A member of the Arizona Students Associa­ tion says a proposed salary of $9,000 for the position of ASA executive director isn’t worth the price. > Bill Bordley doesn’t mind being a member of the Phoenix Giants. But the two-time USC All-America does resent the scout’s insinua­ tion that he is “the next Sandy Koufax.’’ Page 14 Page 6 thursday Arizona State University « 'C o p y rig h t, S ta te Press, 1979 state press April 12, 1979 Voi. 61 No. 102 Fund distribution: Financial Aids faces disclosure or law suit Bv Lori Grzesiek The ASU Financial Aids office is faced with the option of disclosing how it distributes its federal grant money or being sued by ASU Associated Students.. Isidro V alles, a ssista n t director of programming for the Financial Aids office, admitted last week that he violated federal law when he didn’t publicize a surplus of available Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants. He said he didn’t want a “flock of students” coming in his office because it would “interfere with ongoing business.’’ ASASU President Lancfe Ross has hired the law firm of Burton, Phelps, McMahon and Weideman to demand information on how the Financial Aids office awards SEOG grants. Attorney Osmond Burton said ASU ap­ parently is violating the U .S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare’s regulation that public notice be given when federal grants are available. He added the University also might be in violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which states that an agency receiving federal monies cannot discriminate on the basis of race, sex or religion. Questions of discrimination arose when Valles told his counselors to contact students about the grants on an individual basis. Frank Granillo, a work study student who is also a member of MEChA, contacted only the organization of Chicano students about the available funding. Members of the Native American Student Association said they were discriminated against because MEChA members had filed their requests for financial assistance three weeks before the information “leaked out” to the Indian students. SEOG funding is highly competitive and is awarded on a first-come, first-served basis. Ross said the incident is “another horror story from the long list about the Financial Aids office.” “It’s another example of how that office is being mismanaged and how the University has failed to clean up a great deal of discrepancies, inconsistencies and problems relating to students when applying for and receiving financial aids,” he said. Ross added he will contact HEW and ask for a complete audit of all Financial Aids Office activities if denied information on grant distribution. If HEW refuses, he said he will sue the office in U.S. District Court. Financial Aids Dean Roger Swanson currently refuses to release information to ASASU on how SEOG funds are granted because George Hamm, vice president of student affairs, has authorized the Financial Aids Advisory Committee to conduct an in­ vestigation on the matter. “I’m not sure I want to impair the com­ mittee’s investigation by having someone else involved unnecessarily,” he said. “The more information that goes out, the more the possibility increases that all kinds of inappropriate responses will be generated.” He added he would recommend hiring an auditor outside of the Financial Aids Office to investigate how SEOG funds are allocated if the advisory committee finds evidence of wrongdoing. The committee’s first meeting is today. Hamm said he “is not convinced at all that HEW law has been violated.” “But enough concerns have been raised that the Financial Aids Advisory Committee should take a good hard look at the charges and give recommendations (to Swanson),” he added. Handout Farris Harwell, a criminal law graduate student, spent Wednesday morning handing out leaflets on Cady M all In support of one of the candi­ dates in the Associated Stu­ dents election. Voting con­ tinues today with polls open from 9 a.m . to 6 p.m . [State Press staff photo by Matthew Ltu] Page 2 State Press Thursday, April 12, 1979 E ffe cts o f lo w radiation on health still unansw ered EDITOR’S NOTE No matter where you live on earth, you can't get away from radiation. Some radiation, that is. If you work in a nuclear power plant or live near one, you may get more. How dangerous is this low-level radiation? The experts have studied and mulled this question for SO years, and there’s no answer yet. WASHINGTON (AP) During the last 30 years about $5 billion has been spent on more than 100,000 investigations of what radiation can do to your health. Yet when specialists a t Three Mile Island were pressed to say what the radiation dangers were, they had to say that “there is no risk — based on what we know today.” The accident a t Harrisburg is the centerpoint now, but it’s far from the only problem on scientific investigators’ minds. Among the others are: —A study reporting a higher incidence of cancer among nuclear workers at Portsmouth Naval Shipyard at Kittery, Maine. —Findings by a county health officer that people around Denver, living downwind from the government’s Rocky Flats plutonium weapons plant, are contracting cancer at a rate higher than the rest of the nation. —Research on soldiers who participated in the early testing of the atomic bomb and people living near the Utah and Nevada test sites have shown an in­ crease in certain types of cancer. —Studies have been done which show higher cancer among people living near a C onnecticut nuclear pow er plant; residents of dwellings built on or with uranium mine tailings, and workers a t the g o v e r n m e n t 's H a n fo rd plutonium processing plant in Richland, Wash. Many scientists say that today we still doi. ’t know what level of radiation is dangerous and many believe we will never know. Other experts believe the answer will never be known because there is no danger from low-level radiation. “ I t ’s not because the government isn't trying,” said D r. Donald F rederickson, d ire c to r of th e N ational Institutes of Health. “More than $5.5 billion has been spent for rad iatio n h ealth research . Fifteen to 20 federal agencies are somehow concerned with radiation and they report to no fewer than 50 congressional committees. “Everyone is looking for the answer but that answer is not easy to find.” Scientists say the health effects of exposure to high-level doses are well known and have been documented extensively from studies on survivors of the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, people treated with high doses of therapeutic X-rays and a handful of people injured in military or occupational radiation accidents. CAMPUS BEER BASH study there. We may have enough of the bits to build a frame for a picture but we have no idea what the picture looks like.” Large Pitcher of Beer $1.50 Featuring MICHELOB and Other Fine Beers Every Friday A Saturday 4 to 8 pm Doctors say obvious medical symptoms which rapidly appear with high level exposure are absent at lower doses. 5th & college, rempe “With low-level exposure there are no easy markers or signals such as radiation illness,” Frederickson said. “Diseases which may be caused by radiation, primarily cancers, have a long development period. Sometimes it takes 15 to 20 years from time of exposure to the first sign of disease.” K nockw urat • K rau t • Ale Questions abolit student government? Ask JOHN WILLIAMSON But the effects of long-term exposure to low levels of radiation are far more difficult to document. “No one in his right mind would suggest exposing people to radiation to determine the health effects,” said Vice Adm. R ob ert M onroe, N uclear Defense Agency director. “So we must rely on animal ex­ periments and what little human data we can find. “In low-level radiation in­ vestigations we have to work around the edges picking up a bit of data here and another tu errate u bcaullful place tu lite ailh handerafied can ed ataiden m irro n and p lan ten % sluaing tändlet, lukh plante, fine imported Miapü, ktpined g ia a lam pt and p o lte n , -jJf A R M A D IL L A W A X W O R X 7 e a s t 5 t h S t r e e t , T e m p e ,A z . HE REALLY CARES! DRY GULCH SALOON 815 N. Scottsdale Rd. 968-5643 Just North of the River Bottom Every Night W ith This Ad ■ (1 per night only - Expires April 12,1979.) Because of a mechanical failure in the telephone line operating the Associated Press teletype, we are unable to bring you the news briefs today. The malfunction should be repaired today, and the news briefs will return in Friday's editions. We apologize for any Go-Go Dancers ★ A ll N ew Shows DANCING EVERY DAY AND NIGHT! Dining • Dancing • Large Screen T.V. • Pool inconvenience. UNIVERSITY PLASMA CENTER 968-6139 Plasma Donors Are Life Savers f-N M B MCAT LSAT I/ I II III GMAT / ' ECFMG PCAT / FLEX OCAT / VQE GRE / NDB F SAT / I! VAT/NLE Our S t e s i p r e p aratio n SPECIALISTS SINCE 193« CASH PAID FOR PLASMA DONATION! NEW DONOR FEES $1 0 . 0 0 will now be paid for each donation and you may donate twice within a seven-day period. That means * 20.00 a week of added income for you. -H. E d u c a tim i Cantar CaMany*CvtnlngsSWMkanda Last Chance to Prepare for Graduate School Entrance Exams! (MCAT. DAT. LCAT) 967-2967 For information About Otbar Cantari In Major US Cities 4 Abroad Outside NV Stete C A U TOU FREE: 880-2*3-1783 ASSOCIATED BIOSCIENCE OF TEMPE, INC. 1015 S. Rural Rd. Tempe, Arizona 968-6139 | 2 for 1 DRINKS Sorry, no briefs American Cancer Society : « 3 Federally Licensed and Regulated. Hours of Operation: Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 8:30-4:30 Wed. 10-6 • Sat. 9-1 B rin g th is a d in fo r *2.00 B o n u s (NEW D O N O R S O N L Y ) I Thursday, April 12, 1979 State Press Page 3 Trial period begins May 1 ASA FALL INTERNSHIP Cameras allow ed in courts fo r first tim e since 1937 By Susan Clark For the first time in Arizona’s history, news cameras will be allowed in appellate courtroom s throughout th e sta te beginning next month. The Arizona Supreme Court’s decision Tuesday initiated the new policy, which begins May 1, permitting photographic coverage of Supreme Court and Arizona Court of Appeals proceedings for a oneyear test period. Specific guidelines for cameras in the courtroom have not been finalized. Chief Justice James Duke Cameron will meet this month with members of the Arizona Broadcasting Association to discuss implementation of the guidelines. Ken Heady, executive director of the association, and A SU m ass com ­ munications lecturer, will be one of those to confer with Cameron. Heady said the association made a request for cameras in Arizona court­ rooms to the state Supreme Court last month when various news media mem­ bers received guidelines suggested by Cameron. “Cameron reiterated he thought it might be time to look at this change,’’ he said. Heady described the new policy as a “mild and limited experiment.“ “I think it will be a controlled limitation with pooled sources available to any party interested,” he said. A pooling requirement, whereby photographers of various media share in th e coverage of th e courtroom proceedings, is also used in many of the approximately 20 states which now allow cameras in courtrooms. ASU community invited to attend annual chili dinner The ASU Student’s Child Care Center is sponsoring its 5th annual chili supper for all ASU faculty, administration and students. The dinner will be held from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., on April 21 at the Center, 1430 S. McCallister. The rock band, Grand Jun­ ction, will perform from 8 p.m. to midnight. The all you can eat cost is $3 for adults and $1.50 for children. For further information call 894-9370. Cameras had been prohibited from filming court proceedings since 1937 by an American Bar Association canon, initiated soon after the then crude methods of photography created a carnival-like at­ mosphere during the Lindbergh kid­ napping trial. The ABA prohibition was again upheld in 1967. Last fall, however, state Supreme Court justices nationwide met to discuss possibilities of allowing cameras back into the courtrooms. In accordance with Arizona’s new “test run” for courtroom photography, cameras will still be prohibited in trial courts. Heady said the experiment will allow the public “a better understanding of the judicial system.” “Although a lot of courtroom activities are of very little interest to most people, for a case that has gained considerable notoriety, there will be a greater listening and viewing audience,” he said. Don Stevenson, photographer for the Mesa Tribune and president of the regional affiliate chapter of the National Press Photographers Association, said he has not yet seen the proposed guidelines. “We regret they’re not going to open it up to the trial courts,” he said, “but if this trial period is successful, we are confident it will be opened to the trial courts, “The policy will just be more con­ venient for newspaper photographers,” he said. “It will allow us admittance in the courtrooms, but it really isn’t going to affect print media photography that much,” Stevenson said. The Arizona Students’ Association and the Political Science Department are offering a twelve-hour internship position with ASA for Fall, 1979. Juniors or Seniors in Political Science will work in the ASA office in Central Phoenix. Applications are available at ASASU - MU 208-J; or the Political Science Department. Questions? ASA 255-3226 or ASASU 965-3161. Deadline for receipt: April 20,1979 Corps The * toughest job v o u T le v e r love... ^ S eniors: Lo oking for jo b experience? Y ou 'll find it in Peace C orps. A n d , your k n ow ledge of m ath , science, business, education, nursing', hom e e co nom ics or languages can help others in one of 65 developing cou n tries . In fo rm a tio n and a p p lic atio n s today only. 9:00 a .m . to 3 :3 0 p .m . across from D anforth C hapel. Ask abou t one-year V IS T A ass ig n m e n ts throu ghou t th e U .S . V o te for Leadership V o te for Experience V o te for N ew Ideas VO TE FO R M A R T Y L O W N IK C am p u s A ffairs V ice President PORTER’S WESTERN WEAR The eternal, perfect, circle of love— A diam ond w edding ring. M EN 'S WESTERN SUITS Reg. *159.98 to *190.98 now *1 0 0 .0 0 2‘¿sr* Reg. *210.00 to *230.00 Suits 40% OFF Tony Lama Justin Toxas Nocona Sale Prices Good thru April 14th. ALSO - NAME BRAND BOOTS AT THE BEST PRICES IN THE VALLEY!!! 3944 N - BROWN - SCOTTSDALE (1 block East of S cottsdale Road) (1 V2 block Sou th of In dian S choo l) BankAmericaro 994-1926 ------- - JEWELRY & DIAMOND CUTTING 130 E. UNIVERSITY DR. "INTHEARCHES” MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY 967-8917 ^ Page 4 State Press Thursday, April 12, 1979 G u e s t E d ito ria l Opinion How can we keep our liberty strong? Recently, the Arizona House of Representatives, in one of its more enlightened actions, passed by a vote of 34-24 (with two abstentions) a resolution to ap­ prove the Liberty Amendment. Strangely enough, this has received almost no publicity in any of the news media, even though a similar action by the United States Congress (where the Liberty Amendment is pending as House Joint Resolution 23) would provide the means of restoring the civil and economic liberties that we are rapidly losing in this formerly magnificent country. One evidence of that loss of freedom is the fact that most people in this country have never even heard of this amendment even though it already has been approved by seven state legislatures and more than 8,000 organizations as well as more than three million signers of the “Yes On 23” petitions. The complete text of the Liberty Amendment is: "Section 1. The G overnm ent o f the U nited S ta te s shall not engage in any business, professional, commercial, financial or industrial enterprise except as specified in the Constitution. "Section 2. The constitution or laws o f any state, or the laws o f the U nited S ta te s shall not be subject to the term s o f any fo reig n or dom estic agreem ent which w ould abrogate this am endm ent. “Section 3. The activities o f the U nited S ta te s G overnm ent w hich violate the in ten t and purposes o f this a m en dm ent shall, w ithin a period o f three years from the date o f ratification o f this am endm ent, be liquidated and the properties and facilities affected shall be sold. “Section k. Three years a fter th e ratification o f this am en d m ent the 16th article o f am endm ents to the C m stitu tio n o f the U nited S ta te s shall stand repealed and. th erea fter Congress shall not levy taxes on personal incomes, esta tes a n d /o r gifts. If you agree that it is time to reduce the size and power of the federal government; if you agree that inflation is caused by government and not by the individual citizens;' if you would like to make your own fundamental decisions instead of letting it be done by government bureaucrats, please write to your state and federal representatives and senators telling them to vote “Yes On 23” now. At the very least, sign the petition hanging on the bulletin board outside of Room 741, Wexler Hall. A. Swimmer, Associate Professor of Mathematics O p tic s Letters gate to the No more nukes! Why accept blind risks? Editor: Apparently many Americans take “risks” for granted in this fast-paced technological society. This is in reference to Greg Yount’s letter of April 6, in which he justifies the risks of nuclear power by comparing it with the perils of coal and oil use. Using the hazardous records of one industry to promote and justify the hazards of another in­ dustry is shortsighted and will only promote the status quo — harm to man and his environment. Mr. Yount’s argument in its simplest form almost makes sense. But I’m afraid the problem is much more complex and far-reaching than mere comparisons can answer to. It is now common knowledge that the effects of radiation may show up years later and not even scientists are sure of its effects, let alone what “safe" levels should be. Also a truly safe method of disposal of the radioactive waste still remains a mystery to government and industry. These are just some of the problems we must solve. Possibly it is what we don’t know that is our greatest danger, evidenced by contradictions and unanswered questions by officials involved at the Three Mile Island plant. We are now learning about previous “in­ cidents” among the 72 plants now operating. And though no deaths could be accounted for, it is the potential of one of these near misses that puts nuclear energy in a different class than coal or oil. Perhaps we should put nuclear energy in check and get a grip on where we are going and where we have been. We should explore alternatives, build energy efficiency into our lives, so as to plan for a cleaner, safer technological future. This would be a difficult, but bolder choice we could make, rather than blindly accepting “risks” we can’t comprehend. Scott Oliver Sophomore Pre-Architecture Accidents are nothing new Editor: This letter is in response to the letter from Gregory Yount and others stating that nuclear power is no worse than oil and coal. I found his letter to be like others in that it was completely void of facts, but rather filled with assumptions, backed with no evidence. In fact the only thing in the letter that made sense was that we should scrutinize nuclear energy .It’s just too bad Mr. Yount did not bother to do this before he wrote his fairy tale. ’ Let us go over his assumptions so we really can put things into their proper perspective. I do not want to discuss oil and coal because this is not the issue at hand, but just let me say not everyone knows we have to have it. There are alternatives such as solar, biomass, geothermal, hydroelectric, wind, cogeneration and con­ servation to mention a few. One of the underlying assumptions in this tetter is that the ‘T hree Mite incident” was a first — that we will learn from and that it won’t happen again. But it will. Let’s take a look at the record: •March 1970 Browns Ferry — a fire burned for seven hours destroying 1,600 control cables. The plant came close to a meltdown. •June 1970 Dresden Q in Illinois — the reactor went out of control for two hours. Radioactive iodine was released at a 100 times the permissable level. •January 1961 — the SL1 reactor went out of control, three workers were kilted. •October 1966 — the Enrico Fermi breeder reactor 30 miles from Detroit had a partial fuel meltdown. Afterwards a technician said, “L«t’s face it — we almost lost Detroit.” I could go on listing nuclear accidents for a couple of pages and I haven't even got to mining and milling, enrichment and fabrication, trans­ porting and waste disposal — a problem no one has solved yet. Still we hear from the nuclear industry everything’s OK. This despite the fact th at the incidence of cancer, leukemia, heart disease and birth defects is always higher for residents near a nuclear plant. What could happen if there is a major nuclear accident? Tens of thousands killed, hundreds pf thousands will contract cancer and other diseases, God knows how many children will be deformed, billions of dollars in property damage and an area the size of Pennsylvania could be made uninhabitable for a quarter million years. Gregory, I really want to know, do you really think coal and oil is no worse than nukes? Study the pros and cons with an open heart and open mind and then see if you- still want to bet your life and your children's lives and their children and their children and their children on nuclear power. The nuclear industry’s position that we should learn from this accident and go on reminds me of the song, “Waist deep in the Big Muddy and the big fool says to push on.” Joel Harp Graduate Student Music Don't threaten the unborn Editor: In rebuttal to the non-anti-nuclear statem ents from ‘mechanical engineer' last week, it is the contention of the anti-nuclear energy effort that conventional fossil-fuel energy technology is a warning. A warning of the consequence of violating the symmetry of a nuclear system whose dissymmetrization-activation threshhold lies a billion volts above that of the atomic \ ¡1sti ms of conventional energy sources. There is a princple of mathematics-physics, the principle of symmetry compensation, which states that the reduction of symmetry of a microsystem must be accompanied by a reduction in the symmetry of the macrosystem. When man, the engineer-scientist, intrudes upon the inherent beauty of a nucleus and breaks it in the name of consumerism through the process of fission, he lowers the symmetry of this microscopic system. Therefore he also reduces the symmetry of the macroscopic system of which he is an intrinsic aspect. But what does it really mean for man to reduce his own symmetry? It means the external asymmetry of birth defect and deformity, and the internal antisymmetry of cancer and dysfunction. Indeed these same equations tell us that such processes are thermodynamically irreversible, i.e. forever. If man (and woman?) continues to. allow nuclear power to persist he may well damn the unborn for eternity — for which he shall surely be eternally damned. Must we sacrific children on the altar of contemporary ignorance and inertia? Paul Fields Graduate Student Physics Thursday, April 12, 1979 State Press Page 5 A n o t h e r L e tte r J ................. Grads got the shaft in ASASU's budget Editor: The Graduate Student Advisory Board recently requested and was subsequently denied funding from ASASU. In a recent State Press article (March 29), Lance Ross, ASASU president, was quoted as saying that the funds requested were “unrealistic and must be sliced.” On that same day the First Council did in­ deed slice the request — to zero. This act on the part of ASASU is of great concern, not only to the GSAB, but other campus graduate student organizations. In addition to being largely discriminatory, it causes one to consider exactly what the priorities and concerns of ASASU are as compared to those of students. In a recent Student Attitude Survey conducted by the Dean of Students Office, the number-one ranked priority that *1m lm ta felt ASASU should have was academic concerns and rights of students. This student attitude certainly is not reflected in ASASU’s fiscal allocations. Pursuing research and creative projects directly related to their fields are an integral part of the academic life of graduate students, yet ASASU denied the GSAB the financial assistance that would facilitate the primary objective of ^ graduate training: the ability to con­ tribute to the general knowledge of their professions and to the solution of problems associated with current national needs. The primary purpose for the funds requested by GSAB was to foster this spirit of scholarship and research — not to entertain students. The annual appropriation to ASASU (a projected $460,000 for 1979-80) is a portion of the Student Activity Fees collected each year and is allocated by F irst Council. Graduate stu d en ts represent the largest college on campus and 0U ¿C y April Flowers by OP Thursday, April 12, 1979 State Press Page 7 Tempe collects on jaywalkers Rv Reena Rivera Using the crosswalks may cause you to lose some time, but it may save you some money. In 1978, 281 pedestrian “jaywalking” violations were issued, said Tempe Justice of the Peace Stephen Morretti. “Out of these violations, 167 were first of­ fenses which were dismissed and 105 persons paid fines. The majority of them were second­ time offenders. Nine persons went to trial and were found guilty,” he added. The fines for these violations vary, depending on which statute the person violates, he said. "Fines can be anywhere from a warning, which costs the person nothing, on up to 30 days in jail or a maximum penalty of $500. “Jaywalking is a hard term to describe, since it can mean anything from a person running across a street to someone obstructing traffic. This is why we have so many different statutes for it,” he said. Last year only one person was jailed for jaywalking, Morretti said. “When a person gets caught jaywalking, he signs a ticket which is a promise to appear in court. If he fails to appear in court, he is in violation of statute 13-3904, which means he committed a class 2 misdemeanor and the charge won’t be dropped,” he said. Violation of this statute means the person is now being charged with failure to appear in court which could carry a maximum $750 fine and four months in jail, he added. In 1978, the city brought in $1,300 from pedestrian fines and $475,000 from other fines, Morretti said. Abzug to visit ASU in support of ERA Bella Abzug will speak in the MU Arizona Room at 8 p.m. April 17. Abzug was recently fired by President Jimmy Carter from her position as co-chair of the National Advisory Committee for Women. Her dismissal caused a revolt on the committee and women’s groups charged Carter with not wanting to advance the cause of women’s rights. The former Congresswoman and long-time activist was named one of the 25 most influential women in the world by a Gallup poll last year. She was also the first woman to run for a U.S. Senate seat from New York. Abzug’s ASU appearance is in support of moves to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment in the Arizona Legislature. Abzug’s appearance will be open to the public, but a $2 donation will be requested. Good news about auto insurance for college students. We’d like to insure your car. Why? Because we specialize in providing auto insurance for young drivers. Who are we? Criterion Insurance Company is a dependable, financially strong company offering important benefits like: convenient payment plans, country-wide claim service, driver training discounts and a wide choice of coverages to protect you and your car. Like to know more? Call or visit us today for a free, personal rate quotation and complete infor­ RJ'.’s can satisfy all gift needs for graduation. mation. Or simply complete and mail the coupon below and we'll send you a rate quotation. There’s no obligation, of course. Call or Write: REED INSURANCE AGENCY 755 N. Country Club Drive Mesa, Arizona 85201 962-6342 V Criterion ocri Insurance u Company Li Yes! Please send me a free auto insurance rate quotation. N am e. □ M a le . □ F e m a le -A g e . A d d re s s . Attaches - Business Cases 3" - 4" - 5" A la r g e s e le c tio n in V in y l & L e a th e r. -- ---_ □ S in g le □ M a r r ie d -A p t. # . C ity . .S ta te & Z ip . O c c u p a t io n . .S p o u s e 's O c c u p a t io n . H A S A N Y D R IV E R W IT H IN T H E L A S T 3 Y E A R S : B e e n in v o lv e d in a n a c c id e n t ? Yes □ No □ How m any?. H a d lic e n s e s u s p e n d e d o r r e v o k e d ? Yes □ No □ B e e n c o n v ic t e d o f a tr a f f ic v io la tio n ? Y e s □ No □ H ow m any? . G iv e b r ie f d e t a ils a b o u t a n y "yes ' a n s w e r s a b o v e in c lu d in g a p p r o x im a t e d a te s : C a r Yr Model No M a k e (G ra n a d a . D art, e tc.) C y! B o d y S t y le (s e d a n . 2 - d r . e tc ) 1 2 D a y s p e r w e e k d r iv e n to w o rk : C a r # 1 ______ C a r # 2 _ _ _ O n e w a y m ile a g e : C a r # 1 ______ C a r « ? ( mcM m Attaché L is t a ll a d d it io n a l d r iv e r s in y o u r h o u s e h o ld : R.J/s Gifts & Luggage 1068 E. Baseline (across from the Lakes) Tempe, Arizona Age M a le o r F e m a le R e la t io n M a r r ie d o r S in g le % of U se C a r #1 C ar # 2 fr o m a b o v e a d d r e s s : C a r a 1 % % S ta te % % C .lfr _________ 2 L _ __________ 2 k _ * 0 C itu C ity S ta te CLIP AND MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY Pag« 8 S ta tt Praaa Thursday, April 12,1979 Vegetables for the dinner table, including cabbage, potatoes and carrots, are produced from Santa Rita’s garden each season under the direction of Slater Loretto, head gardener. Desert abbey Nuns use seclusion to find inner peace A visit to Santa Rita Abbey in the southeastern Arizona wilderness is a step into another world. The silence surrounding the Trappistine monastery, miles from the nearest trace of civilization, is absolute — except for the occasional cry of a circling hawk or the dry scrape of originally emigrated to Arizona to found this 16th location for their sect in 1972. Their former home was a convent in Mount S a in t Mary’s A bbot, Wrentham, Mass. The sect is formally known as the Order of of Strict Six of the sisters living in C istercians the cloistered abbey Observance and represents tree branches in the wind. The awesome grandeur of this terrain speaks to the 10 Trappistine nuns who have found inner peace through the simple but harsh life they have carved for themselves here. the most austere branch of the Roman Catholic Church. The nuns remove them­ selves from the distractions of city activities to face the real perplexities of life in the simple yet strict daily routines of prayer, con­ tem plative stu dy and manual labor. Spending money from ceram ic and glassw ork crafts sold to visitors and a garden of vegetables for the dinner table help the nuns maintain their isolation from the mounds of red tape en tangling th e bureaucracy of the Church. The day begins hours before the sun awakens, when the nuns gather in their chapel to chant psalms in vigil of waiting for the coming of God. They see the inner walls of this sim ple room with its wooden benches and tiny altar seven times each day during breaks from work. Included in the prayer sessions are a morning Mass, afternoon Angelus and evening Vespers. The white smocks and veils worn during prayer are exchanged for blue jeans and patched sw ea tsh irts when the women go about their chores around the abbey — digging potatoes in the garden, tending the horses, pounding stakes in the hardened earth for a fence or baking bread for the following morning. A spokesperson for the group said the members are trying to find the inner peace and harmony for which all human beings aspire. LEFT: Sistsr Celestine, who Is responsible for ths h on their land, takes tim e from her crafts work to animals. ABOVE: Prayer sessions, including a mor Angelus and evening Vespers, give the Trappistin« Thursday, April 12,1979 State Press PtQe 9 ,J V • . and the light shine th in darkness and the darkness comprehended it not." John 1:5 Photos by M ary Connell onsible for the horses the nuns board crafts work to visit with one of the including a morning Mess, afternoon t the Trappistines a. break from work seven times each day. RIGHT: The sisters discard white smocks and veils for blue jeans and scarves when they work in the Qsrden and craft shop each day. Page 10 State Press Thursday, April 12, 1979 Mr. Muscle Man Body-building bouncer pum ps to n s for trophy By Janine Hopkins When he wasn’t exercising diplomacy with dissatisfied or intoxicated patrons at Tempe’s Sun Devil Lounge, Scott Troilo was moving tons of steel four hours a day, four days a week at Pumping Iron Enterprises. After eight months of rigorous weight training, 20-year-old Troilo won the title of Mr. Muscle Man of Phoenix Saturday night. Troilo dominated the competition for Mr. Phoenix and Mr. Greater Phoenix, (state-wide), taking home two large trophies and three smaller trophies for the best chest, arms and legs. “I was very excited, very satisfied to have won the contests,” said Troilo, who is a bouncer at the Sun Devil Lounge. “I put in as much effort as I was permitted to and did my best in this contest.” Pat J. Neve, sponsor of the contest and owner of a health club in Phoenix, said Scott consulted him once a week for diet information. “If you want to be Mr. America, the best way is to talk to a Mr. America and find out what he did,” said Neve, who was Mr. USA in 1975 and Mr. America in 1976. Troilo said he plans to keep pumping iron at least until the next body-building contest in September. Owner of Pumping Iron Enterprises, Terry D. Wrasse, said, “I know how much time and effort Scott put into his training and how much he wanted to win the contest. He set a goal and achieved it, and I can’t help but respect someone who does that.” Troilo, a sophomore at Scottsdale Community College, said to get an education is first on his list. “School is first — unless body-building proves to be a more profitable career,” he said. “I plan to finish my local competition (as a body-builder) in Arizona and then span out. The Mr. Arizona contest is next and that’s it for in-state competition.” EVERYONE EARNS THEIR DAY O F REST How anyone spends their extra tim e o r m oney is their own business. The inexpensive cam pus activities provided byASASU will be m y business. LonTanner ActivitiesVP. LAS VEGAS VACATION FOR 6 DAYS -5 NIGHTS AIRFARE INCLUDED or take the I CASH t - STOP AT ANY LOCATION LISTED BELOW AND TRY THE SENSATIONAL NEW W HIPPED DRINK ^UlCUNG * SIGN UP FOR YOUR CHANCE TO W IN A FREE LAS VEGAS VACATION No Purchase N ecessary ERASERHEAD FRIDAY & SATURDAY AT 11 p.m. LAST TANGO IN PARIS/THE AMERICAN FRIEND , SUNDAY AT 7 p.m. PHOENIX ORGAN STOP P IZ Z A ....................... 5330 N. 7th BROTHER’S HOFBRAU ................. Thom as Mall PIZZA D’AMORE ............. Christown Mall PIZZA D’AMORE ........................... Metro Mall PIZZA O’AMORE ....................... Colonnade Mall 144 N. Central Ave. ARMELLINO’S ............... SKATE W O R L D ....................... 4451 E. Oak St. APPETITO’S SUBMARINE .. 3433 W. Thom as Rd. FAT FRANK ....................... Park Central Mall TEMPE GODFATHER P IZ Z A .................. 6 East 10th St MESA 0R6AN STOP P IZ Z A ........... 2250 Southern Ave. EL T A C O . . . . . .................... 1808 W. M ain St. TASTEE F R E E Z E ................ 1910 E. Broadway SCOTTSDALE DAVID’S DELI ...................... . Los Arcos Mall A & W ROOT BEER .......... 7. 7350 E. McDowell GLENDALE APPETITO’S SUBMARINE — 4310 Glendale Ave. PIZZA OLD R O M A ................ Valley West Mall Thursday, April 12, 1979 State Press Page 11 EASTER IS APRIL 15 Make it a Festival at Your House with gifts and decorations from Jim Staton, Clay Carroll go in different directions By Walter Barry Milwaukee left-hander Jerry Augustine never planned on g ettin g in team m ate Jim Slaton’s pants. So instead, he settled for his shirt. “ ‘Augie* forgot to wear his regular jersey on the trip down from Sun City,” explained Brewers' publicity director Tom Skibosh of the Cactus League incident a t Scottsdale Stadium. “So he borrowed one from Slaton.” In a m atter of speaking, the same could be said for Milwaukee. Last N ovem ber, the American League Eastern Division club “borrowed” the most important part of James Michael Slaton’s anatomy from the Detroit Tigers — namely, his right arm. But to say Slaton minded would be “stretching” the truth a bit. “I'm excited about it,” said the one-time Brewer pitcher who was re-acquired from the free agent draft in the off-season. “It's really changed since I was here last. The attitude here is a lot better than it used to be. There’s been a lot of changes. The guys are looser. The a t­ mosphere is nicer. I guess whenever you have success, it breeds confidence.” Slaton and success have crossed paths many times in the past. Signed to a pro contract originally by the Seattle Pilots in 1969 immediately before the franchise's exodus to Wisconsin, the 6-foot. 185-pound rig h ty compiled a 20-6 record in four minor league campaigns with a composite earned run average of 2.52. Moving to the majors, Slaton strung together six seasons of 10 or more wins.in 200-plus innings pitched. Before being dealt to Detroit with fellow pitcher Rich Folkers for outfielder Ben Oglivie on Dec. 9, 1977; the former Antelope Valley (Calif.) High School all-star cracked the Brewers’ “all-time best list” with 206 starts, 57 complete games, 72 wins, 701 strikeouts and 16 shutouts in 1,449 innings. For the Tigers last year, Slaton had a 17-11 slate in 35 appearances. Three of the wins came a t th e expense of Milwaukee. “Naw, it wasn't revenge,” he said with a laugh. “I didn't have their number. Hell, I beat Seattle three times, too. They didn't say anything.” A smile befitting a Hollywood personality broke out on Slaton’s copper-toned face. It seemed funny for a man who was supposed to be as worthless as month-old meatloaf only seven years ago. “I got off to a slow start in 1972 (1-6 record-wise) and got sent back down to Triple-A ball (at Evansville, Ind.),” recalled Slaton. “Before that (in 1970), I only pitched two games because of active duty in the Army N ational Guard. But the manager down there put me in the rotation and kept me there.” He finished that 1971 season 11-2 — capping it off with a no­ hitter against Wichita in Aug. 3 in the season finale. He wasn't exactly bargain basem ent material. And when Slaton publicly expressed his intention for free agency at the end of last season, other teams treated him with just accord and respect. “Fourteen clubs drafted me. Five were really interested — St. Louis, Detroit, Boston, Milwaukee and California,” Slaton said. “A lot of people figured I'd like to play for the Angels since Anaheim is somewhat close to my hometown (Long Beach) and where I live now (L an caster, Calif.). I wouldn’t have minded, but it just didn’t work out that way for me. I’m happy to be with the Brewers.” And $1.1 million richer, thanks tb a five-year contract. “It’s nice — the security and all. But I'd like to keep going,” he said. “I'm 28 years old now. I'll be 33 when the contract runs ^ocoooooosooogeoooaeoco o eoeociooooooooo&occaocn HarralVs R E N O A N D LAKE TAHOE LOOKING for SUMMER or PERMANENT EMPLOYMENT? Join Nevada’s leading gaming establishment at either of two great locations. HARRAH’S LAKE TAHOE and HARRAH’S RENO The Gallery Store out. I want to pitch for as long as I can.” S till, Slaton rem ains pessimistic about his profession. Ditto about his team’s chances this season. “Baseball’s a funny game. You never know what can happen,” he said. “Everybody likes to be an optimist, but you have to be realistic. You never know who will get off to a slow start. “Right now, we know we have the talen to win it all. We have a lot of depth, especially in pitch­ ing. “Moose Haas is back. Mike Caldwell came back strong last year and a lot of other guys are coming off successful years. They say you can never have enough pitching. Maybe so. But I think we’re pretty darn close TINY, SILKEN STUFFED ANIMALS FROM CHINA. BASKETS OF ALL SIZES. RABBITS OF CERAMIC OR WOOD. METAL, COME-APART EGGS. SUITABLE CARDS. SEE THEM HERE! Matthews Center, Second Floor Open 12 to 4 p.m. Monday thru Friday WEEKEND SPECIAL FISH DINNER $ 0 2 9 A delicious fish file t, crispy on the ou tside, light 'n flu ffy on th e inside. Served w ith P otato & Toast. Thursday through Sunday. I ¡a s. continued page 12 EVERY HOUR IS HAPPY HOUR Fresh Frozen Strawberry Daquiri 95c You are invited to be our guest for a FREE LUNCH Sun. - Thurs. 11-10 Fri. & Sat. 11-11 at the Baptist Student Center 1322 S. Mill Every Thursday at 12:30 966-1705 O n e FR E E M EA L W ith T h is Ad STOCKADE' STEREO WAREHOUSE 1112 E. Apache Blvd. SOUND AROUND B U YIN G A CAR STEREO? Y o u' ve S e e n A l l The "S A L E A D S '1 . . . But For The L o w e s t Prices In Town CALL US! 834-5566 WE’LL PHONE QUOTE! . . . MOST DEALERS WON’T! IF YOU KNOW YOU HAVE THE LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN WHY NOT QUOTE THEM ON THE PHONE? WHAT BETTER WAY IS THERE TO MAKE A SALE? ON THE OTHER HAND, IF WE DIDN’T HAVE THE LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN, WE WOULDN’T QUOTE OVER THE PHONE EITHER . . . WHAT BETTER WAY IS THERE TO LOSE A SALE? ’NUF SAID? STORl HOURS MON. THRU FRI. 10-6 SAT. 10-5 CLOSED SUNDAY Our Representative will be accepting applications for entry level positions in Food Service, Food Preparation, Housekeeping, Cleaning and Casino. Interviewing now for summer employment. Apply in person at: RAMADA INN EAST 3801 Van Buren Phoenix VISA* i m ROUND »TEREO W A R EH O U SE Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday April 17,18,19 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM An Equal Opportunity Employer M /F jouuuixtonnn rtnn r* r * 711 E. M A IN ST., MESA Phone 834-5566 OH3 HVM 0 3 H3 1 S ALL IT E M S S O LD IN FA C TO R Y S E A LE D FA C TO R Y CARTO NS. W A R R A N T IE S A P P LY . LO CA LLY S E R V IC E D . C R E D IT C A R D BUYERS A DD 3 % . ONflOUV ONOOS Page 12 State Press Thursday, April 12, 1979 More about Brewers' Slaton, Carroll go in different directions continued from pagt 11 The Brewers are a contending Prior to 1964 — when he team and I guess they felt I ironically joined Milwaukee for could help them," said the burly the first time — the Clinton, 6-foot-l, 205-pound right-hander Ala., native spent six seasons in who is nicknamed “Hawk" on the minors at such non-descript account of the downward cur­ places as Quad Cities, Boise and vature of his nose. “I was pitch­ Austin. After four years with ing Triple-A last year. This is the Atlanta Braves, Carroll took The 37-year-old relief kind of my second go-around to his curveball and wicked slider to Cincinnati where he became a specialist, who had a major make good in two seasons." In lieu of a 96-73 lifetime fixture of the Reds' bullpen for league record 37 saves in 1972, was trying to make Milwaukee record, 120 saves and 2.94 some seven seasons. the hard way — via the non­ career ERA, Clay Palm er But in 1976, the rollercoaster Carroll has never had it rocking- ride began for him again with roster route. “They invited me to camp. chair easy in his baseball life. stops in St. Louis, Chicago's Comiskey Park, Pittsburgh and finally Columbus, Ohio. 'T ve been this route before,” said Carroll of his non-roster status. “The White Sox had me for a while when they had all kinds of pitching problems. But they had a lack of desire. This Several members of ASU’s “Sky Devils Flying team (Milwaukee) wants to win. Club” found themselves in the winner's circle last “Shoot, yeah. I can see it. weekend at the Regional Safety Conference and Air They're loose and confident. It's nice to come over and be around Meet at Phoenix' Deer Valley Airport. something like that again. It's a Tom Swartzlander took both the Red Barron good feeling.” certificate and Aircraft Recognition categories, while He has a similar sensation in teammates Ann Edmonds and Rick Covert copped his arm at the moment. second place in the ground trainer division and Pre“It’s sound. It feels great. I've Flight competition, respectively. never had any arm problems,” Eleven teams participated in the three-day meet. he drawled. “I don't know what the Brewers have in mind for me Three Arizona schools were represented — ASU, — if they want me to throw Cochise College and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical every day, every other day, help University as well as eight California colleges — San the other pitchers, or what. But Jose State, Long Beach City College, Palomar they said I'm doing very well so to having enough this time around." From his position in the bull­ pen, Clay Carroll couldn't have heard Slaton's comment. And even if he could've, he probably wouldn't have wanted to. Flying dub lands in winner's circle College, San Bernadino College, Mount San Antonio College, Orange Coast College, Cypras College and the College of Mateo. San Jose State won the team competition. Palomar College came in second, with Cochise taking third. All the teams that participated were invited back for next year’s meet. ASU has qualified three flyers for the nationals April 26-28 in Monroe, La. They are all officers — Captain Chuck Monuz, Treasurer Tom Swartzlander and Secretary Rick Covert. The “Sky Devils’ advisor. Dr. Mike Wood, will also make the trip to the competition site at Northeast Louisianna University. far. That's good to hear." Two days before the Brewers broke camp, some more news came to Carroll's ears. He had been cut. And it was back to packing his bags again, for another long ride to some o th e r obscure destination — this time to Vancouver. A nice city, but not “the bigs.” Passover Seder in the Desert W e d n e s d a y , A p ril 18 - 5:00 p.m. (Meet in Hillel parking lot for car pooling) Ram ada No. 1 South M o untain Park Roast Lamb on the Spit Traditional meal and Haggaddah reading under the stars. R.S.V.P. H illel 967-7563 DRIVE CARS FREE Cars Available Many Points U.S.A. W e are I.C .C . licensed and in­ sured. M u s t be 21 years or m ore. SCHEALL DRIVEAWAY 991-5533 BUtmore g o lf tourney The strongest field ever is entered in the 17th annual Lady Sun Devil Collegiate Golf Tournament which is fine fpr the host course — the Arizona Biltmore — but may prove detrimental for the host school — ASU — and its one-year championship reign. C o m p e t it io n be g an Wednesday and winds up Friday. Tee-time is 7 a.m. each day. Participating for ASU will be Kelly Fuiks, Jeannette Kerr, Vicki Singleton and two other Sun Devils will be deter­ mined via the qualifying rounds. Is Happening PINE MEXICAN POOD 1090 W. 5th ST., TEMPI pitch ers co°o*s 60 Ot- n .7 5 y. 4 B LO C K S W E S T O F M ILL 966-0852 Open Monday thru Saturday 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Closed Sunday ■«£ T a k e -O u t S ervice WE DO CATERING LUNCHEON SPECIALS DAILY 11 A M . - 1 P .M C heese C r i s p ................... Sour Cream E nchilada, R ic e ..................................... Taco. R ice, B e a n s ......... E nchilada. R ice. B eans. Tostada. R ice. B eans . . Three T a c o s ..................... Enchilada, Taco. T o s ta d a ................ 1.50 r" ANY 1.75 1.75 CHIMICHANGA w /c o u p o n 1.75 OFFER GOOD 1.75 2 P .M .-1 0 P .M . 2.00 MON. - SAT. 2.00 V *1.00 O fF O ffer expires 4 /2 1 /7 9 & % Tem pe C enter in The Heart Of Sun Devil Country University & Mill q Thursday, April 12, 1979 State Press Page 13 Dr. Brock gives favorable diagnosis for ailing ASU By Walter Berry With ASU's chances for a Pac10 baseball title now resting comfortably in never-never land, you'd think the last diagnosis Dr. Jim Brock could have would be one predicting positive recovery. Yet he has. And it does. “I really think we can turn If nothing else, the threegame series which opens tonight at Packard Stadium could see two teams jockey for sole possession of the cellar. But Brock views the m atter through optimistic eyes. “We're not out of the race, but we are in a position now of playing ourselves back into thepicture," he said. 'T he real key to our situation is that we have to play better baseball. I think we showed that we were capable of that in our play two weeks ago against USC, but we failed to maintain that kind of effort when we faced Arizona (in Tucson) last weekend. ASU freshman right-hander Steve Raine (5-0, 3.66) and sophomore lefty Kevin Dukes (21, 3.57) against the Cardinals' senior rig h t-h an d er Brian Harrison (0-0, 2.25) and secondyear right-hander Paul Grame (2-3, 4.83). At the plate, the Cardinals are SCHOLARSHIPS TO MEDICAL/OSTEOPATH 1C SCHOOL available to students entering or already enrolled. U.S. citizens between 19 and 33 years old. Full tuition, authorized fees, books and $400.00 cash per month. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ON NAVY HEALTH PROFESSION SCHOLARSHIPS contact TOM HULL (602) 261-3158/3600 (collect) Holy Week Services at the Newman Center “Opportunities are still there for us. But we can’t take ad­ vantage of them unless we start to play better baseball.” Stan Holmes this thing around,” said the Sun Devil coach, whose team stands “Leagues Behind the PAC” at 410 to date. “With UCLA a t 10-3 and apparently pulling away, what is left is a fight for second place in the division. “Right now, we're in much less than an optimum situation to take second, but with three of four victories this weekend we could be right in the middle of th in g s. . .” Three or four defeats, con­ versely, could put the finishing touches on ASU's worst season since 1974. But the Sun Devils’ opponent this week — Stanford —is not much better off at 5-9 in conference play. And, more importantly, in fifth place in the Six-PAC. College at University 967-7823 Ideally, it would behoove ASU to have UCLA play the best brand of ball. “We’d like no better than to see them move away from the rest of the pack and have everybody else in the league beat up on each other,” Brock said. ‘T he only time we’d want the Bruins to lose is three times — to us (on April 19-21 in Tempe)." paced by senior center fielder Mike Codiroli (.3% and a PACleading 20 stolen bases), third baseman Phil Wilson (.317, 24 RBIs, 13 stolen bases), catcher Bruce Walters (.333) and second baseman Paul Zuvella (.307, 25 RBIs). Stanford's team batting average is .286. But the situation on hand at the moment is the Cardinals from Palo Alto, Calif. Junior left-hander Joe Lo Presti (5-4, 3.69 ERA) is scheduled to go to the mound against ASU’s Sun Devil southpaw Casey Lindsey (3-2, 4.58) in tonight's 7 p.m. lidlifter. On Friday, Stanford senior right-hander Bruce Fiala (7-3, 4.62) faces ASU sophomore righty Ken Jones (6-6, 3.98), with Saturday’s 2 p.m.-7 p.m. day-night double-header pitting Ju n io r sh o rtsto p M arty B arrett leads the Sun Devils with a .380 average, six triples and 32 ribbies. Behind him are senior catcher John Freitas (.379, 34 RBIs), sophomore right fielder Stan Holmes (.367, five home runs), senior first baseman Mike Anicich (.347, six HRs, 35 RBIs) and third-year center fielder Ed Irvine (.345, 24 RBIs, 12 doubles and seven triples). ASU is currently hitting .322 as a team. “So you could not stay awake with me for even an hour? Be on guard, and pray that you may not undergo the test*. The spirit is willing but nature is weak.” - Matthew 26 Kevin Dukes •Holy Thursday — April 12 Mass of the Last Supper 5:00 p.m. Danforth Chapel) •Good Friday — April 13 Communion Service 11:45 a.m. & 7:30 p.m. Confessions: 5:00-5:30 p.m. & 8:30-9:00 p.m. •Holy Saturday — April 14 Candlelight Easter Mass 7:30 p.m. Confessions: 5:00-5:30 p.m. •Easter Sunday — April 15 Masses at 6:00 a.m. (Sunrise), 8:30 a.m, 10:00 a.m, 11:30 a.m, 6:00 p.iu. & 8:00 p.m. €flST€R SPECIALS __, IN GOLD I----- — — ■ n u ITEMS 40% - 50% c . & Over 400 charms in stock; nil pieces solid 14 kt. gold. '"’’y 1 .------J L - ---D. ----- ----- “ I OfflRMHOU>€RS • CHAINS BRACELETS • ANKLETS BIKINI CHAINS e CROSSES RELIGIOUS CHARMS ■ * BELOW RETAIL Free fngrovlftg On Personalized Chormholders PRICES ~~T~* R. 15" S€RP€NT1N€ OlAIN (re ta il B. 7" S€RPefTINC BRACELET (retail - $24) NOUI $8.” $42) NOUI $16.’ D. CROSS (retail - $20) NOUI $7.” €. SMALL H€ART (re ta il a reception for GARY SLATER m etal sculptor SUZAN ANSON papermaker april 12, 7’9p .m . m e m o r ia l u n io n g a lle r y S39) NOUI $13.” C. PERSONALIZED CHRftMHOUKfl retail yon are invited to $10) NOUI $3.” Tip Gold Mart 6969 > flF H flV6NU€. SCOnSDflL€ ( ^ 9 4 1 - 2 2 4 4 (on. door south.o/ SUI comer 5* ov*. & TO* * -) Page 14 State Press Thursday. April 12,1979 Saga o f 'the next K oufax' By W elter Berry The scene w as alm ost surrealistic in scope. Handfuls of San Francisco “no-names" with numbers in the 50s, 60s, and 70s were running wind sprjnts across the outfield grass. Others were shagging ground balls. A few more were picking off grounders skittering through the rock-hard infield. Almost at the geographic center of the crowd — slightly beyond second base — stood Giant No. 54, a new name among the nobodies, relaying balls back to the mound. And there was a look on his face — relaxed, content and at peace — suggesting there could not be a better place in Phoenix than Municipal Stadium during the “rights” of spring. ‘Tm happy now. Everything has worked out well for me,” said Bill Bordley, the left-hander who made national headlines this winter when he dropped out of USC as a sophomore to turn Bill Bordley professional. “I'm not ashamed of what 1 did. I already felt I was ready to move on — to a higher level, I mean. “I'm glad to be a Giant. It’s an ideal situation for me and a real trip being on the same team as Vida Blue and John Montefusco. . .” Unless “The Count” and the famous No. 14 are sent down to Triple-A this summer, Bordley may not have time to strengthen friendships. It may take the form of long-distance correspondence via the mailman. When San Francisco broke their 1979 training camp on April 2 and headed for Candelstick Park, the 6-foot-3, 195pound southpaw was not among the departing party. It was semi-expected. “I signed a major league contract with a real good bonus, but I really didn’t expect to stick with the big club,” Bordley said. “Being put on the Giants 40-man roster was a big factor in my signing in the first place. But I’m not worrying about where ril pitch. “They (San Francisco’s front office personnel) know more about bringing along players than I do. No m atter where I go, it's still a positive move for me. I need the experience. And besides, their Triple-A affiliate in Phoenix is still close to my home.” Therein lies the crux of the controversy William Bordley caused this past winter after hurling the Trojans to their U th NCAA crown. Generally considered the best pitcher available in the January draft with a 26-2 record and 218 strikeouts over two AllAmerica seasons, Bordley in­ formed several major league organizations that he wanted to stay in close proximity to his parent's Rolling Hills, Calif., residence for “personal reasons.” He eyed the Angels. But ended up seeing only “Red.” “C incinnati d rafted me deliberately against my wishes. I don’t know if they did it to spite me or what, but they knew I didn't want to play for them ,” said Bordley of the National League entity which reportedly offered him $100,000 and a AAA contract to Indianapolis. “I wanted more money and a big league contract anyway, but that’s all w ater under the bridge." At the time however, Bordley seemed more in a rage than the Salt River. He was so adamantly against all other teams that he was quoted by The Associated Tress as saying: “I don't care if the New York Yankees drafted me and wanted me to pitch the seventh game of the World Series in place of Ron Guidry. I still will not sign with them or anybody else. . .” “I was u sin g ' that as an example. I guess it came out kind of strong,” explained the moustachioed 21-year-old. “I used the Yankees as an example only because they represent the apex of sports right now with two straight World Cham­ pionships. I could go and play back E ast. But I don’t want that. It wouldn't be the best situation." Phoenix is. At least in the opinion of USC baseball coach Rod Dedeaux. “Right now. all Bordley needs is a place to pitch every fourth day. And it looks to me that he has it," said Dedeaux. If his past is any indication of the future, the Pacific Coast League and Municipal Stadium is in store for a treat. And some "heat.” ' As a senior at Bishop Mont­ gom ery High School in Torrance, Calif., the fast-balling Bordley averaged two K’s an inning and less than an earned run per game. A t Southern Cal, the lanky left-hander fashioned a 14-0 freshman campaign and 122, 2.73 ERA sophomore season en route to consecutive AllAmerica and all-Pac 8 awards. “Billy was the best at that stage of development than I had ever seen. Another year of college ball would’ve only worked against him,” Dedeaux said in retrospect. “He was ready for the big time by the end of last season. But then again, if he hadn’t had the burden to bear at home th at he had, he might have recon­ sidered. With his father laid-up with a heart condition, it’s tough for a kid to be the breadwinner of the family. But Bill had no choice. He almost had to sign.” Bordley wasn’t exactly a total stranger to the draft proceeding prior to last winter, however. He still has “u n p leasan t memories of the 1976 deal” when he was picked by the Milwaukee Brewers out of the prep ranks. “I w anted to sign desperately,” he remembered. “They offered me $60,000 at first, then added on another 10 grand. But for some reason, the B rew ers’ later retracted the offer and cut it in half. They said continued page 16 WANT ADS START HERE ZZZYGOT Dial-a-joke. Recorded telephone entertainment 24 hours a day. 267-8000. 5 /4 "A FRIEND In need is a friend indeed.” A SU Christian Sclentlests meet at Danforth Chapel every Monday at 3:40 p.m. Ben B. Taylor, campus counselor, Mondays at 12:00 -1 :0 0 p.m. or ras. phone 967-3716. 5 /4 S ervices____________ _______ -A -, W heel W orks A u to C o. Buy, Sell and Trade Japanese Care 1 Mile North of Campus 945 E. Curry ____________ 994-1137 . A n n o u ncem ents SELL OR trade your books at Changing Hands Bookstore. (No textbooks or ro­ mances, please.) You receive 30% of the resale price In cash or 50% in trade credit which may be used to purchase anything In the store. Browse through our two floors of new and used books, art prints, cards and magazines. Open weeknights until 9 p.m. Changing Hands Bookstore, 4 t4 Mill In Oldtown Tempe. 966-0203. 5 /4 WE BUY diamonds and old gold. See us before you sell. Joseph Beming Jewelers, 130 E. University in the Arches. 967-8917. 5 /4 1973 CAPRI. Good condition, great m il*age. new radial tires, air conditioned, 80,000 miles. $1,200. Call Lou, 968-2807. 1969 TRIUMPH GT6. Excellent gas mile­ age, good condition, $1,200. Call 967-8244. Ask for Alan. 4/13 B icycles____________ NO MORE bike flats. Carefree tires are tubeless. Last four times longer. $12.95 plus Installation. "Bikes ’N Things," 9684511. ___________________________ EDITORIAL SERVICES and typing. Connie, 966-7654, call in afternoon. 4/13 NEED ROOM. Savings up to $150. Bikes 'n Things. 968-4511. 5 /4 GOOD STUDENTS. Save 25% on Auto Insurance. Non-smokers 15%. Ask Steve Lundell, ASU Representative, Farmers In­ surance, 835-1480. 5/4 B ooks YOUR #1 SOURCE FOR HOUSE SITTING - Honest and reliable college student looking for house to care for during summer. Excellent references. Kelly. 967-6370. __________ 4/27 SCIENCE FICTION PROFESSIONAL WORD processing ser­ vice (typing) — Manuscripts, Theses, Proposals, Resumes, Letters (Repetitive, Cover, Personal). Right-hand justified mar­ gins or conventional. Storage and re­ visions. Letters - 30c each (in quantity); Manuscripts, etc. - 330 - $40 per hour. All work done on our IBM OS6 Word Proces­ sing Equipment. Editing and proofing. 247-9674. 5 /2 YOUR INCOME taxes prepared professional. Bill Arnold, 967-9266. [& !/s»?ess D ire c to ry ] A utom obiles________ A n n o u n c e m e n ts by a 4/17 P r o fe s s io n a l R e s u m e S e r v ic e EXCELLENT RESULTS In Temps 894-1261 4 /1 3 New & Used Paperbacks & Hardcovers • SF Wargames C O M IC S F O R C O L L E C T O R S The ONE Book Shop 708 Forest Ave., Tempo Just V4 B lock N orth of A S U ! f or S o le ___________ THE MEXICAN Shirt Man is back with new styles of embroidered shirts, blouses, dresses, also wool and acrylic sweaters. Bring ad for 10% discount. Phoenix Greyhound Park, Saturdays and Sundays, East side, space 400. 5 /4 S ervices A R M Y ROTC COULD HELP YOU MAKE UP TO $8,700 FOR COLLEGE. Th ere are a ll sorts o f w ays A rm y R O TC can help you ge t fin an cial ass ista n c e to help you through co lleg e. A nd no active du ty o b lig a tio n un less you d e s ire it. If you're a V eteran th e re are even addition al allo w a n c e s through e d u c a tio n al assistance program s plus receiving credit tow ard M ilita ry S cie n c e courses. To learn th e fa cts , ta lk to one o f th e a dm ission coun selo rs in th e M ilita ry S cie n c e D ep artm e n t on cam p u s at the lo catio n listed belo w . C all now fo r an a p p o in tm e n t. OLD MAIN BUILDING, ROOM 240 PHONE: 261-4404 o r965-3318 N E W HOURS For your convenience MEMORIAL UNION ACTIVITIES CENTER will remain open 8:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Monday through Thursday beginning APRIL 16 ifoGETHEI? W E O N M AKE TH E ASU needs 5/4 1 A CONCERT PROGRAM that will generate more revenue than ever before. 2 An EFFECTIVE SPEAKERS PROGRAM with more student input. 3 STUDENT TICKET PRICES for concerts. 4. Continued improvement of Student Health Services, including full implementation of Gynecological Services. .3 A COFFEE HOUSE devoting p e lt to exciting local talent. h! The real JAZZ SERIES to grow with the continued success as shown in the past. “ GARy L. SHIFFMAN A ctivities V ice P resid en ti ’ 4” 3 Thursday, April 12,1979 State Press Page 15 I7ÜEL0 state press 21” FRAME, 10-speed, perfect, *110.00; Portable evaporative cooler, *15.00; Rocker, *16; 20" 2-speed fan, *8.00. 9868815. TYPING, IBM Selectrlc. Dissertations, theses, term papers. Eight years exper­ ience. Jean, 277-3602. 5 /4 4,13 BLUE NUN Llebframilcb, *3.99; Mol son Beer, ale, *2.69; Seven Crown, *4.99. Rundle's Liquors, comer University and Mill Avenue. 967-9079. 5 /4 LADIES SHOES, Sandals, Purses available in the most popular brands. Baretrap, Sbicca, Frye boots, Bass, Famolare, Dexter, Clogs, Deckers and many more. Backdoor Shop, 707 S. Forest, 966-1772. • 4/27 GRADUATE COLLEGE Expertise. Top qual­ ity typing. IBM Correcting Selectrlc, quality bond paper. Dissertations, Theses, and Research Papers. Call Debby at Schmalzer Corporation, 833-5363; evenings and week­ ends, 969-4524. 5/4 NEED MONEY? *1.25 - *2.00 paid for single albums; *1.50 - *2.50 paid for cassettes. Top condition only. Record Trader, 831 South Rural. 966-5039. 4/13 WANTED TO BUT FINE JEWEIRT EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Manuscript, the­ sis, dissertation, etc. Correcting selectrlc typewriter. 831-8770. 4/17 GOLF CLUBS: men/women sets *35.00 including bag. Also repair, buy, sell classics. 967-5430. 4/26 All Gold, Diamond, Emerald, Ruby or Sapphire Jewelry. Gold Chains, Collections or Individual Pieces. Estates Our Specialty. EXPERIENCED TYPIST. IBM sell-correct­ ing. 90-110 wpm. *7 .5 0 /hour (approxi­ mately 75 cents/page. Fast and accurage. Lora, 947-0976. 5 /4 EXPERIENCED TYPIST. Dissertations, theses, term papers. Guaranteed. Carbon ribbon. Spelling corrected. Near ASU. 967-4937. 4/13 SEWING MACHINE, Free Arm, never used, 1979, best model, still in carton. Full original guarantee. Does everything. Cost $469, must sacrifice, *165. I also have the beautiful cabinet that came with it. Private Home. 946-2127. TYPING: 10 years experience, good sta­ tistical electric typewriter. Elite type. Call Kay, 838-1735. 4 '1 * 279-1711 NEED RIDE to Boston after May 19th. Share expenses and driving. Call anytime, 966-8960, Steve. 4/18 Deer Creek Leather Now Making FREE TRANSPORT to Oroville, Wash., or Canada in V.W. camper. Call Egon Landsberg, 985-0237. 4/13 Custom Fitted Sandals 11 styles -- more on the way. Also Bags, Belts, Wallets, Halter Tops, Leather Vests, and more. T rave l 414 S. Mill Ave., Suite 111 JUNE 4 - 2 6 , Scandinavian Summer Seminar, 3 graduate/undergraduate cre­ dits, Elsinore. Denmaik, *1,159, board/ room/travel/tuition. Dr. R. Axfdrd, 9653643. 4 ,13 (behind The Spaghetti Co.) 966-4042 4/17 J ew elry CARTOONIST NEEDED now part-time, flexible hours, video firm. Qualified, call Imre at 279-0634.__________________ 4/12 GET HIGH. Learn to sky dive. You'll love It. For information call Bryan, 966-4786. 4/13 NEED HELP In Spianish? French? Tutoring changes E’s to C*s, C s to B’s. 968-2913. . 4/25 BEA B A R TE N D ER 957-3370 or Cocktail Waitress American Bartenders School 2822 N. 32nd St., Phoenix 4/18 p e rs o n a l. SHALOM! Please call 249-9234. 5 /4 f or R ent/Lease_____ _ CLEAN ATTRACTIVE 3 bedroom, 2 bath unfurnished home with carport and fenced yard, within walking distance ASU. $450/ month. Available immediately. 838-0549. 4/13 P o o m m a tc W a n te d OVERSEAS JOBS — Summer/year round. Europe, South America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, *500 - *1200 monthly. Expenses paid. Sightseeing. Free Info — Write: L/C, Box 52-AD, Corona Del Mar, Calif. 92625. SI2 "W MESA, CHANDLER, Gilbert students. Here is a great opportunity for you, part-time now, full-time In June. Earn to *70 daily demonstrating two products. Phone Gor­ don, 964-8321, Fuller Brush Co. 4/27 EUROPE AND BEYOND! Traveling the open road. Freestyle. There’s something about it that means the best experiences you’ll ever have. That’s the kind of vacation we’re offering you. Take a modem coach, add young people from all over the world, and hit the road. And you have over thirty options of which road to hit the glamour cities and colorful villages of the real Europe, the Greek Islands, Scandinavia, Russia, the Middle East Africa, India...city to city, detail to detail, adventure to adventure. Call or write for our free fullcolor brochure. □ Y es! Send me m oie InfonneUon ■bout AdventureW orid 791 WANTED: ROOMMATE to share two bedroom apartment. * 137 . 50/ month and Vz electric. Call Mark, 947-4054.________ 4/13 ROOMMATE WANTED to share 3 bedroom home, 1 mile from ASU. *125 and b utilities, kitchen, laundry, male or lemale. 967-1002 or 1-866-2165. 4 /1 2 FEMALE: PRIVATE, unfurnished room in beautifully furnished 3 bedroom home. Available May 1st. Washer, dryer, air, purified water. * 140/ month and utilities. 966-1727. 4/13 T y p in g TYPING THESES, dissertations, term papers, etc.-Professional secretary, ac­ curate, spelling corrected, reasonable rates. 949-9207. 5 /4 EXPERIENCED SECRETARY. Theses, dis­ sertations. term papers, resumes. IBM Selectric. Reasonable. Joyce, 839-4913 after 2 p.m. ®^4 Inter-Collegiate Holidays, Inc. EXTRA HOURS earn you *500 per 1000 stuffing our circulars. For Information: Pentax Enterprise, Dept. AS, P.O. Box 1158, Middletown, O hio45042. 4/20 WANTED: PART-TIME help, 1 - 2 days, light housecleaning. *3.15 per hour. Call 833-7839. 4/17 NEW TIMES paper routes available now. Leave name and number with Anita at 271-0040. 4,12 LEGEND CITY Amusement Park opening April 14. Accepting applications for the following areas: Ride operations, games, food, and beverages, security and main­ tenance. Excellent opportunities for stu­ dents and persons seeking part-time work. Call 275-8553 for information. 4/27 $600 PER 1000 mailing circulars. Guaran­ teed earnings! Write: Myriad, Box 1893M, Denton, TX 76201. 4,12 PART-TIME JANITORS, Tempe area. Office cleaning. Work 3-4 hours per night between 6 30 n m. and midnight. Call 955-4642. D * 4/12 JOBS!! Analyst BS degree in one of the Physical Sciences. Must have 2 years experience in both programming and data analysis OR MS degree in one of the Physical Sciences and no experience necessary. Please call or send resume to: Mike Robson Personnel Manager Bell Technical Operations - TEXTRON 1050 East Valencia Road Tucson, AZ 85706 294-2651 Equal Opportunity Employer M /F 4 /1 2 W an ted NEEDED: Tutor THOMAS TEMPORARIES 4/13 for high school freshman oirl French and Basic Algebra^ Live near 40th Street and Camelback. Phone 9650219. and 5/14 Horn* of thaT-Oiil DEL WEBB TOWNHOUSE 100 W . CLARENDON, SUITE 1735 263-5502 Best W e ste rn International Reservations Center NOW HIRING Telephone Reservations Sales Agents Must hire 800 full time agents for summer Best Western, “The World’s Largest Lodging Chain," offers flexible hours, pleasant working conditions, good benefits and excellent computerterminal experience in the most sophisticated Reservations Center in the travel industry. Applicants must be sales oriented and skilled in dealing courteously with the traveling public while handling high volume phone work through Best Western’s toll-free number. • Light typing required . Complete training provided HAVE A FUN SUMMER AND MAKE MONEY) THOMAS TEMPORARIES Is now Interviewing for Summer Jobs. Positions for clerical and light industrial work are available. •N O FEE •TOP HOURLY PAY RATES •YOU TELL US WHEN YOU WANT TO WORK CALL FOR AN INTERVIEW: silver BS degree In one of the Physical Sciences. Must have 5 years experience on large scale computer systems and evaluation of CE Systems. • Full time shifts available on a seniority bid basis , • Open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week Students & Teachers: 1007 Braxton Ave., #18 Los Angeles, CA 90024 call free 800-223-0694 call collect 213-478-0228 WE PAY cash for gold, diamonds. Call 968-5967. HELP WANTED, available Immediately 3 11 p.m. shift, male/lemale; experienced orderly or nursing assistant. Begin now and work into summer position. Good pay, close to ASU. 967-6748. 4/20 WORK YOUR own hours cleaning occupied homes in Scottsdale. Starting salary *3.25 per hour. 257-0727.________________ 4784 I nstruction STEEL GUITAR lessons, by professional steel guitarist. 833-7063. 4/17 NEED A JOB? Farrell’s Ice Cream In Tempe is looking for cooks, dishwashers, fountain persons and waiters/waitresses. Positions available immediately and for summer. Apply In person Monday - Friday, .3:00 4:30 for a.m. Interview. 1301 E. Broadway. 4/13 HELP WANTED: male. Warehouse work mornings 8:00 to 12:00 Monday through Friday. Call Jim or Bob, 967-6654, 4112 a D V E N IU R A I nstruction 5 /4 LIQUOR SALES clerk specializing In wine sales. No experience necessary. Must be mature end well groomed. Available for at least three semesters. 20 - 30 hours weekly. Hours flexible, store In good area, N.E. Phoenix shopping canter, 248-9615. 4120 WEDDING BANDS, 15% off through the month of April. Joseph Beming Jewelers, 130 E. University In the Arches. 967-8917. 4/27 REPEAL THE sales tax on food. Volunteers needed to help with petition drive. Call Representative John Kromko, 1-800-3528404. Ext. S83S(toll tree). 4/19 Senior Analyst EARN MONEY at home stuffing envelopes. Send stamped self-addressed envelope to: Milestone Enterprises, 3010 Santa Monica Blvd. H484-SP, Santa Monica, California 9 0 4 0 4 . __________________ 4,17 LOW COST travel to Israel. Center for Student Travel. 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. N.Y. time. Toll Free 800-223-7878. 4/17 LEADERSHIP SUMMER. Gain in personal leadership experience and see New England. Boya' Camp, Lenox, MA (51 at year). June 23 - August 23. Swimming and sailing instructors (22 sailboats): tennis (16 courts), baseball, basketball coaches: camp newspaper; other openings. Send full details. Joe Kruger, 20 Allen Court, South Orange, NJ 07079. 4/12 IMMEDIATE OPENINGS! H e lp W an ted T ransportation H e lp W an ted H e lp W an ted W a n te d T y p in g Sor S a le . . . have an audience of 160,000 people a w eek. 4(12 For In terview A ppointm ent Phone: 955-5255 B est W estern International, Inc. 6201 N. 24th Parkway (Comer of 24th St. & Lincoln Drive) Phoenix, AZ 85016 APPLY NOW! Recruiting on campus - call Placement Office for dates and times. 4,1 Paga 16 State Press Thursday, Aprii 12, 1979 More about B ill Bordley — happy a t last as a Phoenix G iant continued from pag* 14 they had cold feet. I don’t know about that. All 1 know is that I ended up in college. 'Things have worked out for the best, though,” Bordley added with a reassuring nod. 'T h e money now is a lot better than what I would’ve gotten out of high school. And I’ve got two years in on a degree. It’s im­ portant to me that I get that piece of paper. . .” The Angels and their owner, Gene Autry, may receive the same — only their’s might take the form of a court reprimand. When the Reds’ failed to sign Bordley after drafting him, California was charged with tampering by major baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn, hence losing the right to negotiate with him. But Bordley saw no wrong in what California did or didn't do. “I understand the Angels are appealing and I’ll back them all the way. I kind of feel sorry for them. As far as I know, they didn’t do anything illegal,” he said of the suit which could conceivably cost California a pair of future draft picks and a $15,000 fine. “I don’t think there's any evidence of wrong­ doing on their part. But I hear the Angels were supposed to have made phone calls to other teams, trying to convince them NOT to draft me. I don’t know about th at.” He wasn’t supposed to. “You can’t blame the kid,” said Spec Richardson, San Francisco's general manager. T h e clubs know the rules. You can't expect a player right out of college to be a lawyer as well. The individual organizations have to police themselves. The Angels should have known better.” Bordley did understand the draft enough to enroll at Mesa College in California, “just for a semester so I could be eligible. The draft was on a Monday. If I went back to USC for the first day of spring classes it would have killed the whole thing.” Then again, going back to his old Trojan stomping grounds wasn’t on his original list of priorities. Even if it was just to pay Raoul “Rod” Dedeaux a friendly visit. “He was behind me all the way. Besides being a great coach to me, hes a close per- 2ND A N N U A L ERA LUNCHEON sonal friend,” Bordley said. “Rod’s the greatest person I’ve ever met in baseball. He’s awesome. I really can’t put into words what effect Rod has had on my life.” Dedeaux can. “I saw him at the hotel the other day. He stopped in far a visit,” said the 64-year-old coach whose team was in Tempe for the ASU-USC series at Packard Stadium on March 29-30-31. “Bill’s a very level-headed kid. We talked a while about his being sent down and he seemed to be in good spirits. “After that, he sat in our HARD CONTACT LENSES $79.95 SOFT CONTACT LENSES $99.95 f Trial wearing period for Contact Lenses. Same day delivery for most soft contacts. Soft contacts for Astigmatism » Contact Lens Supplies. Wednesday, April 1 8 -1 2 :3 0 p.m. Arizona Room — MU Students: $5.00/plate . . . others, $7.00 20% DISCOUNT ON ALL COMPLETE GLASSES Eye Exam for Glasses $20.00 _____________ Fill Your Doctor's Prescriptions____________ Reservations must be made by Monday, April 16 All proceeds will go to help ratify the ERA in Arizona. For more information call Women’s Affairs Board at 965-3161 dugout for the first game of the series. He still thinks he's one of the g u y s . . . which he is.” The professional scouts seem to think Bordley is another Sandy Koufax. T h a t’s totally unfounded,” said the rookie pitcher. T h e y just picked up on my record. That’s all. I’ll tell you right now, I don't throw no 96 miles-perhour like Koufax did. I'm more like 75. "But still, Sandy was one of my idols as a kid. I kind of liked the way he handled himself on and off the field. He was never involved in controversy . . .” DR. W.G. AMES, Optometrist V. 2916 N. 68th St. Scottsdale, Ariz. For Appointment or information 941-5228 Open Monday thru Saturday SO LAR NEEDS M O RE MANUFACTURING M AN AG EM EN T PEOPLE W H O C A N SOLVE PROBLEMS FROM ALL ANGLES. Gary Keller enjoys being able to rebuild old cars in his spare time. He also enjoys working on his career at Solar full time. A career in which Gary assum es total oper­ ating responsibility for one of Solar's m a­ jor plants. "I enjoy doing my own house additions and car rebuilding for the sam e reason I enjoy m anaging a $67-million m anufac­ turing operation," Gary says. "It's an excit­ ing challenge." A challenge which is now available for others with advanced degrees in Indus­ trial M anagem ent a n d a n interest in manufacturing technology and in- Solar has immediate openings for management trainees in purchasing. Career opportunities also are available in production control, materials m anage­ ment, industrial engineering and more. Growth potential at Solar is virtually un­ limited. Also unlimited is the potential for a rewarding life style in beautiful San D iego. Solar em p loyees enjoy yearround sports, recreational activities and sunshine. Which, in Gary Keller's case, m eans plenty of time for rebuilding cars. W ell b e on cam pus April 18 an d 19. If you're interested in driving home a career with a leading manufacturer of in­ dustrial turbine engines, sign up at the placement office today. Or you can call Tom Graham collect at (714) 238-6027 or write in confidence to Solar Turbines International, San Diego, CA 92138. SOiAR TURBINES MTERNimONAI An Operating Group of International Harvester