ASU radio finally to become reality pending funding By Mary Perry t ASU students will be spinning discs at the University s own long-awaited radio station by next year. Final approval of the venture was granted Wednesday by Associated Students and the administration, to the tune of $65,000. Students for Campus Radio President Bill Williams said Thursday that hiring will be postponed until the 1980-81 school year since all the requested funds were not im­ mediately granted. I# €' % # ' ;r •« J,'T‘I _ A total of $150,000 was requested for the project. University officials said the remaining money will be drawn from ASASU’s emergency and concert revenue funds over the next 12 months. Williams said equipment will be purchased immediately. The new Bureau of Radio, set up by the administration and ASASU, will decide policy and implement programs, he said. ---- The station will be located in the McAllister complex, south of University Drive, in a two-bedroom apartment. The 300 watt station will reach all of Tempe and fringe areas oi Scottsdale and Phoenix. n “We will probably operate from 6 a.m. to 1 a.m., Williams said. “Maybe a few years down the road we will expand.” S H HBl W, I H k 1 W ~ WÊ I The group has been working to establish the station since 1977. Employment positions will be available for 24 announcing and reporting students. ' ' s i s # ; "**' ^ “ASASU is tickled to death because they received a large increase in budget over last year, partly because of the ràdio station,” Williams said. The organization will receive $23,000 in the next 30 days, he said. “Next year we will hire personnel.” Storm aftermath Victor Vensor, 28 W . Pasadena, Phoenix, found a “skylight” in the ceiling when he came home after a thunderstorm Wednesday evening. Reports said the damage might have been caused by a tornado. [State Press staff photo by Mary Connell] An A rizona Public Service health physicist says incidents s im ila r to the one W ednesday at a Pennsylvania nuclear pow er plant will becom e more The station will have five full-time professional staff members which qualifies it for membership in the National Public Radio Comapny. National Public Radio is a branch of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Williams said the membership means the station will also receive federal funds. The Phoenix area has m ore radio stations than any other city its size, but there was not a progressive rock station for som e tim e . Until now, that is. frequent, in upcom ing years. P age 5 Primary elections are scheduled next week for A ssociated S tudents executive officers. Today, the State Press offers brief profiles of the candidates in the running. Page 8 P age 9 They call Rod Carew the h itting m achine of the Am erican League. But the C alifo rn ia A ngels’ first basem an doesn’t buy it. P age 19 Page 2 State Press Friday, March 30, 1979 In the news briefly from the Associated Press ACCIDENT COMPARED TO NUCLEAR BOMB TEST HARRISBURG, Pa. — Radiation still escaping from the disabled Three Mile Island nuclear power plant Thursday was likened to fallout from an atomic bomb test by one scientist, as experts puzzled over the cause of America's worst nuclear accident. Amid doubt about what went wrong, plant officials said radiation from a crippling water spill may continue to leak into the air for at least another 24 hours. "This corresponds to a major fallout pattern from a nuclear bomb test,” said Dr. Ernest Sternglass, professor of radiology at the University of Pittsburgh, who measured radiation levels at the Harrisburg airport Thursday morning, two miles from the plant site, and found them 15 times greater than normal background radiation. FIRST WOMAN PRIME MINISTER PREDICTED LONDON — Queen Elizabeth II, fulfilling a centuries-old duty, received formal word from Prime Minister James Callaghan on Thursday that his government had fallen, and she set May 3 as the date for a general election to select a new House of Commons. The latest public opinion polls indicate the Conservatives of Margaret Thatcher will sweep into power easily, ending five years of Labor Party control and making the 53-year-old Mrs. Thatcher Europe’s first woman prime minister. TENSIONS HIGH BETWEEN ARAB NEIGHBORS CAIRO, Egypt — Egypt and Libya have their armed forces on high alert and military analysts said Thursday that the slightest spark could trigger the second war in two years between the Arab neighbors. “Both states are armed to the teeth and in a high state of alert," said one source. “If one soldier fell on his face and fired his gun into the sand, it could trigger a shootout." SENATORS DEMAND KNOWLEDGE OF SECRET COMMITMENTS WASHINGTON — Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., joined Senate Democratic and Republican leaders Thursday in demanding that President Carter tell Congress of any secret commitments made to Israel or Egypt to get their agreement to the peace treaty signed this week. The two leaders said their only knowledge of an American promise to consider helping Israel if Egypt violated the peace treaty was what they had read in newspaper accounts. The U.S. memorandum promises the United States will consult with Israel and consider an increased U.S. military presence in the Middle East if Egypt violates the peace treaty. Tisons sentenced to die for shotgun murders YUMA — Raymond and Ricky Tison were ordered Thursday to join Randy Greenawalt on death row for the Aug. 1 shotgun murders of a 22-month-old boy and his parents and cousin. “We had an agreement with our dad that no one would get hurt," Raymond, 19, told Superior Court Judge Douglas Keiddie before the sentence was imposed. “I wish we could have done something to stop it, but by the time it happened, it was too late, Raymond added. “It's something we’ll live with for the rest of our lives.” Ricky said, “It tears me up that the family was killed. It’s something that I won't forget.” The Casa Grande men, along with another brother, Donald, 20, used sawed-off shotguns July 30 to break their father. Gary Tison, 42, and Greenawalt, 30, out of the Arizona State Prison and were fleeing when their car had two flat tires near Quartzsite. John F. Lyons, 24, an Omaha Marine assigned to Yuma, was ambushed and killed by the gang, along with his wife, Donnelda, 24, son, Christopher, 22 months, and niece, Teresa Tyson, 15, of Las Vegas, Nev. In addition to the four concurrent death penalties, Keddie sentenced the brothers to life without parole on three kidnapping convictions, two terms of 50 years to life for robbery, and four to five years in prison for theft of the Lyons’ family car. “There are no mitigating circumstances suf­ ficiently substantial to call for leniency," Keddie said. ‘Therefore each of you shall be sentenced to death.” Appeal ia automatic under Arizona law. Michael Beers, Ricky Tison’a attorney, declined to comment on the sentence other than to say, “I think it was wrong." The brothers were allowed to visit briefly with their mother, Dorothy Tison, before they were taken to prison at Florence. “I didn’t expect it," Mrs. Tison said of the death penalty, but her sons told a reporter they were not surprised. Join Hillel Grad Students fo ra f)L c T.C.I.F. ¿5™ JEW ELER S FOR ALL YOUR JEWELRY NEEDS Diamonds, Watches 14k Chains, Pendants Sorority-Fraternity Jewelry Watch & Jewelry Repairing 966-7587 TODAY at 4:30 p.m. at THE SPAGHETTI CO. 4th St. & Mill, Tempo Take time out from studying! A BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY TO EARN WHAT YOU'RE WORTH IRAN’S FATE TO BE DECIDED.BY VOTE TEHRAN, Iran — Iranians vote Friday and Saturday on whether to transform their troubled land into an “Islamic republic,” a vaguely defined idea that comforts some with its promise of a return to traditional values and worries, others with its uncertainties. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the 78-year-old holy man whose Islamic revolution toppled Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi’s regime last month, declared Thursday night that the nation’s fate will be decided by the voting. HOME HAIR DRYERS POSSIBLY RELEASE CARCINOGENS WASHINGTON — Confronted with evidence that home hair dryers may release particles of asbestos, the government on Thursday rushed to obtain more information on the possible cancer risk to those who use them. The Consumer Product Safety Commission issued a “special order,” similar to a subpoena, to the 10 manufacturers responsible for 90 percent of the hair dryers sold in the United States. It also sent telegrams calling for top executives of the firms to come to Washington for a meeting with the commissioners early next week. ATTENTION No Preference Students in the| Liberal Arts C ollege Early Bird Advisem ent for Fall Registration from M arch 27 to April 9. Avoid the last m inute rush. M ake an appointment today in Social Sciences 111. Com e in or Call 965-2954 R E S TA U R A N T M ANAGEM ENT W e afford you the opportunity to practically apply your m anagement skills. 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[State Press staff photo by Chris Vaughan] Professional resumes prepared at Sir Speedy Instant Printing * 9 6 7 -9 4 7 3 2121 South Priest, »101 * Tempe. Arizona D E S IG N • L A Y O U T • T Y P E S E T • P R IN T E D The Punting Professionals 5 0 ,0 0 0 S u m m e r J o b O p e n in g s ! 55 mph speed limit extended by House A lliioéé By GéoirA Steve Allnatt The House Transportation Committee endorsed an extension of the 55 mph speed limit because of “federal blackmail" and the failure of western states to band together, the chairman of the committee said Thursday. Rep. Pete Corpstein, R-Paradise Valley, said western legislators were “scared of losing gas tax revenue funds,” which the federal government said would be withheld from states refusing to ex­ tend the speed limit. The House Transportation Committee endorsed a four-year extension of the 55 mph speed limit Tuesday. The current speed limit regulation will expire June 30 and the federal govern­ ment - will refuse highway construction funds to non-extending states, Corpstein said. Corpstein added the limit is rarely needed in Arizona. ‘T h e average speed in Arizona (on interstate highways) is 63,” he said. He said Arizona has the ninth highest average driving speed in the nation. State Highway Director Harold Cardwell agreed that Arizona drivers were speeding, but said figures from a Sept. 1978 study were lower than Corpstein’s. Cardwell said the average speed on interstate highways in urban areas was 55.7 mph and 85 percent drove over 60 mph. On rural interstates the average speed was 60.4 mph, he said, and 18.2 percent drove at more than 65 mph. Corpstein said some western officials ignore violations unless the driver is traveling at speeds in excess of 65 mph. iiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiititiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii IIIIHIHIIIHHimilHIIIIHIIIHP GRAND OPENING! — Home of Phoenix's Largest Waterslide— COUPON 6 Giant Water Flumes on a Mountain of Fun! 2 hours of Watersliding for the price of 1. You pay only $3.00 — Reg. price $6.00 Bring in this coupon today. Expires June 1,1979 _____ One coupon per customer per visit. Celebrities Sat., April 7th 9 6 8 -4 7 4 1 ltHttM.mimMiiiininillHllllHIIIIilIMHlllMmilMtHimWIIIHIIHUIMMIHIHIUIWMIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIMI»»HI ninni The 1979 Summer Employment Direc­ tory of the U.S. lists over 50,000 sum­ mer job opportunities for you. Make plans now to earn money, travel to new areas of the country, and learn new skills. You get information on — names, addresses, pay rates, length of em­ ployment, how to apply — the works! G o to y o u r b o o k sto re , o r s e n d $ 5 .9 5 to: W r ite r s D ig e s t B o o k s , D e p t. C A S , 9 9 3 3 A llia n c e R o a d , C in c in n a ti. O H 4 5 2 4 2 ._____________ 790 W . Broadway, Tempe FREE HAMBURGER Get a Free Single Hamburger with the Purchase of Any Hamburger at the Regular Price. Valid at All Valley Loca­ tions With This Coupon. Expires 4/30/79. Page 4 State Press Friday, March 30, state press O p in io n I know that when things don’t go well they like to blame the presidents, and that is one of the things which pres.dents are paid ,or' -J o h n F. Kennedy W hy Don’t be surprised if the Associated Students Disputes Board has another busy year. That’s because ASASU is scrambling at the last minute to clear up ambiguities in the election code that could screw up student government elections for the third year in a row. Although some problem areas that have provoked past disputes have been taken care of, many existing ASASU bylaws still are unclear. One of the most obvious discrepencies concerns two con trad ictin g bylaw s re la tin g to crass load requirements. One states that elected and appointed officers cannot remain in office unless they carried — and passed — a maximum seven-credit-hour load, which is considered full-time, the previous semester. c h e f b a r f ie ld But only a few paragraphs later, another bylaw states part-time students are eligible to run as long as they change their status to full-time by the time they take office. Luckily, this probably won't affect any of next week’s executive candidates because reportedly they all are full-time students, thus eligible under both laws. The Disputes Board is expected to clarify the issue on Monday. But the point is, ASASU officers have known about this problem all year, yet nothing has been done about it until now, only days before the Wednesday and Thursday primaries. As campus affairs vice president, Bill Grant is responsible for handling the elections. He told the State Press that First Council should have had more “initiative in amending the bylaws." But Grant shouldn’t try to pass the buck. Election code revision is his responsibility, not First Council s. If there are disputes again this year, it won’t be anything new. ASASU President Lance Ross was nearly booted out of office last year when his op­ ponent, Grant Goodman, charged him with violating bylaws limiting campaign expenditures. The dispute centered around a typographical error that had been signed into law by then-Executive Vice President Dave Crowley. The provision, which was supposed to value campaign spending at 50 percent of market value, instead read, “50 percent of market value minus 50 percent.” Jim Gill Anim al Legislature Apologies to George Orwell. . . All the members were assembled. Chattering and clucking, mooing and quacking, crapping and scratching on the floor, they waited. The barn chambers were alive with an­ ticipation. The Council of Rules was about to convene. The Council was headed by the Colonel, a portly, rather distinguished looking swine, who never acted aloof or snooty about his blueblooded bacon breeding. “There’s a little pig in all of us" he would snortle jestingly to his fellow Rulemakers. But this was not a day for jest in the barnyard, for the Council faced its most serious problem since the Revolution, when the animals had overthrown their human masters. “You’re just a dumb animal,” those humans would tell the Colonel back in the olden days. “You eat like a pig and drink like a fish — and you’re happy as a lark about it.” The animals were all thought to be alike back then — carefree and irresponsible. The animals were treated like dirt. No one listened to the animals. But they hadn't all been the dumb oxes the humans took them for and now they were in charge. Now things were different. “First order of business,” demanded the Colonel. And all eyes turned toward Council member Patrilius as the old hen rose to speak. Patrilius was a rather regal-looking piece of poultry who had clucked many a meeting into filibuster. She was known to have one of the narrowest minds and sharpest beaks in the barnyard and no one messed with this old bird when she got her feathers ruffled. Her ally on the Council was Jasie Coupe, a well-spoken, but somewhat naive member of the barnyard’s leading donkey family. When Jasie talked, everyone listened. He worked like a mule and was known to be one smart ass, which made him an invaluable comrade for Patrilius. Indeed, the hen never strayed far from the Coupe. And since most of the other Rulemakers were sheep, these two made an influential combination. Patrilius winked a t Jasie as she began her oratory. “Mr. Chairman, fellow animals” she gabbled, “whether you know it or not, this barnyard is going to the dogs, and I for one, think it’s time we curb the situation. Litterally speaking, our dogs have unleashed quite a burden on the other barnyard members while serving no useful purpose in our society. “Face it, they can't be milked, they’re too doggone lazy to farm and they never raise a paw to help with barnyard chores. Instead, they spend their time chasing sticks, sniffing one another’s rump and peeing all over the place. “And yet fellow animals, we support them. We pay for their training in those easy-chair obedience schools. We send them to dog shows and we pay for their shots. “Well friends”, the Barnyard Battleaxe con­ cluded, “I think it’s time we tighten the choke chain on these carefree canine cavaliers . . . time to teach them a lesson . . . to teach them . . . responsibility." The cows mooed and the pigs oinked and the sheep bleated their agreement. And Jasie Coupe, always one to kick an un­ derdog when he’s down, continued where Patrilius left off. “I suggest,” whinned Coupe, “that if these playful pups would spend less time at the dog track chomping Gainesburgers and sniffing flea and tic spray, they could afford to pay for their own grooming and training and would no doubt, appreciate their education much more.” And the birds chirped and the hyenas laughed and the sheep agreed again. And when it finally came time for the canines to speak, they yelped and whimpered and panted and squeaked. They tried to tell the Council that all dogs weren’t the same — that they shouldn't be stereotyped. The said they led a dog's life and that things were really rough. “Ruff, ruff, ruff' they said. But the more they hounded, the deeper they got in the dog house. “It's just a lot of meaningless growling to me” chortled Patrilius. “I can’t make heads or tails of it. Besides, how can their opinions m atter anyway? Most of these m utts just sit up and beg — they never did learn to speak you know. “I would suggest the quality of education is not strained,” chuckled the old hen. “They’re barking up the wrong tree as far as I'm concerned,” added Coupe. And the geese honked and the cats meowed and the sheep agreed completely. And no one within earshot of the barnyard that night would have thought that the animals weren’t really a pack of wild humans in disguise Ross finally won, claiming he valued his expenses at 25 percent (50 minus 50) of market value. But in the meantime, Goodman had been declared president in a tug-of-war that dragged on for weeks before Ross was reinstated. The 1977 elections weren’t much better. Months after the election, poll workers admitted they might have placed ballot machines at the wrong polls during the general election. Since ballots listed candidates’ names in different orders at different polls, any mix-up of the machines would mean students voted for the opposite candidate than they had intended. Workers blamed Charlotte Grant, election coor­ dinator, saying she hadn’t given them specific in­ structions. Grant maintained there was no foul-up because she knew what was going on, even if the people working for her didn’t. But by the time all this came to light, the ballots in question were long gone, leaving no way to prove whether anything had gone wrong. The m atter was dropped. Compared to last year’s divided camp, this year’s executive officers have done a pretty good job in working together to get things done around here. But are the 1979 elections going to be another fiasco? With a little luck, perhaps not. But when the guidelines in the election code don't make sense to the candidates who are supposed to abide by them, anything could happen. Problems in the code should have been dealt with long before the 11th hour. O p tics V.,.^ v ;p a s ™ w d i L Optics photo by Tony Corso Letter Policy The State Press welcomes letters to the editor on any topic. To ensure publication, however, letters must conform to a few guidelines. Type them, double spaced, with margins set on 60 . characters. Include your full name, class standing and major. Anonymous letters will be discarded. However, if it is im­ perative that your name be withheld, state why. _A11 letters are subject to editing for style, grammar and spelling, but don’t be sloppy. Lengthy letters may be shor­ tened to meet space limitations, so be brief. Friday, March 30, 1979 State Press Page 5 Nuclear accidents called inevitable DRIVE IN LIQUOR A GROCERIES \2 f Grants available fo r A S U students Four ASU engineering and science students will be awarded a grant to work on research projects this summer with ASU chemical and bioengineering faculty. The National Science Foundation will award the grant to 10 students, six of whom must be from schools other than ASU. All of the students will receive a stipend of $100 per week. Applications for eligible students, full-time un­ dergraduates between their junior and senior years, may be obtained from Dr. Neil S. Berman, ASU professor of chemical and bio engineering. 4 1885 E. Apache Blvd. M A Y ''1 3 1 H 'I tt .n U J i/iM A r t Carol Ç ran t C .t i t j ù t t t . f j iS D0NTS Tempo, Arizona 85281 !M O T H E R ' S DAY [Don't forget Her th is year. Don’t ju st get Her an o th er card. DOS f.\\rr ffr n rt Do give Her so m eth in g special. Do give Her so m eth in g sh e'll never forget. Do give Her a beautiful 9" x 12" parchm ent. “Certificate of Excellence” nam ing her “World’s Greatest Mother” |fi CERTIFICATES, etc. P.O. Box 2187 Culver City, CA 90230 'i'V.' ''.CzZ&k. É * J » >m <•. Cium £ ¿uè «< going to happen every ten years or so, but you don't want it to happen.” Dr. Hoyt Whipple, a professor of radiological health at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, said he is concerned with the nuclear issue, but that the purpose of a nuclear power plant is not to insure public health and safety. “Nuclear power plants are built to generate electricity,” Whipple said. “The Pennsylvania event is serious, because it is affecting the generation of electricity. It will be very ex­ pensive to restore the plant.” Whipple said many anti-nuclear activists are expressing “useless." concerns over the long range effects of radiation. “It is true that radiation in some cases can be fatal,” Whipple said. “But, anything taken too much in too short of a time can be fatal. “It’s like drinking a bottle of Scotch, if you drink it in one evening, it will kill you. If you drink it over a week, it can be good for you." Whipple said studies on the effects of radiation in humans and animals have proven that radiation causes an increase in cancer. He said only animals have been tested to determine the effects on offspring, but there is a higher incidence of genetic mutations in humans in cases of radiation exposure. “If a group of persons are exposed to 500 re ms (the lethal dose) of radiation, they will develop flu symptoms within a few hours,” Whipple said. “A few days later he may feel fine, but after 30 to 40 days, 50 percent of those people exposed will die. The others will continue to live normal lives without future symptoms.” Whipple said the government has eliminated the effects of radiation exposure by imposing strict regulations on the limits of radiation a person can be exposed to. An average nuclear power plant worker is permitted to be exposed to a maximum of 5 re ms per year, Whipple said. The average neighbor to a nuclear plant, he said, receives only about .17 rems of exposure each year. Ruth and Jim Benthin CALL 966-0362 o By Mary Beth Von Driska A health physicist for the Arizona Public Service said Thursday incidents similar to Wednesday's accident at a nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania will become more frequent in the next few years. Dr. John Mann said nuclear plants, including the Palo Verde Nuclear Generating Station 50 miles west of Phoenix, are taking all possible steps to minimize radiation exposure, but nuclear accidents are inevitable. A t a press conference held at the Adams Hotel in Phoenix, Mann said the Pennsylvania accident was "merely a minor incident.” At Wednesday's accident at the Three Mile Island plant near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, a valve blew out a water pump that cools one of the plant’s two reactors, causing radioactive steam to seep through 4-foot-thick walls and into the atmosphere. “We design nuclear power systems to pur­ posely fail on paper," Mann said. “We want to make sure we've minimized all the consequences. The industry will study the Three Mile incident carefully and pick it apart to insure it won't happen again, but there are bound to be other accidents.” Dr. Robert Erdmann, vice president and manager of the physics and safety division of Science Applications Inc., said Wednesday's accident could not have been prevented. “It was a partial incident,” Erdmann said. “When we test nuclear reactors we test entire sequences to determine the worst accident that could occur. Wednesday’s incident was a minor part of an entire sequence that should not have happened. But we have to examine each incident and learn to correct and prevent mistakes.” Erdmann said there is always a remote chance that a nuclear power plant’s safety systems won’t work. “There’s always a risk with everything, but people will have to consider the remoteness of those accidents when they make a judgment about nuclear power,”£rdmann said. “It's like a dent in your fender. You know its „ Bachine Bottle Stop 1 .5 0 " M U S IC E X P O 7 9 " 1 _ All of th e latest in m usic equipm ent. SEE h o ttest m u sician s in th e valley, perHEAR “ The form ing daily. Factory rep resen tativ es & en g in eers from all TALK TO ■■ th e m ajor co m p an ies. to 50% on all item s at th is o n ce in a SAVE 20% lifetim e show ing. April 9th For In fo rm a tio n a n d C o m p lim e n ta ry Passes co n ta ct: É r*» FRANK M ILA N O M USIC C O . k. MESA 834-6581 PHOENIX 273-1691 SCOTTSDALE 946-3431 U S A O lym pics.' T h e jo g g e rs built to ta k e th e p o u n d in g m ile a fte r m ile. Women's athletic oxford with leather tip and heel area. Nylon uppers. Waffle studded type outsole, turned up at heel. t f a u * 5 .0 0 u bcui/uiuJbl 1 7 .9 9 C A À o n p l^ ¿ A p U c L U c tlà eu . sm u t b o c ty t ^ U x /V ó ó c r n -' ¿ o tó * * . Men's athletic oxford with leather tip and heel area. Nylon uppers. Sawtooth and suction cup design rubber sole. Men's sueded leather athletic oxford, 21.99 Men's smooth leather tennis oxford, 24.99 And every time you buy a pair of Olympics, T.M. JC Penney will contribute 50c to the U.S.A. Olympic fund. ¿ to ¡ ^ ju A X c c tto r iÿ ' & *S.OOj cu fy U L C c M ^ C u £ j oah/ m v , */. O0J O u l> C o u r d /tfy , * 2 . 0 0 . Olympics të d r n ÿ f a n , c o n * C L fr p C iM & * U « £ . CRIMPERS LTD / / / C oût. U *¿ »0 ú u ty & ù o e-, T ô n îfit, d fr iPdCPenney •1 9 7 9 J C P e n n e y C o ., In c . Tri-City 1900 W m I Main In Mata Shop waakdaya 9:30 to 9:00, Sahnday 9:30 to 0:00, Sunday 12:00 to 5:00 Page 6 Stole Press Friday, March 3 0 , 1 9 7 9 ________________ Soliciting rights might be removed By L o ri M edigovich . ASASU primary candidates might have lost their chance to canvass the University’s dormitories through a slip-up in following solicitation rules. The ASU Housing Department enables ASASU can­ didates to solicit votes in the dorms as long as the can­ didates have picked up and returned a canvass request form. As far as he knew, Cliff Osborne, director of housing, said no requests to canvass have been picked up or returned by primary candidates. ASASU has worked with the Housing Department to set up a canvassing date of April 2 for primary candidates to seek votes in the dorms. But as no requests have been turned in, Osborne said “as far as I’m concerned the candidates were not in­ \ terested in canvassing the dorms on that date.” Bill Grant, ASASU campus affairs vice president, said he was not sure whether the primary candidates would actually be allowed to canvass on April 2 or not. A Tem p* police officer was out directing traffic weoneeaay mgm on mm M B “There’s a lot of ambiguity in the requirements for winds in the area caused power lines to go down and parts of Tempe to be blacked out. [State canvassing,” Grant said. “The department of housing Press staff photo by Sam Jones] ______________________ .________ __________ knew we were sending our candidates through the dorms . for the elections and hopefully they will be allowed to I'm Looking solicit votes April 2.” According to the Housing Department’s policy regardFor YOU! ing the canvassing of dormitories by candidates, Osborne That’s right. If you’re said only ASU students would be allowed to solicit at the Cars Available looking to get out of the dorms. Many Points U.S.A. renting rut let me show Private persons seeking votes and other forms of door W e are I.C .C . licensed and in ­ you how. sured. M u s t be 21 years or m ore. to door solicitation are not allowed at the dormitories, he Call George at: said. In addition to the April 2 date for primary candidates, SCHEALL DRIVEAWAY THE BENTON CO. the general election candidates can canvass the dorms April 10 from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., Osborne said. Candidate debates have also been scheduled at the dorms, he added. On April 3 primary candidates will debate at Sahauro Hall, and April 9 the general election candidates will \ discuss issues in Palo Verde Main. Osborne said the / specific details of the debates have yet to be arranged. Questionnaires were sent to residents in the dormitories V / asking their opinions on canvassing by candidates. Osborne said some residents expressed a desire not to be contacted by the candidates and candidates will not be allowed to talk with these persons during the canvassing dates. . n “But as far as I understand our canvassing policy,’ Osborne said, “the candidates will be able to talk with anyone else in the dorms.” There’s never been a camera like the automatic electronic A-1 from Grant questioned the reliability of the questionnaire Canon. It puts an end to arguments about which exposure method is best forever: because it has them all, and then some. Plus unique con­ sent to the residents of the dorms. trol and performance features you’ll have to experience to believe. “The way the questionnaires were written is biased and And a complete line of Canon "A" Series accessories, for total elec­ slanted,” Grant said. “They were poorly written and tronic versatility. ineffective.” If you've been looking for the one camera that can do everything, you've been looking for the incredible new Canon A-1. “As far as I can tell, the questionnaire asked open-ended questions and gave the residents of the dorms an op­ • Six-m ode exposure • Extremely wide control tor any situation -MiintiH operating range portunity to respond to their desire to be solicited by 1 . Shutter-priority AE . ‘¡n^B • Easy handling and candidates,” Osborne said. 2. Aperture-priority AE exceptional control Program m ed AE But Grant said the return number of questionnaires 4 Stopped-down AE • Full Canon lens and received was low. 5. E lectronic Flash AE SLR accessories DRIVE CARS FREE 968-7243 991-5533 A Cation Six-mode exposure control. Systemversatility Newer electronics for wider applications. Antique Clothing and Costumes Clothes fro m 1920's (and earlier) 1950's clothing * Unique A Series N ow thru A pril 7th Speedlite 199A. Motor Drive MA and NiCd Pack MA shown optional Collectables 1930's and 1940's Manual . Total digital and readout Body Only $34900 1 NEW S H IP M E N T SALE O N OLD O riental (a specialty) MERCHAND,SE Lace, Liners, Jewelry, Accessories and Western Wear fignahrclfa’s 10:00 J ? 0 Classic Clothing TEMPE TEMPE SHOPPING CENTER Tempe, Arizona 85281 968-1657 Phone 967-4662 or 967-8361 808 So. ASH Friday, Marqh 30, 1979 State Praga Page 7 Announcements Dates Clubs Places Meetings TODAY A colloquium on aging and euthanasia will be held at a brown-bag luncheon at noon, in the MU Navajo Room. Larry Wright, KTAR newshost, will speak on "Solutions to Worldwide Crises” at the College Life meeting of the Campus Crusade for Christ, 7:30 p.m., in the MU Alumni Lounge. H illel will hold Shabbat Services at 7:30 p.m. at Baker Center, 213 E. University Drive, Tempe. Speakers from IBM will speak to the Marketing Club, at 3:30 p.m. in Business Administration, room 401. T.G .I.F. will follow. SATURDAY KD Seniors will have a carwash from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Burger King on Apache Boulevard. Cost is $1.50 per car. Tlje Marketing Club picnic will be held at 12:30 p.m. at Daley Park. Cost is $1. SUNDAY H illel will hold its annual fund-raiser at 7 p.m. at Gammage Center. Israel’s leading female vocalist, Ruthi Navon, will be featured. The American Indian Crusade's weekly Bible study will continue on the subject of “Destructive Behavior — How to Overcome it," at 6 p.m. at Danforth Chapel. Raza Graduate Student Caucus is having a picnic from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Encanto Park Bandshell. Soft drinks will be provided, but bring your own lunch. Buses going to Arizona Boys Ranch for the Greek Week Philanthropic Project will leave at 10 a.m. from PV Main. MONDAY The Arizona Outing Club will hold its regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. on the second floor of the MU. Maxie Parks, 1976 Olympic gold medalist, will speak on “How to Get to the Olympics” for the Black Discovery Group at 6:30 p.m. at the Campus Crusade House, 205 E. 15th St. Athletes in Action and Fellowship of Christian Athletes are host to 1976 Olympians Maxie Parks and Cindy Poor, speaking on “Total Release Performance,” at 8 p.m. at the University Activity Center President’s Lounge. The Integrity Club will discuss “How to Keep Your Sanity While Teaching: And Learn Something in the Bargain” at 8 p.m. in the MU Santa Cruz Room. TUESDAY H illel will hold a lunch from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Baker Center, 213 E. University Drive. Cost is 99 cents. ■ Campus Crusade for Christ will hold “Leadership Training Classes" from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at 205 E. 15th St. American Indian Crusade will hold its “All-Indian Student Night,” including a home-cooked meal and recreation at 6 p.m. at the Lutheran Campus Center, 1414 McAllister. Calls flood police Calls have been flooding the Phoenix Police Department now that citizens with information pertaining to unsolved crimes are allowed to remain anonymous, officials say. Sgt. Harry Florian said public response to the department’s Silent Witness program has been excellent. ‘T h e information we’ve been receiving from the public is passed on to the detectives on the case, and they feel almost all of the calls are righteous,” Florian said. The program, which began March 20, offers anonymity and a reward of up to $1000 for information leading to arrests in unsolved felonies. §1 Florian said promising to keep all names confidential makes citizens feel more secure in coming to police with information about crimes._________ _______________________ | ADVERTISING SALES REPRESENTATIVES U.S. technological lead said to be dim inishing America's lead in the “race to space” is dim inishing, lessening th e technological dominance the United States has maintained over other countries, an ASU professor said Thursday. Dr. Ronald Greeley, professor of geology and head of the NASA team studying landing sites for an unmanned mission to Mars, said the United States needs a “national space priority” to widen the technological gap between the U.S. and competing countries. The United States is presently in a slowdown of technological growth and other countries are “picking up the slack” Greeley said. “Foreign markets, such as Japan, are now being looked to for advanced technology, not the U.S.,” he added. The economic benefits provided by the space /" N o w Appearing BILL HALL0CK and CACTUS COUNTY companq HAPPY DAYS S MITES: MILL & SOUTHERN 3 PM -9 PM D A N E LLE P L A Z A 60C Well Drinks & Bottled Beer 3 51 Draft Michelob OPEN AFTER HOURS FRIDAY & SATURDAY till 3 A .M . FOOD A SWING Hamburgers • Shrimp $1.00 All Call Drinks Chicken • Mushrooms Onion Rings • Fries BREAKFAST SERVED T-T NITE SLO W SCREW MITE - Ttaesdqy W ednesday All Drinks M ade with Sloe Gin or J u ic e . . . 6 W TU R K EY A N D TEQ U ILA D R IN K S 75< LADIES MITE - T hursday All Drinks For L ad ies. . . 69< J a c k Daniels For The Men . . . 50C a shot J CaliforniaWestern School of Law Founded 1924 San D iego's oldest, accredited A B A and A A LS law school is still accepting applications for Fall of 1979. I If you are interested please w rite today to: A dm issions C om m ittee California Wèstern School of Law The STATE PRESS has openings for advertising sales representatives for the spring semester of the academic year 1978-79. We prefer freshmen, sophomores and juniors, as successful repre­ sentatives can continue for several semesters. 350 C edar Street • San Diego, CA 92101 (714) 239-0391 CATALOGUE REQUEST The rewards include training and experience in a professionally run newspaper situation and a realistic commission. N A M E ___________________________________________________ Applicants must pick up referral form from Student Employment in Matthews Center and an application blank at the STATE PRESS office, A-111 Stauffer Hall. Completed applications must be returned to the STATE PRESS office by 4 p.m. Friday, April 6, 1979, and applicants must be available for inter­ view during the week of April 9. program help balance America's trade deficit, Greeley said. “Any major scientific goal generates new technology and strengthens the economy,” he added. Greeley cites as one of those benefits, the electronic chips that “drive” desk calculators. “The chips were developed because of the need for miniaturization on spacecraft,” he said. “Now, because of technology, these chips are so inexpensive, they’re practically throw-aways.” A long-term commitment to a space program requires funding of a manned orbital station, a manned base on the moon and an eventual manned landing on Mars, Greeley said. “Each of these projects is technologically possible, but too expensive to maintain congressional support,” Greeley said. A D D R E S S _______________________________________ — ---------- ________________________ ZIP______________ UN DERG RA DUA TE S C H O O L -----------------------------------------' PLEASE SEND: (CHECKBOXES) CATALOGUE □ FINANCIAL AID INFORMATION □ Edward H. Peplow Jr. Manager of Student Publications APPLICATION □ Page 8 State Press Friday, March 30,1979 Finances aremajor, concern Presidential hopefuls speak out Doug M oore Alan Drake Doug Moore said a total organizational shakedown of ASASU is needed to eliminate problems in finances and excess paper-shuffling. Making the ASASU president less a figurehead and more responsive to students is the goal of candidate Alan Drake. “ASASU money is going out in spits and fits to a very limited number of people,” he said. “Everyone pays for ASASU, but not everyone benefits from it. Organized groups like fraternities and sororities have more needs answered because they have a stronger voice.” Drake is a 22-year-old senior art major. “I feel that ASASU offers a majority of needed programs,” Moore said. “But they currently handle only 10-20 percent of the students. Moore, 26, is a senior in finance, and has been the director of ASASU’s Tenants’ Association for two years. Susie Eastridge Charles Herrera Lectures featured National Foreign Language Week will be observed at ASU with special programs and class lectures sponsored by Alpha Mu Gamma, the national foreign language honor society, April 1 to 8. Sanford Couch, ASU professor of Russian will open the event with a discussion at 7 p.m. on Sunday in the MU Yuma Room. Call 965-6281 for more details. W ANT TO BE A COMMISSIONED OFFICER? Army ROTC’s 2 Yr. Program Two ways to get started . . . Take your pick at 7:30 p.m . Friday March 30 B A S IC C A M P Purpose Baker Center 213 E. U niversity Dr. 967-7563 Fort Knox, Ky., 35 miles south of Louisville. D a te s a M ay 21 to June 28, 1979 b. June 11 to July 19, 1 9 79 c. July 9 to August 16, 1979 Training a b c d. e. f. g h i, Join thousands of law school applicants nationwide in A m ity’s LSAT Review Seminars C A L L T O L L -F R E E FOR D E T A IL S A N D L O C A L S C H E D U L E IN FO R M A TIO N : 800-243-4767 Ext 761 ATTENTION FACULTY Dr. David G ourley’s mar­ keting class is co n d u ct­ ing a survey fo r the State Press. One or m ore of the fo llo w in g group mem­ bers w ill be co n ta ctin g you fo r perm ission to survey your class: • J im K ueh n le • Ja n J u e ll Army ROTC Basic Camp provides military training to qualify students to enroll in advanced officer training at their college campuses. Location TAKING THE LSAT? “I like to think of the students as consumers,” Eastridge said. “It’s the student’s pocketbook.” Eastridge, 22, is a senior in political science and economics. Prepare Now for the Future SH A B BA T SERVICES HILLEL Focusing on students as bill-paying citizens and establishing a more con­ sistent rapport with the state Legislature are the goals of current ASASU activities vice president Susie Eastridge. Charles Herrera says he wants to form a student action committee to investigate student issues such as the quality of Saga foods and dorm rates. “Student affairs is getting an in­ finitesimal amount of money — 3.9 percent of the ASU budget — and should get a lot more,” he said. ' Herrera is a 25-year-old graduate student in educational theory. Army History, Role 8< Mission M ap Reading/Land Navigation Rifle Marksmanship Basic Leadership Techniques Physical T rain in g /M a rch e s Individual 8i Unit Tactics Communications First Aid Drill, Parades 8i Ceremonies 1 M ilitary Courtesy 8i Traditions Pay Approximately $ 4 5 0 plus travel expenses. Room & Board Lodging and meals are provided Students w ill live in open bay barracks OR O n C am pus S u m m e r P ro g ram Attend the two 5-week Mini Semesters this summer. FIRST SEMESTER 5 June - 6 July SECOND SEMESTER 10 July - 10 August 1. During the First Semester you take MS 101 and MS 201 2. During the Second Semester you take MS 102 and MS 202 Scholarships Basic Camp students may compete for 2-year full-tuition college scholarships. A detailed Basic Camp fact sheet and film are ‘ available Contact your Professor of M ilitary Science. _______ Completion of these four classes gives you credit for Basic Camp. Enter Advanced (2 yr.) Program for this Fall and start receiving financial support. You can receive several thousand dollars worth of aid, learn some new management skills and receive a commission as a 2nd Lieutenant. Serve Active or National Guard Reserve. • Bill H ayes • Susan S o to • Barry C ohen • Lyn T h o m as SEE US APRIL 4 - 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. SOUTHWEST SIDE OF THE M U (Student Center) OR CALL 965-3318/3319 -y// /////////////'y"' Friday, March 30, 1979 State Press Page 9 Six candidates round out South African prof field for vice-presidencies gets tar & feathers Executive V.P. Sam Armstrong Establishing a weekly checks and balances system for ASASU's budget and having the student Senate representatives elected are priorities of Sam Armstrong. Armstrong, 23, is a junior in economics. John Williamson said he promises to “work aggressively” to clarify the election code and to give more attention to artistic endeavors on campus. Williamson is a 27-year-old English major. John Williamson Campus Affairs V.P. Kevin Cosgrove Kevin Cosgrove said he wants ASASU officers to “get out of their ivory towers” and get closer to the students by opening lines of communication. Cosgrove, 23, is a junior in broadcasting. Marty Lownik places his top p rio rity in estab lish in g a university planning committee to find workable solutions to student problems like ASU's unplanned growth and the lack of student cohesiveness. Lownik, 20, is a junior in Business Administration. N EED M O N EY? 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! Marty Lownik We’ll get the job done for you and put money in your pocket too! Activities V.P. Gary Shiftman JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) White vigilantes tarred and feathered a local historian for criticizing the annual observance of the killing of 4,000 Zulu tribesmen by white settlers, police said Thursday. Professor Floors van Jaarsvled was about to deliver a paper Wednesday night at a theological conference at the University of South* Africa, in nearby Pretoria, when a gang of 40 young white men barged in. They commandeered the podium as 150 spectators watched aghast, then poured tar and feathers over the professor. One of the group, identifying himself as a member of the so-called Akrikaner Resistance Movement, then delivered a manifesto. Van Jaarsveld recently made some mild criticisms in local newspapers of one of the sacred observances of the history of Afrikaners. Gary Shiftman is pushing for a “ re c re atio n a l-e n te rta in m e n t” program that would provide music programs in unusual places ali over campus. Shiftman, 26, is a junior in education. ASASU’s assets can be used to bail out the weaker programs, according to Lori Tanner, who thinks the government needs to address itself to the parking and tuition problems. Tanner, 20, is a junior in history. PIONEER CAMERA SHOP, INC. TEM PE C E N TE R • T E M P E , A Z. 9 6 7 -4 6 6 2 o r 9 6 6 -8 3 6 3 Lori Tanner — presents — Thursdays — Ladies Nights No Cover for Ladies 25c Drinks 8-10 p.m . — To n ig ht thru S aturday— ★ DUSTY CHAPS ★ w ith M ichael C o llin s Entertainm ent Non-Stop from 8:15 The Camel Club 6820 5th Avenue — Scottsdale — NO PRICCS IOUJCR! (or we'll pay you the difference!) CHARMS • CHAINS • BAACCLCTS CHARMHOLDCAS • CARRINGS » RINGS CUSTOM PICCCS AVAIlASie All Pieces SOLID 14KT g o u > BSK (M O O T O U R CUSTOMCfl DISCOUNT CARO 6969 FIFTH AVENUE, SCOTTSDALE' (602) 941-2244 (one door south of SUJ comer 5th ave. & 70th s t) 994-4168 (1 block northeast of 68th St. & Indian School) WEDNESDAYS — JACK DANIELS — 85c — 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 xpires A p ril 7 , 1979 ________ Page 10 State Press Friday, March 30,1979 by DOONESBURY JTMM/.THERETS ALL RIGHT, THISISTHB ARUMORTHAT . LASTQUæ- W reretirjnô i noN- \ cm sraosputb . um M R Garry Trudeau THAPSABSURD TMRETHN68BCAUSBIN0L0N6ER.MNTT060 THROUGHTHE MOTIONSOF0BIN6A ROCKSTAR tUHEN IP RATHERBE vSOMETHINGBTSE. Grin and 'b e a rd 'it SAN FRANCISCO (AP) San Francisco police will be allowed to grow beards and goatees, even though Police Chief Charles Gain thinks it will make his men “the laughing stock of the country.” The city Police Commission, by a 4-1 vote Wednesday night, bowed to a petition from 120 officers to allow neatly trimmed beards. “We should be représentative of the community and its values,” undercover policeman Theodore Schlink III told the commission in urging approval. If we look like the community of 15 years ago, we’ll reflect attitudes from that era." Officer Douglass Kidd, who, like Schlink, is bearded and served on the undercover squad, appeared in uniform at the commission meeting to demonstrate that beards fit neatly within gas masks. Commissioners seemed fascinated, with president Richard Siggans commenting, “I wish I’d known about this — I’d have invited my kids.” YOUMEAN, BI ASASU ELECTIONS DEBATES Hear candidates for student government offices speak on the issues . . . and on their plans for A Special Offer From next year's ASASU a Primary Forum Tuesday - April 3 Sahuaro Hall 7:00 - 8:30 p.m. ASU Students . . . General Forum If you're over 18 you con rent u Ford Pinto or other fine ear at Monday - April 9 Palo Verde Main 8:00 - 9:30 p.m. S P EC IA L LOW W EEK EN D RATES storting at ^ 1 3 - 9 5 ” ^mileage (2 Day M in .) For Your Car. Call Your A .S .U . Representative STEVE BLAGEN Office located at Rural & University 968-4072 or 963-5786 Don't forget to vote in the prim ary , April 4-5 . . . and in the general elections , April 11-12 - Bill Grant ASASU Campus Affairs Vice President Friday, March 30,1979 State Press Page 11 Scenario shown U.S. behind Asian invasion, in film rinqs true. Socialist party member says consultant says 9 " W " By Jim Muhlstein Nuclear officials have questioned the technical accuracy of the film “China Syndrome” in recent weeks with a bombardment of press releases. Actually, Wednesday's accident at a Pennsylvania nuclear power plant went further than the film did, Richard Hubbard, a technical consultant on the movie “China Syndrome,” said Thursday. “There are so many similarities between the movie and what happened at Three Mile Island, the list is endless," Hubbard said. “We could have portrayed something much more dramatic than we did. Hubbard is a former manager of General Electric's Nuclear Division in San Jose, Calif. In the 14 years that he worked for GE, he was responsible for design quality and manufacturing of reactor parts. Hubbard quit his job in February 1976, along with two other long time employees, Greg Minor and P ale Bridenbaugh. Together they formed MHB Technical Associates, Inc., a con­ sultant firm in Palo Alto, Calif, which has advised the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, state attorneys general and the Swedish and German governments on matters of reactor safety. “We quit because we had always thought the designs were relatively foolproof,” Hubbard said. “But there were just too many instances that proved us wrong.” The men were requested by actor-director Michael Douglas to assist as technical consultants on the “China Syndrome” script and movie set. The movie dramatizes the possibility of an uncooled nuclear reactor fuel core burning hundreds of feet into the earth. Hubbard said it was not easy for the men to give up their jobs at GE. “We grew up in it,” he said. “Bridenbaugh came from South Dakota where he was without electricity until he was 16. His first job out of college was working at the Chicago Dresden Plant No. 1, the first nuclear plant in the country.” “China Syndrome” is based on actual accidents occurring at the Dresden Plant No. 2 and the Brown’s Ferry Plant at Decatur, Ala. in 1975, in addition to "things that we know first-hand can happen,” Hubbard said, “If we just tried to scare people, as some of these releases imply, we would have done a pictorial of the Brown s Ferry plant fire, he said. “We could have shown the fire, the dark smoke, workers running around with oxygen masks on, the lights out. “It was a madhouse. That’s what we could have shown,” Hubbard said. . The fire at Brown’s Ferry started when a candle flame, being used to test a wall seal for airtightness, ignited the seal instead. It was the third such accident a t the plant, Hubbard said. “The stuck water pressure meter in the film actually occured at Dresden, Brown’s Ferry and Three Mile Island,” he said. “The machines are designed so that they automatically take care of everything, shutting down and sealing up the plant.” But the movie never goes any further than that, Hubbard said. “In ‘Syndrome” we did just what they did at Dresden; we manually jockeyed the valves to release the high pressure and heat that resulted from stopping the reactor,” he said. “The accident at Three Mile went further with fuel damage and off-site contamination,” he said. “In so many ways it was similar, yet the ending is so much worse in real life.” , Hubbard said the future of nuclear power plants will be dependent on the resolution of two problems the government is well aware of. The NRC made a report to Congress in January outlining specific problems faced by peace-time nuclear industry. One point in the report had to do with known unsolved problems with the steam generators used in all pressurized water systems, Hubbard said. - When you’re in trouble, who.can help? A onetim e teenage drug-user, an ex-M arine turned governor, and a woman executive learned they could count on God. Hear them tell how they found God to be Presented by C hurches o t C hrist, S c ie n tis t in th e V a lle y o f th e S un . Sun day m ornin g a t 11:00 over i/w a n V U Sasll 4*1 PSiannal 49 Bv By Ksthv Kathy Penick The United States was behind the Chinese invasion into Vietnam! a former congressional candidate said at ASU Thursday. “The United States wants to maintain its dictatorship in Vietnam. China wanted to prevent the colonial revolution there and without U.S. intervention, the worker’s revolution would have been successful,” Betsy McDonald, a Socialist Workers Party candidate who un­ successfully challenged Rep. Morris Udall, DAriz., last year, said. McDonald was on campus to talk with students and sell copies of The Militant, the party’s official newspaper. Although she said her party is against all capitalistic enterprises, ranging from Arizona’s copper mines to restaurant chains, McDonald - fc m said the newspaper is “put out by and for the workers.” “Our paper prints things that other papers either itmore or print only very little about,” she said. McDonald said employment opportunities for minorities are few. “When a government can tell 50 percent of the young blacks in a city like Los Angeles that they will never have a job under this system, then something is wrong.” The Socialist Workers Party, McDonald said, favors a country run entirely by the working class. Everyone should work for the good of all, toward goals of 100 percent employment, health care, housing and education. McDonald said the people would have the final say on how these goals are achieved. w F jih s e n e s o PretTy P R ET T Y B A B Y Thursday & Friday 7 & 9 p.m. each evening H E LP & LET IT BE Saturday & Sunday 7 & 9 p.m. each evening . Page 12 State Press Friday, March 30,1 97 9 SPAI! JONES: CHRIST] ARTS & Reprinted from J People all over the world are horrified and puzzled by the Jonestown, Guyana atrocity. Questions are being asked: Who was the Rev. Jim Jones? What kind of religion did he teach? Why did he order the murder and suicide of over 900 of his followers? The answers provided by most of our media during the week following the news of the murder of Congressman Leo Ryan and four others in his group at the Kaituma airstrip have been confused, inaccurate and misleading. Our media have concealed, misrepresented, ir downplayed the key element in (he philosophy o f Jim ones. He was a long-time dedicated Marxist com­ munist who admired totalitarian communist dic­ tatorships such as the Soviet Union and Cuba so much that he built one o f his own in Guyana. It was tiny, with fewer than 1,000 inhabitants, but it had many striking resemblances to the dictatorships it was modeled after. E N T E R T A IN M E N T • The Inhabitants were not free to leave Jonestown. Those who tried to escape were severely punished. « Family members were kept in Jonestown as hostages to enable the dictator to exert control over those who were on the outside. • The inhabitants were cut o ff from free com­ munication with the outside world. The news they got was filtered through the dictator. • They were subjected to the constant blare of ex­ hortations and instructions by loudspeaker, one o f the techniques o f the Chinese communists. • They were forced to attend lengthy meetings, listening to the political harrunguesof Jones, after having worked ten to twelve hours in the fields. This is another technique o f the Chinese communists. >They were trained in what to say to visitors and were „ adept as the Chinese, and Soviets in putting on a good show and concealing the harsh reality. • They were not permitted to own any substantial personal properly, making them totally dependent on the dictator for their subsistence and survival. • They were in mortal fear o f the dictator's armed guards and "hit squads." which they believed would track them down and murder them if they should leave. » They were punished if they complained about food or living conditions, and they were afraid to express dis­ satisfaction even privately. • There was no religious observance in the com­ munity. apart from the obeisance to the all-powerful New w aves: S ta tio n 's 'p ro g re ssive ' m u sic rip p le s radio By Tom Sammons Phoenix has more radio stations than any other city in the nation of comparable size, so one would expect at least a single frequency to play progressive rock music. Not so* There’s a lot of mellow music. Talk shows and news radio can be found at a flip of the dial and album-oriented stations cover the radio band. But recently one Phoenix station, K104 FM, decided to dip its toe into the pool of progressive music in hopes that a vast audience was being ignored and would tune in on their new format. The switch to progressive is not really analogous to a dainty toe-dip, but more resembles an early morning plunge into a freezing stream for Bob Bailie and John McCrea. According to operations director Bailie, the station is in its third week of broadcast and judging by the public’s phone calls and letters so far, the station is off to a fast start. Still Bailie remains cautious in affirming that he hit the formula for success with K104. “The response has been phenomenal in the first two weeks,” he said. “We didn't publish the station’s phone number and still we had well over 100 calls a day from people saying they like what we’re doing. “Especially represented are people who have just moved out here and miss the progressive radio they were used to at home,” Bailie said. “It’s very satisfying but I’m cautiously optomistic.” The decision to switch K104 FM and KIOG, its sister AM station, to progressive was “hectic and nerve-racking,” Bailie said. But he and music director McCrea felt there was an audience waiting in the Valley so they went ahead “with some trepidation.” Formerly the station played mellow rock and garnered extremely low ratings. Since sations “live and die by the ratings,” as Bailie explained, a drastic change was needed to rescue K104 before its new owners arrived. “There was some element of risk involved as to whether or not the audience and advertisers dictator. Jones. • The workers were poorly fed, poorly housed and overworked, while the dictator lived in luxury . would like it,” he said. “We’re not looking to m a k e a million with it, we just want to make a living.” The new owners of the station are awaiting FCC approval for the station and Bailie hopes to have a handy increase in listeners under his belt when the new bosses arrive in May. “We are in the unusual position of haying to wait for the new owners and by th at time we hope to show an increase so they won’t mind the changes. Who would want to change it if its successful?” . The life-giving ratings period is in mid-April, so by June, Bailie and McCrea hope to have official proof of their new-found success. “If we show up halfway decently we’ll get national advertising, but now we have mostly local spots," he said. Ratings are important to executives and advertisers, but the public couldn’t care less about Arbitrons and Neilsens; they want to hear music. “We don’t go for the self-gratification trip here. It’s the people who will tell you if you give them the m usk they want to hear,” Bailie said. Bailie would not detail what the station's music formula is, but opted for thè freewheeling label. The exact music formula is a big secret," he said. For now K104 is trying to build up a library of music from the mellow music shift and is con­ sciously avoiding too much hype. Two weekly features are the initial mainstays: a one-hour BBC concert program featuring the likes of Al Stewart, Renaissance, The Police and Average White Band. Also, Dr. Demento, a California favorite, will run in a two-hour Sunday show of “bizarre, humorous music.” • The settlement could not deliver the standard o f liv­ ing promised to the inhabitants, and it relied heavily on external contributions. Lenin Reincarnated The evidence that Jim Jones was a Marxist com­ munist does not derive solely from the fact that he established a communist settlement in the Marxist state o f Guyana. Jones made no bones about the fact that he was a Marxist. His wife, Marceline, in an interview given to the New York Times in 1977, said that when ones was 18 years old, his idol was Mao Tse-tung. She said his goal was social change through Marxism. The Chicago Tribune on November 22, quoted a form er follower o f Jones, M rs. Wanda Johnson, as saying: " H e told us on many occasions he was the rein­ carnation of Lenin. H e told us this time he would he successful in installing a socialist state in A m erica." She also said that on several occasions Jones spoke of killing then President Nixon or kidnapping the children o f any public figure if he fell it would bring about a socialist form o f government in the United States. The Tribune was the only paper of several that we examined that made any mention of this impor­ tant revelation by Mrs. Johnson. The Washington Post and The New York Times on the previous day did mention the reincarnation-of-Lenin claim, using a soft version, and giving it no prominence. Both of these papers ignored the charge that Jones was willing to kill the president and kidnap children of public figures to bring about socialism. However, The Times did say on November 21 that Mrs. Johnson had revealed that Jones’ inner circle had signed statements saying that they were willing to kill their enemies, including government officials and all former members. Both of these papers described the suicide drills that Jones put his followers through. The Post’s account in­ cluded this paragraph: With all the reaction from Valley listeners Bailie admits “his heart is feeling good.” Still, he and McCrea appear to have avoided the fate that befalls many in the “ratings or else” ratio business. “Whenever there’s an ownership change you feel wary. When new owners come in, sometimes the first thing they do is hand out the pink slips.” "According lo form er cull member Tim Sloen, Jones frequently pul his congregation through tests. *He would pass around a brown liquid,' Stoen said in a West Coast television interview telecast yesterday (November 20) and tell everyone lo drink it. A fter they drank it, he would tell them they would die in about an hour. Mean­ while, he would ask them lo stand up one by one and tell the group why they were proud and honored to die fo r socialism '." (Washington Post, 1 1/2 1/78 , p. A 15) SCHOLARSHIPS TO 1 B m people V / % Power hr Hn ■ w V prevent " defects March of Dimes TH IS SPACE C O NTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER M EDICAL/OSTEOPATHIC SCHOOL available to students entering or already enrolled. U .S. citizens between 19 and 33 years old. Full tu itio n , authorized fees, books and $400 cash per m onth. For further inform ation on Navy Health Professions Scholarships contact Tom H ull at (602) 2 61-3158/3600 (collect). 1 The Times gave a different version of Stoen’s state­ ment, which was not as strong, but it was in the lead paragraph of a page-one story. It said: "H e has mass suicide drills, where he tells all the people, hundreds of people, to drink a certain drink, and he says, ‘That’s fatal. You’re all going to die in 45 minutes. I want to see how you feel about dying for socialism’." Jonestown was described as "a n experiment in so­ cialism where money, power, and elitism had been eliminated." In her 1977 interview with The New York Times, Mrs. Marceline Jones described her husband’s aim as " a Marxist social group." and she said that was what he was building in Guyana. Despite all the evi­ dence that Jones was a Marxist and admirer of the j Soviet Union and Castro’s Cuba, reporters not only avoided calling him a communist, but also went out of their wa> to qualify his socialism with adjectives such as "u to p ian ," "quasi-religious," and "agrarian." We could find not a single article in the mass media Bodies o f m ore than 9 0 0 membei that probed into Jones' Marxist beliefs and All the remarks we have cited above were references in articles devoted to other subj were written about his religious backgrc tivities, which, as we shall see, were phoi simply a means to his political ends, spawned articles on unrelated cults, on th of mass suicide, on Jones' sex life, on po who were connected with Jones or had v commending him. But there were no ar ideology which was his main inspiration, c< The Unmentionabi I I lx not clear why editors should coacea Jones' newspaper, The People's Forum praise fo r communist regimes. Why shoult a “ no-no" lo mention that in 1977. the Re lo Cuba specifically to meet with Huey leader of the far left Black Panthers? Forum of M arch 1977, reported that Jone about conditions in Cuba. He »ported I dard o f living was "fantastic." Jor followers that the Cuban peoplr were enlh the way Castro was running things. Th total freedom, he said. The Washington [ quotes. It never reported them. Having been told nothing about Jones' the Soviet Union and Cuba, many people ’ puzzled by a UPI dispatch that was publ papers on November 25. It told of a d preceded the suicides at Jonestown. Accot the survivors, one woman spoke up sayir was not the only option, that they could g Union or Cuba. She was shouted down. This was followed by an even greale following day. Three survivors said that J had ordered them lo deliver a suites $500,000 and a letter to the Soviet emba town, Guyana, after the suicides. They si It over to Guyanan authorities. It was alsi Jones himself had talked of emigrating U nion, telling his followers that it was land. He had discussed with a Soviet possibility o f moving his followers en U .S .S .R . The Phoney Prea Diverting attention away from his c< made easier by the fact that Jones himse! been masquerading as a Christian and ; He was an ordained minister of the Dis< denomination, which has around 1.3 mi But he had been exposed as a religious Lester Kinsolving in eight articles writt Francisco Examiner in 1972. (The Exai four o f them, capitulating to pressure f his followers.) Kinsolving exposed the I claimed to have literally resurrected people, that his service featured the beat and forced public confessions of non-exi faith healings, and the regular use o f * book. Mrs. Jim Jones (old The New York (hat her husband had decided when he v (hat (he way to achieve his Marxist goals people through religion. "Jim used relig some people out of the opia*e of relig adding that be had once slammed a Bil and said, " I ’ve got to destroy this pap York Times, 11/26/78, p. 20.1 The Times informs us that Jone* contemptuous of religion among his as: York Times. 11/21/78, p. A 16>. But he entice new recruits and to deceive naive the victims were hooked, he used sex timidation and psychological dependent them. At Jonestown, where there were be deceived, there were no religious sei sions of religion. (Washington Post, II Jones had so corrupted people who * Christians that they would commit aduli sexual acts with him or others on his c would even commit murder at his com, murder of their own children, as we now Religion was nothing butj> cover I Friday, March 3 0 ,1979 Stata Prea» Page 13 ■PAID ADVERTISEMENT i RISTIAN OR COMMUNIST? Reprinted from AIM Report. December I, 1978 (abridged) could be beautiful." On November 22, NBC News aired a half-hour spe­ cial television report on Jonestown. It never once I mentioned socialism, Marxism or communism, even | though the title was, “ Jonestown, November 1978: How Could It Happen?" At the very beginning, ! narrator Edwin Newman said: "Jam es Warren Jones, better known as the Rev. Jim Jones, to some, he was a I powerful soiritual leader, a good man. At various times I he said he ws the reincarnation of Christ and Lenin.” That was as close as NBC got to suggesting that Jones ] may have been a man of the left. Having neglected to tell its viewers that Jones* group was a communist group in action, NBC put on a Dr. Frederick Hacker, who said, " I believe these sects and cults are really mini-fascist organizations in action. They use terroristic means o f intimidation in order to force their members to adopt a certain philosophy, a certain way of life, and a certain thinking." »re than 9 0 0 members o f Jim Jones’ People’s T e m p le lay dead in G uyana. ics’ Marxist beliefs and connections, have cited above were only passing t devoted to other subjects. Articles his religious background and ac­ re shall see, were phoney and were 3 his political ends. The tragedy unrelated cults, on the psychology Jones' sex life, on political figures d with Jones or had written letters But there were no articles on the his main inspiration, communism. nentionables t editors should conceal the fact that The People’s forum , was full of st regimes. Wh> should it have been on that in 1977, the Rev. Jones went y to meet with Huey MewIon, the left Black Panthers? The People’s 177, reported that Jones was«cstatic i Cuba. He reported that the slan­ ts* “ fantastic.” Jones told his uban people were enthusiastic about is running things. The people had aid. The Washington Post had these orted them. j nothing about Jones’ fondness for id Cuba, many people were probably dispatch that was published in some ber 25. It told of a discussion that es at Jonestown. According to one of woman spoke up saying that suicide >tion, that they could go to the Soviet e was shouted down. 'ed by an even greater surprise the ee survivors said that Jones' mistress i to deliver a suitcase containing ter to the Soviet embassy in Georgeer the suicides. They said they turned i authorities. It was also revealed that I talked of emigrating to the Soviet followers that it was the promised cussed with a Soviet diplomat the ving his followers en masse to the mey Preacher tion away from his communism was . fact that Jones himself had for years ig as a Christian and a man of God. ed minister of the Disciples of Christ lich has around 1.3 million members, exposed as a religious faker by Rev. in eight articles written for the San ier in 1972. (The Examiner ran only litulating to pressure from Jones and nsolving exposed the fact that Jones literally resurrected more than 40 rvice featured the beating of children confessions of non-existent sins, fake d the regular use of a Marxist song s told The New York Times in 1977 had decided when he was 21 years old hieve his Marxist goals was to mobilize •ligion. “ Jim used religion to try to gel of the opiate of religion,*' she said, id once slammed a Bible on the table got to destroy this paper idol!'* (New •6/78, p. 20.) iforms us that Jones “ was openly religion among his associates." (New 11/78, p. A 16). But he used religion to Is and to deceive naive outsiders. After hooked, he used sex, blackmail, iniychological dependence to manipulate >wn, where there were no outsiders to t were no religious services or discus(Washington Post, 11/25/78, p. A 3.) irrupted people who were once good ev would commit adulterous or homohim or others on his command. They nil murder at his compiand, even the wn children, as we now know. lOthing hut a cover for Jones* com H ide Vlndd photo munist ideology, but most reporters, like a pack of greyhounds, went chasing after the fake rabbit. CBS News takes the prize for this most asinine performance on November 22: Walter Cronkite: A t the end, cull leader Jim Jones was described as a drug-crazed, paranoid, power-hungry fascist, but whal o f Ibis man whose ultimate command led his flock to mass suicide. Betsy Aaron reports. Betsy Aaron: It was called the People's Temple, but it was really Rev. Jim Jones* temple. Jim Jones was the reason people came, looking fo r love and for God. Jim Jones: Now as we meditate. God is love. Love is a healing remedy. 1*1 us believe, let us believe. Aaron: A kind o f intense warmth emanated from this man. His message was traditional and positive. It was Some writers were a little more subtle in their efforts to work the transfer of the negative association to some­ thing other than communism. Max Lerner, in addition to falsely portraying Jones’ followers as simple Chris­ tians, evoked the Hitler image: "Jim Jones mastered the art of conditioning his followers to obedience. He did it with a devilish ingenuity, as Hilter did it with millions, as Manson did it with his own little cult." Robert Geline of the Time-Life News Service, in an article in The Washington Star of November 26, said this: "P aul (a member of the Jonestown commune) remembers that Jones used to preach on the evils of Nazi Germany and show films of the concentration camps on the settlement's sophisticated closed-circuit TV system. Incredibly, while this 'teaching was going on, the communers would salute Jones at the beginning I of each mass meeting with an upraised right arm ex­ tended, fist clenched. They did everything but shout, ‘Sieg H e ir." Mr. Geline surely knows that the upraised clenched fist is the communist salute, not the Nazi. This clumsy effort at transfer fails, at least with those readers who know what the clenched fist salute signifies. the gospel o f Jesus. Jones: I love you. The people love you, and most im ­ portantly, Christ loves you. Aaron: He gave hope to the poor. He gave help to the infirm . There were doubters who questioned his cures, but to his congregation the power o f God was present in Jim Jones. The program went on to show one of Jones’ fake faith healings, the curing of a supposedly lame woman. No question was raised about the authenticity of the cure, although it is known that these cures were staged by Jones and his cohorts. This irresponsible reporting gave rise to reactions such as the one expressed in a letter in The Washington Post on November 26, ‘which said: “ In Guyana, organized religion once again has dropped its mask of benignity and revealed its ugliness." It also led columnist Max Lerner to write in The New York Post of November 26: "B ut Jones’ followers were simple people, eager for a belief that would link them ti> a purer, more primitive Christian faith... They were a community of the faithful, a republic of the innocent. A note from one o f these “ innocents’ * found on Jones' body said: “ I fear that without you the world may not make it to communism." The ideology o f Jonestown was communism, not Christianity, but the media have obscured rather than explained that fact. Jones as a Fascist While the media scrupulously avoided calling Jones a communist, which he was, there was a rush to label him a fascist, which he was not. Walter Cronkite mentioned that he had been described as " a power-hungry fascist." Mort Sahl, an erstwhile nightclub comedian who presides over a radio talk show in Washington, D.C., came out with this beauty on November 24: "The exercise in Guyana was a fascist exercise, no matter what the label on the can. Socialists don’t do th at." We have not as yet been able to ascertain whether Mr. Sahl applies the fascist label to such states as the Soviet Union, Cuba, Red China, Vietnam and Cambodia, or whether he is simply unaware of the close resemblance of Jonestown to those societies. Charles Krause, the Washington Post reporter who accompanied the Ryan parly to Jonestown, seems to share Sabi's view that “ socialists don’ t do th a t." In an article published on November 22, he tells o f Jones' son, Steven, being asked (presumably by Krause) " i f Jonestown had not been an experiment in fascism— with its armed guard and other means o f preventing people from leaving— rather than an experiment in socialism.' Steven Jones reflected the same point o f view, replying, " M y father was the fascist. Jonestown was and still WHAT YOU CAN DO You can help combat biased reporting and protect yourself from media misinform ation by joining A IM , reading the A IM Report, and following sug­ gestions it makes. Contributions to A IM are taxdeductible. Join A IM today and we will send as a special bonus a FR E E copy o f The Terrors o f Justice, an im portant new book by Maurice Stans that retails fo r $10.9$. O ffe r good for limited time only. Act now! N a m e ______________ __________________ — -------A ddress______ ! C ity, Stale. Zip . PA ID A D V E R T IS E M E N T S ’Stylist of Seville’ survives its slicing We always hurt the ones we love, so the saying goes, and perhaps no other opera has suffered more in the hands of its interpreters than Rossini’s beloved “Barber of Seville," So many changes in orchestration, voice parts and characterization have crept in that the opera might be aptly renamed “The Hairstylist of Seville.’ Even in its present state, the piece is great entertainment, as demonstrated Monday night by the New York City Opera Theater in Gammage Center. The company’s choice of the English version by Ruth and Thomas Martin certainly brought the play alive. But it is unfortunate that this progressive opera company has not yet developed an English language adaptation based on the revised, musically “cleaned up” edition recently offered by Rlcordi, the Italian publishing house. . . . Typical of the encrustations of time is the transformation of the heroine, Rosina, from mezzo-contralto to coloratura soprano. This But as w ith the transfer o f the negative reaction to re­ ligion or other religious groups, the transfer from com­ munism to fascism met with solne success. The Wash­ ington Post on November 26 ran two letters to the editor drawing parallels between Jones* followers and the Nazis. N o letters were published which even mentioned that the group was Socialist, Marxist or communist. W hy the Carnage? On November 24, CBS News aired a half-hour special, “ The Horror of Jonestown,” in which the question “ why” was repeatedly asked with no satisfac­ to ry answer being supplied. It was similar to the NBC production in that it never brought up Jones’ Marxism. Nor did it challenge the sincerity of his religious professions. Like NBC, CBS News looked to psychologists to provide answers, rather than to experts in totalitarian societies. Not having asked the right questions, it is not surprising that the networks and the rest of the media have not come up with any satisfactory answers. An important question that no one has asked is whether or not the Jonestown commune was succeed­ ing. All the propaganda out of Jonestown said that everything was going great, but the evidence o f the survivors does not support that. The people worked 10 to 12 hours a day on a meager subsistence diet. Some have said that the dogs ate better than the people. Meat was served only when outside visitors came. Housing was deplorable, with 14 people, including married coup­ les. crowded into a room 12 x 20 feet. They had zero privacy. Jones deliberately tried to destablize families, encouraging husbands and wives to live separately and promoting adulterous relationships. This was no Eden. Without coercion it would crumble. Jonestown s*as a failure and no one knew it better than Jones. He had too big an ego to accept defeat, and the mass suicide offered a way out.. If everyone died, Jonestown would be forever shrouded in mystery, with people asking why it happened and never being quite satisfied with the answer. Its darkest secrets would remain hidden. Why did the followers go along? Some thought as Jones did. Those who differed obviously saw no hope of saving themselves by resisting. With the guards training their guns on them, they were no doubt right. THE TRUTH COMES OUT The above article appeared in the A IM R E P O R T on December 1. On December 20, The New Y ork Times reported that a personal history written hy Jim Jones and found among his effects revealed that “ M r . Jones was always a Communist and that he used his religious connections only to further Communist ends and to politicize congregations.” That was whal A IM said 20 days earlier. Reprints of this page available from A IM • In “Th# Barber of Seville,” Dr. Bartolo emphasizes a point to Roslna [Arlene Randazzo] and the Sergeant of police [W illiam Cason] in New York City Opera Theaters produc­ tion at Gammage. To: ACCURACY IN MEDIA (AIM) 777 14th St., N .W ., Washington, D.C. 20005 YES, I want to join AIM and get the A IM Report. □ $15 for one year enclosed. Cl Charge VISA card # -------------------------------Expires ... ......................—---------------• (1 Send FREE copy of The Terrors o f Justice ( W o n 't send unless checked) G I want to support your work with my tax deductible contribution of $------- —------------- • M u sic * production's Rosina, Arlene Randazzo, had to strain to give her character the needed air of determination, since the frothy vocalizing expected of a coloratura fights against her. So do the high notes, which she would be wise to omit. The role of Count Almaviva calls for a tenor voice that can move, and Roger Lucas, with his light, agile voice, is equal to the demands of the part. His opening canzona, “Ecco ridente in cielo” was splendidly sung, but lost much of its Spanish flavor due to the unaccountable absence of guitar accompaniment. Forrest Lorey brings an exceptional vocal gift to the role of Figaro; he not only possesses a beautiful and secure high A note, but also good judgment in its use. n His superb rendering of the “Largo al factotum, one of operas most demanding baritone arias, brought a long ovation from the near-capacity audience. The only disturbing facet of his performance was his preoccupation with facing the audience squarely, preferably well downstage. With a voice of his magnitude, this is not necessary. . . .. Carlo Thomas’ portrayal of Dr. Bartolo, Rosina s doddering old guardian, was done with enormous energy and acting skill. His bass voice successfully filled the vast spaces of the center, no matter what his position on stage. Thomas’ scenes with Scott Reeve, the production s excellent Don Basiho, were among the evening's most satisfying. Joyce Gerber as Berta, and William Cason in the double role of Fiorello and the Sergeant, were both musically convincing and genuinely funny. Packaging an opera to go on tour is a difficult task, and seldom does a traveling show escape without some dents and scratches. Some technical aspects of the production are bound to suffer and the wear and tear on singers and instrumentalists is great. But the pleasures for the audience can also be great. Such was the case Monday night. Arrivederci, New York City Opera. —William Bryan ! G4MPUS CLE4NERS & COIN-OP LAUNDROMAT •SUEDE AND LEATHER CLEANING •ALTERATIO NS «HAND IRONING •F LU F F DRY «WASH »DRY »FOLD One Day Service on Dry Cleaning and Finished Shirts OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK iyiLLLU lit-liLL GVUiU. 967*9650 * TEMPE Corner of University & Rural Rd. i i Page 14 State Press Friday, March 30,1979 TKO pale imitation in shadow of Who Let It Roll, TKO, Infinity. Is this the Who, or what? Even the name of this new group sounds similar to the now legendary English rock band, the Who. TKO does a fairly respectable job of imitating them on a couple songs, but generally their music is redundant where the Who’s is pure power. Witness a few of TKO’s song titles like “Gutter Boy,” “Kill the Pain” and “Bad Sister.” All of them are in the same vein of music and sound like they are driven by a pair of blasting .38 pistols instead of drums. Brad Sinsel, lead vocalist, sounds more like Roger Daltry than the blond vocalist himself. Sinsel sings on all the album’s songs respectably and puts in a good per­ formance in this debut album. All the songs are written by band members, most of them collaborations in one way or another, but the theme is overworked and not backed up musically. How many different ways can you say ‘I’m alienated' before the message comes across like a club on the head? A couple of TKO’s songs are catchy, like “Bad Sister” and “Only Love,” but for the most p a rt it’s strictly imitation. N ight R ider, Tim Weisberg, MCA records. In comparison with his last few albums. Night Rider is far less punchy than Tim Weisberg’s last efforts, but the effect of this one is pleasing. Weisberg is a pioneer with his distinctive flute recordings and lyric-less songs. After listening to his albums, the realization sets in that he doesn’t need any vocal addition because his flute carries songs and entire albums. Weisberg isn't a rock artist and he’s not in the jazz category; the bearded flutist is in a category of his own. Night Rider is extremely soft in touch and lacks the lengthy improvisation that marked Weisberg’s other albums. “Canterbury Tales,” a short song at the end of side one, is an amazing song in which Weisberg sounds as though he is playing every type of flute made to per­ fection. Before N ight R ider, Weisberg collaborated with Dan Fogelberg on Twin Sons of a Different Mother, a good album that appears to have influenced and toned down his previously rangy but equally pleasing style. W eisberg is an ac­ complished artist who knows his instrument like a good friend, and has proven what he can do with it on Night Rider. —Tom Sammons Blues chase away fans in Clapton performance Eric Clapton and Muddy W aters performed fine shows at the Tucson Community Center Wednesday night. One day after his m arriage to George Harrison’s ex-wife, Patti Boyd, Clapton and his new band performed new as well as old songs and had most of the crowd Poodles in co rp orate satire Cult band adept rockers The Fabulous Poodles were formed in 1974 in England, where they have gained a substantial reputation as a satirical, pop-rock cult band, take their name and cue from Frank Zappa. They are rockers first, jokers second. And, like th eir fin est English predecessors, the Kinks and the early Who, the Poodles combine conflicting elements with graceful nonchalance. Mirror Stars, the band’s American debut album on Epic, is similar in shape and angle to the Who, as it concerns itself with a young man who fails at the standard social-climbing vehicles, and then ultimately succeeds. “Work Shy,” takes care of employment blues. “Tit Photographer” treats a littleconsidered predicament of proximity and want (A seedy flashgun gigolo/I got the tit photographer’s blues”). “Toytown People,” (“Shiny shoes on shiny feet and glue upon their hair”) is a Zappa-like tune. “Mr. Mike” lets the Poodles play microphone in a kind of soft-core Romper HURRY! FINAL WEEK! I Room endearment, “Roll Your Own” is about dope, of course, “Oh Cheryl,” about love, and “B-Movie” completes this thoroughly diverse collection of songs. Some of the songs on Mirror Stars were done in England last year on a Pye records album produced by the Who’s John Entwistle — “Roll Your Own, “Mr. Mike,” “Cherchez La Femme” and “Work Shy” — but have been remixed by the band and Howard Kilgore, Poodles engineer. The balance of the LP was produced this year by Muff Winwood and the Poodles in England. The Poodles are Tony de Meur (vocals, guitar and harmonica), Bobby Valentino (mandolin, guitar and vocals), Bryn B. Burrows (drums, vocals, screams) and Richie C. Robertson (bass guitar, vocals and lead guitar). The bottom line is gratifying: if the Poodles had to stop being clever and funny, they’d still provide a substantial challenge on any terms to “straight” rock bands. —Judd Burns & C Ï: A P R IL LSAT & MCAT Call Days Evenings A Weekends m u te S tarring JOHN DELU5HI plus “STARCRASH” |||‘ Educational Canter 9 6 7 -2 9 6 7 C la s s e s F o rm in g N O W !! For Inform« lion Aboul Other Centers In More Than 80 Major US Cities * Abroad Outside NY State CALL TOLL FREE: SOO-223-17S2 on its feet. But Clapton also can play the blues, and as a consequence lost quite a few folks early in the show. Playing less than a 90minute set, it was nonetheless gratifying to see the legend perform. —Judd Burns M e n ’s & W o m e n 's R u n n in g S h o e s Reg. $29.95 $29.95 SALE $19.95 $24.95 $33.95 $33.95 $36.95 $27.95 $27.95 $29.95 Rocket Easy Rider $29.95 $39.95 $24.95 $34.95 E to n k /k M Street Fighter Men’s & Ladies Stabilizer Men’s & Ladies $34.95 $38.95 $31.00 $33.00 SAUCONY Men’s Gripper Women’s Gripper $28.95 $28.95 $19.95 $19.95 N IK E i Lady Waffle Trainer Men's Waffle Trainer N e w B a la n c e Men’s 320 Women’s 320 Trail 355 m sm a Track Spikes t All Purpose Cleats t« g . S au co n y Mercury W o m en 's Blue S p eed S tars SA LE *¡9.95 $21.95 *21.95 *17.00 * 1 8 .0 0 * 1 8 .0 0 Just |n tim e lo r L ittle League! Reg. P um a All P urpose $19.95 Nike All P u rp o se *13.95 sa le * 1 7 .0 0 * 1 0 .5 0 TENNIS SHOES W ils o n B eta Poly M a tc h . R eg. * 2 1 .9 5 SALE HOURS Monday & Friday 9 30 - 6 00 Tuesday & Wednesday & Thursday 9 30 8 00 Saturday 9 00 - 6 00 AN Sale Merchandise Limited le Quantity in Stock $17.00 MARSHALL’S Al ° “ A-BETA THRIFTY RLAZA Now playing at a theatre near you. Check local newspaper for specific theatre listing. SPORTING GOODS 1843 N. S c o tts d « lo R oad T a m p a , A riz o n a 9 4 7 -1 0 9 5 a MARTIN RITT/ROSE AND ASSEYEV production "NORMA RAE" SALLY FIELD RON LEIBMAN BEAU BRIDGES PAT HINGLE BARBARA BAXLEY screenplay by IRVING RAVETCH and HARRIET FRANK, JR. music DAVID SHIRE director of photography JOHN A. ALONZO, A.S.C. produced by TAMARA ASSEYEV and ALEX ROSE directed by MARTIN RITT "IT GOES LIKE IT GOES" lyrics by NORMAN GIMBEL music by DAVID SHIRE COLOR BY DeLUXE* f ^ \ |P G i P**m6utwct sumestid«b > ) ©1«7VItMNIItlHCfNIUfty»OX (muirenewaluwnotae«¿ram*so*cmSB II a h In ' ------ j Seta Ru m m * «Fi Set.. Mardi 31, 1979 L>♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Friday, March 30,1979 State Press Page 15 U n c u t version to be aired HARD CONTACT LENSES 979.95 SOFT CONTACT LENSES $99.95 Network resurrects film LOS ANGELES (AP) It’s one of those rare, happy coincidences in commercial television — a substantial, artfully constructed film that also prom ises to deliver good ratings. It might seem a little crude, if not blasphemous, to consider Franco Zef­ firelli’s “Jesus of Nazareth” and the A. C. Nielsen ratjngs company in the same instant. But had “Jesus” not shown well in the ratings in its first outing two years ago, you can bet NBC wouldn’t devote four nights to it, artful or not, Easter or no Easter. But because Zeffirelli’s powerful film drew an audience, an even better “Jesus of Nazareth” is being presented this time around. Partly because of ad­ vertising problems and partly because of doubts as to its clout; NBC only allotted two 3 Vi-hour slots for “Jesus of Nazareth” in 1977. Several minutes of Zeffirelli’s eight-hour film were cut to accommodate the programming slots, including a couple of im­ portant scenes. Not so this time. Four two-hour segments will .comprise the miniseries, beginning Sunday, running on Monday and Tuesday, then concluding on Easter Sunday. The lengthened “Jesus of Nazareth” is really more of a restoration than a stretch job. There will be “new” footage in each segment, but it is footage that Zeffirelli had intended as part of the whole film truly remarkable; it was before the network took the lauded by critics, viewers and the clergy of all faiths. scissors to it in 1977. “The decision was to cut In England, a study was 'here and there, trying to conducted to determine the make the program tighter, impact of the film. Six chipping it off, turning thousand three hundred moving speeches into a twenty people were asked stutter,” says producer which source gave them the Vincenzo Labella, speaking most insight into the life of of that first editing job. Christ, the film, the Bible “Sometimes we had to lift or their church. entire sequences, important Forty percent answered sequences. We took out the entire sequence when Jesus the film, 33 percent said the meets the rich young man Bible, and 27 said their who asks to be a disciple church gave them the and Jesus tells him, ‘Sell all greatest understanding. you have, then follow me.’ But if you’ve ever seen “This is very important in “Salvage I” or “The Ropers,” you know it is not beauty or strength of m aterial that puts a program on netw ork television. It is ratings. Labella has no illusions as to why the film is getting' the full treatment this time. our time of exasperated consumerism.” After seeing the ratings on the first showing, NBC and Procter and Gamble, the sponsor, “decided to give us more time,” Labella says. “The first time we had to sacrifice a lot. Now we are able to have the program as it was conceived.” The picture as conceived by Zeffirelli and Labella portrayed a very manly, intense Jesu s Christ, Robert Powell, focusing on the mysterious spirituality of Christ, but also presenting him as a man. The effect of the film was 20% DISCOUNT ON ALL COMPLETE GLASSES E ye Exam fo r G lasses $20 .00 _______________ F ill Y ou r D octor’s Prescriptions_____________ DR. W.G. AMES, Optometrist 941-5228 O pen M on day thru Saturday INDIA HOUSE I n te r n a tio n a l R e s ta u r a n t Featuring C o m p le te In dia D ishes and V egetarian Dishes also S TE A K S * S E A F O O D * C O C K T A ILS DINNERS SERVED 5:30 to 10:00 p.m. Closed Sundays & Mondays We Cater to Large and Small Parties 4225 E. Camelback Rd., Phoenix Reservations Advised • 959-4450 or 959-2830 — « — 7 I ^ tellyfiller... | BRING THIS COUPON AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR ■ Sunday Su pp er g 4 ■ C o m p lete For Call: 965-3161 I | 20% OFF - Any Pair of Trappeur Boots Qeltyfillers j 111 EAST UNIVERSITY i Across from A rth u r Treachers] 966-9479 A round th e F a ll 1 9 7 9 Visit rfour continents while earning a full semester of rcredit. Professors are from leading American Universities. ^Completely accredited by the Univer­ s it y of Colorado. Sail from San Francisco September 12 to the O rien t, Im ija, A frica, S o u th A m erica and the C a rib b ea n . All Alpenlife Soft Luggage 15% OFF - Any Backpack in Stock A p p ly n ow . For Free C olor Brochure, call or write: Semester at Sea. Taj M a h a l Building. P O . Box 2488. Laguna H ills, C A 926 5 4 . Telephone (8 0 0 ) 854-0195 (toll-free outside C alifornia) (714) 581-6770 (in C alifornia). SS. Universe is hilly a irconditioned. 18,000 tons, of U berian registry. SALE PRICES S ALE P R IC E S THRU IH H U APRIL A r n fL 7th rrn H M N K H EK JUST SOUTH OF McKELLIPS ROAD 4C * 1825B N . S c o tts d a le R d .,T e m p e , 949-5082 * * * * * * * * * * * ¥ ¥ ¥ ^ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ |-f% ■ I « w U ■ More than 60 university courses, many with voyagerelated emphasis. Strong supporting in-port programs. Visiting area experts. 15% OFF - | I w Any Down or Polarguard -+C Jacket or Vest c Any Wool or Cotton Long Sleeve Shirt | New Sunday Hours: 4 p.m. - 9 p.m. ^ 20% OFF - | SUNDAY NIGHT SPECIAL I | ■ +C W a itin g For ... From R o a d r u n n e r .,.* 20% OFF - Fo r A p p o in tm e n t or In form atio n 2916 N. 68th St. Scottsdale, Ariz. * Ti nh is n iIs s W n nh a« t Y i vouu 'v weo Been w Pool it Trial w earing period for C ontact Lenses. S am e day delivery for m ost soft contacts. S o ft contacts fo r A stig m atism « C ontact Lens S up plies. Information Table - Monday, April 2 ,9 -3 p.m. Yavapai Room Student Union Multi-Media Presentation at 7 p.m . Coconino Room Student Union • ASU Page 16 State Press Friday, March 30, 1979 d iv e r s io n s Dance The Pllobolus Dance Theater, a group of six adept dancers, will perform at Gammage Center at 8 p.m. Saturday. Tickets are $6, $5 and $4 at Gammage and Dia­ mond’s Select-A-Seat. Bruce Mark’s “Sanctus,” set to music by David Fanshawe, will highlight the 8 p.m. program April 6 and 7 by Ballet West at Gammage Center. The work cele­ brates “One God, by several names, being wor­ shipped by various rituals.” Tickets are $6.50, $5.50 and $4.50 at Gammage and Diamond’s Select-A-Seat. Music The ASU Concert Choir, directed by Douglas McEwen, will conclude its spring tour of Nevada and California with a free concert at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the First Baptist Church, 7000 N. Central Ave., Phoenix. Jethro Tull, with special guest U.K., will be presented by As­ sociated Students and the Univer­ sity Activity Center in an 8 p.m. concert Monday in the Activity Center. Tickets, priced at $8.50, are on sale at Gammage and Diamond's Select-A-Seat. The ASU Jazz Band I and the Rock Ensemble will perform at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the ASU .Music Theater. Admission is free. The ASU Brass Choir, con­ ducted by Ralph Lockwood, is slated to perform an 8 p.m. concert Thursday in the ASU Music Theater. The public is invited to attend. Theater Michael Cristofer’s Pulitzer Prize winner, “The Shadow Box,” directed by Dr. Daniel W itt, concerns three terminally ill patients and their struggle to deal with their condition. It will be staged at 8 p.m. Thursday through April 8 at the Lyceum Theater. Tickets are on sale at Lyceum and Diamond’s Select-ASeat at $3 for the public and $1 for students. Peculiar Institution Theater En­ semble of ASU presents “Any­ time, Anyplace,” a musical in three acts, at 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. A $2 donation is re­ quested for the presentation in the MU Maricopa Room. o a r iis iu o Film “Pretty Baby” . with Brooke Shields runs at Neeb Hall at 7 and 9 p.m. tonight. “Help" and “Let It Be,” will screen Saturday and Sunday. “Help” plays at 9 p.m. and "Let It Be” at 7 p.m. XEROX COPIES OVERNIGHT j* ■ V /* 5« W HILE YOU W AIT f * ~ - ¡ ¡ p i alph - osf*. J L ui La» jlJ raphics U N IV E R S IT Y A R C H E S 122 E. U N IV E R S IT Y CALL COLLECT (213) 770-6672 9 6 8 -7 8 2 1 ANNUAL ■ ) / 9 to b r EU RO PE Register Now: Leisure Learning Courses Self Hypnosis ts Improve academic skills ^ Weight control ts Tension & stress control is Intermediate self hypnosis Register Now M.U. Activities Center Lower Level 99 JN ecit£ > £ & f TMAVM4. 'MOTEL W E L . 'M O T E L v‘/MSt/EAA/SE *T /P S EEÔLLME/OMS’ B E IE M S PEE y P A I? IS M A B A E E A fr O A K Y 'S yo ur h o s t ___ R IC H A R D B- G O L D B E R G /W P /r . M/ S T O # * f H i / M A A // T IE S c o t i s é e c * e û / 7 a v a / î a s <-& FOR IHFOR/VtfiTION W EEKD A YS 833-8646 EVtN IN G S W EEKEN D S 249-2698 Friday, March 3 0 ,1979 State Press Page 17 Wrestlers prepare for Russian tangle By Jim □ sieger Johnathan W inters won’t be there, but the Russians are coming anyway. They’ll be at the Activity Center Wednesday at 7:30 p.m., undefeated and virtually unparalleled in the wrestling world. When freestyle wrestling buffs get together over a cup of conversation, they sta rt with the Russian National team and work their way down. In more than 20 years, they never have lost a dual match in the United States, or anywhere els£ And that’s a lot of vodka celebrating. They have been World Cup champions for th e past 15 years and have won th e team wrestling title in the last two Olympics. They will bring six Olympic champs and three World Cup champs to ASU next week to take on the best squad American coach Bobby Douglas can muster. The event will mark the first visit ever by a Russian wrestling team in Arizona, and it will be stop number four for the Russians on their current U.S. tour. Through all the maze of statistics that the team has built over the years, through all the mind-boggling feats of stomping our red-blooded boys, is there a chance for a possible history making upset? them," said Douglas, who handpicked the wrestlers for his team. “We have the talent to take them. We have a lot of champs too.” “But these guys (Russians) are the best there are, there’s no doubt about that,” Douglas said in a qualification tone. “If people want to see the best in freestyle wrestling, then this is it, it doesn’t come any better.” Douglas, who is also ASU's head coach, does in fact have himself a team of all-everthings. For instance, there is Larry . Bielenberg of the Sunkist Club from Arizona. Bielenberg is an NAAU, NCAA and United States Wrestling Foundation champ at 220 pounds. H e’ll need his list of credentials, because in probably one of the premier matches, Bielenberg will go up against Levan TediashivOle, the 1976 Olympic champion w ho, never has been beaten. ASU's own Dan Severn, riding high after beating the 198-pound NCAA champ in the recent United States Wrestling Foundation tournament, will have to take on Ivan Yarygin, an Olympic and World Cup champ who was the first ever to pin his way through the Olympics. Severn is also the 1978 Junior World and Pac-10 champ as well Dave Severn as All-America this year. Another match that shapes up as one of those “you should have seen it” types, is in the 180pound class. A thlete s-in-A ction’s Don Shuler, a former ASU AllAmerica selection from ASU and someone Douglas is looking toward to hold his own against the Russians, will go against Khasan Ortsuyev, seven times world champ and twice Olympic champion. “Ortsuyev is the best wrestler on the Russian team," Tom Dubin, coordinator for the U.S. Olympic committee in Arizona said. Douglas, who will conduct a clinic 10 minutes before the match starts to clarify the rules, feels his club is one of the best the Russians have faced in the United States, and are equal in talent and strength. “We’re right with them as far as bring in condition and everything,” Douglas said. “Where the problem lies is we a ren 't as experienced in freestyle wrestling as they are. Most of our wrestlers still are making the transition from collegiate style to freestyle when they go up against the Russians, and I figure it takes -about six years for a collegiate wrestler to get to the level the Russians are on.” Douglas also said there is a large gap between the Russian budget and the U.S. budget for their wrestlers. “We spend on the average of $1,200 a year per wrestler, the Russians spend an average of $15,000. They spend 90 percent of their time wrestling and the other training. Many of them even teach wrestling, others are students.” “You could get all the wrestlers in the world together and pick the 10 best out of them, and you couldn’t touch this Russian team,” Dubin said. “They’re that good.” The U.S. team also will consist of Bill Rosado at 105 pounds, Joe Gonzales 114, Mark Mangianti 125, Jim Cysewski 136, Bruce Kinseth 149, Mark Churella 163, and John Bowlsby at heavyweight. Mangianti, the ASU assistant wrestling coach, and Gonzales are members of the Sunkist Club. Bowlsby is a four-time NCAA All-America and Kinseth from Iowa was named the 1979 Outstanding W restler in the United States. Churella is a three-time NCAA champ. The closest the Russians have ever come to being defeated was two years ago in the World Cup in Toledo when they lost four matches. It was close, but no vodka. "I w as deeply im pressed w ith America^ com puter technology high In d u strie productivity bountiful agricultural output and these dynam ite h it album s from Phonogram /M ercury Records.” FRI. SAT., MARCH 30 31 r ii l:Z t Sat 1 :2 «. » 20. 1:2 1 jffifa tW U O Q N SUN MON APRIL ISADORA fUE. WED . APRIL 3 4 M s rc u ry A VERY" NATURALTHING THUR.. APRIL 5 W illiam S h a k e s p e a re ’s LAURENCE O L I lf lE R S h e ik Y e rb o u ti" F ra n k Z a p p a Z a p p a R e c o rd s _________________ IO T H E L L O J O H N M A IA L I BOTTOM LINE MOW n o w MV im m u * w o w w r Y *f h m k t MARKETED BY PHONOGRAM/MERCURY RECORDS. iwwum P * C IW 5 H P * < A POLYGRAM COMPANY RECORDS “ B o tto m L in e " D JM Page 18 State Press Friday, March 30, 1979 mmmmm T e n n is coa ch h o pes fo r break By Bob Petrie , . . , , . . 0ll„ ASU tennis coach Marty Pincus may claim he s such a big bun Devil booster he bleeds maroon, but even he s not too optimistic about his team’s chances against USC and UCLA Saturday and Sunday, respectively, at Whiteman Center. _, “We’ve got to go out and play our game the best we can . . . and hope we get a break,” Pincus said. ... . . . The Devils, despite being 16-2 on the season, will have plenty on their hands this weekend. UCLA is ranked No. 1 in the country, and USC is ranked No. 7. Between the two schools, they have won 24 NCAA championships - 12 apiece — since 1946. In addition, ASU’s only two losses this season have come against competition rated higher than the Sun Devils. ASU, No. 14 m the nation, lost to No. 4 Arkansas and No. 8 Tennessee. On the other hand, UCLA has beaten both the Razorbacks and the Vols, plus Southern Methodist and Pepperdine, two other top-ten teams. « » “They’ve (the Bruins) got tremendous balance, and they ve earned their No. 1-ranking on record," Pincus said. Ranked No. 1 for the Bruins is sophomore Fritz Buehmng, who plans to turn pro after this season. The top player for the USC Trojans is Robert Van-tHof, a junior from Downey, Calif. “I think he’s definitely a favorite to be an NCAA champion this year,” Pincus said. Buehning defeated Van-tHof in the finals of the Palm Springs College Tournament in January. “But Van-tHof s definitely the better player, Pincus said. He can d o i t a l l , a n d h e ’ s very quick for his size (6-foot-3).” . . . . According to the veteran ASU coach, the Sun Devils should be in good shape, injury-wise, to face the Trojans and Bruins. “I hope we are,” Pincus corrected. “We’ve got a few minor in­ juries. We’ve been concerned about Tonnie Sie’s arm problems, but he’s been well-rested. We probably won’t decide our line-up until just before the match Saturday. ... ... If it’s like past ASU tennis matches, the Sun Devils will go with Eric Sherbeck, Alan Waldman, Tim Anderson, Sie, Mike Carruthers and Archie Bouwer in the one through six positions. Backups will be Dwain Smith, Blair Roberts and Grant Helgeson, all of whom have seen little action against tough competition this season. Matchtimes for both games is 2 p.m. Game rained o u t Thursday night's scheduled opener of the ASU-USC baseball series a t Packard Stadium was postponed due to wet grounds. Barring further precipitation, the first game will be played at 7 tonight with Game Two at 7 p.m. Saturday and the finale at 1 p.m. Sunday. Tonight’s game is also “Pony Night” with a Welch pony being given away to the winner of a raffle. All fans in attendance are eligible to enter. Saturday is “Spaghetti Night” with aD ticket-holding patrons receiving a free dinner a t the Spaghetti Company should the Sun Devils beat the PACleading Trojans that night. ASU archery team readies fo r tourney The ASU archery team will host the Southwest Regional Collegiate Championship in the PE East Building. The competition begins at 1 p.m. today and continues through Saturday. There will be two 900 rounds — shooting 30 arrows at 60, 50 and 40 meters. A perfect score would be 900. Frisbee tourney The Second Annual University Frisbee Disc Trwrnanmnt (UFT *79) is set for this Saturday and Sunday at Tempe s Daley Par . Events for Arizona’s spring classic for local players are slated to start both days at 9 a.m. _ . . ~ Sponsored by the campus University Frisbee Club, toe tour nament involves five events - Accuracy, Distance. time aloft) pairs Freestyle and two-man Guts. Overall champMjns will be awarded in both the men’s and women’s division determined by individual placing in each event. . _ _ , __ at Q Registration for the two-day competition is and toe entry fee is $2.50. It is open to the general public. Specta tors and cameras are welcome. State Press Advertising 9 6 5 -7 5 7 2 ASU is the defending champion in the Women's Team title as well as the Mixed Team title. P ar­ ticipating in the tourney along with ASU will be schools from other parts of Arizona, California, Colorado and Utah. Slate Press Production Department JOB OPENING Proofreader FOR YOUR NEXT CAR NEW or USED T h e O N L Y M a n to S ee F o r S pecial S tud en t D isco unts Bob Savittieri — at — R A Y K O R TE C H E V R O L E T Tele p h o n e 947-3535 M u s t have fa r above average a b ilitie s in reading, sp e llin g and punctu a tio n . M u s t be a b le to concentrate for prolonged periods In th e m id s t o f n o is e and o th er d istra c tio n s . M u s t be ex^ ® layu ^®Pe^ : a b le . S h ift hours are 4 p .m . to approxim ately 8 p .m . M onday Th ursd ay. T h is is a stu d e n t hourly po sition and pays * 2 .6 5 per hour. A p p 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 app lic atio n blank at th e S TA TE p r e s s o ffic e , A-111 S ta u ffe r H a ll. The electronic system camera that’s changing , the course of photography. The AE-1 is changing the way cameras will be made, and the way photographers take pictures. 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It just may change the course of your photography! • Shutter-prkxity automatic NEEB HALL FILM SERIES PRESENTS THE BEATLES IN exposure SLR • Incredibly light weight, compact and easy to use • Instant response, sensi­ tive silicon exposure metering • Compact Power Winder A for motorized sequential shooting • Speedlight 155A auto electronic flash sets • shutter and aperture • Accepts all Canon FD lenses for AE operation • Unbeatable performance at an unbeatable price N ow thru A p ril 7th ' HELP LET IT BE Saturday - Sunday 7 and 9 p.m. .Friday and Saturday at 11 p.m. ERASERHEAD t o o Weird To Live _ SHOP,IK TEMPE SHOPPING CENTER Tempe, Arizona phone 967-4652 or 967-8363 Friday, March 30,1979 State Press Page 19 Carew's bat like surgeon's knife By Walter Berry The newest member of the California Angels’ infield dug his cleated feet deep into the red clay batter’s box a t Tempe Stadium, cocked a bat alongside his closely cropped afro and unleashed a vicious and un­ characteristic home-run swing. There was no “crack,” no “sock” or even a single cheer from the horde of spectators as they collectively watched the “path” of an imaginary ball as it headed tow ard d istances unknown. “Ever since I was a kid, Iv e always wanted to crush the ball. You know — make the perfect contact,” said Rod Carew. “I guess I’m still trying.” And succeeding. And failing. It is the personal purgatory for the players in professional baseball that success is very often a “hit or miss” proposition. But for Carew, the past 12 major league seasons have been all “hit.” Seven times he has won American League batting titles. Forty-two times in his career he has collected four hits in a game. - A member of the elite 2,000hit dub, Carew has compiled a composite average of .344 in his last 10 seasons. Only four players in the history of the game have ever done better. And all are in the Hall of Fame. But to Carew , th e ac­ complishments seem almost coinddental. “I don’t think about what will happen or what I want to happen. It just happens. Does that make any sense?," he asked his latest in an entourage of writers who seem to hang on his every utterance these days. “I don’t go into a season thinking about batting titles. It’s not my goal to lead the league. I just let it happen. And for some reason, it seems to be there when the year ends . . .” Still, some compare Carew’s hitting stroke with the precision of a Swiss watch. Others like to describe his bat as a magic wand. The 33-year-old Panamanian first basemen prefers his own analogy — . Co«po^ KRSONAOM SMM, MUUKH | “ I.B.W.N ra.o Si-HorthofÒOTe»«* I 1,2:45,4:30,6:15 8 & 9:40________ n i 104^ if W n, B T ß two*'0 ö ' 16th Street & Camelback Open till Midnight. Every Night rj.m C o n *s ^ WORLD Records-Tapes TEMPE 966-3381 Forest & University (Behind the Chuckbox) MESA 964-8613 Country CLub & Southern in the Woolco Center FLAGSTAFF 779-1330 1 South Beaver PRESCOTT 778-2120 1316 Iron Springs Road Friday, March 30,1979 State Press Page 21 M ore a b o u t Phenomenal athlete contlnuad from p*ga 20 night." As Illinois' most outstanding gymnast in his senior year. Rust has made steady improvement since he began tumbling for fun at the urging of some of his father’s friends. “My dad ran a YMCA camp. He hired gymnasts for the camp and they showed me a few fundamentals. That’s how I got started. I’ve always been active (in sports), and I just caught on and practiced.” If» Rust is guilty of un­ derstatement, it again must be attributed to his character. He in fact did his four hours a day, every day for as long as the body can remember, and did it without fail. Some things came easy, but some things didn’t. “Detail takes a lot of practice for me,” he said. “The intricate, detailed steps we have to make in the compulsaries in the floor exercise I have to constantly repeat to keep sharp on.” The floor exercises are his favorite regardless, and Rust says if he can sharpen up on his weak events, the pommel horse and parallel bars, he might consider giving the Olympics a shot. “You have to be an allarounder to go to the Olympics,” he said. “Right now I’m a ways from that in the pommel and parallels. I’ll see how it goes and hope I can make the im­ provement enough to give it a shot.” But first there are the NCAA finals at LSU next . week. Robinson feels Rust has an excellent shot at two individual titles there. And Rust? Well, he just refuses to risk an arm in­ jury on back-patting. “A gymnast is only as good as his coach,” he said. “Coach Robinson is the reason I have a shot at' any national title. He is the program here, and he is the best coach around.” Rust, does his work. He does his plahges (getting yourself parallel to the floor standing on youf hands — ouch) religiously, and does- his compulsories regardless. If he becomes a national champ, don't look for any swelled head in the crowd. Just look for a man almost halfway - over five feet looking for someone to thank. \ Women's track team The men have the weekend off, but pot the ASU women’s track PASSOVER SEDER Wednesday, April 11 7:00 p.m., Ross Hall, 215 E. University (across the way from Hillel-Baker Center) Traditional full-course meal and reading of the Haggaddah. College students.......................................$6.00 Faculty, staff & their fa m ily .................... $9.00 Reservations must be placed by April 1st. Call 967-7563 or come in to the Hlllel office at 213 E. University Dr. Interested in Kosher for Passover Meals? Lunoh & Dinner will be available at Hillel during Pesach. Reserve now - prices are very reasonable. ¡¡o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o e o « » ^ ^ 11 IN T H E M .U . M O V IE H O U S E - A P R IL 2 Showing at 1:00, 3:00 & 7:00 p.m. • Admission 50* DREAM OF WILD HORSES: A film poem of the wild horses of Camargue done with S S Z mZ hy and M aalitu l color. Electronic sound by Jacques Laspy. OMEGA* An acclaimed visual production of brilliant image and exhilarating beauty. Omega treats the subject of the end of mankind on Earth - and man s reb'rthand liberation to roam the universe. Composed of special effects, Omega does not rely on the plot device of extra-terrestial intelligence aiding man in his new state. but instead has man projecting a ray at the sun, causing it to absorb the energies there to change’ iife. Ambitious in concept and execution, Omega, in the words of he “ American Cinematographer,’’ “ . . . c a u s e s the screen to pulsate with a total sensual experience.” CThe Sun Devils, unbeaten in dual meet, triangular and invitational competition over the past two seasons, head west this Sunday to face defending AIAW national champion Cal State-Northndge in a dual meet. ASU is currently 3-0 in dual meets, 1-0 in triangulars and have won one invitational for an overall mark of 5-0. Last yew:, it was 6-0. “We realize th at our unbeaten record is at stake this weekend, but we need a meet like this,” said Sun Devil second-year coach Roger K err. “It will give us a true taste of what the nationals are going to be like.” ASU finished fourth in the AIAW title in 1978, while Northridge took the individual team title last year and finished second i n ’77. , , , , __ Two Matadors to contend with are American record-holding long jumper Jodi Anderson and one of the premier female distance runners in the world today, Julie Brown. Leading the Devils will be record-holders Val Boyer and Ria Stalman. Boyer set the ASU standard in the 100-meter dash (11.52) and has equaled the school mark in the 200 (23.54) already this season, while Stalman - the 1978 AIAW discus champ - has set Sun Devil records in both the shot put (14.43 meters) and discus WHY MAN CREATES: One of the most famous films of its type, Why Man Creates was made by Saul Bass, a great name in graphic design Through various sequences, this short covers such moments as an animated history of the world as men built it to fulfill ideas, illustrattons of how ideas can begin in the creative mind; a view of the process Ihrougfr which scientists develop new ideas . . . and so forth. Winner of thirty-five prizes, including the Academy Award, awards from New York, Venice, San Francisco, Moscow, Chicago and Berl,r\ Festivals. “The freshness and vitality of the concepts are matched only by the stylishly brilliant execution by Saul Bass.’ — Judith orisc FUTURE SHOCK: An examination of ‘the disease of change is the basis for this adaptation of Alvin Toffler’s best-selling book of the same title. Narrated by Orson Welles, Future Shock presents the idea that to absorb the impact of change, we too must change and learn to control change!’ Various social, scientific and technological developments are examined in a way that makes the viewer aware of the effect of high speed change on all aspects of life. <5 A S U ^ * x 100 relay quartet of Kathey Crawford, Boyer, Freida Cobbs and Brenda Calhoun also own the nation’s leading time m their event with a clocking of 44.80 recorded two weeks ago against use The Devils defeated th e University of Texas-El Paso and Colorado in a triangular meet last week by a 69‘/i-44-34V2 SC0^f’K ®. 'J'w- .¡J Boyer won both the 100- and 200-meter dashes, and Kathy Mint» set an ASU standard in the 1,500-meter run (4:37.8). \ «v Si Only a fe w more nights of the FASTEST FUN IN THE WEST! a* £ // * N o1 ^ 1b o d y - take yo u r pick. " - Anon.- THE SALT CELLAR 550 N. HAYDEN RD. 947-1963 *(on Hayden — V4 Block North of McKellips) NOW OPEN FOR LUNCHES Monday thru Friday Choose from a Variety o f — ★ Hamburgers ★ Deli Sandwiches ★ Salads ★ — This Week’s Luncheon Special Season ends Sunday night Racing at 8 every night through Sunday, rain oi^clear. Glass-enclosed, air-conditioned. Admission 75c, Clubhouse $1.50. PHOBHX GREYHOUND PARK E. Washington at 40th St. • 273-7181 F u n k s ’ G reyhoun d R acing C irc u it - S i n c e 1942 — V2 lb. Patti Melt Vi lb. Hamburger on Rye with grilled onions and melted cheese. Including Super Salad and French Fries. »2.25 H appy Hour 4-6 Daily Fra« Hors D'oauvrss ☆ Live Entertainment Thursday thru Saturday Page 22 State Press Friday, March 30, 1979 M ore a b o u t League hitting machine continued from poQ01® player to free agency — robbing the already hard-pressed Twins of two of their best hitters it put an even heavier burden on Carew at the plate. Nonetheless, the converted second baseman responded by following his .388 American League MVP campaign with a .333 performance at the plate, winning his second consecutive batting title in thè process. Griffith then offered to reward Carew with a $100,000 bonus, but his re c a lc itra n t s ta r suggested instead an extension of his contract. “I wanted to end my career in Minnesota. The money aspect wasn’t the big deal. It was the principle of the thing, said Carew, who has stolen an average of 36 bases in the past six years and set a major league record with seven thefts of home in 1969. “I was under a threeyear ($600,000) contract that was supposed to expire at the end of the ’79 season. All I wanted to do was extend it another six years at $500,000 a year for my own security. “I tried to negotiate it myself. But Calvin kept putting it off and putting it off and by the time we did get to talking, the Twins’ offer wasn’t even close to what I wanted. I would’ve been making about 25 percent of what I was worth on the open market. 1Player killed] EUCLID, Ohio (AP) — One­ time Cleveland Indians slugger Luscious “Luke” Easter was shot to death Thursday after leaving a bank with about $40,000 cash, Euclid police said. Detective Joseph Urbanick said Easter, who had stopped at the bank to cash payroll checks as a favor to fellow workers, was carrying the money in shopping bags. Police said Easter was hit just above the heart, apparently by a charge from a shotgun, as he left the Cleveland Trust Co. branch office. Two men, ages 31 and 32, were arrested after a chase and gun battle with Cleveland police a few miles away, and the money was recovered, Capt. Henry Wilker said. The 6-foot-4 Easter was one of the first blacks to break into the major leagues. puny contract in the first place back in 1976. As soon as word spread to Carew’s ears, he vowed never to sign another Twins contract. after the delivering doctor, Rodney CKne. “I feel like I belong here. And Tm sure Pete thought the same way when he decided to go to the Philadelphia Phillies.” After thumbing his nose at the five-year, $3.5 million offer of Giants’ owner Bob Lurie, Carew almost signed with the New York Yankees for exactly the same sum. “I grew up in New York. Plus, I like Billy Martin (the Yankees’ supposed 1980 m anager). Besides bring one of my old managers at Minnesota (196970), he’s the godfather of one of my daughters.” Carew said of Stephanie, the second of his three daughters. “I probably would’ve gone there if it w asnt for the way (New York owner) George Steinbrenner handled his side of the bidding war. , *$ ■■ '¿A* 'f in ' > . r “I was offended when I read all this stuff in the papers about what George wants, he gets. I resented being pushed around. I felt like a grocery item." Now a member of the Angels after Phoenix’ media magnate and California owner Gene Autry shelled out a KOOL $4 million for his services, the former American League Rookie of the Year (in 1967) feels much more at ease, even if most autograph seekers crowd around him like Catholics seeking an audience with the Pope. “I like it over here. It’s a more relaxed atmosphere,” he said, lounging in a locker room chair with his director-like dark-tinted sunglasses. “Tm not no one special around here. So far, the other guys treat me the same as anyone else. And that s the way f d like it to b e . . .” APRIL 6, 197911 California Angela’ first baseman Rod Carew It was totally unreasonable ($500,000 for two years). “Hey, it wasn’t, an easy decision. No way. I loved that area (Golden Valley, Calif.) It was rough on me and my family to just get up and leave. After 12 years in one place, you can’t make up your mind to go to another team in 12 hours. “But it was no longer fun playing for Mr. Griffith. I’m convinced now that he never will have a winning team. You have to pay the good ballplayers and he just doesn't seem to want to do that. Nobody gets what they’re worth with him around.” Then there were the infamous “Waseca wisecracks” where Griffith allegedly made a series of derogatory comments about his players at a Minnesota Lions’ Club meeting in the Minneapolis suburbHe called Carew “a damn fool” for signing such a “I will not be another nigger on his plantation," Carew was quoted as saying at the time of the October 1978 incident. “The days of Kunta Kinte are over. I will not come back and play for a bigot.” He went through with his promise. But how he got to the California Angels is a story in itself. Carew tentatively was traded to the San Francisco Giants last December for first baseman Mike Ivie, minor league left­ hander Phil Nastu, veteran outfielder Jim Dwyer and $400,000 cash. The deal went through . . . until Rodney Cline Carew negated it. “I felt like I was an American League player. I grew up in this league, like Pete Rose did in the National League," said Carew, who was born on a train in the Panama Canal Zone and named FEATURING: Joe Sharino • The Midnight Blues Band • Nova with Francine Reed • The Arizona Banjo Band • The Ajo Repertory Company • KBBC Spring Music Renaissance • Disco with Dr. Buzz • Las Vegas Casino • The Gong Show • Food Eating Contests • Tricycle Races • Hollywood Squares • The Roommate Game • and Much, Much M ore!!!! DON’T MISS IT OR YOU’ll BE SORRY!! 11 Advance Tickets are Now on Sale in the Memorial Union Activities Center for $1.50. Be sure to register for all events early!!!! Participants may purchase up to five tickets on one A S U I.D .! Sponsored by the MUAB Entertain­ ment Committee in cooperation with all other MUAB Committees._______ YOU Can Race a Real Form ula Car, CMTCITTMNMeMT COMMITTEE ASU I.D. Discount Buy 10 laps - get 111 55 of the Latest Video end Pinball Gaines FREE Dinner Contests Every Friday 0 Saturday Night SUNDAY WALTER RICHARDSON TRIO Folk Jazz IjiPjJj 7-11 The Pit Step Snech Bar Track Rentals Available Brocket Raciagl M 0M O A Y VALLEY BIG BAND 18 pc. Jazz Band 8-10 TUESDAY . WEDNESDAY THE LAUREN KRISTEN QUARTET Funk - Jazz 9-12 THURSDAY . FRtOAY - SATURDAY PHOMNX JAZZ A ll, STARS Modem 6 Progressive Jazz 9-12 Wa supply tha Race Car, helmet, track, and clock - you supply the skill and guts. Wa offer special Club and Group racing packages, too. HAPPY HOURS 3 7 Daily Pitchers *1.50 ibbh I W ell Drinks 60‘ HTfgaBBH 396 S. Mill in Tempe Malibu Grand Prix puta YOU In tha cockpit of a real rotary-powered Racing Machine. Experience the excitement of racing on our demanding track. Our computerizad timing system tails you exactly how quickly you lap our track. ' 96M 880 Any licensed driver can race. Under 18 years of age must have written parent or guardian consent on our release forpt. 1 6 1 6 N . H a y d e n Rd. - T e m p e Next to Big Surf 9 4 1 -2 4 3 7 Friday, March 3 0 ,1979 State Pres» Page 23 . . . have an audience of 160,000 people a week. slate Ipress 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. 4127 ANNOUNCING THE arrival of the venerable Doctor Fred, her charming companion Douglas Tod, the Enchanting Princess Jack, and the exquisite countess Lisa. The Duchess recognizes each of you. 3/30 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 ftoommot« Wanted “SKI EQUIPMENT.“ New Rossignol Strato 102 skis, size 203, boots size 10, bindings, poles. 892-9178. 4 /5 Wheel Woifcs Auto Co. CLEVELAND KING flule with case. Ex­ cellent condition. 5125. 9664004. Fsmie. 4 /4 Buy, M l and Trade Japanese Cars 1 M il* North of Campus iu s e . C u m W * -’ 1« Announcements 1977 TONY AWARD and Pulitzer Prize winning play at the Lyceum! 1 “The Shadow Box," April 5 - 6 . 3/30 ZZZYGOT Olal-a-joke. Recorded telephone entertainment 24 hours a day. 267-8M0. A r n ic n u m •• - " t ■ ASU Christian Sclentlests meat at Danforth Chapsl every Monday at 3:40 p.m. Ben B. Taylor, campus counselor, Mondays at 12-00 -1 :0 0 p.m. or res. phone 967-3716. 5 /4 ROOMMATE WANTED: Shsre 3 bedroom townhouse 1 mile from ASU. 5200 per month includes utilities and use of washer and dryer. Phone Chris, 966-9626 after 4 p.m. « '• 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. _____________ Deer Creek Leather N ow M aking TYPING THESES, dissertations, term papers, etc. Professional secretary, ac­ curate. spelling corrected, reasonable rates. 949-9207.________________ 5 /4 (behind T h e S pagh etti C o .) 966-4042 1972 FIREBIRD. Automatic, power steer­ ing. mags, radlals A M /F M , cassette. 51,500.945-4669. 3,30 CARLOS CASTANEDA Books S C IE N C E F IC T IO N New & Used Paperbacks & Hardcovers • SF Wargames THE SECOND R ING O F POWER C O M IC S F O R C O L L E C T O R S The ONE Book Shop 708 Forest Avs., Temps Just % B lo c k N orth of A S U ! 8(< Now m Paperback $3.95 Business O pp. CHANGING HANDS BOOKSTORE EXPERIENCED TYPIST. IBM self-correct­ ing. 90-110 wpm. 57.50/hour (approxi­ mately 75 cents/page). Fast and accurate. Lora, 947-0976.____________________ S '30 EXPERIENCED SECRETARY. Theses, dis­ sertations, term papers, resumes. IBM Selectrlc. Reasonable. Joyce, 839-4913 after2p.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., 56.00/hour, Carol. 9664996. 3 /30 R.H. McDonald Associatos 1979 E. Broadway Rd. Tampa st Services GOOD STUDENTS: Save 25% on Auto Insurance. Non-smokers 15% . Ask Steve Lundei, ASU Representative, Farmers In­ surance. 635-1460.__________ 3 ,3 ° PROFESSIONAL RESUME SERVICE In Tempe. Career and Summer jobs. Em­ ployment counseling, composition, typ­ ing and printing. 424 W. Broadway, »15. 4 ,3 Professional Bartenders For Private Instruction. STEEL GUITAR lessons, by professional steel guitarist. 8 3 3 -7 0 6 3 .______________ p arties M otorcycles Be the Host at your own HONDA 500 CBT, 6,000 miles, super clean, r ^ « W . « 2 5 .9 6 6 -1 1 9 6 .^ ^ CM A R M Y ROTC C O U L D HELP Y O U M A K E UP TO 48.700 FOR COLLEGE ii .„ r t s o t'w a v s A rm y R O TC can help you get financial . ' rce8 .oSOh rte% youV «hrouSh college. And no active duty S For RentL«a«e_____ L i L U;;on8a . V S a n ^ % " g r a m s n FEMALE NON-SMOKER, furnished room In house, all utilities Included. 5135 month. Call after 4:30.966-8286. 4/4 ^ il^ % * < 3 en c e Dep*arhr!en?on « C ^ H h i t c a Z n S S fM T W , ‘S 3 m £ _ __ OLD MAIN BUILDING. ROOJ J 10 PHONE: 261 -4404 or 965-3318 PUBLIC SPEAKING. Have you ever taken a public speaking course? If to , there i t a teal opportunity tor you to capitalize on your training with our company. If you can spare a few hours per week to address civic groups, church groups, etc., call us for more Information. Rewarding and profit­ able! 253-2407.____________________ 3/30 We need hair models with open minds. No expense to you. Please* call Cheryl or Renee at HELPI Due to recent promotions I need several man and women to help me In my business. I will train you. Flexible hours. Call 253-2407 or write P.O. Box 21404, Phoenix, Arizona85036. 3/30 PICK UP and deliver orders from our customers. Neat dresser, have car and like people. Flexible hours available. 54.75 per hour. Call 835-1353. Fuller Brush Co. 4 /6 H A IR 8 9 4 -119 1 3/30 ARIZONA STATE HOSPITAL behavioral health. 8600.60 - 5800.44. Beginning level counseling and/or nursing work in patient therapy and care full time, all shifts, on the job training applications accepted only at Arizona State Hospital. 2500 E. Van Suren, March 29th and 30th. 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. 3 /30 W ANTED TO BUY FINE JEW ELRY All Gold, Diamond, Emerald, Ruby or Sapphire Jewelry. Gold Chains, Collections or Individual Pieces. Estates Our Specialty. 279-1711 5 /4 H elp Wanted______ PART-TIME. Comparison shopping for major national corporations. Permanent local work on irregular basis. No invest­ ment. Include phone number with 're­ sponse. Shop 'n Chek, Box 28175, Atlanta, Ga. 30328. In summer months. 3/30 PART-TIME WORD processing operators, Xerox 850 or O S /6 experience necessary. Evening hours, central location, no fee, call for interview. LeBus Data Centers, 277-3395. ________________ 4 /3 PART-TIME JOBS big money: Accounting, Law or Pre-law students preferred. All aggressive, articulate, hungry students okay. Need sales reps for CPA/LSAT cassette home study programs. Call Jim Dee at Totaltape, Inc. Toll free 1-800/8747599.1505 N.W. 16th Ave.. Galnsville, Fla. 32604. 3,30 EXPERIENCED PHOTO typesetter, parttime hours by arrangement, Tempe area. No tee. Call tor Interview, LeBus Data Centers. 277-3395.__________________ 4 /3 PART-TIME HELP available for experienced bartenders and cocktail waitresses. Apply In person. The Camel Club. 6820 5th Ave., Scottsdale, 994-4168. 4 /4 995-4999 p.m. NEED ROOM. Savings up to 5150. Bikes 'n Things. 968-4511. ®/4 STUDIO APARTMENT available to female. 2 blocks south of campus. Won't last. Aggie: days 967-7841, evenings 966-7389. 4 /5 and 5/14 KEYPUNCH OPERATOR, 1710 or 129 experience, minimum 10,000 keystrokes. One opening 3:30 p.m. - midnight, two openings midnight - 7 a.m ., Mesa area. Call for Interview. LeBus Data Centers. 277-3395. _________________ 4 /3 Rent A B a rte n d e r S e rv ic e Pall now for an appointm ant. sliver KAREN'S SECRETARIAL Service - Ac­ curate typing of term papers, manuscripts, resumes, etc. IBM Executive. 945-2795. 3/30 Bl c y c l s » NO MORE bike flats. Carefree tires we tubeless. Last four times longer. $ 1 2 .9 plus installation. "Bikes 'N Things,’ 9884511. '_____________ WE PAY cash for gold, diamonds. Call 968-5967. BUSBOY WANTED Sat. 8-3:30, Sun. 8-2:00. 53.00 hour plus tips, close to University. 966-6563. 4 /5 414 Mill • Tempe • 966-0203 Well established money maker. Priced at 540,000 with terms to qualified buyer. Mike Mikan after 5 p.m., 8394)020. Daily at 894-2051. NEW SELF-DEFENSE Invetlon. Sales rep­ resentatives needed for this tree now! Part-time or full-time. Call 253-2407. 3/30 EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Manuscript, the­ sis, dissertation, etc. Correcting selectrlc typewriter. 831-8770. 4/17 894-1261. A STUDENTS RESTAURANT AND CATERING BUSINESS 894-2051 TYPING, IBM Selectrlc. Dissertations, theses, term papers. Eight years experfence. Jean, 277-3602.______________ 5 /4 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Dissertations, theses, term papers. Guaranteed. Carbon ribbon. Spelling corrected. Neqr ASU. 967-4937. 4/13 YOUR #1 SOURCE FOR MANAGER TRAINEE. New divlelon of nationally known company needs excep­ tional men and women over 18, who can be trained to manage a sates fores. Fantastic product line. Finally earn what you are worth. No experience necessary. Call 253-2407. _____________3/30 NEED MONEY? 51.25 - 52.00 paid for single albums; 51.50 - 52.50 paid for cassettes Top condition only. Record Trader, 631 South Rural. 986-5039. 4 /13 LOW COST travel to Israel. Canter for Student Travel. 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. N .Y. time. Toll Free 800-223-7676.