Arizona attorney general's office begins study of the legality of X-rated film ban ■y r n — ii» i a n j The Ariaona attorney gsoorsl’s office ho» started drafting a legal opinion aa ttia authority of the U niversi­ ty adrolnistratioc to ban X-rated film s from the campita. San. Jim (Ceibe, R-Tucson, sought the opinion la a lo t­ tar to Attorney General Bob Corbin A p ril 1. The Iettar asks whether the U niversity adm inistration or the Ariaona Board of R ogante can bon the showing of Xratad movias by any studant group and, if so, ondar what circum stances.” A apokoaporaon for the chief assistant to the attorney gan oral said the opinion w ill ho compieta in appro«im atatyM days. The opinion has boon assigned to aa attorney under Corbin, a u d it w ill undarga a aortas of AraljE, conwntttne revisions, and cor ion by Corbin, before receiving H a signatura. The office does not raiaaaa the names of the attorneys w hoareaaaijaod to the opinions. K u rt Preitag, executive director of the Ariaona 8tudants Association, asked K sib o in early Pebruoiy to request the opinion. Only legislators, beads of stata agancias or county at­ torneys can make the requests. ASA and the Aaaariatad Student» have opposed Schwada’s Doc. SO order preventing any campoa group from showing X-rated tnovim . Preitag and ASASU A ctivities Vice President L o ri Tanner have consulted w ith Bm Arisons chapter of the Am erican C iv il Liberties Union, hoping to fi^ d the ban in tbs courts. Local A C LU director Louie Rhodes has said the most Ukoly legal action would be a court injunction to force Schwada to retract his ban. Ha said once Corbin’s decision is issued, it “ m ight naake it easier ta gat the caaeeff the ground." Turner has m id that if Corbin oppose» the ban, his support would help the students’ ease against the ad­ m inistration. But Rhodes, who is looking for an attorney to take the students’ case, said even if Corbin supports Schwada’s righ t to baa the flhns, “ it m ight ba a red flag — just the thing to get som ebody interested in rt. People m ight get angry that the attorney general would say something tike that.” He said such publicity could snag an attorney’s in­ terest Schwada’s order was issued after a student’s com­ plaint to the r egents fetkw ing a November showing of "Deep Throat” at Noeb H all. Tenner oversees the Neeb H a ll F ilm Sodas, which has shown X-rated film s for ap­ proxim ately five years. ■ ------------------------------------- \ W ed n esd ay Arizona State University C Copyright, Sts» Puss, tern state press T e m p o , A riz o n a ________________________________________________________ April 16, 1980 Voi. 62, No. 101 __________ J Lyceum Curtain is up for renovating A SU 's veteran theater than doubia tha amaunt or ig in a lly allocated by thoA riam e Board of Regents, was awarded to o Phoenix construction firm for the renovation of Lyceum thaator. H O C Construction w ill begin reparation w ithin a few months and Dr. W illiam H. Akine, theater department emaciate pcef emer, said the theater should be camplated for the fa ll lM l per­ form ance season. "W o are Just delighted w ith the prospect of having a new Lyceum by the fa ll season,” Akine said. The contract bide com e to B O M B m ere then the amaunt h u g p te il for the project. A kim said every month of delay costed l percent more, so the lengthy p U m iiM period end extensive fr illin g proems puahod the sentract over budget “ WO actually are pretty lucky aad fertunate that we ware able to finish four moothe after our doadHao," Aktoaeoid. “ 1 didn’t realise how arduous any kind o f m ajor buslnom pro­ ject is ." Planning for restoration began last opriag and construction was scheduled ta bagto lata to the to ll 117», Akine added. B at when the bide subm itted m w sdsd the budget, the theater departm ent, had ta go back to the regents for approval. Because ptaimiag a theater’s aaaam must begin months in ad- CHdie but goodie Tha AgU U sarne Thaelet*» nan M i l o waiting m the stinga. Tha Atim na Boars at »togentsse p ra vae a tu r» inBBm waosoBonaBaaatian and eesetraetieo ia sopaatsd ta kagln seen. Tha «sanity shauto ba all a p ra a e d tip h y ite la B a flM i. our production penis down, we vance, productiam worn sched­ begin early B io your. If wo had to scheduled perform ances fo r moos out ia m id eemon, it would uled tar Payne L a b School, • Payne Lab. Our tim ing was off a require pulling out a ll the equip­ fa d iity w ith half the Lyceum ’s M t» ment. It’s Jm t a m ajor undortak• s a lita ddPM lly» « d i A kim . l iy h fiM i in the base bid im " A k im added. “ A t that tim e, we assumed package a rc o 10-foot high stage "So, rather then bo caught with Lyceum construction would house, raising the ceiling over the audience IS feet, construction of catwalks over the audience for lighting, o new sound and light booth, m ajor renovation of the basement area including in­ stallation of showers and toilets, renovation of the upstairs public restrooms and making the boa th e a te r a c c e s s ib le to wheelchairs. An alternate plan, in addition to tha base package, also was ap­ proved. That includes supplying stage rigging, new seats and a sm ell shop attached to the theater. “ If we waited another year this would probably cost B m illion, considering the in fla tio n a ry spiral. This ia rooHy a reasonable allocation,” A kim m id. The Lyceum theater currently seats 170 people, but that number w ill be cut to approxim ately iflO to allow for wheelcha ir patrons. Payne Lab School seats M la 10 people, A k im said, but added M canbtaqueessdin. The theater, halls and rooms to Payne Lab are undergoiog m ajor electrical repairs ta allow for the opening of a play Wednesday night. A kim m id fire retardant is belog sprayed on tha sotting, the aait lights w ill ba working aad panpie w ill be on patrol around the building to datar vaadaki. "The play w ill ops* m acheduled if the e le c tric ia n gate through,” A kim said. Today Minority studenti1 Residency Committee N ed W ulk problems studied out of town Page 6 ringing the bell P ag e 3 Page 13 Pag« 2 S tate Preea W ednesday, A p ril 16,1960 In the n e in briefly from the A sso c ia te d Press B E G IN S U G G E S T S M A R A T H O N N EG O TIATIO N S W A S H IN G T O N — Israeli Prim e M ln ie te r M enechem B egin propo sed to P re sid e n t C arter Tuesday that s ix w eeks o f non­ sto p n e g o tia tio n s be h eld In the M id d le E ast to try to reach an agreem ent on the fu ture o f A rab P a le stin ia n s, d ip lo m a tic so u rce « said. The ta lk s w ould be held by the Israeli and E gyp tian neg otiatin g team s that in 10 m onths have been unable to re so lve any o f the key iss u e s involved In form ulating an autonom y plan fo r 1.2 m illio n P a le stin ia n s now liv in g under Isra e li co n tro l. C A R T E R F IL E S FO R $17,000 T A X R E FU N D W A SH IN G TO N — P re sid e n t Carter, w hose net w orth slip p ed un der $1 m illio n In 1979, is seeking an in com e tax refund from th e fed eral governm ent o f nearly $17,000, the W hite H ouse d is c lo s e d Tuesday. The president and M rs. C arter dropped out o f th e ran ks o f the natio n’s m illio n a ire s in 1979. A M E R IC A N S TO IL 191 D A Y S FO R T A X E S N EW Y O R K — O n ly afte r M ay 11 d o e s you r salary go to you. B efo re M ay 11, It g o e s to th e tax man. The Tax Foundation, a W ashington-based organization, sa ys that the average A m erican w orker w ill to il 131 days to earn the m oney to pay ta xe s th is year. T h a t's five d ays lo ng er than in 1978 and 11 days lo n g er than In 1975. The average A m erican pays 35.8 percent o f h is e arn in g s to the tax c o lle c to r a n d sp en d s 2 hours, 52 m inutes o f h is 8-hour w ork day w orking fo r the governm ent — the largest sin g le ch u n k In h is expenses. FO O D TO ELIM IN A TE 16,000 W O R K E R S D E A R B O R N ,"M ich . — Ford M otor Co. sa id Tuesday It w ill c lo s e three plants, trim p ro d uctio n at fo u r others, re su ltin g in the e lim in a tio n o f 15,000 Jobs, in clu d in g th ose o f 6,100 w hitec o lla r w orkers. H arold A . P o lin g , e xe cu tive v ice pre sid ent fo r F o rd ’s N orth A m erican A utom otive O p erations, sa id th e actio n w ould trim F o rd 's c o s ts by $1.5 b illio n by th e end o f next year. The larg est plant to be c lo se d Is the asse m b ly operation In M ahw ah, N .J., w h ich w ill end pro d u ctio n Ju n e 20, Idling 3,350 hourly and 373 sa larie d w orkers, Ford said. Airplane plans beeline to Canada PH O E N IX (A P) - Envision a 7S7 airliner, with room for about 190 paasongero and crew. Add a special-cargo hold w ith Toon for 523 Arisons queen bees; U N to 4.M0 attendants and some l m illion hardw orking subjects. That w in be Hughes A ir West flight 717 Wednesday afternoon fo r Calgary and Edmonton, in A b o rts, Canada. The bees — traveling in a separate cargo ffu i 2 * iim U 2.69 hold — w in tabs up about as much opere as MS norm al-si» suite as» , says Ja c k Lenthe, of tha A k W ait freight departm ent ‘ T h e y ’D be carefully packed and there’s ns way they can gat into the passsngor com­ partm ent," be oaid. “ Clim ate conditions in the seeled cargo bold w ill bo identical to the pooaenger com portm e n t" The bee fligh t it a ll hi the nemo of farm ing m S « * 3.29 SALAD BAR- ---------- ¡D in n er----------SALAD BAR FRESH SOUP BAR SELECTIONS OF PIZZA SPAGHETTI * GARLIC BREAD FRESH SOUP BAR SELECTIONS OF PIZZA SPAGHETTI RAVIOLI GARLIC BREAD -------- S S u n c h e e n with 25 items CVmYBAV 1324 South Rural Rd. (Next to Wendy's) R U S S IA N S BU ILD U P F O R C E S N E A R IR AN W A SH IN G TO N — The R u ssian arm y has in creased the stren gth and readlnees o f som e o f U s m otorized rifle d iv is io n s north o f Iran, U .8. in te llig e n c e so u rce s sa id Tuesday. with 25 items ■VHIVMOHT Sp.m.-ap.m. 968-8757 1 UwUK Associated Students ie now accepting applications for the following Point Magazine positions for the 1980-81 academic year. Q. Why did the chicken read Tuesday’s ArtCarved ad? A. To win a free gold ring worth an enormous amount of chicken feed. Make this a PROFITABLE SUMMER Sum m er School -- By attending the univanity summer session et A SU, you oan compress tour semes ten of Army ROTC Into ten short weeks. Then la no military obligation Incurred by attending theee olaaaea. This makes It possible tor you to b ea paid ROTC studant this fall. If you’d Ilka a closer look at how to profitably spend your summer, stop b y . . . DEPARTMENT OF MILITARY SCIENCE Room 240 OU Main Butting Arizona Statt University M63S1I 1. EDITOR See Job description at ASASU, MU SOSO. In addition to the general requirements, applicants must possess two semesters previous experience on Point or any university or professional publication. Two letters of recommendation from professors or individuals with knowledge of the applicants' qualifications are also required. Applicants from all academic backgrounds are solicited. Applicants must pick up Job referral forms from Student Employment in Matthews Center, and submit a special application available from Associated Students. Editor applications are due by 5:00 p.m . Friday, April 18 in the ASASU office, M U 20SJ. Applicants must be available during the afternoon of Friday. April 25, for Interviews by the editor selection committee. 2. MANAGING EDITOR 3. PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR 4. ART DIRECTOR 5. AD SALES DIRECTOR & BU8INE88 MANAGER 7. AD DESIGNER & ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE Times for interview» for theee positions will be eetablishsd. Specific Job descriptions are available from ASASU, MU 20frJ. Applicants for all Associated Students positions must possess at least a 2.2 overall grads point average, and maintain seven semester hours (full time) while In office. W ednesday, A p ril 16,1960 8t«(« P ra ss P a g a S Meetings called for on minority issue QUITTING BUSINESS -- EVERYTH ING M U S T GO By Smaaae McEtfresli The ASU ric e prosidset fo r stu dent affa irs said Tussdsy he plans to m ast w ith appropriate U n iv a n ity members to w ort out tb s bast aoiutlan far m inority stu­ dent problems. “ I want to get a group of facul­ ty, staff and students — people who have specific knowledge and experience — to sort out tbs best direction and m oos in that direc­ tion,” George Hamm said. “ It w ill require some sorting out, some thinking through.'’ Tho Student A ffa irs O ffice also released data an m inority sup­ port and recruitm ent programs to counter statements made Mon­ day by CMcano students. th a t same day, mem bers of M EC hA , a CM cano student orgurim tisn , and other m inority groups m at w ith mombors of the ASU iilin h io lf Ihsi to djscuos their concerns . The adm inistration, particular­ ly Hanun, was accused of ineffec­ tual recruitm ent and aid for m inority studnsto, a t w ell ao the ineffective hiring of m inority faculty and staff. Ham m m id some statements made by the Chics ns students were inaccurate — spec ific ally tboaa regarding financial aid and high school recruitm ent pro­ g ra m . Figures com piled by Financial A id s D irector Ragsr Swanson for tho 1978-79 school year show that the p—— — of aid given to m inority stn d sn li io m och higher than tho psrosntags of eligible m inority students a t AgU. F a r exam ple, 0 percent of B a ric B danatkmol Opportunity O ra a ri aro awarded la m inority The total m inority stuA ddlttsnsl figures a ta ri that m in trily studant« receive 41 p o r coat r i Supplemental Educa­ tional Opportunity Grants, » p e r­ cent r i National D irect Student of Federally » peraad» Then if there is s till financial need, work study or loons are swarded, accounting for the high incidence of work study and Kathy Davie, research coor­ dinator for student affairs, said the m inortiy recruitm ent pro­ gram is more extensive than that fo r non-minority students. In the 1979-80 school year, 99 of 198 Arizona schooia were visited by a m inority recruiter, ten key m inority target schools were visited at least twice, and 918 m in o rity students and SO counselors participated in special on-campus visitation days. Other program s include the Educations! Opportunity Canter, located in Phoenix, which spends more than 9990,000 a year recruiting m inority students for community collage«, vocational and training schooia, and other peat seroortary institutions, she added. ALL THIS ft MUCH MORE MARSHALL'S 947 1095 iliir t i ■ / i lttM78-79. Com paratively, approxim ately 17 r i 188 non m inority under­ graduates recai vad BEO G s and five of 188 received SEOGe. M BChA members said m inori­ ty students are awarded m ors w ork study m ri h u m than grants and scholarships. However, Swanson said eligible m inority students are awarded grants and scholarships fir s t JO B S W S H A V C A JO S F O B YO U ! R E C E PT IO N IST S S E C R E T A R IE S TY PIST S M A T E R IA L H A N D LE R S Let us beta you a n a n a s a short or tong term |ot> around your etees sch uduie Thors are SanaWts wartitng far a tam sarsry aarvtea: •G A IN JO S E X P E R IE N C E •W E E K L Y P A Y C H E C K •N O P E E F O R O U R JO S S • F L E X IS L E H O U R S •H O U O A Y R A Y A R EFER R A L BO N USES T h « M M M BM W S k y a to n a C m Im m M i l l A t» ■ — !*»» V i l l i n i S a v in « » P a v v o fi S a r n a * M M a a H i a* a t U yaaa m P vh AU a«aa«dU a le n t ia C aaa V i« ia Ja z z en sem b le JA Z Z A LIVE « / FBANC1NE REED JAN E MABOV1CH GINDER’S G ARDEN O F JA Z Z IO USE C o n ti* 8 ti» n « th C o o» Tony'» M u a Tmmd B u lla l« C a c h a n « « S u it a « c * PLUS THE CHILDRENS SPACE e n t e r t a in m e n t p a RACISe v a l l e y «SSW. Cti ieaSss.iaWatTSS W a t« M S n U M ill A t » Y B h lr t a A n a a U ilU W oo W aafc» Cana nova * JACK A LV E S EE1M BEA U COSMO TOPPER PH O ENIX CHILDREN'S THEATER IM AGINATION CORPORATION FROM A SU SARGON THE M AGICIAN MIME8 D ANCE Pap* 4 S tata Proas W ednesday, A p ril 16,1980 r Opinion L._______________ stale press S e xu ality throw s no lig h t upon love, but o n ly through love can w a laam to understand sexu ality. — R osen st ock-H uaaay David Christian Gay Blue Jeans Day is back again Urne sa tin , folks. Tim e to get aet out It’s thatt tim e of the year again, your pointer peats and your corduroy* because Thursday, A p ril 17 is Gay Blue Jeans Day at ASU. Obviously I’m Joking about the corduroys; I thought it would be appropriate this year to explain Just what this day is supposed to prove. G ay Blue Jeaaa Day began at a college in Penn­ sylvania in the early WTO’s, and has since grown into a nationally- coordinated event in which colleges and universittOB across the nation participate. It is a day in w hich an invisible m inority makes itself visible to make people aware of the gays' fight to achieve basic human rights. The event is not only directed toward gay men and women, but toward a ll men and women who are suppor­ tive, and who want to show their gay friends that it's no big forr them to w ear blue Jeaaa this day. b it deal fa team on ta s day. Everyone who wears blue Joans on Thursday won’t be gay. The purpose is not to point fingers at anyone. The •purpose is to help make everyone aw are for one day that the uncomfortabienem you m ay be feeling if you have on blue Jeans may be the same « c o m fortableness that someone who is gay has to face everyday.« A frequent com plaint is that blue Jeans are such com­ mon attire that it isn’t fa ir to have a “ gay” Blue Jeans Day. W ell, Just as blue Jeans are an everyday part of our college sttire, gay men and women are a re alistic part of our college population. Don't w orry—this day is not seen fay gays as a day for recruitm ent And believe it or not, that has b e « an ac­ cusation in the past. O verall, it is a day for awareness. I think that awareness generally toads to acceptance. A fter a ll, a person’s sexual preference doesn’t prevent that p e r» « from being a vital, concerned d tiie n , now does it? This year's Gay Blue Jeam Day is being sponsored by the G ay Academ ic Unton of ASU. Atoo,« the same day, G A U and the Special Events Board of ASASU w ill pre­ sent D r. Alan B e ll at t p.m. to the Arizona Room of the M U. D r. B ell, a noted sex researcher and author, w ill present a lecture entitled “ Homoeexualittoa—A n Over­ view .” Interestingly, D r. B e ll to not gay, but has devoted bis life to the research of gay m a and w o rn « So, tiw entire day should prove to be an exercise to awareness. Please don’t be alienated—that's not the in­ tent. Look for me on A p ril 17.1’U be the sky-diver w ith the denim parachute who attempts a landing to the Cady fountain. Ju st kidding—of course. H ire the skills, not the bodies 'Futurebrain' — let's look closer Editor: The creation of a computer science department is a significant e m it at ASU, not only because it w ill elim inate a triplication of effort, but also for the more fundamental reason that the computer is a pervasive phenomenon of the human scene to­ day. If by some happy chance we humans succeed in finding solutions to the complex problems facing our species, then the computer w ill be an integral part of those solutions. If we don’t, then the com­ puter w ill s till be there, either m e rrily calculating the rate at which we are exhausting our resources and ourselves, or guiding the m issiles to their targets. Is not something so intim ately connected with our destiny deserving of special study? Anthony R . Nemmer Lib e ral Arts SP, you're blowing ¡1! Editar: Come on, State Press! What is it you have against the Greek system? I thought you were sup­ posed to represent the interests of the entire ASU campus. I adm it you do a pretty good Job, but it seems you are quite atontad at present I never saw anything of interest concerning the Greek system to the State Press « t il a totally anti-Greek letter appeared to one of your iasuee. That seamed to spark a deluge of pro c« let­ ters, and even an editorial. On A p ril IS you d u n e to stick it to the Greeks one more tim e by printing a totally unfounded totter which accused Greeks of being the "rudast audience ever” (at Greek Sing.) Isn’t it strange that although Greek W e * is over and a ll toe •w ards and honors have b e n distributad, net one a rticle ap­ peared to the Stele Press? Why m e a t th a n a state Press i apartar to attendance a t dosing ceremonias at Dooley’s, or at s p a in g cerem onies at the Camelback Inn, or anywhere, anytim e in betw aa? I realise your typew riters are not equipped with the Greek alphabet, but d a ’t you think if our names and activities were mentioned, fellow students would b e g in to re c o g n is e our achievements and some of the “ m ysteries of Greek life ” would bo uncovered? In her editorial concarning Greeks vs. indepanda t a , M ary Otltaspie seemed to went to e a such a frivoious dtapute rssohrsd Your paper a n make a ll the d if­ ference to the world. Why d a ’t y a ceaeidar a Greek Section, or make a point of provldtag ade­ quate r average of at least one m ajor event to the Greek com­ m unity per week? I think it to tim e the Greek system gets out of the editorial pages and is afforded the coverage it daorves. hryaa W .Gm eck Editor: 11» statements of M EC hA to the A p ril IS issue of the S ta te . Press are to tally discrim inatory. Vasques said “ every Job open­ ing should involve the active recruiting o f m toerities.” W h y? B e c a u se th e y ’ re Chicano? O r black? What about because they’re Jew ish or Bud­ dhist? Whose fa u lt is it that only 3.5 to 4.5 percent o f the student body is Chicano? How many should there be? Why is the dropout rate for CMcanos and other m inorities twice as high as the rest of the U niversity? The reasons I can deduce are that th e « people entered college believing a college educatton was the key to success as I also do—but once they started school they couldn’t keep up w ith the work load or lacked the money to continue. In spite of the money issue, I believe those students who show potential and cannot afford tui­ tion should receive the grants and scholarships. Race should not be the prim ary critortan. Money is not the only m ason people drop out of school o r why they (ton’t start to begin with. There are many people who are not qualified for enrollm ent and even more who are not qualified for faculty or staff positions. This is probably the re a s « m inorities are not employed in some Jobs. M EChA is wrong to blame the school fo r this situattoa. Why should one porson be out of a Job he*or she is qualified fo r Just because another p a rs « who is not as qualified is a member of a m inority? I believe the CMcanos and blacks and anyone else deserve equal opportunities for every Job. But to hire bodies and not sk ills, especially for faculty, is more of a detrim ent to the overall quality of educatton at ASU and an injustice to the entire studm t body than it is to m inorities. Brwce HlmmelMae Business Administration Let's drop the childish games Editor: I am e disabled s tu d a t who was recently the victim of a se n d e e s prank by a faculty member. I have b e a assigned handicapped perking behind the Central P la to that w ill allow me to get my w heelchair to and out the d riv e r’s side. W h a I pulled tote the lot, I found that m y apace wee ta k a by a non-handicapped pecan. This reread me to park elsewhere; the neat h a t spot w a reserved for state vehicle Since #1M w a not there, I thought that it would bo a ll righ t to pork th erefor an hour and a had. Wrong. W h a I re tim e d to a y car, f it s w a parked inches from m y ca r’s bu m p * w ith the w in­ dows rotted up and the doors lacked. The “ gentleman” r a p a a lb li f a detaining me fin. u n ecasa rily was D r. Stanley S a n k , assistant p re fa so r of botany. R ather than w alk a few extra steps, many drivers choose to ignore the feet that they are parking to a handicapped e r a . Others, lik e D r. Ssarak, prefer to play childish games like “ get o v a ” and “ revenge” w h a a disabled person perks in his space. Being handicapped means that there are many proMsme to cope w ith each day. Indifference is the tonghat one of a ll. # Spencer L. WaBace Jeater S e ria l Work Better luck next year, David E ditar: I would tike to take tide spnsrtiatity to p e rsa e lly congratulate D avid Christian a his recent cam ­ paign for Catopus A ffa irs vice president Although he lost the s le c tia , he—a candidate with a not a popular lifestyle—managed to con­ vince 40 percent of the voting students he was s till a competent candidate fo r a govern m atal posi­ tion a a campus that would: —prohibit X-rated film s from beiag shewn, —attem pt to doiqr a w saisn w ith a alternative view a refigtan from vetoing her e p M a . —attem pt to “ puatoh” and control e powerful aad successful W e m a ’s A ffa irs B a r d far its Uberal a c tle a . —tarn out to droves to b e ta to a fanatical evaagritat, but ignora a « tt-d ra ft ra lly h rid at the satos tate» attrae! barely U percent of its e lú d a te to the p a is a r is e ti« day. And H a lly m s that would alert I t a e lii H a g e n as Its cketoefor p rs e id a t r i the United States I egg toad you, M r. Chrtatiah. P ia s e try again neat year. Maybe the snoring w ill be ever fay than. Jacuaism and IMscamsMateatla W sdnesdsy, A p ril 16,1900 S ta ts P re ss Paça 5 Officials disagree on student-fee rise By L a ri Weieraub Although Associated Students most trim its 1980-81 budget by 118.000, it actually recei ved a 9.4 percent increase in student fees, Provost Paige MtdhoOan said Tuesday. “ The total amount of studentfoe dollars rose by only S percent fo r next year,” be said, “ but the U niversity is giving ASASU more than a 9 percent increase.” However, ASASU coordinator G ary Kleemann said there was no fee increase, and using a base budget fig u re of 8480,000, ASASU’s budget experienced a m inus 1.9 percent change. Mulboflan said ASASU used an inaccurate base figure when pfenning next year’s budget and that accounted fo r the discrepan­ cy ia figures. “ The real base figure is 8384.000, ” he said. “ ASASU spent 838,000 o rig in ally allotted fo r the radio station an other areas, and tlfey had to subtract that amount to get the rig id base figure.” B u t K leem ann sa id he disagrees w ith Mulhottons’ base figure. “ I ju st don’t know where he got that figure from ,” Ktoemaim said. "N o radio money has been transferred anywhere.” A U niversity budget review committee, consisting of Pre si­ dent Schwada and several vice presidents, approved a budget of 8413,348 for ASASU. ASASU requested a budget of 8808,108 for the 1900-81 fiscal year. To help finance the mandated 808,000 cut, ASASU President Susie Eastridge said the budget w ifi be cut in five areas. Activités, currently allocated 831,080, w ill be trim m ed to 817,838. Campus affa irs w ill be pared to 863,138 from the original 806,309, w hile college coun cils w ill decr ease to 818,137 from the al­ lotted 819,579.. Also, adm inistration and con­ tingencies w ill be trimm ed. Kleem ann said these figures were arrived at after 6 percent was subtracted from the 197*80 budget in each area. He also said die committee ac­ tually approved a request of 8431,438, but the figure included a m anda tod 818,311 by the Legislature 1er cost of livin g and m erit adjustments. “ If you look at the 8481,438, ASASU received a 3.4 percent in­ crease,” Kleem ann said. “ But that was set down by the le g islatu re , and we have no con­ tro l over ft." Eastridge said the adm inistra­ tion did not take into account an anticipated 818,000 increase in student wages because of the minimum-wage increase. M ulbolfen sa id ad d itio n a l funding fe r student-wage in­ creases w ill have to be transferred from other areas of the budget EUROPE " CAR REN T or B U Y LOWEST PRICES FOR S T U D E N T S . T E A C H E R S EU R O PE BY C A R 9000 Sunset Boulevard Lee A ngelet, C alif. 90009 Phone: (213) 272-0424 NaR M o ad for Special Student/Taaeher Tariff, i O U tU T A L D L S A S K □ P U n C H A M □asnanjeas a vovni m s s SCHOLARSHIP TO MEDICAL/ OSTEOPATHIC SCH O O L oso.» «wswrwr* HMkeWNeon o f Tneson Arts, wen fourth piece In the freeetyieoompatlHon of the Altoona Nsl lenels held tost Sunday In Sun OevN Ito dtom. The naHenafe toohided dtoe throwers from aeroos the osanity end was spenseied by; The Aitoono Otoe AWancs, VoWey o f the Sen, Unlverely Frtobee Otoe Chib, and the Arizona Frieboo Otoe Aaasstol ton. available to students entering or already enrolled. U .S . citize n s between 18 and 33 years old . F u ll tu ition , authorized fees, books and $453.00 cash per m onth. F o r further d etails on Navy Health P ro test Iona S ch o l­ arship, contact C h ris C onnors or Tom H ull et (002) 261-3158 (C ollect). J Produce Sale Style one Style two JOHN COLLINS* s c m i n a m a n "M y nam t it John C ollins. I'm a sem inarian. I hod the Moa off being a priest fo r t long tim e before I did anything about it. I was too seared off my feelings. "B ut I finelly took the plunge end it's tha best thing I aver did. It wasn't a shot in the dent. Friends helped. Talking to sem inarians helped. And prayer wee the biggest htip7 Perhaps you, like John, have thought about the priesthood o r religious lift but never reedy looked into It. How about looking Into It now? — Mad Coupee Today!-------------------- -_*j A fe e ie « end in fo rm a tio n o n : □ Diocasan Priasts G B ro th e rs California Squash Regular $60 - Now $39.99 □ Religious Priests G N u ns Style three Cl Lay M in is trie s Name------------------------------------------------------------------— Address City . State ZIP VO C A TIO N S C O M M IT T E E /S U P ftE M E C O U N C IL „ KUIOBTO e r COLUMBUS Ä M W H a M A CT 0 M 0 7 ^ 706 South Forest • Tem p« a 067-6747 • O ne b lo ck north of U n iversity M onday through Saturday • 10-6 • Thursdays u n til 8:30 Pag» 6 State Prese W edn esday, A p ril 10,1900 No-show Hanatfs Appointees miss fee meetings B y C lare C re — r M any of the 11 students who were appointed to serve on e U niversity committee that reviews stu­ dent residency status are not showing up for mnrtingn after pledging attendance, a vice chairperson of the committee »aid Tuesday. P e n Rook, an industrial technology professor and vice chairm an of the Pee Status Appeals Board, said the board is short-handed many tim es because students are not advising the board that they w ill be absent after previously agreeing to at­ tend a bearing. “ We have a very heavy load of appeals this semester,” Rook said. “ The last meeting we had the student did not show up, and there were only three of us there.” The Fee Status Appeals Board is composed of 30 faculty and staff members and 11 students. It hears appeals by students who have been denied residency by the U niversity Fee Status Office. Rook said prior to a meeting last week, com m it­ tee member Tom Ajam ie told the Pee Status Of­ fice he would attend the meeting but never showed up. , Ajam ie, assistant to Associated Students Pre si­ dent Susie Eastridge and ASASU president-elect, said be sent a note to the Fee Status Office saying he would not be able to attend the meeting. “ I sent them a memo saying I couldn’t come because I was going to be busy campaigning,” A jam ie said. “ Right now they have a surplus of students. If a student can’t come to a meeting the board is supposed to find a substitute.” Ajam ie said that he knew of several students on Reno and Lake Tahoe the committee who either were not being notified of meetings or were not given enough prior notice. But Rook said the secretary in the Fee Status Of­ fice does not even put a student’s name on the schedule without first receiving affirm ation by the student that they plan to attend the meeting. “ He (Ajam ie) must be m istaken,” Rook said. “ A ll the student hppellates are sent a rem inder by registered m ail, and Deters (Thackeray, the secretary), must be in touch w ith the member before she puts their ftame oo the list. ” Rook said Ajamie advised the Fee Status Office he would be at the meeting and then did not show up. “ He was definitely aware of the m eeting," Rook said. “ But he did not pick up his packet or te ll the secretary in Fee Status he would not be there. “ Because there are so many appeals this semester, sometimes we have to meet five tim es in one week. We need the students help. Their own experience as students is invaluable.’ ’ Rook said there seldom has been more than one of the 11 students present at any given hearing. “ If we could even get one to show up at each meeting, it would be great,” she said. _ Students are appointed to the committee by the ASASU president They must apply for a position on a specific committee of their choice and must be full-tim « students. The ASASU president inter­ views them and sends a recommendation for the appointment to the U niversity president for ap­ proval. 3 0 L O O K IN G F O R S U M M E R O R PER M AN EN T EM PLOYM ENT? H A R R A H 's L A K E T A H O E and H A R R A H 's R E N O O u r Representatives will be a ccep tin g a p p lic a tio n s fo r entry level p o s itio n s in F o o d Service, F o o d Preparation, H o u se k e e p in g , C le a n in g and C a s in o . Interviewing now for su m m er e m p lo y­ m ent, ap ply in person at: H O L I D A Y IN N - T E M P E 917 E . A p a ch e Tem pe, A rizo n a T H U R S D A Y , A P R IL 17 and F R ID A Y , A P R IL 18 9:00 a .m . to 8:00 p .m . A n Equal O pportunity Em ptoyar M /F ASU Student Foundation P R ESEN TS TH E MICHELOB. MICHELOB PREM IUM C U P SALE 7 3 BM W 2002 71 BM W 2800 7 7 BM W 3201 7 0 O pal Q T 7 2 O pal G T 7 2 V olvo 142 7 4 V olvo 142 7 3 Saab Sonnait 7 3 Vatta T-Top 7 0 M arcadaa250S 7 4 M arcadaa 280 7 4 M arcadaa 2400 77 M arcadaa 2400 7 5 M arcadaa 2400 7 0 X K E R oadttar 7 2 X K E C oupa 7 4 X J6 -L 7 5 XJ6-1 7 7 X JS -L 7 4 260Z 75 280Z2 + 2 7 7 2802 *57 A C B ristol 7 8 C apri C h ía II 7 5 M G M idget 7 7 M G M idgat 7SM G B 7SM G B 77 M GB 7 4 F ia t 124 Spidar 7 5 F ia t 124 Spidar 7 7 SpiHIra 8 0 VW Bug 7 0 Chavy Nova 7 4 Eld oiad o 7 5 E l dorado conv 8 9 M arcadaa 250 7 0 Mareada* 250 7 2 M arcadaa 250 7 3 M arcadaa 290 7 3 M arcadaa 490SE 7 3 M arcadaa 49081 71 300SEL 9.3 7 5 M arcadaa 290C 7 9 M arcadaa 290« 7 0 BM W 2000 7 9 A u d i 5000 7 9 A u d i 100LS 7 4 A udi 100LS 7 3 A u d i 100LS 7 3 Foraci*# 914 T E N N IS Student Foundation The SMALL CAR CO. TO U R N AM EN T D ATES: 94796 92996 99296 91996 S249S 91995 $2996 $2996 $4996 94996 97496 98996 $12,906 99496 S799S •R M íO 575M #--, *7496 $9496 $9996 $3996 $6496 $8496 $9996 $2996 $2996 $3996 63296 $3966 $4666 $9666 $9666 $9616 91296 9 799 91999 $666$ 92996 64496 $9296 66796 « *iMroSaj f 914,798 BOOM IW V D 19996 912.499 62166 97496 63296 $24*6 •1696 •4796 Small ovsihssd, smallpiteas. 5201 E. Vai Burnì 2754461 Friday, A p ril 25............... ............3:00 p jn . to 8:00 p m 8:00 a m Saturday, A p ril 2 6 ......... to 5:00 p.m . Sunday, A p ril 2 7 ............ RULES: 1. A n y ASU student, not presently o m em ber o f the tennis team , is eligible to enter. Limited to first 200 entries. 2. Com petition w ill be in m en's and w om en's singles, doubles, and m ixed. Categories a re interm ediate and advanced players. 3. Tournam ent fees: $3.00/singles - $5.00/per doubles team. w 4. Entrants responsible for new con of tennis b a lk fo r m atches. Balls w ill be supplied for alt final m atches. Play consists o f single elim ination, 10 gom e pro-sets, or one hour, and a 10 m inute default period. 5. Entry d eadlin e: A p ril 22, 5:00 p.m . at M atthew s Center. Fee paym ent must occom pany entry form . K n trto s a v a S a b te a t M U IN F O R M A T IO N D IS K , M A T T H E W S C E N T E R , IN T R A M U R A L O F F IC I IBO O TH O N M A LL . PRIZES: 1. Com plim entary MICHELOB visors for all entrants. 2. Random prise draw ings sponsored by volley businesses. 3. Total of 20 trophies foe each finalist and runner-up. 4. Perm anent trophy with w inners' nam es inscribed. For m ore d etailed inform ation: STU D EN T FO U N D A T IO N O FFICE M A TTH EW S CEN TER « R O O M 138 O R C A LL 965-6466 S T U D E N T FO U N D A T IO N • M IC H ELO B • S T U D E N T FO U N D A T IO N • M IC H ELO B • M I C H E L O B • S T U D E N T F O U N D A T I O N • M 1 C H 1 LO B « S T U D E N T F O U N D A T I O N • W ednesday. A p ril 16, i9 6 0 State P re ss Page 7 Tumbleweeds turned into fuel B y B a rte rs V sa Fleet Tum blew eeds, 'th ose b ig scratchy balls at thorns that abound In Arizona’s deserts, have tumbled righ t into U niver­ sity laboratories. ,* Aw A M I rh a w rira t s n g t a w r in g professor is working to develop a proceas to change the peaky plant into storable Uqukl fuel. ‘ "Ilw te are many possibilities to convert biom ass into liq uid hydrocarbons,” D r. Jam es Kuester said. He a rid strain pies of the m aterials he has used to make synthetic Itoels include sawdust, nutshells, pole, Jojoba wastea and other plants m aterials. Kuester receives pessdered tumbleweed from two U A scien­ tists. D r. Aden Heine! and hta w ife and associate, M arjorie M e ia e l, have s t u d ie d tmnMewood as an energy source and have developed techniques to harvest the plant and term it into cubes that can be ground into powder. Same of the pepdor w as taken, to Southwest Presto Log Inc. ie F la g ris i!, where fireplace logs Institutes to be held for m inorities, gifted A SU w in offer fiv e sum m er in stitu to s fo r h ig h sch ool HHBDnKV njuBu SIh QSDGb* The m inority in atttulai w o dm ig n e i to in tro d u ce eaghnw riag to sp ecific ^ cu p s of people who aro rega rded as “ u n der-represented” in the According to D r. A rth u r Dean, co o rd in a to r of a rin o rlty program s in the ASU College ef E n g in e e rin g an d A p p lie d Sciences, only 2.8 percent of a ll the in the United States are black, H ispan ic or Am erican k u la n . Women m ake up lo w than 1 percent of the engineers , although they represen t more than h a lf of the U A population The institutes w ill be June 3 to 13 lo r native Am ericans, June IS to 3» for gifted students, June n to 37 fo r woman, June 7 to 11 for Híspanles and Ju ly 14 to IS far black studsnts. There w in bo a apodal collage credit program for gifted btgh school sonlars (those in the top 10. percent o f their classes) June 3 to Ju ly 3. A d d itio n a l ia fo rm a tio n is a v rilrid e from D r. A rthur Doan at MB 3 1 or MS-3431. are made from lum berm ill w astes. The tum blew eed powder is processed in the same way to form Tum blelogs, which era now being m arketed fo r uoe In domestic fireplaces. Kuester takes the powdered tumbleweed he receives from U A and gasifies i t Then the molecules are reconstructed in­ to a liquid of high-heating quali­ ty Kuester said the liquid fuels developed in the ASU lab are not yet m arketable, but be receives inquiries from com­ m ercial firm s every week. - “ There is a lot of in te re st” he said. "The potential for syn­ thetic fuels is estim ated to be HOB billion. In a few years, petroleum w ill be gooe.” He said synthetic fuels w ill not be leas expensive than gasoline. “ The price would be set at the sa m e m a rk e t v a lu e as petroleum products,” Kuester said. “ It would be siQy to se ll the (synthetic) fuels for leas. “ Charge what the m arket w ill bare. That’s the way our economy w orks.” He said a factory would need to proceas approxim ately 3,000 tons of tumfaiaqBed a day to breakeven. Since the reeaarch at ASU is funded by “ public domain con­ tracts,” laboratory findings and inform ation are open to the public, Kuester aaid. ASU receives some funding from the D epartm ent o f Energy, which is interested in stim ulating research using cotton-gin trash as an energy source. The Arizona Solar Energy Com m ission also provides grants for research. “ They (commission officials) are more interested in long­ term projects of importance to the state of A rizo n a ,” Kuester added. THE HONORS PROGRAM, THE FRENCH CLUB, a ALPHA MU GAMMA present BLACK GIRL B L A C K G IR L, a film by O usm ane Sem bene, one o f A fric a ’s leading film m akers, d e a ls w ith th e e xp lo ita tio n o f an A frica n m aid by her French em ployers at th e ir sum m er resort In A n tib e s, France. W E D N E S D A Y , A P R IL 16 1 :40 p.m . ' L A N G U A G E and LIT ER A T U R E BU ILD IN G , RO O M B 19 The p u b lic and a ll m em bers o f the U n ive rsity com m u nity are w elcom e. ss JEW ELER S FO R A L L YO UR JE W E L R Y N E E D S D iam onds, W atch es 14k C h a in s, Pend an ts S o ro rity-F ra te rn ity Je w e lry W atch & Je w e lry R ep airin g 966-7587 See: "H O LO CAU ST" The NSC T d e v M o n S e rie s Tuns. A Thura. • A p rii 16 A 17 B o ile r C e n te r • 213 E. U n ive rsity * H ilM Lou n g e • Free o f charge. Part O ne - 2:30-6:00 p.m . A 7:30-10:00 p.m . P a ri Tw o - 2:30-5:00 p.m . A 7:30-10:00 p.m . F o r d e ta ils , c e il H ilte l — U n io n o f Je w ish S tu d e n ts, 667-7963. PAK SHIP 227 E A S T JE FFE R S O N B T R I iT PHOENIX, AR IZO N A— 004 WE PACK ANYTHING From EScydes To Shnos Pick Up Service Availeble W e h a n d le p a ck in g , bo x in g , in su ra n ce a n d sh ip p in g . - 288-0828 H o u r* : M o n d a y - F rid a y e .w . - 4:Q0 p .m . Spring’s Coming into Focus " . . . and we’re focusing on savings t We've set our sights on savings this S p rin g — and you’ll love the g n a t fashion looks they're paired w ith. If you’ve been eyeing the newest leouia and sh irts, now IS the time to focus In on savings. Come see us. and check out the good news. Jeans ft Slack» *1 2 .9 9 Shirts ft Pullovers *9 .9 9 0 a M V fe e 4560 E . C a c tu s R d . Paradise V a lle y 905*2806 Page 8 Stata P ra ss W ednesday, A p ril 16,1960 Mesa man writes students' papers B yK ym Fex Ron Dupree has w ritten term papers on business adm inistra­ tion, labor relations, health care and humanities. But o fficia lly, be has w ritten none. Dupree is in the business of doing what most college students dread— w riting term papers. The «-year-old Mesa resident said be launched his local career w ith an ad in the 8tate Press in early A p ril. He offered to do papers, dissertations or resumes. He fp«rtaliM a in economics, political science, sociology, humanities, journalism , business adm inistration, English and Am erican literature. A t $5 a page, most students cannot go wrong. But guaranteed grades are not included for $5 a page, he said. “ I don’t anything. I don’t guarantee grades, but I w rite the paper,” he added. There is at least one catch to having Dupree w rite papers, be said. “ I f a kid is rolling along w ith a C or D in the class, and be turns in one of my papers, the teacher knows because I can’t w rite down for a paper,” he said. “ I have an excellent lib rary. I know a lot of things. I am 6 years old. I have eight children. I have killed people in wars, and I have been around.” Dupree said be started w riting papers because college students cannot write. “ I went back to college in 1973, and the kids in college cannot w rite,” he said. “ A kid can take a class and grasp a subject fine and be able to use it and benefit from it fine, but he can’t w rite about i t ” Dupree, who has w ritten term papers for college students in Montana and New York, said be is fa m ilia r w ith the problems students have when they are faced w ith a term paper. •T know colleges, and the problem is w ith the instructors who don’t know the real world. They don’t come out of their ivory towers," Dupree said. “ Students don’t have the experience and the secondary educa­ tion it takes to w rite a paper. And they don’t have the tim e h fffM w it-costs so much to Hve, and they have to work at McDonalds or Jack-in-The-Box." The work Dupree does on a paper varies w ith each one, he said. He reeearches, w rites, reorganises and types, but the stu­ dent must alw ays help, he said. “ I w in not w rite the whole paper,” he added. “ Whatever I have to do, I do. If I hick out and only have to do the w riting and set it up, it's fine. But I do whatever I haveto do.” He said it is not right to do aB the student’s work, but many students feel there is nothing wrong w ith Mm doing everything. “ It is im m oral, unethical and illega l,” he said. “ One g irl told me it w asn't illeg al. You can't legalise ethics." Psychologist to talk about homosexuality RELIVE AN EXPERIENCE Ml t f M l Trip Rff-Unlon” Come for information and a taste of Israel’s excitement. Dr. Alan BeU, senior r esear ch psychologist at the Institute for Sex Research and co-author of “ Homosexualities: A Study of D iv e rs ity Am ong M en and Women,” w ill deliver a ta lk entitled “ Homosexualities: An Overview.” D r. BeU w ill appear at 8 p.m. Thursday in the M U Arizona Roam. Adm ission is IS general, 1 students. Dr. BeU w ill be «Bscussing the findings of M s study w hich was the basis fo r M s book, “ Homosexualities: A Study of D iv e rs ity Am ong M en and W om en.” H e w ill also be his most recent book, to be published later fid s year, which is a “ path analysis” of ex periences w hich contribute to homoeexisrfity. Dr. B r il’s appearance is being sponsored by the Gay Académ ie Union at ASU and ASASU. W eds., April 16,7 p.m. Baker Center • Hlllel Lounge Share the experiences o f Israel w ith p ictu re s, m u sic, food, dancing + m uch m om . For details, call 967-7063. ;* \ t J J 102 S. 24th St. V P h o e n ix , A z . 8 5 0 3 4 Dupree has been turning down offers for term papers because he is w orking on other fires lance w o rt now. He said he has received about SOphone ca lls about M s ad. He added that he w ill be accepting more assignments if they are not due until later in the semester. “ I turned down three to four ca lls a day now,” be added. “ But I have been getting a few mote caOs for papers that don’t need to be done un til fin als week, so I guess I wiU run the ad again.” He said there is no money in the term-paper business, «nhaMji» • number of students have offered to pay Mm more than ts a page far Ms services. Many students offer to pay Dupree larger sums of money when their papers ate due the next day, he said. “They don't realise the tim e it takes to do a paper correctly, to do the gram m ar and syntax,” he added. “ The tim e factor is often im possible to doe paparon." Health Fair '80 to provide tests This weekend, as a part of Health F a ir *88, free tests eAfi be offered far Uve health couaaaliag Saturday • a .m. ta f p jn . and 18 a m . t o f p jn . Sunday a t tha A ctiv ity International Association of Students in Economics and Business Management tnm How would you like to get excellent work experience in your field o f study in any o f 56 different countries around the world? Sound exciting? Find out more about this reciprocal foreign exchange program at the AIESEC meeting todayl B A 9: 2*48 p, m rh J W ednesday, A p ril 1«, 1900 S tate P rase P a p a 9 Calvin Klein D E S IG N E R J E A N S M o s t D a p M n w n t S lo t» » — $4 0 .0 0 *25®° Ow Price F A S H IO N D ISTR IB U TER S 330 S . G ilb e rt, Mesa • 934-9187__________ ¿Pirjiate iWo-l: LSAT/ M CAT/GM AT June 2 8 / O cto b e r 4 / J u l y 12 C a ll D ays, Evan Inga t W eak a n d ! Exam I H plun tirnminfC—w 10/4/80 6/14/80 6/14/80 7/9/80 9 6 7 -2 9 6 7 Sedia Jsctya s a i W » Cannare ì s h im s scons trow ths moria “Nlgtit K8T that Is M a g mated In Phoenix. The Phoenix Sky Her%bar appari awe Mis locadeaet Tuesdays turning. Six-hour limit given to avoid work conflicts Dates DAT G RE GREPSYCH & BIO N LE Fo r Inform ation A bout O ther Centers In M ore Than 80 Ma|or O S C itie s & Abroad O utsid e N V Slate C A L L TO LL FR EE: 800-223-1782 The Ship Is your Classroom The World is your Campus By K elly Smith F u ll-tim e U n iv e rsity sta ff members are restricted to enroll­ ment in a m aximum six hours of classes each semester at ASU to prevent work conflicts, according to the director of personnel Same staff members have tried to register for more hours than is allowed, said Henry Koelbl. “ Thera have been com plaints in the past regarding this policy, and a ll wa can ta ll them to do Is petition it,” be added. Pu ll-tim e staff members may register for six hours a t a cost of IS for day and evening classes of­ fered during fa ll and spring sem esters. D uring five-week sum m er sessions, s ta ff la restricted to only three hours of course w ork a t IS. S ta ff m em b ars m ay net register for course w ork if class meetings require absence A irin g th eir work hours. K o e M said staff members may not register for more than six hours, even if they are w illin g to pay fu ll tuition. “ The reason the policy exists is because we feel it (m ore classes) m ight conflict w ith their w ork,” he said. “ S ta ff members w ork 41 hours par weak. If they took a 1st of classes there m ay ha a con­ flic t.'1 K oelbl said if ths employee registers fo r classes at another collage, the U niversity would ka«a no control. “ Wa wouldn’t have any control over that unless it conflicts w ith th eir w ork a t the U niversity,” be said. “ Thera have been occasions where staff members complained aad th alr petitions were viewed," he said. Earn a full semester of credit. Sponsored by the University of Colorado at Boulder. Sail from San Francisco, September 7, 1980 to the Orient, Southeast Asia, India, Egypt, (Suez Canal) and the Mediterranean. More than 60 university courses, with in-port and voyage related emphasis. Faculty are from leading universities. Special courses and lectures by visiting area experts. Participation is open to qualified students from all accredited colleges and universities. Semester at Sea admits students without regard to color, race or creed. The S.S. Universe is fully air-conditioned. 18,000 tons, registered in Liberia and built in America. For a free color brochure, write: Semester at Sea, U M C 3966, U niversity of Colorado, Boulder 80309. 854-0195 fa x c a g fC o la . and Calif.), (714) 5 8 1 -5 7 7 0 (Calif.), (303)49241 351 (Colo.) • •- • ' • ■ ROCK 'N' ROLL ‘i A/ ' 1 . • ■' 7- - . *1 ' ; One o f life's pleasures Won t you join us this Thursday evening at Neeb Hall for that wonderfully New Wave band from the coast, THE CRET0 NES. They'll , be appearing in one show at 8:00 p.m., with special guests BLUE SHOES, Tickets are just S5.00 and available at all Bill's Records and 208J, and maybe even at the door. Audio locations, MU Ff idny, and Saturday, stop by the theater and see THE BEATIES on the big screen in HELP! , onfliet. The fun starts at and the return of BLUE {SHOES, live in 8 : 00 , and tickets will be available at the door for $ 3.00 .* ■ ' • • - . i No rock on Sunday, but plenty of medieval lust as we present LION IN WINTER at 6:30 and TAMING OF THE SHREW See both for $ 1.50 . A S A S U NE E B H A L L ü t o f f t t e d p iin f support t a r t h d g f m x a MARCHOf DIMES IhiwAci. coNimtwfft»»*VM Nimm »«* No conflict? Not interested. FILM SERIES at 8 30 THE P«j> 10 3 ta ta Presa W edne sday, A p ril 18.1900 DID YOU FORGET? M ajor airlines compete for passenger ticket sai By Barkers Vaa Fleet National Secretary Week April 20 - 26 Free D elivery to A SU Large Selection of Flowers & Plants " m w s m 9S5-07S1 15 W . S ix th St. R A CQ U ETB A LL Factory Purchase SHORT/T-SHIRT Special 4 0 9 9 Purchase mmm __________________reg $26 reg $28 1^ « A ih le tic S h o e F a cto ry | TEMPE CENTER (between M ill & University) 11 E NINTH ST. ASU students «be fly home altar cotnp le tii« term paper* and fin al Msm laBttnas are in for mare fun and gamaa during their plane trips. Discount coupons, a popular airlin e promo­ tion last fa ll, are being fallowed by supermarket-type sweepstakes on flights by United, Am erican and T in as W orld airliass. The throe companies are offartng games as an advertising gim m ick to eOm t a dechne in ticket salse, a TWA reprsasnlattye said Tues­ day. “ We’ve gotten a lot of response so fa r, eonsidering the advertising jest started last week,” Faye Mann said. “ It w ill take aw hile before we can calculate how mucta the games have increased «she.” M m « said TW A and Am erican A irlin es followed United to the playing field. United’s “ Take-off” game began giving rm m ttrip tickets as prism A p ril 1. TW A’s “ W in the W orld” sweepstakes offers a grand prise of round-trip tickets fo r two to anywhere in the world, every year for the w inner’s lifetim e. Ten thousand “ instant w in­ ners” w ill receive a free flight. Am erican’s “ Baseball Game” features 10 grand prises of one-month passes good for unlim ited travel anywhere in the United States. Second and th ird p rism are 10,900 round trips and round-trip upgrades. “ Scratch and m atch” playing cards are distributed to passengers on a ll domestic a irlin e flights. If the righ t combination o f sym bols is uncovered, the player is a wtanar. Chances of that are approxim ately 1 in MO. * In order to com ply w ith state lottery laws, the airlines also offer sweepstakes cards to anyone who w rites to New Y ork and requests one. TW A and Am erican games began Tuesday and w ill continue for approxim ately a month, or until a ll the playing cards have been distributed. Free tripe must be redeemed by Dec. 15, 1980. Lucky ASU students m ight he able to win their way back here for the fa ll semester. B y that time, the airlin e s may be offering trading stamps, encyclopedia volumes or free bookware. A TOUCH OF SOMETHING DIFFERENT featuring ipps MusIcM Tharaptst Music For A ll Psopki A n d Special G uest Stars *QIL SCOTT-HERON CONCERT TICKETS GIVEN AW AY A ROLLER SKATING EXHIBITION by TONY JOHNSON (MR. T) DM Webb TowncHousc • Kino Room Saturday, April 19,1960 • 8 p.m. -1 a.m. TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: Charts Records '2515 N. Central « AMn A r,u (only $3.00) At Ths Door If you like w hat you h ea r . . . tell a friendiff M il W d n — day. AprW 1 6 .19t0 State Pf— ?ket sales in supermarket-type sweepstakes Pope 11 GET THE BEST IN ADVICE ON BICYCLES and REPAIRS Consult one o f our experts. CHIP ALBERY C ustom Fram e B u lld o r Export M ochanle Tempe Bicycle Shop 602 S. M a i (Com er 6th & M ill) 966-6896 INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL! AIRLINE TICKETS A T AIRPORT PRICES. 4 FREE PASSPO RT P H O T O S W ITH EA C H INTERNATION AL B O O U N G ! For R eservations and Inform ation Call: SUNDANCE TRAVEL 500 W. Southern * 835*6888 M esa 2 for 1 ASU NIGHT Any Wednesday Between 5 and 10 p.m. Until April 30 . . . lust Present Your Valid ASU I.D. Buy O ne at Regular Price — Get O ne Dinner of Equal or Lesser Value FREE. Includes Happy Hour Reduced Prices For Your Cocktails. MAXIMILIAN'S M EXICAN RESTAURANT University & 48th St. (825 S. 48th St.) Pag« 12 Stata P ra ss W ednesday, A p ril 16,1960 Carter's draft proposal up for committee vote CeUege Press Service W ASHINGTON - The fate of President Car­ ter’s proposal to re-institute m ilita ry registration for 19- and 20-year-old males w ill be determined later this month when the House Ways and Means Com m ittee votes on whether to approve $13 m illio n fo r the proposal. Most com m ittee watchers expect the measure to pass easily. A House subcommittee has already defeated an IS. 5 m illion request that would have allowed the Selective Service System to register women for the first time. Even those in favor of starting registration for the first tim e since 1973 carefully note that a registration system w ill not necessarily lead to a draft. “ The draft w ill only be re-instituted if there is a w ar,” m aintains W arren Nelson, an aide to Rep. Les Aspin (D-W I), generally considered a congressional expert on m ilita ry personnel. “ As it stands now,” Nelson adds, “ the new registration system w ill be sim pler and less tim e consuming than the old method.” H ie new system envisioned in the b ill would require that 19- and 20-year-old males report to the nearest post office during the month of June or July. B ill proponents argue that post offices are usually quiet in those months. D raft opponents, however have charged that Carter purposefully deferred the registration date until college students are on summer vacation and can not organize large anti-draft demonstrations. S u b stan tial cong ressional opposition to registration remains, lead by representatives Pat Schroeder, D-Colo , and John S. Seiberling, DOhio “ Compulsory m ilita ry service — except in times of constitutionally approved w ar or com pelling national emergency — raises serious questions of propriety and indeed, legality in light of the constitutional prohibition against involuntary servitute,” Seiberling wrote in a public letter to the president. Rep. Jam es W eaver of Ohio, another opponent, feared registration would make it easier for the United States to engage in “ adventures” around the world. In his letter, cosigned by 36 colleagues, Seiberling w orried that registration would be a “ massive invasion of the privacy of m illions of young Am ericans.” The proposal, as it now stands, would require registrants to tell the government their name, address, birth date and social security number. The inform ation would be entered into com­ puters by Internal Revenue Service keypunch operators. B ill advocates say IRS keyptmchers are sim ply the ones who would be available at that tim e of year, that the inform ation on the registration form s would not be shown to other government agencies. In 1978, C arter rejected a Congressional Budget Office (CBO) proposal that would autom atically register people by com piling inform ation from existing government files. The CBO report figured the Social Security System and the IRS could provide most of the needed information. The report also noted that the autom atic registration system could m iss as much as 40 percent of the eligible people, and thus create serious po litical and legal obstacles to a draft based on such an incomplete list. In requesting registration. Carter said the point was to provide the Pentagon with a manpower pool from which it could either expand the size of its forces, or replace casualties in a w ar lasting several months. A fu ll peacetime conscription system, however, wuold require separate congressional approval. The current legislation would provide fluids to implement registration, a power the president already has. O fficials emphasize that registration w ill not remedy the two m ajor m ilitary problems that some critics argue have undermined the nation’s combat readiness. M ilita ry experts say too few technicallytrained officers and enlisted personnel are staying in the service. A s a result, the arm ed forces currently lack an adequate corps of ex­ perienced field leaders. Carter plans to keep temperature controls W A SH IN G T O N (A P ) Am ericans can get ready for another hot sum m er w ith P re sid e n t C a rte r’s d e cisio n Tuesday to extend m andatory temperature controls covering 2.8 m illion offices, shops and other nan-residential buildings for nine months. program through January 1991, adm inistration o fficials said Carter would ask Congress to pass a law m aking the control permanent. The regulations require setting thermostats in non-resideatisi buildings at 78 degrees in the summer and 66 in the w ilder. Deputy Energy Secretary John Saw M ll said the adm inistration wanted to make the rules as much a part of Am erican life as the 56 mUe per hour speed lim it. In announcing C a rte r’s* decision, S a w h ill sa id the president had determined the p ro g ram ,” S a w h ill to ld reporters. The program had been the subject of an intense debate among achninietration attorneys. Some argued that the law only allowed im position of the tem ­ perature controls if the preeldeot made a finding of a “ severe energy supply interruption.” such as he did in imposing the controls Ju ly 16 in the mUbt of long gasoline lines in many parts o f the country. However, Saw M ll called the current surplus of gasoline and heating o il tem porary and said the precarious w orld situation demanded that U.S. conservation efforts continue. "W ith the w orld o il situation as tenuous as it is today and w ith p o litic a l in sta b U ity in the Mideast, the president is com­ pletely justified in extending the program ,” Saw hill laid repor­ ters. Saw M ll put the savings since Carter imposed the controls at 30 m illio n b arrels of oil. The United States saved $1 b illio n in energy com pared to a cost of aom irflstering the program of $6 m illion, he said. C ritics have charged that despite C a rter’s assurances that the controls would be strictly enforced, there have been no tinea im posed fo r noncom pliance and the Energy Department provided only 10 federal inspectors to conduct building audits. Associate professor elected to post Dr. Thomas Nash in, associate professor of botany and m icrobiology at ASU, has been elected vice president of the Am erican B ryological and Liehenological Society, Inc. Nash, who joined the ASU faculty in 1971, earned Ms bachelor’s degree at Duke U niversity and his master’s and Ph.D. at Rutgers. As vice president Ms duties w ill include organizing the society’s meetings throughout the year. Presently be ispreparing fo r a meeting in Vancouver, B.C., Ju ly 14 and 15. GOOD FOR YOU BREAKFAST S E R V E D FR O M 6 A M to 11:60 A M 99 * SP EC IA LS 991 991 1 . 2 E g g s, H ashbrow ns, W hole W heat Toaat 2. 1 Egg, B acon , W hole W heat Toaat 10* ORANGE JUICE 5* COFFEE W ith Purchase of Breakfast O ffe rs valid A p ril 15-21.1980 THE GOOD FARMER 2 Eggs, Sausage, Bacon or Ham, Hash Brow ns & W hole Wheat Toast ONLY • • • • M E AKEAST LUNCH OWNER HUNGRY SATBEKRS •1.79 • SALAD RAR • SANDWICHES •sours L _ • S O fT FROZEN yo gurt ¡T ~ ' b i s t " r c c c E p y T H E H E A L T H F U L A LT E R N A T IV E OpsnSAM. 107P.M. •retell AM.to4P.M- Call 966-7133 lo r U M Out 120 East University (In the Arehae) Tem pt. AZ M en's Liberation WITH WARREN FARRELL TIC K ETS AVAILABLE AT M U ACTIVITIES C EN TER (965-MUAB) AND AT TH E DOOR Sponsored by t h e f iQ T Q T | Idea» k Issues Com m ittee W edneeday, A p ril 16,1980 State Preea Page 13 DENTISTRY 20% Courtesy Discount to Students, Faculty and Staff P e rs is te n c e b y c o a c h e s in flu e n c e s n e w S u n D e v il 2>.2).S. M a„ X . o m c i Mount BY AttOWTMtNT t i u m o m M 7 oeea General D entistry asae so u th b u b a l b o a d surra a TCMRC. AB1ZONA 88283 By Dave NeibergaR Remember the aeendal a cou­ ple y ea rs ago regard ing outrageous phone b ills ac­ cum ulated by ASU football players? W hile Mountain B e ll is s till trying to recover its lost fands from that episode, yet another branch of the ASU athletic department is runniag up phooe b ills of its own. And this one goes right up to the tap rung — the coech's office. Yea, Ned W uik is the c u lp rit But the phone ca lls of the Sun D evil basketball coach m ight Just reap same benefits for the D evils. It was the ca lls that W uft and sa riitsn t coach P a u l Howard placed to Dayton, Ohio, that helped ASU sign one of the na­ tion’s most p ro lific high school basketbal l scorers to a national latter of intent last week. Jim Pellard, who averaged 31.0 points a game at Northridgc High School h i Dayton, said the in­ terest and persistence at the ASU coaches convinced him his beat option waa to become a Sun D evil t a r the neat four years. “ Coach Howard ihowsd more interest than anybody sh e and Coach Wufc ca llsd me more than the other head coaches,” he said. “ And their style o f play and their achedals Influenced me.” Howard signed Petierd to the letter and feels he has the poten­ tia l to slop h i and hefe the Sun D evils. "H s is quits a v ersitile player," Howard said. “ H a caa h a n d s the b all, of courae be can scare, but he can da a lo t of a lta r things w ell too, suck as pass the ball. The b o * thing I can say about him is he’s totagy ca n ta ta * . “ H als a w aProm alsd player. Ih e reason ho scored so many points in school was because h t was actually asked to do that fo r Ida h a m I saw Mm phqr in the North B au d high w ho* gams in Canton. Ohio, la * Saturday and he asovod w ell without the b a ll and got tbs b a ll to other peo­ ple.“ contribute to our success,’’ he said. “ He’ll play some — maybe even more than we think He knows there are other players hare. I expect him to come into fats own his sophomore end junior years.” Tbs addition of P o llard w ill give the D evils some added depth a t guard. Starters Lafayette Lever and Byron Scott both are returning. Lever w ill be a junior and Scott e sophomore. • Howard said the addition of P o lla rd could give the D evils the option of playing the bigger guards at a sm all forw ard spot in “ Hn it quite a versatile player. He can handle the bull, of courae hn can acorn, but ha can do a lot of other things wall too, such as peas the ball. The beat thing I can say about Mm la ha's totally consistent.” — Devil assistant •Paul Howard certain situations, such a the team is in ta d troubla. P o lla rd said his fin al decision came down to a choice between RM (ÔXF ASU and Texas. Northern Illinois also recruited him heavily. Po llard is the only recruit the D evils have signed so far, but Howard said ASU hopes to sign two more players to scholarships and that one of those could come very soon — probably in the next day or two. The D evils w ill need a ll the help they can get as next season's schedule ran ks am ong the toughest in the nation. I O .L T ! TGI. Tecate! Tecace Beer imported from Mexico. Do it the Mexican wop straight from the can with lemon and salt. In addition to the ranged Pac-10 schedule, ASU w ill host nonconference games w ith Kansas State and Ohio State and face New M exico an the road. P in al Four particip an t Iowa w ill headline the Fiesta Classic in the A ctivity Center, which w ill abo include Cincinnati and Montana State. Other home non-conference tilts for the D evils w ill be U.S. In­ ternational University of San Diego and Illino is Wesleyan. ASU w ill participate in the Sugar Bowl Tourney in the Superdome at New Orleans w ith Duka, Ten­ nessee and the U niversity of New Orleans. • F o r the firs t tim e in four years, the D evils w ill a * m e * U A in a non-conference gams. The two teams w ill play two Pac-10 con­ tests. mm TECATE 92714 SEIKO W ATCHES Save 10 - 25% LAYAW AY FOR GRADUATION NOW $ e # ru ru p / JEW ELRY & DIAMOND CUTTING 1 3 0 E U N IV E R S IT Y D R IN T H E A R C H E S 967-8« 17 MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOQETV Black Awareness Week April 14- 19 T h u rs d a y W e d n e sd a y S IE R R A C L U B M EETIN G T h u rs., A p ril 17 • 7 p.m . M em orial U n ion P im a Room g218 Everyone W elcom e W isdom Im port Sales C o , Inc Irv in e , C a lifo rn ia F a ir • W est Lawn «11 a.m . A ffirm ative A ctio n Forum 1:00-3:00 * 1 X 0 1 4 5 M ale-Fem ale R e la tio n sh ip Forum C o co n in o Room in M .U . 12:30 p.m . F r id a y S a tu rd a y K appa A lp h a Pai A nnual P ic n ic C h a rle s Lew is Q uintette + O ne Rendezvous Lounge 11:00-1:00 D iscu ss A rizon a Conservation ls a u ts . U pcom ing M ic e , M king M a cch vR ioch u Cad 646-7626 * D aley Park •11:00 a. m. • Concerned Black Students A L P H A PH I A L P H A • D E LT A S IG M A T H E T A - K A P P A A L P H A PSI • O M E G A PSI PHI - S IG M A G A M M A R H O - Z E T A PH I B E T A B L A C K STU D EN T U NIO N 116 o r 666-3254 F o r Inform ation C a ll NM IT PUTS TO HOP! Paid Donations Unlike donating whole blood, plasma Devil -----» * » - ■»* - A A SA ----- 8 _ 88.J S ._ J -A Wf® fM GUMGfli m r W i i —w e w n r___ IM M C H r a l “ He is a very s e a * pt Im m i ver Mesta, Is g Mhnw m g «HSBUM W SJ a n a * t i tiflN G period, that maans added Inoome to you. At prêt­ ent, when you donate ■ M n t G ift h i h donations are paid for, and tinea you are able to donate twice in a seven-day ^^^^^ìSgH ì^IBR^ÌRì you wit! receive $10.99 can asm up to ►vrW, Tl»/, for eaoh donation. You P sg * 14 S tata Praaa W ednesday, A p ril 16,1960 •We have benefited In the adverse publicity at ASU and UA, getting recruits we normally wouldn’t have.” Sporta editor it's theory time around guiit pole The fa ll of the two m ajor col­ lage football coaches in Arizona, P ran k K u rt and Tony M arn i, has been likened to many tilinga, sot the least of which is a thickening plot to get pro sports into the state eia a djeassombUng of col­ legiate sporte, has to rank as the rankoet The organization alone for such a dastardly deed would boggle the mind. Collegiate sports isn’t a ll that sportin g these days, but one thing it is, is w ell entrenched — w hich is why, when it Hoars up, everyone w itM n spitting distance becomes bedeviled at how high it Another theory, which can be seen in juxtaposition with the previous mouthing off, is the media is out to get the heavies in Arizona, Le. Kush and Mason. No need fo r cringing, we’re safe. Another theory, which has more solidification to it than any other, ia rot breeds rot breads rot breeds rot...etc. Looking for the answer to events that have occurred over the past eight months ie not easy. Finding it is twice as tough. We can start by questioning who stands to benefit the most from the ’cleaning' of the football program s and consequently, at le ast hopefully, the e n tire ‘sporting program s’ at the state adversities. Think. Who would reap the harvest from U A and ASU tipping over athletically? If you said Captain Kangaroo, you’re dose, but s till have to wear the day’s dunce cap. If you said possibly N A U might see some gratifica­ tion, you can collect MOO and ad­ vance to Boardw aft. The only problem is the selection of the word gratification. It is doubtful the N AU personel is throwtag ‘keep on truckin' par­ ties every tim e ASU and U A get pinched. What in fact has happened, at least in the football program at NAU, has been a natural-benefit­ reaping syndrome resulting from the troubled waters flowing under the cousdousnoss of decent to ft at ASU and U A The most natural occurrance, has been the N AU football pro­ gram has had some bhiecMp in­ state recruits knocking on its door to got in, and away from the micraacopoa here at a t UA. Head N A U coach D w ain Painter adm its it, he is sitting back and shaking hands with a g ift hone. “ I don't lik e to see what’s hap­ pened to Kush and Mason hap­ pen,” he said, ‘ I t's a tragedy. No coach the caliber of those two should, be forced to leave their jobe.” But adds, “ We have benefited in adverse publicity though. We have had some athletes came here that we norm ally wouldn’t have had, players we recruited but would have probably lost to Arizona or ASU but didn’t. ’ ’ Before you starting gritting your tooth and booking flight to Flag staff to stomp into Painter’s office and demand he return what is rightfully yours, consider the fact that, (1) N AU is not on either the W ildcats’ or Sun D evils’ nr TYPING Term Papers - Theses - Dissertations Statistical - Reasonable Rates One Day Service on Most Work 894-6644 1/3 PR ICE 2nd HA D IM TUNE-UP SPECIAL ¡ NOW 7.95 P lu s F a ria Com pare at 615.00 IN CLU D ES: C om plete lu b rica tio n , ad ju st headset , cran ks and w heal bearings. A d ju st brakes and gears. M in o r w heal truing. E xpiree 4/30/60 jTlÊ CO M 0U TÍ COLLEGE CITY CYGEERY 909 E LEMON, (902)906-0642 TettPC. 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C a ll tor your appointm ent iw t Offer expires April 30.1900 — COUPON--------- I plaaaa I c a ll fo r an I appointm ent T h is m aspsnstvs but vaiusSIc I service Is recom m ended every 4.000 to r.OQO m ltee for m oot vehicle# Included are up to I five quarts o f o il. now o il fitter end a p rofessio n al c h a ssis [ lubrication. Offer expires April 30,1800 I___ ™ ___ -COUPON----- ------- SUMMERIZE YOUR CAR RADIATOR HUSH AND M l $15« - BOOT AUCH. CAM toui^ m *▼’ m <-f> 11 'tr e s t o s i* IStoel Belted COUPON*--------- * SPRING TIME is Bicycling Time r* ♦! « • MONROC-MAT1C SHOCKS »1488 *1255 V‘ In sta llatio n UF TO 1 lb. OF FRKOI MAKS OVERHAUL artery pta arced lining, new freut ce is. raSuM an «hart cylinder* and re i (new«heal cyt 07 each. A needed!. *79* T ir G $ fo n c ask a fria n d ab ou t Fir— tor» M c C tin lo d i It A| • 986-7206 Wedneeday, April 10,1980 State Press Page 15 A tten tio n s fo re ig n C a r O w ners HH IIPTO 70%ON RKYCIIO FOMMNMITOMITI MO taWMFN MONSA MINN TOYOTA.YW mm*OTMTRS A U M odels F o re ig n 243-3291 SOMM. Mtk ItrM) Pha. 1—rSSWi • IWm*rl • M»n*l»« mtrnaOlfOl m mmééitlmmt*SKmttt MUNCH OUT TIME 99° 2 P.M. - 5 P.M. ALL DAY WEEKENDS ‘•‘•BMP- s i. V H Jw&r | i “* sawperns>tenriwMii PINT O F OUR NUTRITIOUS SO FT FROZEN YOGURT. R EG . PRICE $1.85 WINNEM OF FRU LUNCH • BREAKFAST IN ANNOUNCEMENTS OF CLASSIFIED AO SECTION Ex-ASU quarterback Mark Melees wasn't en the field Saturday ler the annual Maroon and OeM ■CTtonwsQi. Metene, shewn here In last year's pains opalnel Calltorwle, is awaiting the Medenel Peotball League draft lator this month. Bleachers show Malone new view o f Sun Devils By Jfan W aders M a rt Malone has been the starting quarterback for the Sun D evils the pest four years, but this year ho finds hiwwolf in a new ro le — spectator. Whan the DetrUs jutted up for the annual Maroon and Gold game, Malone was on the sidelines, away from the action. No longor would he haveto pick his way through the defense and suffer the humps and bruises of being knocked to the ground. IM s tim e around, Malone could Just s it back and enjoy the weather without the threat of be* tag tackled. B u t once a quarterback, alw ays a quarterback. "The D evils looked good out there and the offense is wide open," bo said. "Coach (D arryl) Rogers is a knowledgeable coach and I’m haprooaad w ith the p ro frsm M s staff and loam have six months and ere off six months, so there is more tim e to recuperate. He is in good shape and w ifi have to stay that way if he wants to make it through a season without injuries. In recent years the defensive players are getting bigger and quicker, and a quarterback is more vulnerable to injury. One tackle and the season can be ~u $2.00 D IS C O U N T O FF T H E S E R EG U LA R PRICES M an's C u t $ 8.00 B lo w Dry $10.00 W om an’s C u t $10.90 B lo w Dry, Iron $12.50 aCoHSMlRARrMNooSoe. C oupon oxplroo A p ril 21. im o W o Uoo « M R io r u ms wi< d ra ft i am p ro k rtfr going to ha aaitharetea pmatelmy t go to the first rsuaA" ha "Bsstealy fi to a watting It to a wefiteg Matent N et sitting armed teme Ipicks Mm I*. Ms has H ug' * J L I I II* E. UNIVERSITY TH E H A K K A M P IN T H E A R C H E S M on .-Fri. 0:30-5:30 Sat. 0 00-3:00 U N IS E X .S A L O N Shampoo Sat* os.ss FROZEN YOGURT TH E H E A LT H F U L A LTER N A TIV E O pw iB A M . 107 P.M . »11 A M . 104P.M . C all 985*7133 for take out 120 East University (In Hie Arches) Tempe. AZ BIRO'S RECORO EXCHANGE 111 E University C o rn e r o f U n iv e rsity & M y rtle In T ow er C e n te r WE BUY, SELL AND TRADE RNE QUALITY USED RECORDS ■v AND CASSETTES I 966-4158 sia.it «son IS ' I 1 V O P EN J^ N D W ^ S W TJR ^ Y IM WEDNESDAY NIGHT BEER BASH W ednesday Nights 9 - 1 2 Ladies W ine Coolers 25« Ladies Beer 15* J U M P E ,aw il . ... and I have to be prepared to do tbs batti sea," b e s s M ’l rusty don't cars whet play for.” With a 18-week regular fachte Mm la the pres, Hw possibility “ “f tf ‘ playsff games, pre bail takes a different ester thee Me 9ÉMr ! I ★ R ED K EN 900*3110 I P sn u a a oS C u ts S3S.SS I 1 I AM C u ts loelud* Shorn*** ■a fü S T F O G C E K ^ y over, not to mention a career. " I don’t think about the injury factor," he said. "When you start w orrying about injuries is when I you get hurt." Malone isn’t worried about ad­ justing to pro bah. "I im agine the game is played a little bit differently up there, but that’s what a rookie needs to le arn ," he said. ‘ T m Just looking forw ard to playing the fam e " The offbeat is basically s pass­ ing offsane out of a m ultiple pro "I would have likodtoheve run thin offense, from a passing standpoint, white I was playing," he said, "but that'll the way things go sometimes. " M akne is gearing him self for prebatt, but be s t u fe tta twinge when the D evils took the fie ld eu Saturday. "A fte r playing h a rt four years it was kind of straags not haieg h i the game, but I Just teal I am m aking a move «p to a higher level of football.” M ile n a h tearing ASU to try bin luck in the upcoming National F o o tb a l LaagM draft. Ha wants ta play prafmateaat b a ll sad has • SALAD BAR • SANDWICHES •SOUPS tttaftttMlÉIVMS "It’s e grind, but It Is a grind« ■varybady»" fi» said. "W t ptey LADES NIGHT EVERY TUESDAY GUYS' SPECIAL 9-12 25* B e e rs & $1.75 P itch ers HAPPY HOUR M O N D A Y-FRDAY 4 -7 25* B e e rs 0 - CLOSE 933 East University (In Tampa Town Plaza) 966-2508 25* Beers *175 Pitchers Pag* 16 Stata Prasa Wednesday, A pril 16,1960 PRE-LAW CLUB MEETING April 16 • 4 p.m. Room 145 • Law College G uest Speakeri “Duke” Lieurance A tto rn e y a t L aw All students invited ■fUR Sun DuvN InfleMer Kan Hants ghm a young playar aoma hitting Hpa bafora Saturday’» CalHomla. ASU atagad a clinic for Nttla laaguara — the Sun Davila of the futura. S u n D e v ils o f th e fu tu re s h o w s tu ff in P a c k a rd By J lu W allers Once a year head coach Jim Brock, M s staff and Three hours before the fin al ASU-Cal game was players get together w ith die L ittle Leaguers to to get under way, the atando were fille d with give them some tips on hitting and fielding. The several hundred scream ing fans. youngsters get to work w ith the players and get They were earlier than moat crowds, but in a ll about as dose to a big-tim e ballplayer as moot of other respects they were typical fans. They wore them have ever been. baseball caps, tee-shirts and carried gloves. The youngsters were sp lit up into goups, by The only difference was the c rowd was a little position, and given a chance to learn how the big younger than average — t to 13-year olds to be boys play the game. exact. Bob F e rris and A lv in D avis worked w ith the The youngsters were at Packard Stadium for the 3rd Annual L ittle League D ay. iosaoaot* 3aaaocaa»»%%«.«3» K nn»%%n.WMH— o p b A Career for N O W and the FUTURE M ED IC A L A SSISTA N T Thursday * College Night * ★ *BEER & FO OTLO NG Hot Dog ..........................$1.00 •Actual U FO footage on 3 G iant Screens R ES PIR A TO R Y T H E R A P Y •A M A accredited RT Program •Approved for Veterans * Boaaa •Student loans and grants available. BIOSYSTEMS INSTITUTE Uthen our products and services you neea aUfcogether in locatioiL So you can up new telephones, oMones for different styles or colors,or evwi repair needs taken care of. But there’s an even better reasoc Center Store-you save money.If your I modularjacks, you can save on instaflat ’’ ip your «ctewsw« phones at the >the next timeyoirte out shoppin to your nearest PhoneCenter styles and savings. Mountain B el Ceil 244-6301 2626 E . U n ive rsity D r., P h o e n ix 66034 sate. (Q A. See Tuesday’s ArtCarved ad. aBBBOPM Archers enter state outdoors The ASU archery represen­ tatives to the U.S. Intercollegiate Championships w ill be decided Saturday, when the D evils com­ pete in the Arizona Outdoor Inter­ collegiate Cham pionships in Phoenix. Other teams in the Arizona meet w ill be Scottsdale Com­ m unity College, Pim a Communi­ ty College, Navajo Community College, Glendale Community College and Phoenix College. A SU beat C a l State-Los Angeles to defend their men’s, wom en’s and m ixed team Southwest titles in Tucson. Tom Stevenson was the men’s titlist and Robin Wools took the women’s division Q. How can you get a FREE gold ring without getting m arried, riding a carousel, or doing something you wouldn’t want your mother to know? YOU W ONT BELIEVE YOUR EYES A FUTURISTIC EXPERIEN CE •Videotaped Beetles concert in stereophonic sound •Electronic Lounge •PLU S LO TS M O RE * LIVE COMEDY EVERY W EEKEND NEVER 4125 N. 7th St. A Restaurant - Lounge 277-1026_________ CO VER________ of the Future W ednesday, A pril 16,1900 State P re ss Page 17 M ora about W ill g u ilty p a rty p le a s e , s ta n d b y schedule, (3) Painter la only in Ms second year a t N AU , And Is having re c ru itin g -tra n sitio n prebiams of Ms own, and could use a break today, (S) Both ASU and U A are guilty'until proven in­ nocent and deserv s' everything they don’t g e t Painter took over for Joe Salem last aeasoo, and anytim e a new c o a c h co m es a lo n g , th e recruiting suffers. "Y e n lose continuity in the pro­ gram aa fa r as recruits are con­ cerned when you c h a ig t,” Painter said. “ I Imagine there has been the same problem at ASU, and we had it when Salem to ft” So Painter naturally is ridtag on die wave of die k ille r ink; and would b a a clula if he dtete’L No one in th eir righ t mind would ask M m to give any tap recru it return ticket to the V a lle y o r tu e son ju st because ha sympathises w ith M s colleagues. But what of Painter, and his program and N AU ’s athletic department. Although there are beanies coming their way, the size of the quake that shook ASU and U A had to be fe lt in the Lum berjacks’ shirt. “ I don’t feel any pressure,’ ’ Painter said. “ We aren’t of the magnitude of ASU or U A . In fact, we’re looking for more support and media coverage. We would lik e to see people realise that we have problem s here also.” Painter points specifically to T itle IX and a sagging economy as two m ain reasons for Ms pro­ gram being cutback. He says state cutbacks has affected several areas, in part icular recruiting, where the uaa of state cars to get recruits to the univer­ sity has been sharply cut back. A lth au fli there are problem s at N A U , as there probably are at every university in the country trying to build a successful athletic program , the problem s aren't of the same ctaaptexion as the ones .that have drubbed the two lower schools (in prad m ity only). \ . *V “ Our media is supportive of our program here,” Pain ter said, “ and we keep the ham open to them. A ll of our coaches work w ell with the m edia people and we are looking for mere coverage a ll the tim e.’’ A football coach asking for m ere coverage? O u t there be such a thing aa ae four of the press — la A riam a — a t a t e a Hka this? I guam it m ight depend on bow h ill your dance card is. "W e've (N A tT s adm inistration and athletic department) had msstingn, aa wo always do, to go over the rules, what we’ve done and keep abreast of the situation in our departments,’’ Painter said. A school that keeps abreast of its own situation, a novel ktea. Back to the advantages. A halo, of course. Now, it happens, the A risons Board of ftagonta m it e in ­ vestigate, or probe, w hich could be worse, the financial situs ties of the state’s T H R U univer­ sities They are going to exam ine the entire p re « a m a t each school, fin an cially, academ icalJy £ |g pre-disaster. It’s Ilka trying to revive a suicide case after watchteg them Jump from M L McKiirieyProbes, investigations, lookate, m ic rosco p ic disections, whatever you have,- its a l in­ tended to sweep up what the media has put in the sbrodsr. It has come down to a salvage Jab at ASU and U A , and now N AU is Betting the backwash. But if what Painter says is trus, N AU should have no w orry about whiplash. It is unfortunate that men the «-■wtur gf K l*»h and Mason, whatever ca lib e r they be, had to be forced out of their positions. They should have had a bigger fanfare, lik e w alking out in the m iddle of the Rose Bowl or ssn u tea g . But then again, the d runder which each sore aqueoaed to death didn’t w arrant a ticke r tape parade either. Mason’s g u ilt is self-evident, Kush’s to s till being subjected to objectivity. W hatever comes forth from the next few months, or however long it takes to mine sweep the state, it can be assured that P a in te r’s position w ill probably be the hottest action in town, o r state. It’s unfortunate that rot doss actually beget rot, and that the spread o f bug spray could d rift in­ to the pines of Flag. Gensralittas about football pro­ gram s in p a rticu lar and athletic program s overall are running ram pant. Although no mobs have been formed, astute students acad em ically p ro ficie n t are pointing the perverbial finger of fate and w ishing the probe teams w ell, and they are taking collec­ tions to provide round trip fare to Flag. It’s doubtful the trip w ill be worth it, but Painter and Ms department w ill probably coffee and donuts. Sun Devils sign women cagers Shooting baskets and putting obota are not exactly what you expect your average high school senior to do for a college education, but ASU women’s basketball coach Juliene Sim p­ son has signed a high schooler who apparently can do both. Kym Hampton, a 0-foot-l center-forward from Iroquis High School, Louisville, Ky. has signed a national-letter-of-intent w ith ASU. Hampton averaged 17.1 points and IS rebounds per game during her high school career and was an All-State selection the last three years. She won the Kentucky state shot put fin al last «Pring._________________________ "K y m w ill probably pick up our inside game trem endously," Simpson said. Along with Hampton, Simpson signed three other players: Shawn Sm ith, a 5-foot-11 for­ ward from Howard College; Lynn Christensen, a S-foot-3 center, Detroit Lakes. Minn., and Anne Brinkm an, S-foot-S guard, Oceanside C ity, N .J. Christensen made All-State at Detroit Lakes High School on the strength of her 17 point, 17 rebound averages. She was tabbed as one of the five best players in Minnesota. Gay Academic Union and ASASU Special Events Present H O M O SEX U A LITIES An O verview D r . A l a n B e ll Senior Research Psychologist. National Institute for Sex Research Co-Author of Homosexualities: A Study of Diversity Among Men and Women. Thursday, April 17, 1980 8:00 pm Arizona Room Memorial Union $2.00 general $1.00 with ASU I.D. HAPPY HOUR 4 to 7 45* Beers • 65* Well Drinks *2.20 Pitchers REMEMBER O u r 2 for 1 Special on Tim's B.B.Q . Ribs F u ll Pound o f Riba — Frias — Toast — — C o la Slaw — Rag. 13.95 — Monday thru Friday 11 a.m. - 8 p.m. EXPIRES A pril 21,1960 The situation at N AU la la a Open 11 am-1 am daily 1123 S. Rural Road (Across from ASU) 968-0243 Pag* 18 Stata Praas Wednesday, A pril 16,1980 Devils make splash at AAUs; Dollaghan advances to finals B y Charlie M as Some people m ight abject to be­ ing e ll wet, bat at the Am ateur Athletic Union meet A p ril 10-12, M ik e B ru n e r and se ve ra l members of A SU ’s women’s swim m ing team spent their time, when they weren’t drying out, winning or placing hi^i. Bruner, a Methusela of sorts in the swim m ing w orld at age 33, won three events and came in third in another to key the ASU contingent. In addition to Bruner’s efforts, freshman Andy Astbury from England set a B ritish record and the D evils recorded four top ten finishes. A S U ’s W estern C o lle g ia te Athletic Association one-meter d iv in g c h a m p io n , T r ic ia Dollaghan, finished third in a field of 40 in the one-meter at the Western Regional but did not qualify in the three-meter board. The United States champion­ ships, to be held Wetkieeday through Saturday in Milwaukee, Wise., features die top five divers in the one and three-meter events. "O b v io u s ly ," B ill Rose, women’s swim conch said, “ the “Obviously, tlw highlight of tho AAU was Bronsr. (His swimming) probably ratsd as on# of tho finost performances aver.” — Ross highlite of the A A U was Bruner. H is performance probably rated as one of the finest ever.” Rose said Bruner’s perform ­ ance was rem arkable because of his advanced age, for a sw im ­ mer, and the fact his wins were a ll in long distance events. Bruner, who has been training with the Sun Davila for the past year, won the 200-meter butterfly in 1:50.7, Just short of his 1:50.23 world record. Bruner took the 800-meters in 8:03.4 and then came on to beat B rian Goddel in the 400-meter freestyle w ith a tim e of 4:52.2, leas than a second off the world r ecord and the third fastest recorded tim e in history. Bruner fe ll off his winning ways in the men’s indlvdual medley, finishing third in 15.19.7 Anne Gagnon, Association for Intercollegiate A th le tics fo r “Obviously, tho high­ light of tho AAU wss Brunor. (His swimming) probsbty ratsd as ons of tho finest performance s aver.” — Ross Women 100 and 200-m eter breaststroke champion, finished fifth in the 200 w ith a tim e of 2:37.2 Astbury finished sixth in the 400-meter freestyle in 0:57.0 then finished eight in the 1500-meter freestyle, setting the Britieh record in that event w ith a tim e ef 0:13.2 Another freshman. Cam Raid, finished seventh in the 400individual medley w ith a tim e of 4:31.2 Meg Hoeflich took third in the consolation bracket and tenth o v e ra ll ia the 200-mater backstroke with a 8:10 and tenth in the 100-meter backstroke w ith a tim e of 1:50. Tlw Sun D evil women ’s team fioMhod the yonr wtth' a 0 4 dual meet record, w ith Mm three leases com ing at tlw hands and Ana of USC, Tosao and Stanford. The Devilo finished second to the Trojaat ia the W CAA and finished fifth in Mw A iA W cham ­ pionships behind Stanford, Tax- as, USC and Florida. ASU also had seven A llAm ericans. They were: A llison Grant; Gagnon; G a il Amundrud; K a th y S h ip m a n ; C o rrin a W einkofsky; H o e flich and Dollaghan. In addition to Gagnon’s firs t HOT C A R ? place finishes, the IQS meter freestyle relay team, r m oisting of Gagnon, Weinkoaky, Amun­ drud and Hoeflich set a natioal record in that event. Weinkoaky set three distance records and Shipman two in the 500 and 100-m etcr butterfly Tuesday, instead of reading the ArtCarved ad, you can steam wallpaper off a friend’s apart­ ment w alls and use it to make flim sy lampshades, but you 'll never win a free gold ring or one of 999 other prizes that way. C L A S S I C G L A S S TI NTI NG 15% O F F With This Ad Car's T ru ck s Vans FIREBIRD CAMARO 1711 E A S T A P A C H E TRAMS A M Wednesday, April 18,1960 State Preea Page 19 M o n about . . . hava an audience of 160,000 people a weak. Devils help youngsters T first basemen showing the ymiagrtars how te stay down hi A nnomicèmwntg front of the ball aad keep their ECKAM KAR From heads up.. " April Kan«« Freedom and Six rows of about U youngsters i7 .n u .w m followed along as Parris went TOM A M M O thanks a» Ma laval M a u auprarato I — p u n ir a wnw »aarwiy, to * am m s nI m g a n o m m y y through the moves. tttaf m ag i ftiig campaign g gtiocwM. Your oare . “ I eq)oy working with kids and wy camnd lmtoil la ASU they seem to have a lot of fun,” Perris sakl. win n e r s o r ow Par You The rest of the team showed the M aga ara Tao» , Danny kids their specialities. Mike Sodden was throwing WINNO W O F d ie Good For Van tree Hinch grounders to the third baeomen iottary a rt Kathy Kalaar, Judy C lamaan, Krta and the pitchers were in the Floor. bullpen hroidng out deliveries. G RAM O O PEN IN G There was activity going on aD Ut» U ta h Haw * ever the field and it was hard to c m e la w dry tell who was having more fun, the 134SE. Agnato Uhd. B ayte w S to p p in ai Contar (C lo w lo ASU ) kids or the player». “ I’ve done this before and 1 •D ry wW i each waah really apjoy It,” said Davis. “We •eoa oI dotorgent w aaoh euatomar. “ O ffer pood th ru F rIO a r,A d d t it h didn’t have anything like this in Csllfonda and its rise to get to knew the Little Leaguers." Catcher Steve Bonccre agreed Automobttog with Davis and added he wouldn’t COUGAR, 1C70, runs gm d, pood rubber, must mind doing something like this add. Want M S», M odd negotiate. C M Val, with youngsten during the sum­ cssota»____________________ mer. l« w F o n o PAIRLAHE. d ip i" dW N. ctocn. aaDuring batting practice Sod­ ctotont trancporttolon. *TM.- Oad 8*74357. den' was the hero of the cr owd. S M ._________________________________________ The kids oowed aad aahed as Sod­ LO O KS SAD. runa sreet. t» M Dodge Coronal, A cy l., go anyodw ol *220 o r alM r. Mark, S W d en seat the ball over the fence. Sodden Just smiled as his toammmatas Joined in the 1*77 M A V SN CK. g t a l condition, 2-door, A ByL.FM .aaM . «M O STI o r S4 M 1 M ,________ chssn. 1*71 PLYMOUTH OUSTER, graan, »door, The Idds ware having a g n a t m p n v w wi wacwTiwn* conunion. moving, mtiwi time, but what day at the ball park would be complete without getting autographs. » m «» Brock didn’t diasapoint B o o t e it s kids, an be announced there m te an hair. A ll the normal rhattor rumbled through the dugsut as the Little I aagwon swarmed teward ith olr targets. “ WBl you alga my baseball?" “What page a n you on?" " A n you the quarterback?" During the session, the plnyon learned tesse the seuvsnlor program inaaow lighL (■Hold* LeeLaSala staked eut a spat la the dugsut and sifted programs, hasohafls, baseball saps, legal-aised papen aad anything that the little guys broutfithisway. “ Page ss,” he said, as everyone loafed through thofar program looking far the page with Ms picture su it “ 1 think 1H nm sm hor I was oa hags SI lo r the r u t of my M e,” I alula said Kevia D it e was aumuadad by programa and pane and he Just stood than — ****g and shaking Ma head. “Aad that la what Lima I segna Day la a l about, ” Brook said. ì l a a m a to wtoto w do wKh boato to Hand*. F»r suoMy ohMh and i (no taaihoaha, pMaaal. Wa pay'30% of Mo grtaa in oaah gr SS% in e ra « orMob mag ha w gd M M dwMrw.~ Dtma-A«Unt I -a# n o u s a s aa n ip a a u s , p e ts ,r aatawl \ jraM an uauunnr ua n ar H a lp W o n te d P oommata Wontdd NEED EXTRA eatot? Wa naad ovar 300 poopto lo work a l homa to their ip a ra tlma. Cam 1100 M »290 woekly part Urn , Bonus M ftrat hundrad raaponaas. For Inlom iallan, plaasa aond t a ll addraaaad. atam pad envelope to: Johnoon and Hart Co.. F.O. Boa issio -B . L A , OA8MI»_________________________ FEM ALE NON-SMOKER. pooL Odm le room. M ealy fundahad. 4148/month and to »Metri c C«d EW OmT. Uauady homa altorO JO pjh . NEED YOUNG adult» or a ludanH lo r olMea anoror gantrai w o fi. m f •now._______ ______ M ALE OR tomato In tum totod houaa with pool. 3140 monthly phi» ututttoo. Cad 0EP4IE7 s ta r 9 p.m._____________________________ U I U I a. — w il l or ony portion. Eaceltont retorencoe. Tompo o ra a .C o a so ta a ra .« g n » M o rg g » T ia d 1»Tt MOPSO, FSUQSUT, 1JO S m too. *380 or bool oHor. Can Barb ara. MS-1283, or noma, m n e ____________________ tw o TOYOTA CO RO LLA M i a epoed, oMrao, romombto aonroal, luggaga rack, good Moo, 24-34 mpg. 41,718. T in y , M S td M w **bdw »»4p.m .,w *»tond»»am .4p.m . Bor Rtnt/ltQM 3 SEOROOM HOUSE, n w . Mountain «Mm. landaeapad golf, awbnmtnp. tonnt* l AOOr month. Ahwehikoo. 33»3340______________ NEW TOW NHOUSE lo r rani. Tampa 2^rawAwrara^ra rararn ram r a t m u i r a i-oatn. fb bui^A»« Storaraw oooroom ana non or ia^ Daoroom, now* ra — n I , , | a a ^ ^ k r a 4d i ^ r a a •OINnOvVw rTgnPy. ^fgmtW^gygf| «ra»w4m,^ra4 rwVTiyOTWraw wIO», patio, pooL otorogo, corpo ri ond more. C om COMOCL e m s o s - im »»Mfmonm._________ O N E ANO TWO badroam, M 3» and up, part u td ltta paid. Furntohod. n w manogtmam . 9S7-M44. »grantor rated.__________________ STUDIO FO R rent. »300 pkia ullMltoa. noor A » U ,w tltinroplae«. Cad»M -3M 7attor0p.m . You won't be Bored! PART-TIME SALES. Earn »1004300 par .0wmORIvasO TO P»an».iwih»l» arsa «ndto Unto» weak. Split gap and driving. Oad Slwm, 8»7 SSI FOOT MMatatwa.»SS'S»SSm44S4T. , Tl S k Tam t a i»» k with Ooiby. »quaHitoton and tblaa. H cyclea tllM MO INTERNATIONAL tS a g sid Uftto ma. EW». Jtm, batam »11 p-m. 8E7-ldE7. D IM E -A -L IN E .T S Â rrc ty js OPPORTUN ITY M r SEW INO M A C H IN E , P isa A tm , nov sr tread. TIBS, bast m odal, atm hi carton. F u ll o itttn a l guarantw . D o ss avarythhtg . C oat S4SS, m u it sa crifica . S i86. I algo have th# beautiful cabinet that cam» with H. Privata Hom a. *46-2127. - SfS banafN*. 8to 17» T yping M o to rc y c to » At C Z JAW A ITS. E » cia tm matown lc« l and phyatoal eandltton. 1,200 ndtaa. IM O , CaR Otoktoy.WT ACCURACY » Portonol AVOW) TWE preptaad mMttafy SmH only togto wap. Pud datant and p icg wm ESSO. 14» BM N nf Orto», Sdogar. M l 04401. CERTtPtt O ANO tetoag couple tasking raraag ra^^raan^toMMÉ arato Iraml mmmom *o .a m u i pe » Mae. Oa» Panah MS »IM. tor toam tototmo. tMa. ______ CHEAP AUTO repair. Tonoogi i »m e si» o u t s m *» m dftgbtto gudtwwa. Ratto! EMP.0S. aaorlfloaforSISOOO. »40-170S GOOD STUDENTS »am M X on Aula btautoaea. Nenamobar guabty saw it « . Oa» SM ta SM 14BA M l WM , F tornar» m utta nt BETTER THAN typing, «rapt» your mean tL oomputattaad word paw pOSSSni. gtou wtoL IwTIVw arato toni N ^ranMM ate. Also I uee; w wdt tram, better mtee. At The wmtmg C»ntar(T8Q.»g*4M4_________________ CUSTOM TYPING. Near ASU, M» E. Btoboa, readway and bautham, off Cottage. _____ I.__________________________ POUR B Typing tanto». »3»M U , aak tar FACfT For PH O TO CRAPH Y P iiL Help W nnte BO YOU MM muon, or |aM »matto» a MIT Sa- 9 5 2 -0 8 8 9 ag» I wasbe. Oaa amn- r S L i r j Bvgmmoto Wonted DRIVE CARS FR S M a g F ila ta B A A . I.C .C . must as t i SCHEMI. OiWIAWAY 801-5533 I tonglaa ar asuptoa, part-time arttoltbwakWaMMMea,M»fSW_______ 1M o ria . Goad accureH typist, vary GRADUATE I XPERTIBE taHcna. thaaaa, raaaarch papere. W iaItty you a seed borne. Ctot TO I icam ay taatow anim antw . GRADUATE PREFERRED LIFE ELECTROLYSIS. MONEY, own baa*, proto* »kmattom A fu lfillin g caraor. Permanent hMr ram owL 4 w»«k courts. Arizona Inttltut» of Etoc trotyato, »49-4248.___________________ NEVI C l WOK oat my Sanato AU-717 amp. Snad aow aad am m arata. Otot Mr apasMea- R O CQ U E A M A Y A presents; S trv te ts , BEAU TIFU L O LD -F ASM IO N IO wadBIng iBe M n ì b ì , BtBB to. 999 or 9 b b i Of’ Call 831-2887 TWO ROOMMATES wanted. Mato or tomato lo M ar* »bedroom houo* to mu» from ASU. 3190 pka* to utMIttoa. F ancod back yard, fra» wotar, qutot area. CaM Randy. ISO 127». A»aBMIaMay33.________________________ P o r lo t o CH AN Q IN Q H A N D S BO O KSTO R E WEDDINGS DICK C A M E R O N SERIOUS STUOENT8 »Kara tow nhouw, lncludm utlHtto*. pool, phone, privacy. TV, ■torso. MeaafTompe. Mato or tomato. »180 par m enlh. «34 0 4 » M la rfca a ________________ rara^^^ratawta HItara R-irOSQ, S m n»r1 I^w, h it mvUU. ib is P*wvwwWutaU. IM fwvmmm Im t r u c f lw i Opening emnbtgeuntM 8 p.m. h h O y i I fc m o m i Sondwa i b * s > MBjMOM ROOMMATE WANTED. FOOL woMiar. dryor, dl»hw»h»r. 2.5 rnNas from ASU. »170 and to uftWhoo. 0 4 1 - 3 4 0 4 . ________________ YOUR INCOME TAXES piapatod by a young ans IP T ILaS LA N C W OOOctortnsL seno» Aam n OWN SEOROOM. 1to mltos to ASU. BoautHully fumfahad. me washer, dryer, dH hwoohor and accra» to large pooL *l40fm onth and •hare uMMtlse. Am , 904-2047 days, 908-5200 •m nlngeandw M kend»__________________ 7318,1 • M ib S U g a d Boote •Art M nta S PooMro «M FEM ALE TO M iara 20»4rcom a p t Firaptoea, poaL «aorta. »170 and to utMttim Earn Thamaa-OESOW tama.__________________ N A V t YOUR tan* papers ly. O to lbandre. 88MC73.1 TYPINQ: WM Eolactnc. Rush )oaa aoaaptas. PSMALB. ito ta ta ham u mpm , E t i twdtoa ocadmam a»S> pw L SfM par mantb. Nana» to Panto, Ì474M1. Mee,atl4TM G A raM ra U f r a . l r a t o Mans, »4M ta» TYPSIG ESRVtC t. aauBtTi Wid»4toatn4tyaa»wtt4r. Ktotor.M1477» SUMMER WORK m- Tan mar» Earn $4800.00 and gain valuablo rafaranoa for Sfagliala School or futura amploymant. MM» A8B201Q. 8ummar Otvialoo Today, Wadnaaday, April 10th • 1:30 and 3:30 p.m . A Tlmaa-MIrror Subaidiary 4/IS ^J!^9BSM^raifiiSSfiSEMHfiS!9Lwfiranra^raSMwi t y p in g . PAST, t u t a » Otot CONSUMER SERVICES HGHTS INFLATION .Student Discount Program • Now AvailableDISTRIBUTION CEN TERS: •Memorial Union Information Desk •ASU Dormitories •Consumer Services Office - MU 208J •Engineering Center TYPES O F BUSINESSES A N D •Sports Equipment •Car Supply and Repair •Hair Care •Mexican Food •Clothes •Audio Equipment and Repair •Photography Processing •Medieal/Dental Services •Musical Supplies ►Roller Skates ►Yard Goods ►Art Supplies »Copying Service •Mopeds •Bicycles •Restaurants •Furniture Consumer Services Dep’t. Memorial Union Room 206J »Books •Shoes •Rowers ►Prescriptions ►Liquor ►Motorcycles Directors: Andy Molloy Ellen MacFaiiand Phon» 965-1249 or 965-3161