f thursday March © C o p y r ig h t , S ta te P r e s s , 1979 . . . . 61 p re s s A rizona S ta te U n iv e rs ity Tem pe, Arizona ...... ....... Stopping b ill was 'lost cause' Ross says silence at tuition hearing w as part o f plan By Steve Allnatt Lance Ross, ASU Associated Students president, said Wednesday, he did not testify at the House Education Committee tuition hike hearings because the Arizona Students Association felt the bill was a lost cause in that committee. The Education Committee approved the $650 a year out-of-state student tuition hike, 7-6, Feb. 21. Ross said the bill was 90 percent assured of passing the Education Committee. Ross added, however, he would be the lead-off speaker in an allout effort to stop the bill in the Judiciary Committee Monday. “We’re definitely going to try and stop it in the Judiciary Com­ mittee,” he said. “The odds still are not in our favor in this com­ mittee, but they’re better than before.” Ross said he felt there was a 30 percent chance of stopping the proposed tuition hike in the committee. All Associated Students presentations before the Legislature on the tuition hike proposal are coordinated with representatives from the other state universities. “In our minds (ASA) it was best for me not to talk,” he said. “It was a decision we made (earlier).” UA Associated Students President Doug Ehrenkranz agreed. “We all endorsed this representative kind of testimony,” he said. “We’ve made an effort not to have students repeat what others have said.” Ehrenkranz added that the proposed tuition increase affects students at all three state universities and the particular school of committee witnesses is immaterial. Ross said his testimony before the Judiciary Committee would be more effective because Education Committee members Jim Cooper, R-Mesa, and Pat Wright, R-Glendale, are not members of the Judiciary Committee. Cooper and Wright, both supporters of the tuition hike, have been the subjects of many stories in the State Press. "Had I personally testified, two committee members (Cooper and Wright) could have gotten off the track,” Ross said. “I would have ended up defending the State Press instead of talking about the tuition increase.” . . . . Ross said ASU students did not get short-changed by his silence at the Education Committee hearing. “I thiric students here are being looked after,” he said. “We’re working on this on a day-to-day basis and I think we re making the best judgments.’’ . . . . . . “We have people down at the Capitol daily talking to these people (legislators),” he said. “Close to 85 percent (of the lobbying to kill Walk on the w ild side The setting sun cssts shadows on students strolling down Palm Walk on tha east side of campus. The view Is from the footbridge connecting the walk with the Palo Verde dormitory complex. [State Press staff phdto] It may be a little early, but two 1980 presidential candidates have already campaigned in Phoenix. Neither one, however, expects to win anything. If he knew what the 1978-79 basketball season had in store for ASU, Sun Devil center Kurt Nimphius says he would have gone elsewhere. And fast. Page 5 Page 16 What is it like to be put under hypnosis and find out about your past lives? A State P ress reporter found out in the conclusion of a two-part story. The ASU men’s swimming and diving team opens its bid fora Pac-10 title today in Downey, Calif. The two biggest obstacles in the way are USC and UCLA. Page 6 Page 16 Page 2 State Press Thursday, March 1,1979 In the n ew s briefly from the Associated Press U .S ., CHINA COM PLETE PRO CESS ESTABLISHING RELATIONS WASHINGTON — The United States and China completed the process of establishing full diplomatic relations Thursday with the two sides deeply divided over the wisdom of China’s 11-day-old invasion of Vietnam. The Chinese liaison office here will become the Chinese Embassy during an early afternoon flag-raising ceremony at which Ambassador Chai Tse-Min will preside. In Peking, Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumenthal will represent President Carter at a similar ceremony marking the elevation of the American mission there to full embassy status. VIETNAM WIPES OUT CHINESE PROVINCE BANGKOK, Thailand — Vietnam claimed Wednesday to have put 1,600 Chinese troops out of action in a northwestern province where analysts believe the armies are jockeying for position prior to one of the most decisive battles of the 11-day-old border war. The Voice of Vietnam said its troops wiped out a Chinese regiment and two battalions in the hilly province of Lang Son, but did not give the exact location of the fighting. A Chinese spokesman, who asked to remain anonymous, dismissed Vietnamese claims on the Chinese casualties and declined to indicate the actual number of casualties. IRAN TO CUT OUT MIDDLEMEN TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s revolutionary government, moving to gain maximum benefit from the nation’s oil riches, Wednesday announced it intends to cut out a consortium of middlemen responsible for marketing most of the country’s oil. Hassan Nazih, new head of the National Iranian Oil Co. told thousands of oil workers that “the word consortium will, with the help of Allah, be eliminated from Iran’s vocabulary." Ayatolla Ruhollah Khomeini, who led the nation’s Islamic revolution, said the revolution can succeed only if all foreign influence in the country is eradicated. SOCIAL SECURITY UNABLE TO CREDIT C O RRECT ACCOUNTS WASHINGTON — The Social Security Administration disclosed Wednesday that it has been unable to credit nearly $69 billion in wages to the correct workers' accounts because of identification problems dating to 1937. The problems, which mean that retirement benefits for the affected workers could be reduced, stem from inaccurate or incomplete earnings reports filed by employers or the self-employed over the years, Social Security Commissioner Stanford G. Ross said. TRADE DEFICIT INCREASES WASHINGTON — The U.S. trade deficit, a major cause of inflation, grew substantially worse in January as Americans increased their purchases of foreign oil by $484 million, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. U.S. companies and individuals bought $3.1 billion more of all products than they sold abroad to produce the biggest trade deficit in 11 months, the department said. Official predicts gas stations w ill be closed on weekends Associated Press While American oil companies insist they can handle the current fuel supply squeeze without government intervention, Energy Secretary James R. Schlesinger said Wednes­ day the government may have to force service stations to close on week­ ends by summer. Schlesinger also warned of possible m andatory temperature controls in public buildings and $l-a-. gallon unleaded gasoline “within a year or so.” But Schlesinger told the Senate Energy Committee “there is no immediate need” to take these steps unless the supply squeeze caused by the shutdown of Iranian production becomes more serious. And Alice M. Rivlin, the director of the C o n g ressio n al B u d g et office, told a Senate hearing the Iranian crisis could trigger a major round of price hikes by oil-exporting nations, raising the possibility of a worldwide recession in 1980. The top congressional economist told a Senate G o v ern m en tal A ffairs subcommittee that if the current 500,000 barrel-aday impact on U.S. oil supplies continues for a year, it would increase unemployment by 200,000 jobs and increase the in­ flation rate 0.4 percent. Meanwhile, Iran said it would sell its oil to the highest bidder when it resumes exports, rather than to the group of companies that had been its customers. Oil analysts say this could drive the price of Iranian oil up to $20 a barrel, compared to the base price of the Organization of Oil Exporting Countries cartel of $13.35 a barrel. OPEC gave official ap­ proval W ednesday to separate oil price boosts by several members of the cartel — Kuwait, Libya, c o n tin u a d p e g a 3 TIME TO SPOIL YOURSELF GIVE YOURSELF A GIFT FROM W The Gallery Shop Boxes - Jewels - Little Things M a t t h e w s C e n t e r - 2 n d F lo o r O P E N M O N . - FRI. 12-4 ttu * *5.00 h e u e o a t ,! O tiv n p tM 'j& l& U M J U t i s A - SM U T b u d g e t: Cl, b fa t r d A fy , * 2 .0 0 , C aM teddy, fin. cut* AfrpôinZêhtuCÙ. 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Mushroom Cheeseburger — Fresh Mushrooms - Cheddar Cheese — with French Fries 1.95 * Happy Hour 4-6 Daily Free Hors D’oeuvres ☆ Live Entertainment Thursday thru Satuiday ★ Thursday, March 1,1979 State Presa Page 3 O fficial undecided over b ill Outcom e o f tuition increase unpredictable By Jim Muhlstein With less than a week to go before his committee must decide on the bill, the chairman of the House Judiciary Committee says he is still weighing the matter of a proposed tuition hike for non-residents. “I don’t know where I stand on the bill,” Rep. Peter Kay, R-Phoenix, said Tuesday. “I “We don’t want to tamper with the concept of a University by making changes that affect students unfairly or unequally.” really haven’t studied it that carefully yet.” Kay said he is not in the habit of polling his committee members so he has no idea where they stand on the legislation either. The bill, HB 2265, will be third cm the agenda when the Judiciary Committee meets at 9 a.m. Monday. There will be a public hearing before the committee’s final vote and all interested students are urged to attend, Kay said. “We don’t want to tamper with the concept of a university by making changes that affect students unfairly or unequally,” he said. “However, I do feel that out-of-state students should handle more of the load. We should at least require that academic qualifications are equal.” Kay put the Marne for the suggested “heavy” More about Gas problem s contlmMdtrampag*2 On Tuesday, Mobil said it Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. Other nations, would limit the amount of including OPEC giants gasoline it sells to dealer» T h u rsd a y , Saudi Arabia and Iraq, b e g in n in g have said they will not raise matching similar moves by prices until the next Texaco, Continental Oil Co. scheduled increase April 1. and Atlantic Richfield. More oil companies took Standard Oil Co. of steps Wednesday to keep1 Indiana followed that move gasoline and crude oil Wednesday, saying it will supplies adequate through reduce shipments of its voluntary allocation plans. Amoco gasoline and some Mobil Corp., the nation’s c h e m ic a ls b e g in n in g second largest oil company, Thursday. said Wednesday it was cutting by 9 percent The U.S. government got supplies of crude oil to $41 million in successful r e f in in g c u s to m e r s , bids Wednesday for a retroactive to Jan. 1. Mobil second batch of drilling attributed the cuts to “the sites in the Baltimore uncertain supply outlook.” Canyon off New Jersey. In Exxon Corp., the nation’s August 1976, oil companies largest oil company, said bid $1.1 billion, but so far last month it was cutting brought only two very crude oil deliveries 10 small sources of natural gas percent during the first have been found in the quarter of the year. ______ area. _______ ___ Safety procedures to be topic of show Students and safety engineers from five Western States will meet to discuss safety procedures at the 14th Annual Southwest Safety Congress and Exposition, March 13-15 at the Tucson Community Center. The theme of the conference, “Safety: a Personal Responsibility,” will concentrate on the human factors involved in thejjreventkm of accidents. Registration fees are $1 per day for students with ASU identification. ■ _______________ increase in tuition on the Arizona Board of Regents. “I think if they had acted responsibly and consistently over a number of years, the whole situation could have been avoided.” ______________ “I think if they had acted responsibly and consistently over a number of years, the whole situation could have been avoided,” Kay said. Rep. Jim Cooper, R-Mesa, co-sponsor of the bill, said the legislation would be attached to another bill as a “trailer,” should the judiciary fail to approve it Monday. The perfect match for everybudget. You may think diamond wedding sets are out ofyour price range. Not at Weisfiekfs. We have beautiful 10 kt gold wedding sets economically priced from $205 to $400. And, they're covered by the same guarantee as our more expensive sets. Use your Mastercharge, Visa or American Express^ card. 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I’m one of the ° ^ people who are the victims of Americanism. ° n®°, t h ®22 million black people who are the victims of democracy, nothing but disguised hypocrisy. -M a lco lm X state press Don't blame Ned if team is dead ■—1* * 1 * w With the basketball season mercifully winding down to the end for ASU’s Sun Devils, the cries undoubtably will come again for “No more Ned. Going into the final two games of the season with Washington Saturday and Washington State Monday, the Devils record is a dismal and disappointing 15-13 overall, 6-10 in Pac-10 play. There was more expected of this team, of course. Pre-season talk had the Devils challenging UCLA and USC for the conference crown and a berth m the NCAA tournament. Expectation turned into cold, hard reality, though, when the team proved to be consistently inconsistent. And most of the blame has been placed on W ulks shoulders by the fans, who have been somewhat silent since the outbursts at the USC and UCLA games in January. .. , ... But th e boo-birds will be back this weekend, and the only thing that will shut them up is a victory — the same thing that silenced them in January. Wulk must share some of the blame — it is any coach’s responsibility. But is the answer to fire Wulk? No. He is a proven coach. Wulk came to ASU in 1957, leading the Devils to the Border Conference title, although their overall record was 13-13. , His overall record at ASU is 346-247, the seventh best in the nation among active coaches. ASU has competed in seven NCAA playoffs, two National Invitational Tournaments and «me Conference Commissioners tourney. Eight times ASU has won or shared conference championships. Past glories do not atone for present failures, but _ art m oore canning Wulk won’t make up for a dismal season. A certain amount of common sense and teamwork on the players’ part would have helped. Ned Wulk did not blow two out-of-bounds passes at UCLA’s Pauley Pavillion to throw away a game ASU had in the bag. Ned Wulk did not throw away the ball with 2:52 left in the game in Tucson, allowing Arizona to stall its way to an 85-80 victory. Those are mental errors by players. Coaches can harp on fundamentals until they are blue in the face, but execution is up to the ball-handlers. A change of personnel? Maybe. Tony Zeno is capable of scoring when he is hot and rebounds welL He does, however, tend to panic in crucial situations. Is there anybody capable of providing the scoring and rebounding punch of Zeno without making mental mistakes? If there was, Zeno probably would be on his can. / fitters to the Editor £ | L o R IA , Too - y m m „ m e . 1 UCUS, G a. - P r e s id e n t C arter’? sister, Gloria Spann, is free on a personal recognizance bond after being accused of illegal harm onica playing. “Obviously, I have less talent than I thought,” Mrs- Spann commented. She, her husband, Walter, and two other persons were arrested Saturday night at the McWaffle restaui a m , said Americus police. “I am chacgeo w ith J P 1 playiijg e harmonica fM tj i stop p la .. and kept said from Mrs. S friends and she monies. Police the rest, who se d jukebox, . Mrs. o, erly < ■ CItS A M J K , yp Guest Editorial G e t o ff y o u r b u tt, B r o th e r . .• i • To become aware of our true potential is our greatest need. Black people need to realize there is nothing we cannot do if we put our minds to it. For so tong, we have been told we cannot do this, we cannot do that. We have been brainwashed into believing it. Now, when the opportunity arises, either we do not know how to take advantage of it, we are afraid to take advantage of it or we just don’t want to take advantage of the opportunity. Why? Because we are comfortable doing nothing. It’s easy to be a nothing, much harder to be a something. Those of us who are in school, at least, want to go somewhere and be something. Are we using our full potential or are we bull­ shitting? Remember we cannot bullshit the master bullshitter. We must do it to death in school, just like we do it to death at the MU or at clubs and parties. If we can party all night, we can hit the books all night, or at least a few hours a day. » I am not God, nor am I perfect. But I have come to the realization after spending many Then there is Greg Goorjian, freshman 'Thon thorp is Greer Gooriian. thethe freshman r recruit who scored 43 points per game in high school. He has bellyached about not being able to play his game. Goorjian has played this season with some success {mainly in the Oregon State win) but has a tendency to shoot too often. His presence seems to have caused friction among the team’s upperclassmen. As a result. Baby Greggy has threatened to leave. Maybe ASU would be better off without him, unless he realizes his 43-point average has been left behind for good in high school and he starts to play team ball. Ned is too old, you say? Of course 22 years is a tong time and a change may be needed. But you dim t fire a proven coach because of one lousy season. Wulk was in hot water in the late 1960s and early 1970s when his teams compiled 5-21,11-17, 11-15 and 4-22 records in sucession from 1966 to 1970. He was spared by Dr. Fred Miller and his teams began to produce, leading to a 25-4 record in 1976 and second-place finish in the NCAA W estern Regional. This season isn’t the first time an ASU athletic team has fallen on its face after big expectations. In 1976, talk was rampant about the Sun Devils winning a national title in football. The team, of course, did an el-foldo, winding up 4-7. But nobody called for the firing of Frank Kush, mainly because everyone around ASU is scared shitless of him. Remember the old adage, “spare the rod and spoil the child?” Then maybe Dr. Miller should spare the rod — Wulk — and send the spoiled child — Baby Greggy Goorjian — home. * i J L n iia u o a T am h if lp lf. hours• in school —„a,and because I am black, I know — no one pwes me anything. The only way I going to get something is to go out and get it myself. I don’t like to half­ step, so believe me I am going to be one wellprepared Brother when I jump out there into the Real World. We must learn to work within the system to get ahead. The key is work. We have to give it all how or it or won t be worth giving later. How many of us could be as great as Martin, H arritt or Malcolm? We all have the ability, but do we have the desire? If I could have three wishes come true for this Black Culture Week, the first wish would be for all my Brothers and Sisters to start using every ounce of potential we possess; the second, to become truly united behind a goal and the third, to love each other above all things. Together using these three wishes, we can make a very positive and lasting impact on the society of today, hopefully making it a better world for the children of tomorrow. Thank you for hearing me out. Think about it, Brother and Sister. Edward William Taylor IH Are cops scared of lightning bolts? E ditor: A few questions: Why did ASU Police Sgt. Paul Lee issue a visitors parking permit on Feb. 21 to The Way International Biblical Research Group to park its Greyhound bus in the commuter parking Lot 42 east of the Law Building instead of in a visitors’ lot? Why was this group also allowed to park more than eight other autos in commuter Lot 42 without visitors permits? Why, when I requested at 2:30 p.m. that citations be issued to the vehicles without permits, was I told that there would not be an officer available until after 5 p.m. and by that time the group would be gone? n Why was this group allowed to place “Reserve Parking signs in Lot 42? Why? Maybe Sgt. Lee was worried about being struck by lightning if he or the rest of the security staff took action against this certain group. Why, maybe if I started a group like this, I and the rest of my people could park anywhere we wanted. Why not? Why, now when I think about it, I wouldn’t want to be struck by lightning either! M ark P h illip s Junior M echanical E n g in eerin g Guess I'll wait til 2017 E ditor: Sure, I’m pissed. Rumor has it there was a 75 percent eclipse of the sun Monday, only like the two million or so other Valley residents, I was in the wrong position to see it (I was underneath the cloud cover). Well, the next major eclipse of the sun visible in the United States will occur in 2017 (barring Hawaii, 1991). So I’m not really that upset, I’ll probably be alive. Jimmy Carter won’t, he’ll be dead. Bing Crosby wont, he’s already dead. . . T od M aleckar Q uantitative B u sin ess A n a ly sis Thursday, March 1,1979 State Press Page 5 """ - — Presidential hopefuls campaign in Phoenix Libertarian candidates race for nomination By Mary Gillespie Although Clark is closer to his Two 1980 presidential can­ didates are already racing each home turf than Hunscher is to other down the campaign trail, his native New Hampshire, the although neither of them ex­ bearded Easterner may do pects to move into the White better in Arizona than in any other state because of support House in the next two years. New Hampshire businessman he has received from Libertarian Bill Hunscher and California leaders here, Clark said. lawyer Ed Clark are vying for “But I think I’ll get the the Libertarian Party presiden­ nomination,” he said. “I’ve been tial nomination. active nationally (in Libertarian The hopefuls sp en t la st “In this country we have the phe­ nomenon of successive generations staying within the welfare system '.because it’s easy. The work incentive is gone.”________ gone,” he said. “The federal government has a budget of $570 billion with a deficit of as much as $60 billion,” Clark continued. “The govern' ment just keeps creating more money, which fuels inflation.” Hunscher, who said he favors phasing out the Social Security and Federal Reserve systems, added that drastic cuts are needed in the U.S. defense as drug use, prostitution and gambling. “These m atters should be outside the area of government legislation,” Hunscher said. “They a re in terp erso n al decisions which each individual should resolve for himself. Making them illegal just fuels o th e r illeg alities, such as organized crime.” “Victimless crimes are a m atter of personal morality, and making them a criminal offense just encourages distrust of the law,” Clark said. Assailing the U.S. welfare system as “plantation politics in which we give minorities just weekend at the state party politics) for a long period of enough to keep them from time. I think Tm the favorite. convention in Phoenix, each The two candidates have rebelling,” Hunscher said he try ing to sway as many Arizona adopted sim ilar platform s, advocates getting rid of such delegates as possible to support mixing a type of fiscal con­ “inexcusable waste. him for the nomination. servatism with the classic “In this country we have the Hunscher, 40, and Clark, 48, Libertarian philosophy of total phenom enon of successive freedom for the individual. have a good reason for starting generations staying within the their presidential drives so Both men favor legalizing so- welfare system because it’s early. Because Libertarians easy. The work incentive is traditionally receive such a called “victimless crimes, ” such relatively small number of votes, the party must petition to get on the ballot in most states. A t the national party con­ vention in Los Angeles this September, one of the tw o will eiqerge as the Libertarian entry in the presidential race. Both men are running tough campaigns, despite the fact that a third place finish at the polls would be an accomplishment for the party representative. ‘T m running a serious race and I’m going to get a lot of votes — a t least the difference (in vote tallies) between the Democrats and Republicans,” said Clark, who received almost 375,000 votes — or 5 percent — against California Governor Jerry Brown last year. “We can probably expect about 10 times th at (5 percent) across the nation in 1960,” he said. Loans offered to w om en in engineering Approximately $80,000 is available in special loans from the Business and Professional Women’s Foundation to women in undergraduate or graduate engineering courses. Completed applications for the fall semester are due May 15. The loans are made for tuition, fees and related expenses. For applications and further information, w rite to Loan Fund for Women in Engineering Studies, BPW Foundation, 2012 M assachusetts A ve. N .W ., Washington, D.Q. 20036. k A im liberty" around the world rather than a supporter of oppressive governments, Clark said. Hunscher concurred, saying former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger “designed Iran to be our bulwark in the Mid-East, but we ended up building up the Shah's monstrous regime. “No wonder when the times came for revolution, democracy “After Jimmy Carter, I think realize anything is possible.” budget to lessen the deficit. “For instance, why should we have troops stationed in West Germany? I guarantee they (the West Germans) have a bigger stake in their own defense than we do and would do a better job at preserving it,” he said. “Their economy is flourishing while ours collapses because we insist on staying in NATO.” The stance of the United States in world order should allow it to be a “beacon of they wasn’t among the alternatives for Iran’s new government.” Hunscher, who announced his candidacy six weeks ago and is following a rigid campaign schedule said “the press in New Hampshire isn’t asking me the •you don’t really expect to be President, do you?’ question anymore. “After Jimmy Carter, I think th ey realize anything is possible.” H E L P !! ARE THE LARGEST IN OUR FIELD AND NEED PHONE PEOPLE WE For The Easiest Sales You've Ever Had. We Offer: » 1. Weekly Advance. 2. Dally * Weekly Contests. 3. Weekly Bonuses. 4. 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THE C LA SSIC ... sizes 3-13 shirt- 100% cotton long sleeved shirt with mandarin neck, placket closing, left breast p o ck e t... assorted woven plaids .sizes sm., med., Ig. .. \ *12 BankAmericard • Visa • Master Charge CAMPUS SHOP-Arizoea State University 715-B Forest Ave., Tempe j I |U#UfE| swmngJOHN BELUSHI | I nONALD SUTHERLAND] F A S H IO N C O N S P IR A C Y Page 6 State Press Thursday, March 1,1979 Psychic reveals reporter's form er life 'Just call me Sheila' everything I had seen and thoroughly convinced this By Tricia Reeson indefinitely. What if one of my former aspect of reincarnation has Lately, a lot of people at As soon as he was said. But the question become for me a little reincarnations (if I really the office have been giving convinced I was thoroughly remained . . . was I ex­ away from me some pretty strange had any) was someone that under, Baranowski started periencing my past rein­ fu rth er went down as a real cad? “hogwash" and a little carnation or was it merely looks. the regression. In a half­ This is not that unusual. M aybe I’d b een a r a p ist, or whisper, he counted back all a figment of an closer to being something worth looking into . . . But it seems to have gotten into time, barely breathing overactive imagination? I skeptically. worse since I told the words aloud, until I don’t know. But whether I believe in everybody that my real could see myself in my As Sheila, I couldn’t give reincarnation or not, the name is Sheila and I died at mind’s eye as a little girl Baranowski any hard and whole experience has age 13. fast facts that could be used again. The warm security of definitely had one lasting We talked about my to prove Sheila Axxon ever affect on my life . . . for all knowing exactly what I’ve “doggie Pepper" and how I existed — never mind that my friends and co-workers, been up to for each of the wanted to be a veterinarian I’m presently using her left­ I answer to two names now. 21 years of my life was before Baranowski took me over soul. shattered last week when I Just call me Sheila. And although I’m still not back even further, saying met Frank Baranowski, a “You are now in the 12th local psychic who planting season of still specializes in helping people another expression. And Riunite Lam bnisco . . . 1 . 9 9 750 m l relive their past lives. everything is vivid and Baranowski, a hypnotist Frank Baranowski clear.” and expert on parap­ And I was th e re . XXXI Pabst " B o c k " Boor . .* 1 . 5 9 6 Pack sychology, offered to put Standing at the end of a me through the “hypnotic a child-beater. I could even narrow cobbled s tre e t La Pax T e q u ila .............* 3 .9 9 ' 750 ML age regression” method he have been Hitler, or a royal somewhere in Great Britain has done on more than bitch — like Cleopatra. But Baranowski didn’t in the year 1788. My hair 1J00 people. was long and blonde (it’s T e c h n ic a lly , ag e give me too much time for now brunette), and I could regression means putting a reflection. Before I could hear myself telling person under hypnosis and follow my natural instincts Baranowski that my name taking their psyche, or soul, (turn tail and run) he had was Sheila Axxon and I back through early child­ started the hypnosis. worked in the seamstress HARD CONTACT LENSES $79.95 “It has been a very full shop my parents owned. hood and into the ex­ SOFT CONTACT LENSES $99.95 periences of former lives. day for you,” he said, his T ria l w ea rin g p e rio d fo r C o n ta c t L e n s e s . My family wasn’t very S a m e da y d e liv ery fo r m o s t s o ft c o n t a c t s . But for me, regression fuU voice softly crooning good to me, I told him. My S o t l c o n t a c t s fo r A s t ig m a t is m « C o n ta c t L e n s S u p p lie s . meant a jittery weekend of the words right into me. father beat me and my 20% DISCOUNT ON ALL COMPLETE GLASSES ragged nerves, filled with a “And now it is time to just mother made me work all E y e E x a m fo r G la s s e s $20.0 0 fascination for reruns of . . . relax.” . F ill Y o u r D o c to r’s P r e s c r ip t io n s _____________ day sewing clothes for the The quiet, melodic “Night Gallery” and novels wealthy. rhythm of Baranowski’s by Edgar Allen Poe. DR. W.G. AMES, Optometrist Baranowski took me By Monday morning, I voice is enough to put even further, telling me that it F o r A p p o in t m e n t o r In fo rm a tio n 2916 N. 68th St. 941-5228 was perched nervously on the staunchest insomniac to was now a year after Sheila Scottsdale, Ariz. O p e n M o n d a y thru S a tu rd a y this guy’s couch, sipping sleep. But it was his eyes Axxon’s death. I felt myself honeyed tea and wondering . . . piercing, glassy grey- looking down at her grave, why in the world I was blue eyes, seemingly look­ describing the white cross entrusting my “lives” to ing through me, that did m a rk in g it and explaining the trick. this man. that Sheila had died of an Before I realized it, I was “Relax,” Baranowski told illness at age 13. me in soothing tones. lying down on the coach, Ten minutes la te r, “There’s really nothing to my body incredibly heavy Baranowski snapped his and . my mind floating. The be frightened about.” fingers and I was back in Easy for him to say, I experience felt something 1979 and in real life. thought, he’s not facing up like the first stages of I could clearly remember dropping off to sleep . . . to his past. B ill urges legislation to challenge ERA extension By Lori Medigovich An Arizona House Concurrent Resolution dealing with the legality of the Equal Rights Amend­ ment extension might not have a legal leg to stand on, an ASU law professor said Wednesday. The bill urges a legal challenge to the extended ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment. By m ajority vote, Congress extended the time period for the ERA to 1981. Without the extension, the amendment would have died in 1978. “I think the extension granted by congress is legal,” William Canby said. “And I agree with the position of the Department harassment by those who of Justice concerning the by 37 of his fellow house do not support the ERA," members, and probably will extension.” Dunn said. The department, he said, pass the House. Another ¡House member, Rep. Clare Dunn, Dstates th e ratification Debbie McCune, said she period of the amendment Tucson, said she doubts if also believes the extension the resolution will pass could only be extended by a of the deadline was legal majority vote of Congress because some who signed and that even with the because the time period the resolution really do Arizona Senate’s recent was not included as part of support the ERA. defeat of the amendment, the ERA. she believes the ERA will “ I don’t know if the ERA “It is not always true clear the necessary 38 time provisions are part of wiU, pass by 1981 or not, but states for ratification. the text of an amendment,” something will come of it. I “I don’t-know if the ERA Canby said. “But in this don’t know, but I don’t will pass ■by 1981 or not, case, a time limitation was think anything will stop the she said, “but something begun fo r not included in the ERA m ovem ent will come of it. Whether a women in society. ” text." modified version comes out Sam McConnell, R“Some of the names on after that or not, I don’t Williams, a c o - sponsor of the resolution are from know, but I don’t think the resolution, said the people who really didnt anything will stop the ERA time extension is not begun for know what they were movement legal. women in society.” signing at the time, she “Congress passed the Margot Sheahan, a extension on a simple said. member of the Right to Life A supporter of the ERA, majority rather than the Organization, said the Dunn said she considers the t w o - t h i r d s m a jo r ity House Resolution is a good necessary to propose an .extension of the amend­ way to challenge the ment legal. amendment to the con­ ‘‘U n d o u b t e d l y t h i s legality of the ERA ex­ stitution,” he said. resolution is a shot in the tension. McConnell said the “I feel the challenge this dark and further resolution has been signed Oh yea! Eugene Potent!, a senior construction engineering major, appears to be satis­ fied with his afternoon workout behind the men’s PE building. [State Press staff photo by Mary Con­ nell] _____ You are invited to be our guest for a FR EE L U N C H at the Baptist Student Center 1322 S. Mill Every Thursday at 12:30 One FR EE M EA L W ith T h is A d INTERNATIONAL CAREER? A rep re se n ta tiv e w ill b e o n th e ca m p u s TUESDAY MARCH 6,1979 to d iscuss q u a lific a tio n s fo r a d v a n c a d study, at AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL a n d job o p p o rtu n itie s in th e f ie ld o f INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT It’s Semicid, a safe, easy-to-use vaginal contraceptive suppository with an active ingredient proven effective by millions of women. If you're dissatisfied with your present birth control method you should know about Semicid, a real alternative in contraception from Whitehall Laboratories, one of the world s leading pharmaceutical companies. Semicid is safe and effective. It contains the maximum allowable level of nonoxynol-9, an ingredient which safely kills sperm in seconds. K s the spermicide in products doctors recommend most and has been used effectively by m illions of women for over 10 years. Now this tested, proven ingredient isavailable in Semicid. Sem icid is safe, too. Unlike the pill, it has no hormonal side effects. And unlike the IUD, it can’t damage uterine walls. Furthermore, Sem icid does not effervesce the wav the other vaginal suppository does. Sem icid is non-irritating to most women. There’s also no unoteasant o d o r. Neither you nor your partner will notice Sem icid is there at all. Semicid is neat and convenient.Slim, only an inch lonq, Semicid is so simple and easy to use. There-s no applicator, so there’s nothing to fill, clean, or remove. Sem icid is not messy like foams, creams and jellies. And it’s not awkward like the diaphragm. It lets love-making happen naturally, spontaneously. Within minutes after you insert it, Semicid dissolves and spreads a protective covering over the cervical opening and| e S d d comesfn asmall, discreet dispenser containing 10 suppositories. You can purchase Interview s m ay be scheduled at Career Services Academic Services Bldg. AMERICAN GRADUATE SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT Thunderbird Campus G len dale, Arlxona 15306 ,— it about this remarkable contraceptive, ask your doctor. Use only as directed Semicid resolution brings up is a very healthy thing,’ she said. “The extension was a departure from our system of passing an amendment. I don’t think the extension should have been pased in the first place.” “As far I understand the law,” said Maureen Mur­ phy, a spokesperson for the state’s ERA coalition, “a simple majority is all that was necessary to extend the ERA ratification dead­ line/’___ Even though Sheahan said the present ERA legislation will not pass in Arizona, she said th e amendment will not go away. “About 52 percent of the population currently is not covered under the con­ stitution and the ERA gives rights to these people,” she said. No action currently has been taken on the resolution. Page 8 State Press Thursday, March 1,1979 "The Warriors' Teen-age rampage linked to gang movie By Mary Perry Teen-age boys apparently affected by the movie “The W arriors” went on a rampage Friday night causing several thousand dollars worth of damage at a Scottsdale elementary school. C o rw in E l ls w o r t h , principal of Hopi Elementary School, 3110 E. Lafeytte Blvd., said four rooms were vandalized. The two youths flooded a faculty room, broke eleven win­ dows with a hammer, destroyed light fixtures and smeared paint on walls and blackboards. “Evidently the in ­ dividuals had seen the movie "The Warriors.’ ” Ellsworth said. “There were a couple of W’s painted in one room. On one wall they wrote — ‘The Warriors were here. Phoenix Police Detective Terry Hudgens said the boys were involved in two other instances of van­ dalism that night. When the officers learned of the Hopi incident, they discovered House reps claim foul-play by regents evidence leading to the youths. W itn e sses re p o rte d seeing the boys breaking house lights in two Phoenix residential areas before the school incident. Officers connected the crimes and after pursuing the youths for half an hour, ap­ prehended and arrested them, Hudgens said. They were taken home and released in custody of their parents, he added. “They adm itted the crime,” he said. “They had sprayed the word ‘Warriors’ on the wall in spray paint. When the officers asked why they did it they said they had seen By Lori Grzesiek , , _ House members were double-crossed by the Arizona Board of Regents and forced into introducing a tuition increase bill, state legislators said Wednesday. Rep. Tony West, R-Phoenix, and Rep. James Sossaman, R-Higley, said there was a “gentlemen’s agreement between individual legislators and regents last year. The agreement was to increase tuition $1,000 a year for out-ofstate students and $200 for in state students over a twoyear span, they said. B But Regent Earl Carroll said he had no such un­ derstanding. , , , . . . ___ _ “It was never the intention of the board to increase tuition in such a matter,” he said. The regents decided to increase tuition $460 for out-of-state students and $100 for in state students for the 1978 fall semester, he said. Further tuition increases would be decided according to the consumer price index. However West said at an Education Committee meeting last week that the bill increasing tuition $650 for out-ofstate students was introduced because the regents failed to keep a promise. , . ,A. , ,. , “I’m sorry the bill is here but it wouldn t have had to be introduced if the Board of Regents had measured up to their responsibility to increase tuition, he said. Bruno Dispoto, ASU Associated Students director of legislative affairs, said some legislators think they were tricked by the regents. _ ... “Some legislators feel they were lied to because they thought the regents would increase tuition half of the agreed amount for this year and another half for next year,” he said. . . . . . But Dispoto said the victims of the misunderstanding are Arizona’s university students. “We are the pawns in a game that the legislators and regents are playing,” he said. “We’re the ones that always end up paying for problems between the Legislature and the regents.” OC discovered by Denise the movie the day before a special “They have been charged Johnson, education teacher at the in all three instances with grade school. Johnson had criminal damage,” Hudgens returned to the school said. “They damaged o v e rh e ad p ro je c to rs , Saturday to “catch up” on ceramic pots, mirrors, a her“Iwork. came in about 10:30 candy machine, florescent a.m. and found a number of light fixtures, smashed windows broken in the art earphones and destroyed room,” she said. “The water supplies.” Juvenile authorities will faucet in the faculty room be notified and the court was on and I noticed the will decide if the 16- and 17- flooding. “It was an unbelievable year-old boys will be tried mess. They just tore that in adult or juvenile court. room up one side and down A spokesman for the the other,” she added. Maricopa County Attorney’s Johnson called the head office said the youths also could be charged with custodian for the Scottsdale School District and the curfew violations. police. TT C A O * The damage was mOJOJODoroti i i 1■"«wwwwwìnrrw KAET - Channel 8 Host and Producer for the weekly news magazine, Arizona Weekly . . . speaking on Howard Jarvis, putting a rock concert together, handgun issue and excerpts of his work while at KDKB Radio. Faculty Lecture Series M U P I M A R O O M - M A R C H 1 -3 :0 0 p .m . FREE The Hottest Thing On ice! SATURDAY, M ARCH 3,1979 Phoenix Roadrunners ASU state press NIGHT . . . A t the Coliseum PHOENIX ROADRUNNERS vs. SPOKANE FLYERS MAZATLAN REGULAR ‘ 4.00 RESERVED SEATS M ARCH 17-24 8 DAYS/7 HITES •Roundtrip air from Phoenix •7 nights at the HOTEL P LA Y A M AZATLAN CALL •RT transfers COLLECT! •U.S. departure tax •W elcome cocktail y jM IT E C W $ “ A ^ O A O J O per person dbl. iAMMON TRAVEL 3013 N. 1ST A V E. • TUCSON 882-0946 FOR ONLY 4 $150 I FOR.ASU STUDENTS - FACULTY - STAFF # A portion of the proceeds from ticket sales for this game will be given to the ASU ICE HOCKEY TEAM. Enjoy a great evening of ice m hockey and help'the ASU team. { J FOR TICKETS, CONTACT . . . RICH GITTINGS, ASU Hockey Coordinator 967-8931 or JIM HAGA, Phoenix Roadrunners 263-7828 or Come to the STATE PRESS Office W indow 1:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Weds., Thurs. & Fri. t Details kept secret Adventurous activities m ystify members By Jayne Clark Members of a Phoenix club can fulfill their dreams of being a captain of a submarine, conducting a symphony orchestra or being $n extra in a Hollywood film. " The Phoenix Adventure Club was formed in December by six couples who wanted to have adventures “they’d never do on a normal day.” Ralph Haber, the host of the first adventure, said every two months an “adventure” is planned by the host couple. Each adventure lasts from four to 48 hours. The participants are told what to wear, when to leave, but not where they are going or when they will return. “Any details are kept secret until the ad­ venture begins,” Haber said. “We might go up in a blimp or be a con- testant in a demolition derby, he said. “Anything’s game as long as it’s not dangerous and everyone can do it. “We’ll probably get into some weird things. Everyone in the group is stimulated to come up with unique ideas.” , ■ The couples pay one. dollar a day for two months to cover the cost of the adventure, Haber said. “With a budget limitation of $720, a part of the challenge is for the host couple to come up with an adventure within our restraints,” he For Haber’s adventure, the club members became “Biblical peasants and guards” as movie extras in Page, Ariz. “We took a $70,000 motor home, stocked 'D arlings' in US industry uncom plaining of dirty jobs with snacks and booze and watched video taped movies on the way to Page,” said Haber. “Everything on our adventure was a first to us. None of us had been a movie extra, driven in such a luxurious vehicle or watched video taped movies.” The club’s work began on an early Saturday morning when each member reported to the movie location for costume and make up. “We were characters in a segment of ‘Greatest Heroes of the Bible,”’ said Haber. “We were a part of a crew of 200 that produced about five minutes of film in a 10-hour day. “It was great. Who would think that any of us would ever be extras in a Biblical film?” he added. 11COUPON i l Are you unhappy with string jobs done by local tennis shops? ff////77Z a_I THE nonmi U IIU IIL I« . . _ _____ .. , i J ____1___ __ m spokesman C'A Ed CSnyder. c T D im n DETROIT (AP) — They adds Donald E. Hart, head “The robot was accepted by _ .UIIIIIVU don’t take coffee breaks or of the Computer Science the workers and there was B ra d T h a y e r ____ demand vacations. They Department at General no union objection." Research generally don’t get sick. M o t o r s CERTIFIED PTR PROFESSIONAL Ford now has 236 robots And they are not inclined to laboratories. employed in such jobs as personally strings all the racquets to Automakers are among file union grievances. stamping, spray painting, insure CONSISTENT TENSION and the leaders in development They don’t even see the die casting — “areas of of robots. Ford Motor Co., PROFESSIONAL WORKMANSHIP problems th a t most worker discontent,” Ford for example, has used workers do in their jobs — Your racquet is guaranteed to your says. even though these are the robots since 1958, when a GM, meanwhile, has satisfaction. dirtiest, most boring and device was introduced in about 150 robots, including -one plant to »transfer hot least attractive in factories Call 968-3268 - Close to A SU 32 pioneering body welding — but more and more they parts. I co u po n | ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ! “It’s a deadly, ugly, dirty machines installed in 1970 do “see” and even “feel.” at Lordstown, Ohio. This ever more popular business there,” says Ford arling of American lanufecturers is the inustrial robot, a mechanical tarvel closer to R2-D2 of Star Wars” than most eople imagine. He now numbers about ,000 in the United States, Proudly Presents Our ome 1,000 in Western ¡urope and perhaps 30,000 l Japan, according to the )e tro it-b a s e d R obot nstitute of America. Served 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday - Saturday What he lacks in the HAM & SW ISS CH EESE lersonality of his movie M EATBALL SAN D W ICH . • 2 -4 ° ON K AISER R O L L ...................................................... 2 8 0 busin, however, he more Delicious home made meat balls nestled in our tomato Generous portions of delectable Ham, topped with . . . w and topped with our Special Bread, crisp salad han makes up with work Swiss Cheese, served with potato salad and garnish. rom his whirring and with Choice of Dressing. TU NA M ELT . . 2 40 SAUSAGE SANDWICH . . . . . . 2.40 ¡licking tubes, hoses and A tasty open-faced sandwich with potato salad and Our Zesty Italian Sausage smothered with our luscious ingers. garnish. tomato sauce and covered with tasty Bread, crisp salad “What comes out is of RO A ST B E E F SA N D W ICH A u J u s . 2 .8 0 with Choice of Dressing. »nsistent quality,” says A1 Healthy portion of tasty roast beef nestled in our special STEAK SANDWICH . j ..................................... .... Williams, midwest regional bread, served with crisp green salad w / choice of dressing. 6 oz. Tenderloin — served on our Sour Dough Bread, manager for Unimation Inc. crisp salad with Choice of Dressing. of Danbury, Conn., the SPAGHETTI SLIM nation’s largest maker of COCKTAILS CALIFORNIA WINE BY THE DECANTER For the nol so hungry industrial robots. BEER ON TAP C r i s p s a la d w it h c h o ic e o f d re s s in g , lo a f o f S o u r SEBASTIANI “If a guy leaves out a D o u g h B r e a d , d e ss e rt, c o ffe e o r tea, m i l k , ic e d tea DARK BEER Mountain Burgundy Rose’ Chablis C h o ic e o l s p a g h e tt i w it h couple of welds, someone Glass 55c C o m b in a t io n o l u n v 2 s a u t e s ........................ 3 -3 « gets a car with rattles. Small Decanter — 2.60 Pitcher 2.35 i m u sh ro o m . . 3 .1 5 m eat sauce 2 .6 0 M i , it h r a r h e w e . 3 .2 0 With the robot, you get an LIGHT BEER Large Decanter — 4.20 c la m . . . . 3 .3 0 to m a to improved product." Glass 45c By the glass — .75 3 .0 0 s h r im p 3 .3 5 c h ic k e n liv e r Pitcher 1.85 “One of the main things it does is it doesn’t get tired, Or: TRY ONE OF OUR SPAGHETTI DISHES TBE SPAGHETTI C0 HJPRHY RESTfKIRfiRT LUNCHEON SPECIALS Available Any Time THURSDAY, MARCH 1 5 p.m. OPEN CommittM Meeting H APPY HOURS: Monday - Friday 4 3 0 - 7:00 p.m. IN T H E C O C K T A I L L O U N G E (U.J.A. & Israel Action Committees) P L E N T Y O F FR EE P A R K IN G at HILLEL 213 E. University 1818 SOUTH ALVERN0N TUCSON, ARIZONA 85711 (602) 748-8100 with guest speaker NATAN YONATHAN "Life on a Kibbutz” TV A n Israeli film d e a lin g w ith M r. Y o n a th a n 's s o n , L io r , w h o fe ll in th e Y o m K lp p u r W a r, w ill s h o w n fo llo w in g th e m e e tin g . be 4th and MILL STREET TEMPE, ARIZONA (602) 966-3848 1418 N. CENTRAL AVENUE PHOENIX, ARIZONA (602) 257-0380 JOIN US FOR DINNER, TOO! Page 10 State Press Thursday, March 1, 1979 On Campus Reads p re s s INEXPENSIVE CONVENIENT EFFECTIVE Order forms at every dorm. State Press, and at M.U. information desk Pay at Cashier's O ffice or A-111 Stauffer Hall Y They really penetrate the A SU Campus Community 40,000 people p re s s Thursday, March 1, 1979 State Press Page 11 HMBINnMBMMNK' Memorial Union Activities Board ■■HBMMNI IN T H E M . U . G A L L E R Y M A R C H 12 - 30 Group Invitational Show by ASU Art Department Graduate Students Opening Reception - Monday, March 12, 7-9 p.m. Everyone Welcome! Print Sale! Thursday March 8 & Friday March 9 10:00 o.m. - 3:00 p.m. M.U. West Lawn More than 75 different fine art prints on sale every day in the M.U. Activities Center for only $3 each. I Everyone Invited Wont to sell your crafts? coll: 965-6649 Sponsored by: the MU AD Host & Hostesses r ' ¥ ■ LOOK TO M.U.A.B. FOR] GOOD TIMES, ------------- ------ Ideas & Issues In the Rendezvous Lounge POP-UPS M a rc h 5 - M e s a V illa g e C it y T o e T a p p e rs 11-1 p .m . M a rc h 7 - C o y o te 11-1 p .m . M a rc h 8 - Interpreter's T h e a te r - M .U . C o u rty a rd 12-1 p .m M a rc h 1 2 - U n iv e rsity G o s p e l E n s e m b le 11-1 p .m . M a rc h 1 4 - B ro th e rs M im e 11-1 p .m . M a rc h 28 - P a u l B o y le 11-1 p .m . M a rc h 5-10 C h ild A b u s e M a rc h 12-16 G ra te fu l D ead M a rc h 26-31 A c e T ru c k in g C o m p a n y VIDEO TAPES F A C U L T Y L E C T U R E S E R IE S March 1 M ARK NYKANEN - Host and producer for KAET’s Arizona Weekly - 3:00 p.m. M.U. Pima Room JAZZ SESSIONS M a rc h 2, 9 & 30 3:00 - 5:30 p .m . CLIO AW ARDS M a rc h 5-9 11 -1 2 :3 0 p .m . XX'C- FILM S E R IE S March 5 - NUNZIO Warm, tender story about an individual (forgotten by society in the past) for whom the future is now beginning. 1 - 3 - 7 p.m. • 50c Admission Film S H O W I N G IN T H E U N I O N C I N E M A March 2 through March 4 SOUND OF MUSIC (G) - Julie Andrews, 7:00 p.m. March 6 through March 8 THE SENTINEL (R)-Chris Sarandon, 7& 9:30 p.m. March 9 through March 11 SHERLOCK HOLMES SMARTER BROTHER (PG) - Gene Wilder 7 & 10:30 p.m. SILENT MOVIE (PG) - Mel Brooks 8:45 p.m. | Recreation March 13 through March 15 MY FAIR LADY (G) - Audrey Hepburn, Rex Harrison M E E T I N G S : 3 p .m . T h u r s d a y s M .U . W a tch fo r th is m o n th 's " l H ig h lig h ts March 16 and 17 THE RESCUERS (G) - Voice of: Bob Newhart March 27 through March 29 7 p.m. 7 & 9:30 p.m. 7 & 9:30 p.m. THE FURY (R) - Kirk Douglas March 30 through April 1 THE TEN COMMANDMENTS (G) - Charlton Heston RIGHT TO W ORK DEBATE DAR W IN AYCOCK VS. DILWORTH BRINTON M .U . A rizo n a Room M arch 12 1 p.m . M E E T IN G S : Tuesday 3 p .m ., M .U . G ila R o o m ■HB« MEMORIAL UNION Page 12 State Press Thursday, March 1, 1979 '^mpmhsuvwiAalFIMSHCOCtfKMMM HTORRO M ^ K I0 » , M O W H A Y je iM V HOUR MOTHER A WP rW P M U M lN / »■ m t l l l H R I T ? " F irst , a n d p o s t i M i W A N r p o v * r m *n£t you HAUE M A W MINUTES e s fo C E WPIOACTÌMS M U OUT THsi*j*>*t*Aieivu.D»EM* e*>acrwm tout Vf* reaches you. ombmciuisth ^ i Hk e c a w o p au ,ih* ON HOW ■» COf t WITH A SM M h S S HVCl**BATTKX. U T S SHY YOU LOOuOtrr y o M UMPOU Hh O SC C m s R IN N T lodicinò Im the *ÜT1tf HMS5' VAWHM«HrAROC CHECKTHEMAIN STOPTHENMSAlPBCDRUilERYAMPVAKEcARC OFTHOSEW)A*PDHLS VOUVE0CSN 'HEAHlNSTOM^ ciato, nou Listen cutset...* ''to r , PtstuHint YOU N O YOUfi FH M lV W tG C ttr yH FM VZCP S t a s i; Tflw mese steps i o n to re c r y»UR « n / » 5 fONHSTftlUUT. gEMUtecK/TttOUat 'M K .R /tD U tT W ' e f t u e c A N A s r y R u o u L itS e a s y i s s u h u h /m d o w n , JUST fr IH M LA V E R OF P A P E R CAN STOP A LARG£ PORTION OF OCADLY ALPHA R A Y » . C lC M CCftTHtN S0U M Ptf4U E5 CAN A F R IC O SO M E P R o T C C n o rJ . XJ(I SHO ULD --- ✓ ♦t u r n y e v R STEREO ONTO F U C C V O U X E ANDSIT arrweEM me SfEAKfieS, MAK/NeAIREYbuPtAY SOMOWKb UtTH ftCUTV D P H » H A N D LOW Ffti^ lC sy SOUNDW AWES. IP y o u o n y HAIE- A R ADIO, TUNE IT 16 ft T D IS C O STATION. AHOID ‘ M E U O lJ M u s t ' STATIONS A T A L L . C O S T . FINALLY, D O N T OPHOOB. WASTE TIME T O M » T O O A a y o p e CMIL D E F E N S E office f o r in f o r m a t io n , w e ' ll OUTOF TDUAJ B y THAT t im e .* flu. Be io n » Advance w arning could save residents from nuclear attack All but 130,000 of Maricopa County’s 1.3 million residents would die in a surprise nuclear attack, a spokesman for the Department of Civil Defense and Emergency Services said. But Robert Hubbard, said 80 percent of the population could be saved if there was plenty of prior warning — and if people would heed it. “If we had about a week advanced warning we could save 80 percent of the 1.3 million people we account for in the county. That is, if we could get them to move out, to listen to us,” Hubbard said. “That’s a hypothetical number though. A lot of people would not leave,” he added. Hubbard said the county’s Disaster Defense Center, 2035 North 52nd St., has a great responsibility. “We do the disaster planning for the county,” he said. “We work in fallout shelters throughout the county and also keep track of water flow from the dams.” Hubbard said Maricopa County is a likely target and probably would be hit in a first-wave assault in a nuclear war. “We think Phoenix is a high-risk area. So do the feds (Federal Government). They consider Tucson and Yuma to be high-risk also. “Of course, we’re trying to secondguess the Russians,” he added. There are 1,016 fallout shelters in Maricopa County, but no “bomb shelters,” Hubbard said. “You must understand the difference between bomb shelters and fallout shelters,” he explained. “ASU has a lot of fallout shelters but if a nuclear bomb exploded over the campus the fallout shelters would disappear.” Fallout is the mixture of radioactive material and dirt thrown into the sky during the explosion and then falls back to the ground afterward. Hubbard said the reason there are no bomb shelters in the county is because they are “cost prohibitive. “Who wants to build a bomb shelter? You need reinforced concrete and all that stuff. It costs too much.” He added other countries are building bomb shelters, most notably Russia, but the United States has no program for their construction. On a map at the Disaster Defense Center Hubbard pointed out the areas of destruction that would occur if either Luke Air Force Base, Sky Harbor Airport or Williams Air Force Base were hit in an attack. If Sky Harbor was the target, the “total” destruction would range east to the outskirts of Tempe, north to Paradise Valley, west past Interstate 17 and south to Guadalupe. Additional “moderate damage” would occur 10 miles farther in each direction. Hubbard advised anyone who could not get to a fallout shelter during an attack to “get something between you and the radiation. “Anything that puts mass between you and the radiation will help. Even a telephone book will stop some,” he said. PORTERS ROOT CORRAL A SU blood drive to start Monday Arizona Blood Services is sponsoring its annual blood drive from March 5-9 at ASU. Donors may give blood from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily in the MU Pinal Room, Palo Verde Main and a mobile van ad­ joining Saguaro Hail from noon to 8 p.m. daily. Arizona Blood Services is a nonprofit organization which provides blood and blood components to patients through­ out eight Arizona counties and the Imperial Valley area in Southeastern California. The service relies exclusively on voluntary donors. There is no charge to patients for the blood and or blood components they receive. For additional information contact: Sandy Seital at 9491412. SOPHOMORE BUSINESS MAJORS! Are you interested in a career with a major corporation? Ryder Truck Ren­ tal is seeking one man or woman to serve as a college intern. Em ploy­ ment will be full time through the sum m ers of 7 9 and ’80, coupled with a firm job offer upon graduation. F O R M O R E INFO R M ATIO N, C O N T A C T M A R C M cD AN IEL 965-4521, A N YTIM E NEED M O NEY? Pioneer Camera can convert your unused 35mm Cameras into cash in a hurry. We will sell your photo equipment on consignment. Leave it with us for a day, a week, a month . . . no hassles! We’ll get the job done for you and put money In your pocket too! PIONEER CAMERA SHOP, INC. TEMPE CENTER • TEMPE, AZ. 9 6 7 -4 6 6 2 o r 9 6 6 -8 3 6 3 CINE CAPRI - SHOW TIMES M O N . A TU ES. A TH U R S. 7:30 ft 9:15 2323 E. C A M ELB A C K RD. W ED. A SUN. 2:15, 4:00, 5:45, 7:30, 9:15 Exclusive! F R I. 7 :3 0 ,9 :1 5 ,1 1 :0 0 S A T . 2:15, 4:00, 5:45, 7:30, 9 :1 5 ,1 1 :0 0 a s le n ii — YOU’LL GET A BOOT OUT OF THIS — 'T h e W y a t t E a r p " Rimed LIVE IN CONCERT Style 2517 London Tan Beige Inlaid 17” Tops Reg. $145.98 Porter’s Discount Price ♦12098 NAME BRAND BOOTS AT THE BEST PRICES IN THE VALLEY!!! 3944 N. BROWN • SCOTTSDALE (1 b lo c k E a s t o f S c o tt s d a le R oad) (1 vt b lo c k S o u t h o f Indian S c h o o l) ìmmA nemmo 994-1926 W ARNING: This Picture Contains Harsh And Vary Vulgar Language And May Be Considered Shocking And Offensive. No Explicit Sax Or Violence la Shown. Released b y S P E C IA L E V E N T ENTERTAINM ENT I concernteueuM>meuoww»eN«eeiioe.it«coiice«ie»iiM«t I Thursday. March 1,1979 S t e f Press Pag« 13 Indians negotiate for needed water B y C h ristin e 01 b erg The possiblity of additional water rights at the Fort McDowell Indian Reservation would mean increased crop production and livestock management, said Dan Shaffer, the reservation’s economic planner. Recently negotiations between the Salt River Project and several Indian tribes have been threatened due to SRP’s decision to go ahead with the state Land Depart­ ment's settlement of Salt River water rights. Shaffer said the additional water is needed to further develop the farmland on the reservation, northeast of Scottsdale. “We produce barley, wheat and alfalfa on the 6,000 to 9,000 acres of land,” he said. “Conceivably, with additional water, we could expand this production to include produce, beans and cotton." Similarly, additional cattle could be handled with more water, Shaffer added. “Increased irrigation would result in increased pasture. At this time the reservation has approximently 1,000 head of cattle,” he said. “Additional water would definitely make it possible to increase the number of cattle main­ tained on the land.” Adding to the problem, nearby farmers had dug a well and pumped water out of the ground close to the Ak-chin Indian Reservation, which caused deep depressions in the land. Thus Indians’ crops and cattle went thirsty. “Hopefully problems similar to this will not be repeated,” Shaffer added. ASU insurance lacks applicants The University’s student health insurance program will have to undergo some changes next fall because of low student participation, the Associated Student’s executive vice president said. “I don’t think it’s well understood on campus,” D.C. Hoffman said. He blamed this for the poor student in­ volvement. Hoffman said ASASU will be involved in a promotion campaign in late spring for the student insurance plan to try to raise the present enrollment from less than 2,500 people to more than 5,000. Reporter for KAET to speak on career Constructive pastime Joe Lobeg, a 51'year-old construction worker, puts on the finishing touches for the new classroom and office building. Construction is expected to be complete by mid-April. [State Press staff photo by Matthew Liu] f * |!> * DRY GULCH SALOON 815 N . Scottsdale Road • 968-5643 Just North of the River Bottom The Curtain is now up O n the Valley's finest stage! Great Go-Go Dancers A ll N e w Live S how s 2 for 1 DRINKS! With This Ad. (I per n ight o n ly - E x p ire s 3/7/79) D in in g • D a n c in g • L a rg e S cre e n T .V . • P o o l Mark Nykanen, a reporter for KAET-tv Channel 8, will speak Thursday in the MU Pima Room about his radio and television career. Nykanen is a former news director for KDKB and is now working as a reporter on KAET1s news program, “Arizona Weekly. The speech is part of the Faculty Lecture Series and will be at 3 p.m. AD SALES PERSONNEL DESIRED FOR CNIOACO'f L O O K III*G O O D POINT MAGAZINE unifcx-i SNOW! SNOW! SNOW! Lookin’ for Chicago and Midwest area local students and residents who want to return to the Windy City for ail the latest cuts, styles and news about what s happening back home. Come a n d . find out what Lookin’ Good 2” is all about. “Chicago s Chicago's Lookin' Good t TftSCHN€fi C€NT€fl 500 life* Southern Hvm u i Arizona For appointment, call 964-0455 $1.00 O F F WITH THIS AD Interested persons please see: HAL SMITH Association Graphics £r Advertising 2 0 8 H MEMORIAL UNION Page 14 State Press Thursday, March 1, 1979 Woman recalls flying in the 'roaring 20 s By Susan Clark Melba Beard was boldly creasing the sky in her rudimental open-cockpit biplane years before progressive aviation technology turned fliers into the “push button pilots" of today. When the 71-year-old Beard began her flying career in 1929, “things were unorganized and the planes were simple,” she said. “We actually had only three instruments in the planes,” Beard said. “But today all the electrical equipment and complications make pilots what we call “push­ button pilots.” “They just don’t have the adventure we had years ago,” she said. “There were no large schools (for flight training) in those days and very few regulations. But now regulations are so restrictive that it’s going to put a lot of people out of the air." Beard still flies for “fun and enjoyment in her own 1928 open-cockpit biplane that tops out at 75 mph. She admits she actually could not fly a plane today with all of the added electrical equipment. “That’s not my idea of flying,” she said. Beard, a Scottsdale resident, cultivated her interest in flying in 1929, when she gave up her art education and signed up for flying school Jn Pasedena, Calif.,to be trained as a commercial pilot. There were only 117 licensed female pilots in the United States when Beard was receiving her aviation schooling, but she said women’s lib was not the issue 50 years ago. “Some people accepted women flying and some did not,” she said. “It was different then, but the girls soon saw they were going to be judged on ability like men, although they didn’t get paid as much as men,” Beard said. Opportunities for female pilots have in­ creased tremendously over the past few years, she added. “There are unlimited opportunities for women now. When they’re good, the sky’s the limit.. Women are now flight examiners, aeronautical engineers — women can do everything in airplanes that men do." Beard is a charter member of the 99’s, an organization of female pilots founded 50‘years ago in California. Amelia Earhardt was also a charter member of the 99’s. Beard knew her for several years before her mysterious disappearance while attempting a flight around the world. “I used to see her at (99’s) meetings. She A P check show s mass transit bad Americans who leave their cars home and take public transit instead to save fuel — as President Carter suggested — might find that even if the switch is possible, it isn’t always practical. An Associated Press spot-check showed that buses, subways and trains in many major cities already operate at or near capacity. The AP also found that while mass transit is usually cheaper than driving, it is almost always slower and more inconvenient, and is generally geared to those who work a standard nine-to-five day. Earlier this week, Carter urged people to use public transit, along with carpools, to conserve energy. And the prospect of higher gasoline prices makes the idea of saving fuel even more attractive to many drivers. But will it work? To find out, the AP asked staff members in about a dozen of its news bureaus who nor­ mally drive to work to take the bus or train instead. All except one managed to make it to the office without unusual delays; all reported some trouble. Department of Transportation figures show that almost 72.7 million people a day commuted to and from work by vehicle — public and private — in 1978. Of those, less than 5 million, or just under 7 percent, used public transit. A little more than 20 percent rode in carpools. The majority — over 70 percent — drove to work alone. State Press Advertising 965-7572 sponsored flying events through the 99 s for the members because women weren’t too well accepted in those days,” Beard said. Air pollution conditions are distressing, Beard said. “That is part of the reason my husband and I moved from California to Arizona 25 years ago. “I can see pollution growing and growing, and in California it was becoming so foggy I was scared to fly. Now pollution is increasing rapidly and although it’s not that bad in Arizona, I don’t see when it will stop." Beard was active and held official positions in numerous aviation associations throughout her career as a commercial pilot, and most recently participated in the 19H Powder Puff Derby in Palm Springs, Calif, for its 30th year commemorative flight show. She is also involved in aviation history research and occasionally paints for enjoyment. As for her career choice, which began in the Roaring 20 s,’ Beard said she “wouldn’t ex­ change it for anything. “There’s nothing like getting away from the earth up into the sky where the whole world is yours and there is no one to interfere,” she said. DRIVE CARS FREE CANTERBURY Z28 / The Episcopal Student Community Cars Available Many Points U.S.A. -FOR YOUR NEXT CAR- W e are I .C .C . lic e n s e d a n d in ­ s u re d . M u s t be 21 y e a rs o r m o re . ROBERT SAVITTIERI invites you t o ' WORSHIP Every Morning 7a.m . Monday thru Friday T h e O N L Y M a n to S e e — at — RAY KORTE CH EVR O LET 7224 E a s t M c D o w e ll T e le p h o n e 947-3535 SCHEALL DRIVEAWAY 991 5533 Danforth Chapel S p e c ia l S tu d e n t D is c o u n t s nEib f a l l c h i c f ilm s é r ié s ■II EXCUSE JU S T ME P E A R . - ’ I 'M MARCH FO R. A SECON D . CpINû-J 7 0 C U T YOUR. HEART O U T ! Thursday, March 1 Friday, March 2 • 7 and 9:30 p.m « EYES OF LAURA MARS ¡SATURDAY 3 SUNDAY 4 w THE KING OF MARVIN GARDENS Announcing the opening of the Law Offices of 1 7 PM " CHINATOWN » pm JOHN P. SILKEY ATTORNEY AT LAW •NO CH ARGE FOR INITIAL CONSULTATION •DWI’s •INCOME TAX •LANDLORD-TENANT •ACCIDENTS & PERSONAL INJURY and other legal services available. Located close to A SU a t . . . 5 0 0 W . B roadw ay S u ite 1 1 4 For appointment, call 894-1956 . ■ / èJL COMING JOHN ABERCROMBIE RICHARD BEIRACH QUARTET NEEB HALL THURS., M A R C H 15 7:30, 10 p.m. TICKETS S3 AT M U 208J A N D BILL'S AUDIO Thureday, March 1,1979 State Press Page 1S Here's the plan. Brad Vandermark, coordinator of the Phoenix Grid Plan, explains differences between the Papago [thru-town] freeway and the Grid [around town] Plan. [State Press staff photo by Matthew Liu] ______________ ______ 'W a ll o f bullion* N. Y. C. bank holds $ 101 billion in foreign gold NEW YORK (AP) — Five stories beneath the streets of the world’s financial center lies the largest storehouse of gold on Earth. Traders in London, Zurich, Tokyo and a few blocks away at New York’s World Trade Center bid the price of bullion to a record of more than $250 an ounce. But down among the riches of Midas, there was scarcely a shrug. Eighty feet below the street in the vaults of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York lies about 13,000 tons of gold, worth some $101 billion at the going rate. That’s more than twice as much as is stored at Fort Knox. ‘The first week I was here I was impressed. I don’t think about it anymore,” said a darkhaired woman guard, robed in a yellow smock. She was on duly as keeper of one of three keys in the inner'vault. Not that people take gold casually at the Federal Reserve Bank. But one gets used to most things after a while. These days, as the subway rumbles above the vaults, there is even some mild grumbling about large trunks of cash temporarily stashed in one of the two gold rooms. Painting and other maintenance work in another vault area has crowded things a bit. But grid has its lure and the work that goes on here has its own aura of unreality. To get to the gold storehouse, which is half the size of a football field, one must walk through a 90-ton steel cylinder door set in a 140-ton frame. Inside, past two more gates, are 122 compartments of various sizes, many with gold bricks stacked floor to ceiling. The largest — bank officials won’t say whose it is — but 107,000 bricks form what workers call “the wall of gold." All the gold here belongs to foreign governments, their agencies and international organizations — about 80 in all. While ship­ ments sometimes leave the bank, often the work goldkeepers do amounts to moving stacks of gold from one compartment to another. In that way, one country can pay another in gold without shipping the bullion across any border. Career Opportunities Exploring for Energy — presents — T h u rsd a y s — Ladies N ig h ts N o Cover for Ladies 25c Drinks 8-10 p.m. We need field service engineer trainees to help m eet o u r expansion plans. If you have the education, initiative, and are willing to w ork and tr a v e l. . . you can ex pect th e sam e opportunities fo r advancem ent realized by m any o f o u r executives. O ur w ork is not easy. B ut it is alw ays challenging! — Tonight thru Saturday — ★ We need individuals with degrees in the physical sciences — E .E .,M .E ., E .E .T ., engineering science, physics, geophysical engineering — and a spirit o f innovation and adventure. Birdwell is an im portant division o f Seism ograph Service C orporation w hose world wide businesses include geophysical exploration, wireline services for oil and gas wells, radio location services, and supportive m anufacturing. V a lle y Fever ★ with Michael Collins Entertainment Non-Stop from 8:15 The Camel Club 6820 5th Avenue — Scottsdale - W e will b e on c a m p u e fo r Intervlewe March 7,1979 C o n ta c t y o u r p la c e m e n t o ffic e fo r app o in tm ent If you think you’re somebody special . . . or think you can be . . . tell us about yourself. Box 1590, Tulsa, Okla.74102. (918) «27-3330. Equal opportunity employer. 994-4168 (1 block northeast of 68th St. & Indian School) WEDNESDAYS — JACK DANIELS — S5c - Everyone - Arrive between 8-9 p.m. and receive one FREE drink with admission. ★ FREE A D M IS S IO N — with this ad — E m il— MIICHT. 1ST» ★ BIR D W ELL D IVISIO N Seismograph Service Corporation A SUBSIDIARY OF R A Y TH E O N COMPANY Page 16 State Press Thursday, March 1,1979 'W hat a Fool Boltovas' "—■“"8 F (JISTSr“”" ' every man for him self |ASU dives for No. 1 It’s the hour of truth for the ASU men’s swimming team as it starts competition in the Pac-10 conference meet today in Downey, Calif. ... . .... The meet, scheduled for three days, will feature some of the country’s top teams and individual swimmers. .... With a surprisingly strong team, the Sun Devils go into the championship series hoping the diving team can continue its dominance, as they have slammed (finished first and second) every opponent this season. Finishing with a 9-2 dual-meet record, Coach Ron Johnson has produced one of the most successful teams ever to com­ pete at ASU, with six members already qualifying for the NCAA tournament. Several swimmers as well as divers are looking for an in­ dividual conference championship, including Paul Asmuth in the 1,650-yard freestyle. Asmuth has qualified for the national meet in the 1,650, and hopes to do the same in the 500. All-America Blake Johnson will also carry a lot of ASU s hopes in the meet, competing in the 100- and 200-yard backstroke and 400 individual medley. Ward O’Connell’s diving team has been a dominating force in every meet this year and has placed three divers in the NCAA meet thus far. . Dan LaSarge and Duwan Ericson have qualified in both the one- and three-meter diving events, and Tom Weyhrauch has qualified in the one-meter. Kerwin Gober is expected to do well in the 200-yard breast­ stroke and Sam Hewson and Sam Jones will anchor the sprint freestyles. Shannon Varner is also a strong contender to capture the 400-yard individual medley. Even with impressive wins over Stanford and California, which finished No. 2 in last year’s NCAA’s, the Sun Devils are still a long shot to win the title after having dropped dual meets to both USC (host of the meet) and UCLA. He came from South Milwaukee, Wisconsin A s its High School Player o f the Year He tried hard to recreate what had once been created In Ned Walk’s life He musters a smile fo r his Sun Devil tale It never came near what he wanted it to be Ordy to realize it never really was Fouls had a place in his life Refs never made him think twice A s they rise their arms to the scorer’s table Anybody else would surely know They’re watching 54 go But what a re f believes, he sees No A S U fa n has the power to reason away What seems to be is seldom better than nothing And nothing at all may send him Back to the South Milwaukee Red Rockets Where he can still believe There’s publicity in his life . . . By Walter Berry and Bob Petrie Lyricists Kenny Loggins and Michael McDonald have never met Sun Devil center Kurt Nimphius. But with a few alterations in their current hit “W hat a Fool Believes,” you’d think the pair had known him all his life. Ever since the 6-foot-10 junior set foot on the Activity Center’s hardwood in 1976, patrons have been expecting him to duplicate his past feats. Or better them. As a senior a t South Milwaukee High, Nimphius led his team to a 25-0 record and the state championship in the process of s e ttin g school sta n d a rd s for rebounding, scoring, blocked shots and field goal percentage (.750). The efforts brought him AP and UPI kudos as “Wisconsin's Athlete of th e Year.” Who would have guessed that instead of “All-WAC” or “AllPAC”, his name would grace the lis ts of th e annual “AllMisunderstood” teams,” right up there next to Dr. Pepper? “I was kind of an underdog when I came here," said Nim­ phius. “Everybody was talking about Johnny Nash as being the biggest catch in the school s history back then in a good recruiting year. “No, they (Sun Devil fans) didn't expect too much out of me. When I came here they (the Phoenix print media) didn’t write anything about me. Back home, everybody wanted me to stay in Wisconsin. But that s one of th e big reasons I wanted to get away. I didn't want all that pressure on me.” W hether he noticed it or not, the pressure — both of the pure and peer variety — has been on him since his sophomore year, after Mark Landsberger got “BulT’ish on Chicago and to ld continued page 17 & c i: AT Kurt Nimphius P E O P L E 'S C A M P U S O U T R E A C H presents Gospel Folk Music by Surrender I B J * Call Dajs Email«* â Weekends W & ESFiLi M Join our L R i r U N arch Class HamuealICast* 967-2967 March 2 MU Bldg. - Montgomery Lounge 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. CAMPUS BEER BASH Large Pitcher of Beer $1.50 Featuring m ichelob and Other Fine Beers Friday & Saturday 4 to 8 pm JEW ELER S 966-7587 April Exam Ihrtaida WV Stal» C i a W U H B i l l W H « 0ILic Diamonds, Watches 14k Chains, Pendants Sorority-Fraternity Jewelry Watch & Jewelry Repairing fo r th e Fw lefoneatlen Maat Otter Cent«* la Han Ttaa K UaJaHIS Cille» t «road 5th & College, Tempe FOR ALL YOUR JEWELRY NEEDS A PR IL <2> p «4? % K n o c k w u rst • K ra u t • Ale I Thursday, March 1, 1979 State Press Page 17 More about Netters attempt Center gains self-confidence to retain title on his ow n—not from coach contlmwd from p*ga 16 ASU to go take a nice, healthy dump. ASU head coach Ned Wulk, left without an option at the center spot, was forced to go with the untried Nimphius, who had scored just 27 points during various “garbage times“ as a freshman. His en su in g less-thanstaggering sta rt was due to one painful reason — a right ankle which he fractured three times while playing pick-up basketball over the previous summer. But the ankle ailment wasn't his biggest stumbling block. It was the referees, who were anything but “K urt”eous to Nimphius. “Last year they were picking on me. They wouldn’t let me play ball,“ said Nimphius who fouled out 11 times in the 23 games he started. “Refs were really inconsistent. The other centers liked to muscle me around, and when I tried to muscle back — phweet! — the refs called a foul on me. They let the big stuff go on underneath, they called th e ticky-tack fouls on me.” This season has seen a complete reversal with Nim­ phius fouling out of only one of 28 games to date. That came Feb. 15 against UCLA in Pauley Pavilion — the same night his front teeth came close to exiting also, due to a David Greenwood elbow. “Greenwood backed into me. He was looking th e other way, then turned around really quick and BAM! It's getting better, but one tooth’s still p retty sore,” said Nimphius, who is still sporting a thin wire brace across his eyeteeth. “I think it was an accident. To me, it looked like an accident, but of course, I didn’t know what it looked like on TV." To the Phoenix - idiot box audience, the rest of the game had all the earm arks of an upset . . . until the Sun Devils got careless with a four-point lead in the final 14 seconds. “I couldn’t believe it. We had ’em beat in their own place,” Nimphius said. “We had ’em beat in every right. And then we blew it.” If Nimphius knew what the 1978-79 basketball sked had in store for the Sun Devils, he would’ve blown off ASU before the season had even started. “If I was in my sophomore year and this would have happened, I would have taken off. If I had a couple of bags. That's what I should have done — spend two years here and go somewhere else that had a passing offense and get the playing time I want and more exposure,” said Nimphius, who turned down scholarship offers from Marquette, Wisconsin, Kansas and Texas, among others, to come to Tempe. “The problem is we need more m otivation, and w ere not getting it from the coaches or ourselves. “We're an up-and-down this year. We play too much for ourselves. When you play as a team it shows. Sometimes we play as a team, sometimes we play as individuals and sometimes we don't [day at all. For me, I feel kind of leery going to the games now.” Yet Nimphius admits he fits into the “every man for himself” scheme. T m learning to play for myself. Nobody wants to play the ‘team’ game toward the end of the season when it doesn’t count anymore. A t this stage, individual efforts help more than teamwork,” said the 218-pound junior, currently averaging 8.1 points and 4.3 rebounds per game. “The more you score, the more you stay in the game. Tm trying more moves under the basket and driving the baseline. I’ve learned to just tu rn around and take the shot. Confidence is all it is. You do it on your own. For me, it just came all of a sudden.” The newfound confidence hasn't come from Wulk. “He can use me and A1 (sophomore center Alton Lister) a lot better than he has. We can both play a lot. Like in th at USC game (Feb. 17). We both started in the beginning. But at the end, Ned copped out and took one of us out. “Coaching has a lot to do with confidence. I th in k I v e progressed a lot on my own though, playing a lot against A1 in practice. I’ve learned some of the forward moves, but I’ve still got a long way to go. “Redshirting would be good for my grades and degree,” said the climatology major. “I don’t know if I’d want to stay another year, but even if I wanted to, I couldn't. I have too many responsibilities at the house now." Nimphius is currently a land­ lord to a trio of Tempe homes purchased by his parents last winter. Anything had to be a step up from place he called “home” last spring — a semiramshackle tin-roofed shanty of West Seventh Street near the railroad tracks. “The place I live in is pretty nice, but the other two places my parents bought are kind of on the shacky side. Tm kind of the maintenance man, too. Except for the plumbing. If anything goes wrong, I call up the Sears man and let him do th at.” Had he been summoned last year, the Sears man would have never found Nimphius* old abode. Situated between a broken-dow n m ailbox, an abandoned trailer, and a front yard featuring an ocean of good old Arizona mud, the house resembled something out of the “Addams’ Family” era. “I liked th at house, though, the way it was set off the street. We had a washer and dryer, and we had a really good deal on the rent. We had some really good times there,” Nimphius said. “When I first came out hare I couldn’t find a place to stay. Even if it was a pink shack. I’d take it.” - The White House, Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial may be on the traveling agenda for ASU’s women’s badminton team this week, but it’ll be pure business when the Sun Devils take to the court and attem pt to retom their n.Unw.l title in the AIAW Intercollegiate Badminton Nationals in Washington, D.C. The tournament, to be played a t George Washington University, runs today through Saturday. In sweeping to the 1978 title, ASU captured the singles events with first, second, third and fourth places, and also netted second and third place in the doubles. “A big factor will be the depth of each team,” said ASU coach Merle Packer. “However, we stfll consider ourselves strong competition with five returning players, and two highly skilled freshmen.” The depth ASU hopes to capitalize on in Washington starts with returnees Carrie Morrison, Monica Ortez, Ram Owens, Rosie Dorame and Trish Pair. Of those, Morrison is seeded No. 1 in singles and No. 2 in doubles, Ortez No. 2 in singles and No. 3 in doubles, Owens, No. 3 in singles and No. 2 in doubles and Dorame, No. 4 in singles and No. 3 in doubles. The freshmen Packer banks on Heather Ross and Lori Ball, who will team for the third doubles team. b “Strong teams to look out for are UCLA, and Long Beach, Packer said. Ninety-one entrants are scheduled for this year s tourney, up from 52 in 1978, so the shuffling of shuttlecocks will be hot and heavy from the crack of dawn until late a t night. One problem Packer’s squad will face wifi be the fatigue factor, due to the long days of competition. BATS AIOT ABOUT T O U ... D unn's chokers have a distinction all their own E a c h one is a genuine hand-designed pendant of G erm a n silver and turquoise inlay with a leaf design attached to a sturdy and comfortable chain. You'll wear it proudly to suit your own individuality •O Box 9*1 Oram. UWi 84057 ACTUAL SIZE <°— DON’T LOOK BACK M EX IG flN P B S B TEMPI 1090 W. p\\cb0rS 4 BL0CKS WEST0F MILL 966-0852 C0°0*s JO®?' »1.75 Open Monday thru Saturday 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Closed Sunday Take-Out Service LUNCHEON SPECIALS D A IL Y 11 A . M . - 1 P M . _ 1. C h e e s e C r i s p ........................... 2. S o u r C re a m E n c h ila d a , I *5® • •> R i c e ................................................■ * *1.00 off ANY CHIMKHANGA 3. T a c o , R ic e , B e a n s .................... 1 • ! 5 w /coupon 4. E n c h ila d a , R ic e , B e a n s ........... 1 « 7 * 5. T o s t a d a , R ic e , B e a n s ............. 1 « P S 6. T h re e T a c o s ............................... 2*00 OFFER GOOD 2P.M .-10P.M . MON.-SAT. O ffe r e x p ires 3/17/79 7. E n c h ila d a , T a c o , a T o s t a d a ......................................... a a N E W B O S T O N A LB U M IS IN THE STARS, HE N E W B O S T O N T O U R IS O N THE ROAD, O N EPIC RECORDS A N D TAPES. Produced M anagem ent : Paul Ah ern, t e n Lane, me rro a u c e a b uy y Tom »v/m Scholz. --------v ------% Appearing at th e C O LIS E U M M A R C H 3/5 __________ Page 18 State Press Thursday, March 1, 1979 ____________— —------------------------------------------- Is dissension ruining I don't pretend to be a basketball expert. If you asked me to diagram the many variations of the “Six Play,” I probably would excuse myself and go count the chewing gum wads under the tables at one of Pete s Fish and Chips” eight convenient (and greasy) locations. , . , On the other hand, neither am I a hardcourt novice. I can understand fast breaks and zone defenses and half-court presses. I can distinguish & double dribble from a pick-androll, not to mention a pick and shovel. I am able to recognize team play, hustle and good attitude when I see it. And I haven t seen much of anything this year from the ASU basketball team. But I have seen (and heard of) one recurring thing this season — dissension. It’s currently running rampant among the ranks. Animosity is at an all-time high. And it just might cost Coach Ned Wulk his job. “When I went out to look at other schools, I saw a lot of jealousy between players,” said one ASU player, who requested to remain nameless. “But the last time we played that same team, I didn’t see that pettiness anymore. The pettiness is here. Right now. Sun Devil seniors sitting on the bench silently count the seconds any underclassman plays, realizing that with each tick of the scoreboard clock another chance to strut his stuff (shot) in front of an NBA scout has been squandered. They answer questions about fate and pressure, but all the time they re thinking, “Can’t that goddam Greg Goorjian score less points sometime? I wanna be the one who puts up those 80-footers tonight.” Freshmen and sophomores, in turn, gripe about their acute lack of playing time, once waiter berry those said seniors air their complaints to Wulk who tends to side with the upperclassmen. Nobody is happy. And it all leads back to one reason. ,, “Everything points to Ned, said another ASU player. “He can’t motivate us anymore. Whenever he tries, we just look at each other and laugh. I used to have a lot of respect for him. But not anymore. Not after this year.” To tell you the truth, I was prepared for this 12-car accident. Any team with too much talent and too many able bodies will self-destruct in the end. Or don’t you remember the Philadelphia ’76ers the past two seasons? I was prepared for this all-for-one, one-forall and everyman-for-himself basketball out of ASU. I was all set to see a Red Cross tent pitched in the three-second lane. I was ready for a team in torment — not to mention tatters and chaos. Too many times before the season did I read about what a marvel these Sun Devils in polyester pants were. Experts whose opinions I clip and paste in my catbox had told me how great things were going to be. They were so aggressive, they’d dive for cigarette butts on Van Buren; so dedicated, they’d draw offensive plays on hotdog napkins; so cocky, they’d set perfect triple picks on old ladies at the check-out counter at A.J. Bayless. No longer would the Devils have to take a taxi to catch up to the league leaders. No longer would ASU athletic director Fred Miller have to go pricing at Bullock’s or Diamond s and ask the musical question: ‘‘How much is that basketball title in the window??? It was supposed to come hand-delivered, to the Activity Center doorstep. No strings attached. People were sure about it in no uncertain terms. They minced no words, spared no cuddles, dealt in no euphemisms. So, as Ricky Ricardo would say, “Wha’ Hauppinnnned???” So far, ASU has been worse than bad. They are H-O-Double R-I-B-L-E spells Harrigan. Losing seasons tend to push enthusiams into the sewer and although ASU may wind up over .500 overall, their spirit found the gutter after those two demorolizing losses to UCLA and USC as far back as mid-January. Now, every eternal optimist is adamant in his belief that 1979 will be different. And it will, if a few Sun Devils have it their way. At least four front-line players have said they will transfer if Wulk stays on as head coach. Also, some of the upperclassmen have reputedly told some of the freshmen to scram, based on what they have seen in their past few seasons. “Ned’s ruined too many guys," one Sun Devil said. “He won’t ruin me.” The season is already past the salvaging stage. . . ASU loses The UA’s women’s tennis team used a tie-breaker in the final set of doubles to down ASU, 5-4, Wednesday at the Whiteman Center. Both teams split the singles matches, 3-3, with the Wildcats winning the doubles, 2-1. The Sun Devils are now 6-2 in the Pac-10 and 7-2 •verall. B ik fc p H O E N I X SYMPHONY ^ TICKETS Still available for . M ARCH 5 -8:00 p.m. “ A n Evening with Beethoven” Group Seating ($1.50) with student I.D. C a ll HILLEL a t 9 6 7 -7 5 6 3 Comfort A fo o tb ed of co rk mixture, lined with soft suede, shapes to your foot and provides support and comfort that benefits your entire body. Eight styles to choose from, as well as Noppy’s, the sandal that massages your feet. B ir k e n s to d c . 414 S. MILL #106 Mfll Ave. Shops 966-3139 Next time you’re in Mexico, stop by and visit the Cuervo fabrica in Thquilaf Since1795\ve’ve welcomed our guests with our best. A traditional taste of Cuervo Gold. Visitors to Cuervo have always been eeted in a special way. They're met at the gates and invited in su k to expen­ ce the unique taste of Cuervo Gold. This is the way we've said "welcome"for more than 180 ars. And it is as traditional as Cuervo Gold itself Fbr this dedication to tradition is what mokes Cuervo ild tru ly special. N eat, on the rocks, with a splash of soda, , a perfect Sunrise or M argarita, Cuervo Gold will bring n back to a tim e when quality ruled the world. Cuervo. The Gold standard since 1795. CUERVO ESPECIAL® TEQUILA. 80 PROOF. IMPORTED AND BOTTLED BY ©1978 HEUBLEIN, INC., HARTFORD, CONN Thursday, March 1,1979 State Press Page 19 1 Wrestlers place without support . . . have an audien ce of 160,000 people a week. " T " By Jim H sieger When th e ASU wrestling Douglas said. “It's equivalent to H e lp W onted team left for the Pac-10 con­ football and basketball in F o r Sale Instruction ference cham pionships last change. There is much more week, there were no parades, no tradition and better athletes.” WRITERS! Sail what you w rite. . . locally. noon rallies, no confetti and Douglas just got back from a Oat detail* on over 100 little known Arizona certa in ly no cam eras to six-day recruiting trip through free lance market*. Arizona Writer1» Mar­ document th e fated event. the northwest and California, keting Guide available at A S U bookatora. 312 Certainly there was no reason but didn’t mention any prospects Student Book Center, Book* Etc. to expect an y th in g b u t in particular from those areas. 1874 IMPALA, 38,000 miles. Be*t offer. 3/1 mediocrity, since the team had “We’re looking in Arizona Call Tarry at 888-1308 or 8B7-3067. lost eight starters from last also,” he said. “There are some RIUNITE LAM B R U SCO , *1.88; six Pabst year's squad and were picked to top prospects a t Phoenix “Bock" b een , SI .58; La Paz tequila, *3.88. finish no better than fifth in the College, Mesa and Western Rundles Liquors and Market, Unhrenity 3/27 conference before the season A rizona. W e're • looking and Mill Avenue. 867-8078. started by those who know. especially for people for 167 and LADIES S H O E S , Sandal*, Purses available The wrestlers, who were 150 (pound classes).” In the most popular brand*. Baretrap, ASU compares favorably in Sblcca, Frye boots, Bass, Famolare, holding the fortunes of ASU in recruit consideration with top Dexter, d o g s , Deckers and many more. their hands, had zero minutes of ex p erience in conference wrestling schools like Oklahoma, Backdoor Shop, 707 S . Forest, 886-1772. 4/27 championships, all being either Iowa and Iowa State, according VIEW G A M M A G E from back yard! Room in to Douglas. S H O E S A L E — Men's and Women's shoes 2 bedroom house - *165, utilities paid. All redshirts or freshmen. M o to rcy cle s conveniences - Female. Aggie, 967-7841. As a teacher of wrestling up to VI off. Backdoor Shoe Shop, 707 S. The only “te st” the team came Forest. 886-1772. 3/1 Evenings: 966-7389._______________ 3/2 1875 Y A M A H A 850. Runs great, 10,000 up against all season was technique, Douglas might have miles, never laid down. Asking *725. Curt, Oklahoma, and they flunked, few if any peers. M ESA: 3 bedroom house to share, full 894-1516. 3/7 EVERYTHING G R O W S In Anything Groes. house privileges. Gays O K . 15 minutes to “I read a couple of his bodes 6” humidity growing system answers losing 30-6. ASU. Available March 1. Call Dave, They aren’t th e awe inspiring and decided ASU was the place water, fertilizer, PH , soil, and trace 964-3889. 3/6 phenomenon of a semi-century for me,” Bill Cripps said. element problems for sseds, cuttings, P erson al pottsd and sick plants. Grows for *4.79. eclipse, but they are for real, “Douglas is a good teacher, Instructions Include light requirements and A R E Y OU an artist or a crafts parson? Sell finishing second in the con­ especially on foot technique, an bug control. Send *4.75 plus *1.25 postage your handmade items at the Arts and Crafts S C r V i C C S ference m eet to a powerful area that I needed a lot of help - handling to: A ll System s Gro, 1245 Fair. March 8th and 9th. Sponsored by M U w --------- --------Highland, Dubuque, low» 52001. 3/16 Host and Hostesses. Registration Is now In 'G E T T H O S E eight-track tapes repaired at a Oregon State team and placing in.” fraction of the cost of new ones. Call the M U Activity Center. For more Informa­ Cripps won the outstanding seven w restlers in the NCAA, 898-1309. 3/1 tion, call 96641649. 3/2 wrestler award in the con­ only the second time ASU has S E W IN G M A C H I N E , Fre e A rm , JO H N : with broken ankle, from Minnesota, ference meet last week and PR O FESSIO N A L R ESU M E Service hi n e ve r u s e d , 1 979, b e s t m o d e l, s t ill sent th a t many to th e finals. met at Sadie Thom psons, lives Las Casltaa Tempe. Employment Counseling, Com po­ in c a rto n . F u ll o r ig in a l gu ara n tee . “I think we surprised some defeated NCAA champion Dan homes, has dog Joshua. Call back Polly. sition, Typing and Printing. 424 W. D o e s e v e ry th in g . C o s t $469, m u s t people,” Head coach Bobby Hicks in the 142-pound class. 3/1 Broadway, #15. Ready for the Head s a c r ific e , $165. I a ls o h ave t h e . On a year-round practice Douglas said. “The only people Hunters? Call John, 884-1261. 3/30 b e a u tifu l c a b in e t th a t c a m e w ith schedule for the team, Douglas It. P riv a te H o m e . 946-2127. who expected us to do as well as 'G O O D STUD EN TS: Save 25% on Auto is the type of coach who likes to we did was us.” P e ts Insurance. Non-smokers 15%. A sk Steve It was to be expected, the no get into his work, firsthand. Lundell, ASU Representative, Farmers V* L A B pups, 6 weeks old. free to good “I can show a wrestler a lot respect syndrome, especially Insurance, 836-1480. 3/1 homes. Marilyn, 9664804 after 6:00. 3/2 I ost/Found when some key people who w o e better than telling him what he M A D O O G DISCO from Tucson spins the out a good p art of the season is doing wrong,” he said. “The LOST: Australian Shepherd, n o tall, brawn hottest and latest disco-soul, (or whatever H e lp W anted with injuries were getting the coach has to be in there hand-toeyas. A ls o Mack Labrador. 13th Street. you desire) releases for any party. Co m ­ 3/1 cobwebs worked out ju st before hand to help someone the most. plete professional d isco lighting effects FULL-TIME OPPORTUNITY: Part-time Things are just too fast to see and sound system. Excellent rates. No hours available. Flexible scheduling for the meet. LOGT: TW O turquoise rings. Left: ladles charge for travel! Radio Page Rick In responsible individuals. Interviews. Call “We could have done better sometimes.” bathroom, north and M .U. upstairs, Tucson: 745-3779 Give name and 941-0164. 3/6 Wednesday night, 2/21/79. Great senti­ than we did,” Douglas said. Douglas feels the Sun Devils telephone number. I'll return your call mental value! Please return them. N o W O RK YO U R own hours cleaning occupied “(Roye) Oliver could have done have a good chance to produce __________________ 3/9 immediately. 3/1 . hom es In Scottsdale. M ust have car and better, but considering he's only at least five All-Americas this questions. Call Rena, 968-8678. phone. Starting salary, *3.25 per hour. LOW C O S T travel to Israel. Center for been back three weeks, he did a year, and if they can place a FOUND: Irish Setter In the vicinity of Mill 257-0727. 3/6 Student Travel. 9 a.m . - 6 p.m. New York and Alameda. C all 986-2144. 3/11 pretty good job; about all he was couple of wrestlers near the top time. Toll Free 808223-7678. 3/8 STUD EN TS: PART-TIME work available capable of doing.” in the NCAA meet, there is a R ECO R D ED MESSIANIC message. Please evenings and Saturday. U p to 2t hours per Douglas also said if Eddie good chance of taking it all. A u to m o b ile s______ _ weak, will fit your schedule. Easy work, call 249-9234.__________________ 3/9 “Realistically, it takes about C O R V E TT E L82, 4-speed, every option, no nice boss. C a ll 967-0240. Cloee to campus. Ortiz had been wrestling all YOUR INCOME taxes prepared by a 3/6 year, th e team would have done eight years to produce a national m iles, new, must sell. 638-8634 after 6:00. professional. B ill Arnold, 967-9266. 3/7 Jeff. */1 better. Both Ortiz and Oliver championship team,” Douglas, O V E R S E A S J O B S — Summer/year round. missed several matches with who is in his fifth year at ASU, 1877 D O DG E van, custom interior. 16,000 Europe, S . America, Australia, Asia, etc. injuries, including th e Oklahoma said. m iles, *7,300. Sink, Ice box, new tire*. A ll fields, *500 - *1,200 monthly. Expenses You have to be lucky to do it.” Extra sharp. Call Dave, 884-3888 or Bill, paid. Sightseeing. Free Information- write: meet. Oliver quslified for the Rent A 981-0206. 3/2 U C , Bo* 4490-AD, Berkeley, C A 94704. 3/1 NCAA meet, finishing second in Bartender Service the 156-pound class. Ortiz PH O N E S A L E S : Evenings, nice office, 1871 VW B U G . Standard transmission. Professional finished fourth at 128 but didn't close to campus, hourly rate, bonus. Call *950. Carolyn, 965-2932 or 2760070 eve­ Bartenders 9684853._____________________ 3 ,2 qualify. nings. 3/1 For But what would ASU do now PART-TIME DAYTIME sales d a rk wanted. 7 3 M G MIDGET, *2,200. (not firm), Must Private against th e Sooners, being a 3/2 Must have super personality and be sell. Sue or Eileen, 886-5887. Parties interested In back packing, camping, etc. little older, a little wiser and a *3.00 per hour. The Arm y Surplus Store, Be the Host at your own lot healthier? 746W. Main, Mesa. 3/2 party. “We would beat them now, Call MARRIED C O U P L E for management and Douglas said. “We have our maintenance of 12 unit apartment complex. team back and are a t full 2 bedroom, poolside apartment available. 995-4899 3/2 strength and it would Reference required. 2785004. 3/2 7 0 Porsche 8 1 4 ................ different story. We scheduled 9 1 4 ........ — b u sin ess D irector,\\ 77 34 PPorsche PART-TIME S A L E S R EP. for local business Oklahoma specifically for o r e c h e 9 1 4 ................ forms company. Salary - flexible hours. __. ____ •52 Porsche e p e ................ perience. We really didn’t ex­ 243-1227.___________________ 3/1 | y p if lf l 71 2402 ............................ pect to beat them at th e time.” 7 2 240 Z ............................ GIRL FRIDAY for local business forms GR AD U ATE C O L L E G E expertise. Top quel7 4 280 Z ........................................ Douglas, author of two books W heel W orks A u to C o . company. Typing and miscellaneous 75 280 Z 2 + 2 .................... tty typing, IBM correcting Saiectric, quality, on wrestling techniques, was Buy. Sail and Trade Japanese C a n 69XKE Roadster ............ duties. 2481227. 3/1 bond paper. Dissertations, Theses, and 1 A lla North o( Campus 7 4 Jensen H e a le y ............ even a little surprised at the Research Papers. Call Dabby at Schmalzar 8*4-11*7 945 E . Curry PART-TIME E M P L O Y E E S for manufac­ *62 V e t t e ............................ Corporation, 8386363; evenings and week­ outcome. 7 2 V etteT to p .................. turing plant. High school shop helpful. ends, 967-2305.____________________ 3/8 .62786 “I didn’t expect to get seven 7 4 S p it f ir e ...................... . 9680836.__________ _____ _________3/6 men in the nationals." he said. “I F or Bun*/Leq»e 71 Spitfire ....................................J J PART-TIME W E E K E N D clerical position, TYPING: T H E S E S , dissertations, leni) figured five, but the 190-(Mike 7 3 Opel G T ..................................** light typing, filing, phones. Camelbacfc papara, etc. Professional secretary, ac­ MARRIED C O U P L E for management and 71 Flat 124 S p id e r...........................6* Kovahck) and 184-(Joe Romero) m aintenance of 1 2 unlt apartment oomplex. curate. spalling corrected, reasonable Hospital. 9586200, Ext. 206.________ 3/6 7 2 Flat 660S p id e r...........................$* pound classes were a surprise.” 2 bedroom, poolside apartment avellabM. rates. 9488207. 3/2 7 5 Flat 124 S p id e r.......... H U S B A N D A N D W IFE — to manage small '69 M G B - G T .................... Even with inexperience and Reference required. 2795004.________3/2 Scottsdale apartment complex. W ife to TYPING, IBM seiectric. Dissertations, 7 3 M G B .......................... several walk-ons, including Ortiz TW O BEO ROO M townhouse for rent collect rent, show apartments. Husband, 7 7 M G B .......................... theses, term papers. Eight years exper7 7 M G M id g e t ................ ......... and Romero, Douglas calls this *276/month. Call Toby at 886-7400. after minor maintenance. Prefer graduate stu­ lence. Jean, 277-3902. «M -76 M G M id g e t ..............................6*166 dent. Must be mature and responsible. Call year’s team the best ever at 6:00. 7 5 M G M id g e t .............................. 274-1171 for appointment. 3/6 EXPER IEN C ED TYPIST. IBM self-correct­ ASU. 7 4 M G M id g e t ..............................• * " * s t u d i o A P A R T M E N T - S» «*«» ing. 98110 wpm. *7.50/hour (approxi­ 7 2 M G M id g e t ..............................» ! ! C A R E E R OPPORTUNITY with Equitable “They are m ore intense and a oarklng - large yard, barbecue, «"wurai mately 75 oents/page). Fast and accurate. 76 BMW 2002 .............................. * 6 * » U fa Assurance as Sale* Representative. facility, private home. t W u H W e e pakl. 74 BMW 2002 .............................. H H ! Lora, 947-0876. 3/30 more dedicated bunch of guys,” Salary and Com m ission. C a ll Dale Pariah at _____ Female. Aggie. 867-7841. Evenings. 9 88 -68 BM W 2002 ................... •••••! ? he sa id “They're b e tte r than the 253-6166 for appointment. E O E , M / F . 3/16 7 4 Saab S O L E ...................6 6 6 6 « « 7388. ________ ___ __ 7 4 Audi 100 L S ............................f * 1976 team, a lot better.” FR O N T D ESK attendants. Arizona Athletic W a n te d 7 5 Audi F o x ........... ........ ASU also placed seven Club. 1426 W . 14th S t.. Tempe. Applica­ SMALL OVUMAD W E P A Y cash for gold, silver and wrestlers in the NCAA meet in F or Sale tions and Interview» 4 to 7 p.m . Thursday diamonds. C all 9685867. 3/7 SMALL HNCES 1976. and Friday only. 3/2 GUITAR: Electrs Lee Paul Copy, case, The second place finish in the phase shifter, fuzz power boost pre-am ps, A R E Y OU an artist or a crafts person? Sell T H E F U L L E R Brash Com pany needs your handmade items at the Arts and Crafts alLmighty Pac had to be a new condition, worth *850. Sell for *320. students to pick up and deliver orders In 3/6 Fair. March 8th and 9th. Sponsored by MU the Tem pe and West Phoenix areas. double duty surprise considering 867-8800, Joel. Host and Hostesses. Registration is now In 5201 East Van Burnt St. Average (5.00 per hour. Must have trans­ the move up in competition from the M U Activity Center. For more Inform»78 C H E V . Camero L.T ., white, 306 V-8, portation. Call Mike for interview. 8381363 t u * m H Wff ftftJQ theW AC. 3/2 automatic, 13,000 m iles, excellent, *5,500. o r 967-3763. 3/7 “There's no comparison," Must sell. 882-4979. 3 ,2 Classifieds S tart Hare SMALL CAR COMPANY SMALL CAR CO. Page 20 State Press Thursday, March 1, 1979 SWIM SUIT SALE «H P ¡¡SÌÉNS LADIES' ARENA LYCRA TEAM SUIT to *23.00 MEN'S ARENA LYCRA TEAM SUIT to *15.00 Hundreds of suits in this year's newest styles and colors. We have the Valley's Largest Selection of one piece and competitive swimwear. From famous makers like - Adidas , HEAD, and Arena. HURRY IN NOW AND SAVE UP TO 50% OFf ^ iA lp in e Ski Keller N e x t to Tang's imports 1533 E. Apache. Tempe 968-9056