Planning threatens intram ural grow th, A S U o fficiai says By Lori Grzesiek Poor planning threatens the growth of ASU’s intram ural program s, the Associated Students Campus Affairs Vice President said Tuesday. Bill Grant said the intramural depart­ ment was “scrambling to find fields” for softball and football teams in October, after they received short notice that plans were being made to use four of the five intramural fields for the construction of two women’s softball fields. “My concern is there won’t be any room to grow because the decision w asn’t planned well,” Grant said. “They (in­ tramural directors) were under the gun to put together something within a few days notice and probably could have come up with some better alternatives if they had more time.” Keith Jacobson, the coordinator of intramural sports, said all the sports c W e d n e sd a y December 6, 1978 Arizona State University Vol.61 No. 56 V _____________________ fields east of Scottsdale Road will be in use after the two softball fields are built but the limited space is not a threat to intramural growth. “Everything has been planned and well be in great shape for the future,” he said. In October, however, Jacobson told the State Press that the intramural depart­ ment hadn’t been notified of the con­ struction until it had begun, and prearranged schedules would be thrown into chaos. He said Tuesday intramural programs would meet the rising number of students involved by increasing the number of games and lengthening the intramural season. He added th at about 250 students participated in intramural softball and football in 1975 and 300 students com­ peted last year. sta te p re ss Tempe, Arizona J In mass com m unications dept. No relief in sight for overcrow ding By Jim Muhlstein For some mass communications majors, breaking out of the state prison may be an easier task than graduating from ASU. And certainly less expensive. “It took me four attempts to get into ‘Introduction to Mass Communications,’ and when I didn’t get into ‘Newswriting’ the first time around, I decided to change my major,” said Tom Gibbons, a 21-yearold history major. Sun catcher Bob Sanderson, graduate student in mechanical en­ gineering, tests photovoltaic cells using solar testing equipment on top of the Engineering Building. Sanderson is testing these “solar” cells for different manufacturers to find out how efficiently they gather the sun’s rays. [State Press staff photo by Sam Jones] O n th e In s id e The Ford Pinto has suffered some bad publicity lately, and dealers report the car isn't selling as good as it used to. Page 6 Lonely? Need some "companionship"? For $70 an hour, you can get some satisfaction, and it's only a phone call away. Page 12 Even a Hollywood script writer couldn't have written a better success story than the season Atlanta Braves' rookie Bob Horner had. Page 15 ‘Introduction to Mass Communication,’ a required course, is a prerequisite for all courses leading to a bachelor’s degree in mass communications. “I saw there were at least four more required courses that I would have to take,” Gibbons said. “I’ll just have to gamble now and see that I can get a job in newspapers without the degree I should have.” The mass communications department is still reeling from a 30 percent increase in enrollment in the last three years, which has resulted in 44 percent more requests for spaces this semester than were available last spring. “It’s a serious problem that the depart­ ment is experiencing,” Dr. Donald Brown, head adviser of the mass com­ munications department, said Tuesday. “The biggest part of the problem is manpower. We need to hire full-time instructors, but we don’t have the money,” Brown said. Brown said that in some instances, as many as six courses were sought by twice the number of students than there were openings for. “We were able to move the location of one of Dean Bennet’s courses to a larger hall so that we could take in a few more students, but you can’t do that in most instances,” Brown said. “We have to worry about accreditation. You can’t have 40 or 50 students in an editing class, for example, and do a quality job of teaching,” he said. Brown would not comment on what plans have been discussed to circumvent the problem in the future, or if such plans have been discussed at all. Department chairman Joe Milner was unavailable for comment. Bruce Itule, assistant professor of journalism, said he believes Milner has tried “extrem ely hard” to get more faculty, and that students should take their complaints to th e Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, Guido Weigend. “In every faculty meeting, we discuss this problem,” Itule said. “We’re over­ crowded with far too many students for the number of faculty members. “But if we don’t have the money, we can’t hire. Students who feel strongly about it should get together and see Weigend." Money for the hiring of additional faculty are distributed to the department through the College of Liberal Arts. “The state Legislature approves our budget and will scratch out whatever they please,” Weigend said. “They are ingrained in the idea that a 22-to-one, student-professor ratio is ideal. Other schools of comparable size and enrollment that I have talked to, have ratios of 18- or 19-to-one. “Even the difference of two or three students in th at figure is a big dif­ ference,” he said. Weigend is currently working on the 1980-81 budget and s< as no hope for improvement in the clos< d-class situation next fall. “It isn’t going to change next year, I can tell you that. The budget’s already in,” he said. Page 2 State Press Wednesday, December 6, 1978 (F In the news briefIk from the Associated Press FBI TO FIRE AGENTS WASHINGTON — FBI Di­ rector William H. Webster said Tuesday he will fire two FBI agents for their part in conducting allegedly illegal surveillance against the radi­ cal Weather Underground in the early 1970s, but will take no action against 59 other agents. In addition to firing two agents, the director an­ nounced he will demote one agent and suspend one for 30 days. All four had supervisory responsibility, Webster said. GAS PRICE TO GO UP NEW YORK — Motorists will be paying a couple of cents more for a gallon of gasoline within a week, be­ cause of the current tight supply of the fuel, industry analysts predicted Tuesday. “Before next week is out, you will probably see a two- or three-cent increase in most markets,” said Dan Lundberg, publisher of the Lundberg Letter, an influential industry newsletter. “This won’t take place in specific areas, it will take place on a national level — and especially in rural areas.” DEDERICH IN STABLE CONDITION PHOENIX — Synanon founder Charles Dederich, facing charges of conspiracy to commit murder and assault and solicitation to commit rhurder in a rattlesnake attack on a Los Angeles attorney, was listed in serious, but stable condition here Tues­ day. Dederich was flown here earlier Tuesday from a Kingman, Ariz., hospital. A spokesman said he was listed in critical condition at the time suffering from irregular heart rhythm. CARTER ADMINISTRATION RECOMMENDS HUD CUT WASHINGTON — President Carter's budget managers claim they can cut the federal housing budget and still in­ crease subsidized units, but his housing experts say the. reduction would slash the program by one-third, sources report. The Office of Manage­ ment and Budget is recom­ mending the Department of Housing and Urban Develop­ ment budget authority for housing be reduced from about $26.3 billion in the current fiscal year to about $22.5 billion in Carter's 1980 budget, the sources said. NO VOTE ON SALT AGREEMENT TUCSON — Sen. Dennis DeConcini said Tuesday he will not vote for any SALT agreement between the United States and the Soviet Union unless there is a Soviet “soft­ ening in human rights viola­ tions.” The Arizona Democrat said at a news conference that the Soviets must tie the human rights and Jewish emi­ gration problems to any arms agreement. PRISONER REMOVAL ORDERED PHOENIX — The Maricopa County Board of Supervisors has told the state Corrections Department to remove women prisons from two areas at the county's Durango Detention Center. The 155 women pris­ oners were placed there after they were moved from the Arizona State Prison at Flor­ ence. That transfer came to irk 9rand opening ifif PROFESSIONAL ELECTROLYSIS permanent hair removal permit movement of male inmates into the former women’s section to help re­ lieve overcrowding. FENDLER LOSES AGAIN PHOENIX — Robert Fendler, former head of the Lincoln Thrift Corp., lost another legal battle in the Arizona Supreme Court Tuesday. The high court refused to consider a special action by Fendler seeking to overturn a decision by the state Banking Department which barred Fendler from taking a seat on the American Bank of Commerce board of directors. CLEVELAND MAY DEFAULT CLEVELAND — Police and firemen reacted angrily Tues­ day to the city’s proposal to lay off 400 safety employees in an effort to keep Cleveland from becoming the first major U.S. city to default since the Depression. “We’re so under strength it’s unreal to even consider this,” said William McNea, president of the Cleveland Police Patrolmen’s Association. FORMER CONVICT SOUGHT PHOENIX — James McVay, a former Maricopa County Jail inmate whose testimony was the basis of new trial motions for convicted slayers Max Dunlap and James Robison, is being sought by Canadian authorities for questioning on a murder there, officials said Tuesday. McVay, 30, is also wanted in Coshocton, Ohio, where he escaped in August Retraction Francine A. Quinn, R.E. Jacqualine K. Young, R.E. ^ today’s new image salon, mesa, az. YOU NEED PUN N ED PARENTHOOD . . . M any peo p le think th a t th e only kind o f birth control is "the pill". There are m any safe, effective methods of birth control availab le — some d o n 't n eed a Find out the facts. Call: planned parenthood of central ANDNORTHERNARIZONA Phoenix: 257-1515 Tempe: 967-9414 O u r Christmas Stuff is "different." Come see o u r . . . e Mexican hand-made jewelry e Chinese cloisonne jewelry e Polish hand-carved boxes e Seri Indian iron-wood carvings e African ethnic pieces e Museum reproductions in sculpture OPEN 12 to 4 PM — WEEKDAYS THE GALLERY STORE • Crusader, Cress, Olympic kilns • Shimpo, Robert Brent wheels • Kemper Tools • Westwood Ceramic Products • Chemicals, glazes, refractories BUT NOT FOR ME Because I Go To Beatles Nite at Specialty WEAVING LONNECAN'S IT'S BEATLES NITE EVERY WED. LONNECAN'S BAND Wed. - Sat. Tues. ACOUSTIC NITE David Dodt Mike Dixon Yarns *n F ib e rs 2 6 E . U n iv e r s ity D r . T e m p e TH E O b 9 6 7 - 3 6 8 1 O n O D O F ART à Use To Be Boring . . . W ants an d N eed s • Arts and Crafts • Creative Living Matthews Center, 2nd floor Wednesday Nites POTTERS' For N e w L ifestyles 8 3 3 *7 7 0 0 e South American hand weavings In the Sept. 8, 1978, edition of the State Press Sports Editor Walter Berry referred to “underworld figure Tony Nicoli.” The State Press has no evidence that Anthony J. Nicoli is an underworld figure. It hereby retracts that reference. BOOKS FREE CONSULTATION LONNECAN'S 7436 E. M cD o w ell • 1 blk. E. of Los Arcos • 947-3304 qrç- W y in e ^ s y ..December $ ,.i978,.State tFress Page 3 Director w ill lecture at the center for law Dr. Sidney Wolfe, director of the Public Citizen Health Research group in Washington, will be the featured speaker at the Arizona Center for Law in the Public Interest’s fourth anniversary event Friday, at 7:30 p.m. Wolfe, considered a leader in the consumer health movement, will speak at 6745 N. Central Ave., Phoenix. For more information, call the Center for Law office (2524904). Tickets cost $10. i pl Pool it j con: 965-3161 C h r is tm a s Residents of ASU dormitories will be asked to restrict their use of flammable Christmas decorations this year. This Manzanita resident found an out-of-the-way place to display her Christmas cheer. [Photo by Steve Berry] P o r tr a its PHOENIX 5 15 E THOMAS 2 6 4 2531 SCOTTSDALE LOS ARCOS MALL 9474383 PHOENIX METRO CENTER 9976259 Holidays bring fire hazards If Jesus Christ were born this Christmas in an ASU dorm, He might find the accomodations a little uncomfortable. He would lie on a skimpy bed of straw, in a dark manger where candlelight is a mortal sin. But the King’s discomfort would be justified in the name of safety, as ASU fire regulations prohibit open candles, and re stric t combustible Christmas decorations in campus dorms. A fire safety code for all yuletide decorations recently was issued, and will be enforced by the individual dorm directors, ASU Fire Marshal Sylvester T. Anderson said Monday. “I want to put the burden on the unit directors for enforcement, because it’s impossible for me alone to inspect all these dorms,” he said. “But at the same time, I’ll be doing random checks to insure the guidelines are being followed.” Fire hazards increase at Christmas because the misuse of electricity in lighting can start blazes that thrive on the presence of flammable gift-wrapping, decorations and dried-out Christmas trees, Anderson said. ASU has never had a fire caused by Christmas decorations, but residents of the dorms will still be asked to limit the amount of flammable decorations they put up, especially in key areas, Anderson said. One little-known danger is stringing flammable streamers down a hallway, which act “like a fuse on a firecracker,” rapidly spreading fire, Anderson said. This type of decoration spread the flames th at killed ten students last Christmas in a dormitory blaze at Providence College in Rhode Island. However, ASU’s regulations will allow streamers to be hung if they have been commercially treated to be fire-resistant, Anderson said. Decorating lamp shades are prohibited, Anderson said, because some papers ignite at about 400 degrees and 100-watt light bulbs can reach 500 degrees in a short period of time. Christmas trees, which are traditionally set up in dorm lounges, need not be a fire hazard if they are tre a ted properly, Anderson said. The misuse of electricity causes most fires at Christmas, Anderson warned. Yuletide dorm decorators should check for frayed electrical cords, use only U nderw riters Laboratories approved lights and be careful not to overload the circuits. CC DISCOUNT LIQUORS has: •The BEST keg beer deals In the Valley. Large selection - FREE ICE - NO EQUIPMENT RENTAL. Tubs furnished Coldest Beer 29° F. • LARGEST SELECTION of Fine Imported and Domestic LIQUORS - BEERS - WINES - LIQUEURS • “ NEW WINE WELL” Chillers at all stores. 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IF YO U ’RE G O N N A DO IT - DO IT FOR LESS!!! HOURS: Tuesday — Saturday 10 a.m. - 6 p.m. ’79 models of Ford Pintos line up at a local dealership waiting to be sold. The new models have a redesigned fuel system, diminishing the possibilities of rear-end collision explosions that plagued earlier models. [State Press photo] Dealers say customers reluctant to buy Pintos By Tony Motzenbacker Although Valley Ford car dealers have differing opinions about the sales of Pintos because of continuing adverse publicity, production sales have decreased only slightly, a representative of the Ford Motor Co. said Tuesday. Michael McVeigh, a representative of the Ford Division for the Phoenix district, said the number of Pintos produced and sold to dealers last year is only 3,000 more than the projected figures for 1979. The Pinto, first introduced in 1970, came under attack because the position of the fuel tank caused some 1971-77 cars to catch fire if they were involved in a rearend collision. Consequently, Ford has recalled 1.5 million of its 1971-77 cars for modifications they say would eliminate this problem. New Pintos also have been modified. Dave Krupp, regional public-relations manager for Ford, said the modifications include replacing the original fuel-filler pipe with a longer pipe and installing a polyethylene shield that will cover the entire front of the gas tank. “We’re trying to minimize fuel spillage,” Krupp said. He said the Ford Company has estimated the repairs could cost up to $40 million if everyone takes advantage of the free repairs. McVeigh said th at although bad publicity cut sales of Pintos between 25 and 30 percent last summer, November sales indicate that the Pinto sold at a higher rate than all other cars nationally. Local Ford dealers, however, have mixed opinions about how the publicity has affected the sale of Pintos. “Because of the bad publicity, people @ o * n fite te S e a u ty are terrified even with the ’79s,” said Bill Hould, a sales representative at Canyon Ford in Glendale. Hould said although his company used to sell up to 10 Pintos per month, in the past four months they have averaged only one per month. “A good dealer will average about three a month,” Hould said. “It used to be twenty.” Hould said people may be frightened of buying any small cars because they potentially have the same problem. He cited the Chevrolet Chevette, which is presently being recalled, as an example. Bill Osterle, new car sales manager at Don Sanderson Ford, a Phoenix firm, said sales of Pintos have decreased with his company also. “It would be misleading to say they have not. As far as traffic and people coming in and asking for them — sales are down,” he said. But Osterle said the media has blown the situation out of proportion because any car put under similar test conditions would catch fire. He said he has no fear of the Pinto and recently bought his son a 1972 model. “I wouldn’t put my son in one if I did (fear it), Osterle said. Some dealers, however, have noticed no change in the sale of Pintos. “We’re selling as many Pintos as we ever have,” said Joe Matheny, new car sales manager at Berge Ford in Mesa. He said the Pinto was the second best­ selling car in November. “The price will sell the pinto,” Matheny said. S e s w ic e b B tM ta i AMP JHIRMACK PRODUCTS A VAI1ABU HAIRCUTS MEN and WOMEN SHAMPOO & BLOW DRY $550 Now Open W ednesday & Thursday Evenings by A p p o in tm e n t BEAUTY SALON 31 E. 9th ST. « TEMPE CENTER • 967-3722 KO DAK C O LO R B U R ST 100 In s ta n t C a m e ra • Beautiful instant color by Kodak with an elegant SATINLUXE™ Finish • Print exits cam era autom atically and develops in m inutes • A utom atic exposure control • Easy to use “zoom ing-circle" focusing aid • Uses either flipflash or electronic flash, such as KODAK Instant Flash, Model B • C om plete with eyecup, tripod socket, and com fortable neck strap Jus, *3 5 °° PIONEER CAMEIIA Tempe Center University & M ill 967-4667 • 966-8363 PRQQ Page J; State Press Wednesday, December 6,1978 Board could be responsible for policy, president says By Mary Perry A ssociated S tu d e n t’s programs and budgets. “Since they (ASASU President, Lance Ross, said work for Tuesday the Student employees) Affairs Board should accept student government, they r e s p o n s ib il ity fo r should be accountable and University policy-making, responsible to student governm ent,” Ross said. but not for budgeting. Ross has recommended “This encompasses th e the $55,658 budget for hiring and firing of the student affairs ad­ employees.” Ross said if ASASU has ministration be reallocated to ASASU and out of the problems with its em ­ hands of the Student ployees it has no official Affairs Board. ASASU jurisdiction to do anything would then pay its own to alleviate the problem, because the employees are employees. The Student Affairs accountable to the Student Board has advisory Affairs Board. Hamm said the main responsibility to President John W. Schwada through problem with reallocating Dr. George Hamm, vice the money is what would president of student affairs. happen when a new student It reviews m atters government takes over. He governing student policies, said employees should be N ew career insight program is initiated ASU students who would like to know more about the career they are considering can get a closer look by spending a day with a graduate in that field as part of a new service being presented by Associated Students. The program, Select-A-Career, gives students a chance to visit with an alumnus in the same field, such as law, accounting and education, and to let them see what the job is like, said Mary Turkovich, ASASU presidential aid. “The student gets an information packet from the MU information desk and presents it to his adviser who contacts one of the alumni in that field. The grad and student set up a date and time to meet and they talk about careers and opportunities in that field,” she said. “The program utilizes the schools’ resources by using its grad students help. It should be successful but we’re not projecting a large turnout,” Turkovich said. DR. W.G. AMES OPTOMETRIST Soft Contact L e n s e s ...........................$159.95 _Eye Exam for Contact Lenses ...........$ 2 5 .0 0 " soft Contact Lenses for Astigmatism FASHION EYEWEAR protected from a “cleaning out” when administrations change. “Say you are working for ASASU, sending yourself to school and supporting a sick husband,” Hamm said. “Every time a new student government comes in you stand the chance of losing your job. I’m sure the secretaries with AS­ ASU would be very n e r­ vous if the control was in th eir (ASASU) hands. If they are not, then they should be,” Hamm said. In a Nov. 30 le tte r to Hamm, Ross . said, “Apparently in the past a mental division has existed between the Office of Student Affairs and the ASASU offices.” The problem office of fiscal adviser was held by Barbara Jordan. D.C. Hoffman, executive vice president said Jordan left for a better position. But Hamm said Ross came in before the first day of classes and wanted Jordan fired. “ She (Jordan) hadn’t been at the job even a year and had been doing an excellent job. It usually takes a year to get used to the work,” Hamm said. “Policy affairs have been handled but the budget has dominated the business of the Student Affairs Board,” Ross said. NEW ADDRESS - 2916 N. 68th S t. 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NIKE SHOES, WRISTBANDS, SUNS BOOKS, NIKE-SUNS-T-SHIRTS, AND TICKETS TO SUNS GAMES 1st ROUND COMPETITION BEGINS SATURDAY, JANU­ ARY 27th, 1070 AT A GYM NEAR YOU - YOU WILL BE NOTIFIED AS TO TIME AND LOCATION OF FIRST ROUND PLAY - WINNERS ADVANCE AND CONTINUE PLAY ON CONSECUTIVE SATURDAYS • FINALS IN MARCH - APPEARANCES BY PHOENIX SUNS PLAYERS YOUNG LIFE OFFICE 264-1326 cut along dotted line MAIL TO: H-O-R-S-E 6745 N. 7th AVE. PHOENIX. ARIZONA 85013 AGE GROUPS FOOD BOOZE BOOGIE 530 West Broadway Tempe (6 0 2 )8 9 4 1375 7-6* 9-10 11-12 13-14 15-16 17-18 19-30 31tup *6 FOOT GOALS. ENTRY $5.00 1AXDEDUCTIBIt DIRECTIONS: FILL OUT COMPLETELY. MaH to addraes at left with 35.00 entry lee (checks made payable to YOUNG LIFE). You will be notified in January as to time and location of first round play. NAME REGISTRATION DEADLINE: DECEMBER 31. 1978 STREET CITY PHONE ZIP SCHOOL (IF ANY) SEX BIRTHOATE AGE Wednesday, December 6, 1978 State Press Page 7 'The Sphinx is sick/ N ew prim e-tim e ratings emerge NEW YORK (AP) - It “All in th e Family” and in the Family” No. 13. The ABC shows air like old times, and it “Alice.” Egyptian paper reports was But for the most recent Tuesday night, the CBS made you wonder what CAIRO, (AP) — The lion’s body of the Sphinx is firm, but the human face of the majestic monument is showing the effects of 5,000 years of howling sandstorms, scorching desert days and chilling nights. Its seven-foot nose has been missing for centuries. The left eye is sagging and the entire left side of the 13-foot face is distorted. “The Sphinx is sick,” the daily newspaper A1 Akhbar reports. “It’s suffering from acute anemia. Unless the right medication and treatment is applied, the neck could give in to begin with.” But the method of treating the time-honored patient sharply, divides art and restoration experts so proud of the aging wonder just outside Cairo, near the Pyramids at Giza. It’s been five years since the Sphinx received a facelift — an “Injection” of barium pigments to strengthen the area from the neck up. “It badly needs another shot,” says Zahi Hawass, in­ spector of the pyramids section of Egypt’s antiquities department. “The outer layer is peeling off all over.” But another expert, Ahmed Saleh, the department’s director of research and restoration, advocates building a “windshield” around the 65-foot-high unprotected monument. “It needs trees around it to protect against sandstorms,” he told A1 Akhbar. “Those sand particles become a cyclone — they hit the Sphinx on the face, drop to the feet and the wind lifts them up again in a continuous cyclical motion.” Saleh said the proud monument’s latest ailment is a recently noted unevenness in the water table underneath it. Some experts fear this may cause it to lose its balance. Although the Sphinx looks as solid as only a fivemillenium-old sculptural marvel can, A1 Akhbar kicked off a public campaign for urgent measures to protect one of Egypt’s prime attractions. “Speak up to authorities for restoration,” the paper appealed. The latest problems are only an episode in the turbulent history of the monument. King Khepren, the builder of the Giza Pyramid, had the Sphinx carved out of a limestone block that measured 239 feet in length, the lion’s body representing the power of the king and face bearing his features. Because it faced the rising sun, it was considered a sun god and later acquired the name Abou El-hol, the father of terror. Over the centuries, the Sphinx often had trouble keeping its head about the shifting sands. It was last cleared from the dunes only 40 years ago. Its nose was damaged centuries ago. One legend says Napoleon had it lopped off to display French supremacy after he landed in Egypt in 1798. Another tale attributes the missing nose to the folly of a deranged Egyptian. ß jß ß ß ( M E iL mm emx& happened the week before. ABC listed the th ree most-watched prime-time TV programs for the week ending Dec. 3, dislodging th ree CBS offerings in­ cluding “60 Minutes,” which fell from first to fourth. True, the over-all effect on the A.C. Nielsen Co.’s weekly ratings was the same. ABC won th e n e t­ works’ competition, as it had despite CBS’ strong showing the week before, with a rating of 19.7. CBS was second at 19.5, followed by NBC at 18.7. The netw orks say th a t means in an average prime­ tim e m inute during the week, 19.7 percent of the homes in the country were turned to ABC. “60 Minutes,” CBS’ ac­ claimed newsmagazine, climaxed a 10-year climb during the week ending Nov. 26 by finishing first in the ratings, followed by Sunday night companions week surveyed, it was three ABC shows — “Laverne and Shirley,” “Happy Days” and "Three’s Company” — back on top, and that’s not really news. The three normally finish one-tw o-three in some combination, though it was fourth for “Three’s Com­ pany,” fifth for “Laverne and Shirley” and seventh for “Happy Days” the week before. This time, “60 Minutes” tied with th ree other programs for fourth place, with “Alice” ninth and “All programs Sunday. The rating for “Laverne and Shirley” was 30. Nielsen says that means of all the homes in the country with television, 30 percent saw at least part of the program. NBC’s failing was at the bottom of the ratings — three of the week’s five low est-rated programs. NBC’s “The Story of Christm as” was No. 61, followed by “Good Times” on CBS, “Project U.F.O.” on NBC, CBS’ “Rhoda” and NBC’s “Weekend.” Pick 'em winners Robert Ronald Rossi is the winner of the football season’s final Pick ’em contest. Rossi missed only one pick in the contest — the P ittsburghHouston game. There was a tie for second, but the tie-breaker game of Army-Navy snapped the deadlock. Second place went to Larry Nienaber and third to Mary Smith. Both Nienaber and Smith missed two games. Christmas Dreams. This Thursday, Friday and Saturday ROCKY HORROR PIC TU R E SHOW 6:30, 10:00 P.M. PIN K FLA M IN G O S See Us For Your Christmas Engagement. 8:30, MIDNIGHT SUNDAY TRUFFAUT S STOLEN KISSES 7 P.M. ¿ fa e p k M .ffe fo u ttp . JEWELRY ft DIAMOND CUTTING 130 E. UNIVERSITY DR. “IN THE ARCHES” 967-8917 • MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY SHOOT THE PIANO PLAYER mm" ^ 9 P.M. 7 .7 V7 7 ’ : ■V Page 6 âtâte Pré'sà Wédhèsâa^Ôéâëi^bë^ëi Censure hurt ASU, says English prof By Lori Medigovich ASU has a “black eye” in the academic world because of its censure by the American Association of University Professors, a former president of ASU’s AAUP chapter said Tuesday. Robert E. Shafer, an English professor who served as ASU president of AAUP last year, said ASU was censured by the national organization nearly three years ago because of the controversial firing of Morris Starsky. Starsky was fired in 1970 by the Board of Regents because he canceled class in order to attend an antiVietnam war demon­ stration, Shafer said. As a result of his being fired, Shafer said Starsky has found it difficult to find a job at another university. y 'Psychology m ajor plays Santa Claus J e ff Stone By Patricia Smith Five children in South Phoenix will have a happier Christmas thanks to a 22year-old ASU psychology major. Jeff Stone read about the children Wednesday in the Republic’s “Christmas for Caring” article. The series profiles some of the needy families in the Valley. With only $270 a month from social security checks, the children’s 26-year-old mother is also supporting her disabled sister and her parents. Stone went to the Tempe Bike Shop and bought three bicycles, one black, one red, one blue. , “I decided to do something nice; to me, it was a Hanukkah present,” Stone said. Stone said students should spend money for someone who needs it, and not for friends who already have almost everything they want. “College students are isolated from the real w orld,” Stone said. “They’re sheltered and don’t know what’s going on. They take everything for granted.” Stone works more than 40 hours a week at Scottsdale Memorial Hospital as an EKG technician and at Dial America Marketing. Stone had been saving money for a Christmas vacation to visit friends in San Francisco. Instead, he bought the bicycles. “I’m a people person. I like to share,” Stone said. “I never want to get to the point where I don’t appreciate what I have.” w- “Starsky’s professional career has been destroyed, and he is today a sick man for his struggles to regain his academic position here,” Shafer said. Shafer said the University administration should work with the local AAUP chapter to inform the Regents and the public about the consequences of being on censure. "The U niversity could lo se com m encem ent speakers and honorary degree recipients because of this censure,” he said. Shafer said the U niversity should move toward reinstating Starsky in order to lift its censure. ;S J*>I& If is jM K I 1^*1« W E’VE GOT THE CHAIN, GANG, IN 14K GOLD I ■’ii. ; w m SPECIAL CHRISTMAS HOURS: Dec. 18-22,10-9 Dec. 23,10-6 g Christmas Eve, 10-3 SCHUBACH JEWELERS V 3134 S Will Avf . iSmitty s[Centerj Mili &‘Southern ' 966 004? Mon. S/at -f'Ö-b 00 Frida'» 11 T30 . 706 South Forest • T e m p e • 967-8747 O n e Block N orth of University M onday thru S aturday 10-6 Thursdays until 8:30 Wednesday, December 6,1978 State Press Page 9 Tourist spending sparks economy By Kathy O’Donnell Tourist spending in Arizona is expected to pass the $3 billion mark this year, a spokesman for the State Office of Tourist said Tuesday. , Jim Cullison said Arizona visitors spent more than $849.5 million during the July-September period alone, and this figure is expected to rise by the end of the year. “The outlook is very good,” Cullison said. “Tourism should continue to increase, but this all depends on the economy. If a recession should hit the country next spring or summer, this could make a difference, but it shouldn’t affect us as drastically as other industries. “People are starting to put money away for vacations. If there is a slowdown, the money is already put away.” The influx of tourists in Arizona has brought benefits to the economy. In the three-month period between July and September of this year, 72,752 jobs were provided for workers in the tourist industry, and 121,495 jobs were opened in areas indirectly related to tourism. Cullison estimated approximately 12 to 15 million tourists visit Arizona annually. Cullison said the climate is one of the biggest factors that draws tourists to Phoenix. Tourist attractions include the Grand Canyon, the Painted Desert and the Indian reservations. During the winter, visitors prefer southern Arizona and its agreeable climate. But throughout the summer, north­ ern Arizona is popular. According to Cullison, the largest percentage of tourists are from the West Coast, although large numbers are from the Midwest and the East coast. ‘There is a bigger promotional effort today to bring in visitors,” Cullison said. “A lot of attractions have become publicized and there is heavy advertisement of the state as a vacation spot.” According to statistics published by the ASU Bureau of Business and Economic Research, airline tourist ex­ penditures totaled almost $235.5 million in Maricopa County, between July and September of this year. About $50.5 million of this was in lodging. A spokesman for the Sky Harbor Airport Holiday Inn said the hotel is beginning to feel the onset of the tourist season, and by January will probably be filled to capacity. Even hotels like the Hyatt Regency, which are geared for conventions ra th e r than single accommodations, disclosed that it is also affected by Arizona tourism. “We get our biggest increases in the food and beverage departments,” a Hyatt Regency spokesman said. Other companies are also influenced by the arrival of the Arizona to u rist. Checker Taxicab Company, which provides the majority of Valley transportation for tourists, reported a notable increase in business. fc Sem rc JEWELRY by G6TOrcje 618 South CòJ teqn Avenu.• * .Tempe Arir ma 8528*1 \ Telephone 6¡"'2 968‘ 1233 OPERATION ID IS COMING! ASU is joining the many com m unities that have used this sytem successfully to discourage a n d /o r apprehend thieves. Watch for details! F I I EASANTS M ealoP99< A hearty stew served with delicious pocket bread..................... with coupon Our own highly confidential recipe made with fresh mushrooms, zucchini, carrots, and other all natural ingredients, slowly simmered to perfection. the o ccupied Arab land. The UN has issued over 160 reso lution s ag ain st Israel and its con tin uo u s vio latio n s of hum an rights. It is really funny that Expires 12/8/78 I I I I T h is is how th e Israelies treat the P alestinians in Z io n is ts s till call Israel a Dem ocracy w here the basic rights of the N o n -Jew s (P ale stin ian s ) are denied! ASU O rg an ization of Arab S tu dents 120 E. UNIVERSITY Open 7 a.m. -8 p .m . Weekends Sat. 10-5 Sun. 12-5 CALL A 968-7133 Healthy HOTLINE FOR HEALTH Alternative PAID ADVERTISEMENT Page 10 State Press Wednesday, December 6, 1978 ----------------------------------- ------ ----------------------------------- *------------------------------- Crane Forest Service hiring rangers Aging p sych ic By Jim Muhlstein The two Scottsdale police detectives nervously took their seats at the front of the empty church in Phoenix. Outside, heavy rains were turning North Third Street into a small river. Detective Dennis Borkenhagen folded his damp coat on his lap. Neither Borkenhagen nor his partner, Chris Bingham, knew what to anticipate, as an older man with a deeply furrowed face approached them. The National Forest Service will hire 834 seasonal employees next year. Most positions are in fire fight­ ing and last from two to nine months. Applications are available at all district ranger offices and forest headquarters and must be returned to the Southwest Regional Forest Service head­ quarters in Albuquerque by Jan. 15. Applicants must be at least 18. Pay ranges from $3.57 to $5.05 an hour. Many of the jobs begin in March and April. An Organizational M eeting of j The Raza Graduate Student Gaucus j W ill be m e e tin g ^ the Navajo Room (219) in the Memorial Union on Thursday, December 7th, at 5:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. I The group is interested in: —facilitating communication among graduate students —creating a cohesiveness and identity among Raza graduate students —developing a talent bank among graduate students —securing information about employment opportunities and disseminating information —acquiring scholarship, fellowship and research monies. j I j S j \ I i i For more information about the group contact: Margaret Camerena 945-8394 [H] • 965-6529 [O] or Gene T. Chavez 838-9510 [H] • 965-3674 [O] S p e c ia lty BOOKS For N e w L ife s ty le s 2 6 E . U n iv e r s it y D r .T e n t p e • Arts and Crafts • Photography • Children’s Choice • Creative Living THE 9 6 7 -3 6 8 1 o p OF ART ADVERTISING SALES REPRESENTATIVES m urdefinvestigation j \ 5 [ l[ \j \ ! \t \ J \ j ( “Take my hand,” an aging Walker Wescott said. For the next two hours, the detectives listened and watched as Wescott, 53, former Methodist ministerand professed psychic, and members of his Psychic Repertory Theater, acted out the personality of the person they believe responsible for the murder of actor Bob Crane in Scottsdale, earlier this year. Borkenhagen, who heads the Crane murder in­ vestigation, and Bingham, assisting on the case, had responded to the theater group’s invitation to attend its October seminar in the University of Life Church at 1124 N. Third St. in Phoenix. “Someone from the group called us and said it would be worth our while to come down and observe,” Borkenhagen recalled recently. The primary aim of the seminar was to cast roles for Psychic Theater’s planned production of “Burden of Guilt, Burden of Proof,” a play about the possible solution to the Crane murder. When few people responded to the company’s ad­ vertisement, the seminar was scaled down to a private session for the detectives. “The sheriff decided to let Wescott do his thing." . . . “His thing involved running around . . . saying ‘This is where the bodies will be found, ’ but all the time changing his mind. ” “We did character analyses, performing the murder in addition to the detectives, to demonstrate how ‘readings’ can reveal important evidence,” Wescott said afterwards. Borkenhagen, however, was less optimistic after the performance. “What they did was so broad, so greatly exaggerated that they could have been describing anyone on the street,” he said. Five members of the group live in Phoenix, while two others, including Wescott’s wife Karen, 31, reside in Los Angeles where they serve as the “active core,” putting together news releases and other materials. All of the members have had acting experience. Wescott’s diverse background includes some off- Broadway and small film roles. William G. MacMillan, co-director of the Psychic Theater, has starred in a number of films and plays, including a part in Clint Eastwood's “The Enforcer.” Borkenhagen is not alone in his doubts of Wescott's abilities to solve crimes. In July 1976, Richard Sommerhalder, a 29-year-old ex-convict, was arrested for the suspected murder of two Santa Cruz, Calif, women, whose abandoned car had been found near town, but who remained missing for nearly a month before their bodies were found on a lonely stretch of highway outside Felton, Calif. “The FBI told me there is a five percent finding rate [the FBI's own national figure] among psychics, so I can’t discredit these people when they call. ” The father of one of the women, critical of the way local law officers handled the case, hired Wescott to find his daughter. “The sheriff decided to let Wescott do his thing,” said Superior Court Judge .Chris Cottle of Santa Cruz, who was the district attorney handling the case. “His thing involved running around the Santa Cruz mountains pointing here and there, saying ‘This is where the bodies will be found,’ but all the time changing his mind.” Cottle said after seeing “a great performance” by MacMillan in a local production of “One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest” he believes the Psychic Repertory Theater to be no more than a group of talented actors. “It’s too bad, because if this (psychic readings) could become a useful tool in criminal investigation, this bunch could be the ones to hurt its chances,” he said. Sommerhalder was later convicted in the case described by Cottle as a “circumstantial monster.” In Los Angeles in September 1977, the psychic “investigators” moved into the Hollywood Center Motel. They were hired by owner Ebrahim Talaei to manage the complex th at included 'th e adjacent Hollywood Center Theater, a Los Angeles landmark. “They wanted to manage the motel and I hired them,” Talaei said in a telephone interview. “Then they wanted to take over the theater and I wouldn't let them. When I wanted them to leave, they wouldn’t.” Talaei sued W escott in March for back rent amounting to more than $6,000 for the three apart­ ments th at had served as the th eater group’s “headquarters and staff residence” for six months. A news release from the Interworld Congress, dated Middle age to be discussed Middle age, the years between 30 and 55, will be discussed at a conference at ASU Thursday and Friday. “Coping and Adaption in Middle Age” is open to the public, free of charge. The major speaker will be Dr. Linda George, assistant professor of psychiatry at the Duke University Medical Center. She is expected to identify stress situations common in the middle years and offer a variety of ways to cope with them. For more information call Dr. Morris A. Okun at 965-3643. The STATE PRESS has openings for adver­ tising sales representatives for the spring sem ester of the academ ic year 1978-79. W e Drefer freshm en, sophomores and juniors, as successful representatives can continue for several semesters. The rewards include training and experience in a professionally run newspaper situation and a realistic com m ission. Applicants must pick up referral form from Student Employment in Matthews Center and an application blank at the STATE PRESS office, A-111 Stauffer Hall. Completed applications must be returned to the STATE PRESS office by 4 p.m. Friday, Dec. 8, 1978, and applicants must be available for interview during the week of D e c .11. Edward H. Peplow Jr. Manager of Student Publications DRY GULCH SALOON 815 N . Scottsdale Road 968-5643 Just North of the River Bottom Presents Their ALL NEW STAGE The Finest in the Valley Great Go-Go Dancers A ll N e w Live Show s! (Now Interviewing Dancers) _____ Dining • Dancing • Pool Wednesday, December 6, 1978 State Press Page 11 Charity gives holiday dinner lie 'reads' for police acMillan, Ted in a in Clint Vescott’s -year-old mrder of oned car 1 missing »und on a percent lfigure] it these the way escott to s thing,” ita Cruz, e. nta Cruz ‘This is the time ince” by Over the epertory I actors, gs) could ion, this e said, .he case er.” psychic Center ralaei to idjacent Imark. I hired er and I ive, they ck rent le apart group’s ths. ss, dated March 17, said that Wescott and MacMillan had “of­ fered to deal with the underworld forces that were strangling Talaei, et al, by exposing their corrupt activities to the light of day.” Talaei won his suit, and in July, Wescott and friends arrived in Phoenix. Since its founding eight years ago in New York City, the Psychic Repertory Theater has headquartered in 10 cities. Its members say they have lost families, homes and jobs because of their commitment. Still, they have not yet solved a criminal case. The involvement of psychics in criminal investigation is nothing new. But it is nearly always unsolicited. When convicted felons Gary Tison and Randy Greenawalt, along with Tison’s three sons, ran the roadblock south of Casa Grande in August in a van belonging to a couple missing while on a trip to Colorado, scores of letters and phone calls from psychics offering to assist in finding the couple flooded the office of Bob Hampton, sheriff of Montezuma County in Cortez, Colo. “We ran 10 or 12 of them down,” Hampton said. “The FBI told me there is a five percent finding rate (the FBI’s own national figure) among psychics, so I can’t discredit these people when they offer to help.” Eloy Ysasi, an investigator for the Maricopa County medical examiner who also was a Phoenix policeman for 20 years, said the Phoenix police department has never solicited such assistance. “We listen to what they have to say. Nobody wants to offend anyone, but they have never actually helped us solve a case," Ysasi said. Borkenhagen said a dozen psychics in the Phoenix area had contacted the Scottsdale police, but the department had solicited none of them. “When she told Crane he was going to die, she set into motion the machinery that killed him. ” Wescott said he is not easily offended, but he is worried. He is worried someone will believe Tamara Rand, a Los Angeles psychic who reportedly told Crane he would be killed. She allegedly told him two days before his beaten and strangled body was found in a Scottsdale motel room. Wescott claims Tamara Rand killed Bob Crane, and he said that worries him because of a “growing con­ spiracy among occultists to psychically induce crimes.” “Based on our experiences, I can tell you that she did it and I can tell you how it was done,” he said. Wescott said that when “so-called psychics” make predictions, they start a wave of vibrations that eventually come together to actually induce the crime. “Crane and his wife had been separated for some time,” he said. “Rand was dating the actor when reports began to surface to the effect that a reconcilation between him and his wife was imminent.” The St. Vincent de Paul Dining Room expects to serve 2,000 Christmas Day dinners, but needs donations to fulfill the need. This is the 26th consecutive year the charity has provided holiday dinners for needy families. Donations may be brought to the rear entrance of the facility at 119 S. 9th Ave., Phoenix, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily and until 8 p.m. after Dec. 22. “I had a reading done once that said I would be crucified in thirteen cities, so we accept the hardship. ” “When she told Crane he was going to die, she set into motion the machinery that killed him.” Borkenhagen would not comment on W escott’s accusation. He said only th at Rand had been questioned because of her acquaintance with the actor, not because of an alleged prediction. As Wescott sat recently in the living room of his small house just off East Van Buren, he said he has begun to worry about his health. He has suffered seven major heart attacks in the last 10 years. “The constant moving has taken its toll, I’m beginning to feel the exhaustion again,” he said. “I had a reading done once that said I would be crucified in thirteen cities, so we accept the hardship.” Wescott said he had hoped to stay “a good while in Phoenix” but his theater group is beginning to ex­ perience some familiar pressures. “There are a number of people who would like to see us leave this town,” he said, but wouldn’t say who they were. Wescott paused and put a hand to his chest. “Something is coming into the room and I don’t know what it is,” he said. Wescott stood with his eyes pressed closed. The skin of his mouth pulled back tight against his teeth as he struggled to breath. Suddenly, Wescott dropped to the floor howling, animal like, the veins in his neck taut. His arms and legs flailed the floor. “You bastard! I told you not to interfere!” he shrieked. “Why did you do it, why, why, why?” Then suddenly, the attack subsided and Wescott was reduced to a pale, collapsed form in the center of the room. Without a word spoken, each member knelt beside him and began to massage his chest, his abdomen and the back of his neck, as Wescott mumbled wildly in Hebrew. “Are you going to need any help?” MacMillan asked calmly. “They are being very difficult this time,” Wescott answered. “Give me your hand.” Conference to link cultures A workshop designed to heighten awareness of Indian culture is scheduled from Dec. 6-8 at the Sunburst Hotel, 4925 N. Scottsdale Rd. in Scottsdale. Entitled, “Crossing the Transcultural Interface: Working with American Indians,” the event is sponsored by the American Orthopsychiatric Association, the ASU School of Social Work, the Phoenix Indian Center and the Phoenix Indian Medical Center. The conference fee is $50. More in­ formation is available at the University Conference Service at 965-5757. A profession that allows you to help others and Also feel good about yourself it American Medical Assoc. Accredited it Small Classes — Individualized Instruction ★ Well Established School With An Academic Program That Is Continually Being Upgraded it 2 Campuses — North Phoenix & Scottsdale 994-0331 SCOTTSDALE EDUCATIONAL center 7300 E. 4th St., Suite 208 - Scottsdale, Arizona Applications now being accepted lor spring. SPORTS Specializing in Backpacking, Mountaineering & Ski Touring LARRY TREIBER BILL SEWREY 2654401 4506 N. 16TH ST., PHX. For Christmas We Have: •Fine wool and chamois shirts •Toasty warm parkas and booties •M any other items to make your wildern£ss experience a pleasure! ^O F F A N Y LARGE PIZZA — OR — *1“ OFF A N ' MEDIUM PIZZA OR BOTH ! GIANT BOOK SALE NOW IN PROGRESS BOOKS ON: Art • Nature • The West • Cooking • Psychology • Antiques • Trains • Cans • Guns • Literature • And More! OVER 300 TITLES AVAILABLE %>uiut‘Table 901 S. MILL AVE. PIZZA RESTAURAN TS Scottsdale Rd. A McKellips [Temp* Center] Holidays Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9-8 • Sun. 1-5 967-1111 (In the Alpha Bela - Thrifty P la n ) 947-4396 Hours: Sun. thru Thurs. 11 a.m. -12 Midnight Friday and Saturday 11 a.m. - 2 a.m. COUPON EXPIRES DECEMBER 11.1978 eTc COUPON! J Page 12 State Press Wednesday, December 6,1978 E S C O R T S E R V IC E S : ‘Companionship’for $70 an hour By S u m o Clark Ju st call and ask for a girl. Anyone can do it. Traveling businessmen, Valley residents — any man desiring sex can get it by dialing the number of an escort service. They are listed in the yellow pages of the Phoenix telephone directory. Services including Southern Comfort Escorts, At Your Service Escorts, Eros Escorts and For Executives Only are just a few in the Valley that offer young women who will satsify the sexual needs and wants of men for a fee of about $70 an hour. And, it's as easy to get a job as an escort as it is to call for one. Susan Blake, a 21-year-old ASU student, applied for a job with Eros Escorts. “Do you have an old man?” was the first question the woman on the other end of the phone asked when Susan first called to apply for the job. The woman also asked about where Susan lived, what model car she drove, and more personal questions about her height, weight and measurements. Susan was careful to answer the questions honestly. She wanted the job, and she wanted to make a good impression. She knew that with this phone call, she was taking the first step in becoming a prostitute. Several of these Escort — or outcall — services operate in the Valley. Most advertise in the Yellow Pages. Others use bachelors and singles tabloids to advertise first-class outcall girls, available anytime of the day or night. Eros Escorts, 3440 N. 16 St., is run by a man named John Posner. When Susan called Posner, identifying himself only as John, arranged to meet with her in a Scottsdale bar late that night. Susan was nervous as she waited for him to arrive that evening. The only thing she could think about was her friend, Sandy, who told her the first contact always was this way. per hour and the rest is on a tipping basis between him and the girl. The tipping begins at $50 an hour,” she explained. Sandy thinks it is a good set-up. She said she can pick her own working hours because her boss cannot tell her what hours to work or she would again be guilty of pimping and pandering. Detective Darrel Graham of the Vice Enforcement Unit in the Phoenix Police Department, said pimping — taking the money of a prostitute — and pandering — setting up a girl for prostitution — are prohibited in Phoenix by city ordinance. Sandy works two or three nights a week, turning about two tricks a night. That comes to gross earnings of about $420 a week, of which Sandy keeps $300. Most of the men who call the service for a girl are traveling businessmen between the ages of 30 and 60 who earn more than $50,000 a year, John told Susan. Most write off the escort expense on their business accounts, he said. Susan knew this to be true from talking with Sandy. “I work on a hourly basis,” Sandy had told her. “But actually, it's not an hour. It's just how fast I can get out of there. Make the guy happy, get the money and take off. If I can get out of there in 20 minutes, I’ll do i “It makes me so mad when these jerks ask me if they get the whole hour.” Both Eros Escorts and the service Sandy works for check out the customer before the woman actually meets him. Once a customer calls requesting a girl, the service will, in turn, call the woman at home. She will contact the hotel where the man is staying, asking for him by name. “What you do in that hour you spend with a customer is your business and I don’t want to hear about it.” Sandy (not her real name for her own protection) has been working for an escort service in Phoenix for two years. The 24-year-old would like to go to college, but said she never seems to have the money or time. “I met my boss in a Denny’s before I went to work. A girl I was working with in a massage parlor said, ‘Hey, you should be working for this escort service,’ and I thought since I ain't making no money working in this massage parlor, why not? So I called them." Sandy said she tried to work as a waitress for a couple weeks when she moved to Phoenix from the Midwest four years ago, but didn't like the work. “When I came to Phoenix, I was trying to escape a bad home situation, and when I worked as a waitress after looking for a job for a real long time, it just seemed like such a waste to work a couple of hours and make only $10.” Sandy said she started working for a massage parlor, which led her to the escort hustle. But first it took some time to adjust to her job at the parlor. “When I went to work there, I'd come home and cry myself to sleep for the first two weeks. Then I got my head in the right place for it; and I just got used to it.” John approached the table where Susan sat, waiting. He introduced himself by first name only, they shook hands. He pulled up a chair next to her and sat down. For the next 90 minutes, Susan got the rundown on the ins and outs of how Posner runs his escort service. He told Susan he runs a totally legitimate business. He explained how Susan would owe the service $20 of the $70 hourly rate for every hour she worked each night. In his explanation, not once did he mention sex or prostitution outright. “What you do in that hour you spend with a customer is your business and I don't want to hear about it. You’ll be expected to work six nights a week and about eight hours a night. “You can make up to $400 a night and potentially $1,500 a week depending upon how hard you want to work and how ambitious you are,” John told her. “Escort services can be run out of a hotel room or an apartment. All they need is a phone number and to adver­ tise it in the paper. Some don’t even have to advertise — it’s by word of mouth.” Another man approached the table and was greeted by Posner. He sat down across from Susan and identified himself as Michael. The conversation con­ tinued. “Do these men just want companionship?” Susan asked. “No way,” was the reply. It was the answer Susan had anticipated. She knew Sandy had slept with every customer during her two U ^ “I work on an hourly basis. But, actually, it’s not an hour. It’s just how fast I can get out of there. Make the guy happy, get the money and take o ff.” _______ years as an escort. Police say customers at escort services get more, much more, than a goodnight kiss. “Some are legitimate; most are not,” Lt. Ed Calles said of the escort services in the Valley. Calles, lieutenant of the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office of Special Investigations, said it is obvious by the ads run in single tabloids just what they are selling. “Escort services can be run out of a hotel room or an apartment,” said Dick Fisher, a detective in special investigations. “All they need is a phone number and to advertise it in the paper. Some don’t even have to advertise — it’s by word of mouth." Arizona does not have a statewide prostitution law. “In the county there is no law against solicitation. In the county, our responsibilities are for the state statutes, not any city ordinances,” Fisher said. “We enforce state law and there is no state law against soliciting for prostitution.” “Under the law, in order to prosecute the owner or operator of one of these services, we have to prove that he has the knowledge of what the girl is doing. And of course, their story is they just send her out as an escort and don’t know what she does.” The only state laws the county sheriff’s office has to work with in this area are receiving the earnings of a prostitute (pimping), residing or being employed in a house of ill fame, and similar statutes, Fisher said. “Under the law, in order to prosecute the owner or operator of one of these services, we have to prove that he has knowledge of what the girl is doing. And of course, their story is they just send her out as an escort and don’t know what she does. “They know what’s going on, and we know what's going on, but it's talked about in general terms and we can’t prove it. “The laws we have to work with make it more difficult to crack down on these types of organizations,” Fisher said. The customer knows he is calling for sex, Sandy said. But that telephone exchange is handled carefully by the service. “When my boss is on the phone with a customer, she can't tell him what he's going to get for that $70 he’ll “When my boss is on the phone with a customer, she can’t tell him what he’s going to get for that $70 he’ll pay. If she did, she could be busted for pimping.”_____________________ pay. If she did, she could be busted for pimping. “She wQl only tell him the service hss a rate of $20 The point is to verify the man’s identification as he has given it to the service. The assumption is he has had to show positive identification upon registering at the hotel. This way the service knows if the man has been “up front” about who he is, John explained. If the man checks out, the escort will go to the hotel, to the man’s room, and within five minutes of entering, ask him to settle the “ financial arrangements.” Sandy said she can tell if the man is a police officer. “A regular guy knows what he is going to get and will give me the money when I tell him he is paying for my time. “But a cop will push and ask, ‘What do I get for my $70*?' and try to get me to say something about a sex act. But I won’t. I’ll just play his game with him and say, ‘Any one thing we agree on from start to com­ pletion’ or just ‘You're paying for my time.' “Because it's not illegal to pay me for my time but it is if he gets laid. So that ‘one thing' could mean anything from a game of checkers or backgammon. Also, a cop won't give me that money until I say I will perform an act of prostitution for him.” Graham said it sometimes may come down to a word game between an undercover policeman and an escort. Sandy is right, Graham said. An officer will try to get the girl to say something about a sex act. Sometimes the girl will slip up in her answers, Graham said. Sometimes she will simply walk out if she has been around long enough to catch on to an undercover policeman, he said. “We check out the guys real good. The only ones we go to see are exe­ cutives in town for conventions and stuff. It’s a lot better than a massage parlor.” Sandy has never been busted. Her escort service has an attorney on retainer in case she would be. But Sandy said she can smell an undercover cop and has walked away from many. John offered Susan what he called his best advice: don't become emotionally involved with any of the customers. He told her she would only get hurt if she did. “Always remember, a trick is a trick,” he told her. John stood- up, and before he excused himself to handle the nightly calls, he asked Susan if she would like to go to work that night. Susan declined. Was she sure? He could easily put her to work that night, it was still early. Susan replied she would like to think it over. conMnuadpage13 Wednesday,'December 6, 1978 State Press Paige 13 More about Buying ‘com panionship’ for $ 7 0 an hour continuad from paga 12 With Posner gone, Susan and Michael sat across the table and continued to discuss the service. Michael leaned his tatooed arms on the tabletop. He asked Susan if she were a police officer. No, she said. He seemed satisfied with her response, and explained that even if she were, now that she had denied it she could not take any action against them. That is a common misconception, Graham said. Undercover police may have to lie about their iden­ tification or they would not get information, he said. And if an officer lies about his identification, and proceeds to take action against the escort sérvice, it is not entrapment, Graham said. Even so, there have been few prosecutions of escort services because it “is a difficult cas' to make,” Graham said. In the past 2'/2 years that Graham has been with the special investigations department of the Phoenix police, there have been only five or six prosecutions. Most of the time, the department will work with a prostitute who is mad and decided to “roll over” on her pimp and help the police to prosecute, he said. The most candid references to sex came from Michael after Posner’s departure. Michael asked Susan if she had a gynecologist. He advised she get one and see him regularly once she started to work for the service. “The only thing I do to get through it is lay there, grit my teeth and think about the $50. That’s the only way I can handle it.” He told Susan to always use prophylactics when working. “Just have them with you and tell the guy ‘This is the way it is.’ ” He reminded Susan she could go to work that night. She told him she would think about it and let the service know. She soon left. She did not become an escort. But her friend Sandy admits she is a hooker, and that the service she works for operates on the earnings of thè prostitutes employed by the service. “We check out the guys real good. The only ones we go to see are executives in town for conventions and stuff. It's a lot better than a massage parlor.” Yet Sandy is not overwhelmed with being a hooker. “I think it’s rather disgusting and at times it repulses me. In fact, I have found it has ruined my whole sex life. The only thing I do to get through it is lay there, grit my teeth and think about the $50. That’s the only way I can handle it.” by Garry Trudeau DOONESBURY redfern, i iuanta PIECE ONTHAT6AN6 HI, OF-THIEVES WHICHTHE BOSS! VOTERS. IN THEIRUISI DOM, SENTBACK W CONGRESS! DAMMITALL! POST-OWER6AT5 IS NOT OVER VET, I TELL YOU! REPFERN!----- r Attention New Location: / Îam 409 S. Mill Ave. Engineering and Drafting Students TEMPE 966-3658 966-0700 GVR Blueprint Company, dealer of fine engineering and drafting supplies PRESENTS •Stano-Pen, the world's first prob­ lem-free technical* pen. # •10% discount on all supplies with ASU I.D. •If item is not in stock, we w ill order it. V J 4035 E. McDowell, #9 Ph. 275-6210 NO, DUMMY. THESHAKE1HE BOONSQUAD! FIOCO! UÑOLE TAGES!THENOREAGKTOKf. CON- AW DONTLEAVECUTTUE GRESB? SPEAKER ANDHIS DAMN NURSING Sandy said she has advised other girls who are attracted to the job by the money not to become an escort. “Once you get into it, you don’t get out of it. The job is addicting, like junk. Yofi get addicted to the money and not having to work very hard. “I just keep making up excuses to stay away from a straight job. There is always something I want or need in the future and can make money for it this way. “I think now, if I had it to do all over again, I’d have gone back home and tried to work things out. “I don’t know, but one of these days, I’m going to have to get out of it. I’m getting too old.” There have been several bills introduced in the Arizona Legislature over the past eight years for stronger restrictions on massage parlors, Fisher said. “There have also been bills introduced to make prostitution illegal statewide. They haven’t gotten very far. “A lot of people feel we shouldn't spend too much time on these kinds of ‘victimless crimes.’ A lot of people — and this has been the feeling of some of the people in the state Legislature — feel you can't legislate people's morals. “On the other hand, there are those who think the morals of the country are going down the drain and that this stuff shouldn’t be allowed. “Some say, ‘Why waste your time on that? Go catch a burglar.’ And some say, ‘Why are you letting this happen?’ It puts us in the middle." Also in Phoenix: 338 E. Camelback 264-4475 We stock KENWOOD • FISHER • AKAI • CERWIN VEGA • DYNACO • ALTEC LANSING • PIONEER • SANYO • JENSEN & MUCH MORE. Come listen to our SANTA SPECIAL. Great Sound for only $219. Give us a call or stop by. DM-IS THIS A THINK NO' ^ pie ce , boss? '¡ ¡S re m 0 BIRD'S RECORD EXCHANGE 111 E Uravereity Ripples of elegant beauty surround the smooth, hard stone. “Dog & Butterfly” Corner of University & Myrtle In Tower Center WE BUY, SELL and TRADE FINE QUALITY USED RECORDS I A new album by Heart. O n Portrait“ Records mid Tapes. Management and Direction: Ken Kinnear, Albatross Management Inc. Produced by Mike Flicker, Heart and Michael Fisher. OPEN MONDAY - SATURDAY 10-9 “Portrait’,’ are trademarks of CBS Inc. <£) 1978 CBS Inc. rockjazzfolxbluesclassicalshow s 9 6 6 -4 1 5 8 J APPEARING AT THE COLISEUM ON DECEMBER 8 J Page 14 State Press Wednesday, December 6, 1978 Anti-hunters take to hills to protect bighorn sheep TUCSON (AP) — The last of four desert bighorn sheep hunters, trying for a ram in mountains near here, face major opposition from an anti-hunting group, a group member said Tuesday. John Walker, leader of the Animal Defense Council group that has gone into the moun­ tains to try to stop the hunt, said his group plans to use walkie-talkies and an airplane to keep in touch with and keep a watch on the hunter. “If we save the life of just one ram, it will have been worth the effort,” Walker said. Despite his group’s efforts, since the sheep season opened Saturday, three of the four hunters given permits for the Santa Catalina Mountains have gotten their rams. Three kills in three days is an unusual record for sheep hunters, who usually are not so successful, state game officials said. The latest kill was by 15-year-old Tucson resident Mike Jensen, who brought out a ram Monday. The two hunters, who got their sheep before Jensen, said the efforts of Animal Defense Council members to keep them from making kills actually contributed to their success. Walker denied that. “T hat’s blatantly ridiculous, basically, they’re trying to avoid us. When we’re most active and effective, they can’t kill sheep, so they switch to another area and attribute the kill to us.” The two hunters said they were taking steps to avoid the anti-hunting group members at the time they spotted rams and made their kills. Thus, they said, they had to * credit the group for helping them. Walker said the anti-hunting group has had some difficulty because it is spread too thin in the rugged 20-square-mile sheep hunting area. Before the hunt last week, Walker’s group announced it would use whistles and guns loaded with blanks to frighten sheep out of the range of hunters. Group members said they think the state is mismanaging bighorns by allowing them to be hunted. New course to cover solar energy aspects An NAU course that will assist engineer/physicist students to calculate the economic value of a proposed solar design will be offered to Valley residents next semester. According to Dr. Frank Mancini, associate director of the Arizona Solar Energy Research Commission, the course will cover a number of aspects of solar energy, including fluid mechanics, methods of solar energy collection, heat transfer and economic analysis. The three-hour course will be held Mondays from 6:40 to 9:40 p.m. in Room 800 of the State Capitol Tower and will begin January 22. TEMPE OFFICE SUPPLY has just about everything you need •Complete office supplies •School supplies •Attache cases • Rubber stamps — custom made to your order •G ift supplies •Greeting cards •Wedding announcements and gifts We also have a large selection of office furniture. DELIVERY SERVICE Spanish-style onions wanted in Japan-no one knows why (AP) — It’s enough to bring tears to your eyes! The Japanese are buying up America’s onions. Not all of our onions, of course. The big demand seems to be for the Spanish-style onions — the ones some people erroneously called Bermuda onions. No one knows exactly why; it could be an increased taste for hamburgers. There also are reports that the Japanese onions were smaller than usual this year. Idaho and Oregon are the biggest producers of the big, Spanish-style slicing onions. Last October and November, they shipped 4.6 million pounds of onions to Japan. This year, in the same two months, unofficial figures show shipments of 43.7 million pounds. Prices, meanwhile, are up. “Rather dramatically,” said a U.S. Department of Agriculture spokesman who asked not to be identified by name. A 50-pound sack of Spanish-style onions with a minimum diameter of three inches sold for $3.50 at Idaho and Oregon shipping points in the first half of Operation ID is coming to campus! November. By the end of the month, the same sack was going for $6. “That is a very high price for onions. No question about it,” said the USDA spokesman. Adding to the problem is a disease that has struck the oniops in storage, meaning many of them must be culled out. “We can’t put our finger on what we call the cullage, but it reportedly is running very heavy,” the agriculture spokesman said. It should be pointed out that there is no shortage of onions. The storage crop — onions of all kinds on hand throughout the country for marketing during the coming months — stands at 18.2 million hun­ dredweight, up 5 percent from last year. The storage crop of Spanish-style onions in the West is almost as large as last year’s. Even with the increase, the exports account for only a small fraction of total production. Tom Cooper, who runs the federal Market Reporting Service in Idaho Falls, Idaho, said, for example, that only about 6 percent of the onions shipped from the state in the current marketing season have been destined for export. A fo o tb e d of c o rk mixture, lined with soli suede. sha|x‘s to your loot and provides sup|x>t t and comfort that benefits your entire Ixxly. Kighl styles to (hcx)se from, as well as Noppy’s, the sandal that massages your feet. Tem pe: 414 S. Mill Ave. Suite 106 966-3139 Tucson: 1023 N. Park Ave. 622-1395 ¡m m n v iL L R w ax W 0HX 7 e .5 th . S t. T e m p e Beautiful and unusual handcrafted g ifts c a n d /e i f ie lle ijf m acxam e A u b d u fccd tc y b imho* fed tcafib c a id b c a le n d e r w coden h t a n t e i ic x e b M M M IH IE K S O ta M a g & 'feooG toj] B irk e n s to c k J 616Mil Ave., Tempe,Az. 968-8622 968-8621 M . / X Wednesday, December 6, 1978 State Press Page 15 Rocky's story got nothin ' on Horner The Braves first planned the 6-foot-l, 205-pound Blyleven. He went on to hit A Hollywood writer could Horner said. “It would .266 in 1978, with 23 never dream such an in­ reach right up there with to send Horner to th eir third baseman had a homers and 63 RBIs — a conference with Atlanta credible success story as one of the College World remarkable total of 48 general manager Bill Lucas, Bob Horner’s. Series. he stayed to play in the homers and 163 RBIs During the past six “ I t’s a super award during his combined college majors. months, Horner, a former knowing all of the players “We talked about it at and*pro seasons. ASU baseball star, played in the National League The only drawback to the great length to make sure in the 1978 College World thought you were the best 1978 season for Horner was we weren’t biting off more Series, was named for the rookie around. It’s quite an than we could chew,” an injury to his left second time to The honor,” he added. H o rn e r r e c a lle d . shoulder, which required Sporting News All-America A fter setting NCAA “Everything worked out postseason surgery to college baseball team , season records of 25 homers repair torn cartilage. real well.” selected as college and 100 runs batted in and But recovery was swift, Horner paid immediate baseball’s Player of the an NCAA career record of and Horner is currently lift­ dividends in his first game Year, picked No. 1 in the 56 homers, Horner signed a Bob Hom er ing weights to strengthen for A tlanta on June 16, 1978 baseball free-agent contract with the Braves the shoulder, and should be when he slammed a home draft, signed a major league for $202,000, one week Double-A farm team at ready for spring training. run off Pittsburgh’s Bert Savannah, Ga., but after contract with the Atlanta after the 1978 CWS. Braves, and most recently was named National League Rookie of the Year. The screenplay which took Horner only six months to write could rival “Rocky” as the best sports movie ever made. And with all th a t hap­ pening to Horner, he must be flying high. “ It seemed to me like everything happened at once,” H orner said. “It takes a while to kind of come down from all of it.” Horner is the first baseball player ever to win The Sporting News College Player of the Year award and the NL Rookie of the Year award in the same season. He was also the first rookie to be brought to the majors in mid-season to wi” Rookie of the Year since Willie McCovey did it in 1959. “It was probably one of the nicest awards I’ve got,” Ronnie Laws Super Holiday Savings from WORLD Women win West Coast Invitational The pre-season goal of the 1978-79 ASU women’s swim team was to pick up where it left off last year — namely, winning the West Coast invitationals. Last weekend, the Sun Devils did just that. Getting superb individual efforts from Melissa Belote, Pam Rogers and Diana Kutsunai, ASU copped the San Diego Invitational for the second consecutive season. Belote led the way with victories in the 100 and 200 yard backstroke and 1650 freestyle. Rogers won the 50 and 100 yard breaststroke, while freshman Kutsunai took all the butterfly events — 50,100 and 200. In all, ASU captured 15 of 22 events in the two-day com­ petition, amassing a total of 1,336 points. UA finished second with 934.5, followed by San Diego State (485], Utah [258.5], Fresno |2061 and the University of San Diego [150]. GET READY FOR A NAPPY CHANUKAH HILLEL is selling menorahs candles and dreidels 213 East Univarsity Dr. 967-7563 FLAME G reatest H its 1974-78 8.98 List A vailable on United A rtists (7.98 List) ^JLGEUSBAND DR. HOOK SANCTUARY. Pleasure & Pain Yourchoice LP or Tape EM I AMERICA ~ RENAISSANCE In The Beginning THE BAND Double LP Set (10.98 List) (9.98 List) w m m 8eottMM* Road * McOowaN mPapago Plata Opan UH Midnight, Every Night Double LP Set i i s r l i •T ifC i M R 778-1330 P— tCO TT 778-2120 IS IS Iron Spring* Road Page 16 State Press Wednesday, December 6, 1978 Hom etown boy w ill show his stu ff in N ew Jersey By John Maino Al Harris is going home and Fred Miller is responsible. That’s right, folks. Because it was Miller who knowingly and willingly finagled the Sun Deviis into a spot in the first Garden State Bowl to be played in East Rutherford, N.J. Where is the connection you ask? Well, F.ast Rutherford. N.J. happens to be located a downand-out pattern away from Rancocas Valley Regional High School, which is the institution where Harris first developed the fine art of ruining a quar­ terback’s looks. And in Giants’ Stadium on the afternoon of Dec. 16, defensive end Alfred Carl Harris will, at the expense of Rutgers University, attempt to show the folks back East how much he’s learned in college. The fact that he’ll be doing it in front of a slew of friends and relatives who haven’t seen him play since 1973 is enough to How will you feel a week from Wednesday? COMPUTER RESOURCES •Computer readout charts your biorhythm for an entire year. (Dec. 25 - Jan. 1, 1980) • Know your High & Low days at a glance •Unique Christmas gift for yourself, a friend or lover! recruit from an area that plays very good high school football,” Harris said. “The high schools in their area always have very big, physical teams loaded with good athletes.” “Another thing I know is that we’ll be playing in their back yard and they’ll be ready for us." Many Sun Devil fanatics have been miffed by ASU’s lack of recognition on the West Coast, despite the fact ASU had dominated the Western Athletic Conference. They’ll soon learn that folks out East know as much about ASU as a native Arizonan knows about lox and bagels. “There are a lot of people out East who have never even heard of ASU,” Harris said. “When I was living out there, I was an avid college football fan and I went out of my way to find out how they did in their games. But most people out East don’t know anything about us because we usually play so late th at our games don’t make the Sunday papers.” Frank Kush has said that the main purpose of a bowl game is for the players to have fun and enjoy themselves. Harris, no Four ASU football players have been barred from stranger to the bright lights of playing in the Dec. 16 Garden State Bowl by Head Coach New York City, admits that this year there is a chance of the Frank Kush, it was announced Tuesday. team enjoying itself a little too The four are: starting defensive tackle Joe Peters, much. “T here’s always a lot of middle linebacker Gary Padjen, running back Arthur distractions at a bowl game,” he “Turtle” Lane and quarterback John Fouch. said. “But I think some people going to be surprised at just Kush suspended the four for missing the team bus are how many distractions there are following the game in Tucson against UA Nov. 25. in New York. The Devils' head coach was in New York Tuesday at a “I’m not saying that the city is beautiful, because it’s not. But it press conference and unavailable for comment. is awesome. I’m sure we’ll all In other Sun Devil sports news, basketball coach Ned have a good time, but I hope we Wulk said Tuesday freshman players Dale Cooke and Tom don’t get so distracted that we forget about the game.” Kuyper were being redshirted for the 1978-79 season. start his adrenalin flowing. "I went to school in New Jersey from sixth grade through my sophomore year in high school,” he said. H arris was chosen to both the AP and UPI All-America college football teams at defensive end. “And I've got a whole bunch of relatives and friends back there who'll be at the game. “ Most of them have never seen me play in college, so that, along with the fact that I’ll be playing in my last game for ASU, guarantees that I’ll be up for the game.” That definitely is not a note of cheer for the Scarlet Knights, who, after losing their opening game of the year to No. 1ranked Penn State, won their next nine games before falling to lowly Colgate 14-9, to close out a 9-2 regular season. Harris knows very little about this year’s Rutgers team. “The only thing I know about Rutgers right now is that they Send: $5.00 ($5 bill, check or money order) Your Name and Name of Receiver, plus Address & Birthday to: P.O. BOX 33214, Phx. 85067 HEAVEN'S ABOVE CROSS-COUNTRY KOHL'S RANCH Ski the beautiful Mogollon Rim! Miles of forest land, excellent skiing conditions throughout the winter. After the day’s skiing, enjoy the accommodations at Kohl's Ranch: Rustic cabins, mod­ ern lodging, kitchenettes, sauna, fine restaurant and bar. Lessons available. A complete touring center, just two hours northeast of the Valley. SUGGESTED! Call Mon. - Thurs. after 7 p.m. 9 6 6 -9 7 2 6 Days Toll Free 2 7 1 -9 7 3 1 Football players miss bus, restricted from bow l game 3 1 C XEROX COPIES Z OVERNIGHT 5« W HILE YOU WAIT aiphayraphics UNIVERSITY ARCHES 122 E. UNIVERSITY 9 6 8 -7 8 2 1 Cooke, a 6-foot-6 forward from Altadena, Calif., has been sidelined since the start of the season with an injury, which was aggravated in pre-season workouts. No reason was given for the redshirting of Kuyper, a 6-foot-6 for­ ward from Bellflower, Calif. Kuyper has not played at all this season. LIMITED OFFER Exhibition and Sale of FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS 'd MONET TOULOUSE-LAUTREC / ROTHKO CEZANNE VAN GOGH ROUSSEAU ESCHER* KLEE DALI DEGAS PICASSO VERMEER REMINGTON FRANKENTHALER I .V RENOIR A WYETH P a le stin ia n s . They w ere both forced to leave th e ir HOMER GAUGUIN MIRO COROT child and an old m an. They are both hom eland by Israel. N o w they are living in refugee cam p s. Today th ere are m ore than 2 m illio n P a le stin ia n s living in refugee cam p s. There shall LOCATION: On the LAWN between HAYDEN LIBRARY and STUDENT UNION DATE: MON., Dec. 4 through FRI., Dec. 8 TIME: 9:00 AM to 5:30 PM (weather permitting) SPONSORED BY CULTURAL AFFAIRS BOARD . . . Priced at $3.00 each O r any 3 f o r $7.00 (tax included) *Due to Import Costs all Escher Prints are offered at $4.00 each or any 2 for $7.00 be no peace P a le stin ia n s in are the M id d le allo w ed to East u ntil return to h o m elan d . ASU O rg an izatio n of Arab S tu d en ts PAID ADVERTISEMENT these th eir Wednesday, December 6, 1978 State Press Page 17 ASU wrestlers suffer 'Monday'blues By Jim Elsleger Monday came and Monday went, and a combination of Mondays all around proved to be too much for th e ASU wrestling team, as it came out on the short end of a 2911 score with Oklahoma at the Activity Center Monday night. Two years ago, Jim and Mike Monday wrestled for ASU but were kicked off the team by Coach Bobby Douglas for what he termed “a variety of reasons.” And after Monday (the day) he has doubts about the decision. Mike (the w restler), started off the match by pinning Everette Winters in the 118 pound class, and ASU was never able to mount a comeback. John Jeffries got ASU on the scoreboard in the next match with a 7-4 decision in the 126-pound class, his seventh game without a loss this season. Jim got a 24-13 decision over Joe Koeth in the 142pound match and the Sun Devils found themselves far behind on the strength of the Monday (the wrestlers) wins after the first four matches. Bill Cripps at 150 pounds and Vave Severn at 177 managed the other two wins for ASU. “There is no doubt that we would have won the match if the Monday brothers were wrestling for us,” Douglas said. The loss before a crowd of some 800 dropped ASU’s record to 2-1 for the season with their next match scheduled for Jan. 5 against Northern Colorado at home. “We got out wrestled and were beat by a very good team,” Douglas said. “Both us and Oklahoma are in a rebuilding year; they’re a little ahead of us right now." Spread eagle An Oklahoma wrestler heads for a “crash landing” in the grasp of a Sun Devil grappler in Monday night’s ASUOklahoma match in the Activ­ ity Center. It was ASU, how­ ever, which crashed and burned, as the Sun Devils dropped their first match of the season 29-11 to the Sooners. [State Press staff photo by Christopher Colby] annruw uinnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnrrnn----------------- CHRISTMAS SPECIALI urns Je I EVERY PURCHASE OVER $10.00 THE JOCK SHOP SPORT STORE HEY STUDENTS! Whether you ore going home for the holidays or staying here, ASU clothing is a must 11 ORIGINAI ASU GAME JERSEY ¡ m ASU SPORT SHIRT Reg. *8” Home & Away Colors. Sizes S to XL Haircutters Reg. *15 95 S A L IM S ’ 5 SUE * 7 “ M! In M aroon & Gold Reg. $5.50 Bring a Friend & Get Riddel Casual Brown Full Grain Leather Two Haircuts for The Price of One $15 Haircut! (Offer Includes: Shampoo, Conditioning Treatment, Haircut & Blow Dry Styling) Call ter Appointment $199* Many O th e r Christmas Values A va ila ble ! Expires 1 M 0 - 7 S _______ | ROADWAY PLAZA SALE Various Prints New Sporting Goods le a lc e « . Broadway & M ill Ave. 968-8144 MILL A BROADWAY TEM PI • M BROADWAY PLAZA 967-5589 150 Päge 18 State Press Wednesday, December 6,1978 ASU golfer enthusiastic about winning this year By Jim I j sieger Dan Croonquist, golfer ex ­ traordinaire and practitioner of the things that make champions out of winners, may be the secret ingredient the ASU golf team needs to grab the so-far elusive No. 1 ranking. “I think we have the nucleus to go all the way,” Croonquist said. “When the rankings come out in February, we should be on top, and I feel we’ll stay there.” Croonquist has the talent and attitude to turn this year’s team into a memory as well as a champion. He likes the idea of winning, but may be a little more knowledgeable on the subject of disenchantment. He has met players who have the talent to win but not the a t­ titude — abortion time. Before coming to ASU in 1977, Croonquist played for Texas A&M, and almost got lost in a stream of negation, and the most feared of all of the athletes’ enemies — pessimism. “The players at Texas A&M just w eren't winners,” Croonquist said. “They didn’t aspire to improve, they didn’t think they could be winners and no one told them they could be.” A crippling disease in athletic circles. Croonquist spent one semester in the A&M doldrums in 1976, then sought greener pastures, positive attitudes, and players who could handle being the best there is — a la ASU. “This is the place to play golf,” Croonquist said, showing as much enthusiasm as his serene personality could muster. “The players here are great, they’re positive about their game and the team and con­ fident in themselves. Something they didn’t have at A&M was someone to tell them they could win.” This need for encouragement may be the most im portant thing a golf coach can offer his team. “Golf is so much an in­ dividual game that if you aren’t instilled with the right attitude from the coach and other players, it can be disastrous,” Croonquist said. “I didn’t agree with Bob Ellis’ (head golf coach at Texas A&M) philosophy at all. I was just spinning my wheels there and he wasn’t doing much to help the team. Here at ASU, (Coach George) Boutell is great in working with the players, and the players, in turn, are willing to learn and are always working to get better.” When a golfer reaches a certain level of expertise in the game of golf, mental attitude is the only obstacle left in getting just that much better. S tarting at age four, Croonquist has reached th at level where physical ability is tantamount only if the head is screwed on properly. “It’s hard to prepare mentally for a game like golf, so anything or anyone that can help you is very im­ portant,” Croonquist said. A fter graduating from Mounds View High School in St. Paul, Minn., Croonquist opted for the junior college circuit, even after flattering offers from such notable golf havens as Wake Forest and Alabama. “I just, felt I needed more tournam ent experience," the ASU senior said. “I went to McLennan Junior College in Waco, Texas to get th a t ex ­ perience. I played in 25 to 30 tournaments in the year I was there and it helped me trem endously. It was a good place to play. I was ready for the major schools after high school, but felt it would help me more if I got as much to u r­ nament play in as possible before trying it.” So he sharpened the game and the attitude at McLennan and moved on to Texas A&M, a live and learn move. “I was recruited by just about everyone, including ASU, but I decided on A&M for personal reasons,” Croonquist said. After the metal-glove treatment the Aggies offered, the wandering golfer decided ASU and Boutell had the ingredients. “Dan is probably the finest player in all of college golf,” Boutell said of his ace. “He has won on all types of golf courses and has a trem endous com­ petitive ability in any situation.” Croonquist is currently playing in the No. 1 spot for the Sun Devils and has held the top spot on every team he has ever played for. After having to sit out the 1977 season because of ineligibility after transferring, he quickly made his presence known this year. He is currently a member of the all-conference team in the Western Athletic Conference, and made second team All-America honors. He finished eighth in the 1978 NCAA championship to u r­ nament, and second in the WAC Championship. Besides wanting to lead his team to a national title and grabbing the individual trophy, Croonquist has set goals for himself on both a long and short range basis. J THE ORIGINAL A . METAPHYSICAL CENTRE BOOKS LECTURES PYRAMIDS CLASSES Sharing I» Fun, Bring a Friend \ 3018 H. 16th St, 279-2876 /* We Are Not Alone! GIVE A PIECE OF THE UNIVERSE THIS CHRISTMAS For $3.00 you w ill receive. . . •Deed to 5 acres on the Planet of your choice (except Earth)! •Deed is suitable for framing! •N am e and address of your neighbors — if any! Send N am e, A ddress, Planet C hoice & $3.00 To: O U TER L IM IT S , IN C . 812 E. E C H O L A N E — P H O E N IX , A Z. 85020 Claims by local inhabitants (humanoid or otherwise) supercedes these deeds. STORE YOUR VALUABLES OVER CHRISTMAS VACATION! OVER 1000 UNITS! H )00 OFF ANY UNIT ON 1st MONTH STORAGE MURPHY BROS. MINI-STORAGE • 7 Sizes • 25 to 2 0 0 sq. ft. • 3D Curry 5 } 2 Locations in Tem pe 13 University 1606 E. Curry R d. • 968-4852 965 E. University • 968-9261 ASU Chu/s Choo Choo formerly CLUB CASA LOMA •M O N D A Y BEER BASH1*1™ ^ * 1-50 Coors & Miller Lite on tap •TUESDAY contlnrad page 19 LADIES NITE WELL DRINKS & DRAFT 2 for 1 •WEDNESDAY CHOO-CHQQ NITE 10c for ALL WELL DRINKS & DRAFT BEER $3.00 cover •T h u r s d a y TOURNAMENT NITE Foosball, Pool, Darts, Backgammon •FRIDAY DISCO DISCO CLOSED •SATURDAY •SUNDAY HAPPY HOUR 4-7 60 ° Well Drinks 35 * Draft Monday - Friday 396 S. MSI Avenue, Tempe 96&4980 Wednesday, December 6 ,19 78 State Press Page 19 More about Golfer boosts team continued from pago 18 For S a le M * lp W an ted S t r v lc t t COMPLETE KING-SIZE waterbed and pedestal frame. Will sell together or separately. Also complete amateur dark­ room. Vivltar enlarger, era-lab timer. 967-6639. 12/8 MESA CPA firm needs two highly Intelli­ gent accountants. Call for appointment. 834-7111. 12/8 GOOD STUDENTS: Save 25% on Auto Insurance — nonsmokers 15%. Ask for Steve Lundell, 835-1480, ASU Representa­ tive, Farmers Insurance Group. 12/8 TEACHERS — your skills needed for management level position. Part-time, Transportation_____ “The Walker Cup team is a which was tem pting but 1 12-15 hours weekly. May earn $1000 IN-DASH AM/FM cassette, 1-2 RIDERS wanted to Ohio or part way. short-term goal right now,” he politely declined. A bag-carrying TELEMASTER monthly. Summer openings also. 971Alko under-dash FM/cassette, Mecca Leave around 12/18. Contact Rich, 968said. “If I can make that team, offer was made, which the ASU eight-track under-dash, Medallion mini 8796. 12'8 8131 after5:00 p.m. 12/7 then I automatically qualify for player humbly declined. auto-reverse cassette, deluxe eight-track DRY GULCH Saloon now Interviewing girl 12/8 1968 INTERNATIONAL Metro van, *1000 the M asters in 1980. Plus, I dancers for their new stage. Contact Don, Croonquist ju st finished underdash. 967-0417. firm. 967-0417. 12/8 968-5643. 12/8 would get to play in Scotland competing in the Sun Bowl Alland England, which isn’t bad Star Classic in El Paso, Texas PART-TIME help wanted. W ill train. *2.75 an hour. Call 941-2496 after8:00p.m. 12/8 T rO V O I either.” where he tied for fourth. A SEWING MAC H IN E, Free Arm , W hat are his long-range better golfer for his efforts and never used, 1979, best m odel, s till FREE TRAVEL opportunities throughout COLLEGE STUDENTS and Teachers: Work in carton. F u ll o rig in a l guarantee. plans? W hat else? The with an outlook that is minus the USA. No car rental; drive to or from all temporary during your holiday breaks!! Does everything. C ost $469, m ust major cities. Arrange trips in advance. Cars Earn extra cash for Christmas!! Register professional tour and eventually great athletic killer — sacrifice, $165. I also have the available now. AAACON Auto Transport, just once, no fees or contracts. Employers the world. “Sure, I’m going to pessimism, Croonquist looks b e autifu l cabinet that cam e w ith 264-0201. 12/8 Overload, 264-4060. 12/6 It. Private Hom e. 946-2127. 12 /8 try the tour,” Croonquist said forward to every tournament SKI SALT Lake City with the Shando Ski EXTRA MONTHLY INCOME! Work two with confidence. “I should have with No. 1 in mind. Club, January 7th - 13th. $185. For more days a month, plus two weeks In summer. a pretty good chance of making The first-team All-America info, call 947-4874 or968-4097. 12/8 Starting pay averages $103.50 per month. it. hopeful joins Scott Wadkins in Benefits include college tuition reimburse­ Croonquist is not a dreamer the run for the NCAA cham­ STEREO. BRAND NEW. Never ment, military shopping privileges, regular been used. A M /F M record pay raises and life insurance. Vacancies for on uppers, he is a bona fide pionship. P essim istic a lly T y p in g changer; 8-track, records from ages 17-34: Vets up to age 40 eligible too! talent, who used the best models speaking, someone has to lose. radio, live, tapes. Large speakers. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. IBM self-correc­ Join the Army National Guard. Call man could find to gain his ex­ S till in orig in a l carton. Sold fo r ting. 90-110 wpm, $6.50/hour (approxi­ 271-3473. 12/7 $360, w ill take $185 firm . Call pertise. “I never had formal golf mately 75c/page) fast and accurate. Lora, USHERS AND concession help needed. 278-0304. 12 /8 947-0976. __________ 12/8 lessons,” he said. “I just W A N T ADS Apply: Mann Christown Theaters, 5707 watched th e pros and copied TYPING — IBM Correcting Selectrlc II, also North 19th Avenue. 12/8 automatic typing. Dissertations, theses, them. I try to emulate (Jack) CANNON FT6 with 1.8. Excellent condi­ research papers. Rosemary Vance, 967tion. Also excessorles. Need bucks for Nicklaus and (Sam) Snead the START 9143. 12/8 school. Will deal. Call Jeff, 965-3810 day or I ost/Found most." If you’re going to do it, evenings. 12/8 IBM CORRECTING Selectrlc, experienced why mess around with anything LOST: LINDY Star sapphire ring; front row HERE theses, dissertations, etc. Reasonable. Dylan concert. This is an irreplaceable gift. but the best? Lilie, after 7 p.m. 994-0540, weekends all Reward. Ray, 967-8271. 12/7 Croonquist wasn’t born with a F or B ent/Lease day. 12/6 silver p u tte r in his hand, TAN SPIRAL Philosophy notebook lost on CHRISTIANS: For Rent, 3 bedroom house NEAR ASU. Research papers, theses, though. “ Actually, I played 11/28 by chemical plant. Must have back near ASU, $350/month + utilities; ap­ English degree. Editing. 7 hockey a lot more and liked it a {fii/s/ness D irectory\ pliances and washer/dryer and some soon! Please! Greg Rosen, 968-6711. 12/7 dissertations. years experience. 967-4443. 12/8 furniture. Available Christmas. 967-8163. lot more as I was growing up,” »triever, two LOST: FEMALE Go • < ' 1 \ cO v 12/8 ______ -A-______ TYPIST. Theses, disserta­ he said. “I played all types of fReward! Call EXPERIENCED years old â U C XS-Yr ' tions, engineering/tech. reports. 838-0602. 12/7 968-3930, ‘ C P i o , 967-6015. sports, but hockey used to be W heel W orks A uto C o. 12/6 my favorite. What else does a Buy. Sell and Trade Japanese Cars H e lp W an ted IBM SELECTRIC. 8 years experience, 1 Mile North of Campus kid from Minnesota play?” 945 E. Curry 8S4-113T dissertations, theses, term papers, etc. EXTRA HOURS earn you $500 per 1000 M o torcycles (Green golf balls fail again.) Call Jean, 277-3602. 12/8 stuffing envelopes with our circulars. For “I got to be pretty good at 750 HONDA, 73, Super-bike, super-clean, Jack Ross Lincoln-MercuiY Information: S&S Enterprise Dept. 55, P.O. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Very neat copy. 4-1 headers, free-flow air cleaner, oil cooler Box 1158, Middletown, Ohio 45042. 1 /18 hockey, but I hurt my knee New Cars Correcting typewriter. Also Statistical Re­ and pressure gauge, new rubber, some when I was about 15 and quit 2700 N. Scottsdale Rd.______ 994-4500 ports. 964-4846. 1/18 tasteful brass plating and more! Asking before I got seriously hurt and I *1300. Call Stan, 949-9023 after 5 p.m. 12/8 MEN! W O M EN! Jack Ross Lincoln-Mercury GRADUATE EXPERTISE — Guaranteed. didn’t want to chance ruining my JOBS! Dissertations, theses and research papers. 1975 HONDA CB-360T. Adjustable back­ Body Shop golf game.” Ah, the heart .lies CRUISESHIPS • FREIGHTERS Call Debby at Schmalzer Corporation, 665 W. Main S t., Mesa 964-2414 rest with luggage rack. New tires. Com­ No experience. High pay! See Europe, not on the cold, cold ice. 833-5363 or 967-2305. 12/8 pletely new top-end. Excellent condition. Hawaii. Australia, South America. Win­ “Now I ju st play golf,” 996-1208. 12/8 Jack Ross Uncoln-MercurY ter, Summer. TYPING THESES, dissertations, term Croonquist added. “I like to play Send $3.50 to SEAWORLD Used Cars papers, etc. Professional secretary, ac­ 1975 YAMAHA 500cc, excellent condition, C-75, Box 61035, Sacramento, CA 95625 1900 N. Scottsdale Rd. 947-8321 other sports, but with school curate, spelling corrected, reasonable oil cooler, windscreen, luggage rack, bell rates. 949-9207. 12/8 and all it’s too time consuming.” helmet, $850. 1974V2 Honda 25D Elsonor, THE SALVATION ARMY needs part-time $150. Call 968-7300. -F12/8 Croonquist has won two in­ TYPING? Call 277-0161 for any typing and full time bell ringers. Apply 714 Myrtle. dividual titles out of the four needs for your reports, term papers, etc. 750 HONDA, 73. Super-bike, super-clean, Call 967-8649. Minimum Wage. 12/8 Crown Fum. Leasing tournaments ASU has entered $1.60 per page. Copying and stationery 4-1 headers, free-flow air cleaner, oil cooler For House, Apt. & Business supplies also available. Action Office PART-TIME PROGRAM leaders and pressure gauge, new rubber, some this fall. Last summer, he went 1874 E. Apache Blvd. 894-1459 recreation, sports, cooking/sewing, gym­ tasteful brass plating and more! Asking Mates, 1611 E. Camelback Road. 12/8 back to Minnesota and finished nastics, dance, music, art, drama, photog- $1100. Call Stan, 949-9023after 5 p.m. 12/B second in the State Open, and raDhv . . Scottsdale Girls Club, 948-8020. 12/8 third in the State Amateur. He B icy cle s W a n ted went all the way to the semi­ I nstruction__________ VETERANS — MAKE your experience finals in the 1978 U.S. Amateur FUGI: 10-speed bicycle. Blue. Excellent PHONE SALES: Good work, evenings, nice PARACHUTE twelve miles from Phoenix! count. Contact your naval reserve today, condtlon, large, men's frame. Call Bill, office, fantastic boss, close to campus. Championship before losing to 967-4102. $5.00 off with student I.D. Professional 278-0847. Max K. Long. 1/31 12/6 Call 968-4853. ________________ 12/8 instructors. Phone 275-0010. 12/8 Rod Spittle, who is the current Canadian amateur title holder. CAMERA SHOP needs experienced person TAXIDERMY CLASSES, commercial stu­ A u to m o b iles ______ full-time. Consider part-time. 966-5134. dio, taught by professional Taxidermist. Croonquist has developed his D im e-A -Line Mr. Olsen or McAvoy. 12/8 Starting Dec. 4. 971-3790, 992-2971. 12/8 1973 INTERNATIONAL Crew Cab with game by not only watching the camper shell. 4-wheel drive, power steer­ AND Oil Change, $10. Call Steve, RELIABLE DRAFTING or engineeringpros, but playing with them TUNE-UP ing, Tru-Trax tires, dual tanks. Good 967-1877. All work guaranteed. minded person for hourly inspection of also. While in high school, he condition. $4300, negotiable. 967-1826. tolerance plastic parts. Experience P o o m m ate W anted 12/8 played with J.C. Snead, kin to INVESTORS! HERE'S the chance of a close with calipers and micrometers helpful. 4 ROOMMATE WANTED, 3 bedroom home, lifetime. Buy excellent 1971 BMW motor­ Sam, in the National Junior cycle p.m. 12 a.m. Monday Friday. $3.25 to 72 VW ''BUG.” Sunroof, rebuilt engine, for $300 less than it’s worth. Call Scottsdale. $150 per month plus half Tourney. “J.C. took an interst in 967-2459. start. Call Pat 967-8821. 12/6 utilities. 994-1126. mag wheels, extras, real clean. $1550, 12/7 me and helped me out a lot, offer? 946-7486. 12/8 PART-TIME EVENINGS and Saturday work. ANYONE KNOWING David/Becky Brake, ROOMMATE, FREE RENT and utilities, Croonquist said. “He tried to get please relay this message: Mark Reardon Begin earning In excess $5.00 hourly share nice two bedroom apartment as­ me to go to a Southeac< Con­ says Hi! Any return messages? servicing Fuller Brush customers. 947- sisting disabled grad student. Available now. Rural and Southern, 967-6748. 12/8 ference school after hi«1 x>l, 4025. 12,8 GOOD PARTING OUT with a '65 Dodge Dart. Call but I decided against it.” SUMMER JOBS. Forest Service. How, 967-8315 till midnight. 36th STREET and Thomas, $125 plus Vi But when his game takes a TRANSPORTATION with where, when to apply. ,Complete informa­ utilities. 955-0936 after 8 p.m. 12/6 vacation, Croonquist doesn’t JOULES, WE need some energy quick. The tion, $3. Mission Mountain Co., 148 E. supply is low, the demand is high. Bring Evergreen, Kalispell, Montana 59901. Ap­ FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for light have J.C . or any other pro some over when you come on by. LOW DOWN PATMENT plication deadline January 15. 12/8 house work in return for reduced rent. around to help him. He turns to Large home at “ The Lakes." Access to • EAST TERMS Scott Wadkins (senior), father of GET OFF the can. Get on the Stick. Final ATTENDANT/NURSING assistant, work pool, tennis and racquetball courts. Grad­ _________ Scott Wadkins (player), who is exams are coming quick! uate student, non-smoker preferred. Call evenings 3:30-11:30 p.m., disabled grad 12/7 currently the No. 2 player on IF YOU want a pipe like Old Saint Nick, buy student. 1.5 miles ASU. good pay, ex­ 838-4645. 75 Fiat Spider ....................... *3995 the ASU team. “Scott’s dad is it from us before you get sick. Ye Olde Pipe perience preferred. Will train. 967-6748. 71 M a v e ric k ........................... $1195 12/8 the only one who helps me when and Tobacco Shoppe, 955-7740. 71 Torino ............................... $1295 Services TEACHING VACANCIES now in the rural 70 Dart Swinger ............ $1095 my game goes bad,” Croonquist West. For further Information, write Rocky 76 Dodge Aspen SE $4195 said. “Something I try to keep it F or S ale Mountain Teaching Positions, P.O. Box 75 Audi F o x ................ $3495 from doing as much as possible. TSP-109, Lakeville, MN 55044. 12/7 WEDDING SONGS 73 Pontiac Lemans $1995 Croonquist isn’t on the cloud GREAT CHRISTMAS gift place, Southwest $1695 72 Buick Skylark PERSON FOR housework one day per WITH GUITAR 73 Olds 98 .............................*1995 tran sit system though, just Trading Co., 707D S. Forest. Sterling week. 44th Street and Camelback area. 73 Nova Custom Hatchback $1995 Erich Sylvester because he can hit a golf ball silver, 14K gold paraphernalia line, tur­ $2.50 per hour. 959-9206. 12/8 73 Dodge D200 w / cab *2295 Call for song list. farther and straighter than most quoise, gifts, novelties. Bring it all back 76 Dodge Van Conversion $5395 12/8 LOOKING FOR eager student to assist hackers. He offered yours truly home. 72 MG Midget *1595 973-1655 12/6 Instructional Television Coordinator for 72 Cougar XR7 *1795 a match-up on the fairways. BACKDOOR SHOE SHOP, 707 South KAET-TV. Type at least 60 wpm. Self­ DRIVE CARS FREE Cars Available Many Points U.S.A. W e are I.C .C . licensed and in ­ sured. M u st be 21 years o r more. SCHEALLDRIVEAWAY 991-5533 Forest, 966-1772. We carry ladies' Frye boots, Sbicca, Bare Trap, Bass, Deckers. Clogs, Famolare and many more shoe lines. 12,8 starter. Zealous about detail. Room to grow. If qualified, check with Student Employment Office, Matthews Center. Job number 379H. 12/8 VODKA $2.99 fifth. Riunite Lambrusco $1.99. Lowenbrau $1.99 six pack. Rundtes, University and Mill avenues._____ 121 & HELP WANTED: flexible hours, morning hours, and full hours during Christmas break. Apply: Ocean Car Wash, 28 W. University. 12/8 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. ________________________ LADIES SHOES and sandal sale. Up to Vk off. Backdoor Shop, 707 S. Fora«. 968-1772. 12,8 PHOENIX BASED theatre chain has Im­ mediate opening for manager of Tempe theatre. Flexible hours, excellent condi­ tions. Call 955-2233 after 1:00 p.m. for appointment. 12/8 PART-TIME CLERICAL, 4 hours, 6 a.m. to 10 a.m., $3.50 per hour. Apply Kirsch Service, 1457 West Alameda, Suite 111, Tampe. 12/8 74 VW Beetle *2395 76 Mustang Mach I $3495 75 Triumph Spitfire $2795 72 C a p r i................................. *1595 Professional Resumes /o p portunity established since 1966 Call Kim 967-7833 1/24 HAYAY SHALOM Recorded M essage. Please Call 2HM234 NEW USED SALES LEASING RENTALS CROW N AUTO BROKERS 1 Vi ml. North of Campus on Scottsdala Rd. [Rural] ( 12/8 966-1421 966-6064 : Page 20 State Press Wednesday, December 6, 1978 FOR EVERY SPI ■ ON YOUR GIFT U SI! We've got your racquet!! Select from Leach, Ektelon, Aldila, and More! And Save Up To 40% SALE REG. RACQUETBAU Nike Kill Shot •1 7 « RUNNING SHOES Adidas Lady Runner OFF RUNNING GEAR SPORT SHOES RACQUETBALL ‘26 95 4 3 95 S SANTA SPECIAL Adidas Runner $ 4 3 95 Ektelon, Magnum, Magnum Flex Adidas Country $ 2 8 95 *33" TENNIS Everything Goes AT UP TO SOCCER Adidas Junior 50%°" *9 " SANTA SPECIAL Reg. $42.50 FOOTBALL Puma T.D. M 3 9’ BASKETBALL Puma Hi Top Nike Lady A ll Court Nike Men A ll Court $2 3 " *1 5 *9 $ 1 5 *9 TENNIS WEAR Head, Adidas, Gonzales, Bill Blass, Rhia. All Greatly Reduced. TRACK Puma Hurricane Adidas Jet OFF M ost Item s, Tem pe Store Only — Sale Ends Dec. 24. Starts Today. $1 7 95 $3795 $] S] $] 995 $ 1 7 «9 $2195 »23" * 3 1 95 FREE PAIR OF SOX WITH Select a Complete Outfit from Adidas, Sub 4, Gobella ,And Many More A t Up To 40%«rr SANTA SPECIALS SUB-4 NYLON TOP *6” Reg. $1000 S U M N YIO H SNMTSI $6» Reg. $1000 BALLS, BALLS, BALLS 995 995 $2795 Other Models Greatly Reduced ★ 95 $ 1 7 9s BASEBALL Adidas M ajor League * 1 9 " Adidas Diamond $ 1 5 99 Head M aster Frame $1 3 $ 1 3 95 Puma Junior Frame by Head, Yonex, Prince, Adidas, Bancroft and MORE! Plus all your favorite accessories: Balls, Grips, String, Bags, Hats, Gloves, and .... SAVE UP TO 7 Q % $1 Ç 95 Nike Oceania Reg. $44.95 VOLLEYBALL Adidas V olley *29” $3995 N ike LDV The Valley's Largest Selection of Name Brand Running Attire Now at Huge Savings! SOCCER Brine M ikasa SALE REG. I •1 5 " $H " $1 9 95l »17951 BASKETBALL Mikasa FOOTBALL Mikasa VOLLEYBALL Baden ANY SHOE PURCHASE ★ "iAlpine Ski M eier N e x t to Tang's imports 1533 E. Apache, Tempe 968-9056