r th u rsd a y g A rizo n a S ta te U n ive rsity £ â» V _______________________ !_________ state press July 26, 1979 Voi. 4, No. 8 Tempe, Arizona Long-delayed hotel to go up near ASU By Richard Monks Construction of a resort hotel at the northeast corner of Rural Road and University Drive — the site 9f a similar project that was cancelled three years ago after ASU athletic officials were accused of conflict of interest because of their involvement — is on again. The project was originally set for 1973 when ASU Head Football Coach Frank Kush and Athletic Director Fred Miller formed a partnership with Scottsdale financier Anthony Nicoli and other in­ vestors to construct a 12-story, 300-room Hilton hotel on the site. But the plan caused repercussions after the 1975 development of ASU sports facilities near the hotel site. Conflict of interest allegations were made against Kush and Miller, and the hotel plans were dropped in September 1976. At that time Kush and Miller said they held only small interests in the project, and the major decisions on what to do with the land rested with Nicoli. Neither Kush nor Miller could be reached for comment on whether they are presently involved. Tempe City Planning Aide Harry Jenkins said Miller and Kush are not involved in current plans. While Miller and Kush are out, Nicoli is still involved. The hotel is being con­ structed by JPK Inc., a Phoenix-based development company. In 1977 the JPK corporation merged with Camelback Shadows, owned by Nicoli. In addition, the previous owner of the land which is planned for the hotel was University Plaza Inc., another Nicoliowned company. They sold the land to JPK earlier this year. Jenkins said the plans for the present hotel call for more than 350 rooms in eight or nine buildings, a continental restaurant and “a few small retail shops.” Each unit will contain a kitchen so that out-of-town guests “will not be forced to eat all of their meals in restaurants.” “Unlike the previous plans,” he said, “this one calls for no golf course. Only two swimming pools.” The hotel, which will go up in October and consist of two, three and four-story buildings, will be situated just east of the fire station on University Drive. Jenkins said there would be no danger posed to the Fire Department response to fires because of the hotel. “There’s supposed to be a continuation of the street east of the Tempe Fire Department,” he said. “This will alleviate any traffic problems occurring before or after construction.” Before the hotel can be built, the plans must be approved by the city’s Planning and Zoning board, which has to o.k. the four-story buildings and the kitchens in every room currently not allowed. Jenkins said the variances are ac­ ceptable and he was sure “there would be no problem.” The architectural design then must be approved by the Design Review Board, which he again said should approve the plans. The architect for the project is Tempe city councilman Art Svob, who is forced to abstain from voting or making recommendations regarding the hotel because of conflict of interest statutes. W h o 's that m asked m an? Dennis Mully, an 18-year-old construction worker, appears to be prepared for the worst. Mully is pert of the ASU electric shop crew presently renovating the Engineering Building. [State Press staff photo by Tom Tingle] “The final step,” Jenkins said, “will be to get it ap­ proved by the city council. Which, if the Planning and Zoning Commission and the Design Review Board ap­ prove, should be no trouble.” Jenkins said he expects JPK to begin construction “as soon as everything is approved.” He added this wfll take approximately “a month at the very least.” S S S denies plan to use universities Campuses may find they're caught in a draft By Steve Allnatt The U.S. Selective Service System plans to use college campuses as conscription centers, according to a spokesman for an anti-draft group who said the plans were obtained in a freedom of information act suit. The acting SSS director denied the allegation, however. Documents turned over to the group in­ cluded “copies of the actual plans for emergency registration including the use of college campuses,” said Jon Landau, staff attorney for the Central Committee for Conscientious Objectors. The suit was filed in January by the Friends Peace Committee, a Quaker group in Philadelphia, and was settled June 25. But acting SSS director Bob Shuck said campuses are not being included in registration efforts. “If we use any college campuses it would be to supplement election officials,” he said. He said registration would be conducted with the assistance of election officials, and voter registration lists and campuses would be used “only if they also served as voter registration centers.” Shuck added use of universities as registration centers would have to be sanc­ tioned by college presidents and state election officials. He said conscription (actual entry into the military) would take place at current Armed Forces Examination and Entry Stations. He added the terms “registration” (for the draft) and “conscription” often are confused. Landau said Shuck was “trying to duck the issue” when he denied the plans. “When he says ‘we do not plan’ he’s trying to avoid controversy on college campuses,” Landau said. “In fact, plans do call for the use of college campuses.” A spokeswoman said ASU University President John Schwada said he has not been contacted by the SSS. Manuel Figueroa of the Dean of Students office and Col. Bill Lacy of the military science department said they had not been contacted either. “I haven’t heard a thing,” Lacy said. “In fact, in Seattle two weeks ago, the Secretary of the Army said the Department of Defense and the Department of the Army were both against bringing the draft back.” ASU Associated Students President Susie Eastridge said she is strongly against any effort to use ASU as a registration center. “I would do anything I could to stop it,” Eastridge said. “It would be frightening if campuses went along, but I don’t think they would.” Landau said his organization was opposed to resumption of compulsory registration in any form, but added the use of campuses as registration centers was especially repugnant. “We’re concerned that the military wiU make inroads into the U.S. educational system,” Landau said. “It should be kept separate from the military. “When the military gets a foothold, they end up controlling things completely,” he added. Landau also said he believes the draft will be resumed in the early 1980’s. “It will be after the elections,” Landau said. Page 2 Summer State Press Thursday, July 26, 1979 Sura he can w in Econom ics prof seeking Rhodes seat in C on gre ss By Richard Monks the United Nations and the Pentagon as an economic consultant qualify him to deal with the rising economic problems. “I think there will be a need for economists in coming years rather than politicians,” he said. Originally, Amacher said he had planned to run for Barry Goldwater’s Senate seat. Goldwater also has mentioned retirement after his present term. “I changed my mind because it would cost close to $1 million," he said. “To run for the House will only require about a quarter as much - $250,000.” Amacher said he plans to spend the remainder of the summer raising funds and then teach through the 1979-80 academic year. He added he will go on leave in the fall of 1980 to campaign. “I wouldn’t run if I didn’t see it possible to beat John Rhodes,” he said. “I’m not a masochist.” An ASU economics professor who hopes to unseat House Minority Leader John Rhodes in the 1980 elections says he’s sure he can beat the incumbent of 29 years. “I think the job should be filled by someone who wants it rather than someone who fills it reluctantly,” Dr. Ryan Amacher, a Democrat and chairman of ASU’s economics department, said. There has been some doubt as to whether Rhodes will seek a fifteenth term but Amacher said he will proceed as if Rhodes were running. “If he does run,” he said, “I think Til be the only one who runs against him. If he doesn’t run then there will be a flood of candidates from both parties." Amacher said he feels the key issues of the 1980s will be economic ones and it will take “a clean approach” to solve them. He added he thinks his experience working for ASU, KAET offering 8 courses for credit through TV this fall provide teachers and teachers-to-be with background in the education of exceptional children; “Gardening in Arizona,” describing gardening problems and opportunities unique to Arizona; “Open Math,” designed to improve elementary school teaching of metric, basic facts, computation, consumer and logical thinking. ASU will offer eight television credit courses over KAET-TV this fall. Courses in astronomy, the arts, social psychology, nonverbal communication, special and elementary education, technology and social change will be offered as regular television programs beginning with fall semester classes the week of Aug. 27. Five of the television classes are repeated in response to requests. They are: ‘T h e Prisoner,” a BBC production of the 1960s that has evolved into a course in social psychology dealing with the individual and freedom in modern society; “Beyond Works,” a course that explores elements of nonverbal communication from body language to manipulation of space and time. “The Exceptional Child,” which is designed to Students who register for TV credit courses are required to complete assigned reading and mail-in papers and examinations, in addition to viewing the television presentations. Textbook purchase and registration can be handled by mail. ASU tele v isio n cou rse sch ed u les and registration forms can be obtained through the office of continuing education, 965-6563. Sct&inÂVI ® SANDWICH SHOPS E very F rid ay E n jo y, W ith th e p u rc h a s e o f A n y S c h lo t z s k y : 6 0 o z P itc h ers o f B u d w e is e r on T ap * 1 95 each The Movie HOT”Surfing in Brazil, California, Hawaii and soutti Africa p l u s Explosive Skateboarding G LENFAIR: M on.. T u es . July 30 & 31 HAYDEN EAST: wed., THurs , A u g u s t 1 A 2 ALL SH O W S 7, 9 a n d 10:30 pm NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS " \ FOR SUMMER JOBS ★ Clerical ★ Secretarial ★ Industrial ★ Typists •Work as many hours as you like •Start immediately •Top pay CALL TODAY 277-6246 office • 'QT o v e r lo a d S O W HO N E E D S <äA5 TO djE T T O ASU? If you’d like to save yourself a real pain in the gas tank next fall, come visit our attractive new two and three bedroom patio home models now. They’re the closest new homes to the ASU Campus, an easy one miie walk away. Each offers solid con­ struction, the advantages of owning and these exceptional features: ■ R 30 ceiling insulation & R-13 wall insulation ■ Elegant cathedral ceiling ■ Heat pump refrigeration & heating ■ Carpeting & draperies ■ Exterior landscaping & care free maintenance ■ Dishwasher & disposal See the new Casitas East patio home models now. Some models available for occupancy fall term. 2 and 3 bedroom plans From $44,950 or Liters o f Pepsi 40^ each Just one sandw ich...it’s that good! 2245-A W. Broadway 18 E. 10th St. M esa,962-6113 Tempe, 968-0056 University east of' McClintock • $94-1959 (Turn south on Hacienda Dr.) Sales Office Open 10to5 Developed by Schroeder Wallace Sales by Blue Ribbon Realty Schroeder Construction Co.. Inc. Builders of fine homes since 1961 Thursday, July 26, 1979 Summer State Press Page 3 S A L ’S MEXICAN FOOD, COCKTAILS, DANCING ft GAMES GIANT TV SCREEN LADIES NIGHT MONDAY NIGHT ----- SPORTS------ Thursday Nights ALL DRINKS 2 for1 HAPPY HOUR 4-6 Large Pitcher Beer .. $1.35 Can or Bottle Beer .. $ .40 Draft B e e r ........... $ .25 Well Drinks ........ 2 for 1 M argaritas.......... 2for1 (A b ove P ric e s for H a p p y H o u r O nly) Happy Hour Prices During Game HOT DOGS ... 2Sc TAKE OUT SERVICE AVAILABLE 967-4611 955 E. University [Diagonally A c r o s s From _ Fire Station] r BIRD'S RECORD EXCHANGE 111 E. University Corner of University & Myrtle In Tower Center WE BUY, SELL AND TRADE FINE QUALITY USED RECORDS AND CASSETTES OPEN MONDAY - SATURDAY 10 - 9 ROCKJAZZFOLKBLUESCLASSICALSHOWS Board with sch ool? 966-4158 Danny Combs, a 22-year-old Phoenix resident, “pops a wheelle” on his skateboard near Stauffer Hall. Combs has been skateboarding for 10 years and uses the board for transporta­ tion as well as for fun. [State Press staff photo by Tom Tingle] SUMMER SIZZLES A T THE IN O U R G R E A T E S T E F F O R T T O S E R V E Y O U BETTER WE'VE MOVED! sunm m bounac Wednesday; BEER BASH lliy v e f S it y (Support Your Local Jock) W ith all the C oors 6c M ic h you can drink. $1.00 women $2.00 men Thursday; OUR INFAMOUS LADIES NITE F o r women only, 7-9 p.m. 25c well, wine & C oors Friday & Saturday; VERY HAPPY HOURS s p o r t in g 7-9 p.m., 25c well, wine, Coors for everyone. M .C . - L u ke Cusack Sundays. Mondays & Tuesday»; NO BOOZE BOOGIE Teens 7-11 p.m. go o d s D.J. - M ik e M erber Every Night; PARTYING, DANCING OR JUST LISTENING T h e music is guaranteed to suit your taste. N O W A T 1 0 3 8 So. M IL L A V E . A C R O S S M IL L F R O M G A M M A G E (F O R M E R L Y M E R R IT T 'S D E L I-M A R T ) 9 6 8 -7 7 2 5 RUR3L ST /tP3CH€, TCIWPl Page 4 Summer S tate P ress Thursday, July 26, 1979 r Opinion It is better to have loafed and lost than never to have loafed at all. — Jam es Thurber state press J N o fua! like an old fuel "Synfuel:" King Coal is fired up It appears both boom and bust are heading for our little corner of the world. The American rebirth of coal — or “synfuel” as it has already been dubbed in Newspeak — appears to be rekindling old arguments and firing some intriguing new ones between Washington and the Western states. President Carter, in a frantic attempt to lessen American dependency on foreign fuels, has proposed an $88 billion crash program to develop synfuel, much of the coal and oil shale for which is deep in the earth of Arizona, Utah, New Mexico and other states. We will again see the phenomenon of the boom town springing up around mining cen­ ters. More people will flock to more jobs and more money in the West. But a last ditch, headfirst plunge into the synfuel barrel will also inevitably bring with it serious environmental damage — something lawmakers are apparently willing to accept in return for the possibility of being able to tell OPEC what to do with its cartel. Air and water quality, wildlife, open space — their already rapid disappearance would doubtless be hastened by an immediate jump into extensive mining and subsequent liquification and gasification of the coal and shale so abundant here. At least one Congressional measure, a bill introduced by Rep. John Dingell, D-Michigan, would empower the federal Department of Energy to “override state authorities” should they try to get in the way of progress by at­ tempting to limit the blight. The less-than-rosy relationship between Carter, a growing group of legislators and Western leaders has some observers predicting a future civil war between the “hydrocarbon states” and the “consumer states.” — DOONESBURY _ ^ Probably the most serious environmental problem the West will face during the boom years, however, is water. It is no secret that resource is already limited here. But the amount of the liquid required to synthesize coal fuel is mind-boggling. A liquification plant producing 100,000 barrels a day would require about 17,500 acrefeet of water per year — before the com­ bustion process, which is water-cooled. In other words, to produce two billion barrels of synfuel a day would cost us at least 350,000 acre-feet of precious water. So. We are left trying to balance the obvious need to be aggressive about energy selfsufficiency against environmental devastation if we jump into synfuel production without taking a good look first. Let’s do it — but let’s do it like porcupines make love. ---------------------------------------^ Letters to the Editor Magazine in fine shape; story missed the Point v e rv e m a ssa ie bo o ks. B e , i w MG, t o w er in g b e s t s e l l e r s , iso p a g e s . so m b v m e s M ove, t h a t s howbig verare. in e k in d of BOOKS ABOUTWHICH M EN L IK E TO THB M ANS U K B A VA­ CUUM CLEANER NO DETAIL IS TOO SNUUL. TO SHOW UPIN ONE O F H/S BOOKS. ' r r s O A W hAl b e r STAM HE W ANTS TO M TERYIEW m u FOB H IS NCW BOOK ON POWER .. I 'H IS V O K E CRACKLED OVER THE UNO. 6KVFF, ASSURED.. HELLO/ \ \ rz i can t . jo a n e r u JUST TOO NERVOUS ABOUTN T INTERVIEW w rm h a ib e r st a m TOMORROW. 1 DONNO, I GUeSS . n s ju st A u r n e INTIMIDATING. A LL THE JOURNALISTS H £ M UTES ABOUTARB SO MUCH LA RG IR THAN v e r v e a l l s o A w esom e AND BRILLIAN T AND W ILLFUL. B !6, POWERFUL MEN. ENCRUSTED W ITH VIRTUE, BACH KEEPM 6A 'RENDEZ t a s WTTHH ISTO RY"/ <*>m c >»/ 2 * * W * f “£ j * * RENDEZVOUS W m H SX R Y ! I DONT EVEN OWN A N ENG AG E­ M ENT BO O K’. Editor: Point magazine is really not as “troubled” as your July 19 article indicates. While it is no secret that we had financial problems last year, we are no longer struggling to exist. Our student handbook edition, DevflsAide, which will be available shortly, was a complete financial success. We realized approximate advertising revenues of $11,800.00 and were therefore able to cover printing and typesetting costs of approximately $6800.00 easily. Further, 164 advertising contracts worth $15,450.00 have already been signed for future regular editions of the magazine, and the first contract deadline is still one month away. In short, our financial picture is very promising. Our efforts during our first year resulted in a second place award in Sigma Delta Chi’s western regional university magazine contest. We hope to continue this tradition in our second year, and have assembled a fine staff to accomplish this. I would like to assure any of those people as well as anyone else who may have been misled by your article that Point is not on death’s doorstep. Instead, it is flourishing. Steve McGlockUn Managing Editor Roxanne Crane Advertising Director P a rk in g tic k e ts w ith o u t a car; w h e re w ill b u re a u c ra c y e n d ? r r s A N ENORMOUS PR IV I­ LEG E TOM EET X)U, AW . , REOFERN. AN INCREDIBLE. 1 EXTRAORDINARY PR1AIE G B ’ J \ THANK T0U.MR.HALBERSTAM. I UNDERSTAND roUPE WORKM G ON A SEDU CI TO'POW ERS THAT B E "__ THATS RIGHT. TM CALLING tT 'L A CANEE OE LA CREM E" THE BOOK IS ABOUT THE GIANTS OF JOURNALISM, THE BIG. VERY BIG MEN. FORCING LIF E TOB U ST ON THEM TERMS, VUTTS HOW B IG THE/ A R E ' w h er e j m n ie LEFT D o ro u W ANT AM EREVERSAr. lÿ r w r iH B ePEAT SM ELL < *.*V T * Editor: What’s a person to do? Recently I received a statement from the University with a charge of $42.00 for out­ standing parking citations, and $10.00 in erroneous medical charges. The fact is that I do not even own a car! I returned the bill with a note to that effect, only to receive another statement, with an additional charge (again a parking citation)! Mr. Richard Coyne, the Fee Status Officer, informed me that it is up to me to prove that I don't own a car! After numerous visits and interviews with the ap­ propriate officials (who incidentally yielded an admission on their part that the car in question belongs to someone else!), the harrassment continues. Does anyone out there know the key to solving this bureaucratic riddle? Cyrous Vahidnia ____________________ Engineering student Thursday, July 26,1979 Summer State Press Page 5 Professionals crow ding job market, survey says W f ARE THE LARGEST IN OUR FIELD AND NEED RHONE PEOPLE By Thomas Brom Pacific News Service SAN FRANCISCO She works as an investment analyst on Montgomery Street, goes with her friends to moderatelypriced French restaurants, and drives a diesel Rabbit. He heads the tax section of a corporate legal firm, takes flying lessons on the weekend, and drives a BMW. They jog after work near the Marina, buy grass and cocaine, and almost never eat at home. “She” and “he” represent two of the fastest-growing oc­ cupational groups in the U.S. — professional w orkers and m anagers. The Current Population Survey for 1977 shows 13.7 million workers in the “professional, technical and kindred” category. This com­ pares with 7 million, shown in a comparable data source, for 1968 —! a 97 per cent increase in a sin gle generation. The managerial category has in­ creased about 42 per sent since 1958 to 9.7 million woiaers. Together, the two categories account for over one quarter of all U .S. workers. The oc­ cupations range from doctors, lawyers, writers, teachers and accountants to d ieticians, com puter sp ecialists, and corporate managers. White collar workers, including those in clerical and sales, now comprise one half of the labor farce, up from 41 per cent just 20 years ago. “We are witnessing a basic restructuring of the domestic economy,” says Bureau of Labor S ta tistics (BLS) econom ist Richard Rosen. According to the BLS, the percentage of white collar workers in major cities is still greater — 70 per cent in Washington, D.C., 62 per cent in Nassau and Suffolk counties on Long Island, 62 per cent in Denver-Boulder, and 60 per cent in San Francisco, San Jose, and S ea ttle. P rofessionals and managers alone constitute more than 30 per cent of the workers in Washington, D.C., Boston, New York, D en ver, Min­ neapolis, Los Angeles, San Jose, San Francisco, and Seattle. “San Francisco has always been a financial and trading center,” says Merlin Meyer of the BLS West Coast office. “But there is definitely a major shift going on." Who hires these white collar workers, and why do they migrate primarily to the coastal cities? The BLS refuses to speculate. “We just provide data for other people to analyze,” says Rosen of the BLS Office of Employment Structure and Trends. But Merlin Meyer pointed to the importance of New York, Boston, Hartford, Houston, and many of the West Coast cities as administrative, financial, and insurance centers. In fact, many i Z28 FOR YOUR NEXT CAR NEW or U SED The O N L Y M an to See Fo r Special Student O lacounts Bob Savittlsri — at — RAY KORTE CHEVROLET Telephone 047-3535 Of the jobs So attractive in the coastal cities involve professional and managerial services for th e global operations of U.S.-based multi­ national corporations. U.S. direct investment abroad rose to $149 billion in 1977, including investments of at least 10 per cent of the voting stock of foreign companies as well as loans to foreign affiliates. In the mid-1970’s, the foreign sales of the Fortune 500 firms in the top 50 cities totalled an incredible $213 billion. A recent Columbia University study of the “corporate head­ quarters complex” in New York City found that nearly 100 of the Fortune 500 list of largest corporations have headquarters in that city. This complex ac­ counts for over one-fifth of all wage and salaries workers, and one-fourth of total payroD ($8.7 billion). “A s such,” the report stated, “the complex represents the largest aggregation of economic activity in the City, considerably larger in terms of jobs and income - than manufacturing, municipal governm ent, or nonprofit enterprise.” Despite ' the much-reported industrial decline of the Nor­ theast, nearly one half of the Fortune 500 largest corporations still have their headquarters in the region’s 10 largest metropolitan areas. The study found, however, that corporate headquarters are increasingly mobile. Some have moved to the Sunbelt extending from Atlanta to Los Angeles, where wages, rent, taxes and living costs are substantially For Tho fastest Solos Yoo'vo Evor Hod. Wo Offer: lower than in the Northeast. In the process, they have spread the distribution of professionals and managers like seeds in the wind. Each cor­ porate headquarters requires its own network of service com­ panies, together providing jobs for the nation’s well-bred and well-educated. Barbara and John Ehrenreich, authors of “Between Labor and Capital,” see the rapid growth of w hite collar jobs as the emergence of a new class, the professional-managerial class (PMC). Ranging in occupation from engineers and teachers to social workers, the PMC’s function is the direct or indirect management of the working class on the job, in schools, and through the mass media. The Ehrenreichs believe the attitudes of professionals and managers combine hostility toward their employers with dislike of most other workers. T hese conflicting a ttitu des define a unique set of political in te re sts, including en­ vironmental, anti-nuclear and anti-corporate campaigns that often antagonize both big b usiness and th e labor movement. Professionals and workers alike must work for wages, say the Ehrenreichs, but they confront each other over issues of knowledge, skills, and culture. “We may now be seeing a concentration of professionals and managers in the U.S. cities that have world corporate head­ quarters,” Barbara Ehrenreich says. “Other professionals then follow out of preference for the area.” 1. Weekly Advance. 2. Daily 1 Weekly Contests. 3. Weekly Bonuses. 4. Excellent Selling Atmosphere. Expsriancs Helpful, But Not Nsessswy. Wo Train. Tho Right Poison Con Moke *250 to *300 Dollars a Weak. Wo Havs Boon in Tempo Since 1873. Coll Mr. Roberts ot 966mg 5 2 7 Look Your Best with CONTACT LENSES Soft *9995 •Soft L e nse s for A stigm atism N o w Available •Sam e Day Delivery for Soft L e n se s Trial Wearing Period for Contact Lenses H a rd ‘79®' — Fill Your Doctor's Prescription — ______ DR. W . G. AM ES, O ptom etrist Fo r Appointm ent or Information 2916 N. 68th St., Scottsdale, Ariz. 941-5228 O pen M o n d a y thru Saturday \ 4 C.C. sez, “Don’t be misled by keg beer prices. WE HAVE THE B EST deal in the valley.” H E R E ’S W H A T W E D O ! 1. W E FURNISH THE COLDEST BEER IN THE VAL­ LEY. OUR HUGE WALK-IN IS SET AT 29” - 30° . . . BELOW WATER FREEZING. 2. NO EQUIPMENT RENTAL CHARGES. SAVE $3.00 TO $10.00 PER KEG. 3. FREE TUBS FURNISHED. NO RENTAL CHARGES. SA V E $2.00 TO $5.00. 4. ALL ICE FURNISHED. NO CHARGE. SAVE $5.00 TO $8.00. 5. THE FR E SH EST BEER IN THE VALLEY. NO OUTOF-DATE BEER. 6. SPEC IA L PR IC ES FOR H OM E UNITS. w XEROX V COPIES OVERNIGHT 5 CW H IL E Y O U W A IT ■ "Our Service Cannot Be Surpassed. ” aipnaorapiiiGs V DISCOUNT LIQUORS U N IV E R S IT Y A R C H E S MESA TEMPE “ON THE TRAIL” 122 E U N IV E R S IT Y 1945 E. Baseline at D ob son 1847 N. S c o t t sd a le Rd. at M c K e l l i p s 933 E a st A p a c h e T ra il 968-7821 839-9261 945-2064 986-1995 R A R A R A F U IR * R A FUI R * A * A A A U R A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A R A R A R A À A A A R A A A A A R A A A A A R A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A \ | Celebróle Hie end of finol/ in m nzA T tM Aug.12-18 i 155.00 994-4075 947-6372 W IN YOUR TRIP FREE! Show your A SU I.D. with your $25.00 deposit any Wednesday or Friday night at Mabel Murphy’s, Scottsdale & Thomas, and you’ll receive a ticket for a free trip drawing to be held Friday, A u g u st 3rd (last day to s ig n up). Or, get 15 of your friends to mention your name when they sign up and Mabel Murphy will pay for your trip! MABEL’S "END OF FINALS" VACATION INCLUDES: * * * * * * * * * Round-Trip, Chartered M otor C oach - Phoenix to N o gale s Round-Trip Transfers in N o gale s and Mazatlan Round-Trip Rail A cco m m o datio ns - N o g a le s to Mazatlan 4 N igh ts Hotel A ccom m odations (Your Choice) Party at Valentino’s (Includes Cover C harge and First Two Drinks) Pre- and Post-Trip Parties at Mabel M urphy’s Official M abel M u rp h y 's T-Shirt City Tour and Bay C ruise Hotel Taxes R AT ES PER PERSO N HOTEL PO SAD A DE DON PELAYO PLAYA DEL REY EL P E SC A D O R PLA YA M AZAT LAN DOUBLE TRIPLE 150.00 160.00 160.00 170.00 140.00 145.00 145.00 160.00 QUAD 135.00 140.00 140.00 155.00 S3 W elcom e Page 6 Summer State Press Thursday, July 26, 1979 For those on Eat your w ay pas "it w as thanks to this salt mineral that all o f us survived the d isaste r . . . " Custom Fitted Sandals 24 styles from which to choose PLUS Leather Handbags, Belts, Buckles, Wallets, Moccasins and More. DEER CREEK LEATHER (in the courtyard) 414 S. M ill Ave. Shops • Suite #111 • Tempe J- Memoriol Union , # M E R 5 FESTIVAL * Summer Films will be shown in the Union Cinema of the Memorial Union (lower level), Thursday and Friday evenings. Tickets are $1.00 with a University I.D., $1.50 without. There are no refunds or exchanges on movie tickets. JULY 26-27 THE D U C H ESS AN D THE DIRTWATER FOX 7 & 9:00 p.m. AUGUST 2- 3 V SILV ER STR EA K 7 & 9:30 p.m. PAPAG0 Jose Cuervo 750 ml. Botila M O LSO N IM P O R T E D BEER W 6 -P K 099 "6 -P K radiation through chelators calcium — which can help protect the body and limit the absorption of radioactive elements. People can also protect themselves by avoiding smoking and stress and other things that trigger cancer.” Pectin in foods such as fruit and sunflower seeds has also exhibited an effect on strontium. During the early 1960s, Russian scientists reported that pectin extracted from sunflower seeds reduced the absorption and deposition of strontium 90 in the skeletons of test animals. An earlier report by the U.S. Army Quartermaster Food and Container Institute showed that supplementing the diet of guinea pigs with green vegetables such as cabbage or broccoli “enhances the survival of irradiated animals while the use of beets did not.” The 1958 study concluded that “feeding of cabbage both before and after radiation exposure produced the greatest amount of protection.” This apparent protective ability of green BREAK s4 9 1 R85 ■ W CCAAIS E AWAY 1185 I I CAS CASE ZMCertiy-Fa Presents APETffi W ES FILM “BREAW NG/W DENNBMRGTOPHffi OBWHSQUAID DANE STERN and JACKIE EARLE HALEY alsostarringBARBARA BARRIE FAUL DOOLEY innoducingROBYN DOUGLASS RoduoedandDirectedbyPt IEHW ES WmenbySTEVE TE3CH MuseAdapted WILLIAMS Conductedby LIONEL NEWMAN COLOR BV Dri 1IXF f ! ALL OTHER BEER A T REDUCED PRICES CALL FOR SPECIAL PARTY RATES • 946-0715 7117 E. McDowell Rd., Scottsdale headthe v w m r book y s Hi 1*7»TWENTIETHCENTURV-FOX ASU NEEB HALL plant such chloi sproi from doctx seem Dr Systi Newi antaj cinog Be juice rally use i juice some right The chances o f warding off th FREE TO THE COMM UNITY A M E R IC A ’S F IN EST TEQUILA Q99 “chelators” to help remove radioactive material from the body. Chelators combine with radioactive elements to form stable compounds in the body which can then be eliminated. A British study, published in the Inter­ national Journal of Radiation Biology in 1971, showed that kelp effectively removed stron­ tium 90 from the body. “The alginate preparation (OG1) reduced the absorption and retention of strontium about 4-fold,” the report states. Annalisa Kennedy, an anti-nuclear activist with Oregon’s Trojan Decommissioning Alliance, says that kelp can be used daily, like salt, in salads and cooking. “The best way to protect yourself is to join the anti-nuclear movement,” she says, “but kelp and other seaweeds like dulse provide an abundant source of minerals — iodine, potassium, MAJOR STUDIO PREVIEW TONIGHT AT 8:00 PM DISCOUNT LIQUORS H E IN E K E N IM P O R T E D BEER By Mary Claire Blakeman Pacific News Service Brown rice, miso soup, bean sprouts, seaweed, green vegetables, fruit and sunflower seeds. It may not sound very appetizing to most American palates, but according to a growing number of health activists in the anti­ nuclear movement, such a diet may be the best culinary response to the post-Harrisburg nuclear age. Though the medical establishment puts little stock in the connection between what people eat and their ability to withstand nuclear radiation, some scientists are beginning to take a serious look at the possibilities. What they have found is intriguing, and tends to support some of the non-scientific evidence. The notion that diet may have a protective or rehabilitative effect on persons exposed to nuclear radiation first surfaced among Japanese survivors of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In the current issue of the East West Journal, Dr. Tatsuichiro Akizuki attributes his survival and that of his patients in Nagasaki to a diet which included the combination of brown rice, salt and miso soup, and which strictly eliminated sugar. Miso is a form of fermented soy beans which has a high mineral content. “I had fed my co-workers brown rice and miso soup for some time before the bombing. None of them suffered from atomic radiation,” Dr. Akizuki says, “I believe this is because they had been eating miso soup.” “The radioactivity may not have been a fatal dose,” he adds, “but I, and other staff mem­ bers and in-patients kept on living on the lethal ashes of the bombed ruins. “It was thanks to this salt mineral method that all of us . . . survived the disaster free from severe symptoms of radioactivity.” Others who lived through the bombing of Hiroshima say their traditional macrobiotic diet, which emphasizes whole grains and vegetables, helped them to survive. However, no one has collected conclusive data to show that people on macrobiotic diets had a higher survival rate than others. What is known is that certain foods act as (ft. Ad proté of ce corpo quick to su remai diet a “G< minei pson, Instit of an; of th excep healtl resist one.” Dei foods, chemi chelat One forme Thursday, July 26, 1979 Summer State Press Page 7 > on the glo w last the holocaust W hat is know n is that certain foods act a s "chelators" to help remove radioactive iaterial with pounds . Interi 1971, stron[ginate an and report ictivist iioning ly, like vay to luclear other mdant ssium, plants is also attributed to sprouted seeds, such as alfalfa or wheat, which are high in chlorophyll. Wheat grass, which is grown by sprouting wheat benies, is gaining attention from unorthodox health circles and established doctors alike for its beneficial effects — which seem to include protection from radiation, Dr. Chiu-Nan Lai of the University of Texas System Cancer Center reported in Science News that “extracts of wheat sprouts exhibit antagonistic activity toward known carcinogens.” Betsy Russell, who dispensed wheat grass juice at a recent San Francisco anti-nuclear rally claimed that “it’s much more effective to use it before exposure, but since wheatgrass juice rebuilds cells and detoxifies the body, it’s something the people in Harrisburg can use right now.” }n g off the effects o f high level delators is a hedge , at best. dy and tnents. '(Hiding s that flower ntium. entists flower tion of tals. Army stitute guinea age or diated The bbage >osure on.” green Advocates of natural substances as protection from radiation point out that .the use of certain foods is most effective when in­ corporated into the regular diet — not as a quick fix remedy. While there is some evidence to support their claims, most medical doctors remain skeptical about the correlation between diet and radiation. “Getting the necessary vitamins and minerals is important,” says Dr. Roy Thom­ pson, senior staff scientist at Battelle Memorial Institute in Richland, Wash. “But I don’t know of any substantial scientific evidence that any of these things have an effect on radiation except for the fact that it could make you more healthy. And a healthy animal is more resistant to outside insult than an unhealthy one." Despite the skepticism regarding natural foods, medical science puts great store in chemical substances which act as effective chelators in certain high exposure cases. One such case is that of Harold McCluskey, a former chemical operator at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in Washington, who was exposed to radioactive contamination in an explosion at the plant in 1976. He breathed in the highest recorded human dose of the isotope americium 242 — 400 times what an average adult might receive in a lifetime. Kept in near isolation for five months, McCluskey was given specially produced zinc DTPA (diethylenetriamine pentate), which acted as a chelator with the americium. His levels of radiation finally were lowered to the point where he was allowed to return home. His doctor, Bruce Britenstein, reports that the 67-year-old McCluskey stopped the DTPA treatments last March. “As far as we can tell, the treatment has been 95 per cent effective,” Dr. Britenstein says, “But he still has a large burden of americium. He’s doing reasonably well, but we don’t know what could happen in the future.” In the McCluskey case, DTPA proved useful — but it is unlikely that the chemical would be given to the population at large in the event of radioactive exposure. Public health officials are much more likely to turn to potassium iodide as a precaution against radioactive iodine 131. Iodine 131 is considered especially hazardous since the thyroid gland has a special affinity for the element, and it can endanger growing children. “Since iodine concentrates in the thyroid, we can prevent the concentration of radioactive iodine by saturating the gland with nonradioactive iodine (potassium iodide),” explains Dr. Sidney Marks, associate manager for Environmental Health and Safety at Battelle. ‘The result of the gland being saturated is that it can’t pick up additional iodine.” A small percentage of the population is allergic to iodides, cautions Dr. C.C. Lushbaugh, medical director of Oak Ridge, Tenn., Associated Universities. “You don’t just have everybody pop a pill.” But whether one pops a pill or turns to a macrobiotic diet, the chances of warding off the effects of high level radiation through chelators is a hedge, at best. Much more important, says Richard Penberthy, project director of the Center for International Environment Infor­ mation in Washington, D.C., is to know the nature and seriousness of the hazard. wanna“ ! lucky? ' material from the body. Wednesday - Saturday HAPPY HOUR PRICES WITH ASU I.D. Come Enjoy Sporting Events on Our 7 ft. TV Screen. Beer - $2.00 per Pitcher • Well Drinks - 70c each 1334 N. Scottsdale Rd. • 945-0031 ★ ★ “K It “K «K * “K * * * ★ * £ * * * * “K * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ O P T IQ U E B O U T IQ U E • * * can afford contact * lenses and glasses. * * * Soft C o n ta c ts s125> H a rd C o n ta c ts *85 ‘ 'includes everything 20% Discount on Your First Pslr ot Qlsssss. 50% Discount on Your Second Pslr ol Glsssss. 120 E. UNIVERSITY • TEMPE • 966-9440 [In tho Arches) C o u p o n g o o d only with ad. Expire s 8/31 /79. "GET AWAY FROM THE NOISE AND NEON" ■ j THIS W EEK'S W INNERS OF A FREE LUNCH FOR TWO ARE: ☆ Reggie Carlyon ☆ Philip J. Kessel ☆ Cindy McKeon ☆ Marilyn K. Pourchot ☆ M.C. Sweeney ^ SA LA D BAR (Good from 7/26 through 8/2 • • • • B R E A K F A ST LUNCH D IN N E R HUNGRY • S A N D W IC H E S •SO U PS •SO FT FROZEN YOGURT SA TISFIERS SLEEPING BAG S FROM $19.95 Slumberjack Model 1900 ....... $36.95 Reg. $49.95 Slumberjack Summit I .......... $49.95 Reg. $72.00 Slumbeijack 2 y2 ..................$69.95 Reg. $90.00 I FA ST T Í 1 I T I A ' .... ' " _ PH O EN IX 2304 E. Indian School TEM PE 1332 E. Apache 967-7442 ; ^_________ i THE HEALTHFUL ALTERNATIVE Open 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. Weekends 11 A.M. to6P.M. Call 968-7133 fortakeout 120 East University (In the Arches) Tempe, AZ. J j ★ At Last! Now you Watch for the Good For You FREE LUNCH LOTTERY ★ “and you thought w e were only sn o w s k is ’ * if if if * if if if if if if if Page 8 Summer State Presa Thursday, July 26, 1979 ClassicsI record review Liszt piano transcriptions will not disappoint fans Berlioz — Symphonic Fantastique (arranged for solo piano by Franz Liszt). Idil Biret, piano. Finnadar SR-9023._________ W h atev er ju d g m en t musical history will place on the original compositions of Franz Liszt, it is generally acknowledged that he was the supreme master of the (lost) art of the piano transcription. The mere scope of Liszt’s transcriptions is awesome, and includes the nine Beethoven symphonies!, Schubert lieder, and the paraphrases of operas by Bellini, Gounod, Verdi, Wagner, and others. Certainly one of Liszt’s most astounding tours de Gammage: fall plans are diverse Gammage Center at Arizona State University will offer a variety of events during the 1979-80 season through its Dance and Alumni Series. ) Gran Folklorico de Mexico on Sept. 14 will open the Alumni Series, which offers patrons a choice of five out of eight major events. Also included are the St. Louis Sym­ phony, Oct. 16; Big Band Festival of the Fabulous Forties, Nov. 16; Jury’s Irish Cabaret, Feb. 5; the Neil Simon hit show “Chapter Two,” March 2; p a n to m im is t Marcel Marceau, March 24; a Ballet West performance, April 3; and the Philadelphia Orchestra, May 31. Those purchasing the Dance Series may see four events: the Twyla Tharp Dance Company on Oct. 4; a Ballet West performance, Oct. 19; the Paul Taylor Dance Company, Feb. 2; and the Houston Ballet, March 5. force is the piano arrangement of Berlioz’s Symphonic Fantastique, which, here receives its first recorded performance. If we are to believe contemporary accounts, Liszt’s arrangement had an even greater effect on Parisian audiences than the original orchestral version. The piano paraphrase is still largely out of fashion with performers and critics. There are hints, however, that it may be returning to favor. Along with the present recording, there is Earl Wild’s Porgy and Bess fantasy (Quintessence P M C -70 60), Ervin N y r i g h a z y ’s L i sz t' arrangements (Columbia M2-34598), and Glenn Gould’s Wagner tr a n ­ scriptions (Columbia M32351). While no substitute for the original, this new release is highly en­ tertaining, and those familiar with Berlioz’s score will not be disappointed. Miss Biret plays with taste, imagination, and musicianship, and her powerhouse technique negotiates the many technical difficulties with casual ease, though I might have liked a little more diablerie in her playing. Humphrey Searle provides informative and literate program notes. —Bryan Stoneburner ADVERTISING SALES REPRESENTATIVES ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT GfMPUS CLE4NERS 8r CO IN -O P LAUNDROMAT •SUEDE AND LEATHER CLEANING •ALTERATIONS «HAND IRONING •FLUFF DRY »WASH * D h v »FOLD O ne Day Service on Dry Cleaning and Finished Shirts OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK 967-9650* TEMPE Corner of University & Rural Rd. Come in fo r your free Diamond Presentation. The STATE P RESS has openings for advertising sales representatives for the balance of the summer 1979 semester and/or the fall semester of the academic year 1979-80. We prefer freshmen, sophomores and juniors, as success­ ful representatives can continue for several semesters. The rewards include training and experience in a professionally run newspaper situation and a realistic commission. 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, July 27, 1979, and applicants must be available for inter­ view during the week of July 30. Edward H. Peplow Jr. Manager of Student Publications ^ ¡o A e f iA ' JEWELRY 6 DIAMOND CUTTING 130 E. UNIVERSITY DR. "IN THE A R C H ES” MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY CALL NOWI rsx 249-0934 FREE PHONE QUOTES •‘â tiijf. -----M E D IC A L ---SC H O O L August 79 - January '80 applicants, 4-year fully recognized and estab­ lished Mexican Medical School, with several hundred American stu­ dents enrolled. Use Eng­ lish language textbooks and exams in Eng­ lish. School combines quality education, small classes, experienced teachers, modern facili­ ties. Unvenidad Dal Noresta 7502 17 A w ., B'klyn., N.V. 11214 (212) 232-3784 __ or 594-6589— f 11 u “ NO-ONE REFUSED” Sun V alley Insurance S tore • AUTO • SR 22's • M O TO RCYCLE • LOW DOW N PYMT. • REC. VEHICLE • M ONTHLY PLAN S 2814 W. Northern Ave. 967-8917 Thursday, July 26, 1979 Summer State Press Page 9 diversions THEATRE Paramount Picture’s “Sa­ rong Girl" Dorothy Lamour is currently starring in the Wind­ mill Dinner Theatre's produc­ tion of Neil Simon’s “Barefoot in the Park." Lamour has starred in more than 50 movies. Reservation informa­ tion is available by calling 955-1801 or 948-6170. “Gypsy,” a musical hit based on the early life of stripper Gypsy Rose Lee by Stephen Sondheim and Jules Styne, opens at Theatre Phoe­ nix /Phoenix Little Theatre Aug. 9. Singer-songwriter D.on Mc­ the Matthews Center Gallery Lean will appear at the Scotts­ through Aug. 12. dale Center for the Arts at The Center for Creative 8 p.m. Aug. 4. Tickets to'hear Photography at 843 E. Uni­ the American...Pie' man are versity Blvd. in Tucson is available at ' the Scottsdale showing the works of Louis Center box office and Dia­ Carlos Bernal through Sept. 6. mond's box offices. Prices are The focus is on the Chicano $5.50 and $6.50. experience. Admission is free. T h e M o v ie HOT ”surfing in Brazil, California« Hawaii and South Africa p l u s Explosive Skateboarding GLENFAIR: M o n ., T u e s., J u ly SO & 31 HAYDEN EAST: w e d . . T h u rs.. A u g u s t 1 & 2 ALL SHOW S 7 9 a n d 10: SO pm MOVIES Twentieth Century Fox and the A SA SU Cultural Affairs Board will present a sneak preview of “Breaking Away” at 8 p.m. tonight in Neeb Hall. The film is about the adaption of four men to college life. More information is available at the Cultural Affairs Board, 965-5658. CONCERTS The ASU Summer Session season ends with The Dukes of Dixieland at 8 p.m. tonight in Gammage Center. General admission tickets are $3.50, but summer school students with a fee card get in free. Rock-and-roller Rick Nel­ son, son of Ozzie and Harriet, will star in two concerts at the Windmill Dinner Theatre July 30. Ticket information is available by calling 955-1801 or 948-6170. Lamour The Massenkoff Russian Folk Festival will give two per­ formances at the Scottsdale Center for the Arts at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Tickets are available at the Scottsdale Center and Diamond’s box offices. Tickets are $5.50 and $6.50. jpoooeoooooooooooooot Scottsdale Plaza 2200 N. SCOTTSDALE RD. (South of Oak St.) SPECIAL! B od y W aves $15.00 Dukes o f Dixieland McLean’s only 1979 Valley appearance is the final pres­ entation of the 1979 “Refriger­ ation Series” sponsored by the city of Scottsdale. The New York String Quar­ tet will be presented at the Scottsdale Center for the Arts. All tickets have been reserved, but a limited number of seats may be available at curtain time, 8:30 p.m. Aug. 3. Reconstruction with guest guitarist Jerry Garcia will be at Dooley’s for two shows Sun­ day. The first show is at 7 p.m., the second at 10:30 p.m. Tickets are $7.50 in advance and $8.50 the day of the show. EXHIBITS “Faces,” an exhibition of paintings, sculpture, prints and ceramics from the ASU art collection, will be shown at VAN ST EA D 'S 303 FIFTH AVE. NEW YORK, N.Y. 10016 G YOU WILL REC EIVE A COPY 0 FO R YOUR B O O K S H E L F AND S 1 0 % OF SA L ES, «sco so o o o o o o o e o o so o so i RITCHIES 50 FLAVORS ICE CREAM DOUBLE DIP CONES T 1 DOUBLE DIP SUNDAES 47* 87* Reg. $1.19 each. Limit: 3 per coupon. Good through August 2, 1979 Reg. 67c each Limit :3 per coupon. Good through August 2,1979 M« Kitchie's Kitchie's 915 E. Broadw ay 425 S. M ill (At Rural - Lucky Center) At 5th Street Downtown Tempe 966-8950 966-7023 U N IV E R S IT Y P L A S M A CEN TER 9 6 8 -6 1 3 9 Plasma Donors Are Life Savers CASH PAID FOR PLASMA DONATION! *10.00 I SEE YOUR NAM E Ml PRINT YOU TOO SH O U LD B E A PART O F THE A M ER IC A N VO ICE BEIN G PU BLISH ED BY VAN ST EAO S. SEN D YOUR SIG N E D [PRINT NAME C LEARLY] O R IG IN AL POEM / IDEA/OR SH O R T STO RY [1 PAGE] WITH $25 TO: Hair C u ts $8.0 0 in clu d es S h a m p o o , M o isterizer & C o n d itio n in g T reatm en t and B low Dry w ill b e p a id fo r e a c h d o n a t io n a n d y o u m a y d o n a t e tw ic e w ith in a s e v e n - d a y p e rio d . That m eans * 20.00 a w e e k o f a d d e d in c o m e fo r y o u . A S S O C I A T E D B I O S C IE N C E O F T E M P E , IN C . 1 0 1 5 S. R u r a l R d. T e m p e , A r iz o n a 968-6139 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 (N E W D O N O R S O N L Y ) Page 10 Summer State Press Thursday. July 26, 1979 A C .7. a t Gammage Adultery played for laughs in tw o com edy classics San Francisco's American Conservatory Theatre presented two nights of the type of superb theater the ASU drama depart­ ment is technically ill-equipped to attempt and commercial houses in the Valley wouldn’t touch with a fork. W. Somerset Maugham's 1920 comedy “The Circle" led off the Tony award-winning company’s Gammage stand. They followed with Ivan Turgenev's nineteenth century “A Month in the Country.” Both works were treated with a technical virtuosity rarely, if ever, seen in Valley theaters. The lighting and sets, par­ ticularly in the Turgenev work, created magical fairy-tale settings from which the actors demonstrated their considerable skills. Both comedies dealt with upper class adultery and at­ tempts to break the sixth commandment. Maugham presents the cynical thesis that true love not only doesn't run smoothly, but that, at best, it is only a temporary condition. Of course, for the more romantic, the loveconquers-all theory can easily be fit into the structure. The action is set in an English manor house, where a stuffy member of Parliament and his flighty wife live. His mother, who had left his father thirty years before, is coming for a visit. Papa is present too, and so is a young man provided for the girl to relive history and try her wings in her mother-in-law’s shoes. The whole affair sounds rather like Neil Simon in London. But Maugham, in typically British style, keeps the whole situation under beautiful control. Slapstick is absent and nothing is sacrificed for a punch­ line. This does not mean the script is humorless, because it is very funny and the cast makes the most of every opportunity. Special mention should go to Marrian W alters as the adultress returned, an Auntie Mame ty p e, for whom everything is “too divine” or “too wonderful.” In a role that in vites a Las V egas-style burlesque, Walters takes it right to the edge and turns back in the nick of time everytime. “A Month in the Country” also fretful without making audience feel the same. the “The Circle” was more en­ thusiastically greeted by the Gammage audience because nineteenth century Russian comedy moves slower than usual American fare. The production would not have been seriously injured if some minor surgery had been performed. The audience burst out of the auditorium for their cigarettes and water during the sole in­ termission. But when the house lights went down again they were back in their seats and ready for more. —Steve Allnatt Guarantee! Quality Records and Tapes We Buy, Sell and Trade Rock, Blues, and Jazz W e have something special — Stop by this week! W e also BU Y and Trade Military Medals, Patches and Uniforms of All Countries and all Wars. We’re located in the Mill Avenue Shope, along with the Spaghetti Company. 414 Mill Ave., Tempe#110. Hours 10-7 Mon.-Sat. 12-5 Sun. 968-3860 DeAnn Mears concerns adultery in the upper class. A bored Russian noblewoman is toying with the idea of taking a crack at her son’s young tutor. In addition, a friend of her husband wants to fling with her. Her husband thinks it is his friend who occupies his wife's thoughts. To complicate matters still further, a young ward also is attracted to the tutor, but she is wanted by a neighboring landowner. It is all very com­ plicated, and the curtain comes down before anyone will have to line up at the confessional. DeAnn Mears is excellent in the lead and is reminiscent of Carrie Nye. She is bored and STOP and Look at US Colored T-Shirts............ Hieing Boots #8830 ......................... .• 1.75 •34.95 Denim Straight Reg. $12.99 Sleeping Bag, Reg. $119.95 Everest Frame Value $29.95 Gators Galore! Bandanas, Stove, Reg. $37.95 NOW Lantern, Double Reg. $24.95 NOW . Jogging Shoes, Bob Sleeping Bag, Sportster Reg. $17.95 NOW ........ •15,88 Cargo Pants, German • 555 PEACE SURPLUS 5 2 0 S . M ill, T e m p e 8 9 4 -9 1 3 7 New Shipment Huge Color Selection 706 South Forest • One block north of University • Tempe • 967-8747 Monday thru Saturday 10-6 • Thursdays until 8:30 Thursday, July 26,1979 Summer State Press Page 11 ....................................... "BT . . . have an audience of 160,000 people a week. Men's tennis coach abandons CaMrVine for Sun Devil post Give every N EW BO R N the Whatever Arizona State has that University- of California at Irvine doesn't — like national recognition — has attracted a second coach from that college to Tempe. advantage Myron McNamara of Irvine was named as men’s tennis March of Dimes coach this week, following by three weeks the naming of Irvine’s Len Miller as head track coach. Len Miller admitted he had talked to McNamara about A u t o m o b ile s ________ the job. K A RM ANN GHIA desperately wanted. Any “I told him I’d never talk to him again if he was offered condition. Any year. Running or not. Badly the coaching job and didn’t take it,” Miller said. damaged OK. Will tow. Immediate cash. 8/9 “He’s a great one. I encouraged him to apply. I asked Call Ann: 244-0366. Dr. (Fred) Miller, (ASU Athletic Director) to give him B o o k s __________ ____ consideration. He’s 59 going on 16.” E L L O R TRAOE your books at Changing McNamara served as the Anteaters’ tennis coach since SHands Bookstore. (No textbooks or 1966. While at Irvine his teams captured six NCAA romances, please.) You receive 3 0 % of the price In cash or 5 0 % in trade credit Division H titles since 1970 and have perenially been a resale which may be used to purchase anything In national power. the store. Browse through our two floors of “Myron has excellent credentials,” said Fred Miller. “He new and used books, art prints, cards and magazines. Open weeknlghts until 9 p.m. is a proven winner and a respected name in college ten­ Changing Handa Bookstore, 414 Mill In Oldtown Tempe. 966-0203. 8/9 nis.” Before coaching at Irvine, McNamara was vice president and general manager for Jack Kramer’s World Tennis Incorporated. In this capacity he organized worldwide tennis tours which included such names as Rod Laver, Ken Rosewall, and Pancho Gonzales. After his stint with World Tennis Inc., he supervised the budding of two tennis clubs, the Riveria Tennis Club in Los Angeles and the Balboa-Bay Racquet Club in Irvine. McNamara is credited with having coached the world’s fastest server, Scott Carnahan. He also developed numerous age-group national champions through his clinics and summer camps. He played on two national championship teams at USC. While a Trojan he was individually ranked in the nation’s top ten on a yearly basis and was also selected to play in f or R c n t/L c o se the Junior Davis Cup. ASU women's hoop team signs 3 high school stars ASU women’s basketball coach Juliene Simpson an­ nounced last week the signing of three high school athletes to national letters of intent to attend ASU next fall. Cheryl Cambell from California, Sandra Goering from New Mexico and Cassandra Landers from Indiana, signed to become Sun Devils. Campbell, a 6-4 center, starred at Anaheim High School last season where she averaged 22.2 points, 17 rebounds, and 9 blocked shots per game. She also shot 60 percent from the field. Goering led Farmington High School to the New Mexico 4A State title last year. The 6-2 center was an all-state selection the past two seasons. Landers, a 5-5 guard, averaged 21 points per game last year at Evansville Bosse High School. H e lp W a n t e d _______ P o o m m a te W o n te d NEED W ORK for the summer? See us today! Work temporary assignments and still have time for the summer fun. There is never a fee with us and you are paid every Friday of the week you work. Sherry Corkran, Valley Temporary Service, 101 N. 1st Ave., Suite 1970, Phoenix, Arizona. 2582888. 8/9 BEAUTIFUL DOBSO N Ranch home, recrea­ tion facilities, pool, great people. $170 plus utilities. Close to ASU. Patricia, 839-8908. EARN EXTRA $$$ — Become Security Guard. Information, $1.00 — Powers — Dept. 8 3 , 104 Church Street, Ronkonkoma, N.Y. 11779. 7/26 EASY EXTRA INCOME!! Earn money working at home. Send S S A E to Marketing Associates, Dept. S P -1 ,1628 E. Logan Dr., Tempe, AZ. 85282. 7/26 VA W ORK STUDY position available. Candidate must be a veteran currently enrolled full time. Public contact work involved, re: Gl Bill benefits. Candidate must be confident in meeting the public and be self-motivated. Reliable transpor­ tation and home phone desired. Call John at 2587251, ext. 337. 8/2 PART-TIME HELPER to assist concrete finisher-hard work-$5.00/hour. 9983483. 8/2 PART-TIME FEM A LE to work in laundry, flexible hours, great for students. Call 9688933 between 2:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. 7/26 W HY RENT? Two bedroom, two bath townhouse, payments only $145 monthly. $15,000 down. Co-op, near ASU. 947-2871. 7/26 LA PAZ APARTMENTS Large 1 & 2 bedroom units furnished, pool, laundry, etc. AVAILABLE NOW O n ly 2 b lo c k s off c a m p u s at 1011 E. Lem on, Tempe. P h o n e 967-2544 5/9 H r Ip W an te d TELEPHONE SALES: Evenings, good pay, nice office, excellent summer work, close to campus. 988-4853. 8/9 H O U SEKEEPER - BABYSITTER wanted. Two children, 12 years and 14 years. Light housecleaning, cook suppers, car required. M-F, 7/30/79 to 8/24/79. Could continue after school starts. $75/week, meals, mileage. Jerry, 267-4788 or Stefanie, 244-5787.6381643 evenings. 8/2 M A LE OR FEM A LE live-ln attendant for 25-year-old handicapped male. Large, quiet 3 bedroom home, with pool, near McDow­ ell Rd. and 68th Street. Approximately 2V4 miles from A SU campus. Short hours, leaving entire day free for other Job or interests. Pays $500/month minus 16 rent ($150.), 16 utilities (35.00), and food. Although no experience Is necessary, some lifting is Involved. A responsible, mature person who enjoys a relaxed, structured lifestyle is preferred. If In­ terested, contact Wayne, 9482705 after 2 pmv__________________^25 COUPLE WITH one child need babysitter, housekeeper. 2 to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. Good pay, close to ASU. Call after 6:00.967-5682. 8/9 COORDINATOR W ANTED for Arizona's largest Arts and Crafts Fair. Experience in public relations, organization and office skills. Year-round position. Salary nego­ tiable. Send resume to M.A.M.A., P.O. Box 3084, Tempe, Arizona85281. 8/9 TWO ROO M M ATES to share new three bedroom/two bath townhome, pool, wash and dryer. 16 mile from ASU. $150. plus utilities. Kirk, 894-1637. 7/26 T y p i n g ______________ TYPING, self-correcting machine; all typ­ ing done. 4 years legal experience. Call Mary, 839-5425. 6/9 THESES, term papers, general typing on Correcting Selectric typewriter. South Tempe area. 831-8770. 8/9 K A R E N 'S SECRETARIAL SERVICE — Ac­ curate typing of term papers, manuscripts, resumes, business, etc. Quality work. 9482795. 8/9 N EAR ASU. Research papers, theses, dissertations. English degree. Editing, 7 years experience. 967-4443. 8/9 TYPING - ACCURATE - IBM Selectric. Call Gwen, 949-8443. 8/9 PROCRASTINATORS, Don't despair! Close-to-campus pro needs work, works fast. Call now, 9683314. 8/9 TYPIST for commercial letters, in her home. 1 to 2 hours daily. ALCAR, 9583688. 7/26 TYPING, IBM Selectric. Manuscripts, theses, dissertations, term papers. 85 cents per page. Janet, 834-0893. 8/9 W a n te d W A N T E D : Parking S p a c a for o n # car, preferably covered, w ithin 2 m inutes’ walk of 1st United M e thod ist C h u rc h o n University Drive at A S U , m o rn in g s o nly during se m e sters tor next 2 years. G e ne ro us terms. Cell 837-1454. 8/9 F o r S a l e _____________ W ALK TO C L A S S from a spacious 2 bed­ room. Low move-in costs. 2 pools, park-llke surroundings, barbecue picnic area. 1 block north of Apache on McClin­ tock. Evergreen Terrace Apartments. 9677357. 8 '9 CONDO/TOW NHOUSE for lease or rent. Two bedroom, one bath and pool, near ASU at ideal location. Couple or two singles at $190 each. Call 278-8435 or 997-9667. 8/9 8/2 MO PED closeouts! Beat the gas crunch. Bikes 'n Things, 968-4511. 8/9 J e w e lr y _____________ LA DIES' Sandals — Baretrap, Sbicca, Bass, Famolare, Oeckes, and many more. Backdoor Shop, 707 South Forest, 96 8 1772. 8/9 DIAMONDS, GOLD. Highest cash paid. Need 1 carat diamonds. Joseph Beming Jewelers. 130 E. University Dr., Tempe. 987-8917. 8/9 M U SICAL INSTRUMENT, collector’s goldtop Gibson Les Pen* T g f t nt condition, Schaeller V» -v « New case. Appraised, ^ -- j u Must sell at $400. 2683536 after 7 p.m. 7/26 I o t t / F o u n d ________ _ MOVING OUT SALE! Kitchen table, living and bedroom furniture, also good set of Sears A 7813 tires Dynaply Polyester, 12 volt battery. 967-2416. 7/26 LOST IN PHOENIX, a black Labrador. Please call 955-5032 if you have any information. 7/26 P e o l E sta te _________ W O N T LA ST LONG! Sharp Bradley Townhouse, choice area near Lakes. Two bedroom, one bath, cathedral celling, completely wallpapered, many extras. $48,500 or $22,000 CTM. By owner, 831-5667. 7/26 REA L ESTATE for sale. Desirable two bedroom, $44,000 near ASU. Nice area, 1012S. Parkslde Dr., 967-3488. 7/26 S e r v ic e » ____________ IMPROVE YOUR grades. Let me correct syntax, grammar, spelling -and punctua­ tion. It's worth the investment! 966-3314. 8/9 TOO HOT and tired to clean house? Enjoy yourself while I do the work. Call Kathy at 959-4545. References. 7/26 F o r S o le S E W IN G M A C H IN E , Free Arm , never used, 1979, best model, still in carton. Full original guarantee. D o e s everything. C o st $469, m u st sacrifice, $185. I a lso have the beautiful cabinet that cam e with it. Private Hom e. 9 4 8 2 1 2 7 . g (g JEAN SHOP Have a highly profitable and beautiful jean shop of your own. Featuring the latest in jeans, denims and sportswear. $15,600.00 in­ cludes beginning inven­ tory, fixtures and training. You may have your store open in as little as 15 days. Call any time for Mr. Ellis, 916-542-1236. 8/2 TUBING TIM E Get your tubes early at the Exxon station. The corner of McKellips and M esa Drive. Open Sundays. Page 12 Summer State Press Thursday, July 26, 1979 Season tickets for football go on sale A u gu st 28-29 Student season tickets go on sale for $15 August 28 and 29. Though there are only 10,000 of them available, the same as last year, Tom George, assistant ticket sales m anager, doubts there will be a shortage. “Last year, we sold about 5600 season tickets to students,’’ he said. “This year, I would say they will probably pick up about 65 percent (or 6500).” A first-come, first-serve method will replace a previous lottery method. After August 28 and 29, students will be able to pick up leftover tickets, still on a first-come, first serve basis, beginning August 31. Home games are California, September 8; Toledo, Septem ber 22; Washington, October 13; “We’ve sold about 55,000 Washington State, October general public season 20; Utah State, October 27; seats,” he said. “We’re West Virginia, November selling more than we have 17, and UA, November 24. before.” Many prospective ASU Last year was the first football fans may be left out in the heat. General public when Sun Devil Stadium, season tickets are 1800 with seats added on the seats away from being sold north end to bring the capacity to 70,311, put out. “I would say at the rate 57,000 general public we’re going, by mid-August season tickets on sale. we should be sold out,” About 54,500 were sold last year, George said. George said. M arch o f Dimes THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER iHiiim iiiiiiinim iniiiiiniiiniiiiiiim iniim iitnim iniiiiiinniiiiniiin»niiiiniiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiniM i^ I M orehouse “G ood j I Sponsored By ASU Summer Sessions Food and D rin k” Outside Patio Dining UVE EENvT e ^ f g h , MENT (No Cover No Mm ) THE DUKES OF DIXIELAND, L ,G H T & DARK I B EER O N T A P = IM PO RTED & D O M EST IC BEER W IN E CARRYO U T DRIVE CARS FREE Tonight • 8 p.m. This is going to be an all-time evening of entertainment at Gammage. The Dukes of Dixieland are world-famous and they’ll bring their special music to Gammage this summer for one performance only. | Tickets: $3.50 General Adm ission I A S U Sum mertun Free Event Cars Available Many Points U.S.A. We are I.C.C. licensed and in­ sured. Must be 21 years or more. SCHEALL DRIVEAWAY 991-5533 helps prevent birth defects People Power _ 1 = University & Forest | (In the Arches) 966-7788 - Tem pe Daily: s 10:30-12:00 p.m. F r i.& s a t .ii i:ooa.m. | Sun. til Midnight S 3 Tha performance by the Duke* of Dlxlelend fe e Summerfun event end is free to A SU Summer Sessions student» end ASU fecully end eleff. Present either s student fee csrd (admits one) or a current faculty/stafl ID (admits two) at the door at tonight's performance lor admission. A limited number of general admission tickets for tonight's performance are available to the public at $3.50 per person. Y o u r H o sts: “The Fa m ily” For additional Information please call the Gammage Box Office at 965-3434. luilllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIinillllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIMIHIIHIIIIllr LAZY! But not enough m oney t o w o r k a t it ? Let's talk about i t . . . Let's discuss your making m oney! WHERE: Howard Johnson's Motor Lodge Apache Blvd. & College Ave. The Frontier Room W HEN: Friday, July 27,1979 TIME: 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Have a cold drink with while we discuss YOU and YOUR OPPORTUNITY. Former Sun Devils