, for a number of reasons. “The nuclear alternative is becoming less widely accepted,” Shejridan said. Gas and oil prices are going up,- he said, and there are tax incentives coming out for geotherm al energy, which is environmentally acceptable. Sheridan said there is enough geotherm al energy under Phoenix to air-condition all the homes in the Valley during the summer. “We are not exploring it (geothermal energy) like we should be,” he said. “The geotherm al resources of the Western United States are equal to the Arab petroleum resource.” Form er Arizona Gov. Paul Fannin attended the meeting and said the reason Arizona has not been developing geothermal energy is because of two un­ successful projects the state already has had. Another problem, Sheridan said, is “a resistance from the utilities going into this new resource.” There are two kinds of geotherm al energy, hot, dry rock and hot magma; The latter “is not feasible yet,” Sheridan said. Many places are generating electricity from hot springs and geysers, he said. “Geothermal is an old source of energy.” In the hot, dry rock method of producing energy, two deep holes are drilled into a hot area in the earth . One hole sends water down and the other sends up hot steam. Hot steam coming up from the earth is used to power turbines Dr. M ich a el Sheridan ATTENTION N o Preference Students in the Liberal Arts C o lle ge Early Bird Pie-Registration for Spring 1979 from Oct. 17 to N ovem ber 10. M a k e a n a p p o in t m e n t t o d a y in S o c ia l S c ie n c e s 111. and produce energy. The hot magma method is not feasible because of the distance involved in the drilling, Sheridan said. Although some geothermal plants have been tried on top of volcanoes. Development of the use of geothermal energy may have to come from private industry because it can be used in agriculture and chemical plants, he said. Tryouts for Devils'-Angels are scheduled for weekend ASU baseball coach Jim Brock is looking at his team ’s 1979 season was a “rebuilding” year in more ways than one. Not only does he have to find a successors for stars Bob Horner, Chris Bando and Co., but must locate suitable replacements for his crop of graduated batgirls — the Devils' Angels. Applications for positions on the ASU batgirls must be filed at Brock’s Activity Center office by 5 p.m. today. Tryouts are slated for Saturday. AMES OPTOMETRIST Soft Contact L e n s e s ......................... $169.95 Eye Exam for Contact Lenses ............. $25.00 FASHION EYEW EAR NEW ADDRESS - 2916 N. 68th St. Scottsdale STUFF Low cost insurance protec­ tion for your gear. Dorm room, Apartment, or MiniStorage. For information or appointment call Monday through Saturday Call E N G IN E E R IN G C O M P U T E R S C IE N C E & TECH N O LO G Y M A JO RS 839-9010 Ask.for Jim. DON’T GRADUATE INSURANCE PLANNING SERVICE WARNING THIEF! Operation ID is coming! It will put you out of business. 941-S228 w ith ou t talk in g to th e H ughes R ecruiter visitin g your cam p u s so o n . C ontact your placem ent office for interview dates. M A R IN E C O R P S O F F IC E R P R O G R A M S FO R C O LLEG E ST U D EN T S Marine Corps career programs — in avionics, data process­ ing, telecommunications, fi­ nance and business manage­ ment, to name a few — are among the best offered in or out of the military. Find out all the facts by calling: M ARIN E C O R P S O FFIC ER SELECTION O FFIC ER 317 North Central Ave., Rm. 208, Phoenix, Arizona 85004 F ly thejet se t Stand the ^ F-4 Phantom on its tail and climb, straight into the stratosphere. Cruise at 185 mph and dive at 220 in the jet-powered AH-1 Cobra gunship. Hover In midair or shift the AV-8 Harrier into “drive” and jet out at transonic speeds. Phone 261-3880 PLATOON L E A D E R S C L A S S (PLC) O FFIC E R CA N D ID A T E C O U R S E (OCC) W O M A N O F F IC E R C O U R S E (WOC) C H A L L E N G IN G -R E W A R D IN G E X C IT IN G Captain William P. LANZA Marine Officer Selection Officer THE MARINES ARE LOOKING FOR A FEW GOOD MEN. C o m e in o r C a l l 9 6 5 -2 9 5 4 MMMMWMMMMMMMMMMWWWMMMMMMMMIflMMMIMMNMlMMMWMIMMNMMMi Page 6 State Press Wednesday, October 18,1978 M ore about Alcoholism rate growing steadily continued from page 3 It doesn’t affect one departm ent more than another, although there does seem to be more abuse among fraternities and sororities because it is more a part of the social scene there,” she said. The disease involves three stages, Litowitz explained. The first is building up a tolerance for the drug. An alcoholic is able to hold more and more liquor and not be affected as the disease progresses. Second is w ithdrawal, in which symptoms are suf­ fered when alcohol con­ sumption is restricted. The final stage is loss of control. This is what makes a person an alcoholic for life, Litowitz said. He is OK without liquor for an in­ definite time, but once he takes a drink, he cannot stop, she said. “He can never be a safe social drinker again. There are studies being done but it is — and has been — the general belief that one can never regain control. He m ust maintain a life of sobriety,” she said. Denial deters cure Litoqitz called alcoholism a “disease of denial.” “Denial is the single most prevalent factor. People depend on alcohol because it works, it accomplishes what they want,” she said. “Denial is the greatest deterrent to them getting b e tte r. They must recognize their own problem and surrender to it.” A fter two years of sobriety, a person is considered cured, but that is the most dangerous period, Litowitz said. “Alcoholism is a progressive and terminal disease. If you don’t know you have it and it is allowed to progress to its end, it will end in death,” she said. A bsentees m ay vote until N ov. 3 miles from the nearest polling location, are unable to vote on election day because of religious restrictions or because they do not expect to be in their voting precinct on election R egistered voters are day. eligible to cast an absentee Persons can cast an ballot if they are 65 or absentee vote at the older, blind, physically Elections Department, 111 disabled, live a t least 15 S. Third ave., or can write The absentee voting period for persons unable to go to polls on election day, Nov. 7, is open from now untU Nov. 3, county officials announced. Students “social drinkers” Kaplan stated several conclusions in his study. He said a large number of students drink, with the ratio being about 57 percent male drinkers and 43 percent female. The main reasons for drinking were said to be sociable and for enjoyment of taste and that students drink mostly on weekends, in the evening and with friends. The report also said drinking was associated with a history of parental drinking and it increased proportionately with the rise in parental income. But, the report said, university life may heighten drinking habits or cause new drinking habits to be formed because of peer group influence. Cummings said he believes students have become more conservative and now are more serious about going to school. “They tried the drug scene, found it deleterious and now want to make a contribution in other ways,” he said. “They are turning more toward the work .ethic and are finding more satisfaction in it. They want to use the college e x ­ perience to learn something.” to the departm ent to request a mailed ballot. The office is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays, and will be open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. this Saturday and Oct. 28. B irth defects are forever. Unless you help. ALL SINGLES DANCES Over 500 Attend Weekly! Friday, Oct.. 20 - S c o ttsd a le R egistry R esort Friday, O ct. 27 - S c o ttsd a le Safari CONTEM PORARY m u s i c $3.00 • 8:00 P.M. 945-6746 Willnljhtl ■ Delicious home-cooked meals at reasonable prices. Breakfast, lunch and dinner every day — for every pocketbook, every taste, every size appetite. Tempe 1000 E. Broadway, East of Rural Sco ttsdale 7170 E. Stetson. South of Camelback » .« h a . "S.W." *.»»,«# "Ik " til« "S.W." l i l t , t i l l , * iH "U l" 1.5», 4:1#, 1:1# G L E N F A IR 2 9 4 4 - 1 8 2 2 « K-i‘IhW.LVMI 1/ij - 4:14, III«, f i l l M . t i n . ■tiW , 5:1#, 4:5#, 4i!t, 5:15, f:5# ________ / V Come visit The Village 9 M W BIRTH CERTIFICATE 9 This is to acknowledge that . . . Arizona's largest Christian Music and Bible shop . . . or any of the many shops located in 10,000 square feet of has accepted Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour and having confessed and been forgiven of sin s'b y the blood of Christ is reborn by the spirit of God into the body of Christ. the Best in "everything." Christian All rec­ Therefor* tt any man be In C h rist, he is a new creator*, o ld thing a are passed away- b th o ld t il thing» t r t become new." II C o rin th itn t 5 :17. ords, cassettes and 8- ■Now therefor# you t r t no lo n g tr s trtn g trs tn d foreigner» to God. but Itilo w c itlrtn s w ith the stm ta. tn d of th t h ou sth o ld of God." E p h ts itn s 2:19 tracks — 1 5 % off list. No sale, just our normal Pisce of N tw B irth :. low prices. Only 10 min­ utes away. (PRINTED ON If you don’t come we will VA s 11 GOLD CERTIFICATE) Free to any N ew Born C h ristia n not more than tw o w eeks old. S e e Patrick at the Village. both miss a Blessing. Y'oll come. THE CARPENTER'S VILLAGE OPERATION ID IS COMING! 415 W. Southern • 968-8701 A S U is joining the m any com m u n itie s that have used th is sytem su c c e ssfu lly to d isco u rag e a n d /o r apprehend thieves. Watch for details! I I I I I C A O / n rr ir W / O V r r H aircu ts R e g. $15.00 ON A HAIRCUT includes Shampoo A Blow D iy H a ircu ts (Stu d e n ts) R e g. $10 00 CRIMPERS LTD I I I I 111 East University Drive, Tempe, Arizona 966-5192 OFFER GOOD ONLY WITH THIS COUPON. OFFER EXTENDED THRU OCT. 31, 1978 ACrJt^ytU lC*UyfH.i A ____ I I i I I I I I I I I Wednesday, October 18,1978 State Press Page 7 *2°° OfF A N Y L A R G E P IZ Z A Perusing *100OFF A N Y M E D IU M P IZ Z A a, L Students inspect and buy photographs and raffle tick­ ets, being sold on Cady Mall by Northlight Gallery, to help raise funds for the print gallery and to bring visiting artists to ASU. [State Press staff photo by Michael Wardenburg] \ PIZZA RESTAURANTS Scottsdale Rd. & McKellips (In the Alpha Bala • Thrifty Plaza] Hours: Sun. thru Thurs. 11 a.m. -12 Midnight Friday and Sat. 11 a.m .-2 a.m. COUPON EXPIRES OCT. 30.1 0 » COUPON! A S U not wiped out by strike A lternate means of supply will be found if s trik in g N o rth w e ste rn paper mills cannot supply the University with toilet paper, the head of ASU’s physical facilities depart­ ment said Tuesday. Herb Bay said anticipated shortages of inner-leaf carbon and other, lesscommon paper products may result from the strike, which has been in effect since July, but he an­ ticipates no toilet paper shortage. pretty inventive lot. They’ll “We’ve got more toilet find a way out.” paper now than we’ve got grass seed,” he said. TAKING THE Bay said th ere is no contingency plan for a shortage and won’t be until Join thousands o f suppliers indicate they can’t law school applicants furnish ASU needs. nationw ide fai He speculated other mills Am ity* LSAT in Wisconsin, Michigan or Review Seminars Canada could fill orders. C A L L TO LL-FREE FOR “We may suffer a change D E T A ILS ANO LO CA L in quality, but th e re ’ll SC H E D U LE INFORMATION: always be paper,” he said. 800-243-4767 Ext 761 “I think students are a LSAT? STUDENTS ARE YOU JOB HUNTING? If you ore, you need a professionally prepared resume! Since 1962 preparing resumes has been our business. We are Pitts­ burgh’s Oldest and the Nation’s Largest Resume Service. We know that ten seconds is all the consideration the average resume gets during the first critical screening. Because of this, your resume must sell your most marketable skills fast and hard. 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CALL 264-3027 Launch Your Career in Arizona ITT Courier has become a major force In the computer industry. We're a dynamic, progressive organization with a new facIHty and tremendous projected growth. Consider our current opportunities In the areas of: • C o m p u t e r P r o g r a m m in g / S o ftw a re D e v e lo p m e n t • E le c tric a l/E le c tro n ic s/ S y ste m s D e sig n • M e c h a n ic a l D e s ig n • T e c h n ic a l W ritin g The demand for ITT Courier's Information display system s in major industry, government and finance continues to increase dramatically, worldwide, and fast food restaurants on three continents are using our point-of-sale system s. Your energy and commit­ ment are valuable assets and will be rewarded. You’ll also enjoy an excellent salary and complete benefits plus the chance to continue your education in Arizona. For on-cam pus interviews on October 25 and Nov. 8, contact A S U 's Career Services Office in the Academic Services Bldg. Room 109. 965-7173. If unable to schedule an interview we invite you to send your resume to: ITT Courier Terminal System s, Inc.; 1515 W. 14th Street; Tempe, AZ. 85281; Attn: R.T. Marsh; Mail Stop A-12. B E S T R E S U M E S E R V IC E 3443 N. Central Ave. Phoenix, Az. Suite 1009 Financial Center ________ Terminal Systems, Inc. ® J Page 8 State Press Wednesday, October 18,1978 Books for Indians topic of conference Representatives of all major American Indian tribes and organizations will meet Thursday through Sunday in Denver, Colo, to prepare recommendations for improving library services on or near reser­ vations. Dr. Norman Higgins, chairman of educational technology and library science at ASU, is the only non-Indian invited to the meeting. He will discuss the role of library education in the development and improvement of library services in Indian com­ munities. The meeting is one of a series in preparation for the November 1979 White House Conference on Library and Informational Services in Washington, D.C. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Jim Bales M onday T uesday I M atin ees! _ 3 :0 0 p .m . W ednesday. F r id a y ___ _1:00 & 3 :0 0 p .m . $1.50 General Admission • $1.00 with ASU I.D. FREE ★ * A S U geologists'survey $ to aid land-use planning * D N J O iN J Two-Bit ★ FBcks FREE * * * * * * * T h u r s d a y 11 a .m „ 1 2 3 0 & 3 p .m . i f *************** Lower Level — M.U. By Tony M otzenbacker A geological survey, w ritten in non-technical language, is being prepared by an ASU professor and two graduate students. It will anticipate problems that confront Valley land develppersT one of th e Students said. “We’re trying to speak English, not geology," Jim Bates said Tuesday. The Geology For Land ASASU PRESENTS D lU YJO eL T H U R S ., N O V 2 A S U A C T IV IT Y C E N T E R A i seats reserved, $7.50 & 8.50 Tickets «vai atole at Gammage Bax Office, a l Setect-A Seat locations and a l World Record Stores. Use Planning^ survey examines natural hazards and is a major area of work for Dr. Troy Pewe* ASU geology professor. The survey, which will be completed in 1979, will be usefiil to developers, city planners, architects and engineers. It will be concerned prim arily . with such geographical problems as swelling clay, flooding, boulder rolling, decline of ground w afer level and caliche. “Swelling clay acts like a sponge,” Bales explained. He said it is especially common where swimming pools have been built because the clay soaks up water, causes expansion, then contracts when it drys. The resu lt is a cracked pool, he said. Cathy Schulten, the other student involved in th e research, said decline of groundw ater levels is caused when underground water is pumped away and not replaced. ‘There is no way for the w ater to g et back to the water table because water sources have been dammed up and rainfall is so in­ frequent here,” she said. Schulten said the purpose of the survey is to provide maps that will make people aware of the problems. “We know how to an ­ ticipate problem s, so we want to make th e in ­ formation available to builders so they, can overcome them,” she ex­ plained. She said a previous survey produced by D r. Pewe resulted in the S c o tts d a le H ills id e Ordinance, which states that houses cannot be built on an incline of more than 15 percent. The reason the ordinance came, into effect, she said, was because rain-caused rockslides destroyed homes eonUiMMd pag* • w a n ts legislature to repeal debated statute By Jim Gaertner Arizona’s new criminal code, in effect less than three weeks, will receive its first challenge Thursday when the state Legislature meets in special session. Gov. Bruce Babbitt ordered the lawmakers to convene in a special session to determine the fate of a controversial statute within the new code. The statute, ARS 13-211, makes it a misdemeanor for law enforcement agencies to release any information relating to ongoing police investigations. Babbitt said it is his hope the Legislature will repeal the statute on the basis of its broad wording. “Repeal is clearly the way to go,” Babbitt said. He said he reads the statute as “dearly constitutional,” but there are problems with its wording, which is “far too broad.” “It (the statute) locks up every kind of police report if read literally,” Babbitt said, “and could be used as a shield by police agendes.” He added there has been a “problem with access” to information for the media. The problem was brought to light when law en­ forcement agencies in Pima County chose to apply the broader interpretation to the statute and refused to release information to the news media. As a result, the Arizona Newspapers Assodation asked Babbitt to consider the special legislative session to remedy the situation. Maricopa County law en­ forcement agendes didn’t interpret the new statute as implying any change in working relations between them selves and news organizations. Babbitt said he met last week with heads of both the Arizona House and Senate More about Geologists' survey continued from page S in th e Scottsdale area in January. The present survey, sponsored by Scottsdale, Tempe and Phoenix, will study the Tempe quadrangle, an area from Camelback Road to Baseline betw een 38th S tree t and Dobson Road. Dr. Pewe and his team will walk over the area, digging holes, taking soil samples for lab analysis and making on-site inspections. “We m ust fully under­ stand where rocks and sedim ents are and what types of m aterials are there,” Pewe said. ‘Then this technical information is translated into a series of color maps for th e landusers,” A Tempe man was arrested at the ASU track and charged with assault and resisting arrest after he allegedly struck a female to discuss the need for the student from behind while running on the track, ASU Police reported Tuesday. special session. Harold V. Bowie Jr., 30, an unemployed Tempe resident, was He added he was con­ arrested by plainaclothes officers Friday at about 6:20 a.m. He vinced the statute’s weak appeared in Tempe Justice Court on Friday. Bond was set at $1,880. phrasing was not a result of According to the victim, Barbara Jean Saliba, a part-time ASU any “surreptitious motives” student, she and the suspect both were running on the track in the on the part of lawmakers. same direction. He approached her from behind and pushed her Instead, Babbitt called it down, she told police. The incident occurred at 6:30 a.m. on Oct. 11. “just one of the oversights The suspect reportedly ignored calls of witnesses to stop and that occur in the legislative continued running around the track. process.” Saliba was taken to the University Health Center, where she was The governor said th e treated for cuts and bruises. She returned to the track Friday with police and identified Bowie special session will convene at 10 a.m. Thursday, and as her attacker, officers said. Another witness who was present at shouldn’t last more than the track on Oct. 11 also identified him.. half a day in repealing the statute in question. Babbitt said he would be available in the afternoon to sign the repeal measure. An improved version of the statute, clearer in its in terp retatio n , probably won’t be written until the L e g i s l a t u r e ’s next scheduled session in January, Babbitt said. B E F O R E YO U BU Y C H E C K O U R PRICES.| NEW LOCATION: 409 S. M l Ave. Tempe, 966-0700 WARNING THIEF! Operation ID is coming! It will put you out of business. Bales said the survey also will be useful for using natural resources to their best advantage. “You don’t want to build over sand and gravel (two of Arizona’s im portant natural resources) and then try and mine it out af­ terwards,” Bales explained. Schulten said “Geograph­ ical hazards don’t become hazards until man gets there.” Boulders have been falling off1mountains for centuries, she said. The problem arises when some­ one builds a house in its path. Tempe m an booked on joggin g assault ¿y c*? A lso 338 E. Cam elback, Phoenix We don’t specialize in Marching Bands, Fancy Showrooms, Giveaway Gimmicks, or Loss Leaders. We offer Quality Sound Equipment at warehouse prices. At Sound Warehouse, you’ll find Altec Lansing • Cerwin Vega • Kenwood • •Hitachi • Fisher • Teac • Akai • ULTRALINEAR • PIONEER • SANYO • SHARP • BRISTOL & JENSEN Auto KfiOiya ikvoxs c 1? cr\tycp Sffrofy airpa iqup Avot VtcVaye irvp •4>£a aßvto oir • F e& v trrSaia YVSk BVaY irPav E&À voo TBfVY €V tfX T 06A PAETT A S S O C IA T E D B IO S C IE N C E O F T E M P E UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER C a sh P a id fo r P la sm a D o n a tio n U ‘P lasma Donors are Life Savers $6.00 - 1st donation $9.00 - 2nd donation ' V (within same work week) B o n u s P ro g ra m s A v a ila b le HOURS: Mon. -Fri. 9a.m. -5 p.m. Sat. 9 a.m. -1 p.m. Federally licensed aad Regelated CALL FOR APPOINTMENT • 968-6139 * 1015 S. Rural Rood, T em pe Bring th is ad in for Bonu s. (New D onors O nly) Toga Party. Thurs. Oct: 19th. 8 p.m. Bear Chug. Telephone Booth Stuffing, Fish Swallowing, Lots of prizss & a special prize for the best Toga outfit. Featuring 16oz Mic for SO*. Happy Hour MrF 4-7p.m. Open till 3 a.m. Fri. & Sat. F O O D B O O Z E B O O G IE 530 West Broadway Tempe Arizona (602) 894-1375 Page 10 State Press Wednesday, October 18,1978 11 c o u p o n ! A S U club uses com p u ter j “ ~ to help students get dates \wmns. By D a n D a vis Once upon a time, during the days of castles and kings, a glass slipper enabled a handsome prince to find his beautiful princess. Today, during an era of disco dances and shy singles, a new University club is using a computer to help ASU princesses find their prospective princes with a little more sophistication. Starting Thursday, the Sun Peoples Singles Club will sponsor a computer dating service for the ASU community, said Charles Herrera, club president. “More than 90 percent of the people in the United States suffer from shyness,” he said. “We’re hoping this service will increase the number of contacts between single people.” The service will be headquartered in the MU. Roj Karimi, vice president of operations at the club, said the $5 membership fee includes a computerized printout of compatibility with the op­ posite sex and invitations to singles’ parties and dances. Sun People is a non-profit organization affiliated with Associated Students. The group was born in August under the guidance of a 10-member advisory committee. Herrera said the dating service would have gotten off the ground sooner, but th e group encountered difficulties in programming the computer, which also is used by ASASU for other business, and deciding which one of three proposed questionnaires to use. The service will not be fully operational until mid-November, he said, but members can apply in the meantime. Besides parties, dances and date services, club members will receive monthly newsletters, hear guest speakers and participate in communications workshops. ‘This service is the first real campus vehicle for singles to meet honestly,” Herrera said. “It isn’t a fantasy. Look at BUI Wolf (ASASU legal advisory) — he got married to a girl he met on his second computer date.” John Pennell, com puter services director, said persons wishing to use the dating service will fill out consentapplication forms, available in MU Room 109, and questionnaires that are fed to the computer. The computer then gives out a list of other compatible members and th eir phone numbers, which is given to the applicant within a week, Pennell said. That list is kept confidential. “The rest is up to him (the member), though,” he said. “We don’t guarantee dates.” Pennell said the dating service will be updated every three months by comptuer analysis of follow-up questionnaires and surveys returned by its users. Karimi said the group hopes to buy its own $25,000 computer within five years. Herrara said he hopes no one will try to abuse the system by pulling “any pranks or stunts like the ones some frat members already have tried.” He did not elaborate on what the “stunts” were. Dr. Hans Sebald, ASU sociology professor, said the' com puter dating service could ease some of the hardships of being a lonely single. “It is an excellent idea, with potential to greatly help particularly those singles like myself, who find themselves more socially isolated than others,” he said. Babbitt nam es week to observe 'A m ig o s' Gov. Bruce Babbitt proclaimed Nov. 5-12 as Amigos de las Americas Week, in recognition of Arizona volunteers working in Central and South America. The ASU organization, Amigos de las Americas in the center for Latin American Studies, will discuss plans for the week at its first meeting today at 12:15 p.m. in the Social Sciences building. Room 212-A. The organization is starting its 15th year of of­ fering medical and other health services in Latin America. O C T . 21 R o o m changed! to M u rd o c k R o o m 101 I I I I I I THAYER _I TENNIS, RACQUETBALL, B A D M IN TO N and SQUASH STRINGING BRAD N y lo n % >9, »10 968-3268 | •24 hour service •2-month guarantee on workmanship & materials days or evenings IIC O U P O N II 1 C XEROX i F COPIES 3 Z OVERNIGHT 5« W H IL E Y O U W A IT slph raphics U N IV E R S IT Y A R C H E S . , 122 E UNIVERSITY . : • , • 968-7821 M EX I C A N FOOD & LOUNGE La Casa Linda 14 1 0 7 E. B roadw ay 968 2291 Happy Hour Entertainment 4 to 7 P.M. M on.-Fri. Friday ft Saturday 6:30 to 9:30 Margarita A Wall Drinks FOR PRICE OF HALF PRICE DINNERS Wear your A SU T-shirt and get any combination dinner at one half the regular price. O ffer g o o d until O cto b er 31,1 9 7 8 801 E. APACHE JU ST W EST OF RU RAL Hours: Sun. -Thurs. 11-11 Dining Fri. - Sat. 11-12 Dining Mexicai? Food Lounge Open: Daily 3 -1 a.m. Take-Out Orders Available 967-3355 SC H E D U L E O F EV EN T S: THURSDA Y through MUSIC BY SA TU R D AY TOM GIBNEY SUNDA Y DINNERS - 15% OFF WITH ASU I.D. M O N DA Y MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL ON OUR GIANT SCREEN TUESD AY LADIES NIGHT $1.00 Strawberry Daouirl Night - HAPPY HOUR 3-7 DAILY - Wednesday, October 18, 1978 State Press Page 11 DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau TOPAMERICAN NEGOHAWR, TTUASNftALL PEACHESAND CREAM AT CAMPDAVID,U AS rr? in m a wu had you* SHARE OF LOU WATER M ARKS, RIG H T? ( ¿T E N G IN E E R IN G C O M P U T E R S C IE N C E & TECH NO LO G Y M A JO RS THAT'SMGHT, MAHD, IV SATTHEWORSTMOMBtTCAME HOPI MEN BEGINACCUSEDSAPAT OP OFDEUBERKIELYATIACMHG SAMT WHUBISRAELISWORSHIPED PtSPOMP. fop YOMjgppupiNms. f WATCH FOR THE HUGHES RECRUITER VISITING YOUR CAMPUS SOON. C ontact your p lacem ent office for interview d ates. ~ w r v A T FIRST, W ITH SOAK. DIFFICULTY. ! ^ THEN ACCUSED DOES SEEM BEG IN OF TRUING UNE A B IT TO LATA GUILT O F A CHEAP T PP ON HIM . SHO T- AND TH EN ? I / l u $AVF.-ON INSURANCE -CENTERS INC. l l l DAY 15: CAMP D A W PLUS IM O. 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I U lrtin u 's salutes the Arizona S tate University Player o f the W eek ¡V M P A § FILM S Wendy’s is proud to salute MARK MALONE Q u arterb ack // \ UMliaM QBNBflMIA as Arizona State University Player of the Week. A CLO CKW O RK ORANGE Tues, Wed. / 3:00, 7:00 & 9:45 p.m. Lower Level — M.U. $1.00 with ASU I.D. • >1 -SO without C O M IN G ! The Sorcerer 28 North Central Awe. 1727 West Glendale St. 4218 Westt IBethany Home Rd. 3214Eartl t Indian School Rd. 2737 Wert Indian School Rd. 2346 East M cDow el 790 Wert Broadway 1 B K OPENING SOON: 1000 East Baseline Rd. tempe M ain and Dobson mesa 2024 Eart C am dbadt phoem x wSSSSSSst « HU GH ES B i r t h d e fe c t s a r e fo re v e r. M a r c h o f D im e s THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER Page 12 State Press Wednesday, October 18,1978 Trojans ' cou/dn't g e t up By .Walter Berry The first Pac-10 football game ever to be played at Sun Devil Stadium was billed in advance as ‘T he Contraceptive Bowl” — pitting the sometimes sterile ASU offense against the ‘Trojans” of Southern Cal. But by 10:30 Saturday night, it was the usually unflustered and seldom impotent USC ground game that “couldn’t get it up.” “We were flat unaggressive. We ju st didn’t play our type of football,” said All-America tailback Charles White in the funeral parloresque USC locker room after ASU erected a 20-7 upset of the No. 2 ranked Trojans. “I think we were too lackadaisical after our long week of rest, but Fm not going to take anything away from ASU. “They were damn good pursuing outside. That was the key to th eir success,” added White. “They stopped us out­ side. We didn't establish our running game until later, when it didn't matter.” Quarterback Paul McDonald, who, with White, brilliantly led SC to a nationally televised 2414 victory over Alabama three Saturdays ago, agreed with his teammate wholeheartedly. “We were aware that this was a big game for Arizona State. We were prepared for it mentally, but we made a lot of stupid mistakes that broke up our rhythm on offense (two Kim Anderson interceptions, five fumbles and a plethora of penalties),” said the lanky junior from Covina, Calif. “Arizona State’s defensive end (A1 Harris) was playing for the outside and we couldn’t look him in to get our sweeps going. They took away that whole side of the field from us.” H arris. ASU’s incumbent Associated Press' All-America, was told by Sun Devil defensive coordinator Larry Kentera to beat USC tight end James Hunter to the line of scrimmage on every play, create a traffic jam and essentially “vasectomize” the Trojans' vaunted toss-sweep “student body right” attack. «ES» A L L S IZ E S U P TO 9x12 SO. FT. Up To 12x9 111 Smith Carat! Papago Plaza, Plaza. Scottsdale 946-3187 SCOTCH M IST -NIGHT CLUB Featuring "PARADISE 9-1 Tues. - Sat Quarterback Mark Malone winces In pain aa Sun Devil football trainer Ray Robison assists him off the field In the fourth quarter of A SU 's 20-7 win over USC Saturday night. Malone, who led all rushers in the game with 138 yards in 19 carries, suffered a slight groin injury, but returned two plays later. [State Press staff photo by David Seibert] assignments and threw off SC’s timing. You couldn’t single out anybody in particular. It was a total team effort, both of­ fensively and defensively.” The Devil defense held USC to a mere 70 yards rushing — a sum the Trojans usually amass by the first five minutes of play and/or one Charles White carry. A somber Trojan head coach John Robinson could only shake his balding pate at the post­ game statistics. The Sun Devils, almost to the water boys, were flabbergasted by USC’s ineptness. But they weren’t disrespectful. “They’re a great ballclub. I didn’t expect that kind of play out of a team of that caliber, but I guess they were due for an offnight,” said defensive pnd Bob Guest Band Sun. - Mon. Sergeant Peppers Show Twice Weekly A SOCIAL GATl Happy Days 12-6 70c Beer & Well 1 Doz. Shrimp Cocktail •♦126 994-1651 continued page 14 Flabbergasted “ASU caught us on a bad night. We made too, too many mistakes,” said the third-year mentor, who has compiled the Like a charm second-winningest percentage in It worked like the proverbial USC’s grid history already. “We charm. had some troubles with injuries “We never gave USC a chance to our first and second string to get untracked,” said a centers, but that wasn’t the grinning Harris in a triumphant story. Anytime you play like we and noisy ASU locker room. did, you deserve to get your “We separated our defensive butts booted.” BIRD'S RECORD EXCHANGE (G roup and Private Instruction) SPECIAL ASU GROUP RATES AVAILABLE N o w O f f e r in g Beginning Country Sw ing (B lu eg rass Type Swing) Five 2-H our L esso n s A dvanced Country Sw ing $ Four 2-Hour Lessons 111 E University Corner of University & Myrtle In Tower Center WE BUY, SELL and TRADE FINE QUALITY USED RECORDS OPEN MONDAY - SATURDAY 10-9 R0CKJAZZF0LKBLUESCLASSICALSH0WS V 966-4158 1000 person Classes lake place at: fo u ita a n a tk The Volleys’newest and best ’Country Swing"bar/ SUNDAY NIGHT PRACTKE SESSIONS Cassette Music 50c Cover 8-12P.M . Instructors available for tips. 4D41 N O S T R I C E N T R A L TO SIG N UP OR FOR INFORMATION, CALL FOGGY BOTTOM, 263-8838 or OPEN: TU M BLE W E E D S at 966-2763 from 10:00 a.m! - 5:00 p.m. Wednesday, October 18,1978 State Press Page 13 Berry on Basebai/ Fate decides Gullett's career B y W alte r B e rry Five months ago, Don Gullett could barely touch his nose. And when he did, it hurt like hell. “I really wondered if my career might be over,” said the New York Yankees’ stylish southpaw. “I could barely lift my arm over my head. The pain was excruciating. “Pitching? No way. That was out of the question.” Like Rosanne Rosannadanna on Saturday Night Live, Gullett thought he “was gonna die." So late last May, afte r a frustrating and fruitless spring training, that seven-letter word which pitchers dread so much was mentioned. SU-R-G-E-R-Y. But instead of the conventional medical methods — i.e. the unwieldy scalpel — Gullett consented to the suggestion of Dr. Maurice Cowen, Yankee team physician, who had heard about a new form of therapy for damaged rotor cuffs in shoulders. Joe Namath had tried it and experienced a certain degree of success. Gullett, once baseball’s most promising pitcher, decided to give it a try. “It was really eerie," he said. ‘They put me to sleep (anesthesia) and rotated my arm. By that, I mean they forced it back as far as it would go. But I was unconscious and couldn’t feel anything. There were no after-effects, either. When I woke up, it was just like I had pitched a nine-inning game.” Since mid-July, Don Gullett hasn’t felt like he’s pitched one inning, never mind nine. The reason — a relapse of the injury he thought was cured for good. “I can’t understand it. I was making really great progress every day. I felt I was getting stronger with each outing,” said the soft-spoken 26-year-old out of Lynn, Ky. “All of a sudden (four weeks after the treatment), the arm goes out on me. Now, it feels worse now than it did before.” Ironically, once Gullett had apparently overcome his arm ailments through the therapy, teammate Jim “Catfish” Hunter tried the same avenue with similar success. But he has yet to have any relapses or repercussions. “I don’t know. You explain it,” said Gullett, who still ranks as one of baseball’s winningest pitchers with his 109-49 won-lost ratio. “When my physical problems were behind me, I was able to relax for the first time since I recovered from that Achilles heel injury when I was with the (Cincinnati) Reds in the (1976) World Series. Now, who knows if I’ll ever return to my old form? It sure isn’t me.” His career now rests on a wing and a prayer. YANKEE YARNS — One of the more in­ teresting sidelights of being a pre-game guest in the Yankee Stadium clubhouse is watching Catfish Hunter prepare his “gamer” wad of chewing tobacco. The Hertford, N.C., native first works a few sticks of Juicy Fruit or Bazooka bubble gum around in his mouth, then meticulously spreads the gooey gob all over his carefully rolled clump of Red Man loose leaves. It’s enough to make you lose your lunch. “But it’s the only thing that keeps me loose on the mound when I’m pitching and it keeps me concentrating,” said Hunter in his down-under twang. “Remember, I’m the son of a farmer. I learned to chew tabacky when I was knee-high to a boll weevil.” CHICKEN DELIGHT-LESS — One of the greatest misconceptions in modern major league baseball trivia is that Yankee infielder Frederick Blaire “Chicken” Stanley — a Tempe, Ariz. native — is also an ASU product. Stanley was born in Farnhamville, Iowa, raised in Tempe since age six, but attended Michigan S tate University. A far cry from the maroon and gold hue, eh, Tony Kubek? I still can’t believe how easily ex-Yankee manager Billy Martin can manipulate the media. In July, when the Reggie Jackson situation came to a boil and Martin issued his now famous “convicted liars" quotes, fingering George Steinbrenner and Sir Reginald, Harry Hecht of the New York Daily News and Murray Chase of the Times came out looking like scapegoats when Martin denied the quotes publicly, even though he admitted he said it to other people in private. Billy the Brat has yet to apologize to either writer. Last Saturday, NBC’s relic sportscaster, Curt Gowdy, fought another of Billy’s battles, denying Martin ever called Yankee pitcher Ed Figueroa “gutless.” It’s a shame, considering every Boston writer I talked to this summer said Martin called Figueroa that, and much, much worse. Something is definitely rotten in The Big Apple. Shouldn’t you “discover” us too? Everyone else tells us we are great! Once you see our out-of-the-ordlnary gifts, jewelry, cards, etc., you’ll be convinced. Modestly yours, OPEN 12 to 4 PM — W EEKD AYS THE GALLERY STORE Matthews Center, 2nd Floor PLAYGAMES! If you like tournaments, this is the place for you! CHESS OR BACKGAMMON EVERY WEEKEND $10.00 Entry Fee — 50% of all entry fees paid back in CASH PRIZES! Monday Nights - Backgammon Tournament $4.00 entry fee Tuesday N ig h ts“G O ” Players meet Wednesday Nights - Speed Chess Tournament $4.00 entry fee Thursday-Friday - War Games O R P L A Y A N Y O T H E R G A M E Y O U L IK E . E N J O Y Y O U R F A V O R IT E B E E R O R W IN E W H IL E P L A Y IN G I f i Black Knight Chess fr Game Pariour 1014 N. Scottsdale Road Tempe (In the Woolco Shopping Plaza) 10 Te ENGINEERING GRADUATES Are you interested in Engineering with a company considered a pioneer in the field of avionics? A company located in the attractive fast-growing Southwest? A company that values individual contribution and offers a choice of assignm ent? Sperry Flight Systems, located in Phoenix, Arizona, might be what you're looking for. If you are interested, we would like to talk with you. Lou Edmonds Will be on Campus October 27 Please sign up with the Placement Office to talk with Sperry. C hoices of career starting point with Sperry include: Product Design or Research & Development or Control Systems or • Pick any large original pizza. • O r pick any m edium size D e e p Dish Pizza. • Pick your favorite toppings. • Pick any pitcher of soft d rin k * • Pay only $5 99 with this coupon. Offer go o d thru O cto b er2 4 , 1978. G ood at these participating stores: I I I SCOTTSDALE 2922 N. Hayden Rd. (At Thomas) 945-6334 TEMPE 1024 E. Broadway (At Rural Road) 967-8875 I mu S ho use ■ a v a ila b l e r a ■ a o o it io m a l ■ ÌiI b W i h J ÆU I I Design Analysis We are looking for both M S and B S graduates inElectrical/ Electronic and Mechanical Engineering. We offer an informal work atmosphere and an environment for professional development, including tuition refund. I 3546 W. Peoria (At 35th Ave.) 938-3060 Straw Hat P IZ Z A b •or PHOENIX 3232 E. Shea Blvd.| I745 W. Glendale (At 32nd St.i (At I9th Ave.) 996-1300 249-9I9I 13660 N. 19th (At Thunderbird) 993-8100 Copyright c to/* sV W Electronic Design I The Straw Hat GN Restaurant Corporation I I f F L IG H T S Y S T E M S A D ivisio n o f Sp erry Rend P.O. Box 21111 Phoenix, Arizona 85036 A n E q u al O pportunity Em ployer M /F Pape 1A State Press Wednesday, October 18,1978 M ore about Saturday Night Fever fuels M onday morning migraine eonttmiad from pogo 12 Kohrs, who recovered three fumbles and seemed to have the arms of an octopus all night, batting down some six USC passes. “I think the psychological advantage was ours from the beginning. We were looking forward to this game since last summer. I know I was as psyched as I’ve ever been for a football game. We ju st came out smoking and never let them off the hook.” Middle linebacker Jeff McIntyre recovered another Trojan fumble early in the fourth quarter that set up ASU’s final score, a Steve Hicks’ 28yard field goal. He was one of the few Devil dissenters down on SC. end, too. But he was the dif­ ference." Malone, surprisingly, was all adulation towani the Trojans. “I wasn’t impressed by them. I was awed,” he said. “I just couldn’t believe how fast they were.” USC nose guard Rich Dimler returned the compliment with interest. “Arizona State was fast, but we knew they were fast. They didn’t do as much running as we thought they would, but their quarterback was hurting us,” Dimler said. “He shot up the inside for his big yardage. We worked on defensing against that in practice all week, but I guess our technique wasn't as good as it should have been.” Not impressed Malone’s run “I wasn’t impressed by Southern Cal at all. As far as I’m concerned, they’re just a bunch of guys from California with smog in their lungs,” ‘Big Mac’ said with a distinct air of cockiness. “That fumble recovery? Well, I remember that Joe Peters (ASU tackle) hit Charlie White coming through the middle and hurt him a bit. I saw the ball come loose and saw White’s eyes looking up to the sky. He didn’t bother to go after the ball, so I did.” Outside Sun Devil Stadium, pandemonium reigned. The 71,000-plus patrons, who created roars that measured 7.5 on the Richter Scale, fraternized with the players and partied on. “We must’ve made at least $10,000 for the alumni fund tonight,” a maroon-and-gold shirted booster blared to a passing ASU athletic director Fred Miller. “Hey coach,” someone else yelled above the din to Sun Devil offensive backfieid coach, Don Baker. “What did you feed your guys before the game? A can of beer?” The talk reeked of alcohol, levity and gratefulness. But as far as ASU head coach Frank Kush was concerned, revenge was the main motivating factor. ‘These are the same players who lost to Washington State not too long ago. It was just a super opportunity for them to redeem themselves," said Kush, referring to ASU's ill-fated Pac10 inaugural in Spokane Sept. 16. “Our kids never lost their poise — Malone especially. He was p retty banged up at the A 9.9 sprinter despite his bulk (6-foot-4, 215-pounds), Malone split the USC seams for 138 yards rushing on 19 carries to lead all ASU runners. One of his jaunts — a darting 6 >yarder late in the third qu .trier — eventually set the stage for his own one-yard TD plunge to give ASU a comfortable 10-0 lead and, for all intents and p u r­ poses, the ball game. “I broke to my outside and everything just opened up for me,” Malone said. “It’s funny what goes through your mind in a situation like that. All I was thinking about while I was running was keeping loose. “Sometimes, when your running under the gun like that, your muscles get all tensed up and your strides get shorter. I don't know if that affected me or not. But I do know that if I had a half-step more it would’ve been six (points). Some USC guy made a deperation leap at me and just clipped me on the back of the (right) heel.” Undaunted, Malone later authored an 18-yard scoring strike to sophomore wide receiver John Mistier that all but broke the Trojans' backs. “It was ju st a simple out pattern — a 71 weak,” said Malone, who ranked fifth in the Pac-10 in total offense going into Saturday’s game. “John ran the pattern so well, he had a five yard cushion into the end zone.” Midway through the fourth quarter, Malone threw a scare into the Sun Devil coaching ranks by coming off the field doubled over and apparently holding his elbow, reminiscent of Dennis Sprout's injury in Fiesta painful. I did everything I could Bowl V versus Nebraska. The El except grab my crotch in front Cajon, Calif., native made a of 70,000 people. It was killing similar miraculous recovery. me.” “It wasn't my elbow or even USC knew similar pain. But it my arm, though. I don't know if allocated itself above the belt. you can put this in the paper, “We were beaten psychologi­ but I got helmeted in the peter,” cally,” Robinson said, as his Malone whispered with a sheepish grin. “It was pretty Î î MH squad packed hurriedly and heated to an idling fleet of Greyhound charters. “ Some­ times a team needs something like this, though. We’re a young team. Well be back. “We won’t die. I won’t let them.” NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH m anhattan villa pizza, Delicious home-cooked meals at reasonable prices. Breakfast, lunch and dinner every day — for every pocketbook. every taste, every si2e appetite. Tem pe 1000 E. Broadway. East of Rural Sco ttsdale 7170 E Stetson. South of Camelback r vL Fri. A S a t. 11 a m.-12 midnight ^ ♦ This Coupon Not Valid on Delivery * Cash Only * * * * # * * * * * * * * * * * * * ] 25C Each Tike Out O id e ra * !M t* * * * * * * * * * * * i|M M e W ants You to Know: Holiday-tim e reservations are filling fast — call u s A .S.A .P. to get Super Saver Fares while they last! Faculty, Students, Group Leaders — C A L L U S F O R A R R A N G E M E N T S — Ski Trips, Research Trips, etc. (A ny destination is not foreign to u s and our services are free.) 64 E A S T B R O A D W A Y , Su ite 2 T E M P E 967-9855 • 967-1900 W e're HEYYYYYYYYB I'm at Lonnegan's Every W ednesday Nite! — cc DISCOUNT LIQUORS What M ore Can I Say? has: • T h . BEST keg beer d e a ls in th e Valley. Large selection FREE ICE - NO EQUIPMENT RENTAL. T ubs furnished C oldest Beer 29* F. • LARGEST SELECTION of F ine Im ported and D om estic LIQUORS - BEERS - WINES - LIQUEURS • “NEW WINE WELL" C hillers a t all sto re s. W e will chill any wine, beer or liquor alm o st instantly - NO CHARGE to chill anything th at is not in ou r h u g e walk-in. LOW!! LOW!! COMPETITIVE PRICES “Our Service Cannot Ba Surpassed.” ARIZONA’S FASTEST GROW ING LIQUOR CHAIN FOR ALL OF YOUR SPIRIT NEEDS. T H R E HUGE VALLEY LOCATIONS M ESA 1945 W. B aseline a t D obson ITS BEATLES NITE EVERY WED. LO NNEG AN'S BAN D Wed. - Sat______ Sun. - Tues. VALLEY FEVER P| ▼ TEM PE 1847 N. S c o ttsd a le Rd. at M cKellips 839-3261 945-2064 “ON THE TRAIL” 9333 E. A pache Trail 986-1995 LONNEGAN'S 7436 E. M cD o w e ll • 1 blk. E. of Los A rcos • 947-3304 Wednesday, October 18,1978 State Press Page 15 Robert Petrie ASU's stock rises in polls The secret to ASU’s 20-7 upset win over Southern Cal Saturday was simple. According to Sun Devil defensive tackle Joe P eters, ASU “keyed on everybody, played a basic defense and kicked their ass.” ASU skied te 12th place in this week’s A teoeiated P ress rankings of the top 20 teams in the country, a bit surprising, considering the Sun Devils (5-1) were unranked last week. No. 2 Penn State was unsuccessful in its bid to “bye” its way into the No. 1 spot, as Oklahoma doggedly continued to hang onto th e top rung — despite an unimpressive 17-16 win over lowly Kansas Saturday. Both teams own 6-0 records. And if yon think the omission of Ohio State from the top 20 was a misprint, forget it. The Buckeyes, limping along with a 2-2-1 record, failed to make the top 20 for the first time ranee God created the world. And even the new Polish pope can’t save Woody Hayes from being cast into the fires of mediocrity to wail and gnash his teeth. I t looks like Valley TV viewers — or any TV viewers for that matter — won’t have Bud Kaatz to kick around any more. After being sacked from Channel 12's Action News last month, the affable gaffer has decided to' give up the microphone and go into the insurance business. “I’ve never done it before, and I’m really involved in it,” said Kaatz, who will be peddling insurance for Central Life of Phoenix, which is headed by former Phoenix Racquets’ owner Jimmy Walker. According to Bud, he’ll never go back to broadcasting again. “I’m not going to play around with that anymore.” Then, he added with a thumbs-down gesture, “T hat’s all sort of down the tubes.” Let’s take a small step back into sports history. The scene is Green Bay, Wis.; the event, the 1967 NFL championship game between the Packers and the Dallas Cowboys. Packer w a r n in g ! quarterback Bart Starr plunges sighted on the field, shaking for a one-yard sneak and the hands with ASU players with 10 If you like Eastern-style subs and winning touchdown with just 18 minutes still left in the game. sandwiches, you’ll love ours. There’s seconds remaining. What compounded the The late New York City problem was the presence of Los nothing special about our sandwiches, sportswriter Leonard Schecter Angeles media personnel in the they’re just the best in the valley. takes it from there. “A fter­ box, who by this week must wards, CBS had Tom Brookshier think Phoenix-area sports media in the clubhouse for interviews, types are p retty bush. One with Frank Gifford plugged in writer, observing the “glee” of ITALIAN DELICATESSEN from the broadcast booth. the “professional” local p er­ 31 W. SOUTHERN Neither of them asked Green sonalities, said, “They’d have (Southern & Mill In Danelle Plaza) Bay coach Vince Lombardi any thrown ’em out of the L.A. questions, they just oohed and Coliseum about 30 seconds after 968-0712 ashed. It made me want to fwo the game started.” GOOD FOOD, REASO NABLE PRICES. STOP IN SOON Which probably explains why up. Whenever somebody hires a cheerleader to do a reporter’s the Gazette writer was on the field in the first place. job, credibility drops to zero.” Nothing is farther from the tru th , and it showed at ENGINEERING Saturday’s ASU-USC game both in the stadium press box and on COMPUTER SC IEN CE the field. S TECHNOLOGY MAJORS Despite repeated warnings from ASU sports information W ANT ADS director Dick “Moon" Mullins about cheering in the press box, STA RT a small, annoying group of reporters continued to root for the Sun Devils in what, H ERE ostensibly, is a working press area. C ontact your p lacem ent office One example that stands out was on a play where ASU for interview d ates. A nnouncements quarterback Mark Malone skirted right end on a keeper for AXFORD, DR. ROGER, vote for Maricopa r ----------------------------------------» 66 yards. During Malone’s run, a Community College Board, November 7. Student/Faculty interests, community ser­ Flagstaff rep o rter who was ! H UGH ES ! vice. 11/7 phoning in part of a story began * __________________« screaming “Go!, Got, Go!,” into THE RIMERS of Eldritch. Secret passions Crm t n g a * * * mMhl m lh H tctrorw ; the telephone, and wildly shook and murder. Be there. Opens October 26. Tickets - Lyceum Theatre Box Office, Noon his fist in the air. -3 p.m., Monday-Friday. 10/20 AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F And a Phoenix Gazette beat writer for the Sun Devils was THE GREAT Pumpkin Feet Is Coming. CAPISTRANO’S BEFORE YOU PICK UP YOUR DEGREE, PICK OUR INTERVIEW. Watch for More Gory Details! BU LB— SALARY? STABILITY? SU C C ESS? RECOGNITION? GOALS? FUTURE? Are these words associated with your desire for future employment? Let HARRIS CORPORATION answer your qu estions ........... We offer competitive salaries along with an excellent benefit program. • RECO G N ITIO N ? H A R R IS recognizes talent and ability and searches for these qualities. Tiiieuii SIITIEIS, IRC. C o rp o rate H eadquarters: 101 H ow ard S tre et San Francisco, C alifornia 94 1 0 5 FREE INTRODUCTORY Scuba Lesson, Beans & Booze, every Thursday 7 p.m. Call El Mar Diving Center, 833-2971. LAGOONA DANCERS! Room for one more? Call Randy, 4218. ROOMMATE WANTED for three bedroom apartment. Furnished, utilities, pool, $106. 2 blocks from ASU. Elise or Andy, 967-1766. NORTHUGHT GALLERY RAFFLE, print sate and T-shirt sales: on the Mall Oct. 16-20. Rattle prizes total $2,400. Donations from: Custom Hi-Fi, Phoenix Giants, Tampa Bike Shop, J. Burbridge, Photo Factory, Audio Graphic Supply, Az-Tech Graphics, Fosgate Electronics, Camara Repair, Tower Records, Lewis Camera, John's Green Gables, Guild Camera, Shop of Art, Eakil's Clogs, Playboy Club, Erickson's, Crimpers, ASU Bike Co-Op, Matt Comer, Oaah Inn, Bellyflllers, Pioneer Camara, St. Michael's Alley. Tickets $1.00. Tickets also at Northlight Gallery, Fine Arts Annex. Raffle drawing: Oct. 23, 7:30 p.m. Northlight Gallery. STEREO: KLH Compact, model 20. Call 966-9680. • G O A LS? DO YOU need help in Stats, Maths, Fortran operation, Research? Call 8384252. Do not wait too long; seek help to Improve your grades now. Goals may be achieved working for H A RR IS in your chosen career. Western D ime-A-Line_______ • STABILITY? H A R R IS offers Job stability to all contri­ buting employees. The one that has tem­ porary jobs fo r both men and women. The one that lets you w ork when yo u w ant to — on days w ithout classes, during semester breaks or vacations. D ro p in at a Western office and register. There are 140 across the nation. Let us show you how Western con be Num ber One fo r you. 10/18 MIKUS (Alias chief, Boris) got half price at Zodiac on his birthday. • SA LA R Y ? WESTERN'S THE O N E Once you try us, y o u l be hooked. • SU CCESS? Yours with a company that will allow and help you advance your career. • FUTURE? Limited only by you and your contributions to your profession. we are a leader In the field of distributed data processing, and enjoying continued growth, we need professional people to help meet the increasing dem ands success creates. Our current search is for individuals skilled in the disciplines of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. The pride of H A R R IS DATA C O M M U N IC A T IO N S is giving you the best career opportunities possible. The rest depends on you when you make the decision to join our growing teem of successful professionals. W e will be Interviewing on your cam pus TUESDAY, October 24th. For further Information contact the Student Placement Office. ( O M 1 M l U M IG A T I O M S A N O ( M F O F 4 M V A T 1O M H A N D U M O VICKI V: Ws want to the show and now we know when you do the lighting it's very exciting! JIM STIFF: You need some new shoes, so stop buying booze. Get them today, you've got no time to loee. TO OUR Newton-meter There is no one sweater. We'd like It a bunch, it with us you'd sat lunch. Por Sol« FIRST CLA SS M OBILE HOME 2 Bedroom, 144 bath, all appliances + dishwasher. Tempt, Family Park. JOPUN TRAILER SA LES 252-7666 10/18 POOL TABLES: Solid mahogany, antiqua styling, aiata, l a t itar pockets, $400, delivered. ASU students and personnel rara Its Premium Belgium Balls with pur6,264-3725. 10120 ONE PAM RUI magnums 10/20 Page 16 State Press Wednesday, October 18,1978 S o , S a le THE MEXICAN SHIRT MAN I* back with new styles of smbrokfeieO shirts, Mousse, (trasses, also wool and new two-tone acrylic sweaters. Bring ad for 10% dis­ count. Phoenix Greyhound Park, Saturdays and Sundays, east side in our new space, 400. 12/8 EXCELLENT CONDITION — electric wheel­ chair, redwood burl coffee tables, Invslid toilet chair, much mlsc. 7416 E. Palo Verde Lens, Scottsdale. 048-1037. 10/20 Initrucflon PARACHUTE twelve miles from Phoenix! $5.00 off with student I.D. Professional instructors. Phone 275-0010. 12/8 F or Rent/Lcasc_____ FOR RENT: 2 bedroom, unfurnished, utilities paid, pool, children ok. $270. Call 968-5487. 10/20 FEMALE, NON-SMOKER, lovely furnished room, pool, reasonable. Call evenings, 247-0800. 10/24 B ic y c le s FOR SALE: Raleigh Grand Sports. Flaw­ less. Cost $300 new. Will sacrifice for $150. Call Scott: 968-2797. 10/18 P col Estofe G et an "A” in E conom ics by investing w hat you pay in rent in a h o m e. Build equity, save taxes, an d a lot m ore. Let G eorge at The B en to n C om pany, 968-7243 tell you m ore. 10/18 S t r v ic e « DAY/NIGHT DISHWASHER — buspeople, must be available from 10 a.m. dally — part-time available. Apply after 3 p.m., 8900 E. Camel back. Equal Opportunity Employer. 10/20 BACK TO SCHOOL expenses got you down? Part-time openings for 3 hours dally available to-tadtee and man. Wa train youto earn minimum of $6/hour. Phone 835-1383 for appointment. Fuller Brush Company. 10/21 HOUSE PAINTING. Interior, exterior; your « h o les of paint. Extremely low rates. Fme estimates. Reference s . Scott, Steve, 9682797, 242-3341. Give your home a new outlook. 10/24 MALE MODELS. Photographer will be In Phoenix the end of October and needs versatile male models. Those selected will receive generous renumeration. Send photos and all information to JG, Box 552, Willoughby, Ohio 44094. 10/18 OVERSEAS JOBS — Summer/full time. Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $500-$1200 monthly, expenses paid, sightseeing. Free info. — Write: International Job Center, Box 4490-AD, Berkeley, CA 94704. 10/25 NEED MONEY? The Record Trader pays the highest for albums, cassettes or trade three for two. 831 South Rural, 966-5039 10/X NEWS PHOTOGRAPHER wanted. Black & white. Must be experienced, have equip­ ment and transportation. Call 967-8714. 10/19 ATTENTION MARKETING, Real Estate and Insurance Majors. Looking for a job that offers valuabe personal selling experience plus excellent earning opportunities? Call Mike after 9 p.m. for Interview. 987-3783. 10/27 For All Your Real Estate Needs Buying - S elling - Properly M anagem ent - R enting Call for inform ation of current h o m es available. Carolyn Weary & Assoc. 10/20 H elp Wonted NURSES AND Student Nurses: Earn extra money while gaining clinical experience. You work the hours, day(s) and hospital of your choice. Interesting private duty as­ signment. Work under the supervision of our Director of Nursing. Excellent inservice program. Call Paula, Medical Personnel Pool, 257-8331. 11/10 PART/FULL TIME. We have 10 openings for students with construction experience. Job pays 83.50 an hour. Job will last through May and will provide experience In the mobile home Industry. Must provide references. Contact Palm Harbor Homes, 309 S. Perry Lane, Tempe. (t mile from campus.) 10/25 ARE YOU an artist or a creftsperson? Sell your handmade Items at the Arts and Crafts Fair, November 9th and 10th, sponsored by MU Hosts and Hoetesses. Registration begins October X in the MU Activity Center. For more Information call 9656649. 10/18 PHONE SALES: Evenings, good work, nice office, close to campus, hourly rate, bonuses. 968-4853. 11/1 PUBLIC RELATIONS. Part-time and some weekends. To meet with celebrities In th e entertainment and athletic field. Salary plus expenses. Training position, must be attractive. Call Mr. Framburg, 949-0603. 10/18 IMMEDIATE TEMPORARY assignments! Register now with Employers Overload. Any office skills acceptable. We’ll work around your class schedule. Call 284-4080. 10/16 EARN $1K to $480 weekly, stuffing envelopes at home. Guaranteed! For information, rush self-addreeaed, stamped envelope and 25c (coin) for handling. Metro Enterprises, Box 49114, Austin, Texas 78765. 11/1 WORK STUDY position available a s re­ search assistant, University Counseling Service. For Interview appointment, call 965-6146. 1 0 /X ADDRESSERS WANTED Immediately!. Work at home — no experience nsceesary — excellent pay. Write American Service, 83X Park Lane, Suite 127, Dallas, TX. 75X1. 11/7 HAYAY SHALOM 894-1139 1 0 /X A S S IS T A N T M A N A G E R Tower Plaza Cinema 38th Street & Thomas Rd. 5 shifts weekly, each shift 5 to 6 hours. Call in person at Tower Plaza Cinemas between 1:30 p.m. & 5 :X p.m. 10/19 L ost/Found LOST: 5-month-old Brittany Spaniel. Rust and white. Rust “saddle” on back. Any Information, call 288-3312. 10/19 LOST: BEIGE 1977-79 pocket calendar. Contains important information. Much purple writing. Reward. Please call Evie, 995-9490 10/18 S e rv ic e » Erich Sylvester C a llfo rso n g list. 973*1655 EXPERIENCED TYPIST, guaranteed work. Dissertations, theses, research papers, etc. Carbon ribbon. Near ASU. 987-4937. 11/X Recorded Message. Please Cali 249-8234 12/8 P ersonal MODELS NEEDED for demonstration In hair classes. Newest cuts. No charge. Please contact Erin at Hair — Scottsdale. 994-3553. 10n9 ARE YOU an artist or a creftsperson? Sell your handmade Items at the Arts and Crafts Fair, November 9th and 10th, sponsored by MU Hosts and Hostesses. Registration begins October 30th In tlw MU Activity Canter. For more Information call 9866649.___________________________ 10,18 GOOD STUDENTS: Save X % on Auto Insurance — nonsmokers 15%. Ask for Steve Lundell, 836-1480, ASU Representa­ tive, Farmers Insurance Group. 1 0 /X P gom m ate Wanted TYPING THESES, dissertations, papers, etc. Professional secretary, rate, spelling corrected, reasonable 949-9207. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. IBM self-correc­ ting 90-110 wpm, 88.50/hour (approxi­ mately 75c/page) last and accurata. Lore, 947-0978. 11,10 NEAR ASU. n eeaarch papers, theses, dissertations. English degree. Editing. 7 years experience. 967-4443. 12/8 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Theses, disserta­ tions, engrg/tech. reports. 838-0602. 11/3 TYPING, EXPERIENCED, fast, accurate, editing, IBM Selectrtc, call evenings and weekends, 994-8252. 10/18 PROFESSIONAL, GUARANTEED IBM Cor­ recting Selactric typing. Rica, edge, rush lobe. Cheap. Call 988-4119 evenings. 10/18 TYPING — IBM Correcting Bslsctrlc II, also automatic typing. Dissertations, t heses, research papers. Rosemary Vanoe, 9679143. 12/8 W anted FEMALE TO 8HARE new, furnished townhouse. One mile from ASU. $150 plus Vi utilities. Non-smokers please. Available November 15.959-5285.__________ 10/20 MALE STUDENT, free room and board, own room and bath In Mountain Shadow Estates, Scottsdale. Must stay nights and have own car. References. Cali collect Mrs. Dixon (312) 234-6222. 10/19 WANTED. SERIOUS male student to live with two male students In large house located on west side of Tamps. $100 month plus sharing utilities cost. Call Howard McMIllin, 041-0474. 10/18 Automobile«______ M otorcycle« 1972 450 HONDA. 13,000 miles, lots of 1 0 /X chrome. $800.988-2679 after 6:00. 1989 IMPALA, two-door, good condition, A.M. radio, very comfortable seels. 8600 or best offer. Call 894-1555 after4 p.m. 10/18 1973 GMC VAN, % ton, power steering, power brakes, air conditioning, automatic, partially pansled, carpeted. Coll Joe, 266-3908. 10/18 U sad, Guaranteed Parts | B & M Foreign & Am erican A uto FREE TRAVEL opportunities throughout USA. No car rental; drive to or from all major cities. Arrange trips In advance. Cars available now. AAAGON Auto Transport, 284-0201. 12/B 10/18 term accu­ rates. 1 0 /X 2004 E. 1st St., Tempe American888-7818 Foreign 867-8617 10% Discount with the ad. A utomobile« 10/18) MADAME W A ISE R A FORTUNETELLER CARD READER PALM READER Past — Presen t — Future Names , Oetee 6 Faots* Are you worried, troubled or In doubt?' So you want happiness, success and peace of mind? I can help you and advise you on all matters of your life. If you want to overcome your obstacles, see me. I can and will help you. ■ 1 T y p in g T ra v e l WEDDING SONGS WITN GÜITAR LIQUOR STORE CLERK. Part or full time. Starting salary $2 .60/ hour. Pre-employ­ ment poly test. 27541855. 3421 E. Van Buren. 10/18 LOW COST travel to tarasi. Toll free, 800-223-7678, 9 a.m. - 8 p.m. NY Urns. 10/31 IBM SELECTRIC. 8 years experience, dissertations, theses, term papers, etc. Call Jean, 277-3602. 10/31 National Marketing Co. has openings for sales minded people interested In part-time employment. Openings are available on the following shifts: 5:00 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.; 10:X a.m. to 4:00 p.m.; 4 :X p.m. to 9 :X p.m. Our sales people work In a modem, contortable, business environment, contacting es­ tablished customers on long distance WATS lines. Earnings, which Include salary and bonus, average $4 to $6 per hour, paid weekly. These are perma­ nent positions, with full-time shifts avallble during holidays and summer. If you have a good clear speaking voice, proper grooming for a business office, enthusiasm and competitive spirit, our experienced management team will train you to sell our nationally recog­ nized products (while being paid, of course). Our Tempe office Is located approx. 5 minutes from campus. Ptsasaoall DIALAMERICA for details. SALES GIRL needed every weekend through Christmas at Park and Swap. Phone 275-0685. 1 0 /X WORK STUDY positions available: Depart­ ment of Higher & Adult Education; X hours/week. Call 965-8248 for Information. 10/19 PERMANENT HAIR , removal, sculptured nails, manicures, pedicures, skin care. Gall Walker’s Electrolysis of Scottsdale - 7033 Indian School. 945-4245. 11'22 PART TIME WANTED: COCKTAIL WAITRESSES. Ap­ ply in person, Dooley’s, 1216 E. Apache blvd. _________________ 10/25 ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERS: Drafting position (Ink work), $4/hour - salary varies with experience and sbility. 252-8051, ask for Karen Keeton. 11/1 RED CARPET 25 W. S o u th ern Ave. P h. 968-3414 . H e lp Wanted OUTDOOR FLOWER vendors needed. Earn extra cash in the afternoons. Call Sunshine Floral Company, 956-5050,262-9521.1 0/X A 8 T ra v e l H « lp Wanted W j 1 ^ w ith th is co u p o n 242*8735 NATURAL FOOD6 short order cook. Also juice girt. Flexible hours. Earthen Joy, 988-4710. ' 1 0 /X C a ll For Appointm ent 102 South 24th Strast Phoenix, AZ. 85034 Ih PRICE READING HOUSECLEANING one day per week. Be neat,, quick, efficient, permanent. Call mornings, evenings, 994-3813. 10/18 FIAT SE R V IC E 275-7472 m m 10/18. 10'» WHEEL WORKS Directory -A- -F - Jack Ross Lncoln-Mercury Crown Fum. Loosing New Cars 2700 N. Scottsdale Rd. 094-4800 Jock Ross Lincoln-Mercury Body Shop 085 W. MablSL, Mesa 084-2414 Jack Ross Uncoln-Mercuiy Used Cars 1900 N. Scottsdale Rd. 947-9321 Wheel W orks A uto Co. Buy. Sell and Trade Japanese Cars 1 Mile North of Campus 948 E. Curry_______________ 804-1137 G Books Etc. Best Sellers. Magazines, etc. X I S. Mill Ave., Tempe Ctr. 967-1111 m CO M PANY For House, Apt. & Business 1874 E. Apache Blvd. 894-1480 -G - • SPEC IA LIZIN G IN JA P A N E SE C A R S (Toyota, Datsun, Honda, etc.) Don't You Fret • Price Range Between *600 - *2,500 Guitar Repair & Sales 22S W. University, Suite 105 999-7931 • Buy, Sell and Trade A£. Cash & Carry • Service W ork on Japanese C ars —Grocery 9 Deli Institutional— 1915 E. Apache, Tempe, Az. 994-9153 1 MILE NORTH OF C A M P U S -R -B M Red’ Carpet Realty Carolyn Weary and Associates 25 W. Southern Ave., Tempe 988-3414 -s- I *75°° off any Car PURCH ASE I I W ith T his C oupon f ooupon por person 71 T oyota Corolla ..........$ 3 8 5 7 4 D atsun 710 4-dr. . . . $1185 7 3 D atsun 610 w agon . . 31285 71 VW S u p er B eetle . . . .$1485 7 4 S ubaru DL ...................81795 7 4 T oyota Corolla 1600 . 82095 I 1 5 % D iscount on ! Parts and Labor I I for Sarvice W ork ( W ith T h is i Coupon. ! sj J © 10/13 John's Shoe Repair Resoling oi Tennis Shoes 718 S. Mill »7-8101 I---------------------------“ I 946 E CURRY IfaL/Tempe] ¡894*11371