Air Force Fighter plane crashes near UA; 1 dead pm m \ ; w v it m im TUCSON — An Air Force fighter jet plane crashed near’ the U niversity of Arizona ju st after noon Thursday, narrowly missing a nearby junior high school. One person on the ground was killed and six are reported injured, said Lew Jackson, a spokesman for Davis-Monthan Air Force Base. The names of the victims were not released. The pilot, Capt. Frederick Ashler, who was not seriously hurt, bailed out of the plane over UA’s mall and parachuted to the ground where he was picked up by an ambulance. The 28-year-old pilot told Air Force officials he had no idea what caused the crash. The plane crashed close to Mansfeld Junior High School where students were attending class. “It went down right on the street be­ A friday Arizona State University tween the football practice field and the school in an explosion and a big ball of flame,” said eyewitness Tom Duddleston of the university’s information bureau. Jackson said the plane crashed near Seventh and Highland streets just outside the campus. Emergency room officials of two hospitals reported receiving six persons injured in the crash. A woman with severe burns, a man with back injuries and a boy with chest injuries were taken to the Arizona Medical C enter, a spokeswoman said. “The plane was heading toward the air base and I was watching it,” said UA student Mike Guan. "The pilot bailed out over th e university mall and his parachute opened and I watched him land.” October Voi. 61 No. 36 HU p r e s s H Tempe, Arizona, H ouse Appropriations Com m ittee chairman also receives $21,000 professor's salary By Mary Beth Von Drisks A state representative who is head of the House committee that appropriates the budgets for the three state universities also moonlights as a University of Arizona professor. Thomas Goodwin, R-Tucson, is chairman of the House Appropriations Committee. He also is a full­ time professor at UA’s continuing education depart­ ment and receives an annual university salary of $21,000, Dick Morris, senior budget analyst for the Joint Legislative Committee, said Thursday. Rep. Juanita Harelson, R-Tempe, said Goodwin’s position on the UA faculty may be one reason that university consistently receives larger appropriations than ASU. .. aiwivc ha« W n a battle -between Goodwin and myself over the funding for the two universities, Harelson said. “He is especially loyal to UA because he also is on their payroll.” However, Lawrence Nelson, dean of UA’s continuing education program, said Goodwin’s position did not constitute a conflict of interest. “I don’t think Goodwin’s two jobs conflict with each other because he doesn’t receive federal funds,” Nelson said. “Why can’t teachers work for the Legislature? It’s like saying a news reporter shouldn’t work for the Legislature because he would write stories about it.” Nelson said Goodwin, who teaches governmentrelated non-credit courses, does not receive stateappropriated funds. He said Goodwin’s salary comes from student tuition and local funds, and is based on the number of con­ tinuing education classes he teaches each semester. Goodwin could not be reached for comment Thurs­ day. Harelson said UA receives noticeably higher ap­ propriations in identical programs, even though ASU has more students. ASU has 28,000 full-time students, while UA has 25,823. But UA receives $19,190,700 for instructional resources while ASU gets $16,440,400, Harelson said. The Tucson university also receives $4,899,500 for student services, but ASU is allotted $4,188,900 for its similar program. Duane Eckert prepares to shoot during a game with Steve Colby and Chuck Mason in the MU gamet room Thursday. The Hal­ loween decorations have been put up this week in preparation for the M UAB Pumpkin Fest today. [State Press, staff photo] Page 2 State P re ss Friday, October 27, 1978 In t h e n e w s b rie fl fro m th e A s s o c ia te d P re ss HILLEL PRESENTS: W ESTER N NIGHT! FAIR MID- WA Y COORDINA TOR FIRED SOMALIAN OFFICERS EXECUTED N A IR O B I, Kenya — Thousands of S o ­ malians watched as a firing squad exe­ cuted 17 army officers Thursday for their part in the unsuccessful attempt last spring to overthrow President Mohammed Siad Barre, M ogadishu radio reported. P H O E N IX — Fred Pope Jr. has been fired a s mid-way coordinator for State Fair “in the best interests of the fair,” Tom Clark, executive director of the Coliseumfairground, said Thursday. WOMEN CLIMBERS KILLED Saturday, October 28 at 7:30 p.m. Hillel Deck ^ COASTGUARD CUTTER, COAL FREIGHTER COLLIDE K A T M A N D U , Nepal — Two members of an all-woman American mountaineering expedition scaling the 26,545-foot Anna­ purna main peak have been killed in a climbing accident, an official of Nepal’s Tourism Ministry said Thursday. y ‘s B A L T IM O R E — The scream, “Oh, my God, he’s going to hit us,” pierced the air moments before the doomed Coast Guard cutter Cuyahoga collided with a coal freighter, the cutter’s navigator says. Dances will be taught by the caller. Hillel DOUGLAS FAMILY MEMBER SENTENCED TO 6 MONTHS Union of Jew ish Students 213 E. University Dr. - Baker Center CIVIL GUARDSMAN DIES T U C SO N — Jam es Stuart Douglas III, member of a prominent Arizona business family, has been sentenced to six months in jail in connection with falsely receiving veteran’s education benefits. BILBA O , Spain — A paramilitary civil guardsman died Thursday from wounds he received in an am bush here over the weekend. He was the third person to die from the attack by ETA guerrillas and the 10th guerrilla victim this month. HOO VERIMPLICA TED IN SLUR SCHEME 967-7563 ,^w vw w vw w w w w vuvw w w w w vw vw w A career in law w ithout law sch o ol QUEBEC POLICE SEIZE DOCUMENTS D ET RO IT — The Detroit New s says recently released FBI records show that J. Edgar Hoover feared the murder of civil rights worker Viola Liuzzo in 1965 would rally the civil rights movement and did everything in h is power to slur her reputation. M O N T R E A L — Quebec provincial police Thursday seized documents belonging to officials of Q uebec's two largest labor unions, the Quebec Federation of Labor and the Confederation of National Trade Unions. After just three months of study at The f \ Institute for Paralegal Training in Philadelphia, you can have an exciting and rewarding career in law or business— without law school. s a lawyer’s assistant you will be performing i many of the duties traditionally handled only by attorneys. And at The Institute for Paralegal Training, you can pick one of seven different areas of law to study. 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. a Elton m akes official bow with new hair transplant LONDON AP - Elton John, the British pop star who looked well on the way to becoming a glistening baldie, made his official bow with his new hair transplant Thursday. Yes, there’s hair there once more. No doubt about that. A bit thin, perhaps, but never­ theless it's top of the crops as far as he is concerned. Elton John, a former music publisher's errand boy whose global hits include such multi­ million sellers as “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road" and “Candle In The Win,” had his first hair transplant operation in Paris in September 1977. He went back later for a second stage of the transplant, and will return to Paris again Advertising 965-7572 Birkenstock. A fo o tb ed of ( ot k mixture, lined with soil suede. sha|K‘s to your Ux>t and provides sup|x>n and << intort that benefits vour entire Ixxly. Fight styles to choose from, as well as Nappy’s, the sandal that massages your feet. Jb Tempe : 414 S. Mill Ave. Suite 106 966-3139 Tucson : 1023 N. Park Ave. 622-1395 Join us for a plain old fun evening of square dancing, good food and merriment. $1.50 long time, and I am sure people were beginning to think that nothing was happening under my hat. “I had the operation because I did not like being bald. “I admit it — 85 percent vanity — and I am thrilled with the result.” The trichologist, a specialist in hair and hair diseases, removed hairs from the back of Elton John’s head and inserted them into his bald top. The cost was unofficially estimated at $2,000. That's a fleabite to the man who owns the Rocket Records Co. and whose music has made him a millionaire. soon for the final part of the treatment. But the success of the trans­ plants so far was so pronounced th at he agreed to be photo-' graphed informally at his home at Windsor, near Queen Eliza­ beth's majestic Windsor Castle. The photographs were released to the media to give fans their first chance to see Elton John's new crowning glory. For quite some time, he has been seen wearing a cap or other headgear. Commenting on his hairraising experience, the 31-yearold singer and songwriter told reporters: “I know it has taken a * * * * * 'he Institute for Paralegal Training is the nation’s first and most respected school for paralegal training. Since 1970, weve placed over 2,500 graduates in over 85 cities nationwide. T f you're a senior of high academic standing and looking for an above average career, contact your placement office for an interview with our representative. We will visit your cam pus on: I Tuesday, October 31 The Institute for Paralegal ffiff t Training9 l»«$8® I•>* É 235 South 17th Street Philadelphia, PA 19103 (215) 732-6600 Approved by the American Bar Association. VOTER BEWARE! 3 The temporary Governor's new "wooing song" is not in harmony with his spending record. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * P a id fo r b y F r ie n d s o f M e c h a m in T e m p e * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Friday, October 27, 1978 State P ress Page 3 Popular m eans o f birth controlis ineffective By Tony Motzenbacker People who think hope and optimism are effective forms of birth control suffer from a misconception, a P la n n e d P a r e n th o o d counseling coordinator said Thursday. “ Hope is the most popular method of birth control,” said Sally Boyd. “It is also the least ef­ fective.” She said optimism is the sec o n d -le a st e ffic ie n t method. The birth control pill has been the most effective type of contraception (99.5 percent prevention rate) since 1960. Presently there are . nearly 10 million users in the United States. Studies made over the past several years, however, have shown a relationship betw een pill use and circulatory disease, in c lu d in g b lo o d - c lo t problems and heart attacks. Consequently, women have been turning to alternative methods of birth control. The IUD, which must be inserted into the cervix by a qualified clinician, is the second-m ost e ffe c tiv e method (about 97 percent). Boyd said the main problems with the IUD are that it can cause cramping and heavy bleeding during a woman’s menstrual cycle or can become dislodged. Also, she said, there is a slight possibility the IUD can puncture the cervical wall and en ter the ab ­ dominal cavity. But despite the disad­ vantages, Boyd said 87 percent of the women who are given IUDs continue to use them. She said the diaphram is becoming popular again, and is 95 percent effective if used properly. The diaphragm, a soft rubber cup with a flexible ring arotind the edge, must be inserted into the vagina before intercourse and should be used with a spermicide jelly or cream. The diaphragm is especially popular among college-educated women, because it has no chemicals and because of women’s concerns about the use of the pill. Boyd said use of the diaphragm “unfortunately is not an exact science” because a change in a woman’s weight can alter the size of th e cervix, especially after pregnancy. “A lot of people swear by them (diaphragms), others swear at them,” she said. Tw o l e s s - e f f e c t i v e methods of contraception are vaginal foam and contraceptive suppositories. Boyd said these devices are only about 70 percent ef­ fective, but this is due to human error, not method failure. She said the condom is as effective as the foam or suppository methods and currently is the only one that can be used by males. “(But) many men don’t like to use it,” she said. However, a condom used with foam or a con­ traceptive suppository is almost as effective as the pill, Boyd said. She said some women also use the “n atu ral” family planning method, which includes monitoring days betw een periods, checking body temperature or examining vaginal mucus to determine peak fertility periods. The problem with these approaches is that women’s m enstrual cycles are not always regular and sperm can live inside a woman’s body five to seven days. Natural methods require 10 to 12 days of abstinence per month. The 1976 National Fertility Survey indicated th a t race, education and socio-economic status were factors in the number of unwanted children and pregnancies, but the in­ fluence of these charac­ teristics has been diminishing since 1972. E m ily Je n k in s -R e e d , director of Arizona Family Planning Council, said the decline in influence of these characteristics is because of the increased availability of low-cost or free clinics that provide contraceptives for poor persons. One important factor in choosing between birth control methods is the person’s partner, she said. “We’re trying to involve more men in the decision­ making process.” J e n k in s - R e e d s a id regardless of the type of contraceptive method used, people should ensure that it is appropriate for them and their life-style. WEEKEND SPECIAL The Best Reason for Giving Flowers is No Reason A T ALL V2 DOZ. ROSES Save $2.50 only *5.00 » S J tE B " G ood O n ly W ith A D G o o d thru Oct. 29, 1978 Does not apply Flowering Plant Policy on wire service m 9 • (Free flowers with all plants) Flower & Plant Sh ops Tempo DISCOLIHT center Page 4 State Press Friday, October 27, 1978 Opinion state press / An obstinate man does not hold opinions, but they hold him. — Alexander Pope An English poet ettsLstQ the Editor Selfish decision to cancel horse class smells 'fishy' Editor: There is a very touching issue hap­ pening concerning the equestrian program at the ASU farm and I feel the student body and faculty should be aware of it. “Someone” feels the equestrian classes should no longer be under the heading of Agriculture, but under the heading of Physical Education. Instead of just switching the depart­ ment headings, the plans are to get rid of the horses and cancel the program at the ASU farm altogether. This is basically the problem. In my opinion, getting rid of the program is a selfish and unconsidered decision. Many people may not even know about the ASU farm and for this par­ ticular concern, about the excellent horse facilities there are. Not only are the facilities great, there are great instructors, horses, equipment, and most im portantly, a great AT­ TITUDE. A program that offers all of this to its students should be praised and en­ couraged instead of throwing it all away. As for myself, I just recently found out about the equestrian program ASU offers and I am disappointed about the plans to discontinue it. Ten years have been spent building the equestrian program and I think after ten years of growth it deserves some support Not many schools can say they’ve got an equestrian program equal to the one here at ASU and the people who believe in the program need all the positive input possible. gue pace Commercial Art More Jewish critics of Zionism Editor: The following statements were quoted from the writings of some more Jewish persons of notable creditability who have been critical of Zionism because of its racist nature: RABBI ELMER BERGER “This exclusivist Zionist nationality concept has always been the source of conflict in Palestine and it remains so today. “By definition, the State of Israel’s Zionist ‘Jewish people’ nationality base cannot accommodate any number of ‘nonJewish people’ nationals who might, in normal democratic procedures, threaten the ‘Jewish character’ of the state. “The State, therefore, is an exclusivist state. “It is for security for this kind of state that the Israelis are asking. The Zionist determination to maintain this kind of state explains Israel’s defiance for twenty-one years of the United Nations injunction to allow the ‘non-Jewish people’ Palestinians a free choice between repatriation and compensation.” BESSING J. ROSENWALD “I still believe th a t Zionism, a nationalist movement, is deleterious to Jewish citizens of the United States, and to the Jewish nationals of many other countries outside of Israel. I still remain a firm adherent to the American Council for Judaism and the principles upon which it was founded which it still maintains.” Viable horse program shouldn't be changed I have been taking the equitation classes offered by the ASU agriculture departm ent for the p a st four semesters. In addition to learning to ride, I have learned much about horse breeding, management, and anatomy — the many facets of an academic and business-oriented class. Through knowledge and ex­ perience gained in these classes, I was able to obtain a job this past summer teaching riding to children. This could not have been possible without the use of the fine agriculture facilities, faculty, and horses. Dr. Mulhollan stated that the equestrian classes are recreational. I don’t pay $90 per semester for mere recreation. He also said that they were placed under agriculture by accident. It is no accident that subjects such as horse anatomy, breeding, and management are under the agriculture department. How can Mulhollan say these classes are not related to the agriculture department? It is unreasonable to think that it is more efficient to “contract horses from outside stables.” Why pay to rent stable horses, which are unsuitable for the different levels and skills now tau g h t, when the agriculture department’s horses are well-trained and suitable for all types of riding? I fail to see the logic. The P.E. department does not have the facilities, faculty, or money to teach equitation, and it did not request the change. The agriculture department has all three. Why change a viable program that has validity and quality, and is satisfactory to the many students in it? The administration has created a problem where none need exist. There is no logical or valid reason for the change. Julie Campbell C o n c e rn e d fe m a le d istu rb e d Editor: While reading through the State Press, I came across the article about co­ eds, which really disturbed me. What happened in Best C Dorm is not the business of anyone except those who Organization of Arab Students O p tic s w ho is SCUDD GOOKIN were involved. I think it is neither necessary or fair to ruin the reputations of approximately 180 students who live there. For those 15 students who were involved, their feelings on the subject are bad enough w ithout the State Press and the rest of the campus exaggerating the story as a topic for conversation. The matter was discussed thoroughly by th e Residence A ssistants, and certain steps w ere taken from there. I live in Best also, and it is a shame that some of my friends are being put on the spot because of this in­ cident. If everyone would mind their own business, the world would be a much nicer place to live in, and so would ASU. Concerned Female Editor’s note: The le tte r policy of this publication requests that names and majors be signed to letters to the editor. The policy is flexible only when the subject matter of the le tte r w arran ts special con­ sideration. L etters which express opinions th at may directly damage the writer’s profession or career will receive special consideration. These cases are few and the editor requests that names and majors be signed to letters. Friday, October 27,1978 State Press Page 5 <ït University and Mill Aves. ^ Have a Good Morning! Breakfast S erved till 11 a.m. ¿m v O LD F A SH IO N E D Fresh, Crisp Cereal-Two E g g s (any style)-Texas Toast-Coffee $1.50 $1.19 #3 G riddle C a k e s and $1.19 #1 Tw o E g g s, C ottage Fries, Texas Toast, Coffee Syrup, Coffee 95c #2 O n e E gg, cho ice of $1.70 #4 Fresh, C risp Cereal, meat, C ottage Fries, Toast, O range Juice Coffee #2 .'/atti'ii - EGJGJO I7GJBG H AM DELIGHT “A JA M ’S FA V O RITE” O range Juice, with French Fries Coffee Regular $1.90 $2.25 #5 French T o a st and $1.19 W ith Tw o E g g s Syrup, Coffee Offer go o d M o n. thru Fri. 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Bruce Babbitt’s proposed plan to put all inmates to work at the Arizona State Prison is feasible, but creating jobs for prisoners will take a “couple of y ears,” state D epartm ent of Corrections Director Ellis MacDougall said Thursday. The plan to put prisoners to work was endorsed at the 33rd Arizona Town Hall meeting, which ended Wednesday with conferees adopting several “alternative” plans for prison reform. At the three-day session held at Grand Canyon Village, MacDougall said present rehabilitation efforts at the Florence prison are a failure. Babbitt’s 1979 prison plan was endorsed by Town Hall p ar­ ticipants as a possible solution to the rehabilitation problem. Presently, about 30 percent of th e inmates at the Florence facility have jobs and only 5 percent of the prison's budget is used for training programs. Establishing jobs for all in­ mates is possible, MacDougal said, but not immediately. “It is absolutely possible, but we can't wave a magic wand and make it happen overnight," he said. “It will take a few years. In fact, we have to do market surveys to find out what products the inmates could produce and do agriculture studies. " I t’s a complicated process that will take time,” he added. MacDougall said the results of the Town Hall were en­ couraging. At the conference, he pressed for alternatives to prison reform, other than buOding new and bigger prisons. *Tm totally satisfied with the outcome of it. It seemed the participants read my budget and made plans to fit it exactly,” he said. Some of the alternatives adopted at the conference, titled “Corrections in Arizona — Crisis and Challenge,” were: •Stepped up use of probation and parole to reduce over­ crowding. •The development of an ef­ ficient inmate classification system. •The development of stan­ dards to regulate living con­ ditions at the state’s jails. The group’s recommendations were compiled into a 19-page report. Rep. Tony West, R-Phoenix, said even though the results of State Press coverage of football discussed The Intercollegiate Athletic Board on Thursday referred decision on whether the State Press can accompany the football team on away games to the Student Publications Advisory Board, which meets on Nov. 3. Fred Miller, athletic director, said funding was not the issue when he decided to “sever the offer” of free accommodations for reporters who cover out-of-town games. “It (the decision) was spurred by an unfortunate column that appeared in the State Press,” Miller said. On Aug. 29, Sports Editor Walter Berry and Reporter Robert Petrie wrote a column about the uncomfortable situation encountered with local professional sports media at Camp Tontozona. State Press Editor Kate Glassner said the paper should have been told in August when the article appeared that funds would be cut off. She said the S tate Press didn’t have time to make preparations to finance reporters covering road games. State Press Advertising 965-7572 the conference basically were good and some beneficial proposals were included in the report, members gave too much thought to criminals instead of their victims. “I am disappointed in a couple areas. F irst, the Town Hall didn’t deal with repeat of­ fenders. And second, there was no sensitivity shown to the victims of crimes. “Most of the participants are busy feeling sorry for the inmate while no compassion is shown for the victim,” West said. The conference’s con­ centration on inmates is because of the selection of the par­ ticipants in Town Hall, he said. “These are people who work within the system , and are geared only to the inmate.” Much of the discussion at the conference centered on the state’s new criminal code, which went into effect Oct. 1. Many of the conferees suggested the code will prove extremely ex­ pensive to implement. The criminal code provides tougher penalties for most crimes, so the sta te ’s prison population will swell over the next few years, participants said. R obert Misner, A SU law professor, predicted an inmate population increase of ISO percent over the next eight years, partly because the new code. “ In some ways, the code would have to be modified,” said Misner, who was keynote speaker at Tuesday's session. 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Our MAGAZINES include Al­ gol, Galaxy, Cinefantastique, Omni, Locus, Heavy Metal, Starlog, Galileo, plus many hard to find FANZINES, PR0ZINES, ond FILMZINES! We stock the FANTASY PRINTS of Frazetta, Kaluta, Smith, Boris, Adams, Wrightson, Starlin, Nino, and many others with a great assortment of signed, limited edition PORT­ FOLIOS! We also carry a complete line of new MARVEL & DC COMICS, Underground Comix, and Comics for COLLECTORS! Our FANTASY GAMES section includes Dungeons & Dragons aids and accessories! 708 FOREST AVBIUE ★ TEMPE CENTER 12 E. 10th St. at M ill • 967-0221 • [Opposite ASU] 'S T TEMPE ★ 967-3651 1 block west of College & V2 block north of University, just north of the ASU campus, between DAX & High Rollers! OPEN Monday-Saturday 9:30 to 5:30 * Thursdays til 9 p.m.! Friday, October 27,1978 State Press Page 7 By Steve Allnatt Because many university students have reading problems and cannot even write a coherent sentence, beginning Monday the ASU Reading Center will offer a re a d in g im p ro v em en t course, the coordinator of the College Reading program said Thursday. Anne Gottsdanker of the Reading C enter said participants can expect to increase their reading speed 50 to 130 percent. The 15-hour non-credit course is scheduled to run until Dec. 8 and costs $35. There will be two day Glasses and four at night. R egistration will be con­ ducted until Thursday, at Payne Hall, room B-112. “A good many students have problems with reading,” said Carolyn O’H earn, who runs a w riting program for students having trouble with freshman English classes. “One time, I observed a tu to r working with a student who had punc­ tuation problems. As the student read the passage — to place the punctuation — it became apparent th a t part of the problem was she did not read very well. “Many students are not accustomed to close, in­ tensive reading,” she said. “Often they feel if they read a chapter and sort of un­ derstand it, it’s adequate. It’s not adequate. Not only do they have to understand it, they have to remember it. “Reading a textbook is not like reading a novel, but they (students) read the material approximately the same way. They don’t have the ability to shift around,” O’Hearn said.Ber nar d Jackson, associate director of the Educational Opportunity program, agreed. “I t’s not getting any better, and many students aren’t going to admit they have a reading problem,” he said. EOP staff members tutor students and Jackson said even math students are having problems, which he attributes to poor reading skills. He said 100 students per sem ester taking in­ termediate algebra come in for tutoring. “Students (in math) wish they would be taught rather than have to read,” he said. “Reading deficiencies compound and confound the problems.” Gottsdanker said ap­ proximately 55 students already have enrolled for the Reading Center course. “We want to make the reader more efficient in term s of speed, un­ derstanding and overall study ability,” she said. “I ju st finished teaching a session and the average increase (in reader speed) was 100 percent.” “We do not use any magic gimmicks to produce this improvement, but common sense and work. Anyone who is willing to work can improve th e ir reading skills,” she said. G ottsdanker also said success is greater with the ASU program than with the Evelyn Wood or other advertised systems because the ASU course con­ centrates more on reading for meaning and less on increasing word-by-word consumption. The course will be taught by doctoral candidates in reading education. Each section will be limited to 25 students. “The course does not rely on any specific eye or finger m ovem ents,” he said. “Reading is an active decision of th e brain. People do not have to read every word to get th e meaning, and as they learn to read for meaning, their speed will naturally in­ crease.” G ottsdanker said, “In addition to speed and comprehension, we offer work in vocabulary and study skills.” ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ROADS M O SCO W New & Used Records & Tapes W e buy, sell & trade Rock, Blues & Jazz. W e specialize in Live Concert Recordings. W e a lso trade for military m edals, un iform s of all countries and all wars. patches, W e ’re located in the M ill Ave. S h o p s. 414 S . M ill Ave., T e m p e #110 H o u rs 10-7 M on d ay-Satu rday 968-3860 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 4- Class offered to students with reading deficiencies ★ ★ * * * ¥ gSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSB SSSSSSSSSSSSS 1% ^ UN D E V IL 2 UNISEX HAIRCUTTING SHOPS C u sto m Stylin g C o lo rin g Straightening Fro stin g Beard Trim s Perm s R egular H aircuts mw Appointments Available “W E TAKE PRIDE IN OUR W O R K ” 966-7312 966-5462 Open Tues.-Fri. 9-6; Set. 9-5 Open Mon.-Frl. 10-5:30; Sat. 9-4 3400 S. MILL AVE. 130 E. UNIVERSITY DR. (Danelle Plaza) (Back In tha Plaza behind Dairy Ouaan) (A rcha s Plaza) ARCHES■ PLAZA I U N IV E R S IT Y SOUTHERN S e lls C lo th in g & C o n fid e n ce DANELLE PLAZA ["IpUNIPERM ACID WAVE spEC|AL K W o r Natural Looking Wed. & Thur8.0niy Long Lasting Body with this co up on a n d Superb Conditioning Expire s 1 2 - 7-78 *29.95 Rap. * 35.00 r06 South Forest • Tempe • 967-8747 • One block north of University Mondav throuah Saturday 10 - 6 • Thursdays until 8:30 Page 8 State Press Friday, October 27, 1978 Property thefts up, police say The d a y 's the thing Michael Whitehurst, undergraduate student in ceramics, creates a large stoneware pot that he later destroyed. Whitehurst likes to make mostly small fine porcelain bottles. [State Press staff photo by Michael Wardenburg]] Gallery gets $1,500 from mall print sale ASU’s Northlight Gallery made more than $1,500 in a print sale held last week on Cady Mall in front of the MU, said Bob Kahan, gallery director. The sale, held every semester since 1972, consisted of photographs contributed by staff and students. “The money goes toward the operations of the gallery,’’ said Kahan. “We are open 365 days a year, put on four major exhibitions and eight student exhibitions a semester.” The gallery is located on the northeast corner of campus behind the Old Main.____________________ If ever you see a suspicious character — som e guy hanging around a bike rack or lurking by a dorm — call the University Police at 3456. No names necessary. And no victimless crimes, please. $AV-0N a ll y o u r INSURANCE n e e d s at o u r CENTERS INC. 2 6 6 -6 0 0 0 4721 N. CENTRAL AVE. Wallet and handbag thefts are rising a t an alarming rate according to ASU police, who say students should keep a watchful eye on their possessions to avoid joining the list of statistics. ASU police issued a bulletin to students last week which cites Hayden Library, women’s locker rooms, handball and tennis courts, and unlocked dormitory rooms as easy pickings for thieves. ASU Detective A1 Smith said personal thefts had been fluctuating the past two months and the bulletin has been issued because of several th eft reports in September and this month. According to a campus crime report, September’s statistics showed 27 cases of personal property thefts and one report of stolen state property. Both figures were down considerably from September 1977 (46 and eight, respectively). Included in the report were three stolen motor­ cycles (one recovered) and one stolen car. Bicycle thefts remained high — 28 reported fights in Sep­ tember’s report. ASU’s police department is implementing a photo I.D. program for grounds­ keepers, shop and housing w orkers and custodians. The employees will wear a yellow badge bearing their picture • reported missing (four recovered) last month. A total of seven persons arrested at ASU in Sep­ tember included two DWI’s (driving while intoxicated), three for theft, and two arrested for being armed with a dangerous weapon. There were also two HEY, S M A R T Y ! If you’re a student getting " B ’s " or better, you may qualify for 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 Renter's Insurance, too. Call D A N at 835-1107 O u r policy Is savin g you money. for a free Q uotation . 1 FREE W ASH with this ad Per Customer Customer Limit - 1 Per WASH 1M CLEAN W ORLD Your *1 Stop" Cleaning Place Alterations "BOOK BAZAAR" Medical — Educational Scientific — Technical WORLDWIDE IMPORTS Expires 11-7-78 Suede-Leather Drop-off Laundry Drapes The BEST in Laundry & Dry Cleaning Care U SSR , China, G DR, etc. Open 8 a.m.-9 p'm. & S undays 745 E. McDowell, Phx. 254-1817 W e buy or trade non-fictions 24 Hr. Service * Reasonably Priced 1035 E. LEM O N Corner of Lemon & Terrace 966-5311 Tempe, Az. Dataproducts Corporation is the leading manufacturer of computer line printers supplying major computer companies worldwide. mm We are located in Southern California, less than thirty minutes from the Pacific n . » Ocean. In California you can visit the U a t a p r o a u c t s snow during the winter but leave it behind when you go home. Dataproducts will be interviewing on campus: Monday, October 30 Interviewing will be conducted for most degree levels in the following areas: • ELECTRICAL ENG INEERING • M ECHANICAL ENG INEERING • INDUSTRIAL ENG INEERING • COM PUTER SC IE N C E We offer you immediate and significant challenges along with the opportunity to learn from top professionals. Performance at Dataproducts produces rapid growth within our expanding organization. If you are unable to meet with our recruiter on campus, please forward resume to: Robert Bam College Recruiting Manager . DATAPRODUCTS CO RPO RATIO N 6307 De Soto Avenue Woodland HiHs, C A 91365 Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/H Friday, October 27, 1978 State Press Page 9 DOONESBURY saa, caah, sYNC* M im es. K im s' a J UI7H 3.0. MY RHYME IN 1 WHAT? TIMES! SEARCH OF out o f I WHATI'M SAYING, TURKEYS, IS WAT THEGAMESBIGGER THANALL OFU S! FOOTBALL BELONGS TONO ONEERA! by Garry Trudeau SO WHATS WRONG WITH FOOTBALL? IF FOOTBALL TSHT A VALID WAYOF UFE, lo o m KNOW WHATIS ! / BY GUM, HES RIGHT, K im / U S VIOLENCEAM) WHAT APEYOU SMUTS, B .R Î [ RIGHT! A r u e K im . AT “ K R * WATCH IS M f * ™ FINE TIMELESS? TOGO OUT WATCH! I Remember when... you could buy a new single family Home, by Hallcraft, right in the heart of prestigious... S co ttsd a le? 20NK, TM SORRY TOBE BUR­ DENING YOUWITH MYSYNC PROBLEMS. BUT YOU'RE THE { ONLY PERSON I KNOW WHO'S : REALLY W CONTROL OF H IS TTlS TRUE,B.D.! ZONKS WHO'S LIFESTYLE TRANSCENDS REALLY CULTURAL PARAMETERS. WHAT? TFSNOSECRETRESONE WOW-YOUVE GOT ME ON THE SPOT. OU SCHOOL CHUM! EYBRTTHtNG YOU SAY IS PRETTY HARP TODISPUTE! IET RE DOES THAT MAYBE. TM MEAN YOU’LL LET ME | TAPEME CHECKEN ONf BOOK. you hurry, there now is a limited edition of completely new-design single family homes about to be offered—and if advance enthusiasm and interest means anything, they won’t be available long. So don’t put off seeing one of these lastchance, affordable Scottsdale dream homes by Hallcraft Nu-West... they’re conveniently located ... right on your way. C A SA DEL M AR FROM THE '6 0 s 78th St. & McDonald Dr. r> ,, f t Scottsdale McDonald 991-6742 i ballerai niHiiest A D IV IS IO N O F D E V E L O P M E N T C O R P O R A T IO N O F A R IZ O N A O F ALL CH AINS ~ SCHUBACH AVA ILA BLE WM “Famous for Diamonds” 3134S. Mill Ave. Smltty'sCenter u C W C L C n o Mill &Southern 966>0042 Good thru No*. 1 0 ,10T# e m rw e * ■ dr mmammm Page 10 State P re ss Friday, October 27, 1978 Collage' Dates Clubs Announcements Places Meetings TODAY The Communication A sso ­ ciation for Undergraduate Stu­ dents will meet at 2:30 p.m. at Lunt Avenue Marble Club. Upcoming events will be d is­ cussed. The Muslim Student A sso ­ ciation will hold a lecture and d iscu ssion on an earlier lec­ ture given by Prof. Joseph Van E s s at 3 p.m. in the M U Pinal Room. American Indian Crusade will hold a Halloween party and a home-cooked meal at 6 p.m. at the Lutheran Cam pus Center, 1414 S. M cA l­ lister. There is no adm ission charge. Campus Crusade for Christ will show the film “The New Charles C o lso n ” at its College Life meeting at 8 p.m. at the Tempe W om en’s Club, Apache and Mill. SATURDAY The Neo-Hellenic StudentFaculty Association will hold a scholarship benefit dance at 8 p.m. in the M U Maricopa Room. MONDAY Gay Campus Community will hold a rap group at noon in the Social Sciences Build­ ing, room 326, and a general b u sin ess meeting at 8 p.m. in the MU Gila Room. The Office of Student Services-College of Education will d isc u ss program require­ ments for graduation and certification in elementary, secondary and special educa­ tion at 1 p.m. in the Payne Education Building, room B-42. The Center for Indian Edu­ cation will hold the first M is s Indian A S U Pageant at 7 p.m. in the Education Lecture Hall. The student chapter of the Arizona Association for Chil­ dren with Learning Disabilities will host representatives from Tempe Unified School District at 7:30 p.m. in the M U Coconino Room. The Arizona Outing Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the M U Pinal Room. New student members are welcome. f in a l d a y ! Eight minority students get federal grants Minority fellowship grants have been awarded to eight ASU graduate and doctoral students under Title IX of the 1965 federal Higher Education Act Total amount received was $62,400, which is $3,900 per student per year, plus tuition and fees. The federal program is designed to recruit and retain blacks, Indians and women in studies that require specialized training. Students awarded grants were Franklin G. Gettinger and K urt O rganista, psychology; Karen M. Mason and Cheryl L. Shavers, chemistry; Jeanne S. Pierson and Anita J. Switzer, chemical engineering, and Shirley Turner and Elizabeth A. Webster, geology. O peration ID is c o m in g to ca m p u s! This is the last day of our sale of men’s traditional Siladium® rings and selected women’s 10-karat gold rings. T he ring you choose is custom-made for you. You can select many custom features. This is an unusual opportunity to get a custom-made ring for just $59.95. See our rings today. THE /IKIQ1RVED REPRESENTATIVE has a large collection of college rings. A sk to see them. Deposit required Ask about Master Charge Of Visa. ‘Savings vary sightly from style to style. /^KIUJRVED ^'-COLLEGE RMGS UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE Memorial Union Friday, October 27,1978 State Press Page 11 Tuning in Bill Sharp, assistant lab direc­ tor for the department of microbiology, surveys a spinny-headed worm with one of three electron microscopes in the department. This scan­ ning electron microscope cost $62,000 three years ago, and has magnification capabilities of up to 100,000 times. [State Press staff photo by Sam Jones] Advertising 965-7572 r 4 Un.-Mtn. Oct. 29-30 I ^ \UMSr Barbra as Brice BARBRA STREISAND OMAR SHARIF -;-cmo *c cru: F^esio g.od'iry nev, a dp1*'0n&tg oprs erv1n.g 1*ne ana gvea.serice We.now~red-for©;F:l;AU.:TA‘S' o'd.our- serving line.; v; m me At.1'.YOU CAN EATplate We; have -added .3 odditional 1 o.''chepmipec'10•.pi0tos w.h1ch are served Monday, thry Friday' Id ) 'T *o 4 p nr One of the new JuTicheon plates' includes two BUR i ’OS of.y.exur-choice ,Ai M:e.t.r;o.center location we.aIsp mstai¡ec ; SALAD ^BAR'. and ; a ■.fantastic FROZEN., PINA ; COLADA / (‘Vor c'"i,er a iso Has a a new manaqement team and. new chef, iiatur aiiy ' you,'vop always sejec.f pur famous DELUXE ALL Y'Ou IAN EAT BUFFET. .7 day s'a. week''from ' lam t‘p:9 pm, and in 1C C'r; on F-f)ddy'p*'d Saturday Only P a n c h o ’ s Offer Unique Buffet S e rv ic e WIN A FREE COLOR TV ■«I« D R A W IN G TO B E H EL D OCT. 29, 1 9 7 8 . Cagney a s Cohan HZ* B u ffe t D in n e r '•frinii"¿¡¡Mal0* i m i » 1 M Mee? N Tae.Oct. 31-MON.. NOV.-6 PHOENIX ARE* PREMERE \ Bring this coupon — Offer expiras Sun., Oct. 29,1978 Buy 1 All You Can Eat Buffet Dinner for $2.59 and get 1 FREE. Over 20 Different Varieties Plus PRe t ^ W e A lso Sorvo Am erican Food and Cocktails Serving continuously 7 days o w eek 11 o.m. to 9 p.m. Open 'til 10 p.m. Fri. A Sot. BUFFET M EXICANO Not good in conjunction with ether discounts ftaftm lN IN II« » 00 9 00 S e il« SM ’ H I N LOS ARCOS MALL SCOTTSDALE SeeIMS« »« 9« H« «lauUM«. HM tx a m :h m r m i . mmin dW METROCENTER Diagonally across the street from Soors A uto Cantor L u n ch eon S p e c ia ls Bring IN * coupon — Offer expiree Sun., Oct. 29,1978 T a k e -O u t 4 for *1 * IS : Bring this coupon — Offer expires Sun., Oct. 29,1978 • 1 Taco • 1 Enchilada wiarcw«) • 1 Flouta * 1 Burrito (Bean) or combination of any 4 plus A FREE SOFT DRINK Metro Location has Drive-Thru service. Scottsdale Location has Walk-In service. ALL FOR ONLY Ä i) *1.00 ~ *, a ® J I BUFFET M EXICANO METROCENTER LOS ARCOS MALL SCOTTSDALE Diagonally ocross the street from Soars Auto Cantor 1Off i-« at K«Rûa Tinds fts most stiomefu] expression tri +1» darkest 6ideof nfneticotx politics —--+Fiapol»'Keal p ie ttirou). TVvouahou*r nmecicak hiStoOj/ pe-nvowirg Iv j í represented -me auifrest, crue leaf instrvnerrt of social change/ An ASU student kicked in the rear door of a Tempe Police squad car after officers arrested him for driving under th e influence of alcohol and possession of marijuana, police reported Thursday. The incident happened early Wednesday, in the 400 block of W. Fifth Street. Police would not release the student’s name, but said he was driving a white Dodge Monaco. Resisting arrest charges were added when the student kicked the police car’s rear door, bending it out from the frame about one inch, officers said. Controversi) sfi IIrages -todag uboirt-the Circumstances ' Sumvnding •**« pie ttyswirB o f "Mie. late be roued 3 John ttnneag... öenHemsn, t*e So-called "magic crest* on tee riqht and out The pie. ttifwing of at Fhssidervt bu a derar" Ostar named Booth rhft n a tio n tin I?fe5. OPERATION ID IS COMING! iffortc bi) leqitiatans to enact strier p» control laws haue been thwarted bg cftrzcns advocating tie basic /American right to bear pies>udi, Mr. 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 isc o u rag e a n d /o r apprehend thieves. Watch for details! *\ Président!) anti let me remind Ljou t h a t pies' vVS V In our tlecatte/ -Hie _ U- aborted pie thrcw m g President Pond bg a crazed hi'pp* reminded us that- political pie violence is Still \teri) much g slice o f American life..______ attempt on former don* Mi people, Ipeople, Iti/I people^ Student to cream people with pie-in-the-eye service By Mark L. Barry An ASU student has resorted to pie throwing to earn extra income during these days of runaway inflation. “Need a pie throw? Contact Pie Throwers Unlimited,” said an ad that appeared in the classified section of the State Press. Behind it all was Mark A. Shufeldt, a sophomore majoring in business at ASU. Not inspired by the pie in the eye th at rocked the once anti-gay spokesperson Anita B ryant, nor the store-bought 10-inch cream that engulfed the face of ta x -c u ttin g c ru s a d e r Howard Jarvis, Shufeldt adm itted the idea came from his brother, who had started a similar agency at Washington and Lee University in Virginia when he was in school a few years ago. Offering a unique service that has since become a fad for publicity seekers and angry opponents alike, Shufeldt thinks pie throwing is a “big joke.” Not limiting the flavor of his pies to the ordinary cream, “I’m glad to throw any kind,” he said. “Maybe a banana or coconut cream.” Although his service is still untried, Shufeldt believes he has plenty of experience, from practical jokes. But he has yet to throw a pie for pay. But his service, he said, will be put to the test soon. Pledged to throw a pie in Old-time Boa rd in g H ou se Eatin' Parlor »DpiiCio j s .home cooked meais a,t reasonable prices . •Breakfast, ¡(inch and dinner every day - for every poeketbook. every taste, every size appetite Tempe f000. E Broacway. East of Rural Scottsdale 71.70 E Stetson. South of Camelback the face of a birthday boy, Shufeldt believes the element of surprise is a great factor in the success of his service and would therefore not divulge any more information on the upcoming event. Since the ad appeared on Oct. 13, Shufeldt has received several calls. “ Some people are con­ sidering my service and will let me know. A couple of guys called just to see if the service was real,” he said. He said he considers several factors when setting the price for his service. Working on the elem ent of surprise, the accessability of the victim, and the flavor of pie a customer wants, Shufeldt added that he sets his price according to the individual case. A L L S IZ E S U P TO 9 x1 2 S O FT. Up To 12x9 111 Smith Çarpe Papago Plaza, Scottsdale 946-3187 State Press Advertising 965-7572 ON A HAIRCUT 5 0 % OFF Includes Shampoo & Blow Dry SCOTCH MIST -N IG H T C L U B Featuring H aircu ts Reg. $15.00 H aircu ts (Stud e nts) Reg. $10.00 C R IM P E R S L T D 111 East University Drive, Tempe, Arizona 966-5192 O F F E R G O O D O N L Y W IT H T H IS C O U P O N . O F F E R E X T E N D E D T H R U OCT. 31, 1978 u— — "PARADISE” — — — — — — — 9 -1 Tues. - Sat Sgt Pepper's Show Twice Weekly 11:30p.m. Beggs and Aitkens ¿ L é fiJ lA S tA A Sun. - Mon. o J ¿ uZ Z 'm M * A S O C IA L G A T i Happy Days 1-6 70c Beer & Well 1 Doz. Sh rim p Cocktail t i e _______ 1137 N. Scottsdale Rd. One block S. ol McDowell 994-1651 6 é £ í/ fifa a — Page 14 State Press Friday, October 27, 1978 Peggy Burton: Peggy Burton A S U grad student wants to eliminate se x discrimination Peggy Burton received a bitter dose of the sex discrimination she campaigns against early this year when the Tempe Historical Museum demanded she resign as director after she announced her candidacy for a District 27 House of Representatives seat. “They told me they couldn’t afford to pay a man to take my place. They wouldn’t have asked a man to quit his job just because he decided to run for office,” Burton, a Democrat, said. A long-time ERA advocate, the ASU graduate student said she believes “laws must be put on the books to prevent this type of thing from happening.” “I’m sure they figure I don’t need to be paid well and given benefits because I have a husband to take care of me,” she said. “But that’s not the point. Professionals should be treated equally, regardless of sex. *♦ Burton said the Proposition 101 measure to limit state spending to 7 percent of Arizonan’s personal income “is a must. We have to start somewhere. “It’s vital that every program should have to justify its budget every year. I think everyone will feel the readjustment, but no one will get hurt. “It’s not a magic solution, but it’s a start,” she said. The wife of an ASU engineering professor, Burton said she believes students “don’t realize they are tomorrow’s leaders, and that they can make a big difference by just getting out to the polls. “I know university people have a lot on their minds besides politics, but participation in government can only help them affect the rules they’ll be living by when they get out into the world,” she said. Burton said she considers equity in funding for ASU and UA.to be a pressing issue, citing an $80 million budget for UA’s 24,000 full-time students this year, while ASU received only $63 million to support more than 29,000 full-time students. “That means we (ASU) are getting less than $2 for every $3 UA receives, and I think all of Tempe is getting short-changed because of it,” she said. Burton doesn’t consider herself a politician, and says she is good friends with her Republican op­ ponent, Rep. Juanita Harelson. “I think it proves there doesn’t have to be a back­ biting rivalry between candidates,” she said. “We get together and talk about the issues, and I think our give-and-take is what democracy is all about.” This is the first in profiles of candi District 27, writt State Press re\ M ary Gilles • i t — f f — i l ___________ I ____ _______I __ _ § # • • a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a ia a a a a a a a a a ia a a a • ¡9 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • i i f m .................................................................... .......................... *••••# **•••# **•••# •••••ft $•••» (•••*• #••••* *••••# •••M i ••M i #••••* • • • • • ÏR V • • • • • • •• •• •• •• •• •• •• j î * .•* <% ; #•••##•••* # •••# •••# •••!••••* ••••!#•••« §#•••• !••••* The V a lle /s M ost Unique Disco _____________ Sunday TEEN NIGHT 6 PM to 10 PM___________ • M onday THE ROOTS OF DISCO 7 PM to 9 PM BLUE M ONDAY WITH LEWIS BROWN 9 PM to 1 AM Free Record Albums To The First 10 People at 9 PM *«•••( *••••( ■••••( ••••#( ■•••e •••a •••a !•••* Tuesday FREE DISCO DANCE LESSONS 7 PM to 8:30 PM •••#a< Wednesday-Thursday ASU APPRECIATION NIGHT NO COVER ____________ 1/2 Price Drinks 7 PM t o 10 PM WITH ASU l.D. Friday- Saturday THE MUSIC OF MANTOR Starts at 9 PM Beat the C o ve r... Com e Before 9 PM! Ask about our GALACTIC HALLOWEEN PARTY! P ro p e r A ttire R e q u ire d •••a< 3400 South Mili Avenue Southern & Mili • Tempe Southwest Corner Danelle Plaza Dial 968-STAR ••••a( ••••ai ••••#< •V.V-:. •• •• •• •• •• • •. ss::;** Friday, October 27, 1978 State Press Page 15 rtCCJ f iM Juanita Haralson: Long-time ERA opponent running for a fourth term the first in a series o f lies o f candidates in rt 27, written Ju a n ita H a relso n If she is successful in this year’s bid for a District 27 seat in the House of Representatives, this will be Juanita Harelson’s fourth term as an Arizona congresswoman. “The first bill I’d like to propose after the election will be one to lengthen legislators’ terms to four years,” the Tempe incumbent said. “It’s pointless for us to spend thousands of dollars every two years when less than 35 percent of the people turn out to vote. “When Tempe alone has had five sets of elections already this year, people stop taking the process seriously,” she said. The GOP representative said she is concerned that “a minority of the electorate does the electing” and cited especially low student voter turnout as adding to District 27’s poor showing at the polls. Harelson said equity in funding for ASU and UA is one of her priority issues for the upcoming session. “We’ve got to find out once and for all why ASU receives less money than UA for identical programs. “For example, student services at both universities are exactly the same, yet UA gets substantially more with which to run their program than ASU does,” by ite P ress reporter A a ry Gillespie. tm m Harelson, a member of the House Appropriations Committee, said. She added another of her concerns is obtaining special funding for gifted children. However, Harelson, an avowed inflation-fighter, believes “the only way to cut inflation is to cut spending.” She actively supports the Proposition 101 measure to limit state spending to 7 percent of Arizonan's personal income, but warns it is only a “first step and nothing more. The proposition doesn’t apply to county or city budgets, which consistently run over 10 percent.” A long-time ERA opponent, Harelson said the second section of the amendment, which entrusts elimination of discrimination to federal enforcement, fuels her objections. “Arizona already has House bill 2280, passed in 1973, which protects women’s rights. “Each state needs to deal with sexual discrimination in its own way without this huge federal umbrella,” she said. “We’re all smothering in federal regulation and bureaucracy as it is.” ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ f il m ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ’★ i * F.rTTtr. wpresents G BH j T h e G rea t P u m p k in F e st TO DAY UWJOM C5JNEMA FR ID A Y - OCTOBER 27 10 a.m. to 1 a.m. OBSESSION M em orial Union Today & Sat / 7:00 & 9:30 p.m. Plus Special Midnite Show ARSENIC A N D O LD LACE M atinee Today / 1:00 & 3:00 p.m. Lunch O KLAH O M A! University Buffet 11:30 to 1:30 Pum pkin Fest Buffet Sunday / 7:00 M em orial Union ion ; BEAUTY A N D THE BEAST knd ZERO FOR C O N D U C T Dinner m M o n d ay / CLUB Lower Level — M .ll. $1.00 with A SU I.D. • $1.50 without 4:30 to 6:30 Pumpkin Fest Special Northeast Corner Mem orial Union CO M IN G ! Ryan's Daughter V. •fC ★ ★ In honor of the Great Pumpkin Fest ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ i* * * * Page 16 State Press Friday, October 27, 1978 diversions “O b se ssio n ” will screen at 7 and 9:30 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Union C ine­ ma. The cla ssic m usical “Ok­ lahoma” will be featured at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Sunday. Jean Cocteau’s “Beauty and the Beast” will be show n with “Zero tor Conduct” at 3 and 7 p.m. M onday. A d m issio n for Union C inem a film s is $1 with A S U ID, $1.50 without. “Carrie,” starring S is s y Spacek, will screen at 7 and 9 p.m. today and tomorrow in Neeb Hall, followed each night by Andy W arh ol's “Frankenstein” and “Zom bies of the Strato­ sphere,” chapter nine, at 11 p.m. Tw o by O rso n Welles, “Lady from Shanghai” at 7 p.m. and “Touch of Evil” at 8:30 p.m., will be featured Sunday. A d m issio n for Neeb film s is $1 with A S U ID, $1.50 without. The Great Pumpkin Festival, sponsored by the M U A B En ­ tertainment Committee, goes on all day today in the MU. Halloween activities, includ­ ing a pumpkin carving con­ test, are scheduled from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the M U east lawn. Live m usic will be provided by Angell and Trout F ish in g in America. Evening activities begin at 8 p.m. and include comedy, m usic, film and a costum e dance. B illy J o e ! “The Rimers of Eldritch” is currently running at 8 p.m. through Sunday and, again, Nov. 2-5 in the Lyceum Thea­ ter. Tickets for the University Theater production, priced at $3 for the public and $1 for students, are on sale at the Lyceum box office and Dia­ m on d ’s Select-A-Seat outlets. Ed Shaughnessy (drummer of Tonight Show fame) will bring h is band Energy Force to G am m age Center A S U with an 8 p.m. concert Saturday at G am m age Center. A Haunted House, sp o n ­ sored by the A S U Newman Center student council, will be open from 9 to 11 p.m. Saturday in the basement of the old church at the corner of University Drive and College continu«d pati* IB Interpreter's Theatre 'Beanfield W ar' is earthy “The Milagro Beanfield War.” Somehow the title evokes an image of flying tostados criss­ crossing battle lines. Sounds like interesting, if messy, stage business. However, it is completely irrelevant. The war in “Beanfield" concerns the dogged determ ination of one Jose Mondragon to illegally irrigate his beanfield. As performed by the In te rp re te r’s Theatre Troupe October 19-21, John Nichols’ story is an earthy (no pun intended) comedy with a social point. Jose (Jose Lam bert) is the kind of guy who like to brag, “I can grow sweet corn just by using my own spit and a little ant piss.’’ A local political move some years back had made that almost a necessity, as irrigation water had been reallocated to big-time farmers, leaving small-timers like Jose “high and much too dry.” So, one day Jose decides to irrigate his beanfield. Enter the “war,” the people of Milagro, and various others Only part of the presentation is in dialogue, necessitating the use of two narrators, Susan Hoffer and Christine Muldoon. Each possesses her own style of perkiness, which enlivens the narrative and provides a con­ tinuity th a t allows the other characters to pipe in as occasion demands. In fact, all the actors exhibit a perkiness which keeps the comedy buoyant and evident, as apparent in the constantly delighted response of the s.r.o. audience. The barest essentials of a stage setting were used: a few chairs, a table. The Alternate Space is a rather small space and the actors for the most part were positioned on the bottom row of the audience bleachers. This worked very well, actually, establishing ju st the right £ ~ distance, or ra th e r intimacy, between the “justfolks” characters and the audience. Especially notable in their parts were Lambert as Jose, Laura F. Abril as his wife Nancy, and Robert Sorenson as H erbert Goldfarb, a satiric po rtrait of a naive VISTA volunteer. -J e a n Wilson FABULOUS HALLOWEEN PARTY! TU ESDAY, O CTO BER 31 WEAR A COSTUME fr GET A FREE DRINK! Fühl - GAMES - PRIZES & Costum e Contest at Midnight all at BlueGrass Country — HELD OVER — By Popular Demand YESTE R D A Y 'S W IN E ” Nov. 1 - 4 VALLEY FEVER" is back again!_____________ BlueGrass Country 2003 N. Scottsdale Rd. (between McDowell & Oak) A S A S U R E A L J A Z Z S E R IE S IEG BERT0 I GIS MONTI Print from “Nebraska Documentary Project” currently showing at Northlight Gallery. Y////ï/////y////////y///syy//yyyyy/yy///sy///y/yy///yy//y/////y^ This Weekend At The Gallery Lounge All Tequila Drinks jP À All Rum Drinks 3 U v (Saturday Only) Halloween Costume Contest Prizes for: Most Original Obnoxious Obscene Best Overall FOR YOUR ENTERTAIN M ENT SH E P A R D S FLO CK' M o n d a y, O cto b e r 3 0 A S U M usic Recital Hall 7 :3 0 & 9 : 3 0 pm $ 3 .0 0 Tickets at al I Bill's A u d io and MU 208J located atop the arizona athletic dub 1425 W . 14th S t 894-2281 1 Friday, October 27,1078 Stata Prosa Paga 17 "Midnight Express' plugs film r i MIDNIGHT EXPRESS - Billy Hayes (with William Holler) Popular Library — $2.25 Remember those TV spots Hal Holbrook use to do: “If you get busted over there, you’re in for the hassle of your life." Billy Hayes was busted “over there;" “Midnight Express” is the hassle of his life. In th e fall of 1970, Billy Hayes, a middle-class American college student, was arrested at a Turkish airport for attempting to smuggle two kilos (about four and a half pounds) of hashish out of the country. For the next five years of existence in Turkish prisons and entanglements with the Turkish bureaucracy, he would learn how painfully naive was his first reaction: “I was an American. Everyone knew that Americans got special tr e a t­ ment.” A lright, so how do you critique a harrowing experience? As a narrator, Hayes is lucid, honest and direct. As a prose stylist he is simple-sentenced, mostly unreflective, incapable of communicating anything but the most superficial matter-of-fact impressions. As a w itness, he has seemingly remembered every pertinent item . 'A s an imaginative writer, he has failed to provide emotional glue for the succession of events — and they therefore remain just that. Perhaps it should be men­ tioned that this paperback is splashed inside and out with blurbs and raves — about the movie of the same name. There’s even a plug for the soundtrack. This is fairly indicative of the kind of narrative it is: it begs for the audio-visual interpretation of film — a rather sad quality in a book. Hayes obviously did not write the book to servfi as an all­ purpose scenario. There is something almost confessional in the book’s frankness and unadorned style. It would have been easy to have made the whole thing into a moral lesson, a warning, an expose. It is none of that. There is no anger, no cheap shots from the pulpit and no cloying sen­ tim entality. From a literary standpoint, th a t is all the defending this book can inspire. From a human-experience standpoint, it is the best en­ dorsement possible. — J e a n W ils o n LO T'S dress let selectively Blackbeard, Henry VIH and European peasantry will spend this Halloween in the Lyric Opera Theatre’s closet. According to new policy, LOT may no longer rent costumes to private individuals, but may continue renting to “civic, cultural and educational organizations for theatrical productions.” Sort Out Your Valuables! Operation ID is coming to campus! MAJORHOUyHWODPREVEW 8 PM TONIGHT at the CHRISTOWN THEATRE Melvin Simon Productions presents Rudy Durand’s The first pinball musical starring BROOKE SHIELDS as “M ISS TILT” matched against “MR. WHALE, the champion of the world in the Super Bowl of Pinball! Hear the 4-track magnetic stereo soundtrack ABC Records prom ises to be the biggest album of the year. O N E P ER FO R M A N C E ONLY Free movie poster for everyone and free drawing for a pinball machine. . MANN THcATWta_______________ OW N 1j ■C H cRm»IST unatuIWbMUM J mumm um 1M< W| w ill b e sh o w n b efo re a n d a f te r p rev iew » m Page 18 State Press Friday, October 27,1978 B o b W illiam s Diversions 'Great Chefs' film delectabledelight “Who Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe” is a rollicking romp through a paradise of pasta and pastry. It combines the finest ingredients of comedy and mystery with just a pinch of grizzly murder. After all, what could be more grizzly than to be baked in your own oven? And, worse yet, to be overdone? Jacqueline Bisset and George Segal star in the Warner Brothers film. Bisset is the internationally reknown dessert chef Natasha O'Brien. Segal is her thoroughly debauched ex-husband, fast-food king Robby Ross. He chases her around Europe trying to win back her love, while she just wants him to go back to the starch, grease and preservatives from whence he came. Robert Morley is Max, the outrageously rotund editor of Epicurean Magazine and Europe's leading food critic. Having eaten himself into a state of vulgar obesity, he has been told that without immediate dieting, he shall surely die. U4 V II \ It may be easier to lose weight than he thinks. Someone has begun to murder his favorite chefs. One by one, they are picked off in the most bizarre ways. Yes, having your head pulverized in a duck press is bizarre. contliHMd from page 16 Avenue. - A d m issio n is 25 cents. Egberto Gism ontl, Brazilian guitarist of jazz and classical influence, will be presented in concert at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. M onday in Recital Hall of the m usic building. Tickets, priced at $3, are on sale in M U 208J and all B ill’s A u d io stores. The Men’s and Women’s Choruses of A S U are sch e d ­ uled to perform at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, free to the public, in the A S U M u sic Theater. Fall Fast, an A S A S U sp o n ­ sored event during Hom e­ com ing Week, is planned from '11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Nov. 2 on the M U east la w n 'a n d the M e n ’s P E field. Featured m u­ sic ia n s will include the Freeze Band, Jack Alves, H ans Olsen and Andy Kem s. The A S U Rugby Team will give an exhibition match. Contests, food and prizes are included in the day’s activities. Lunch will be served from 11 a.m. to 1 D .m . The question is, who is killing the great chefs of Europe? Is it Natasha? She always seems to be with (and sometimes in bed) the chefs before they are killed. Is it Robby? He seems to have the motive and the opportunity in all instances. Is it Max, or as some refer to him “the fat pig?” Or could it be someone else? The film is really more comedy than mystery. The characters are a little too shallow. Natasha is too sweet; Robby too rude; and Max too fat. Yet, it’s fun to watch all their zany antics. The real star of the film is the food. There are tables of it that make Christmas at the Rockefeller’s look like an off-night at Jack-inthe-Box. Believe me, it’s not easy to choke down stale popcorn and Dr. Pepper when the people on the screen are dining on baked pigeon en croute and vintage champagne. Often, you can’t hear the movie for the drooling in the theatre. Besides having the best one-liners in years and food to die for, the movie is good entertainment and definitely preferable to a night at home cleaning the wax out of your ears. Rick Grove In the Ly­ ceum Theater produc­ tion of “The Rimers of Eldritch.” Bring your man and w e ll have Sadie cast a spell on him to serve your every wish. Ô .-00 P.M. O ct 31 ie*s Halloween Parly Costume Contest $10 3rd prize $31 2nd prize $78 1st prize Witches Brew .. . 75C Dance Contest/M onster M ash/Tombstone Twisl/Bat Boogie Happy Hour Mon. thru Fri. 4 to 7 P.M. Open ‘til 3 A.M. Fri. & Sat. It will Quack You Up F r id a y , O c t . 2 7 , 1 9 7 8 • C A R N IV A L A C T IV IT IE S 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. M U East Law n • P U M P K IN C A R V IN G C O N T E S T • G A M E S « D U N K IN G B O O T H • L IV E M U S IC W IT H A N G E L L and Trout F is h in g in Am erica • D u c k 's Breath Theatre in one perform ance o nly — 8:30 p.m. 10:00 in the A rizo na Room , $1.00 •“It C am e From O uter S p a c e " in 3-D . . . S h o w tim es: 10:15 and 11:45 p.m. in the A rizo n a Room , 50c • C o stu m e D ance with P A R A D IS E . . . 9:30 p.m. - 1:00 a.m. in the M a rico p a R o o m Friday, October 27, 1978 State Press Page 1b "Inner Secrets' Santana's feeler attempt “Inner Secrets” — Santana “Masques" — Brand X (Arista (Columbia FC-35600) PB-0829) This is, w ithout a doubt, Brand X has seen a change in Carlos Santana's most pivotal personnel from their last album album since Abraxas, the classic and a change in sound to match. montage of time, place and The new members are music of how many years and keyboardist Peter Robinson and changes ago, when the Mission drummer Chuck Burg, and since District of San Francisco was a they comprise the backbone of lifestyle, not a home. The LP the band, the resulting change hac established Santana as a in concept is inevitable. thinking guitarist, with a style The characteristic jazz-rock as eccentric as soft butter. It was, after all, his band. sound is still there, with the varied sections and shift of Santana was Santana. However, this time around, “feels" throughout a com­ the focal point is Greg Walker position. But there is more of a and his vocals. Santana makes pop sound on this album. The only an occasional appearance sections are longer, often to the from cut to cut while Walker point of redundancy, the establishes himself (or makes a material less creative, and there stab, anyway) as a fair student seems to be a loss of energy and of Motown. Only fair, but he direction in general. —Suzanne McElfresh does survive. repertoire, and the recorded there are some im portant sound is up to DG's usually high changes. Specifically, the standards. conductor seems more Karajan's early sixties DG responsive to the basic “Sacre" was criticized by many roughness of th e music, the (including the composer) as “Danse Sacrale,” for example, being too smooth and refined for proceeds with relentless force the score’s inherently barbaric and urgency. All the finesse and qualities. While the new per­ precision of the Berlin formance is not radically dif­ Philharmonic is still there, ferent from the previous one, however: the Introduction to □ W E PAY MORE FO R A LB U M S CASSETTES 3 s S ? * tra d e ! RECO RDS "Facts of Love” is his best attempt with a distinctive R&B flavor. The song is more suc­ cessful because of the careful sequencing of cuts on the album that finds “Facts of Love” sandwiched between two songs of empirical Santana signature. “Life is a Lady/ Holiday” is Santana taking his single “giantstep forward” on the album. “Wham” displays profound rhythm guitar in the best tradition of "M other’s Daughter.” Two cuts should have been left to their owners, however. Not only are “Stormy” (Classics Four) and Wilson Pickett’s “One Chain (Don’t make no Prison)” such close covers, but it can be said that Santana is just usual and unimaginative. At this point in time, it’s not surprising to find Buddy Holly represented here. “Well, All Right” is just that. It is obvious th a t Carlos Santana is at a crossroads. This album with its various styles and hooks, is a “feeler” attempt, not a feeble attempt Santana is testing new feet on new turf. — J im M u h lste in 831 S. RURAL. TEMPE (NEXT TO BO-JO'S) 966-5039 OPEN 11-7 MON.- SAT. “Le Sacre du Printem ps” — Stravinsky (DG 2530884) “Fourth Symphony in E Minor” - Tchaikovsky (DG 2530883) Conductor H erbert von Karajan continues his series of -standard repertoire remakes for Deutsche Grammophon with these two recent releases. Both discs boast vivid sonics and superb orchestral playing from the Berlin Philharmonic. The Tchaikovsky in particular seems to me to be in the same class with the M ravinsky/ Leningrad (DG) and Szell/ London (London/Decca) record­ ings, that is to say of the very first rank. It is perhaps surpris­ ing that the supreme conductor of Bruckner, Strauss, and Wagner would be such an adroit interpreter of Tchaikovsky. From the start, it is apparent that Karajan will not take a piecemeal approach to this much-maligned symphony. All the movements hang together as an artistic unity, including a stunning finale. The Berlin Philharmonic’s transparent richness and silken ensemble seem close to ideal for this f Part 2, “Le Sacrifice,” is ap­ propriately gloomy and a t­ mospheric. With DG's spacious yet clearly defined sound, this is one of the most vividly recorded “Sacre’s” yet. All in all, a most impressive disc, ranking among the preferred stereo recordings of Stravinsky’s great masterwork. —Bryan Stoneburner ^ . . . A N D SE L fT F O R L E S S B U Y 6 . G E T l F R E E ! $w -*■ A THAT G ETS YO U 7 FOR A S LITTLE AS G U A R A N T E E D T O P Q U A L IT Y II m SEM I A N N U A L P A R K IN G L O T S A L E Sat. & Sun. - Oct. 28 & 29 N o Tricks — Just Treats Tons and Tons of Audio Bargains Our Famous Low Prices Now Even Lower Save on Every JVC Item in our Huge Inventory. Beat the price increase too. Kolossal Kenwood “Save a bundle” Tape Decks - Am ps - Tuners - Receivers - Turntables “Best Deals for Wheels” Car Starao Top Nama Brands Custom A M / FM in-dash Tape Units from B o b H ope Save 1 0 -5 0 % on C a r Spe ake rs too "Blank Recording Tape" -M A X E L L-FU G I-SC O T C H -BA SF-T D K -A M PEX- A S U H O M E C O M I N G ’7 8 If y o u ’re not buying yo ur tape at the Superm art . . . Y o u ’re probably paying too m uch. Friday, November 3, 8 p.m. with Patrician Price Speakers - Speakers • Speakers T in Ja ck R a t t t r m O rch e stra C on ducted by O eeffrey Clarkson -HomeInf inity-Ultralinear B*|.C - Venturi -AmpexStudio Lab Series and Special Guest P a u l \A f illia m s -AutomotiveJensen - Pioneer Motorola - Roadstar -etc. - * Tickets «10.00, *8.00. «8.00 ¡fc Student tickets *7.00 All Seats Reserved 4c A.5.U. Activity Center V A LU A BLE C O UPO N Use this coupon just like money. worth S5.00 on purchase s of $50-$150 $10.00 on purchase s of $ 150 -130 0 $ 15.00 on purchase s over $300. ♦ Tickets Available at 4c Gamaase Bai Office Lim it one co up on per custom er. G o o d only Oct. 28-29,1978 4c D i a m o n d s S e l e c t - A - S e a t L o c a t io n s The Safe A Sound Place to Save L I C T P R U P U U E t) B Y C H U C K ED DY & AS S O CIA TE S PEV SENTE U UY A S A S U & THE A LU M N I A S S O CIA I HIN J Save on Accessories too Record and Tape Cleaners Demagnetiziers Patch Cables Tape Storage Racks and Cases 20 FOOT H E A D P H O N E E XT EN SIO N C A B L E $6.95 Value *2» "Bargain Hunters Delight" If you don't m ind a few nicka and scratches or a D isp lay or D em o M o d a l - odd s/end s, have w a got a deal for you) S o m e “a s Is " — but m o st with warranty, too. S P E A K E R S - TU RN TABLES - A M P S - TU N ERS R E C E IV E R S - T A P E D E C K S • C A R S T E R E O S . LAYAWAY ANO HNANONO AVAAAAU . 4 0 1 # N. 33rd Ave. B 8 8 374-3*36 M V W . INDIAN SCHOOL AB. A N S **« (MAYMN PLAZA WIST S U M M * M | tmtamms-M i m i u l * m f a ut m a u a n t s b i i i m m u m i a Page 20 State Press Friday, October 27, 1978 Jim E/s/eger A SU faces different W ashington ASU is going back to Washington. There’s no stut­ tering here, back to the timber land. It will be a little different this time. They play Washington, delete the State, in Seattle not Spokane, and this time they’re going to play, not watch. But Washington is not W ashington State, no sir. They’re tougher, faster, bigger, meaner and hungrier. Of course, ASU October vintage is not ASU September vintage. It was September and the Sun Devils went to Washington undefeated, they came back missing a tail. This is October, and the road to ruin has been paved with glitter, ranking and wins. The memory of September and the circus performance in the 51-26 loss has waned some, but flashbacks still occur oc­ casionally. Both ASU and Washington are in a must-win situation, an adage th a t will get its wear before the season ends for the Devils. Washington is finding out that it’s harder to defend a Rose Bowl championship than to win one. Thus far, the Huskies have done a grim-reaper job of it. They' opened with a nationally televised loss to UCLA, 10-7, on an ice-like field in the rain in Seattle. Since then, they have slipped to a 4-3 record and 3-1 in the conference. Last week against Oregon they unveiled, or rather unleashed, a new-look offense, and his name is Toussaint Tyler. Tyler got his first start ever against the Beavers and made good with 152 yards on 17 carries. The insertion of the sophomore was prompted by the loss of tight-end Scott Green­ wood. “We had to make some ad­ justm ents for the loss of Greenwood,” Coach Don James explained after the 20-14 win. What Jam es did was split replacement tight-end Ron Wold out to help block for outside th reat Joe Steele, and when Oregon adjusted to the realignment Tyler went up the middle with regular success. You don’t get to the Rose Bowl without imagination. Washington had to have imagination along with a sense of humor, with three fumbles and two interceptions in the game. “We played upset football but got away with it,” quipped James. A couple of Bromos and a warm bath later, all was settled in the Washington camp. So if Tyler is for real, it being difficult to tell with a name like Toussaint, and Joe Steele continues to run roughshod over defenses, ASU is in for a headache in a long line of migraines. Steele has 778 yards in 169 carries this season, and is second to Charles White of USC in rushing in the conference. He picked up 126 yards on 21 carries against Oregon despite the defensive overshift, which is a good indication of his ability. The only team to keep him in check so far this season was Alabama, holding him to 82 yards on 30 carries. The ASU rushing defense is not without its laurels though, being ranked first in the Pac-10. Washington had a new a r­ tificial turf installed at Husky Stadium this season, and despite its doubling as an ice-skating rink during the week, it could be ASU’s extra man on defense. Oregon found the going a bit slow, slip-sliding its way to 161 yards on 58 carries. Washington looks relatively healthy for the game, with Greenwood being the only key injury. Cornerback Lance Theoudele and Guard Curt Marsh missed the Oregon game because of sprained ankles, but are expected to play Saturday. Defensively, the Huskies are led by All-America linebacker Michael Jackson. The defensive secondary, which was highly touted before the season started with three seniors back, has turned into somewhat of an Edsel. They aren’t pretty to watch but they get the job done. Jeff Toews (6 foot, 252) and Roger Westlund (6 foot 4, 255) are the duct cleaners for Steele. A1 Harris and Bob Kohrs will have the honors of keeping W ashington’s running game under control, as the Huskies like the outside game more than the Sam “Bam” Cunningham style of over the top. Washington has the speedy receivers and the power running backs, but the quarterback is a devout skeptic. Tom Porras is a 47 percent passer and a 1.2 yards-per-carry rusher who when in doubt gives the ball to Steele. So much, in fact, that Steele is closing in on the Washington record for most carries in a career of 202 set by Ron Towland in 1976. ASU stopped White in the USC game, so all things being unequal, there is no reason they should crumble under the Steele curtain, except for “ washphobia,” (a fear of schools with Washington in the name). If it rains and Steele finds out about suction cups, defensive coordinator Larry Kentera may find out about defending his unit. Kentera feels ASU’s defensive effort against USC has been extrem ely undermined. “The difference in the USC game was emotion,” he said. “We have the ability, we just have to keep the motivation.” He feels the line did as good a job as a team could do against the Trojans, and it is a little presumptuous to put 150 per­ cent of the blame for USC’s ineptness on a makeshift center and untimely fumbles. “There’s no doubt Steele is a th re a t,” K entera said. “Washington does a lot of things similar to USC and are super tough to play in Washington, but if we play with emotion and execute properly we should be okay.” With quarterback Mark Malone finding out what the game is all about, ASU’s offense could hit the scoreboard up for several touchdowns. But in Seattle, quite often Mr. Thundercloud has a big say in whether a team is effective or reduced to jelly-legged mush balls. Washington admittedly was looking a little past Oregon to the ASU game. “When Washington State put it to them (ASU) we sort of counted them out,” Tyler said after the Oregon game. “But after the USC game, they bounced back into the picture and we knew we were going to have a tough game on our hands. You try not to think ahead but we’re all human and we can read.” The Oregon game wasn't as close as th e 20-14 score in­ dicates, with the Beavers getting a touchdown with 18 seconds left. “For us to win, we’re going to have to put out the same effort we did against USC," Kentera said. “Washington is in a corner, as we are, and has to win to stay alive.” SOUPS LSA T? Join thousands of law school applicants nationwide in Amity’s LSAT Review Seminars C A LL TOLL-FREE FOR DETAILS AND LOCAL SCHEDULE INFORMATION: 800-243-4767 Ext.7B1 S A N D W IC H E S •The Salad Jungle 208 WEST SOUTHERN 966-5589 FA M O U S SA LADS HOURS: M o n d a y - T h ursday 11 to 8:30 p .m . Friday -11 to 9 p.m. Saturday - N o o n till 7 p.m. COCKTAIL HOUR M o n d a y to Friday 5 to 7 p.m. B R IN G A F R IE N D Thursday, Friday & Saturday CARRIE 7 and 9 p.m. Friday & Saturday . . . A n d y W arhol's FRANKENSTEIN - X-rated Sunday - Tw o film s by O rson W elles LA D Y FR O M SH AN G H AI T O U C H O F E V IL am p u s A m b a ssa d o rs presents ... Pam Mark Hall Contemporary Gospel Singer In Concert NEW LOCATION: 409 S. M il Ave. Tempe, 966-0700 “Female gospel artist of the year.” 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 Sound TAKING THE A S A S U R eal Film N e e b Hall Film S e r ie s p r e se n ts BEFO R E YOU BUY C H EC K OUR PRICES. A lso 338 E. Camelback, Phoenix More is at stake in the game than a follow-up to the USC win for the Sun Devils. They have to keep their Pac-10 championship hopes alive, along with keeping their recruiting position in first class shape with a nationally televised win. - Record World Magazine F r id a y , O c t o b e r 2 7 • 8 p .m . United M ethodist Church On Campus - Comer of Forest & University T ic k e ts *2.50 Available at: Quo Vadis Bookstore Carpenter Shop On the mall 8 Friday, October 27, 1978 State Press Page 21 Coach, teacher and student is also Cowboy-of-the-Month Robert Petrie Referee gives official advice It would be a cold day in October before a referee would start blasting his counterparts for incompetency. So with the temperature in Tempe taking a dip, Ed Trexler — a 30-year-old veteran of officiating tennis and four other sports — took an “official” time out to analyze the current controversies af­ fecting officials. ‘The No. 1 problem is a lot of officials are officiating sports they never played,” Trexler said. “Football referees should have played football, and basketball referees should have played basketball. It gives them a greater sense of savvy and appreciation towards the sport than someone who just read the rule book. “Also, there’s no true training period for officials to work their way up, and no true method of selecting officials,” Trexler added. “It's basically the old American game of ‘who do you know’ and it's catching up with the world of officiating.” That second problem is one Trexler hopes to alleviate when he conducts a three-day workshop in tennis officiating — World Team Tennis style — Jan. 12-14, 1979, at ASU. Trexler, who officiates WIT matches and Big Sky Conference football, basketball, baseball and softball, says his workshop is a first at a major university. “The WTT office told me that to their knowledge, no one else ever has done this before. So it’s sort of unique," Trexler said. “I think there’s a need to make people more efficient in tennis officiating, especially the new WTT style. It involves a lot of oncourt practice and several hours a day of officiating,” Trexler said. Trexler’s workshop — officially dubbed PED 498 — is worth one hour of credit, and the fee is $30. It’s open to both students and the public. The WTT style, developed with the advent of the WTT in 1975, involves five moving officials, compared to 13 stationary ones in the conventional style of officiating. “Officials are being respected more and more by the players, because they’re part of the game,” Trexler said. “The old style is medieval. The WTT style has given tennis a shot in the arm.” A WTT official from the circuit’s inception, Trexler was one of five officials who handled the 1978 WTT All-Star game in Las Vegas. While in Glitter Gulch, Trexler made a few new friends and ran into a couple of old ones. “I met Cheryl Tiegs, -and let me say this — she loves me,” Trexler said. “I’ll always remember the super hug she gave me. “Oh yeah, Ilie Nastase was there too. I guess he loves me also,” he added. “If he loves anybody, he loves me.” Isn’t “Nasty” really nasty? “Not really,” Trexler said. “When he gets mad and starts to throw tantrums and intimidate officials, he’s really doing two or three things. He intimidates officials, but what he’s really doing is in­ timidating his opponents. And the crowd loves him, he entertains the group.” But the kind of entertainment Nastase provides isn’t fit for virgin ears. Or virgin eyes. baseball game Saturday | Arizona State’s baseball team will participate in its first fall scrimmage game this Saturday, against former WAC foe Utah, at 3 p.m. in Packard Stadium. Admission is free. The scrimmage will be the first public showing for the 1979 Sun Devi] squad. In other baseball news, the 1979 Devils’ Angels have been selected. Six of the 15 girls selected are returning veterans from the 1978 squad. . New for 1979 are Kathy Chudy, Susan Kline, Sally McCall, Suzi Moore, Lonnie Reese, Cindy Smith, Kris Smith, Valerie Thompson 'and Stacy Webb. Returnees are Cathi Field. Michele Gron, Julie Hazlett, Susan Thomas, Lori Van Zee and Vicki Winkler. Joe Sousa, longtime rodeo veteran in California and Arizona, has been selected the ASU Rodeo Club’s Cowboy of the Month. Sousa joined the Rodeo Club shortly after arriving at ASU last fall to finish his requirements for a degree in education. Besides his studies and involvement in the Rodeo Club, Sousa also is a football coach and an English teacher at Agua Fria High School. Previously a bronco buster, Sousa now makes his mark in calf roping for the Rodeo Club, because of the many injuries he had incurred busting broncs. “Bareback is the most physically demanding event in rodeo,” he said. Calf roping has a lower risk of injury, he added. Sousa attributes his calf roping ability to his horse L.T., which is the only horse he’s had since he started roping. But calf roping isn’t as easy or as safe as Sousa maintains. While practicing in the spring, L.T. flipped him, and Sousa suffered a broken leg which sidelined him for the rest of the season. Born in Tucson, Sousa started his rodeo career at 17, riding both broncos and bulls. After competing in amateur rodeos briefly, he joined the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association in 1961, and rode under that affiliation until 1970. Later he competed in the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association. While attending Gavilan Junior College in California, Sousa was twice selected an All-Conference fullback on Gavilan’s football teams. He also attended San Jose State and Montana State. State Press Advertising 965-7572 Shhh! TEMPE’S BEST— KEPT SECRET! 968-6193 OCEAN FRESH JU M BO SHRIMP UNIVERSITY A S H |9th & A SH AND M A P L E 9th RED SNAPPER All combinations of Crab, Shrimp, and Snapper LU N CH EO N A N D D IN N ER PO RTIO N S Indoor and Outdoor Dining in the Atmosphere of an Old Tempe Home and Flourishing Garden Setting. 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Forest Page 22 State Press Friday, October 27, 1978 A m iniscule step for som e; a giantjum p for M arshall By Walter Berry There must be easier ways to kill yourself. But for ASU freshman Eric Marshall, skateboard high jumping is a way of life. “Outside of a few scratches and scapes, I’ve never gotten hurt, luckily,” said the 18-yearold from Mt. Laural, N.J., with a smile. “I don't have any fractures or scars yet. I'd hate to get hurt. I have a low threshold for pain, I guess. “But I have seen people break bones, rip knees off and bloody things like that. I've seen people whose whole knee was just one great big scar. Of course, they’ve been riding a lot longer than I have.” Most participants have. Marshall started skateboarding only 26 months ago. His career has taken off since then. “I was never really into the sport at all until about two years and two months ago. I saw some guy — one of my friends — looking at a skateboarding magazine and I asked him to let me look at it. The next thing I knew, I was trying to copy what I. had seen,” said Marshall. “I had one of those old boards with clay wheels in my garage. I dragged it out, and rode it around for a while.” He got hooked. “From then on, it seemed like I was practicing all the time. I used to practice on it every day for two or three hours on the basketball courts of my high school under streetlights. I didn't have anything else to do,” Marshall said. “Everything I know, I taught myself. I’d see something I wanted to learn and I kept practicing until I could do it. No one else in my neigh­ borhood was into it like I was. I just kept practicing and getting better.” By April 1977, Marshall felt he had developed enough ex­ pertise to enter his first official skateboarding contest in Virginia (then his home state). He won the high jumping competition with ease. Since then, Marshall has copped the first place trophy in a number of East Coast championships, as well as his latest coup — the free style title in last Saturday's Arizona State Championships. In all, he hardly broke a sweat. “It was much easier than back East. Most of the people are into park riding here, not free style,” said Marshall. “They ride pools or pipes. I’m trying to get into that now because that’s where the big teams are nowadays — the sponsors. But most people aren't into what I do best, either.” High jumping, Marshall maintains, is a highly defined art. “It can be dangerous if you don’t do it right. It’s really not that hard if you take it in small steps. My roommate (Bill Knoop from Dearborn, Mich.) tried to high jump right away and almost broke his face,” Marshall * 3* LET'S W ORK TOGETHER TO PROTECT THE UNBORN AN D THE NEWBORN dp MARCH OF DIMES THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER LEGAL SERVICES PETER WfflTMER Attorney at Law 1801 S. Jen Tilly Ln., Suite A2 Tempe, Arizona 85281 968-2485 Simple Uncontested Divorce *200°° Plus Costs Call For Appointment "THE EYEWEAR EXPERTS” BUDGET O P T IC A L •Soft Contact L e n s $165.00 • Hard Contact L e n s $ 90.00 •G enerous Student D isco unt 8 3 2 -8 0 0 0 Hours 9 To 5 Mon. - Sat. THE Silhouetted against the sky, A SU freshman Eric Marshall does his thing — high jumping with a skateboard. The 18-year-old architecture major from Mt. Laural, N.J., won the Arizona State Championships last Saturday in the free style category, but has his sights set on “higher" achievements. [State Press staff photo by Sam Jones] remembered. “The problem is that most people push back with the feet when they try to jump off the board. That’s wrong. You have to jump straight up, without pushing the board either way. If you do. . .” You’ve just lost your two front teeth. With caution in mind, Mar­ shall has his technique down to a science. “I have two microphone stands set up five feet apart and I rest a pole atop of it. The pole is painted in contrasting colors so I can see it on my approach,” the blond architecture major said. “I also calibrated the pole so I can set it at any height I want. “What most beginners should do is sta rt with the pole set really low — maybe an inch off the top of the board. That way you can build up your confidence as you build up your height. The hardest part of it all is learning how to jump off the skateboard, go straight up and land back on the board while in motion. “In competition, you have to land on the board and ride for at least two meters before either of your feet can touch the ground again. It shows you have control after your jump instead of falling immediately off.” Despite his relative novice status, Marshall is well aware of the “ ups and downs” his oc­ cupation includes. But since one December 1977 demonstration COUPON CLIPPER SALE! * ■* Southw est SJraJing Com pany * * 707 S. Forest Drive, Tempe * * ¥ * * 2 ° ° OF ANY 14k CHARM * (Expires Nov. 15, 1976) ¥ * MON.-FRI. 10-5 NICE PEOPLE ¥ * 967-5777 GREAT PRICES ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ¥ run at a New Jersey high school, his “highs” have outdistanced the “lows.” “I was out practicing early that morning with some other skaters and I jumped five feet, two inches. The world record is five feet,” Marshall said matterof-factly. “When my club manager came that afternoon, I told him what happened. He didn't believe me. “He said ‘Let’s see if you can do it in the demonstration.’ My manager went and told the crowd what I had claimed Td done and to watch and see if I could do it again. I did it (5’, 2”) on the second try.” Ever since then, Marshall has “run the gauntlet” daily on his wheels of polyurethane, preparing for future tests and contests. He has had his share of setbacks, however. “The high jump board is made of laminated wood and the glue 4210 E. Main St.. Mesa (In Village Center) Vi Block W est of Sm itty's Behind Dairy Queen BOB M EIGHAN BAND AS BACK AGAIN A T THL W ue #oat $ub ON OUR OUTDOOR PATIO $ 2 0 0 a d m is s io n Show is 9 -1 Thursday, Friday and Saturday plue <®oat T3ub 910 N. Hayden Rd., Tempe 966-4880 continued page 2 6 PORTER'S BOOT CORRAL YOU'LL GET A AT THE BEST PRICES IN THE VALLEY!!! 3944 N. BROWN - SCOTTSDALE g g Friday, October 27, 1978 State Press Page 23 "BACK WHEN IWAS IN SCHOOL,MY BASEBALLCOACHTOLD MEHUT SOMEDAY THERED BEA LESS FILLING BEER. HE ALSO TOLD ME TOTRYOUT FORGIB CLUB” M arv Throneberry Baseball Legend c 1978 Miller Brewing C o . Milwaukee Wis Page 24 State P re ss Friday, October 27, 1978 Rio Zaro Staffers go with W ashington W iz a rd o f O d d s C O LLE G E FO OTBALL W EEK No. 8: LO SER W IN N ER U.C.L.A. Saturday. Oct. 28th: A R IZ O N A ST A T E ALABAM A O KLAHO M A P E N N ST A T E NOTRE DAM E SO U TH C A R O L IN A SO. C A L IF O R N IA BAYLOR AUBURN NO. C A R O L IN A ST. NEBRASKA O H IO ST A T E M IC H IG A N M IC H IG A N ST A T E ARKAN SAS TEXAS TEXAS A & M STANFO RD W A S H IN G T O N ST. P IT T SB U R G H M IS S O U R I M ARYLAND M ASSA CH U SETTS RUTGERS M IS S IS S IP P I NO. T E X A S ST A T E P U RD U E KA N SA S IN D IA N A G E O R G IA TECH FL O R ID A ST A T E G E O R G IA M O N T A N A ST A T E YALE HARVARD M IA M I (O) UTAH ST A T E W Y O M IN G H O LY C R O S S N E W M E X IC O D A RT M O U TH T U LSA M IS S. ST A T E NFL PRO P IC K S Sunday, Oct. 29th: C H IC A G O G R E E N BA Y N E W Y O R K G IA N T S P H IL A D E L P H IA W A S H IN G T O N M IA M I CLEVELAND H O U STO N DENVER PIT T SBU R G H N EW E N G L A N D O AKLAND Monday, Oct. 30th: LO S A N G E L E S A R IZ O N A 14 4 W A S H IN G T O N 24 V IR G IN IA T ECH 48 K A N S A S ST A T E W E S T V IR G IN IA 23 13 M IA M I (F) 7 •NORTH C A R O L IN A 18 C A L IF O R N IA T E X A S C H R IS T IA N 24 17 W AKE FO REST 4 •C L E M SO N O K L A H O M A S T A T E 24 NO RTH W ESTERN 45 25 M IN N E S O T A 17 W IS C O N S IN 6 •HO USTON 10 SO . M E T H O D IST 18 R IC E 27 O R E G O N STA TE 14 O REGON 9 •NAVY 21 CO LO RADO 24 DUKE 21 C O N N E C T IC U T 9 •C O LU M B IA 15 V A N D E R B IL T 24 L O U IS IA N A TECH 18 IO W A 5 •IOW A S T A T E 8 ILLIN O IS 14 FL O R ID A 7 *SO . M IS S IS S IP P I 6 KENTUCKY 13 N O R T H E R N ARIZ. 10 PEN N 7 •P RIN C ET O N 15 TO LED O SAN JO SE STATE 15 8 •C O LO R A D O S T A T E 13 BROW N 13 UTEP (EL P A SO ) 8 • C O R N ELL 27 DRAKE 6 •T EN N ESSEE DETRO IT T A M P A BA Y •NEW O R L E A N S ST. LO U IS S A N F R A N C IS C O B A L T IM O R E BUFFALO •C IN CIN N ATI SE A T T L E K A N S A S CITY •N EW Y O R K JE T S S A N D IEG O AT LA N T A * P ossib le Upset COMM ENT SPREA D ASU vs. UW . . . Berry 21-17 UW (5-1); Moore 24-20 UW (4-2); Hendrix 24-21 ASU (4-2); Glassner 24-10 UW (3-3); Seibert 21-13 ASU (3-3); Muhlstein 24-17 UW (5-1); Petrie 2116 ASU (3-3); Barfield 24-21 UW; Brud 24-17 UW; Trepel 2117 ASU; Coulombe 21-18 ASU; Grzesiek 34-17 UW; Clements 24-20 ASU; Elston 24-10 UW. 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D R U B W IL D C A T S , 52-7 G O P H E R S P A Y F O R 7 7 S H U T O U T ! !!! 35-10 S P A R T A N S D O U B L E U P O N B A D G E R S , 34-17 C O U L D B E H A L L O W E E N S U R P R IS E ! !! 27-21 T H E R E IS N E V E R A S U R E T H IN G , 31-21 H U R T O R NO T, A G G IE S W IN , 31-13 C A R D IN A L S R O M P O V E R B E A V E R S , 37-10 C O U G A R S - T H O M P S O N S IN K D U C K S , 28-14 ID E A L S P O T F O R U N B E A T E N M ID D IE S , 17-8 B U F F S O V E R R A T E D ; L O S E 38-17 T E R P S B L IS T E R H O S T D E V IL S , 31-7 N E W E N G L A N D S H O O T O U T TO H O S T , 28-7 L IO N S IM P R O V E D ; L O O K F O R U P S E T , 23-14 R E B E L S S L A P D O W N H O ST , 28-13 E A G L E S D E S T R O Y R IV A L , 37-13 B O IL E R M A K E R S R E T A IN B IG 10 L E A D , 28-10 H U R R IC A N E C O U L D B L O W IL L W IN D , 27-22 H O O S IE R S C A P T U R E 28-20 C O N T E S T R A M B L IN W R E C K E N G IN E E R S 27-13 W IN S E M I N O L E S G E T B Y T O U G H H O ST , 27-20 B U L L D O G S E K E O U T 27-21 SEC V IC T O R Y A X E R S G E T C H O P P E D D O W N , 41-28 E LI G R A B 20-10 IV Y L E A G U E G A M E T IG E R S D R O P 21-14 D E C IS IO N R E D S K IN S A M B U S H H O ST , 28-13 A G G IE S T R O U N C E V IS IT O R S , 29-14 B A T T L E O F L O S E R S T O P O K E S , 24-16 F R E IG H T T R A IN B O U N D T O S T O P , 27-14 Lutheran Cam pus M inistry — W O R S H IP -1 0 a.m. — at G ood Shepherd Church 1430 S. 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PIZZA RESTAURANTS Scottsdale Rd. ft Mcfcellips 8:00 p.m. to midnight Memorial Union Cochise Room 25c it taller than the Ghost Sponsored by: M U A B R E C R E A T IO N C O M M IT T E E (In the Alpha Sato -T hrifty Plaza) 947-4396 Hours: Sun. Ihm Thur». 11 a.m. -12 Midnight Friday and Sat. 11 a.m. - 2 a.m. COUPON E XPIRES N O VEM BER 6,1978 COUPON! . Friday, October 27, 1978 State Press Page 25 Player keeps go in g after g u n m ishap By John Maino Curtis Aaron was in the out of place. Everybody he said. “They got it back in shoulder and was looking camp and then 1 thought I best shape of his life in was watching me and place and I kept playing forward to a solid season wouldn’t be able to hit August 1977, He weighed wondering who I was,” he with it, but I couldn’t strike with the Sun Devils. Not so. again because of the way “On the first day of that shoulder felt.” 220 pounds, and worked out said. “Then some of the a blow.” He adds, “I’m not back to Needless to say, a line­ hitting at Camp Tontozona, three times a day in guys I played against in preparation for his first high school recognized me." backer who can’t hit is like I was in a one-on-one drill my old way of hitting, but He adds, “Then the word a fish who can’t swim — in and I h u rt my shoulder I’m on the right track. I’m trial at Camp Tontozona, starting to get more again,” he said. got out th a t I was the trouble. ASU’s football training aggressive and I’ve just got At th at point, Aaron ‘gunshot victim.’ ” A fter spring ball, he camp. Although he was count­ went under the surgeon’s couldn’t be blamed if his to keep going. Then, a .38-caliber bullet “I was down on myself at slug felled th e Fontana ing on spring practice to be knife again, this time to attitude was as Junior the beginning of this year, Samples would say, “lower his vehicle to redeem repair the shoulder. Then High School All-America but I’m hanging in there. tight-end nearly p e r­ himself, he met another the monotonous effort of than a bullfrog’s belly.” “My whole perspective All I ’m asking for is a setback. building himself up started manently. was destroyed,” he said. “I chance, and as long as I’ve “I was playing linebacker all over again. Eight days after the was working my butt off got a chance, I think I’ll Aaron worked hard all in a spring scrimmage when shooting, he weighed 180 pounds and needed help I separated my shoulder,” summer to strengthen the those first th ree days in play.” walking. He was in the worst shape of his life. His chances for playing football at ASU were cloudy, at best. For Aaron, now a sophomore offensive guard for the Sun Devils, the experience flashbacks like a nightmare. “I was working at a liquor store in California about two weeks before I was to report to ASU,” he recalled. “The other guy that worked in the store with me was holding the gun th a t we kept in the store for protection.” “ He grabbed me from behind, ju st goofing around, and when I pulled away from him th e gun went off at point-blank range, hit me in the ab­ domen and lodged about an inch from my spine,” he said. “After being in the hospital for eight days, I lost 40 pounds, but luckily I had been in g reat shape before the accident. That probably saved my life,” he said. Lying flat on one’s back in a hospital bed isn’t the best way to get prepared for a Frank Kush preseason camp. Aaron knew that for him, football was over for for your dog, give it expert train­ You could be the owner of one awhile. ing, and enter it in races. As owner, of three fully-qualified-to-race grey­ “When I was in the hounds to be given away at Phoenix you will receive the standard 35% hospital, I was totally of w hatever purse money your dog Greyhound P ark—one each on the bummed out,” he said. “But wins throughout its entire racing nights of October 27,28 and 29. the coaches were great, career. Your nam e will appear in the No purchase is necessary. Free they sent me a card and official racing program and official told me to just make it out tickets on the drawing will be given records as the owner. here when I could, and that away at Phoenix Greyhound Park they still wanted me.” Racing W ednesday through Sunday every racing night through October Although physically the at 8 p.m. Admission 75c, Clubhouse 29. Age 18 and older only. worst was over when he $1.50. Glass-enclosed, air-conditioned If you are a winner, your own reported to school, the grandstand and Clubhouse. Reserva­ young greyhound racing dog will be mental hardships lingered. tions: 273-7181. assigned to a licensed, professional “I came out here and racing kennel. T he kennel will care watched all the practices, Clip this coupon now! but I just felt completely THIS WEEKEND WIN TOUR OWN RACING GREYHOUND. GREECE FRENCH R IV IER A 3 W EEKS •Scheduled roundtrip TWA jet transportation from New York •All hotels, first class •All transfers •All sightseeing by air conditioned coach •Two meals daily (Breakfast in France) $1449 DEPARTURE JUNE S, 197« R a M m llo m until Jan. 31- a b j 'f i n n presented by ¿ 0 4 - 7 / W Exacwtive Traval Avo. Service Inc. N71 •MIS (Lobby-Executive Tower«) Fill in this stub and deposit at Phoenix Greyhound Park. ASU Name Address City State Phone Win your own raring greyhound at Phoenix Grey­ hound Park-October 27,28 or 29,1978. Age 18 and older only. —_ m r p h o c n ix g r e y h o u n d p a r k Fast Washington at 40th Street Funks’ fireyh i kind Racing Circuit. Inc. Page 26 State P ress Friday, October 27, 1978 M ore about The 'ups' and 'dow ns' o f a skateboarder Scholarship Benefit Fund Dinner/Dance of the Entries must be turned in to the State Press by 3 p.m. Friday in Stauffer Hall. Only one entry per person will be accepted. The top three entries will be listed in Tuesday’s paper. The A SU game will be used as a tie breaker, so just predict the score. To predict a tie, place an X in both boxes. continued from page 22 is separated in the tail. One night when 1 was practicing some jumps, the tail split a bit on me. I have to call home and order some more now. You can't buy one. They don’t make those kind of boards for general sale. There’s not much of a demand for them, I guess,” said Mar­ shall, who used his skateboarding skills to land the job as ASU’s basketball mascot this season. “The boards I use are bigger than the average ones you see. If I would go out and buy one it would cost me over 100 bucks. But they're given to me.”. Marshall isn’t alone in the elite class, he explained. Most serious skateboarders involve themselves in unions, clubs and brotherhoods of sorts. “The better ones will supply you with all the necessary materials you need. Some will even pay your entry fees for the contests,” he said. “It's not a unique thing, though. Anybody can sponsor someone or put a team together. I've even seen bicycle stores have a team that made their skateboarders wear T-shirts th a t advertised the store. Sort of free publicity.” Although he is presently competing unattached, Marshall has his sights set on procuring a portfolio full of publicity in the not-so-distant future. Like late this month. “There’s a big contest coming up over Thanksgiving weekend in Carson, Calif. It’s a major meet and I want to be there. I think the prize money is going to be somewhere in the vicinity of $25,000 for the top three finishers,” he said with definite dollar signs in his eyes. “I met one of the organizers last weekend and I asked him some questions about how much was involved. “He watched me win and said I should come over, that I might have a chance to do well there. There are only three other guys I know of that can jump over five feet and they’ll probably be there, too. I have no idea how I’ll do or how they'll do, but I know one thing. They must have improved, ’cause I know I have. Still, should Marshall meet defeat, it won't be a crushing blow to his hopes. His “ultimate goal” is to win the championship . . . of the world. "T hat's t he big one, in February in Long Beach, Calif. You HAVE to go to that one if you want to be anyone in skateboarding,” he said. “The prize money is going to be $35,000 maybe — $10,000 more than last year. “I’m going to be ready. Believe me. I plan to practice at least two hours a day up until then, maybe even more. There’s going to be participants there from Japan, Africa, South America. The CBS Sports Spectacular is going to be there. . .And so am I.” The kid reeks of confidence. 1ST ANNUAL Pick 'em ARll A SU Neo-Hellenic Student - Faculty Association Scholarship given by . Predict the score. vs. Washington TRI-CITIES AHEPA FAMILY V ISIT O R S □ UA □ NAU □ Arkansas □ Pittsburgh □ Miami (Fla.) □ California □ Southern Methodist □ Clemson □ Rutgers □ Illinois □ Miami (O.) □ Drake □ North Carolina □ South Dakota □ Delaware □ Tenn.-Chattanooga □ Kutztown State □ Dubuque □ Chicago □ Rose-Hulman HO M E □ UCLA □ Montana State □ Houston □ Navy □ Notre Dame □ USC □ Texas □ N. Carolina State □ Columbia □ Indiana □ Toledo □ Tulsa □ South Carolina □ North Dakota □ The Citadel □ McNeese State □ West Chester State □ Luther □ Grinnell □ Centre October 28,1978 7 p.m. to 1a.m. Maricopa Ballroom Arizona State University - Memorial Union Donation — $7.50 (students $4.50) When is the DAYBREAK Meets every Tuesday EVEN IN G at 7:30 p.m. in the Santa Cruz Room at the M.U. Building. First prize will be any three single L P s or tapes (mfg. list $7.98) from Tower Records. Second prize is a certificate for $20 from Crimpers Ltd., redeemable on any services. Third prize is dinner for two at Chimi’s Mexican Food. Impressive, eh? GIVE D A Y B R EA K A TRY TU ESDAY « Name Phone DR. W.G. AMES w m vm s \ OPTOMETRIST Soft Contact Lenses ................... $169.95 Eye Exam for Contact Lenses ....... $ 25.00 Soft Contact Lenses for Astigmatism A nnouncements AXFORD, DR. ROGER, vote for Maricopa Community College Board, November 7. Student /Faculty interests, community ser­ vice. 11/7 FA SH IO N EYEW EAR NEW ADDRESS - 2916 N. 68th St. For information or appointment call M onday through Saturday =w FOOD Scottsdale C AM PU S A M B A S SA D O R S present Pam Mark Hall, contemporary Gospel singer in concert, October 27, 8:00 p.m., Methodist Church on campus, Forest and University. Tickets on the mall. 10/27 ■ FUN EC K A N K AR P R ESEN TS an evening of ECK, Friday, October 27, 7-9 p.m., United Bank, 84 East Broadway, Tempe. 10/27 í?.eJ.sCafe ! i ! 45 WEST SOUTHERN 967-4003 Lost/Found B O O K ST O R E S 2 m YOUR H O STS — R.J. AN D KAY — BRING YOU M U G S OF BEER - 25« LARGE PITCHERS *1.50 I B la n k B o o k s : H and bo und b o o k s with parchm ent p a ge s . . . clothcovered journals . . . for writers, poets, people . . . prices range from $1.95 to $24.95 PEPPER IS LOST. Medium build black dog with white chest and beard. California tags. Please call 966-0233. Baber P a c k s H is Trunk: S to rie s for children to read and color ..$2.95 A RM ADILLA W A X W O RX 7 e a s t 5 t h S treet,T e m p e ,A x . LOST: PRESCRIPTION G LASSES. After USC game. ASU-downtown Tempe area. Brown aviator type frame. Brown gradient lenses. Reward. 966-8376. LOST AT Barclay Jack’s September 1st, a brown leather purse. Content important. Reward. Return to MU lost and found. No questions asked. Get O ff M y Sh ip : E n sig n B e rg vs. the U .S. Navy - B e r g 's stand h a s changed the role of the h o m o ­ sexual in the military .........$4.95 LOST: G ERM AN Shorthair pointer. Male, dark brown and white, sin city area. Please call 967-7159. C H A N G IN G H A N D S BO O K ST O R E 414 M ILL AVE i LOST: The Very F irst S h o e B ook: C a r­ to o n s by the Pulitzer-Prize W in ­ ning C arto o nist Jeff M a cN e lly ........................................ $4.95 O p e n Every W eeknlght Til 9; S a tu rd a ys 10-6 and S u n d a y s 12-5 ... errale a beautiful place lu lite with h an d crafted carted w«Miden m irrors and planten glow m g candles, lush plants, fine imported soaps, stained glass lamps and polten, FRIDAY F R EE LO ST A FOUND CO LU M N G e o rgia O ’Koofo: The first fullcolor collection of her paint­ in g s . . . with 108 plates and text by the artist ....................$16.95 C o m e in and brow se through our large collection of quality new and u se d bo o k s. W e carry art prints and unique note cards, too. T» Announcements VOLUNTEERS! HELP re-elect our excep­ tional governor. Call 967-3129 or stop by our Tempo office, 414 Mill AVe., room 202. 10/27 THE GREAT Pumpkin Fest. October 27, Memorial Union, 10:00 - 3:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m.-1:00 a.m. 10/27 . . « • SHABBAT SERVICES Friday, Oct. 27, 7:30 p.m. at Hillel 213 East University Dr., Baker Center 967-7563 Daybreak is a group of people meeting together to discover the truths that Jesus Christ taught. In the new M ill Avenue S h o p s betw een 4th and 5th Streets. 966-0203 Tampe ^ __________________ - 10/27> Courtesy Of: nnn w e s t e r n Ullil S A V IN G S Le a d in g from .strength since I !fe9 For Sale__________ DYLAN CONCERT tickets, Tucson, Nov. 19, 1978. Excellent 4th, 11th, 12th row center, reasonable, 1-602-622-5123, eve­ nings. 11/2 CHEST, COUCH, Mayfair banjo, Ensenada guitar. Any reasonable offer. Call any time, 277-1976 or 249-9136. 10/27 Friday, October 27, 1978 State Press Page 27 Help Wonted Por Sale THE MEXICAN SHIRT MAN Is back with new styles of embroidered shirts, blouses, dresses, 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 GARAGE SALE: Come decorate your place, many new items, October 28 and 29, 9-4, 57th Street and Windrose, North of Cactus. 10/27 FOR SALE: Pioneer PL112D turntable. Still under warranty. Excellent condition. Em­ pire 2000 cartridge. Best offer. 968-9743. 10/31 H elp Wonted GREAT AM ERIC A N Seafood Company. Opening in November. A new and dynamic company offering fantastic growth oppor­ tunity. We’re seeking individuals who smile, have a positive outlook on life, and would be interested in working with a new developing company. All restaurant posi­ tions available. No experience required. Call 971-0475 for appointment. EEO em­ ployer. 11/1 N URSES 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. Cali Paula, Medical Personnel Pool, 257-8331. 11/10 ATTENTION MARKETING, Real Estate and Insurance Majors. Looking for a job that offers valuable personal selling experience plus excellent earning opportunities? Call Mike for appointment. 967-3783. 10/27 ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERS: Drafting position (ink work), $4/hour- salary varies with experience and ability. 252-6061, ask for Karen Keeton. 11/1 EARN $180 to $480 weekly, stuffing envelopes at home. Guaranteed! For information, rush self-addressed, stamped envelope and 25c (coin) for handling. Metro Enterprises, Box 49114, Austin, Texas 78765. 11/1 A D D R ESSE R S W ANTED Immediately!. Work at home — no experience necessary — excellent pay. Write American Service, 8350 Park Lane, Suite 127, Dallas, TX. 75231. 11/7 BACK TO SCH O O L expenses got you down? Part-time openings for 3 hours daily available to ladies and men. We train you to earn minimum of $6/hour. Phone 835-1353 for appointment. Fuller Brush Company. 10/21 NIGHT POSITION (hourly or work study) In Counselor Training Center. 20 hrs./week. Call 965-5067 for information. 10/27 W ORK YOUR B U N S OFF! Homestyle Bakery - Vigorous personal growth oriented company. $500 per month plus all the bread you knead. Call 899-2087. 10/27 PHONE SALES: Evenings, good work, nice office, close to campus, hourly rate, bonuses, 968-4853. 11/1 SAN TAS AN D helpers needed for Tri City, Los Arcos, Scottsdale Fashion Square, Thomas and Colonnade Malls. Nov. 24 Dec. 24. Morning and Evening shifts. No experience. Interviews for all positions at following malls only. No phone calls. Apply in person 9-12 and 1-3. Oct. 26 at Tri City Mall office; Oct. 27 at Scottsdale Fashion Square, lower level - north wing; Oct. 30 at Colonnade, lower level. 10/27 JGOC o sc c o $2.65 PER HOUR. Pizza and Sub shop. Apply in person at Out-R-Inn, 1045 East Lemon. No experience necessary. 11/2 BACK TO SCHOOL expenses got you down? Part-time openings for 3 hours daily available to ladies and men. We train you to earn minimum of $6/hour. Phone 835-1353 for appointment. Fuller Brush Company. PIZZA HUT INC. now hiring part-time cook, day and/or night, 20 or 30 hours per week. Must be 19. Apply at 4735 E. Southern. E.O.E. 10/31 PART TIME 894-1139 10/31 • Real Estate Investm ents • Estate Planning •General Real Estate • Multiple Listing Service 7525 E. Camelback Rd. Scottsdale 941-1418 10/31 S ervices Jack Ross Uncoln-Mercury Used Cars 1900 N. Scottsdale Rd. 947-6321 Wheel W orks Auto Co. Buy, Sell and Trade Japanese Cars 1 Mile North of Campus 945 E. Curry _________ 894-1137 B Books Etc. Best Sellers, Magazines, etc. 901 S. Mill Ava., Tampa Ctr. 967-1111 THE G REAT Pumpkin Fest. October 27, Memorial Union, 10:00 - 3:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. - 1:00a.m. 10/27 Recorded Message. Please Call 249-9234 T yping P ersonal 12/6 I nstruction PARACHUTE twelve miles from Phoenix! $5 00 off with student I.D. Professional instructors. Phone 275-0010. 12/8 PRO FESSIONAL E.S.L. Teacher will tutor foreign students In English. Call Jan, 966-7941. 11/9 TUTOR AVAILABLE for general sciences, math, English, reasonable rates. Call Cyndi, 834-7774 after5 p.m. 10/27 LSAT REVIEW COURSE. Arizona LSAT Review Course Inc. will again offer its 28 hour course taught by practicing attorneys and college professors in Scottsdale, November 18, 19, 25, 26. Full price Includes take home materials: $150. Regis­ ter now. Write 4008 N. 15th Ave., Phoenix, AZ. 85015 or call In Phoenix, 264-0236 or 949-5786. 11,1 P oommate Wanted FEM A LE ROOMMATE wanted to share two bedroom, two bath apartment. 4.5 miles from campus. Call 945-9389. 10/27 YOUNG STUDENT couple would like to share very nice, new 3 bedroom home with a responsible female nonsmoker. Private room with phone for only $50/month (includes utilities!); comparable places go for over $125. Air conditioned, washer and dryer, dishwasher, all new furniture, etc. About 5 miles from ASU (possible use of our small motorcycle if you need it). Call 834-3459after6p.m. weekdays. 10/27 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Theses, disserta­ tions, engrg/tech. reports. 838-0802. 11/3 TYPING — IBM Correcting Selectric II, also automatic typing. Dissertations, theses, research papers. Rosemary Vance, 9679143. 12/8 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Very neat copy. Correcting typewriter. Also statistical re­ ports. 964-4846. 11/3 TYPING BY Business College Graduate. IBM Correcting Selectric. Experienced with graduate and senior papers. By appoint­ ment. Anita. 966-9088. 11/30 FEM ALE ROOMMATE to share new four bedroom house. One mile from ASU. Call 968-5406. 11/8 TYPING THESES, dissertations, term papers, etc. Professional secretary, ac­ curate, spelling corrected, reasonable rates. 949-9207. 12/8 T ravel W anted FR EE TRAVEL opportunities throughout USA. No car rental; drive to or from all major cities. Arrange trips in advance. Cars available now. AAACON Auto Transport, 264-0201. 12/8 LOW COST travel to Israel. Toll free, 800-223-7676, 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. NY time. 10/31 NEED ROOMMATE to share 4 bedroom house, quiet residential area, University and Dobson, (10 min.-ASU), $87.50/ month, Vt utilities. Call Jim or Kelly, 969-5435. 10/31 T y p in g NEED ROOMMATES, two females willing to share large master bedroom In beautiful townhouse, 4 miles from ASU. $135 per month, includes utilities. Call Mary, 9661890 for details. Available November 1. 10/27 EXPERIENCED TYPIST, guaranteed work. Dissertations, theses, research papers, etc Carbon ribbon. Near ASU. 967-4937. P ersonal NEAR ASU. Research papers, theses, dissertations. English degree. Editing. 7 years experience. 967-4443. 12/8 I NEED 3 to 4 non-Student ASU/Berkeley football tickets real bad! Call 894-9441 early or late. 11/1 Bicycles 10-SPEED, WON from the Pub Restaurant, never ridden, 26", worth $133. Asking $80. Michael Sullivan, 968-0170. 10/27 M otorcycles PROFESSIONAL, GUARANTEED IBM Cor­ recting Selectric typing. Pica, elite, rush jobs. Cheap. Call968-4119evenings. 10/27 _____________imo IBM SELECTRIC. 8 years experience, dissertations, theses, term papers, etc. Call Jean, 277-3602. 10/31 ARE TH ESE common reading faults handi­ capping you? Find out: Send $2.00 (refundable) for comprehensive test series. Uranus, 5050-I Calatrana, Woodland Hills, CA 91364. 11/1 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. IBM self-correc­ ting. 90-110 wpm, $6.50/hour (approxi­ mately 75c/page) fast and accurate. Lora, 947-0976. 11'10 A utomobiles A utomobiles 1974 YAM AHA 125 MX dirt bike, excellent condition, hardly ridden, $375. Call 9664847. 10/27 Automobiles 1973 VEGA 4-speed, runs good, needs ring job, $290 or best, 971-7496. 10/31 C L A SSIC INVESTMENT, MGC-GT, 3-litre, 6 cylinder, automatic, low mileage, AM/FM, wire wheels, new radials, valued over $4000. Must sacrifice to best offer. 967-5908. 11/3 1974 FIREBIRD ESPRIT, air conditioning, power brakes, AM/FM cassette, 51,000 miles. Call991-1013, ask forPaul. 10/31 WHEEL W O RKS 5 0 0 0 0 - Crown Fum. Leasing 964-2414 HAYAY SHALOM PERMANENT HAIR removal, sculptured nails, manicures, pedicures, skin care. Gall Walker’s Electrolysis of Scottsdale - 7033 Indian School. 945-4245. 11/22 Jack Ross Lincoln-Mercury Body Shop 665 W. Main St.. Mesa call: 894-2281 L. P oommate Wanted Peal Estate off 45 minute massage one time. Through 11-7- CERTIFIED M A S S A G E FOR W O M E N V aluable Coupon EVERYTHING YOU always wanted to know about learning how to fly, but were afraid to ask. Contact Mike at Phoenix Aviation, 275-7668. 11/3 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.; 10:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.; 4:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Our sales people work in a modern, confortable, business environment, contacting es­ tablished customers on long distance W ATS'lines. Earnings, which include salary and bonus, average $4 to $6 per hour, paid weekly. These are perma­ nent positions, with full-time shifts availble 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. Please call DIALAMERICA for details. 4.00 * inside the Arizona Athletic Club 1425 W. 14th St. Non-members and members always welcome! SUPPLY STUDENTS with protection. Sell top quality, best featured self protection device. Call 488-9862. 10/31 -F - Jack Ross Lincoln-Mercury At E’s 11/1 TWO STUDENTS as Production Assistants needed for local program series at KAETTV. Qualifications: Researching written and media materials, general television production assistance, organizational and clerical skills. Work study preferred. Call Linda Higginbotham, 965-3506 for appoint­ ment. 11/1 -A994-4500 by appointment T-SHIRT CO. needs women to model tops for brochure. Must be over 21 and have a car. Call 275-6438. 10/27 B u sin e ss D irectory New Cars 2700 N. Scottsdale Rd. jacuzzi ’sauna ’steam ’ cold plunge T-SHIRT CO. needs part-time cartoonist. Must have sample drawings. Good pay. Call 275-6438. 10/27 NEED MARKETING Representatives /tele­ phone sales — full time days — part time nights, Scottsdale, 941-0045. 11/10 W E N EED a clean-up person to help around salon, 30 hours/week. $2.65/hour. Call Hair, 894-1191. 11/1 S ervices S ervices S ervices CO M PA N Y For House, Apt & Business 1874 E. Apache Blvd. 894-1459 -G - • SPECIALIZING IN JA P A N ESE C ARS (Toyota, Datsun, Honda, etc.) Don't You Fret • Price Range Between *600 - *2,500 Guitar Repair & Sales 225 W. University, Suite 105 966-7931 A£. Cash & Carry — Grocery 8 Deli Institutional— 1815 E. Apache, Tempe, Az. 894-9153 -RRed' Carpet Realty Carolyn Weary and Associates 25 W. Southern Ava., Tempe 9ee-jeie -sJohn's Shoe Repair Resoling of Tennis Shoes 718 S. Mill 9t7' g101 • Buy, Sell and Trade Ü • Service W ork on Japanese Cars 1 M ILE NORTH OF C A M P U S *7500 off any Car P U R C H A SE W ith T h is C o up o n ’71 ’74 ’73 71 74 74 Toyota Corolla ...... $ 395 D atsun 710 4-dr........ *1196 D atsun 610 w agon . .*1298 VW Super Beetle . . . .*1495 Subaru D L ..............*1796 Toyota Corolla 1600 .(2095 1 coupon par parson 15% Discount on Parts and Labor for Service Work With This Coupon. 10/13. E CURRY Rd/Tempel 1894-1137i Page 28 State Press Friday, October 27, 1978 SPORT SHOE FEATURING ,® La d y W affle T ra in e r W affle T ra in e r A ll C o u rt Training or Racing, this Superlight This is the C an vas Shoe that does everything. Tennis, Basketball, Raquetball, Casual W ear. W affle Shoe is your best value. Sizes 4-14. Sizes 4-14. Sale Price *19*® Sale Price * 1 1 " FREE Reg. *2 9 « Reg M 6 « Pair of Sox with Purchase Sale Reg. ♦ 11.94 *17.95 N ike Shirts ♦ 3.99 *5.95 N ike Bags ♦ 9.99 *11.95 Sale Reg. Nike Wimbledon ♦ 15.94 *27.95 N ike W ally Jr. Nike Rocquette ♦ 15.99 *27.95 Nike Hi Top ♦ 13.99 *19.95 OTHER NIKE SHOES UP TO 40% OFF Ipine Ski K e le r Next to Tang’s imports 1533 E« Apache« Tempe 968-9056