r W Arizona State University , S m 1979 e d n e s d a y p r e s s T e m p e , A rizo n a '^ C o p y rig h t, S ta te Press, 1979 a l t o r e f l o w _______ ___ _________ s in c r e a s e d ; b r id g e s c lo s e d Salt River Project increased the flow of water in the Salt River to 15,000 cubic feet per second Tuesday, forcing the closing of several more Salt River crossings. Bridges at 24th Street, 40th Street and possibly Seventh Street in Phoenix were expected to be closed to traffic by Tuesday night, officials said. Crossings at 48th Street, 16th Street and 19th Avenue have not yet been repaired from the last wave of flooding. Crossings expected to remain open are Central Avenue, Maricopa Freeway, Seventh Avenue and 35th Avenue in Phoenix and Mill Avenue, Scottsdale Road and Hayden Road in Tempe. Five crossings in Mesa were closed by runoff last week, including Country Club Drive. SRP officials said the flow is expected to last about 10 days, regardless of any rainfall. It marks the fourth time in less than a year the crossings will have been closed due to heavy runoff in the Salt River. Phoenix officials say it could take three to four weeks to reopen the crossings. Hanging out Patrick Hemberger, an ASU grounds construction worker, finds himself suspended in the air at least once a week when he changes the sign hanging across Orange Street near Palm Walk. Hemberger has been responsible for this task since 1974. [State Press staff photo by Matthew Liu] N e w license plates to sport D evil colors « Si ‘ nt> THESE NEW CÛlûRS, WARDEN—i'W AFR&lOTKfrMENjyST 0W t H**JDl£ ¡T!" By Lori Medigovich The Arizona Legislature has decided that next year all Arizona motorists will be Sun Devil boosters, whether they like it or not. The House of Representatives Appropriations committee voted Monday that all 1980 license plates will bear the ASU colors of maroon and gold. The new plates eventually will replace the current green and copper tags on Arizona vehicles, Arizona Motor Vehicle Division Deputy Director Bob Langguth said. “Those receiving the plates will be all newlyregistered vehicles, or those needing to be replaced because they have been lost, mutilated or stolen, he said. With tongue in cheek, Rep. Tony West, R-Phoemx, said the selection of the University’s colors was “one of our most important votes of this session.” The Appropriations Committee got final approval over the Arizona Department of Transportation in the selection of colors, he said. “Last year we appropriated the money for the plates and stipulated that we wanted an opportunity to participate in the selection process of the tags, West said. “Out of the eight colors we had to select from,” West said, “the maroon and gold was literally the most appealing choice. The other stuff we looked at was trash.” He said the Department of Transportation had recommended the committee choose a “ifirt brown and yellow” plate that looked “just terrible.” In addition to the new colors, the plates will also sport a decal of a saguaro cactus to replace the dash currently found between the numbers and letters of the license tags. j ‘The only mistake we made in the selection of the plates,” West said, “was that we’ll have a decal of a cactus when we should have asked for the ASU Sun Imp to appear on the plates.” Pete Corpstein, R-Paradise Valley, said he prefers the yellow on brown plates and is in the process of trying to convince the Appropriations Committee members to change their votes. Page 2 State Press Wednesday, March 28. 1979 In th e n e w s b rie fly L from the A s s o c ia te d Press OIL PRICES HIKED GENEVA, Switzerland — The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries raised crude oil prices by 9 percent Tuesday to $14 54 a barrel and authorized members to tack on any surcharges they think the market will bear. The increase, taking effect Sunday, should raise American retail gasoline prices by about two cents a gallon and increase the American bill for foreign oil by at least $4 billion over last year’s total of $43 billion. Surcharges could push the bill higher, analysts say. ISRAEL, EGYPT LEADERS W ANT WEAPONS WASHINGTON — The leaders of Israel and Egypt took different stands Tuesday on Palestinian autonomy but asked Congress nonetheless to give them the weapons of war and trust them to keep the peace. Both warned of Soviet threats to freedom around the world. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat renewed a proposal for a combined municipal council of Arabs and Israelis in Jerusalem. But he declared flatly that “sovereignty in Arab Jerusalem should return to the Arabs.” w m m m prices on white Argentus and new. Yellow Argentus! • Includes free deluxe options and Josten’s Full Lifetime Warranty! The Great Argentus Rush of 79! • New precious metal alloy for class rings! • Costs far less than gold! • Josten’s stakes claim! • Special introductory josrzExrs ARMY DESTROYS LANDM INES DUGWAY PROVING GROUND, Utah — The Army blew up 26 landmines believed to contain a liquid nerve agent on an isolated part of this desert testing post Tuesday, and the base commander declared: “There was no widespread contamina­ tion.” Gov. Scott Matheson, who expressed anger on learning of the plans last week, said through a spokesman that he was glad the destruction of the canisters went without incident — and he was glad it was over. GOLDWATER BOOSTS ELECTORAL COLLEGE WASHINGTON — Sen. Barry Goldwater, who lost the presidency by the most overwhelming popular vote in modern times, said Tuesday direct election of presidents would be "chaotic and divisive.” The Arizona Republican said abolishing the electoral college would encourage proliferation of splinter parties and lead to “a rash of vote contests that might spread throughout the nation in every close election.” «10 OFF «59.95 limited time only limited time only Only during the following times when your Josten’s representative will be on campus. UA HOSPITAL PERFORMS TRANSPLANT TUCSON — A 49-year-old Tucson man with coronary artery disease received the heart of a traffic wreck victim Tuesday in a 6-hour operation that was the first heart transplant ever in Arizona. A spokesman at the University of Arizona Medical Center said there was no information on the condition of the recipient, whose name was being withheld. The man’s own heart was so weak that even walking was painful for him, officials had said. NEW! YELLOWARGENTUS now WHITE ARGENTUS now hatf p i a p f M a r c h 2 6 th r u 3 0 t im f 10 :00 - 4:00________ U n iv e r s it y B o o k s to r e ________________________ ANNUAL M SCHOLARSHIPS TO M EDICAL/OSTEOPATHIC SCHOOL available to students entering or already enrolled. U .S. citizens between 19 and 33 years old. Full tuition , authorized fees, books and $400 cash per m onth. For further inform ation on Navy Health Professions Scholarships contact Tom Hull at (602) 261-3158/3600 (collect). t © « r7 Corner of University & M yrtle In Tower Center WE BUY, SELL AND TRADE FINE QUALITY USED RECORDS/ j AND CASSETTES 111 OPEN MONDAY - SATURDAY 10 - 9 | ROCKJAZZFOLKBLUESCLASSICALSHOWS S EU R O PE BIRD'S RECORD EXCHANGE 111 E. University t /A'acc/£> £S W Q 9 ' T ££ A VV ££¿l - '# '/JOQTT££¿¿ V/M S i//? A A /â £ • T /P S £ ¿ e i//? S /0 //S - 2 m A ffi ¿ K K V SAIS P A I?IS 3A E A /(£A P 7 s , YOUR H O S T R IC H A R D B . G -O L D B E R C r SA. OS’. A //S T 0 * y S //¿ /A l A A // T!SK c o ¿ .u .s e e C A s a / r a v a / ¿¿a i e FOR /„âù WEEKDAYS in f o r m a t io n 8 3 3 - 8 6 4 6 EVENINGS WEEKENDS 2 ^ 9 -¿ ¿ 9 8 Wednesday, March 28, 1979 State Press Page 3 Lack o f federal funding decreases CETA's s ta ff By Mary Perry Three years ago ASU had 33 employees working in various capacities under the federal Comprehensive Employment Training Act. Today, because federal funds ran out, the University is forced to make do with only six. Director of ASU Per­ sonnel, Henry C. Koelbl, who is responsible for ASU’s participation in the CETA program , said Tuesday the cutback of CETA staff is the major disadvantage of the program. “The CETA employees are loaned to us,” Koelbl said. “Their positions are not official. What is the department going to do with the positions filled by CETA employees when the funds are taken away?” CETA employees plug the holes in the workloads of various academic departments on campus. “They (CETA employees) are good while they are here,” he said. “But when the funds are gone, who does the work?” Employers begin to rely on the temporary staff, Koelbl said. But the University never knows just how much federal money will be avail­ able from year to year. “We’ve always Tiad difficulty getting the positions we need. We always can use more help. I can see us having 100 to 150 CETA employees in positions around campus.” ASU requests the CETA trainees because it is one way to add staff members without draining the already tight University budget. “We ask for it because c e rta in o v e r lo a d e d departments really need the help,” the director said. The federal government allocates CETA funds to county and city govern­ ments. These agencies then allocate funds to the state, from which ASU receives its allocation of monies. A cutback in overall national funds might be responsible for ASU’s decrease in available CETA positions, Jack A. Zappe, ASU placement manager, said. During the last year only about seven CETA em­ ployees have been given permanent positions at the University, Zappe said. Maricopa County CETA Director, Adolfo Echeveste, has launched an in­ vestigation to determine if positions for which CETA employees qualify actually have been filled by CETA personnel rath er than people “off the street.” So far, the investigation has shown that more than 50 percent of CETA em­ ployees are hired per­ manently when a position continued page 6 TAKING THE LSA T? Join thousands of law school applicants nationwide in Amity’s LSAT Review Seminars TREAT YOURSELF RETURNING HOME FOR THE SUMMER? Mazatlan RESERVE N O W ! ! by T rain May 22-27 W e Sell A ir lin e T icke ts 6 days - 5 nights a t A ir p o r t Prices fro m Don't wait call us. W Al P a s le y's \A LLEY T IW EL $ 572° •A IR L IN E T IC K E T S - TO U R S •S T E A M S H IP TIC K E TS A C R U IS E S • H O TE L S • R E S O R TS • A U T O R E N T A L S •IN D IV ID U A L TR A V E L A R R A N G E M E N T S • M A JO R C R E D IT C A R D S A C C E P TE D O n e call does it all 967-9403 CALL TOLL-FREE FOR DETAILS AND LOCAL SCHEDULE INFORMATION: 707 S o u th F o rest T e m p e , A z. 85281 800-243-4767 Ext761 T h e b ig g e s t s h o p p in g c e n te r in th e V a lle y ••• TEM PE! What has ever ! • , • • • ham­ burgers» its own ocean» two smiles fo r every one person and can do it in its own backyard? Answer: The City off Tempe! Just Shake it and Let it Fall Into Place. The Precision Haircut. Precision haircutting is our method of cutting your hair in harmony with the way it grow s. . . so it never loses its shape. And because your hair falls naturally into place, all you have to do is shake it. ... At Command Performance, we shampoo, preci­ sion cut and blow dry your hair for just $14.00 whether you’re a guy or a gal. And no appointments are ever necessary. Permanent waves, coloring, frosting and condi­ tioning, we do it all, but we really shine with the precision haircut, and so will you. More than 5,000 Tempe area merchants make Tempe the most extensive shopping center in the Valley. From homes to harpsichords. . . ladies wear to lariats. . . sport­ ing goods and scooter pies; there’s more here than in an Oriental bazaar. Where else can you surf or disco----belly dance or skateboard. . . purchase plywood or pizza.. enjoy cowboy steaks or Chateaubriand. Tempe offers more. More stores with more selection and mere helpful, friendly folks. Join 115,000 of your closest friends at the biggest shop­ ping center in the V alley. . . Tempe. R e m e m b e r, w h e n yo u s h o p . . . Com m and P e rfo rm a n c e 831-5835 3 322 S. M c C lin to c k — Tem pe Basha's P la za — M c C lin to ck & S outhern N o a p p o in tm e n t necessary. H ours: 9-B M o n .-F ri. Now 8:00a.m .-6p.m . Saturday__________ Q Tfeiripe Chamber of Commerce Page 4 State Press Wednesday, March 28, 1979 O p in io n Where the telescope ends, the microscope begins. Which of the two has the grander view? —Victor Hugo press G u e s t E d ito r ia l Halt canal treaties while there's tim e Last year by means of bribery, fraud, deception and outright prevarication, the United States Senate was persuaded to ratify the Panama Canal Treaties of 1977. This was accomplished amid much sound and fury in the news media and in spite of the opposition of an overwhelming majority of the American people. Now we are coming to the final phase of the battle with almost complete silence on the part of our news sources. The final transfer of the canal to Panama is scheduled for October 1, but before that can take place, the House of Representatives must appropriate funds for the transfer. In other words, legislation implementing one of the most insane actions ever perpetrated by our political leaders is to be voted on in just a few days. What is at stake is a strategically vital link in our defense system. As stated bv four former Chiefs of Naval Operations: “Loss of the Panama Canal . . . would contribute to the en­ circlement of the United States by hostile naval forces, and threaten our ability to survive. ” It is also a commercial waterway upon which a sizeable segment of our economy depends. The treaty requires the forfeiture of $20 billion of property purchased prior to 1903 from the newly established Republic of Panama. The treaty signed at that time ceded the entire canal zone to the United States in perpetuity and pledged to treat the land as sovereign territory of the United States. If approved, the enabling legislation will cost the taxpayers of this country at least $4.1 billion just to transfer ownership. These costs include the $70 million in the cash operating fund and $150 million worth of military supplies which are to be turned over to Panama. We are also to give them $100 million in annual foreign aid and the right to tax American business in the canal zone retroactively to 1903. This treacherous giveaway, this traitorous act, still can be averted if enough of us can convince our congressmen to support House Resolution 1958. This is a bill introduced by Rep. George Hansen, R-Idaho, that would prohibit any use of taxpayer money to implement the Panama Canal Treaties of 1977. Please write your representative and to Rep. Carroll Hubbard, Chairman, Subcommittee on the Panama Canal, 3576 House Annex No. 2, Washington D.C. 20515, asking that the bill be reported to the House floor for a vote by the entire House of Representatives. —A. Swimmer Associate Professor Department of Mathematics I ptters to the Editor Ban grad officers? Think again, John! Editor: I am writing in response to W. John Williamson's letter in the March 15 State Press. Regarding Mr. [Lance] Ross' position as President of ASASU: it is my understanding that Mr. Ross won his office in a legitimate, democratic election. His personal and educational background was a m atter of public record at the time. The student body has the opportunity to elect leaders who will perform competently, regardless of the presence or absence of academic “status symbols." Graduate students comprise nearly onethird of the student body. This is not the “bulk of student power,” but many of us who remain in the educational system to deepen and broaden our educations have leadership skills we are willing the share with the University community. I am not aware of how grad students violate the rules of society or disrupt the main­ tenance of order at this University and I would be interested to hear how Mr. Williamson perceives this as happening. I believe that we contribute to the quality of education available, not only as graduate/teaching assistants, but also in the ways we promote more extensive academic services available to all. Margie Carlson Graduate Student College of Nursing Editor: It’s seldom that I take the time to respond to a stance which bothers me; although perhaps we all should more often. However I feel that the statements by W. John Williamson in the State Press [March 15] regarding the status of student government office-holders deserves a critical response. Williamson said that student government should be reserved to undergraduates because ( 1) “the bulk of student power resides in the undergraduate student body,” and (2) "graduate students have already ‘made it’ in the world with the status symbol of . . . a BA or BS.” Mr. Williamson's argument that these offices should be reserved solely to un­ dergraduates is totally absurd! Graduate students running for these positions are not “violating the rules of society and xlisrupting the maintenance of order at this University," although people who seek to enjoin them from engaging in these activities are. His reasoning that the bulk of student power resides in the undergraduate student body and therefore that undergrads should govern, translates, in plain and simple terms, to, “There’s more of us so we should be in charge.” This line of thought is similar to that of post-Civil War southerners who sought to preclude blacks from participating in government and causes one to wonder how much Mr. Williamson really knows about the American form of governing. His second contention, that since graduate students have attained the ‘status' of an undergraduate degree they should leave the government of the student body up to those who have as yet not attained this ‘status symbol,’ is truly asinine. Does he imply that an office of student government is a status symbol which should be left to those who haven’t as yet attained one? Or does Mr. Williamson simply mean that one who enjoys the status (and perhaps the maturity and education) of an undergraduate degree should not serve as a leader for those who haven’t? Regarding Mr. Williamson’s bid for executive vice president it seems to me that his stance is an attempt to eliminate the competition rather than present fair representation. If however, this is his true belief, it is important to note that his discriminatory position toward graduate students (approx, one-fourth of the student population) may exemplify the attitude he will take toward them should he be elected to student government. For me, that’s enough to prompt me to write this letter; for all of us, I hope it’s enough to see to it that we don’t allow him to apply his discriminatory views. Gari Cheever Senior Criminal Justice/Political Science Editor: III W *\ m St MIDEAST ■ AC M W '0OUT This letter is a response to John Williamson's letter (March 15) concerning graduate students running for ASASU office. I can’t believe anybody could state something so asinine as, “/ hope that in this year's election there are no graduate students running for office. I f there are, they are violating the rules of society and disrupting the maintenance of order at this University. ” If these are the kinds of statements that currently are being made by undergraduates running for office this year, may we have more qualified graduate students par­ ticipating. Lyle Rich Senior Business Administration Guess Iwas wrong Editor: 7S± xwumotf?! WHATiNHAnoM? In view of the response to my letter which appeared in the State Press on March 15, I inquired as to just what the undergraduate and graduate student head-count is here at Arizona State University. I learned that there are 25,108 un­ dergraduates enrolled this semester and 10,351 graduate students. In the face of these facts, I retract my statements and see nothing wrong with a graduate student being president of the Associated Students of ASU. W. John Williamson Senior English Wednesday, March 28, 1979 State Press Page 5 Another Letter to the Editor W e're still being victimized by anti-lslamic propaganda Editor: The Islamic resurgence in the Muslim world has caused a great deal of alarm in the United States and elsewhere. We sincerely believe that, although such an alarm is natural, it should not cause anyparanoia or overreaction. This Islamic resurgence is not motivated by fear, territorial aggran­ dizement or hatred of others. It is humanistic; it is a Muslim response to the medley of problems confronting them; it is a quest for a better world in which to live. This resurgence is neither anti-West, nor anti-East; it is certainly, though, against exploitation, injustice, tyranny and demeaning of humanity. We urge you not to be swayed by biased, one-sided, anti-lslam ic propaganda. We aren’t asking for your support, but we request you to be vigilant and to excercise restraint on those who DRIVE CARS FREE Cars Available Many Points U.S.A. W e are I.C .C . licensed and insured. M ust be 21 years or m ore. SCHEALL DRIVEAWAY 991-5533 want to pass anti-lslamic propaganda to the public, and on the U.S. government, so that it may not be a party to any conspiracy against the Islamists in the Muslim world. As Sayyid Qutb said in “Islam: The Religion of the Future:" “Throughout its long history, Islam has endured and withstood blows more violent and more cruel than those directed against its pioneers everywhere at present. Without power except its intrinsic vitality, it struggled through all, emerged victorious, continued to survive and preserved the communities and lands under its protection, even doing so without a sophisticated armory. Let us join hands together in making a better tomorrow, free from strife and hatred, and based on love and mutual respect. Muslim Students Association ASU Chapter MAY 13TH IS MOTHER'S DAY r/UcMte* D O N T 'S D on't forgot H e r this year. D on't ju st get H e r a n o th er card. Do give H er s o m eth in g special. jurai Çrant D o give H er so m eth in g she'll never forget. IS ni:HtHY AWAHDKI) THIS Wvìtifùnh of I X44‘//t*nce Do give H er a b e a u tifu l 9" parchm ent. x 12” “Certificate of Excellence” nam ing her llw .yliii •»«/ pi iniques PHISFNTF.P ON m~ ; r "" ih “W orld’s Greatest Mother” LLum ?oue ONLY $1.50 t f a . C E R T IF IC A T E S , etc. P .O . Box 2187 C ulver C ity , CA 90230 * 5 .0 0 hewuuub! ” T TEMPE OFFICE SUPPLY 1 C o m p le te Line o f O ffic e S u p p lies O u /n tfX M ' J U ip L iG A ic L ~to ¿ M M u n yn c* r n u tr b u d g e t: d o L n A o cn * -' & £ ito h fu A & jttu d ft" A a A & K '. & fW U X A Ù * * -' C u £ j * 5 .0 0 j a -' A h û A H fM Q , * / .0 0 : t> to u r d A fy , * 2 . 0 0 . ¿7 C a M % é rm % ! School S u p p lies * D ra ftin g E q u ip m e n t S ta tio n e ry • G r e e tin g C ards to d a y frn , cui, i CRIMPERS LTD 10% DISCOUNT On Any Purchase With This Ad / / / €a 4 b td â g fy ù o c , Teorice, 968-8621 • 6 1 6 M ill Ave.. Temoe • 968-8622 FINANCIAL HELP DURING COLLEGE B e tte r Jo b s A fte r G raduation ENROLL NOW in ARMY ROTC'S NEW PROGRAM 1. It is possible to complete the program in 2 years. 2. It is possible to receive FINANCIAL SUPPORT for as long as you are in college. STAR T N O W . . . CALL 965-3318/3319 . . . STOP IN OLD MAIN, ROOM 240 or come by and see us Weds., April 4 between 9 a.m. & 3 p.m. Southwest side of Student Center. After graduation you can serve in the Active Army with starting pay of $12,000 to $24,000 OR Serve in the National Guard Reserves, while employed in the civilian community. Qualify for military RETIREMENT while you gain additional Leadership and Management experience. OR Pursue an advanced degree while the National Guard pays you approximately $2,000 a year. Page 6 State Press Wednesday, March 28, 1979 M o re about Staff funding EASTER IS APRIL 15 continued from pege 3 for which becom es they qualify a v a il a b le . Koelbl said he has not been approached by in­ vestigators and added he believes ASU does comply with the CETA regulations. The program’s goal is to train and prepare unem­ ployed persons for per­ manent employment. If a position in the community for which the CETA employee is qualified opens up, the employer is legally obligated to give the CETA employee an op­ portunity for the position. Make it a Festival at Your House with gifts and decorations from The Gallery Store TINY, SILKEN STUFFED ANIMALS FROM CHINA. BASKETS OF ALL SIZES. RABBITS OF CERAMIC OR WOOD. METAL, COME-APART EGGS. SUITABLE CARDS. SEE THEM HERE! Matthews Center, Second Floor Open 12 to 4 p.m. Monday thru Friday A rt work out Ted Sm ith, a junior in art education, appears to be working out with weights — but actually, he is scrutinizing an oar-like design on display in the MU Tuesday during the Master of Fine Arts Invitational Show. [State Press staff photo by M atthew Liu] ■ Tuition hearing postponed The House Appropriations Committee, which was scheduled to discuss a measure to raise out-of-state tuition at Arizona’s universities at 2 p.m. Tuesday, has re ­ scheduled the meeting for Friday. The fate of House bill 2214 will be decided by the committee at 9 a.m. Friday at the state Capitol. TUCKAWAYA LITTLETWOFINGERS. The Two Fingers T-shirt. Only *1.95 — presents — Wednesday JACK D A N IELS ★ 85° D u sty C h a p s ★ with Michael Collins Wednesday thru Saturday ★ N EXT W EEK - V A LLE Y FEVER ★ Enterta in m e n t N on-S top from 8:15 The Camel Club 6820 5th A ve n u e — S c o tts d a le — 994-4168 (1 block northeast of 68th & Indian School) T H U R S D A Y S - L A D IE S N IG H T Every Night — Arrive between 8-9 p.m. and receive 1 FREE drink with admission. ★ FREE A D M IS S IO N ★ — with this ad — Expires A p ril 4, 1979 Next time you’re tucking away the smooth, passionate taste of Two Fingers Tequila, you can dress the part. In the Two Fingers T-shirt. Just fill out and return the coupon below. (At just $4.95 you might want to tuck away a couple of extras, too.) I--------------------------------------------------------------- 1 Send check or money order to: I Two Fingers Tequila Merchandise Offer I P .O .B o x 31 i Englewood, New Jersey 0 76 3 1 I I Please send m e____ T-shirts. I have I enclosed $4.95 for each T-shirt ordered. Specify men’s/women’ssize(s): □ Small □ Medium □ Large □ Extra Large | I | I Name_____________________________ i | Address________________________ j i i College or University_________________ I City___________State____ Zip________ j Offer good in the United States only. Void where prohibited by law. New Jersey state residents add appropriate sales tax. j I Send fo r our fre e recipe booklet: Tw o Fingers Tequila, P .0 . B o x 14100, Detroit, M l 48214 Imported and bottled by Hiram Walker & Sons, Inc., Peoria, II, Tequila, 80 Proof. Product of Mexico. Wednesday, March 2 8 ,1 9 7 9 State Press Page 7 Board request fo r funds |The called unrealistic by Ross II The Graduate Student Advisory Board is requesting $40,000 for student travel grants, but ASASU President Lance Ross said Tuesday the figure is unrealistic and must be sliced. Kenneth Coney, assistant dean of the Graduate College, said the funding request from the First Council is a “drop in the bucket in comparison to what the graduate students would like to have.” The money would cover travel costs and possibly a per diem for food and lodging for graduate students to present their research papers at conferences across the country, he said. The grants would be for the 1979-80 school year, the first time such a program has existed at ASU. The Advisory Board has already been promised $10,000 from Charles M. Woolf, dean of the Graduate College. The First Council is expected to vote Thursday on an additional $40,000 request. Ross said the figure is “very optimistic” and is “not realistic.” He added that he didn’t think the board expected to receive the full amount. However, he said he is supportive of the program “in cases that would bring prestige to the University.” Coney said the funding would en­ courage graduate students to do research and will “spread ASU’s reputation as a quality graduate school.” I I I I I I I Good Egg Omelettel I II I I I I 120 E. UNIVERSITY The I 968-7133 H ealth fu l A lte rn a tiv e I (3 farm fresh eggs) served with a FREE toasted bagel, English muffin or Good For You toast. Served any tim e. Only $1.25. (Coupon expires April Fool’s Day.) Open 8 a.m . - 8 p.m . Weekends Sat. 12-6 Sun. 12-6 CALL HOTLINE FOR HEALTH Course in clothing design Corrections to be held at Arcadia High In Tuesday’s issue of the State Press it was incorrectly re p o rte d th a t new and transfer students will be given a “first chance” to complete course request forms in Phase I of the early registration process. In fact, all new and con­ tinuing students are eligible to participate in both phases of the process. P hase I, involving academic advisement, course selection, and completion of course request forms, will run Monday to April 9. Phase II, early registration, begins April 10 and ends July 3. A non-credit special interest course in clothing design will be held from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. March 29 at Arcadia High School, 4703 E. Indian School Road, room 609, in Phoenix. The course, offered by ASU will cover problems occuring when commercial patterns are interchanged. Students will learn how to correct lines and adjust patterns for proper look and fit. The course lasts 6 weeks and costs $30 per person. Information is available at ASU’s Continuing Education, ASB 110 at 965-6563. A CASE STUDY IN FOREIGN INVESTMENT “Doing Business in Israel” APRIL 5 3-5 p.m. MU Cochise Room Don’t miss this opportunity to learn about business ventures in Israel. uuuuw w w an featu ring Dr. D an G a la i, P rofesso r of Business A d m in is tra tio n at H eb rew U niversity, and A m i Talm or, V ice C o n s u l for E cono m ic A ffairs , Israeli C on s u late . In Tuesday’s edition of the State Press it was incorrectly reported in the Collage section that M ortar Board members will be initiated today at 5:30 on the second floor of the MU. M em bers will discuss initiation, but no members will be inducted at today’s meeting. For information call Darryl Jenkins Business Dep’t. 965-2440 or HILLEL 967-7563 PHDs: Now th a t you got It, w hat are you going to do w ith it? In just 25 years TI grew from a rela­ tively unknown geophysical explo­ ration company to a multi-billon dollar electronic company Tl is now recognized around the world for its technological leadership. How do you think we achieved this? Not by waiting for ideas to be exploited by someone else! We got there through careful nurturing of innovation and a willingness to take risks. We need your innovative tal­ ents to help us meet our next corporate challenge of more than D ance Contest tripling our sales and becoming a 10 b ilo n dollar company by the late 1980s. First Prize $500 ♦ Trip for (2) to Acapulco for 5 Days. Contests Wednesday, March 21, 28 - A pril 4 , 11. 8:00 P .M . 1st and 2nd place weekly winners w ill be eligible for A pril 18th, 10:00 P .M . Finals plus lots of prizes for contestants. Every contestant must sign-up at SADIE THOMPSONS in advance with the D . J . (Lee Le*i|bold) OPENINGS NOW EXIST Apply your specialty to radars, electro-optics, computers, and weapons systems. Watch your ideas and innovative concepts grow into real-world systems. If you are a US Citizen, send resume and tran­ script to: Dr. Jerry Burnham, RO. Box 2103, Richardson, Texas 75080 or call collect (214) 238-4738. Be sure to try our T e x a s In s t r u m e n t s IN C O R P O R A T E D only 75$ An Eq ual O pportunity Em ployar M /F FOOD B O O Z E B O O G IE 530 West Broadway Tempe Arizona 85282 (602)894 1375 Sponsored by KOPA 100.7 FM S t 1440 AM Page 8 State Press Wednesday, March 28, 1979 Franklin an d Pat Conley Memorial fund begins for accident victim By Janine Hopkins A memorial fund was set up Tuesday for a teaching assistant in the ASU physics department who accidentally shot and killed himself last week. Franklin Dee Conley, 39, died almost instantly Wednes­ day after his rifle discharged as he was taking it out of his car, Phoenix Police Sgt. G. Kinney said. He had been holding his infant daughter in one arm when he leaned back to grab the gun from the back seat of his car, Kinney said. Kinney said Conley died after the rifle’s hammer caught on the seat or floorboard and discharged. The bullet struck him in the chest. Dr. Bill Tillery, an ASU physics professor, said a faculty group set up the fund. He added donations can be sent to the physics department addressed to the “Frank Conley Memorial Fund.” “He was very full of life and very enthusiastic,” Tallery said. “He had a great desire for knowledge and un­ derstanding, but most importantly he was concerned about people.” Conley is survived by his wife, Pat, and two daughters. Mrs. Conley is expecting another baby in August. ALL UST 7.98 LPS& TAPES MORE SPRING SPECIALS H ik in g Boot $n //////////////s /^ s ////s /////S ////s s //////y //s /? /////// /'s '/ / / / / ///'s r v /s // A iO AM TILL MIDNIGHT EVERY DAY m b H i14 4 m « ini ìi x r p t / ^ P ) |r N C Q -L DUNLAP 44216W 216W D U N L A P |\ ^ \ ^ / \ ^ y l > ^ > l O / \ / f 2330 W CAMELBACK RD 2539 E INDIAN SCHOOL RD PEACE SURPLUS 520 S. Mill, Tempe mam /'////> > iMi«MliMk>00 223-1702 ATTENTION No P re fe re n ce Students in th e Lib e ral A rts C o lle g e Early Bird Advisement for Fall Registration from March 27 to April 9. A v o id th e la s t m in u te rush. Make an appointment today in Social Sciences 111. Come in or Call 965-2954 O FFE R EXPIR ES 4 / 3 0 / 7 9 \ 1 C O U P O N PER C U S T O M E R RE-INTRODUCING. . . ■ ■ ■ ■ 12-O z. G lass W ith This A d an d Lunch, Mon.-Fri. 11:30 a.m .-2 p.m. at the World's Wurst Restaurant! 8 THE WORLD’S WURST MENU: FIRST ■ ■ Chile .................................... 65C WURST DAILY SPECIALS Frankwurst........................ 90* Knockwurst..... ................. 1 . 2 0 Bratwurst............................ 1 . 1 0 with chile or cheese . . . . . 1 5* Hot German Potato Salad . 50* Sauerkraut.......................... . 40* Soda.............. . .. 4 0 Roast B e e f......................... 1 . 4 9 Barbecue Beef__ ...............1 .49 Pastrami ............................ 1 .49 ■ ■ Ham & Cheese M elt...........1 . 4 9 Pitcher B eer....... 1 . 6 0 CALL AHEAD FOR T H E W O R L D ’S W U R S T f a s t p ic k - u p RESTAURABT © 969-3664 x eni.fi.am.u: m i f l m n n m m U B — ■ 4th a MILL AVI. Tem pe A b o v e T h e S p a g h e t t i Co The best of the wurst J | n I Page 12 State Press Wednesday, March 28, 1979 European and Soviet kids boozing it early, poll shows LONDON (AP) — Some Soviet kids start hitting the vodka before they’re 10. In Britain there are almost twice as many teen­ age drunks as 12 years ago, and in West Germany laws banning booze sales to those under 16 are widely ignored. An Associated Press survey shows many European countries are now deeply worried by the ravages of alcohol among their young people and are spending millions of dollars trying to do something about it. The experience is similar to that of the United States where drinking ages were lowered at the time voting ages were several years ago, but many states have now raised drinking ages again. Some European countries claim to be making progress in the battle against teen­ age drunkenness and some say the problem is not as serious in their countries as elsewhere. Media conference excludes newspapers, public from attending SCOTTSDALE (AP) — When the Scottsdale Progress requested credentials to cover a conference on “Encounters with the Fourth Estate” here this week, the newspaper was informed that speakers had agreed the public and media be excluded. Among the scheduled conference speakers are Margita E. White, a member of the Federal Communication Corporation; television sports announcer Howard Cosell and ABC news correspondent Ted Coppel. The announced topics range from the hazards of covering Moscow to the business of reporting the news. The conference is sponsored by the Chief Executives Forum, a group of former members of the Young President’s Organization, which consists of young people who are presidents of various companies. A spokesman for the organization said all the meetings are closed. He said when the speakers were invited they wanted to know if there would be local news coverage. He said the business executives and the speakers agreed to keep all the discussions closed to the public. He said the discussions and questions are expected to become “pointed” and everyone wanted to avoid any public attention. A ro u n d t h e W o r id ^ ^ i F a ll 1 9 7 9 But others appear to have little success halting a trend that experts say is fueled by a diversity of factors. These include increasing affluence among the young, an oft-found feeling that modern life is futile, a desire to ape adult drinking — itself on the rise in some places — and the false equation of alcohol with maturity and sophistication. C o m fo rt A fo otbed of cork 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. „ Kachina Bottle Stop DRIVE IN LIQUOR & GROCERIES li « Ruth and Jim Benthin CALL 966-0362 « 18851. Apache Blvd. Tampa, Arizona 85281 MUAB CHAIRPERSON POSITIONS 79-80 • ENTERTAINMENT • FILM • G ALLERY PRO GRAM S • HOST & HOSTESSES • IDEAS & ISSUES • RECREATION • MUAB B irk e n s to d c . applications • MU activities ctr. due Apr. 5 - Neon "nTTHT 414 S. MILL #106 Mill Ave. Shops 966-3139 A s s o c ia tio n Memorial UnionActivitiesBoard G r a p h ic s & A d v e r tis in g w a n ts o u tg o in g , d y n a m ic , c h a ris m a tic p e o p le to le n d th e ir ta le n ts a n d e a rn a ttr a c tiv e co m m ission s as ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES fo r ASASU PUBLICATIONS Visit four continents while earning a full semester of rcredit. Professors are from leading American Universities. 'Completely accredited by the Univer­ sity of Colorado. 19 7 9 -8 0 F u ll-tim e s tu d e n ts o f g jj a c a d e m ic d iscip lin e s a r e e n c o u ra g e d to a p p ly in M e m o r ia l U nion 2 0 8 More than 60 university courses, many with voyagerelated emphasis. Strong supporting in-port programs. Visiting area experts. w e e k d a y s b e tw e e n 8 a .m . a n d 5 p .m . Sail from San Francisco September 12 to the Orient, liyU», Africa, South America and the Caribbean. F u rth e r in fo rm a tio n can be o b ta in e d fro m Apply now. R an dy L a snick, A G A sa les d ire c to r, M e m o ria l For Free Color Brochure, call or write: Semester at Sea. Taj Mahal Building. P.O. Box 2488, Laguna Hills. CA 92654. Telephone (800) 854-0195 (toll-free outside California) (714) 581-6770 (in California). SS. Universe is fully airconditioned, 18.000 tons, of Liberian registry. In fo rm a tio n T a b le -M o n d a y , AprL 1 ,9 -3 p.m . Y avapai R oom S tu d e n t U nion S lid e P re s e n ta tio n a t 7 p.m . C o c o n in o R oom S tu d e n t U nion - A r 'i U n io n 20 8 -E , o r by c a llin g 9 6 5 -2 5 1 6 . Wednesday, M archC8, 1979 State Press Page 13 DRY GULCH SALOON 8 1 5 N . S c o tts d a le Rd. 9 6 8 -5 6 4 3 Just N o rth o f th e R iver B ottom 2 for 1 DRINKS Every Night W ith This Ad (1 per night only - Expires April 4,1979 Go-Go Dancers ★ All New Shows Watch for Our Special “Heineken N ig h t” D in in g • D a n c in g • L a rg e S creen T .V . • Pool Feathered friend A dumb bird, whose friends help to mar the campus, checks out the chicks at the Engineering Building. [State Press photo by Matthew Liu] Language week aims to prom ote tolerance The campus community will have an opportunity to become better acquainted with the many foreign languages taught at ASU during National Foreign Language Week Sunday through April 8. Sponsored by Alpha Mu Gamma, the national foreign language honor society, the week is set aside not only to further the learning of languages, but also to promote un­ derstanding and tolerance of others, Professor Ger­ trud B. Schuback ex­ plained. In addition to lectures, films, slide presentations and the like, activities will include a performance by a Russian choir, a display of Chinese calligraphy and a German “coffee klatsch.” I i RUTHI fNAVON ¡I N CONCERT Hear an exciting rendition of pop, disco, and Hebrew songs by Israel's top singing artist. Ms. Navon is receiving rave notices by critics and standing ovations from audiences on her current tour. s S = S U N D A Y , APRIL 1 7:00 p .m . G A M M A G E CENTER, ASU | | | Special Feature . . . ART SHOW & SALE by Hillel members in the lobby. | TICKETS $6, $10, $12.50 (Students Vz Price) available at Diamond’s Box Offices Gam mage Hillel at ASU (967-7563) Benefit Hillel - Union of Jewish Students BlllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIMIHIimnilllllllllHHIHIIIIIIIIIHIII»IIIIIIIIHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII|l||||l" Pants by A Smile Shirt by Pua 706 S o u th Forest • T e m p e • 9 6 7 -8 7 4 7 O n e block north of U n iversity M o n d a y thru S a tu rd a y • 10-6 T h u rsd ays until 8:30 Page 14 State Press Wednesday, March 28, 1979 DOONESBURY 0 IU. r TEM PE CENTER Trial w earing period for C o n ta c t Lenses. S am e day delivery for m ost s o ft contacts. S o ft co n ta c ts fo r A s tig m atism • C o n ta c t Lens S up plies. JEW ELERS m THREE NOUS, j JIMMY! ■ /T a / 20% DISCO UNT O N ALL COMPLETE GLASSES FOR ALL YOUR JEW ELRY NEEDS Diamonds, W atches 14k Chains, Pendants Sorority-Fraternity Jewelry Watch & Jewelry Repairing jimmy. JIMMY! COULDYOU OVER TELLUSUff HERB! YOLÌRE RE- "N HARD CONTACT LENSES $79.95 SO FT CONTACT LENSES $99.95 E ye E xam fo r G lasses $ 2 0 .0 0 F ill Y ou r D octor's P rescriptions_____________ DR. W .C. AMES, Optometrist 2916 N . 68th St. ' " ‘ " ’“ S Ä " '”“ '“ 966-7587 - * m* ' Engineers/Scientists: ALSO, SINCEYOUASK, IMFEP UPWTTHHAVIN6MYARTAND MYUFE TR1V/AU2EDBYCON­ STANTEXPOSURE- ITS TIME IDRE6AINMYSELF-RESPECT. JIMMY, COULD YEAH YOUSINS A SOMEBODY QUICKTUNEFOR GETHIMA OUREYEWITNESS GUITAR! VIEWERS? / TheTI Electro-Optics Division challenges you to a fu ll spectrum of state-of-the-art projects. The Electro-Optics Division of Texas Instruments is the No. 1 developer/producer of infrared/laser surveillance and target acquisition systems. Our engineers hold more than 200 patents involving optics, detectors/emitters, cryogenics and laser technology. ■ We combine FUR units with other Tl equipment to produce complete close loop fire control systems. This has created addi­ tional opportunities for electrical engineers, mechanical engineers, computer science engineers, chemical engineers and physicists. a t XERO X V COPIES OVERNIGHT 5 CWHILE YOU WAIT alph raphias UNIVERSITY ARCHES ■ 122 E UNIVERSITY 9 6 8 -7 8 2 1 SUNDAY WALTER RICHARDSON TRIO Folk Jazz 7-11 MONDAY VALLEY BIG BAND Iff pc. Jazz Band 8-10 TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY THE LAURIN KRISTEN QUARTET Funk f Jazz 9-12 THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY PHOINIX JAZZ ALL STARS Modern & Progressive Jazz 9-12 HAPPY HOURS 3 7 Daily Pitchers $1.50 Typical FUR Fire Control System variety of aircraft, surface vehicles The diagram shows the various elements of a FLIR and fire control and snips for navigation, recon­ naissance, target acquisition, at­ system. We have many of these tack and night landing. types of projects active at any one We also are the No. 1 producer time in the Electro-Optics Division. of infrared line scanners (IRLS). This provides abundant oppor­ This is a growing market involved tunities for all engineering disci­ with detection of geothermal en­ plines in design, development and ergy sources, crop diseases, water manufacture of state-of-the-art pollution, ocean currents, etc. equipment. A spectrum of equipm ent Electrical engineers are needed At Tl you work with the world’s to work on the development of microcomputer controllers, digital most modem equipment for en­ gineering, research, development, logic design and solid-state manufacturing and testing. analog circuits. Mechanical engineers are A spectrum of challenge. needed to work on the design of If you’re looking for a company high accuracy gimbals and electri­ where innovators are championed, cal mechanical stabilization. and where career latitude is wide Computer science engineers and living locations are varied, (software/hardware) are needed then Tl is your kind of company. to work on distributed design If you have not talked to Tl architecture for microcomputers, and you are interested in pattern recognition algorithms and Electro-Optics, call collect real time digital control. 214/238-4583, Bill Norvell, Fire A spectrum of accomplishment. Control Systems Manager, or We invented the forward214/238-5883, Bill Kanewske, looking infrared system (FLIR) Requirements Manager, in 1964. Electro-Optics Engineering. Our common module concept Send your resume in revolutionized the FLIR market by confidence to: Ed establishing module commonality Haynes, Employment from system to system resulting in Manager, P.Ó. Box 2103 great cost reductions. Richardson, Texas 75080 Tl FLIR systems are used in a Well Drinks 60c T exa s In s t r u m e n t s IN C O R P O R A T E D An equal opportunity employer M /F 396 S. M ill in Tem pe 966-4980 Wednesday, March 28, 1979 State Press Page 15 M ore baseball kibitzing More kibitzing on the spring training b e a t. . . It was last Sunday afternoon when D aniel Boone . cam e strolling into Phoenix. His reception was anything but cordial. As expected. the idea almost halfway through spring training and appeared to be leaning in that direction. “Unless I was physically unable to play ball, I wouldn't switch sports,” Yount explained last week before a game against the Oakland A’s. “I'm really not sure if I could even make the tour. It was all up in the air.” So is his contract situation currently. “I haven't been talking much to the Brewers' front office about it,” said the 23-year-old Woodland Hills, Calif., native who turned pro at 18 and has “People have always kidded me about my name,” said Boone, a wiry 5-foot-9, 160-pound non­ roster p itch er with the California Angels who threw two shutout innings against the San F rancisco G ian ts at Municipal Stadium on Sunday. “It's ail part of the game. The waiter berry fans enjoy getting on some player every once in a while. It’s only natural. And with a name like mine, it leaves things wide open for all kinds of comments. “But it doesn't really bother me," added the former Cal State-Fullerton left-hander who used to drive ASU crazy with his assortment of junk pitches in 1975 and '76. “Sometimes it does. Especially when they start asking me where’s my coonskin ca p . . .” Robin Yount has apparently scrapped his idea of playing professional golf for a living instead of baseball. Last year at this tim e, th e M ilwaukee Brewers’ shortstop toyed with already qualified for his fiveyear major league pension. “No terms have been set down and I don’t really look forward to letting it drag on through the season. I don’t know what will happen.” Yount might've made a few NCAA titles happen for the Sun Devils had he gone through with his intentions after high school. “Yeah, I almost went to ASU. If Milwaukee hadn't drafted me and offered me a good bonus, I would’ve gone,” he said. “(ASU head coach Jim) Brock had been in touch with me, signed me to a letter (of intent) and had me convinced his school was the place to play ball. I was pretty ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ! l io n ’s * * * ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ H aircutters ¥ ¥ Grab a friend for our 2 for 1 ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ★ 00 $• 1 & special offer includes shampoo, conditioning-treatment, cut, blow-dry & styling. Coupon good for month of April. 968-8144 Do it in the Air! Sky Diving Lessons 968-8144 Broadway Plaza Tampa. Mill and Broadway ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if if ■ A ******** "MUSIC EXPO 79" gung-ho on the idea . . . until the Brewers started talking money." File this story under the “The Devil and the Big Green Buck It's a shame the Detroit Tigers aren't catering to slugger R usty Staub's contract dem ands. B aseball’s “B est Designated Hitter” of 1978 is also one of the game's great gentlemen of any y ea r.. Maybe what turned the Tigers off on the redhead was his af­ fection for neatness. A fullfledged gourmet cook, Staub is reknowned for his neatness. His nickname? Yup, you guessed it. “Felix,” as in Odd Couple Unger. (Commercial photographer, p ortraits a specialty . . .) Alexander “Buddy” Backry is back at it. The 35-year-old who pawned himself off as an ASU alumni so he could participate in the annual baseball game last spring has currently stationed himself in Fort Myers, Fla., as a "batting practice pitcher with the Kansas City Royals. How Backry got from Beverly, Mass., to Florida is supposedly through long-time friend, legitimate ASU baseball alum and K.C. left-hander Larry Gura. But how he got the job as ‘BP’ pitcher is by telling everyone on the East Coast that he hurled the Sun Devils to the national title in either 1965, '67 and/or '69. The year depends on his mood or alibi at the moment. The Largest Exhibition of Musical Instruments Ever Presented For You, the Musician . . . April 9th 20% to 50% Discounts On All Musical Instruments For Information and Complimentary Passes contact: I# FIMNK MILANO MUSIC CO . MESA 834-6581 PHOENIX 273-1691 SCOTTSDALE 946-3431 HAS YOUR LIFE BEEN WITHOUT PORPOISE LATELY? Stop in. Our newest sandwich, Without Porpose, is delicious Albacore tuna served on whole wheat roll. Who knows . . . you may like it better than our Vegetarian Deli or our Waiter Wheat Berry. Soups and salads served every day. Free yogurt or tea with any sandwich. Offer expires April Fool’s Day. O p e n 8 t o 8 P .M . W eeken ds 11 to 6 P. M . Coll 968-7133 for take out 120 East University (In the Arches) Tempe. AZ. Good news about auto insurance for college students. mation. Or simply complete and mail the coupon below and we'll send you a rate quotation. There's no obligation, of course. We'd like to insure your car. Why? Because we specialize in providing auto insurance for young drivers. Who are we? Criterion Insurance Company is a dependable, financially strong company offering important benefits like: convenient payment plans, country-wide claim service, driver training discounts and a wide choice of coverages to protect you and your car. . Like to know more? Call or visit us today for a free, personal rate quotation and complete infor- Call or Write: REED INSURANCE AGENCY 755 N. Country Club Drive Mesa, Arizona 85201 962-6342 bo IT X Criterion >o*l Insurance Company T J 0 9 Yes! Please send me a free auto insurance rate quotation. □ M a le l~l F e m a le A r ja M am o □ S in g le □ M a r r ie d .A p t #_ A d d re s s . C it y - -S ta te & Z ip . O c c u p a t io n . .S p o u s e s O c c u p a t io n . H A S A N Y D R IV E R W IT H IN T H E L A S T 3 Y E A R S : B e e n in v o lv e d in a n a c c id e n t ? Y es □ No □ How m any?. H a d lic e n s e s u s p e n d e d o r r e v o k e d ? Yes □ No □ B e e n c o n v ic t e d o f a t r a ffic v io la t io n ? Yes □ No □ How m any?. G iv e b r ie f d e t a ils a b o u t a n y y e s " a n s w e r s a b o v e in c lu d in g a p p r o x im a t e d a te s : C a r Yr M odel No. B o d y S t y le M a k e (G ra n a d a . Dart, etc ) C y l (s e d a n . 2 - d r . e tc .) 1 O n e w a y m ile a g e : C a r # 1 ______ C a r # 2 _______ 2 L ist a ll a d d it io n a l d r iv e r s in y o u r h o u s e h o ld : Age D a y s p e r w e e k d r iv e n to w o rk : C a r # 1 ______C a r # 2 _______ M a le o r F e m a le R e la t io n M a r r ie d o r S in g le % of U se C a r #1 C ar * 2 L o c a tio n o f c a r if d if f e r e n t fro m a b o v e a d d re s s : C a r # 1 C ity % % S ta te % % C a r # 2 C ity S ta te _____ 2 L - % CLIP AND MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY Page 16 State Press Wednesday. March 28, 1979 Gymnastics team stands out in championship at UCLA By Jim Elsleger The ASU gymnastics team underexposed but overabundant with talent built a strong case for itself as one of the premier teams in the country this past weekend, finishing second in the NCAA West R egional gy m n astics championships at UCLA. The Sun Devils scored a school record 438.2 points to Oregon’s 442.6, sur­ passing the previous mark of 436 set in last year’s NCAA championships when they finished second in the nation. The finishes placed both Oregon and ASU in the chase for the team title in the NCAA Championships at LSU next week. Only the top two teams from each of the four regions from across the country vie for the team title. “This is a great team,” ASU coach Don Robinson said. “They are a very talented bunch of guys and should be getting more publicity than they have. It was a great championship series with some great teams and they should get the recognition they deserve with the job they have been doing.” The Sun Devils also qualified in 12 individual events, with Lindsay Nylund leading the way in the all-around and Gary Rust landing th ree qualifying scores in the individuals. Nylund finished third in S a tu rd a y ’s all-a ro u n d competition with a score of 110.40, narrowly edged out by W arren Long of California with 113.25 and Miki Moyal of Oregon with 111.50. Although Nylund had to drop out of the pommel horse competition because of a wrist injury, he did qualify for the cham­ pionships in two other continued page 17 âLWM W MW MM MW MW MW MM MU MW MU MW MM MM MW MW MV MW MW MW MW MW I Coach m ight dine atone It’s not quite an all-points bulletin, but ASU wrestling coach Bobby Douglas is seeking the whereabouts of his team members. “I lost my secretary, so I can’t get out any inform ation,” Douglas said. “I got some guys that I haven’t seen in months." There is no need for alarm. All Douglas wants to circulate is that the ASU wrestling banquet will take place at 6 p.m. Saturday at Granny Annie’s. IN THE ARCHES" 130-A East University | Slate Press Production Department JOB OPENING Proofreader M ust hav# fa r above average a b ilitie s in reading, spelling and punc­ tu a tio n . M u s t be able to conce n tra te fo r prolonged periods in the m idst of noise and o th er d istra c tio n s . M u s t be extrem ely depend­ a b le . S h ift hours are 4 p .m . to appro x im a te ly 8 p .m . M onday through Th ursd ay. T h is is a stu d e n t hourly po sition and pays $ 2.6 5 per hour. A pp lic an ts m ust pick up referral form from S tud en t E m plo ym ent in M a tth e w s C en ter and an a p p lic atio n blank at th e STA TE PRESS o ffic e , A-111 S ta u ffe r H all. Into Unexplored Realms! EXPLORERS OFGOR 9 6 6 -6 4 3 2 FACTORY OUTLET • G ym Shorts The sensationi| new novel in john Norman’! legendary GOR series 3 *^ • A d id a s S tyle Shorts ^ 4 *^ • Jo g g in g Shorts ^5^ 3* M M M M Mt.fUl M M M M M WI'M'MAAwawuwba'AAM. 00 — »w**: Y o u 've S e e n A ll The "S A LE A D S " . . . B u t IOHN NORMAN F o r T h e L o w e s t P r i c e s In T o w n CALL US! 834-5566 WE'LL PHONE QUOTE! . . . MOST DEALERS WON'T! G O R — a w o rld very m uch like Earth, w h ere vast regions rem ain uncharted. jungle lands o f the e q u a ­ tor, inhabited by prim itive tribes, traders, and slavers. H ere . Tarl C ab ot m ust search for th e p o w ­ erful a nd dang erou s ring o f th e m onstrous race o f I K urs. . . D A W O R IG IN A L / $ 2 . 2 5 IF YOU KNOW YOU HAVE THE LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN W HY NOT QUOTE THEM ON THE PHONE? W HAT BETTER WAY IS THERE TO MAKE A SALE? ON THE OTHER HAND, IF WE DIDN’T HAVE THE LOWEST PRICES IN TOW N, WE W OULDN’T QUOTE OVER THE PHONE EITHER . . . W HAT BETTER WAY IS THERE TO LOSE A SALE? ’NUF SAID? DISCOVER GOR WITH TARL CABOT! HUNTERS OF COR SLAVE CIRL OF COR Tarl Cabot * 8 Tarl Cabot * 11 MARAUDERS OF COR BEASTS OF COR Tarl Cabot * 9 Tarl Cabot ' 12 TRIBESMEN OF COR ALL D A W O R IG IN A L S $ 2 . 2 5 EACH Tarl Cabot * 10 DAW also presents spectacular new titles by Isaac Asimov. Michael Moorcock. Ron Goulart. and Hugh Walker STORE HOURS MON. THRU FRI. 10-6 SAT. 10-5 CLOSED SUNDAY \ ALL IT E M S S O LD IN S EA LED FA C TO R Y FA C TO R Y CARTO NS. W A R R A N T IE S A PPLY. S E R V IC E D . LO CA LLY C R E D IT C A R D BUYERS ADD 3 % . Distributed by New American Library P.O. Box 999. Bergenfield. N| 0762 I 3SD O H 3U V M 0 3 B 3 1 S ’ QNfiOUV ANDOS Wednesday, March 28, 1979 State Press Page 17 More about Gymnastics tourney showing & Blow Drys I oontlnued from paga IS individual events, taking a second to Long in the parallel bars with an 18.70. The top six positions qualify for the national meet in the six individual events and the all-around. Gary Rust finished just ahead of teammate R.D. W ebster in the floor exercise with an 18.75 to Webster’s 18.65. Rust also qualified with a second in the rings and a sixth in the vaulting. “Gary has an excellent chance at two individual titles,’’ Robinson said. “He is an exceptional athlete, as evidenced by his defeating (Indiana S ta te ’s) K urt Thomas this year. He has to be one of the top gymnasts in the world along with Nylund.” Rust defeated Thomas, who is the World Cup champion and the top-rated gymnast in the country, in vaulting and tied him in the rings in a dual meet with the Sycamores earlier in the season. Webster, who has been plagued with injuries all season and is still not at full strength, also qualified in the parallel bars and allaround with fifth place finishes. Mike Naddour will also join Webster for ASU in that event as he grabbed third. Rick Hall nailed down two spots in the NCAA finals, taking fifth in both the rings and horizontal bars, scoring 18.60 and 18.65, respectively. “We have a great shot at the title,” Robinson said. “Some people think Oregon has the strongest team, but if Oregon is the team we have to beat I think we’ll be in pretty good shape. Even though we finished second to them, I think we’re a better team.” ASU has finished in the top eight in the country for the past six years in the NCAA’s and finished second twice, including last year. “We have had an out­ standing team here for some years,” Robinson said. “How many teams here at the school can you name that have been in the top eight for six years in a row? These guys dedicate their lives to this sport and should be getting more publicity.” The other top eight teams that will shoot for the team championship are defending champ Oklahoma and the current No. 1 team in the country, in statistics, Nebraska from the Midwest Regionals, Indiana State and Minnesota from the Mideast and Southern Connecticut and Penn State from the East. “We have had a hard year because of injuries,” Robinson said, “and this regional took its toll. The guys did as many as 18 routines in two days and that can get p retty exhausting. I’m not sure that Lindsay didn’t skip the pommel horse because of exhaustion rather than injury, but it’s hard to tell. He is a team man and likes to win for the team as much as for the individual events. We’re in pretty good shape right now though, and are ready to perform.” Webster still has a slight wrist injury and according to Robinson,” is working under a certain amount of r INSTRUCTORS NEEDED Guys Gals (short hair) $12 50 I Gals (long hair) $15°° j We use and recommend I Devils w in I The method was inverted, but the result was the same as the ASU men's tennis team upped its season record to 17-2 with a (i-3 win over the United States International University of San Diego Tuesday afternoon at the Whiteman Center. The men of Marty Pincus played the doubles matches first and swept, 3-0. After likewise winning the first three singles matches, ASU substituted for the remainder of the afternoon "to make things interesting”, as Pincus put it. $1 0 00 | mEDKEN “IN THE ARCHES” WHEN W AS YOUR LAST G O O D HAIRCUT? L_______________ THE GRADUATE STUDENT ASSOCIATION for THE CENTER OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE presents VERNON L. HOY Director of the Department of Public Safety to speak in an open forum about the future growth and development of the Department of Public Safety in the State of Arizona. W e d n e s d a y • M a r c h 2 8 * 2 :3 0 p .m . P in a l R o o m * M e m o r ia l U n io n F b in t ASASU’s Student Magazine Editorial Staff Openings The following positions are part-time, salaried positions open to any full-time ASU student in good standing: Editor Managing Editor Associate Editor Business Manager Staff Photographers Staff Writers The editor will be selected by the 1979-80 ASASU Campus Affairs Vice President. A ll other editorial staff positions will be filled by the editor with the advice and consent of the vice president. Make an appointment with ASU Placement Office to talk with the Navy Officer Information Team March 2 7 ,28 ,29,1 97 9 Interested students may apply in Memorial Union 208 weekdays between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Further information may be obtained from Mark J. Scarp, Point editor, Memorial Union 208-T, or by calling 965-3142. or call (602) 261-3158 for an appointment. N AVAL REACTORS 7 [ 966-9061 j (bholr 120 E. University £komp 1 9 7 9 -8 0 The leading operator of Nuclear Reactors is currently seeking men and women to serve on the faculty of its Nuclear Propulsion School in Orlando, Florida. Advanced degree in Engineer­ ing, Physics, or Math preferred. Selected highly qualified applicants still in pursuit of a B.S. will be considered and if selected are eligible for financial aid. The successful candidate will be challenged by the entire spectrum of teaching. Subjects taught may include Math, Physics, EE, heat transfer, fluid flow, materials, chemistry, and all aspects of nuclear engineering. (Federal regulations lim it maximum age to 28 years.) Competitive Salaries, personal growth and development, grad school opportunities, and excellent benefits are available to successful applicants! Benefits include 30 days paid vaca­ tion, free medical and dental care, and low cost insurance. v. pain.” Cal’s W arren Long dominated the Regional meet, qualifying in all of the individual events except the vaulting as well as winning all-around. Page 18 State Press Wednesday, March 28, 1979 Pincus betrays Sun Devils By Walter Berry It isn’t often a tennis coach has to shoulder some of the blame for a baseball team’s loss. Monday night was a slight exception. ASU men’s net mentor Marty Pincus, ever obliging, took the liberty of catching a Cactus League game last weekend for the purpose of filing a “scouting report” on the Sun Devils’ next opponent — the Seattle Mariners. He turned over his “findings” to ASU pitching coach Roger Schmuck the day of the game. It may be his first and last such self­ assignment. “All he gave us was a brochure profiling the players — the same thing you’d get when you enter the park,” Schmuck said Tuesday morning with a laugh. “We sell the same kind of thing on ASU baseball outside Packard Stadium for 25 cents.” What Pincus should have done was put the report in tennis terms, since Seattle beat the Sun Devils in both the “singles” (8-6) and “doubles” (3-2) department in a 13-hit attack en route to an 11-3 exhibition win. The American League club did the majority of its damage to the collegians on just four singles — breaking open a scoreless tie in the fourth. Leon Roberts started the inning by getting hit by a pitch from ASU starter and loser Tom Hawk,who re­ injured his back throwing a slider in the same inning. Back-to-back base hits by Bruce Bochte and Mike Potter loaded the bases before a rare Marty Barrett error, two sacrifice flies and Larry Milbourne’s RBI single made it 4-0, Mariners. ASU reliever Jeff Ahern then came on to yield a tworun single to Roberts before having to leave the game with an injury. The junior left-hander jammed the index finger on his throwing hand trying to field a grounder back through the box. The Sun Devils pushed across their lone run off Seattle s ta rte r Rick Honeycutt in the fifth. Leo LaSala doubled, was singled to third by Ed Irvine and came home on a fielder’s choice. ASU also scored twice in the eighth off Mariner reliever Shane Rawley on singles by Mike Anicich and John Freitas, coupled with a two-base Seattle throwing error and a wild pitch. Seattle closed out its scoring with three runs in the sixth — on a walk, Milbourne’s second triple of the game, an infield hit and a Sun Devil error — include two eighth inning tallies on three straight singles. Honeycutt (5-11 last season for Seattle) struck out four, walked one and gave up six of ASU’s nine hits in his five innings of work. The Devils left eight runners on base — a recurring “phobia” of late, as head coach Jim Brock phrased it. For the Mariners, utility infielder Milbourne — whose only claim to professional fame is spending two years in Decatur, 111. — had four hits and two RBIs. His p e rfo rm an c e m ig h t’ve thrilled himself, but not any of the less-than overflow crowd of 487. By the fifth inning, most of the Packard patrons had either fallen asleep, gone into a comatose trance, gone home or turned their eyes to the press box’ portable TV — awaiting word on the NCAA basketball champion. On this particular night, “Bored” was indeed the word. . . Reading Course Increases Comprehension and Speed Do you want to learn how to comprehend more of what you read? Would you like to read faster with improved comprehension? Would you like to study more effectively? If your answer is YES, the Arizona State University Reading Center has a highly systematized reading improvement course that is designed to fit your needs. The six weeks non-credit course can be taken by anyone who pays the $35.00 fee. Registration begins the week of Mar. 26 in the Reading Center, Room B112 of Payne Hail. Further information may be obtained by calling 965-7766. Pick a class that fits your schedule from the list below: S T A R T S A P R IL 2 - M A Y 1 t Morning Sections (A.M.) 1. T-Th 9:15-10:30 2. T-Th 10:40-11:55 Night Sections (P.M.) 1. 2. 3. 4. M T W Th 7:00-9:30 7:00-9:30 7:00-9:30 7:00-9:30 R e g is tr a tio n is M a r c h 2 6 -3 0 , t h e w e e k A F T E R S p r in g B r e a k DESCRIPTION OF THE COLLEGE READING PROGRAM T h e C o lle g e R e a d in g P r o g r a m is a c o m p r e h e n s iv e f if t e e n ( 1 5 ) h o u r n o n - c r e d it c o u r s e d e s ig n e d to in c r e a s e c o m p r e h e n s io n , s p e e d a n d r e t e n t io n o f r e a d in g m a t e r ia ls . T h e c o u r s e fo c u s e s o n c o m p r e h e n s io n a s t h e k e y t o r a p id a n d e f f ic ie n t r e a d in g . R e a d in g is d e f in e d a s a n a c t iv e d e c is io n - m a k in g p r o c e s s w h e r e b y t h e r e a d e r s e le c t iv e ly lo o k s f o r t h o s e c lu e s w h ic h w i ll e n a b le h im to r e c o n s tr u c t m e a n in g fr o m p r in t . T h e r e f o r e , n o s p e c ia l e y e o r f in g e r m o v e m e n t s a r e s tr e s s e d . W it h in t h e f r a m e w o r k o f la r g e g r o u p , s m a ll g r o u p , a n d in d iv id u a l e x p e r ie n c e s , t h e s t u d e n t w ill a c tiv e ly p a r t ic ip a t e r a th e r th a n b e le c t u r e d t o b y a n in s t r u c t o r . S tu d e n ts c a n b e n e fit fr o m t h e p r o g ra m a s s t u d y b e c o m e s m o r e p r o d u c t iv e t h r o u g h in c r e a s e d s p e e d a n d c o m p r e h e n s io n . A ls o , t h o s e s t u d e n t s w h o m a y h a v e t o t a k e a p t it u d e o r q u a lif y in g e x a m in a t io n s w ill fin d th a t in c r e a s e d s p e e d a n d c o m p r e h e n s io n a id s t h e m in s e c t io n s w h e r e r e a d in g a b ilit y is t e s te d . O n t h e b a s is o f p a s t e x p e r ie n c e a n d r e s e a rc h , im p r o v e m e n t in r e a d in g is p r o m is e d b y t h e p r o g r a m . C la s s e s in t h e p a s t h a v e a t t a in e d a v e r a g e in c r e a s e s o f f if t y ( 5 0 ) t o o n e h u n d r e d t h ir t y (1 3 0 p e r c e n t. T h e q u e s tio n is n o t w h e t h e r t h e s tu d e n t c a n im p r o v e b u t how much h e c a n im p r o v e . D is c o i .Lounge Tonight - Wednesday "THE BACK TO THE GRIND UNWIND PARTY" D o o r p ro c e e d s w ill go to t h e A S U A d C lu b TONIGHT - WEDNESDAY A p a c h e a t R u ra l - 6 to 2 Invitation to apply fo r STATE PRESS EDITORSHIP The ASU Student Publications Advisory Board is now soliciting applications for the State Press editorship for the Fall Semester 1979. Applicants for the position of editor: must have a cumulative grade index of 2.20 or better; must have either two semesters’ service on the staff of the State Press or responsible editorial experience with a commercial, college, or university newspaper; and must have been a full-tim e student at ASU for at least the two consecutive semesters prior to applying. Candidates must also: submit at least two letters of recommenda­ tion from university faculty members and/or professional journalists; list on the application form the titles of all journalism courses completed and the grades earned in those courses; submit at least two examples of a news story, feature story, or editorial written for the State Press or another newspaper; and describe on the application form the func­ tions and responsibilities of previous posi­ tions held on the staff of the State Press or other newspapers. Candidates must pick up at the State Press office, Room A-111, Stauffer Hall, application forms. The completed forms must be typewritten. Applicants for the position of editor must be available for one or more interviews by the Board between 3:00 and 6:00 p.m. on the day specified for selecting the editor. The Board will interview candidates for Fall Semester editor (1979) on Friday, April 13, 1979. The deadline for receipt of applications will be Friday, April 6 at 4 p.m. Applicants need not be journalism majors; candidates from all disciplines are invited. Edward H. Peplow, Jr. Manager, Student Publications A-111 Stauffer Hall Phone 7572 Wednesday, March 28, 1979 State Press Page 19 Ads prom ise p ie, but fans eat crow D im e-A-Llne________ T yping____________ _ THE ANNUAL flannel flea bag award is presented to Barney H. Basset for con­ spicuous survice in the rearing and education of deserving young fleas. Con­ gratulations, Barn! TYPING THESES, dissertations, term papers, etc. Professional secretary, ac­ curate, spelling corrected, reasonable rates. 949-9207. 5 /4 CAR POOL from Tempe to vicinity State Capitol building 7:45 daily. Return 4:30. Call 966-8298. For all the ASU sports fans so frustrated with the proceedings of your school's first year in the Pac-10 that you’re ready to grab the throat of anything maroon and gold and strangle it to death, relax. The person or persons you really should be after are the ones who put you in that “Running Ahead of the PAC” frame of mind in the first place. They’re the folks down a t the J.C. Whitted and Associates, Inc., a Tempe advertising agency which is handling the ASU sports account during the school's first dip into Pac-10 waters. Every bumper sticker, billboard, famous face and catchy phrase you've seen or heard proclaiming this will be the greatest season in ASU major sports history was cranked out, pasted up, fed a glit­ tering script to, or written by someone at J.C. Whitted. And if you're anything but a deaf, blind or dumb mute, you've been in­ fluenced by the “ Great Sports Hype Robbery of 78-79.” Unlike what Reggie Jackson said last fall on his radio com­ mercials, there was no chance at all ASU was going to get to the Rose Bowl. The Sun Devils did have a respectable season last fall, and they did go to a bowl game, but the public was furious anyway, because it was programmed to believe ASU was going to win the Rose Bowl. And when former UCLA demigod and basketball coach Johnny Wooden came on your TV screens and told you ASU had so much talent that he would have to come out of retirement, he was just feeding you guys a line of bull. But, like in football, everybody’s upset — to the point of demanding the rest of Ned Wulk's already diminishing scalp, because the Sun devils fell flat on their faces and were almost not even allowed to watch the NCAA championships on TV, much less participate in them. And now, the third major collapse of the sports year is well in the works — the ASU baseball team. It’s hard to believe the team which Bob Horner told you was “Leagues Ahead of the PAC” is bringing up the rear of the one league it's playing in. And that, according to what you’ve heard, wasn’t supposed to happen. So, as Cal Worthington would say, here's the deal. Quite simply, the heavy advertising campaign designed to bring more people to ASU sporting events may be the same bad cog which is helping to bring the Sun Devil winning sports machine to a halt. The product, it seems, just ain’t as good as the ads said it would be. But what about the 17 or so other sports teams housed under the athletic departm ent which are not affected by the mass media? They’re probably the best kept secrets this side of your grandma's strawberry jam. But they’re winning, and losing, as well. Take the ASU women’s badminton team, for example. Under the direction of Merle Packer (no, he’s not a famous New York fashion designer), it has bandied the birdies well enough to cop two straight AIAW championships. The ASU women’s swimming team has won just about everything the Intermountain Conference has dished out over the past 20-or-so years behind coach Mona Plummer. But the feats are little known outside those connected directly with the team. On the flip side of the coin, the ASU men’s track team literally has fallen apart in the two succeeding seasons after it won the 1977 NCAA Outdoor Track Championships. But nobody's threatening to kill coach Baldy Castillo over the team’s demise. Come to think of it, Ned Wulk, whose teams have enjoyed little success and a lot of mediocrity during the 1970s, felt hardly any pressure at all until the big one-two punch advertising hype and a corresponding so-so season hit this year. The J.C. Whitted ad campaign did succeed at everything it at­ tempted to this year — except produce a national champion in any of the three sports it handled. Attendance at football and basketball rose sharply this past season, and the baseball turnstiles are clicking at a much better pace this year than last. Most of football's success, of course, can be derived from the stadium expansion, but basketball and baseball are sports which have never been exceptional draws at ASU except for games against UA. But are the heartaches some of the coaches and players have suffered this season due to the oversell of their sports, for the sake of putting a few more fans in the seats, really worth it? . . . In sports — where money rules — the answer, not shockingly, is probably yes. Take a GIANT STEP in th e M a rc h of D im es fc & r W A L K A T H O N ATOg fibw ff 0 (grgfo^ i ' n ^ ^ TO PROTECT THE UNBORN AND THE NEWBORN P l d p TH|s SPACE CONTRIBUTED BV THE PUBLISHER NORTHLIGHT GALLERY first benefit ex­ hibition. Original prints by Arizona photog­ raphers including ASU faculty and grad­ uate students. Tickets are one dollar. Exhibition runs March 4th through 29th. Drawing will be March 29. Winner need not be present. M arch o f D im es THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER usiness Directory | -A Wheel Works Auto Co. Buy, Sell and Trade Japanese Cars 1 Mile North of Campus 945 E. Curry 894-1137 A nnouncem ents 1977 TONY AWARD and Pulitzer Prize winning play at the Lyceum!! “The Shadow Box," April 5 - 8 . 3/30 ZZZYGOT Dial-a-joke. Recorded telephone entertainment 24 hours a day. 267-8000. 5/4 SOCIETY OF Manufacturing Engineers speak on "Processes for Mass Production" Thursday, March 29th at 7:00 in Tech­ nology Building Room 101. 3/29 A u tom obiles________ 71 CAPRI. Good running condition. $550. Call 991-3800, ext. 1025 after 6. Ask for Greg. 3/30 1970 DODGE Convertible, runs good. Call 996-5176 after 5:00 p.m. 3/30 1973 CHEVY van. 8 cylinder, regular gas, carpet, paneling, king size bed, captain's chairs, air conditioned, CB. Good mileage. 266-3364, if no answer 967-5124 after 3:00 p.m. 4 /4 1977 TONY AWARD Pulitzer Prize winning play at the Lyceum Theatre (across from Neeb Hall.) One week only!! The Shadow Box, an unsentimental play about life's second most powerful drama — death. April 5 - 8, 8 p.m., tickets $1.00 with ID, Lyceum box office, noon - 3 p.m. 965-3437. Buy them N ow!! TUNE UP and oil change, $10. Call Steve, 967-1877. All work guaranteed. LADIES SHOES, Sandals, Purses available in the most popular brands. Baretrap, Sbicca, Frye boots, Bass, Famolare, Dexter, Clogs, Deckers and many more. Backdoor Shop, 707 S. Forest, 966-1772. 4/27 THE MEXICAN Shirt Man is back with new styles of embroidered shirts, blouses, dresses, also wool and acrylic sweaters. Bring ad for 10% discount. Phoenix Greyhound Park, Saturdays and Sundays, East side, space 400. 5/4 S E W IN G M A C H IN E , Free Arm , never used, 1979, best m odel, still in carton. Full original guarantee. D oes everything. C ost $469, m ust sacrifice, $165. I also have the b eautifu l cabinet that cam e with it. Private H o m e. 946-2127. 5 /4 I nstruction__________ STEEL GUITAR lessons, by professional steel guitarist. 833-7063. 4/17 P o o m m ate W onted YOUR #1 SOURCE FOR SCIENCE FICTIO N New & Used Paperbacks & Hardcovers • SF Wargames C O M IC S FO R C O LL E C T O R S The ONE Book Shop 708 Forest Ave., Tempe Just Vz B lock N orth of A S U ! » 5/4 B icycles____________ NO MORE bike flats. Carefree tires are tubeless. Last four times longer. $12.95 plus installation. “Bikes 'N Things," 9684511. 5 /4 NEED ROOM. Savings up to $150. Bikes 'n Things. 968-4511. 5 /4 D im e-A-Llne______ _ VICTORY SCORED by killer and Lord? HEY BARNEY, been getting M- and -N ’s from Elsie??? Oh so Bery awfulll! NANCY? NANCY. Nancy. NancY. NancY. NancY. Nancy. Nancy. Nancyl Nancy!! Nancy!!! So bery wunderfle! EXPERIENCED TYPIST. IBM self-correct­ ing. 90-110 wpm. $7.50/hour (approxi­ mately 75 cents/page). Fast and accurate. Lora, 947-0976. 3/30 EXPERIENCED SECRETARY. Theses, dis­ sertations, term papers, resumes. IBM Selectric. Reasonable. Joyce, 839-4913 after 2 p.m. 5/4 GRADUATE COLLEGE Expertise. Top qual­ ity typing. IBM Correcting Selectric, quality bond paper. Dissertations, Theses, and Research Papers. Call Debby at Schmalzer Corporation, 833-5363; evenings and week­ ends, 969-4524. 5/4 TYPING, DISSERTATIONS, term papers, etc., $6.00/hour, Carol. 966-6998. 3/30 T ransportation______ F or S ale____________ SHARE TOWNHOUSE, quiet neighbor­ hood. pool. Must be somewhat neat. $125. plus V2 utilities. 967-8354. 3/30 B ooks TYPING, IBM Selectric. Dissertations, theses, term papers. Eight years exper­ ience. Jean, 277-3602 . 5 /4 T ravel______________ JUNE 4 - 26, Scandinavian Summer Seminar, 3 graduate/undergraduate cre­ dits, Elsinore, Denmark, $1,159, board/ room/travel/tuition. Dr. R. Axford, 9653643. 4/13 S ervices____________ PROFESSIONAL RESUME SERVICE in Tempe. Career and Summer jobs. Em­ ployment counseling, composition, typ­ ing and printing. 424 W. Broadway, #15. 894-1261. 4 /3 GOOD STUDENTS: Save 25% on Auto Insurance. Non-smokers 15% . Ask Steve Lundel, ASU Representative, Farmers In­ surance, 835-1480. 3/30 PROFESSIONAL WORD processing ser­ vice (typing) — Manuscripts, Theses, Proposals, Resumes, Letters (Repetitive, Cover, Personal). Right-hand justified mar­ gins or conventional. Storage and re­ visions. Letters - 30c each (in quantity); Manuscripts, etc. - $30 - $40 per hour. All work done on our IBM OS6 Word Proces­ sing Equipment. Editing and proofing. 247-9674. 5 /2 YOUR INCOME taxes prepared professional. Bill Arnold, 967-9266. by a 4/17 ATTEND MEDICAL School in U.S.A. Tuition $300 a year. Details $2.00. Star Rt. 1, Box 82, Salome, AZ. 85348. 3/29 A R M Y R O TC C O U L D HELP Y O U M A K E U P T O $ 8 ,7 0 0 F O R C O L L E G E . There are a ll sorts o f ways A rm y R O TC can help you get financial assistance to help you through colleg e. And no active duty ob lig ation unless you desire it. If you're a Veteran there are even addition al allo w ances through educational assistance program s plus receiving credit toward M ilita ry S cience courses. To learn the facts, talk to one of the adm ission counselors in the M ilita ry Science D epartm ent on cam pus at the location listed below. Call now for an appo intm ent. OLD MAIN BUILDING, ROOM 240 PHONE: 261-4404 or 965-3318 3 /3 0 RESPONSIBLE PERSON to share driving to Chicago. Leaving around April 1st. Call Jerry, 965-3563. 3/28 W an ted ____________ NEED MONEY? $1.25 - $2.00 paid for single albums; $1.50 - $2.50 paid for cassettes. Top condition only. Record Trader, 831 South Rural. 966-5039. 4/13 WE PAY cash for gold, diamonds. Call 968-5967. silver and 5/14 H elp W an ted _______ PICK UP and deliver orders from our customers. Neat dresser, have car and like people. Flexible hours available. $4.75 per hour. Call 835-1353. Fuller Brush Co. 4/6 WE ARE looking for fraternities and sororities that are interested in raising funds for their house treasuries. Contact Mr. “A”, 949-0883 3/28 PART-TIME WAITRESSES and cooks needed day and night. Apply at Pizza Hut, Baseline and Rural, 839-0383. 3/30 WAITRESS, WAITERS' bus, persons, dish­ washers, hostesses, cooks. Good oppor­ tunities for advancement. Excellent com­ pany benefits, pleasant working condi­ tions, experience desired. Apply in person only, weekdays 2 p.m., 4 p.m. Cisco’s Restaurant. 2700 S. Mill Ave., Tempe. Equal opportunity employer. 4/3 WORK YOUR own hours cleaning occupied homes in Scottsdale. Starting salary $3.25 per hour. 257-0727. 4/24 MGR. TRAINEE for Finance Company. Call 956-2545. 3/30 CHOOSE YOUR own shifts! RN’s and LPN’s, Nurses aids needed for staff and private duty assignments. Call 254-5148. No fee. . 3/30 WE HAVE good help. We need more. The Lunt Ave. Marble Club is now hiring bartenders and doormen full- and parttime. Apply in person Monday - Friday 2:00 - 5:00 at Lunt Ave., 1212 East Apache. Tempe. 3/30 CHILD CARE needed 6:40 a.m. - 7:30 a m. Please phone 966-4562 for more infor­ mation. 3/30 PHONE SALES: Evenings, close to cam­ pus, hourly rate, bonus, nice office, good work. 968-4853. 4/11 IF YOU need extra money — See us! We have temporary job assignments available in all areas of the Valley. Never a fee and you are paid every Friday of the week you work. Valley Temporary Services, 258-2888. 3/30 SUMMER JOBS. The best summer job you could hope for is in the Air National Guard. Earn $1,200 free and clear. Your meals, clothing and housing are supplied free, plus transportation to and from training. After this first summer, just one weekend per month brings almost $60. Even more with promotions you can earn. Plus $125 per semester in tuition assistance. Act now - openings are limited. Call or visit us today. The Air National Guard. 2025 N. 52nd St., Phoenix, AZ. 85008. Telephone 273-9600 or 273-9611. 3/30 LOVE BOATS WANT YOU! Exciting careers and sum­ mer jobs, travel the world. For details rush $1.00 Cruiseships International. Box 530188, Miami Shores, Fla. 33153. 4/n Page 20 State Press Wednesday, March 28, 1979 + + + + + + ★ * + + * * * * A * * * * * * * * * * * * * * A * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ■ ■ ■ — - T T — “™ “ 1............... * SPRING CLEARANCE SALE MARSHALL S SPORTING GOODS STAY IN SHAPE TOP RATED M e n 's & W o m e n 's R u n n in g S h o e s N IK E Reg. $29.95 $29.95 Lady Waffle Trainer Men’s Waffle Trainer i N e w B a la n c e Men’s 320 Women’s 320 Trail 355 SALE $19.95 $24.95 ONLY AMF 5-Way Home Gym Rocket Easy Rider *4.99 Everlast Ball Bearing Jump Rope $33.95 $33.95 $36.95 $27.95 $27.95 $29.95 Includes chest pull - jump rope toner wheel. $29.95 $39.95 $24.95 $34.95 Includes chest pull - jump rope - hand grip. $34.95 $38.95 $31.00 $33.00 3 - Way Home Gym ONLY Reg. $19.95 wall pull - hand grip - *14.95 ONLY Reg. $14.95 *11.50 ONLY Torso-Toner Reg. $5.99 Tones stomach ■ firms legs - reduces hip line. *3.95 Etank/kM Street Fighter Men’s & Ladies Stabilizer Men’s & Ladies ONY Men’s Gripper Women’s Gripper * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * $28.95 $28.95 All Purpose Cleats 17° ° ATTENTION RACQUETBALL RACQUETS E k te lo n M a g n u m Flex * 4 8 .9 5 E k te lo n M a g n u m * 4 8 .9 5 Leach G r a p h ite *3 2 .9 5 * * * * * * * A ll R e m a in in g NOW AVAILABLE FROM WARM-UP SUITS MARSHALL’S Sporting Goods SALE By In Addition to Tennis Soles We Now Have J e le n k Original soles W in n in g W ays for: *38.95 *38.95 *24.95 P e rfo rm e r * Just in time for Little League! Reg. SALE $19.95 $17.00 Puma All Purpose $13.95 $10.50 Nike All Purpose RUNNERS Special Prices Reg. C o u rt C a s u a l NIKE. LDVS, waffle Trainers, Elites A Cortez 'A PRICE New Balance 320's &Trails [ Women's Court Casual Tennis Shorts 30% OFF * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *C Gym Shorts 99^ to ♦1 .9 9 Slightly irregular. saucony Hornets A 1980 Trainers HOURS P R IC E S f Tennis ♦1 3.50 SPECIAL TABLES ^Running ♦12.50) OF SALE M ERCHANDISE * * * * * * íf * íf ALPHA-BETA TH R IFTY PLAZA SPORTING GOODS N E. 1 8 4 3 N . S c o t ts d a le R o a d T e m p e , A r iz o n a * * * >f MARSHALL'S Monday & Friday 9:30-6:00 Tuesday & Wednesday & Thursday 9:30-8:00 Saturday 9:00-6:00 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Brooks viilanovas Etonlc street Fighters, KM5011 701 * SALE $17.00 $18.00 $18.00 Reg. $19.95 $21.95 $21.95 Saucony Mercury Women’s Blue Speed Stars $19.95 $19.95 TENNIS SHOES Wilson Beta Poly Match $ Reg. $21.95 SALE Track Spikes * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * O o (0 ABU University S * * * * * * * * 5f 9 4 7 -1 0 9 5 * All S a l. M .rc h .n d fM L im it« ! to Quantity In Stock S . I . R . . . t h r o a t , S .t . . M .rc h 31, 1178 ^ *************************************************