r Wednesday Arizona State University © C op yrig h t. Stats Prsss. 1980 » press ™62No* T a m p a , A riz o n a A S A lobbying O K, says director B y U r l W tta n ik The Arizona Students Association’s right to lobby for university students is a legitim ate function, the group’s director said Tueeday in answer to a state legislator’s charge the group is misusing taxpayers money. “ We have a perfect right to engage in what we engage fat. I Cooper is Just confused about the statutes of lobbying,” said ASA D irector K u rt Freitag. Rep. Jim Cooper, R-Mesa, told the House Appropria­ tio n Committee ASA was misusing tax money to fund lobbying efforts which he claim s is in violation of Arizona Board of Regents policy. ...... ■ Related editorial page le e r---------------- - ASA director K urt Freitag said the group is a registered lobbying organization and its funding comes from tuition and fens from the three state universities, “Students are taxpayers and their money goes for tui­ tion and fern so I gusss in that sense, we are using tax­ payers money. Cooper said he win ask for a hearing on the m atter before the House Appropriations Committee. Although Freitag m id the association’s actions are within regent guidelines, Robert Huff, executive coor­ dinator for the board, said lobbying is against regent policy. “ Each university provides ASA with $8,500. Regents policy specifically prohibits use of these funds for lobby­ ing procedures,’’ he said. Huff also said he thought the group lobbied, however he added he wasn’t sure what money financed the ef­ forts. “ In my opinion, it lobbied against the tuition increase, but I can’t m y for sure if the money used cam e from the regents or from its own pockets,” he added. Cooper m id the group sent “ threatening'’ letters to legislators which said a record would be kept of how issues important to students were voted on. “ If I don’t vote A SA ’s way, they’re going to inform people to vote against me, ” he m id. Freitag said the letters were sent because ASA has a responsibility to the students to “ involve ourselves in legislative processes where issues concerning students are involved.” He added the legislators are sent a position paper listing the group’s stead on each issue. “ We w ill compile a voting list and make it public before election day so students can see how the legislators vote. “ But this does not mean we w ill tell students how to vote and for whom,” Freitag said. “ If Cooper or anyone else is inferring a threat from com piling the voting record, the threat is a product of their own imagina­ tions.” Cooper also m id he was questioning why the associa­ tion is listed in the state directory and has a watts telephone line. Freitag said the aseociation was created as an organ of the regents and that is probably the reason for the listing. “ I’d be more than happy to remove our name from a directory if it would make Cooper happy, but we do pay for our own telephone,” he m id. Cooper also m id he wanted to know why the ASU business office is doing the group’s bookkeeping for free. According to Freitag, the accounting was worked out by the regents to allow them “ easy access and dose scrutiny to our spending." Regent supports X-rated film ban B y E U ra Haggerty An Arizona Board of Regents member said Tuesday he w ill back A SU P re sid e n t John Schwada “ as far as I can” in the recent ban against campus Xrated film s. Regent Rudy Cam pbell m id, “ I’m absolutely and firm ly against ‘dirty movies’ on cam ­ pus.” Cam pbell m id he w ill support Schwada even if the Arizona Students Association or the Associated Students take the con­ troversy to Court “ Students should have at least four good, dean years of their lives without a ll the crude things that snist in the w orld,’’ CampbeUsaid. Ho added the movies do not bolong on cam pus “ in publicsupported h u ik tin p .” Cam pbell m id he its cussed the movies “ Just In conversation" with Schwada before the Dec, 8 ban on the showing of X-rated movies by any campus group. The board has not discussed the Aim s or the ban. However in November a student com plained to the regents about the showing of “ Deep Throat” at Neeb H all. Campbell m id, “ I’m surprised a young lady is leading this charge for X-rated m ovies,” referring to ASASU Activities V ice President Lo ri Tanner. “ It’s a different world than when I grew up,” he added. Tanner overseas the ASASU Cultural A ffairs Board, which program s the Neab H all F ilm Series. She and ASA Executive D irector K urt Freitag are seek­ ing lagni recourse against the ban, calling it cenaorship and a violation of the F irst Amend­ ment. Miller keeps director's pay in prof's slot tty L a ra J gophsmsre nursing staler U rn Esigei (ieri) and Judy Jacobs, ot the CsBsge et Nursing, chat under an i teoia’s proteoHea T siiO sy’s Mght rains are m peeted io ooiUinus ihteugh tedey. By Sum sne M cEHresk Form er athletic director Fred M iller may have been elrlppari of Ida adm inistrative Job, but Ids salary w ill stay the same, the University provost said Tuesday M illar currently is teaching f lames in the physical education department. “ He w ill be peid hie regular contract salary for the balance of this fiscal year,” said Provost Paige Mtilhellen “ However, Me salary w ill be adjusted for future years.” MHter’s present salary is $4I,0I0 per year. M ila r had been athletic dlrectar at ASU since M l. He was terminated Jan. $. Mu^hnHanmid M tPer’kaaiary w euldbedlvtdadby 1.1 to determine an amount for a nine-month academic year. This ie the normal procedure for adjusting salaries of adm inistrators returning to teaching positions, he ad­ ded. M iller still holdi e tenured position m a professor in physical education. Ha is teaching nine hours which ie considered a. normal semester load, m id James Odonkirk, a physical education profcmor. M iller is teaching clam m in coaching internships, the organization and adm inistration of athletics, beginning racquaiball and beginning tennis, ha added. “ M y background la in teaching and I'm glad to come back to it,” M iller said. Pag* 2 Slate Press Wednesday, January 30,1960 In the n e irs b rie f Ik O r d e r E a rly a n d SAVE V a le n tin e R o se s o n ly $16.50 a d o z. If ordered by F e b . 5 ,1 9 0 0 . B e ra re to bring co u p o n . A fte r the 5th — $22.50 a d o z. from the Associated Press LO N G S H O R E M E N T O LD NO S O V IET BO YCO TT NEW O R LEA N S — A federal judge told of­ ficia ls of five dockworker unions Tuesday that they cannot sanction or encourage a boycott of a Greek freighter chartered to load grain for the Soviet Union. The ruling came in the first court test of a protest by longshorem en in the East and Gulf coasts of the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan. S EN A T E APPR O VES OLYM PIC BOYCO TT W ASHINGTON — The Senate voted 88-4 Tuesday to urge all Am ericans, not just athletes, to boycott the 1680 Summer Olym­ p ic Gam es in Moscow. The Senate’s resolu­ tion, tying an Olym pic boycott to the con­ tinued Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, also called for the Summer Gam es to be moved permanently to Greece and the Winter Games to be given a permanent home In a neutral na­ tion, perhaps Austria or Switzerland. DURANTE IS DEAD H O LLYW O O D — Jimm y Durate, the honkytonk com ic with the outsized nose whose art­ ful mix of clowning, fractured English and heart-warming pathos endeared him to generations of Am ericans, died Tuesday at age 86. The famed ‘‘Schnozzola,’’ as he was known to friends and fans alike, died alone in a hospital room where he had been confined for three weeks for treatment of a lung ail­ ment. M ANGIONE RIPPED O F F BATO N ROUGE, La. — A $1,800 guitar belonging to jazz m usician Chuck Mangione waa stoln from backstage before his perform ace at Louisiana State University, officials said. Mangione, who is more famous for his work with the flugelhorn, described the guitar as an old brown Gibson L-6. A replacement guitar had to be found before the concert could begin Monday night. Police said they’re still investigating the theft. SOVIET TH R EAT TO U.S. GROW S W ASHINGTON — Soviet use of its growing power against Afghanistan significantly Incre sse t the danger of U.S.-Soviet military confrontation during the next five years, a top defense official said Tuesday. Gen. David Jones, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Secretary of Defense Harold Brown said events in Afghanistan show the Soviets may be w illing to threaten vital U.S. interests In the M iddle East. ‘MUDDY’ W ATERS NEW M8U CO A CH EAST LANSING, Mich. — Veteran Coach Frank “ Muddy" Waters — one-time star halfback at Michigan State University — was named Tuesday as Michigan State’s new foot­ ball coach. Waters, 56, has been head football coach and athletic director at Saginaw Valley State Colleges since the school started Its football program in 1974. He guided the Car­ dinals to the Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference title last season. “This appointment is something I’ve dreamed of for 30 years and thought had passed me by,” Waters said. H O PES HEARING REVEAL CRIM E PRO BLEM S W ASHINGTON — Sen. Dennis DeConcini says he hopes a rescheduled hearing on organized crim e will yield “ som e Idea of the extent of the problem in Arizona and the rest of the sunbelt states.” The hearing, originally scheduled for Jan. 11, will be conducted here Friday. “ There are indications that ’planned’ bankruptcies are becoming an increasing source of revenue for organized crim e in the Southwest" and have had “m illions of dollars worth of im pact" elsewhere, DeConconi said. F re e D elivery • La rg e A sso rtm e n t 966-0761 15 W. Sixth St. 11-4 S u n . 8-6 M o n .-S a t. DECONCINI M S. BANNED IN LONDON TIMES LONDON — The Tim es of London Tuesday banned any use of the title M s., calling it “ar­ tificial, ugly, silly . . . a faddish m iddle-class plaything." Am erican fem in ist leaders defended the title, saying men would think differently about It If they had to be identified by marital status. M s. Is a title used Instead of M iss of Mrs*, before the name of a woman. JOIN THE CLUB 4C Xerox Copies* SAM E ORIGINAL $ 2 9 9 ’ Become an AlphaGraphics University Club Member! Just bring your valid student 10 to your nearby AlphaGraphics university shop to receive FREE an AlphaGraphics Student Discount Membership card You II be entitled to the above discounts all spring and summer semester long. In addition we will behaving special discounts on printing, binding, padding and color products which Will only be available to AlphaGraphics Univer­ sity Club Members' aiiiairaM ier SRP APPR O VES R ATE HIKE PHOENIX — The Salt River Project Board of Directors approved a rate hike Tuesday of­ ficials said could add $4.77 to $9.10 to mon­ thly summer bills. The increase averaging 9.6 percent becom es effective M arch 1, SRP general manager Jack Pfister said. H e said it ranges from 7.5 percent for low-use custom ers to 11 percent for higher-use custom ers. Pfister also estimated the In­ crease will raise winter SRP bills between $2.45 and $3.52 per month. SM A LL Q U A KE SH A K ES B A JA CALIFORNIA SAN DIEGO — A sm all earthquake hit Baja California shortly before noon Tuesday that was felt in several San Diego buildings, but there were no reports of damage. 100 COPIES 122 E. University Drive — Phone 966-7821 *8 " n i l * unbound o rig in a ls____________________ IIhrMil? T h e V fonderfG lV farldO ff T h e .U r t a t o l i ! O r b s lb G o 6 6 7 -2 4 1 « EARN *100 PER M ONTH $10 PER DONATION $7 AND I t BONUS ON 7th AND 8th DONATION 933 E . UNIVERSITY S u ito 1 1 2 C a ll F o r A n A p p o in tm en t 894-1338 O P E N B OO-3 :3 0 M onday th ru F rid a y ¿ Z 1 0 VARIETIES. 1. MR. POTATO 6. THE KUNO FU Baked potato a W i butter, tou r Baked potato wMh chow w e n craom and baeon bka 7. T H E G O D FA T H ER 2. T A TER E A T E R Baked potato »tth spignal l l, mm Baked potato with baa* M ts. balls and cheeee mualwootna and gravy 6 . T H E L 1 L ' D E V IL 8. T H E H EA R T B U R N Baked potato with eMN henna an. lakad potato w ith tomatoes, omen woman jhMt and ehaaao 9. THE KNOT HEAD 4. BLUE LADY Baked potato w M i feaat and Mkad potato w ith Mue oheaoe. moaaw nl M o n M ta and ahtoeo l 0 . HAWAIIAN D EU Tt f . ALL AMERICAN B w eetpew tow theneap eW . _ r B ñ ñ ñ p •* M R . B A K ED PO TA TO in Tem po Tow n Pinta *a*c.UNivananv i I Ì 6 6 7 -2 4 1 6 L ■ Expiran Ijtjp B . „ „i, -r im m o m i W ednesday, January 30,1980 State Press Page 3 Get the habit of running up 22 steps to the most unusual gift shop on campus. THE GALLERY STORE M atthew s C e n te r, 2nd F lo o r O P E N 12 to 4 W E E K D A Y S DISCO VEGAS NIGHT February 2 Begins 8:00 p.m. K n ig h ts o f the P y th ia s Lo d g e (7th & A s h , Ternpe) SUM pSH Sy S limy C » « n i TM s Northern Blacfc-TaMod rsttlssneke Is rickNy bsM nd safety glass and can be viewed In the LNe Setenes $3.00 P la y M o n ey to g am ble + 1 F re e D rink — A ll d rin k s 50c R ID ES F R O M H IL L E L C a ll th e o ffic e fo r d e ta ils — 967-7563 Kush drops suit, signs settlem ent Form er ASU bead football coach Frank Kush has signed the $300,000 settlement to drop a m ultim illion dollar lawsuit against ASU and various University officials. K u ril’s lawyer, H arry Cavanagh, said the state agreed the settle­ ment would be tax free. The agreement ended the taxation dispute which had delayed the signing of the deal. Attorney General Bob Corbin had set a S p.m. Tuesday deadline and said the state m ight withdraw the offer if Kush hadn’t signed by then. Kush signed the settlement late Tuesday morning. The farm er coach filed the suit claim ing M s rights were violated when he was removed as head coach an Oct. 13 for allegedly hitting a player and attempting to cover it up. Cavanagh also said that the lawsuit against Beeline Dragway operator R ick Lynch, an original defendant in the suit, would not be dropped . U.S. agents guilty o f assaulting aliens SAN D IEG O (A P) — In a plea-bargaining agreement, two UJS. Border Patrol agents were convicted T uesday of brutality toward il­ legal aliens and ordered back for sentencing M arch 12. A federal Judge found officers Jeffrey Otherson, 31, and Bruce Brown, S3, both guilty on misdemeanor counts of conspiracy and assault last Ju ly 3. The two were awaiting a second tria l on two counts inchuBng one of felony conspiracy. But prosecutors accepted the agreement in which U.S. D rib le t Judge Howard Turrentine decided the case on the basis of testimony In a trial that mtlnd last mnnfh Tilth a f t r r **"' ‘**‘ * “ * conviction. The action, in a 30-minute bearing before Turrentine, set the stage for an expected defense appeal to the WhU-S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Attorneys Nelson B rav, M ichael M cCabe and Howard Prank indicated they would try for a ruling that aliens are legaly “ inhabitants of the state,” entitled to the civ il rights of U.S. residents. D irk D ick, another of four border patrolmen originally indicted by a fadoral grand Jury, was put in a year's pretrial diversion program in exchange far M s resignation, effective wih the indictment last Sept 25. D ick was told that if be violates no laws for a year, the government’s ease against him would bo dropped. B A R C LA Y 'S SPECIA L Com plete Alaskan King Crab Dinner $796 Includes Soup, Salad, Broad Board and Potato O F F E R VALID SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY — Justin Tyme Nightly thru February 9th — 4466 South Rural CONTACT ASASU 208 j MU 838-8389 ,, 70/” / lOl ftO * 4 State Press W ednesday, January 30,1960 Opinion slate press There la nothing more frightful than ignorance In action. — Goethe ------------------------------ j L . ______________________________________ __________ Beer, cigarettes, fast cars & ASA It’s comforting to know that some things never change. With others, it’s a little frightening. A ll you Arixona university students out there w ill be reassured to know that that legislative sage Jim Cooper, R-Mosa, is still right on top of the issues. Prom the man who proposed a tuition hike to combat the collegiate horrors of beer, cigarettes and fast cars, we now have a request that the Arizona Students Association be investigated. According to an Associated Press news story released Saturday, it seems that Mesa’s most (in)famous dairy form er has Just now discovered that ASA engages in legislative lobbying. Gee, M r. Cooper, guess those guys down at ASA can’t pull the wool over your eyes for long, can they? The odd thing about Cooper’s objection is that it comes about six years after the founders of A SA drew up its charter as the official lobbying arm for Arizona's ap­ proxim ately 75,000 university students. He seems to be awfully worried about the “ threat” he thinks A SA poses. “ I have a letter circulated by the students association saying that they have an intereat in the election of legislators,’’ Cooper said recently. “ If that's not a threat to any legislators who vote against them, I don’t know one.” It goes without saying that anyone with an interest in the quality of the state Legislature would be a threat to M r. Cooper’s re-election. The interesting thing is, this is undoubtedly the first ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ — STATE PRESS M A R Y D G ILLE S P Il E d ito r STEVE A LLN A T T M anaging E d ito r C ity E d ito r D A N F E U N E R A sst C ity E d ito r JA CQ U EE G A ILLA R D N ow s E d ito r T IM B O IE C Z K O P ho to E d ito r D E N N Y CO LLIN S Sports E d ito r |IM E IS IE G E R A sst Sports E d ito r D A V E N E IB E R G A U A rts S E n tr E d ito r D A V E W A LKER C op y C h ie f IO H N ISM tKAW A M A R K ) SC AR P O p in io n Pace E d ito r The State Press is pub lished Tuesday through Frid ay during the academ ic year excep t h o lid a ys and c u m periods, at M atthew s Center. Room IS . A rizo n a State U n ive rsity. Tem pe. A 2 «5281 New sroom » 5 -2 2 9 2 A d vertisin g X P rod uction » 5 -7 5 7 2 . The State Press is the o n ly new spaper e x clu sive ly p ub lished fo r and c irc u la te d on the A SU cam pus The news and view s p ub lished in th is new spaper are not n e cessa rily those o f the A SU ad m inistration, fa cu lty , sta ff o r student body tim e Cooper has taken Arixona university students seriously enough to worry about his voting record. Another thing bothering Cooper is that ASA m ight be using (gasp) taxpayer money to support its lobbying. Surprise, Jim , you got it right! You see, ASA receives a yearly budget aUotmentirom the student governments of the three state universties. So, ASA does indeed receive taxpayer money, although indirectly. If it's illegal for a state agency to uae money for lobby­ ing, who's blowing the whistle on every other state agen­ cy adm inistrator who goes down to the capital on com­ pany tim e to pitch his budget request? And since the m ajority of students are taxpayers as well, why should they not be alloted a sm all number of bucks to push for bills that affect them? After a ll, ASA is the only group around speaking out for student interests, and they have some mighty big fish with some mighty big mooey to contend with. Not to mention quick-witted dairy farm ers. Letters to the Editor Stop asking for sacrifice and build better products Ether: Last week the leader of the Free World in hie State of the Union address again made the ca ll to sacrifice. He has asked the citizens of the United States to drive less, heat their homes lass, in short, to alter their standard of living. Carter has asked us to do this under the idea that it w ill make the United States economically and even m ilitarily secure. This sacrificing of the peo­ ple is a m ajor contradiction of democracy, which strives for prosperity of the individual. In two short centuries, our society has obtained more knowledge than a ll previous centuries before. It has split the atom, landed on the moon and increased m edical knowledge tenfold. I find it hard to believe that this society cannot produce an SO-, 90-, or even 100-mile-per-galloo car, a home heater that uses but a fraction of natural gas and home appliances that require nominal amounts o f energy. Stop asking the people to sacrifice! Start requir­ ing these industries to produce highly energyefficient products now. MHteRyaa Freshm an PeUHcal Science The First Amendment doesn't protect filth During the past few months there have been quite a few let­ ters to the editor regarding the Xrated Aim s that have been shown at Nash H all. One letter stands out particularly in my mind. I can’t rem em ber the author’s name, but what stands out in my m ind is that underneath he men­ tioned that he is the projectionist for Nash Hati movies. I personally don’t know what is with many people of the generation, of which I prend to he a part. A con­ ned student writes Ms per­ ianal objection to X-rated movies ind aU of a sudden he’s “ pushing his m orals and ideals on the rest of us.” O r, President (John) Schwada makes a decision for decency and against pornography, and agsin the cries go up that he’s violating the F irst Amendment of the Con­ stitution. AU I would like to say is that the F irst Amendment does not put its stamp of approval on tasteless, filthy X-rated movies. Chief Justice of the (U.S.) Supreme Court E a rl Warren has said, “Those who say that the Supreme Court has put it’s ap­ proval on obscenity are Just not aware of the facts, because the Court has not done that. The Court has specifically said that obscenity is not protected under the free speech clause of the Con­ stitution." In IMS, H74 and 1975, the court handed down a series of decisions that told citizens they had F rig h t to set community standards and enforce them in their own home I happen to be a citizen of the community, an ASU student and I have lived most of m y life in the Valley. I’m not pushing m y views on anyone. I’m not depriving you your rights. I am m erely exercis­ ing my right by speaking against what I cannot condone. The courts have left it to the munities to set their own dards. If we want a decent pus, the deceot students help set decent standards. com­ stan­ cam ­ must Thank you D r. Schwada, Board of Regents and a ll those responsi­ ble for having the backbone and courage to stand up for and take action against these movies that we students of the silent m ajority w ill not support, and certainly w ill not tolerate at ASU. Ed itor’s note: The “ cowoemod student” who has o "personal ob­ jection” to X-rated movies is Bsn Sands rs, a bwsinsss m ajor who is publicly and actively working against the presence of such /lints on campus. Some students /set that his efforts are an at­ tempt to deprive them of their right to see what they want to see, and have differing definitions fo r the words, “decent,” "por­ nography,” "tasteless” and "fUthy ” than others hove. — M JS Fred Ashby General Business Letter Policy The M ate Press welcomes lottati od any tapie. Type them, double spaced, with m nrglM set on to characters. Include your (MB name, dam standing, m ajor and phone numbor. Lottare that de not confor m to thane gu id elin es, as w ell as anonymem totters, w ill be dliB sidsd. However. If it in Imperativo that your name be withhold, stata why. Letters a re subject to editing or rejection. Address lattari ta: Letto n , ABU. AX M M Wednesday, January 30,19008tote Presa Paga 5 M ore letters Russia's the bully EO e This Is a reply to Kathryn Hale’s letter (Letters, Jan. 35), in which she criticized President Carter’s speech. M s. Hale . . . when one uses the media as a forum in which to express oneself, a certain burden falls upon the w riter to research her topic and show some knowledge of that which she is commenting upon. In world politics, nations constantly test one snother, trying to gain the upper hand. If the na­ tion being tested responds inadequately, it loess power, prestige and credibility. If Quit nation overreacts, it stands to lose much, much more. Econom ic leverage seems far more sensible to me than w arfare, Mb. Hate, because I don’t want to fig h t Remember , Russians eat too, and they are susceptible to hunger pains Just like you and 1. You see, food is a prim ary need far man and to deprive him of that b a strong reprisal, but man also has other needs, one of those being accep­ tance. The Olym pics would give that naadad ac­ ceptance to the Russian people, white their government carries out aggressive actions totally mocking the Olym pic spirit. Of course, we a ll know the Russians are nice communists and not filthy capitalists, but com­ munists feel severe financial losses too. Montreal b still paying for the last Olym pics, even though they dM take place and were accompanied by a tremendous influx of dollars to that city. With the enormous outlay of Soviet capital used to prepare for the Games, it b incredibly naive to think that the effects of a boycott would be any less than disastrous to the Russians. Yet, not one of those moves involves this nation in open aggression with the Russians. M s.' Hate, when President Carter and his ad­ visers put so much thought into choosing their plan of action, it’s very disappointing that you couldn’t spare Just a little thought in writing your letter. Joha Seinaa Junior Marketing Editor: D id you not know that Russia’s F irst, M s. Hate asks us to cloak of dominance includes prof o llo w the exam ple of M r. Carter and be “ b ig b u llie s , ” Soviet regimes in Ethiopia and (presum ably from what he South Yemen, which are both “said” in his speech). But, M s. strategically located along the Hate, weren’t the problems that passageway of the oil tankers? M r. Carter was addressing in Add to thb the shaky situation in respsnse to actions taken by the Iran, plus the unpredictable Russians? Was he bail« a bully governments of Iraq, Turkey and by making suggestions to counter Libya and you have a golden op­ an overt Russian m ilitary move portunity for the Russians to in Afghanistan? And a b o to move in. You a b o think, M s. Hate, that counter the growing Russian sphere of dominance in the Rod since th b b an election year M r. Carter b finally doing something. Sea and Persian G u lf areas? Drop/add worked Editar: Although Steven O’Brien b correct in reporting that the Business College teaches free enterprise (Letters, Jan. M ), the profeasor« abo emphasise other pertinent concepts. Among those ideas b the im por­ tance of planning, organising, directing and controlling to successful management. The new drop-add policy encouragea sound management, especially in the area of planting. The student b forced to p im h b or her cur­ riculum and academ ic progress prior to initial registration. B y in­ tegrating m anagerial concepb into the studente’ own Uvee, the learn­ ing process b enhanced. Furthermore, the new drop-add policy worked. Students with legitim ate problems were well-served; those with unwarranted gripes were prevented from infringing on the rights of others. And that’s the way every college should operate. GregNuaael Graduate Assistant Management Just for a vote. T h b b a debatable point, but I think if what b hap­ pening now happened two years ago you would be hearing the tam e response«. But, in your opinion, it seems M r. Carter should not open hb “ Mg mouth” and let us a ll “ die com fortably,” as you say you would like to. Pardon me, but when push cameo to shove I won’t tit back and let someone stick a knife in my gut. But golly, that’s being a big bully, isn’t it. You a b o aay that to ban the sate of wheat to the Russians and to boycott the Olym pics b no big deal. Well, maybe we should keep sending the Rueeiane wheat and technology, and go to the Olym ­ pics so as to tend tester to their system of totalitarian control and expansion that they have already spent m illions an to make ready for the propaganda coup. But I guess m ilitary takeover, ' political blackm ail and pro­ ps gandbtic lying are good and wonderful things and M r. Carter should not do a thing. 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REGULARLY PRICED MERCHANDISE If you arc interested in learning how to Cross Mcknu Outfitters Country Ski and W inter Survival Techniques, coma In or call us about our "Encounters” Program. 1MB W. SOUTHERN - MEIA • 83MM1 A new, natural faahion. Natural color. Natural conditioning. Together they make a natural attraction for mllllona of young, modem, fashionconacloua women who not only want beautiful hair — but want to achieve It in the moat natural way possible Discount applies to service of Shampoo, Haircut and Hanna treatment, styling and drying. Long hair slightly higher. Effective Monday thru Thursday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. February, 1980. 968-8144 45 E . B roadw ay • B ro adw ay fic M ill Oaty bW> Page 0 State Press Wednesday, January 30,1960 Parent-skills group set Education grads competent. University official declares in response to accusation By Barbara Vaa Fleet An ASU College of Education official denied T uesday that teachers educated at the University are incompetent. Kent Christiansen, director of Student Services, said Arizona Board of Regents President W illiam Payne did not have reason to be concerned about standards in the College of Education or the quali­ ty of its graduates. Payne discussed teacher proficiency Friday during a state House appropriations hearing on funding for ASU. He was responding to charges by Rep. Marge Ollsan, D-San Manuel, that “universities are turn­ ing out genuinely illiterate teachers who are not even competent enough to know if their students can read or write. ” Christiansen said, “Our grade standards are higher than many other programs that graduate students from ASU. Child raising is a subject that fills classrooms and emptiea cocktail parties, ties up telephone lines and unravels nervea. Any day in the ASU C linical PsyehoMgy Center, it win be con­ firm ed that mothers and fathers atill wonder how to be parents. In an effort to respond, the center to sponsoring a parent skins group starting early in February for the parents of S-to 13-yenrolds. __________________________ “Teaching is one profession people fe d at liber­ ty to criticise,” be added. “ We are traditionally blamed for the ills of society.” D a s h In n S p e cia l A bill pending in the Legislature would require prospective teachers to be tested' in reading, gram m ar and mathematics before being cer­ tified. S 1 .9 0 “ With a ll the competency skills and minimum standards, there is still one criteria which is hard to — but that is essential in a good teacher. Some students may be high scorers and then robots in a classroom situation,” said Cfaristianaen He added that 75 percent of the graduates get teaching Jobs after graduation. One country fresh egg. two strips of bacon or sausage, heeh brown potatoes, toast & cof­ fee. •. “ I’m also one one of the people who is predicting a shortage of teachers,” Christiansen said. “ We are not even keeping up with the demand now.” Solar test is designed A team of solar energy researchers at A SU has jg"srf a laboratory tasting program for solar cooling devices. The laboratory setup is equipped to analyse the per­ form ance of any component in a solar-powered home cooling system, from collectors to storage tanks to absorption chillers. The program is par­ t ic u la r ly d e sig n e d fo r e v a lu a t in g th e r m a lp h o to v o lta ic a b s o rp tio n designs. Mow OptMi doMy S:00 u r . 731 E. Apocho / M S -0 7 7 8 veterans • ■ a pasts S r u w sm m •stilar B ra tto wisjsr Margo Thornton works on a dotali drawing of t human hand, os port of hor Art Anatomy olsss Go Back To School Iq ^Stylc !... $ are you interested in working together for rights an d benefits for Veterans at ASU? - Service - Recreation - Political Clout SCHWINN This is your organization! •GE H R H A R D T 'S S C H W IN N STU D IN T D ISCOUNTS on BICYCLES SAVE •20 • *30 O N S E LK C T K D 212190 E ip t r M 20% li MU | in Room 217 (Coconino) of the MU. 1 ■ MC SALES i USED 7 1 * M ill A v e . • 9 6 7 -2 1 3 7 Is Jan. 29, at 3:15 in Room 217 (Coconino) of the MU, and on Thursday, Jan. 31, at 6:00 p.m. o f f NEW à B IK IS The Veterans Student Union wifi hold its first meeting of the semester on Tuesday, S E R V IC E See you them! W ednesday, January 30,1960 State Press Page 7 Loans used for profits, according to aids officer By Clare G ra v e r Some ASU students are reaping handsome pro­ fits by obtaining federal benk loans for their education, a University financial afab official said Tuesday. “ 1 don’t think there are a lot of students abusing the loans, but I know there are some doing it,” said Jim Barnhart, ASU bank loans officer. Barnhart said that some college students who don’t need the money are obtaining the 7 percent federally subsidized loans and investing the money for yields of up to 13 percent. An act that removed the 125,000 family-income restriction on student loans in 1978 makes it possi­ ble for any student to obtain a loan. Barnhart said the only requirements that must be met are thoee of the individual banks par­ ticipating in the federal loan program, such as maintaining a 2.0 grade-point average and being affiliated with the hank for at least one year. Once a check is dispersed, the student must sign an affidavit stating be w ill spend the loan money only on educational costa, Barnhart said. “ But once they walk out the door there is no way of knowing what they spend it on,” he added. ‘‘I’ve had parents call me because they want to know when their son or daughter is going to get their money so they can put it in the bank." Barnhart said there is no way of knowing which or how many students are abusing the loans. Officials in Congress are aware of the problem, but are not sure how widespread it is, acconflng to a Jan. 20 article in the Chicago Tribune. Re-instituting an income limitation would hurt the many students who are using the loans proper­ ly for educational costs, they said. However, a Senate committee w ill begin hear­ ings on re-authorizing middle-income student loans in February. Barnhart said because of default problems, more restrictions w ill be placed on obtaining loans, but they will not prevent students from in­ vesting loan money and m akings profit. FBI probes church's ex-financier C. Coazetti from his accountant and made copies of nearly 100 land transaction documents involv­ ing Cozzetti at the Pim a County Recorder’s Office, the newspaper said. Coazetti was placed on leave of absence and then quit the diocese after the money was reported missing in December. TUCSO N (AP) — The F B I has gathered tax and real estate records on a man who quit as the Roman Catholic Diocese of Tucson’s finance director after 177,000 in chuurch money was reported missing, a Tucson newspaper reported Tuesday. F B I agents picked up die tax records of Donald ENGINE TUNE-UP ♦ 40“ 6 CYLINDER 8 CYLINDERS $46 W e 'll Install new A C re sisto r p lu g s, ig n itio n p o in ts en d co n d e n se r; ad ju st carburetor; set p o in t dw ell and tim in g ; teat battery an d ch a rg in g sy ste m s. V -8’s and so m e a ir co n d itio n e d ca rs extra. E le ctro n ic ig n itio n sy ste m s c o st even le e s! M O N R O E-M ATIC SHO CKS — LWTtD WAMANTY — 10-pt. Brak« O V ER H A U L *74M g Typ. Drum T) Am ar. Cara Lig h t T rucks •17“E A CH LURE N O IL CHANGE •6“ 4MB la T.8B0 muse far meal «aMcrae Includedera up tp fine auarteaf attend a arafaaaisnai W a ll H iatall factory pra-arotd lin in g s, now front se a ls and la t um sp rin g s (com bi k its, re­ b u ild a ll fo u r «mos t cylin d e rs rauf Isam tene brake drum s In e * »meal c y i , M eaeft. M rate Joseph Heller’s 'Good as Gold’somewhere between'The Brothers Karamazov’and those dirty little eight-pagers we used to read...doser to 'Karamazov.’...’ ’ Mel B rooks EMCEIWTED FROM THt WASHING TON POST fluid. FRONT-END ALIG N M EN T ANO TIRE NOTATION •15“ AN Amar d m aaaapt Chmattaa and oampaola w/frontman a m a a m easrep* toa-in to aw w tooU aofs ortgirtai ■pocfftpotlana. N o Mfem s— IAAkA ^mAsm s«aait eherne to r— core im snm lacto ry ir G o o d as G o ld m ade M el Brooks laugh. It’ll m ake you laugh. Laugh out loud. Because it’s about Bruce G old, a m an w ho began life in Coney Island and ended u p in A m erica’s real am usem ent park, VCbshington, D C . He’s the kind o f guy only Joseph H eller can give you. Hilarious. H eartbreaking. A nd only slightly less insane than the w orld around him . H e’s a true Joseph H eller hero. Created by the w riter w ho’s already given us ttuo extraordinary and enduring novels, Catch'22 and Something Hap pened. G ood as G o ld .lt has been praised as “m ore perceptive about human nature than anything else H eller has done...he is am ong the novelists o f the last tw o 'Anarkt w ho matter!* tm Nfw m m m*nw or b o o k s Oak for year appomt- ask friend about Firaatona Jest pubEshed h i paperindc by Pocket Books. Am erica* wildest #1 bestseller. ? Page 8 State Press W ednesday, January 30,1900 "CONTACT LENSES9 20% S O F T *7 9 9 5 DISCOUNT ONALLFRAMES P e r M e a l S e tt Leeeee Including Our Designer Fram es SAMEMV DELIVERY«orinosi SOPÌ LENSES $ 7 9 » 5 OUR NEW LOCATION INCLUDES AM OUTSTANDING FRAME DISPLAY HARD TIMM. WEARING FERMIO FOR CONTACT LENSES >SoR Contact Lanes* For AaMguatem AmM t F ill your d octo r's p rescription. fOR APPOINTS«Nt OR INFORMATION EYE EXAM 941-5228 D R . W .G . A M E S OPTOMETRIST _QKH 3666 N. MLLER RD. ?& Su ite 114 Scottsdale FO R G LA S S ES *25 u IM IW mdvmmemS iv# m e a s M l y STARTING THURSOAYS JANUARY 31 5:304:30 FM STARTING THURSDAYS FEBRUARY 7 6:30-8:00 PM & b e g ln n e ra STARTING W EDNESDAYS FEBRU ARYS 6:304:00 FM limited » n H a trt! SIG N UP NOW l A t The Activities Center, Mil $14.00 Includes: — 0 «reeks Instruction — m o sco n i b illia rd s b ook — A A L L tab le tlm el For mere liUanm Uen , e e l MU R ie Cantar e l Old computer to be replaced with new $1.4 million model A $1.4 m illion academic computer w ill be in­ stalled this summer to replace the “ technological­ ly worn out" Uni vac that has been in urn for eight years, an associate professor of Computer Ser­ vices said Tuesday. ASU has awarded a contract to Am dahl Carp, to install the computer in the A-wing of the engineer­ ing complex. The computer is one of four systems oncam pus. The others are used m ainly for "sm all student program s," D r. Lynn Bellam y m id. The computer systems are umd for basic pro­ gramming courses and for extended research. “The Am dahl runs a lot more of the type of com­ The sm aller computers operate in the Liberal Arts, Education, Business and Nursing cottngaa. Only the engineering computer is being replaced. ‘*1116 old Univac and the new Am dahl are used for more upper level graduate research," Bellam y m id. He added that the computer is being replaced because it has become “ obsolete" and “ very ex­ pensive to operate.” Graduate college dean proposes creation of doctor of musical arts degree program The dean of ASU ’s graduate college has pro­ posed a new program that w ill offer students a doctor of m usical arts degree. “ It’s still being discussed, but has been ap­ proved by the Graduate Council and is now being considered by the fa cu lty Senate," Charles Woolf m id. The degree program w ill not go Into effect until it has been ratified by the Arixona Board of Regents. The proposal w ill apply to students m ajoring in choral m usic, instrumental m usic and m usic per­ formance, Woolf m id. “ There are presently Ph D programs in the m usic department in secondary education," ha ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 'k i t ' k ' k ' k i f i f puter programs that are written at other univer­ sities," Bellam y m id. “ It’s broader in scope and more useful." m id. “ What we are proposing here is a performance-type doctorate program .” Only five universities in the western United States offer the doctor of m usical arts degree. The proposal was “ unanimously and en­ thusiastically“ approved by the Graduate Council on Doc. 11, and wUl be sent to the fa cu lty Senate Academ ic A ffairs Committee and acted upon at its fa b . SS meeting, he said. George Umberson, chairm an of the m usk department, m id, “ We’ve had many, many in­ quiries about this type of program .” “ We’ve carefully evaluated our faculties and faculty and we feel they meet the requirements to fadUtete a program of this kind.” V&W Parts & Machine Shop VVW The u ,1n 1 1 Ap 1 Salutes Datsun - Toyota Parts 1324 W. University 8 .Locations DISCOUNT PARTS WAfeiOUSE New Tempe Store NATIONAL GROUNDHOG WEEK 21-Pc. Metric Tool Ids FREE COFFEE REFILLS Brake Shoe Sod BREAKFAST MENU: Student Budget Special — Pancakes or French 1. ♦ Toast with choice of Hem, Bacon or Sausage. 1.10 3. 4. 5. FO R VW • DAT8UN • TO YO TA Climb out of the warm sack and leave your shadow behind Mon. thru Fri. -- Jan. 28 thru Feb. 1 - 6:30 to 10:00 a.m. ♦1.79 Triple Crown Omelette — 3 Eggs with plenty of fillings to choose from . . . Hash Browns and Toast. ♦1.69 Double Cheese Omelette — Country Cheddar and Monterey Jack. . . Hash Browne and Toast. ♦1.59 Daily Double Omelette — 3 Eggs with 2 Fillings . . . Hash Browne and Toast. ♦1.65 Standard Fare — 2 Eggs, choice of Hem, Bacon or Sausage with Hash Browne and Toast. ¥ * ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ Op e n Sunday • MB (M oat M odela) Generator« Mid SM ra exch an g e from •3MB A ir F lM n (Moat Modala) •2JBB 0 1 R to rs (M oot M o d a li) •259 ___ . „ S p O rfc (B o a ch . H ita ch i, N ip pon d en ao) * JB9 a PlligS L im ita por euatom or VALV0UNE30wl detergent 49*m< .. i. —........................... .... ...... » „ il, p o reuatom or W l C A R R Y ... R othiH t C a rb u ra to ri • S ta rt ara • C lu te h e e • Cranfcatiatta • G e n e ra to ri • F iy w h o a la • EngInaa * W ln d a R M d a • » u n i para • E n g in e C om pon en te • M e tric H ar d v a ra • Matri a T o o le a S h o p M anual e. V&W Parts & Mach inr Shop W ednesday, January 30,1900 State Press Peps 9 Provost to recom m end creation o f departm ent By D avM D evis The ASU provost w ill announce recommenda­ tions by the end of January to start a new com­ puter science department, the assistant provost said Tuesday. “ The provost (Paige Mulhollan) w ill have addi­ tional meetings before he announces his decision. He wants to meet with the deans of the colleges ot Engineering'and Liberal A rts,” Elm er Gooding •aid. The proposal would combine the computer •denes programs of the engineering and business collapse and the math department. The proposed departm ent would eliminate duplication ot • courses. W illiam Atchison, profeaaor at the University of M aryland, sms hired by ASU to serve as a com­ Hughes recruiters sp eak m any languages: puter consultant to study the feasibility of such a departm ent He met with faculty, staff and students on Dec. 13 and 14. FORTRAN, laser, p a lu m arsenide, m icrow ave. Com sat, feNowshlps. AD A (a d k d e ct o f Pascal), a n d m ore. The report submitted by Atchison concludes that the department is feasible. Atchison recom­ manded the department be housed in the College of Engineering instead of the College of Liberal Arts. Best o f an. they tafc your tanguop o So h a v e a to * a b o u t your M u re a n d ours. Ask your p la ce m e n t o lllc n w hen th e Hughes recrunervw * b o o n cam pus. r m--------* ------------------- - - - - i Once recommendations have been formulated by Mulhollan and Schwada, they w ill make a presentation to the Arisons Board of Regents for approval of the new department, Gooding said. Bf the regents’ approval of the new department does not take too king, it is “ foreseeable" that It m ay be operational by the fell, be added. ! HUGHES ! » _______. . . . . . ---- ------i HUCHES AtRCRAff COMWANT AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F o f A rch ite ctu re A W á y * w Sv Temre At.I § . in r ¿ ¿ to n e s TAP Ar.50# UJbLL D R IN K S , "I've got it" H may appear that senior IMke Penney le In the wrong department, but actueHy he Is an Arahhoeture wafer, taking e break hem desees. “ CollegeTours” Presents M A ZA TLA N '80 Spring Break 1,000 College Students Eight Days - Eight Nights: • 137** Trip Includes train transportation from Nogales to Mazatian and back, lodging — four to a room. Free cocktail parly anch night, plus many other benefits. Flan A — Laava Friday aftam oon, March 7th. Returns to Arizona Saturday morning, March 18th. Plan B — Laava Saturday aftam oon, March 8th. Ra­ tuma to Arizona Sunday morning, March 16th. Option — Sleeping cabin on train, only $20 par parson round-trip. A $20.00 non-rafundabte deposit Is required to reserve your trip. M all Check or Money Order to: t U BAST DKSSRT PARK LAN K, PHOKNIX, A Z. 98020 For additional Information call Phoenix 283-8017 • Tucson 209-8340 --------- — --------—------------------- Add nasa_____________ _____ .___ ______________ CHy________ _ S ta te --------------- Z i p ------------Phone • .. ..................... ........................................ * i want Ptan A ____P la n * -------W eeper------ASU lv h .0 0 ALLDAQUtfi /5 \ih-SO A L L POLl/N£$IA i Pag« 10 State Prose W ednesday, January 30,1960 4t Nuclear debate at M U A» a part of its series called "And Now F o r Something Com­ pletely D iffe re n t.." the Ideas and Issues Committee of the M U Activities Board w ill present "N uclear Energy and Am erica’s Future: The Great Debate." The program w ill take place today from 2:00 toS:90 p.m. in the M U Pim a Room. FREE DRINKS & CO VER FOR LADIES ON WED. H O TTE ST C O U N TR Y RO C K O SR H H G 2003 N. S C O T T S . RD. • 946-4860 submitted the pieces In partial tuMMmont of her Master of Pine Arte degree. SUN p iu w fey Omny Oaflhu B ill m ay require four estim ates P H O EN IX (AP) — Sen. Jeffrey H ill, R-Tucson, has introduced legislation that would require many Arizonans to file quarterly income tax estimates with the state. It would also double interest penalties for late tax payments. An accountant by trade, H ill says the bill would serve a dual purpoae. F irst, it would allow thoee with big capital gains during the year to make payments in advance and, second, it would make it easier to keep trade of tax evaders. The b ill would require the quarterly filings from Arizonans whose estimated tax liability for the year amounted to $100. F o r corpora­ tions, the requirement would apply where the taxable amount for a year cam e to $40. The interest penalty would be increased from 6 percent to 12 per­ cent, and persons who custom arily pay their state income tax in two installm ents would be charged the 12 percent rate for the October pay­ ment. But, says H ill, any amount the state owes to a person also would be subject to the sam e interest rate. Those who would be subject to filing quarterly estimates would be i l i g l n whose f " " “ «1 income is $20,000, m arrieds with the same in­ com e provided one spouse had no wages for the year, and certain m ar­ ried persona not entitled to file a joint declaration. “ The b ill is prim arily intended to help those who have big capital gains during m e year and to keep clooer tabs on corporations," said H ilL "R igh t now, anyone who has a big capital gain has no way of i m M U an early payment to cushion the im pact when the tax is due A p ril is .” Error A Dec. 7 article in the State Frees printed erroneous infor­ m ation when it reported that IS A SU fratern ities had outstanding debts with the University. The article stated IS frater­ nities owed $27,820, 90 days past due, $19,979,80 days past due aad IMS, 80 days past due. Eleven fraternities actually had outstanding debts totaling $48,890. Je rry S n y d e r, ASU em aciate com ptroller, said four fratern ities had no sutstsm tng dsbts except for bO b that month They were Alpha Epsilon PM, Phi Gam ­ m a Delta, PM M fm a Kappa Md PMKappa Alpha. N E X T D 0 UNIVERSITY CO UN SELIN G S E R V O A N N O U N C ES ITS SCHEDULE O F SPR M G G R O U P S 1980 To bo eligible you must bo a student, taking at laakt 7 or more hours. C a re e r E x p lo ra tio n — M o n . 1:30 - 3:30 b o a in n in g F e b . 4 and M arch 3. G e sta lt/ T ra n sp e rso n a l — M o n . 3-5 b e g in n in g F e b . 4. B o d y Im age & S exu al A w aren ess: A G ro u p fo r W om en — M o n . 5-7 p .m . b e g in n in g F e b . 4. A sse rtiv e n e ss T ra in in g — T u e s . 1:30 - 3:30 b e g in n in g J a n . 29. M anag in g D a ily S tre ss — T u e s. 3:30 - 5 b e g in n in g F e b . 5. C re a tivity W o rk sh o p — T u e s. 3-5 b e g in n in g F e b . 5. G row th G ro u p — W ed . 1:30 - 3:30 b e g in n in g J a n . 30. W om en ’s G ro u p — A w are n e ss & G row th — W ad . 12:30 - 2:30 beg inn ing F e b . 13. R e la tio n sh ip s: H ow to F in d Them and H ow T o K eep Them — W ad. 3-5 b e g in n in g F e b . 8. ' M anagem ent o f C o lle g e P re ssu re a — T h u rs. 1-3 b e g in n in g F e b . 7. G rie f, S ep ara tio n and L o s s — T h u rs. 1-3 b e g in n in g F e b . 7. G e sta lt/ C re a tiv e E x p re ssio n — T h u rs. 3-5 b e g in n in g F e b . 7. A lm o st a ll g ro u p s are lim ite d to 12 p a rticip a n ts, in o rd er to reg ister, c a ll the C o u n s e lin g S e rv ice at 965-8146. TRY OUR LUNCHEON SPECIAL A 6-inch mini-pizza, all the salad you can eat, plus soft drink O N LY *2.99 WE K N O W YOU'RE SHORT O N TIME, S O CALL AH SAD A N D YOUR ORDER WILL BE READY WHEN Y O U GET HERE! G odfather’s P izza 0 R T 0 A S CORNER OF NULL O 10th ST. 6 East 10th Street SW Com er of Tempo Contar \ Wednesday, January 30,1960 S tile Prase Papa 11 New spaper says ex-coach heads dtdnous courses Devil netters split openers First-year ASU tennis coach M yron M cNam ara has his A n t win under Ms belt as Ms team beat Western Athletic Conference m em ber San Diego State, £1. "W e did pretty well for our fin t time out,” M cNam ara said. F o r ASU, Paul Berstein, Tim Anderson, Andy Krantz, Archie Bouwer and Je ff Yom ei a ll won their singles matches. The Devils (1-0) meet the University of California-San Diego Friday and University of Redlands Saturday. The University of California beat A SU 's women S-l Sunday The women begin W CAA play against C al State-Long Beach Friday. B y Dave N e fte rp A Y et another controversy has struck the ASU football program as form er head coach Bob Owens reportedly is the bead of a Californiabased firm which sets up “ dubious’ ' extension courses for teachers Owens is reportedly known in California as D r. Boyce Owens, a respected educational consultant He is said to be known to officials at McPherson College of Kansas, California Lutheran College at Thou­ sand Oaks, CaUf., and the now-defunct Prescott College, as Bob R. Owens, the head of Am erican Educational Enterprises. The Sacramento Bee reported Tuesday that the program under Owens’ supervision is one of "dubious extension credit courses for teachers’’ and said Owens did not teach courses for which he was listed as the instructor. The newspaper said Owens refused to comment on the story. The State Press was unable to reach him far com m ent Am erican Educational Enterprises is a Southern California educa­ tional brokerage started in 1973 to manage extension operations O ffe r E x p ire s Jen. 28. 1980 FREE CONDITIONER THE HAIR KAMP 120 E. University, In The Arches REDKEN PRODUCTS 9 6 6 -90 61 Pacific Coast Hillel Kallah • 3-Day Retreat President1s Dey Weekend • Fab. 1S-18,1960 0 • g g g g ^ f S h a re an o u le ta n d ln g w eekend w ith 200 Je w ish efudante from V ancouver to P h o e n ix, w ho gather together w ith H ille l sta ff lo r stu d y, ce le b ra tio n s, S habbat, sin g in g , d a n cin g , and a g e n e ra lly vary go o d tim e. P L E A S E R E S E R V E B Y JA N U A R Y 30 A p p ro xim a te ly S36 par parson C a ll A S U H U M fo r d a ta lla 987-7583 Introducing the A ll New ÿ ü l f f w -S&unehm on- 0 u i t p *2.69 ( ¿ â u ffe t ¿Sinner SALAD BAR SALAD BAR FRESH SOUP BAR SELECTIONS OF PIZZA SPAGHETTI GARLIC BREAD FRESH SOUP BAR SELECTIONS OF PIZZA SPAGHETTI RAVIOLI GARLIC BREAD . around the country. Partners in the firm reportedly include Myron TarkaM an, brother of Nevada-Las Vegas basketball coach Jerry Tarkanian. Je rry Tarkanian to under National Collegiate Athletic Association fqfM»thina for violations which include arranging bogus credit for athletes. D r. Boyce Owens reportedly has been an approved instructor for San Bernardino State for the past four years and has taught extension courses in Las Vegas. However, Dorothy Christiansen, an elementary school teacher in C lark County. Nev., told the B w that she was hired by Owens’ firm to run the courses. The newspaper reported that most of the institutions it contacted were unaware of Ow ens'm ultiple roles. Stephen Bowles, head of continuing education at San Bernardino State, said the C lark County school district had asked for and co> sponsored the courses and paid Owens’ salary and travel expenses. K arla McComb, the Clark County adm inistrator responsible for such courses, said she knew of no such arrangement with San Bernardino State. „ Bowles said that since the early 1970a, California s state college system hasn’t permitted campuses to conduct courses out of state, but that somehow the courses in question had slipped through. ASU is under N CAA and FB I investigations for grade falsification. The N C A A is also investigating ASU for recruiting violations. Owens became head coach after the firing of Frank Kush. His contract was not renewed after the hiring of D arryl Rogers as ASU head football coach. G O O D FO R $2.00 D IS C O U N T O N A N Y H A IR C U T O R SER V IC E W ITH C O U P O N with 25 items E V tn V B A V 11a.m. -2 p.m. with 25 items EVENT M QHT 5 p.m. -8 p.m. i 324 South Rural Rd. (Next to Wendy’s) 968-8757 Nuclear Energy and Am erica s Future The Great Nuclear Debate AT LAST! NOW YOU C A N REALLY AFFORD CONTACTS Soft C o n ta cts *89“ ! 20% Discount on Fire* Pair ot Glasses 50% Dteooent on Second Pair of (Hesses Professional F«ie Not Included Dr. Jam et R. Smith ft AtiSOC. O p to r netrist 4210 E. Mam Mesa 832-9666 120 E. University Tempe 2:00pni Wednesday, January 30 Pima Room Memorial Union MUAB Ideas and Issues Committee 966-9006 S E Pag* 12 State Presa Wednesday, January 30,1960 Possible shake-ups face A SU 's athletic o fficialdom Bv Jim E lslexer ASU Athletic Director D r. Joe Kearney said Tlieaday that die athletic department stair w ill be reviewed as seea as he returns to A SU perm anently, for any changes and “ roorganirtional needs that might be needed.” Two aesociate and two assis­ tant athletic directors w ill receive word that thsy are oo ad­ m inistrative notice and that their positions win be reviewed, ac­ cording to Kearney. “The (ASU) Athletic Board in­ dicated to m e when I talked to them for the dir ector’s Job that they would be putting the (athletic department) staff on notice in order for me to hsve an opportunity to interview them and r eview each staff member and s ta ff co n fig u ratio n ,” Kearney said. The University requires that a staff mem ber be notified prior to his o r bar contract expiring that they are on adm inistrative notice. Associate directors John Wadas and Mena Plum m er, and assistant directors Pat Kuehner and Herm an Fra sier are ex­ pected to receive “ pink slips” by Jan. 31, the day their contracts with the U niversity expire. “ T h e c h a irm a n o f the (Athletic) board told us a few days ago we would be receiving the notices,” Wadas said. “ They have to tell us by the time our contracts expire that we are on notice. We haven’t received anything yet, but are expecting to. We also don’t know what new moves there w ill be.” Wadas is fiscal management director. "There are expectations from m e to get a reorganixtional plan and to review the staff,” Kearney said. "There could be some changes made, there could be Just a review of where we are at, I have to see when I return. ” Kearney w ill complete a ll businees with M ichigan State by Thursday and make his final return to A SU . He said he is hav­ ing no proM sm s with his contract a t H S U , and added he has had no indication from the adm inistra­ tion there that there is any pro­ blem with M s com pletely sever­ ing ttes with the school. “ There haen’t been any pro­ blem s to m y knowledge,” he said, "and in ta k in g with the ad­ m inistration here, as fa r as I know everything is completely d e a r.” Kearney said be knew the athletic department staff at ASU would ho receiving notices about a review o f positions, but wasn’t sure whan. He said Alonso Met­ c a lf, vice-presid ent o f ad- AUDREY formgriy with Crimpers Ltd. i t now with designers Mar a w ^ »3 a r n * w < w fw»cna««y 1611 E. A peche 968-7954 ministration, would know when director at the Uaiverisity of Il­ the atiit+r"* directors would linois. "C ecil is one of the candidates, receive their notices. M etcalf and tried to get on my staff at was unavailable for com m ent “ It’s a get acquainted pro­ M ichigan,” Kearney said. "W e cess,” Kearney said. "I have to were in a process of determining meet with them and find out a reorganiza tional plan then, but about what functions each posi­ it was put in moratorium and tion has and review how they fit there was never any action taken, in with the departments pro­ so it isn’t sure whether he would hsve been hired.” cess.” Kearney said that the latest The University has also poetad an advertisem ent fo r an concern at M ichigan State over associate athletic director that the possible tam pering of w ill be the No. 2 spot in the recruits by ASU football coach D arryl Rogers are completely department. “This is a new position,” unfounded. "Obviously M ichigan State Kearney said. “ It is a position that is dependant on the would have a concern,” Kearney reorganise tional process. There said. "If an athlete was attracted have been a number of applica­ to Rogers or Ms style of football, then there is the possibility that tions for the position.” One of the leading candidates he would want to follow him to reportedly for the associate Job is Cecil Coleman, a form er athletic Quick quote of the day “ He’s a standup com ic who dabbles-In basketball. I'm more qualified.” rtiosniT S ubs assistant coach A l Bianchi, asked about A l McGwire's candidacy fo r various N B A head-coaching Jobs. THE UPSTAIRS PUB HWPV HOUR 4-7 G m , W N fc D r , Pitchers M.50 Heineken (Bottles) 95* — urnmmmmmmmmmmw i 50% i » » Off On Any Sandwich Coupon good 1/19/80 to 2/28 A80 Lim it One Coupon per Purchase 4th & Mill (Above Spaghetti Co.) 967-9025 The Slimline Business Analyst-II* for business and finance. The Slimline TWO" for science and math. C hoose the Tfexas Instrum ents calculator thatk right for your major. When you’re working in a specialized field, you need a specialized calculator. That’s why Texas Instrum ents designed the Slimline Business Analyst-11" for busi­ ness and finance . . . and the Slimline TI50'* for science and math. Each provides the tailored power and the reliability you’ll need as you learn to solve the problems you’ll face as a professional. And each has a price you'll appreciate as a student. SU m line B usiness Analyst-11. Sleek L C D ca lcu la to r w ith versatile business capab ilities. Solving financial problem s with the Slimline Business Analyst-II can make working with your old calculator seem like pencil-and-paper arithmetic. The fonctions required to perform many common busi­ ness, financial and statistical calculations are built in to help you make quick, accurate evaluations of many complex business situations. Special financial keys are used to handle tinte and money problems such as com­ pound interest, annui­ ty payments, mortgage loons, investment yields, unii amortization schedules and more. 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Its 60 versatile functions can help you handle a wide range of college math prob­ lems. Capabilities include common and natural logarithms. Six trigonometric oper­ ations that can be performed in three angu­ lar modes (degrees, radians or grads). TWo constant memories that retain their con­ tents even u'hen the calculator is turned off. And more. Seven built-in statistical functions sim­ plify the task of boiling down large sets of data points so you can perform accurate analyses and draw reliable conclusions. The power of the Slimline TI-60 is made easy to use by TI’s AOS '* algebraic operat­ ing system, which provides 16 seta of pa­ rentheses and accepts up to four pending operations. That means you can enter most problems ju st as they're written, left to right. TWo miniature batteries provide up to two years of normal operation. And TIV APD'* automatic power down feature helps prevent accklental battery drain. The Slimline TI M Includes a detailed owner’s manual and a durable vinyl wallet. $40.00*. Make sure your next calculator has the specialised power to handle N ty the problems unique to your ngjor. See the Business Ana­ lyst-11 and the Slimline TI-60 at your college bookstore or other TI dealer today. Tfatu Instruments technologg—bringing affordable electronics to §our fingertips. T e x a s In strum ents IN C O R PO R A T E D Wednesday, January 3 0 ,1960 Stata Press Papa 13 G ET A HELL OF A G ranny-Annies HAIRCUT 1000 E . B road w ay, Tem p« M S-7764 7170 E. Stetson Or., Scottartele 646-9700 K Step into th e world o f . nofliar teu fe C CEN TER We have a complete line of Roffler* products. JEW ELERS FO R A L L YOUR JEW ELR Y N EED S Diam onds, W atches 14k Chains, Pendants Sorority-Fraternity Jewelry Watch & Jewelry Repairing tea 6462 •66-7312 •36-2240 130 E .U n iv e rs ity Dr. (A rch e s P la za) T em ps 3400 S. M ill Ave. (O eneiio P la za) B e h in d D airy Q uean Tam pa 1946 W . Baaailn# R d (A lp h a B a la P la za) M e te , A rizo n a 85202 Hours: Mon.-Frl. SO; Sat. 6-5 Hour*: Mon.-Frl. B4; Sat. »6 H ours: M on -F rl M : Set. 9-5 966-7517 ISag Ravox BRADFORD1 1039 E. Lem on, Tem pe C om er of Lemon I Terrace Heme: M -P 10-7. Sat. 1 M SYLVANIA Pac-10 basketball standings * O m an S t ABU «Snn 6 l WHHinppiü U CLA —»- «- -» — W SPN nfnin t • Y • a L 0 t 2 4 • Pal ' 1.000 Jtn m 580 .44« use Ariaana Ornean CaMtomla »tantaie 4 3 t 1 1 S e T t 6 .44« .333 .333 .223 .126 QUASAR FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1 7&9p.m. each evening SATURDAY FEBRUARY2 THURS., JANUARY 31 - 6:30 & 10:30 FRI., FEBRUARY 1-11:00 SAT., FEBRUARY 2 -11:00 SUN. FEBRUARY 3 - 6:00 & 10:30 THE HARDER THEY COME reggae This COUPON entitles you to a FREE MARGARITA with your dinner. Authentic Mexican Food 1300 N. Hayden Tempe, 966-1161 Opan Daily a!11 a.m . Sunday* at 4 p.m . Az. ZENITH ROCK N' ROLL HIGH SCHOOL The Ramones THURS., JANUARY 31 - 8:30 p.m. SUN., FEBRUARY 3 - 8:30 p.m. ASASU NEEB HALL H IM SEMES FCBRUAVIY 7 , 8 6 6 On • BIO SCREEN - In • SPACIOUS THEATER At the LOW, LOW PRICE of Just $1.00 M a k e It a p o in t to a o o ",A n im a l H o u a a n a t N E E B HALL Paga 14 Stata P rass W ednesday, January 30,1960 N ew golf coach 'im ported' from Canada By Jim W allers Contrary to popular opinion, the new women’s golf coach is not from the staff at M ichigan State University. Jocelyne Bouraasa is from M ontreid, Canada and comes to ASU after eight y e a n on the Ladies Professional G olf Tour. Bouraasa is a petite lady with a captivating sm ile and the hint of a French accent “ It hasn’t been hard adjusting to the United States,’’ she said. “ The tour goes all over' the U.S. and I’m probably here more than in Canada during the year “ I did have trouble in my classes though,” she added. Bouraasa attends night classes at the U n iversity, working towards her masters in physical education. “ I read the book and translate into French and then I have trou­ ble answering the questions because I have to translate back into English, ” she said. The hardest thing has been “ a ll this paperwork,” she added, pointing to the numerous papers scattered across the top of her desk. F rid a y was her first day at the University and she spent it working out with the team. “ We went to the golf course out at Awhatukee and I got to see how the g irls play and team a little bit of what they want to learn from m e," she said. In her first tournament with ASU, the Lady Aztec Tournament in San Diego, the team Finished third among the 22 schools represented. “ We were in second place going into the final two rounds and then the weather became very bad,” she said. “ We ended up in third place overall w itii one of the girls finishing in second place in theindividual*.” Even though she hasn’t had a lot of tim e with the team, she feels they have a lot of potential. “ I had a friend who was watching the team and she said bow she would hate to have to qualify to be on this team ,” she said. "They are going to be tough.” In the first tournament in San Diego coach Bara sea noticed the team had trouble adjusting to the cq n flflQM when the weather becam e bad. “ What we’U be working on is playing in different conditions, different lies of the ball and hit­ ting the ball out of the rough,” she said. "They seemed to miss a few refinements and that is where the team w ill im prove.” BeiiM on the tour ctu> b*60106 * grind; playing week-in and weekout, month after month can begin to take its toll, according to Baraasa. "It is tough but you do learn how to play golf,” she said. Bourassa realizes an her ex­ perience in tournament (day that won’t guarantee her being a good coach. “ There are a lot of good players who can’t teach,” she said. "They become geared to their own game and find it hard to ad­ just to someone who can’t do the things that they can. ” Besides being on the tour for the last eight years, Bourassa has taught clinics and helped people organize their game while she was in Canada and says “ I hope it w ill help my teaching methods.” "M y background centers around physical education at the University of M ontreal,” she said, "and I have always been surrounded by golf.” Her brother was a golf pro in Canada and she worked with him helping the regular members and in the junior programs. “ I have been doing that since I was about 16 years old,” she add­ ed. She got to develop her teaching techniques when she had a pro­ blem with her game. “ I took lessons from a pro named E d Oldfield, she said. Oldfield is a well-known teaching pro in Chicago and doubles as the pro at the Camelback Country Club in Phoenix during the winter months. “ He works on the structure of the game and he is a perfec­ tionist,” she said. “ He helped me get my game back together and I learned a lot about bow to teach o th e rs how to im p ro v e themselves. “ I don’t know if that w ill be so helpful here but I’m working with the girls and we’U see.’’ Barassa left the tour to give her knee a rest and ASU seemed like the perfect place to be involved in a teaching atmosphere. “ I’ve wondered if I could do it,” she said. “ It is like wanting to check out the grass on the other side of the h ill because you think it might be greener. ” Her left knee has been operated on two times for stretched ligaments and it forced her to start taking it easy. Only 30 years old, the strain of travel and con­ stant play intensifies the pain she feels. "Teaching w ill aUow me to rest during the school year and play in the summer months,” she said. “The knee won’t be eo over­ worked." for the past five years. Her teams have finished no worse than seventh nationally and in 1975 won the N CAA title. “ I didn’t realize that the team had done so consistently w ell,” she said, “ but I know this team is going to be very competitive and we w ill be adding to the aw ards." The schedule of tournaments this year w ill be a rigorous one with the girls playing in six dif­ ferent opens. “ We w ill play in Austin, Tex. and in a tournament in Georgia later in the year,” she said. “School w ill come first — over practices «- and the grades w ill decide who goes to the tour­ naments. "M any of the girls are in their senior year and that is hard enough without putting the pressure of playing golf too." Bouraasa w ill require the girts to carry at least a B average in a ll their studies. “ If someone is having pro- blems I want to be able to beh) them solve it," she said. "W e’ll talk to the teachers and see what ran h* done to get beck on the Bourassa seemed at home in her office in the A ctivity Center surrounded by the numerous awards that the women’s team has won over the years. H er predecessor, Judy Whitehouee, coached the team LONN tG A N S BAND U VE M USIC 7 N i q h t s s . Wo rk n Tu e s d D A V I D D O D T and MIKE D IX O N • Acdustn S to re# ! 16 0 6 £ Apac he B fv d ’ Tem pe ... 1*91 6 W S to re . B a s e lin e R d M esa ■ cy t l t t e J W ednesday, January 30,1960 State P ress Page IS M ore about A S U officials face shake-up ||6lp W onted OPPORTUNITY FOR b u lin a — or tttauronoa motor to Mom tnouronoo buolntot. Part-time, exetatont tong-range pooalQSWIoo. C M 838 »87SSam .W SoJW .onl». DELIVERY H ELP arantod. Moot Hava own ear wttlt Inoutonca. Oood par. thrao mghta a «took. Tony's tttatan Food, «57-3541.________ it D lm«-A-Llna_______ A S U . B u t i t i t a lm o s t im p a s s ib le KENNY LOGQtNS ticket«: Rear ono cantor 7 ano 10p jw .o> w a CoS SlSSO Sa t o a s s u r e t h a t t h a t p la y e r w o u ld n o t g o t o A S U b u t M ic h ig a n S t a t e . I f t h e a t h le t e w a n t s t o g o to A S U , o r t a lk w it h th e c o a c h in g s ta ff th e r e , h e c a n , a s lo n g a s r u le s s u c h a s th e t h r e e v is it r u le o r o ffc a m p u s e n t e r t a in m e n t r u le i* n o t v io la t e d . I l i e r e is n o v io la t io n a t PINK FLO YD t Iellata wan tad Fab «boato, an» (M oa. Contact McWaol 888-7537, Bob 884 OSOS__________________________________ ROOMMATE WANTED: StOOfmonlh phis W uW W aa Vt mHa bom ASU. Cab Stava, (84TUNE-UP AND ON ohonga SID Cheap auto repair. C a ll Slava, i tsootper thousand «dOn n ln» and «tutting circular» F rao Iwlormallon. TJ SwW rptfo, 23t8W oodbum 8L. Mlddltaown. OHIO «SOW. ICE CREAM M anufacturer naoded at 8w«nomtVTtaQpo lo r liwmodfol« do» or night, fu s or pan-Oms am ptayiw wl. No «kpertonco n»o«»»«ty. Wo w ill train. PooHlon« ataoopan •0 waltraaaaa. fountain poraona, and buaboya. Intarvtawa Monda» thru Sunday, A S p m Frtco end BoooMnoRd., 8388880._______ JO BS! Lake Tahoe, CaNtomtal U tile exp. Fan­ tastic tips! Poyt 81600-83000 aumettar Thousand« needed Casino'« IWotauronw , Roneho«, Cmtaara, Ratting, M e. Sand S M S lo r «ppuc al lonftn tofr» tarrata Ltapw ortd 3. a l l i f R o g e r s t a lk s w it h a p la y e r h e r e c r u it e d S ta te . The tr a n s fe r s , i f p la y e r s w h ile a t M ic h ig a n v io la t io n h e t r ie s a lr e a d y at c o rn e a in t o r e c r u it M ic h ig a n S t a t e , h e n e e d s p e r m is s io n fr o m th e s c h o o l ( M S U ) f o r t h a t ." " M a in t a in in g c o n t a c t ” w it h th e For Rent/Lease i-BEDROOM apartment, fam ished, air oondlttoned, peM, 8380 par month. 1204 W. 5th BtreM . (57-5230. W ALKING DISTANCE ASU. brand now apart memo. 2 bodrenm and 1-bedroom. CaM Dave, me 3tm p la y e r s is n o p r o b le m , K e a r n e y s a id . “ O b v io u s ly w henever a c o a c h in g c h a n g e is m a d e p la y e r s w i l l b e in t e r e s t e d in t a lk in g w it h t h e s t a f f w h e r e e v e r th e y g o . ” R o g e rs w as u n a v a ila b le c o m m e n t o n M s r e c r u it in g fo r th u s fa r. BUM PER STICKER: W rite your own, *3.75. •and maa«ag« (lim it 2 Nrwe — 35 character« each) with name, address and payment to: 0 . E. Hansen, F.O. Ben (02, Sugar Land, Texas 7T47S. Abaw M eraabt tor daMvary. C E L IA LAM BRUSCO *2.58, C o o n Spk. cone •1.88, quart RonRtoc rum 58J8. Imported boors, wtneo. magazlnee, snacks. Rundto'e, University and MIN Ave., Tampa. G it fE T O kfclvN V U A R M V B IRA6I9. *vvat HIM uWIIWj and 10 p.m. shows. CaH »882080 m F E mM !§> 1878 ODYSSEY mop ad. 275 mitae, «reef condttlon. 178 mpg. ISIS. CaM Rtok; work 8820232, Item s 888-1008. O N E PINK FLO YD ttokta. Mon., Feb. 11 In L.A. E M I o a r , w br nW t tw o B LA CK fur C ie n b ig eu»* wBw^^^w aher 8 C 0 ,1878376 W AN T ADS STA R T HERE A nnauncom cnts DISCOVER SCKAN KAR. A way M M o. a «gbttuMpath attigua waaeh bold and advanI iiaanm a M M d u a l adw aaaka ttw i rataUtaton o f sett and B ed. Ftim «nd dtacueatan Thureda», Jan. >1,7:38800 p.m., MU 214. Autom obile»______ INTERNATIONAL 1-TON van, tM Loonltanpd. AM-FM Strack. JSOcc V « Auto trin a Staso# a S S JO S a rb a a ta lW r.S S t-s m ____________ 1S73 NOVA. N o n aalnL a u la ak, 107 angina, runa vary wad. SU SO . SS7-SS13 aitar 8 p.m t asndRtan. Four near now p iam lam ib ss. N sa bu he« N aad i Sad» nark. W b lN tar» . S a » hrnt. Dar» « 87 9 7 2 . aven1SSI PLYMOUTH FURY. Saale i M hipB ita ltan. nata wad. SSSSsrSM I lita r. CakSS7D3»4. VW RASSIT, taw antas, fuel raaph ptol omd. tint, a t VW PA RTS S Maahtaa Sh ag a M S* W. Untvor•My. t l ptaee m ante ta s i M t IS S A b n h a ahas a a ta ff J S eaeh, gaaawt ata and M e tta ti tram I M J a , sN tatara S S A apaiS tourt, VMvaSna SS w t «Se Stadl SL chairs MENI W OMEN! Jo b sl CrutaoatUpel Sailing expedHtonal Seeing Camps. No experience. Good pay. Summer Career Ntatonwkta, wortdwtdel Sand 54J 6 tor appMcMtonMntoitotonono to Cruloowortd 8 Sox 50125. Socremonto, C a lif (6080 NORTH SCOTTSDALE reeteurant needs Sue help, fuH- or part-time evenings. CaN «her to am . Mon. thru EM . §480258 NIGHT-TIME DENTAL telephone receptionist needed 2 3 M gM s a weak. 53.00 per hour. We wttt train. 1583477. to NEED PERSON w ith «d«8u«M spam time to w rits report. Com m ission could exceed 58008 8488038 TUTORS NEEDED on campus. 82.78 to »300 per hour. 8 to 30 hours pm waok. Applicants m ust have work-study grant. CMI Donnta M 0087108 VW FA RTS 8 M achine Shops, 11E4 W Utaver tlty . 21 piece m etric tool kH 88.88, brake shoe 838.88, Mr n ito n 8 3 .(8 M l fitters I M S spark ptuge (Bcetat HHaohl tHppcnSeneot 88c (ItmH feud, VMvoHne 30 art. datargant 48c (NmH «V 8818877. S E W IN G M A C H IN E , F ra a A rm , n o v s ru a o d , 198 0 , b e e t m o d e l, ■ till In c a rto n . F u ll o rig in a l g u a ra n i« « D o s e e v o ry th ln g . C o a t M N , m u s t • s e rific e , $19 8 . 1 a ls o h a v e th e b e a u tifu l c a b in e t th a t c a m s w ith it. P riv a te H o m o . 9 4 9 -2 1 2 7 . 4 (2 «Id W aniad A LL INTERESTED etudontn: H igh paying parttim e |obe on campus, you CM the home. Witt# CcM iglaM Free». Boa IBS. BettavMH. M ich. 48111 new. H e ebMgtaton. B I0 8 T 8 T S M B IN STITUTE, S ch o o l a t R aipM aH iy Therapy, to acoapttng appNaanone tor b asic science irwtructorta) la leach th a fo llo w in g co u rses: in tro d u cto ry Ctwmtatry. Fhyatoa, AnMamy 8 FhyM eligyMath. FraN rance wIM be given to enlndtvtM i«l wm i a S B . in biotogy or Zoology. tn iir n H d person« Mtatad contact Mr. HooMita M 2784 M 8 9 B 9 -1 2 B 8 ja w a lrv DIAMONOO. GOLD Htgtiset caeh paid. Need M l etto dtomond«, Joseph Bomtng Jew ilm e. •wt s»M UnNoralty Drive, Tempo. 807-8017 968-0066 Our representative will demonstrate and answer questions in your aiaa. Friday, Fab. 8 ,7 p.m. C e ll * 79-6468 f o r r e s e r v a t io n . (»•hind Godfather's) Bring a friend. SUNDANCE TRAVEL Servie# — FtaO M vvrvtcvi tor M l your trovai nsoda M tha Bata budgm tamo. C on lie s w s _____________ __ T y p in g ACCURATE typing, reneoitable rat— , eervtce. »38 6088___________________ CUSTOM TYPINO. Noor ASU. BSS OSSI. Poom m ato W onfod REM ALE AHTIST roommoto, «OOOlmonttl. M im o ultim e«, wlth flood «plrtt. moMI» turntahod, toundnr, POOL ptaoh. «880134.______ FEM ALE FO R Sbedroom , two botti homo ctooo lo campus, niooly tum tolwd, big yard, friendly Mmoapttata. StlOfm onth piu* Vk uWWaa.1 M ALE TO SH ARE twttbedroom , «115. U lulile« Included. La Cresoenta Apt«. 8840880. M ALE ROOMMATE, grad pre ferred . 8125 ptoe Vk uttNttoa. CM IS im T MUM-OP.__________ NEED THIRD raommMa tor Sbedroom , Its batti house. Ono m ile to campus. FoM . Mr oondtttoned, clean, gutot. Prefer eertoua Mudent. Siaatm onth and u tilities. 986-2898 or SSMBSS.______________________________ O NE BEDROOM in three room houee, nonemokor ptotorrad. Com pieta laundry tacititi#« evali SUO phi# to ululile«. David E., «80-7482 otter 7 p.m.__________________________ __ PRIVATE BEDROOM. «ISO Include« uttattoe. kitchen, laundry. ASU one mNe. Non-emoker pratottad. Andy, SOS-4414._________________ TOW NHOUSE M Hayden and UnNoralty need« non-emoker, tomato. SlSShnontti and to utHtttoe. C on 1 S t v Ic b » BH AKLEE CEN TER hoe Ite own "energy" pro­ gram .. . " Protein energy bora" .. . “U ke hav­ ing your lunch on the run.” 10 W. Alameda Dr., M e s s r s . ___________________ _ CONVENIENT TO campua. feet quality typing. Etoctrtc typewriter CON omo. PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE M I doblo ralos. 9 ysora legal exportarte#. On OMRpua pick-up and dMIvwy. Sparry ftam lngtan ■offcorrecting mochín«. Can SIS 8425. TYPINO: ISM electronic. Term research papera, dleeertatlon«, manuecrtpM, tape tranecrtptton. Scottedel« Jo TYPING: ISM Selecthe Rúen |obe » co p ie d , large or entail. Profeeetonei and very ____ roaeonabto. 531-5735. TYPING. ISM Elctrontc 60. AH typo I rrw nuecripti Handwritten or ceeeette lapa. ____ Marte, 846-4100. TYPING, NEAR ASU Research the«««, dissertations. English degree. Editing. 7 years experten«. SS7-4««3._____________ __ TYPING: IBM Setaetrie Ten yean expórtanos, Otssertattont, theses, term papers. M l tormate. Joan, 277-3502.__________________ TYPING TMESES, d issertaitons, term I etc. Pro te ««lone! aecrtacry, accurate, »pettin e corrected, raccontane ratea. SCSS207. TYPING IN my home. Feet, accurata work «ritti ree»onesta rate«. Nancy Boldins. «06-7103- W anted BUYING SILVER COINS, t«S4 end prior. on the dottar. C e ll Stavo, 033-7835,035-1400. BUYING SILVER come 1(54 end prior, S1EJB on the doBta. Colt Dove, <67-3245 CASH FDR »liver or diamond» or hard »tons#. CoH Sob, 8M-1314 «her 5 JO._______________ W ANTED TO RENT: Garage or carport cleee to ASU'» campus. CMI H olly M ««»0717. P e a l Istats P t a i Estate TWO BEDROOM house, Maas. CTM 811,000, 137,900. ■««urne low M Slavs, 836-1400 TWO BEDROOM house 810,000 CTM or »7.000 cash down wttt carry. »38,000 l ik e , •36-1480 m U3- PAYINO TO F 808 tor thM *Md etaoe rtn« you norar worn. For tntormMton, ctal NMeon 888 •008 Or R ich 8888838 xK . FREE ROOM ft BOARD if I noo a u ru in e r, i n i v i m is iu u y w ■ u v iiw iiig Lost/Found » • «— M L B « ! ....... — Obtain 'F R E E R O O M ft B O A R D .’ In ord er to d o that they w ould LOST: 9KI laaksL down, ohlny bron ie wtth fu r lined potter Ptaeee rattan. Rowotd. 848 1487. • M otorcycles m s KAW ASAKI M 4tO . LOW mNoogs, robuttt to# «nd. taking. 8700 CMI «088848 er 888 •Im p ly need to pu rch ase • hom o in Tem p« rather then rant. Thom a rt m any w ays to pu rch ase in c lu d in g co-oig ner» and FM A 245'». R ent m oney ie sp ent m oney. W hy not have yo u r room m atas rant from y o u ? A n d , w han it com e s tlm a to graduate and to il, th a a p p re cia tio n m ay paV fo r grad uate o r p ro fe ssio n a l sch o o l. C a ll m e fo r m ora d e ta ils o r loaf osah to lo an hom os arou n d A S U . WERUARAWTEE A sk fo r P aul P m Hm * s $31.1114 o r B31-6BBB ? IH wwaanT m b yaur hatraa, amefMbuyH. SUZUKI 1S7S 087808. 10,000 mttoe, toggaga rook, goad oondMon. SEA M er 8aM oftor. 80S 1188 THAT« A FACTI! M elp W anted Help Wonted Personal NEW YO R K OF FRANC! STATE OF MIND? ' THIS SUM M ER! Just 1 Sandwich If» «bet good AFGHAN PUPPIES «66 (with pupp» MIMO». Purwbmad. Thro« tomata» ovtatabto. C all «87S43SorSSSS1SS_______________ __ Instruction PARACHUTE 12 mttoe from Phoanixl 18.00 oft w ith Studant t.D. Group ratss. Phone 278 0010. SUPER TRAVEL apportatati«« thrniighoot USA No oar tantal; drtvo to or tram aN i etttas. Arrange tnpa k>advonoa. Caro < now. AAAOON Auto Tranco ort, 304-0301. Pot» l iv in g w it h a mora and don't oara to putalclao NT 1% toko ai««««sra and torword matt. Voi» dloorast 8381003.______________ 12 Fun • Money • Good hours LEAR N ABO U T THIS » K ill «80 REWARO tor ttta rotarti of furniture whan from Barctay-«. Ho «uaattona aabad. Anonymi ty pyoronlood. Con Lorry M 8388388.________ OOOO STUOSNTS save 3S% O n-Auto In­ surance. Non-smoker« save 16%. C e ll Steve London, 8381400.___________________ ___ DO YOU Item Nia aitar ChrtM mee ne m enar M e sst Téléphona i ★ BARTENDING^ KNOW A good (oka? I wM Hawn. C all Mr. SnordWy «IM M IS 7 ._____________________ W ELCOM E 9A CKI Wo re taking application, now tor part- or tuM-tlmo hours — you con tv«»88810oar hour, to o l (84 8015 540. w^s» TYPEW RITIA Fortable aiaotrt«, |uM raoondtHoned. Excettant oondttton. Need cash. 8120. 272-7818 14 LO CA L AM W AY d istrib u to r expending buelneee, Beeke etngleo or couptoe, pert-time or tulH kne. nooDMgMton. 833-1807 MEXICAN FEM ALE modM for ad to be used In National M exican car m agohM . 8381880. For Sal« T ravel p«r§onal_ B ü !in i!!_O pp. d a y s in W w h e a rt o f th a p ic tu re s q u e M a s s if C e n tra l S p e ­ c ia l lo u r te r lim ite d g ro u p w ith n a tiv e F re n c h g u id e E x p e rie n c e d h ik e rs o n ly . F a r l u r lh ta Is ta n asM d w , oaN A n a # L a te e M , SS T -4SS 1, B S B R kH S S S N .1 , a i We're a young. H ue |aan type of company thta'e looking for thoaa individuMa who, ubta m btwwy m m word HUSTLE doesn't it w to in old dm cB Btyla. Wa*!! a itattonM toot and aquipmant wholes star tfwt usas tong distance WAT8 ilnaa to r ir t f * our aooounte It you'ra never conatdarad a sales p o K h * 1 U? u 2 i m t th is — wa w ill pay you 1190 00 par 30 hour waab. plus generous commiealon WHILE ^Sow tatee good to be true? Wa invlle you to come by our olltoe and eee tor youraMI. TMk to our amployaaa. than to ue. Wa guarantee you'« Ilka whM you 10a CaM tar appoin tment m b m B w iw i Contreetare » «ppty • Phone: 2M OSE« 1 /a H e lp Wantod B. M. O. C.?? TOI FRIDAY’S - A netional raataurant corporation Ie looking MANAGER ON CAMFUS. Wb n s rtM O R ls » ! » « • » .* ? oneretlna e multi-million doller butin««« with 180 employee« — a n d ere cep eM eo f keeping pace with one of the hottest growth opportunities In eny industry. We will b e on cam pus February 4. Please cell Placem ent for more Information and an appointm ent. n* Pag« 16 Stata Press Wednesday, January 30,1660 FEB R U A R Y 8,1980 That's a date that may be very significant to your career. That's the date that will be interviewing people who want to explore a career with the largest producer of minicomputers in the world. We have opportunities for graduates in Engineering, Technology, and Business in two excellent locations -- PHOENIX and CO LO R AD O SPRINGS Sign up now to explore the following entries into a mini computer career with the industry leader: Phoenix - Manufacturing Engineering, Test Engineering, Component Engineering, Production Supervision, Personnel, Purchasing, Production and Inventory Control Colorado Springs - Design Engineering, Manufacturing Engineering, Diagnostic and Software Engineering We think the Continuing Growth of Digitai can assure your continuing growth. SIGN UP NOW.