PO tu e sd a y Vol. 63 No. press February 3, 1981 Arizona State University Tempe. Arizona i Copyright. State Presa, 1981 Kush responds to charges in trial By Je ff Sellers Form er ASU football Malone at a Camp Tontozona coach Frank Kush took the scrimmage in which Malone witness stand for the first was marked "hands-off" by time Monday to respond to a colored jersey. Rutledge charges of alleged physical said he tackled Malone, who and verbal abuse of former was recovering from an in­ ASU punter Kevin Rutledge jury at the time, at assistant that sparked the player’s coach Bill Maskill’s in­ structions. $2.2 million lawsuit. Rutledge, who now attends Giving terse answers to cross-exam ination from the University of Nevada/Rutledge’s attorney, Robert Las Vegas, is suing Kush, 0. Hing, Kush said he did not Maskill and others. The recall calling Rutledge a lawsuit charges Kush punch­ “ pussy’ ’ and a “ gutless son- ed and defamed Rutledge, of-a-bitch” at a 1978 Camp and conspired with others to harass the punter into Tontozona practice. “ I may have called him forfeiting his scholarship. R u tle d g e sa id K ush the first, sir, ” Kush said. his punting ‘"Gutless,’ I don’t think I criticized repeatedly and grabbed his called him that.’’ Rutledge testified earlier face mask “ as many as 10 Monday Kush used the in­ times" in the days leading sulting language after up to the 1978 football game Rutledge tackled former against the University of ASU quarterback Mark Washington, when Kush Frank Kush allegedly punched him In response, Kush testified he had no specific recollec­ tion of slapping helmets or shaking face masks at Camp Tontozona in 1978. He added such action was neither unusual nor uncom­ mon. " I ’m sure I did,” he said, “ many times ." Asked when he would slap and shake players’ helmets, Kush said he would be more “ lenient” and “ show more compassion” to freshmen and sophomores, because he expected more of up­ perclassmen. Rutledge was a sophomore in 1978. Leveling his eyes at Rutledge, Kush denied he had discussed with the punter the chance of red shirting him (extending eligibility to play) during the 1978 season. “ He would not have (asked for a redshirt)," Kush said "H e was our No. 1 punter ” Kush said as a freshman Rutledge "was a pretty good kid," but he came to Camp Tontozona in 1978 with a “ lack of concentration, a lack of (physical) prépara tion, and a lackadaisical at­ titude.’’ Rutledge testified earlier Kush told him ASU had no fo o tb a ll s c h o la r sh ip s available his freshman year Kush testified ASU had no scholarships for freshman punters, but added he wasn t sure what he had told R u t le d g e about th e availability of scholarships “ I don’t know what I told Mr. Rutledge. I just told you what my policy was,” Kush said in court. Businesses oppose 'direct competition' could force cutbacks at ASU bookstore By Gaye Gould A bill just introduced in the state Legislature could cut back operations of A SU ’s bookstore, solar energy program, costume department and several other “ non-educational areas, the University’s community relations director said Monday. Dr. Brent W. Brown said if the House bill passes, the three state university bookstores only may be allowed to sell course books and supplies. The proposal is designed to prohibit government agencies and state institutions from supplying goods and services that are offered through private enterprise, unless otherwise authorized by statute. HB 2148, sponsored by 19 representatives and 2 senators. probably will be heard in the Government Operations and Commerce committees next week. In three separate testimonies before the Private Enter­ prise Review Commission, which drafted the bill in December, various local businesspeople have said ASU and other government agencies are operating in direct competi­ tion with their businesses. Claudelle Bailey, ASU ’s assistant director of community relations, said if the bill passes, "In essence, we (the Univer­ sity) will not be able to do anything which private enterprise can do for us, other than housing, food service or selling items connected with academic training.” The MU bookstore probably will suffer the most, Bailey said. It will still be able to sell textbooks and insignia items, but probably not gift items or cards. Brown said if the bookstore cannot sell non-educational items, textbook prices might have to be increased. Edward M. Hickcox, ASU auxiliary services director, said he would not comment on the bill until he knows exactly how the legislation will affect the bookstore. George Cunningham, a UA assistant vice president, said the UA bookstore needs to sell non-educational items to break even. In testimony to the commission, he said that 76 percent and 71.4 percent of the items sold respectively by the ASU and UA continued page 10 ASU presents $10,000 award to hero Lopez ASU has presented former hostage Marine Sgt. Jam es Michael Lopez with a Stu­ dent Leader Scholarship worth roughly $10,000. The award includes money for tuition, books and residence hall room and board for a four-year period. The letter, dated Ja n . 27 from George F . Hamm, vice president of student affairs, says the scholarship is in recognition of the leader­ s h ip , co u rage an d outstanding patriotism demonstrated by Lopez dur­ ing the 14*2 months he was held hostage in Iran. I Jimmy Lopez salutes the crowd who attended the parade for him in Phoenix Sunday. Gov. Bruce Babbitt, who praised Lopez Ptioto by Jodi Summara for his “gallantry,” presented him with the Arizona Medal of Valor before the 40,000 well-wishers. Page 2 Stata Press Tuesday, February 3,1981 n e w s briefs m y n iR S fro m th e A s s o c ia te d Press NEW APARTMENTS 1 - 2 - 3 BEDROOMS SOVIETS STUNG BY U.S. CRITICISM AUTO W ORKERS RATIFY CH R Y SL E R CONCESSIONS D E T R O IT — United Auto Worker* union member* voted by a 3 to 2 margin to ratify contract concession* to struggling Chrysler Corp. that will give them a 13 percent pay cut, the union announced Monday. UAW vice president Mark Stepp, in charge of the union's Chrysler affairs, said 26,942 members voted for the third round of concessions and 18,859 voted against, clearing the way for the company to receive $400 million in government loan guarantees if Chrysler's lenders approve sacrifices asked of them. AND UP 24-Hr, Guarded Security Gate MOSCOW — The Soviet Union has been severely stung by Reagan administration claims that the Kremlin is in league with international terrorists and has struck back angrily at what it calls an “ anti-Soviet campaign” in the United States. Senior Western diplomats here said Monday that Soviet officials have dispensed with any idea they might have had about extending a "honeymoon" period to the new foreign policy team in Washington. 1216 E. Vleta Del Cerro Tempe 966-6729 «—»*«•« • ■»—— M EXICO S P E E D S UP FLOOD P R O JEC T S B ILIN G U A L EDUCATION PROPOSALS D ROPPED BY NEW SECR ET A R Y WASHINGTON — Education Secretary T.H. Bell on Mon­ day scrapped the Carter administration's controversial bi­ lingual education proposals that would have required the na­ tion’s schools to teach youngsters in their native language. "Nothing in the law or the Constitution anoints the Depart­ ment of Education to be National School Teacher. National School Superintendent or National School Board,” Bell said in announcing that the proposed rules would be thrown out. P E R U , ECUADOR CA R R Y OUT C E A S E -F IR E LIM A , Peru — Peruvian and Ecuadorean soldiers observed a fragile cease-fire Monday after five days of fighting on the jungle border dividing them while the two na­ tions’ foreign ministers sought a diplomatic solution to the territorial conflict. No fighting was reported on Monday by either side. Both nations had reported heavy losses during the fighting, but gave no specific casualty figures. R EA G A N ADMINISTRATION R EM O VES U.S. EN VO Y TO E L SALVADOR W ASHINGTON — The Reagan administration has re­ moved Robert White as U .S. ambassador to E l Salvador because he voiced policy disagreements with Washington through the press rather than through private channels, a senior State department official said Monday. White’s removal follows his public criticism of proposals made by members of the Reagan transition team for dealing with the Central American nation, which is beset by internal tur­ bulence and dissent. T IJU A N A , Mexico — Workers watching the skies are hur­ rying to complete major flood control projects in hope of avoiding a repeat of the devastation and loss of life of early last year. “ This is the critical tim e,” said public projects director Luis Raminez Ochoa. Twenty people drowned last year in floods touched off by rains that started Jan . 31. Hun­ dreds more were left homeless. TERROR TR A IN STOCK P R IC E S PLUM M ET NEW Y O R K — Stock prices, continuing a four-week slump, took a nosedive Monday amid uncertainty about President Reagan’s economic programs and a lingering selling wave among oil issues. Precious metal stocks also tumbled as gold prices fell below $500 a troy ounce in trading in Europe and New York. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials plunged 15.02 to close at 932.25, after being down 19.03 with a half hour of trading remaining. A New Year’s Eve fraternity party on a chartered train becomes a journey into horror as an insane killer stalks and gruesomely murders one rollicker after another. Stars Jamie Lee Curtis, the new queen of shivers, whose mother, Janet Leigh, starred in Hitchcock’s Psycho. COM M ITTEE BACKS BILL TO MANDATE PRISON TERM S FO R SE X U A L ASSAULT P H O E N IX — The House Judiciary Committee unanimous­ ly encorsed legislation mandating prison sentences for sex­ ual assault Monday after hearing law enforcement officials urge its enactment. But there was strong concern among some committee members that even mandated sentences would not alter current plea-bargaining practices. A rerun from past years, the bill cleared the committee by a 10-0 but still needs approval of the Counties and Municipalities Com­ mittee to reach the House floor. TU ES. & W ED S, • FEB. 3 ■ & 4 ,..#v ; ; - * S H Q W T IM E S 7 00 & 9 30 p m • S U N D A Y 7 p m O N L Y * THE U N IO N C IN E M A LO W ER LEVEL OF THE M U A D M IS S IO N $1 SO W IT H V A LID i 0 J2 (JO W IT H O U T Œ E * ” jgwjsfi';\"á * W ASHINGTON — President Reagan promised South Korea on Monday that the United States will maintain its troop strength in the Pacific region and its long commitment to defend South Korea “ against aggression.” Reagan told the visiting South Korean president, Chun Doo-hwan, that “ our special bond of freedom and friendship is as strong today” as it was 30 years ago. D ESP IT E DROP O F RAIN, NORTHEAST DROUGHT BRINGS D READ ir ★ ★ ★ A splash of rain Monday helped quench the thirst of the ur­ ban Northeast, where a record drought this winter has raised the specter of taps running dry and tank trucks on street cor­ ners doling out drinking water by the bucket. But much more is needed. The water levels are seriously low in an Atlantic Coast region that forms a rough semi-circle from Baltimore to Boston — with New York City in the middle — despite threats and fines and doomsday warnings. EX-H OSTAGES W IFE JO IN S HIM IN HOSPITAL W ASHINGTON — Former hostage Robert Ode, hospital­ ized with bronchitis, has been joined by his wife, officials at National Hospital in Arlington, V a., said Monday. Rita Ode was admitted to the hospital suffering from the flu, a hospital spokeswoman said. Mr. and Mrs. Ode are sharing a double room, she said. P H O E N IX — A natural gas explosion nearly leveled a home Monday, critically burning the occupant, Barbara McAllister, 60, firemen said. Investigators said she reported­ ly struck a match after smelling gas. She was burned over 90 percent of her body, firemen said. The explosion knocked out windows in houses several doors away. W EATHER S E R V IC E SAYS F E B R U A R Y TO F E A T U R E D R YN ESS W ASHINGTON — A continued lack of moisture is in the weather outlook for most of the country in February, the Na­ tional Weather Service said Monday. The service’s Average Monthly Weather Outlook predicted light precipitation for most states. The only areas that should expect heavy rain or snowfall are the coastal areas of Washington and Oregon, Florida except the panhandle, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, western Oklahoma and southwestern Kansas, said the report FO R M ER GOV. E L L A GRASSO R EM AIN S IN CR ITICAL CONDITION H A R TFO R D , Conn. — Former Connecticut Gov. Ella Grasso regained consciousness briefly Monday but lapsed back into a semi-comatose state caused by the cancer that has invaded her liver and intestinal tract. Before Mrs. Grasso’s health worsened on Sunday, doctors had planned to conduct her fifth one-day session of chemotherapy later this week. But it was uncertain whether she would be treated now that her condition has been downgraded from serious to critical. útavlzB p u b Prepare Now for: 20% O F F A L L M E A L S Lunch & Dinner Send a Valentine cake personally decorated almost anywhere in the U.S. for $ 1 9 .5 0 Call toll free 800-453-5710 In Utah call 1-487-0307 2500 affiliated bakers nationwide Use your credit card Get An Edge On Spring 1123 S. RURAL Classes Starting: LSAT Feb 21 June 20 Jan 7 Jan 19 April 22 May 18 MCAT QMAT April 4 March 21. Feb 7 Feb 28 Jan 20 Feb 21 DAT April 4 Feb 7 Classes now available for GRE, PSYCH, GRE-BIO, NLE, TOEFL, VAT, MAT, MSKP. OCAT, CPA. (Valid with coupon only. Expires 2 /1 0 /8 1 . Liquor not included.) 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Almost 200 applicants from around the country ap- plied for the job last May when former Chancellor Donald Baepler resigned to return to teaching at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, Whitley said The possibility of the ex­ pansion to a west side cam ­ pus, processing and indexing the cost of education and completion of conditions of faculty service are some of the major issues Huff has dealt with while acting as head of the regents staff. Drop-off Laundry 9000 Sunset Boulevard Los Angeles, Calli. 90069 Phono: (213) 272-0424 Nati etto ad for Special Student/Teacher Tariff. Cl MNTaL a Liaaa n euacHaai caveau, eaaa a rs a rs waa Classic courses and other programs unable to pay for themselves, could suffer most from budget cuts. Meanwhile, technology and business courses constantly have funds shifted in their direction. WASH N CLEAN WORLD COIN-OP LAUNDRY A DRY CLEANERS The BEST in Laundry & Dry Cleaning Care M-Thurs. 8-8 featuring "C lean 'n S team ." 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C a ro a s e l I I 1 *3.57 Continuing education and other special­ ized programs that cater to a small propor­ tion of the student population may be in for budget cuts, Mortimer said. “ The number one priority of a university administrator is to have the flexibility to ex­ pand in those areas where it is needed. The funds to have this flexibility are not coming from legislatures bent on keeping taxes down.” Mortimer said budget trimming is always likely to produce an outcry from proponents of programs that are cut. He said ad­ ministrators are forced to cope with “ political reality" when determining where to decrease spending. “ Everybody’s got a constituency,” he said. “ Legislators want to see spending cuts in wasteful programs, but not in those of their constituency. ” only with this ad CASH 966-5311 gram s" established by universities in the ’60s and 70s will be the first to feel the chop­ ping of the fiscal ax. COUPON— Sat 9-5 ®un Enjoy Doing Your Laundry for a C hange 966-2150 43 E. Broadway I "' N FREE ($3 per visit) I By Michael Cast American universities, which in the past have depended upon increasing enrollment to fund expanding progams, must begin to cut curriculum, a higher education expert said Monday. Dr. Kenneth Mortimer, director of the Center for the Study of Higher Education at Pennsylvania State University, said college administrators, faced with declining enroll­ ment and rising costs, are forced to kill some programs to keep others alive. “ There has not only been a nationwide decline in the number of students graduating from high school, but we’ve had a slippage in the percentage of graduates who go on to college," Mortimer said to education majors and local educators in the MU Pinal Room. “ We’re still up in overall enrollment from the low we saw in the ’60s, but changing student preference patterns render some programs unable to pay for themselves.” Mortimer said students are now generally more interested in training for a career in business or technology than in absorbing liberal arts and humanities courses. Decreasing enrollment in such courses as Greek literature or Russian history has forced college administrators to shift funds to more “ practical” courses, Mortimer said. “ A major problem for the universities to decide is whether or not they must absolute­ ly have classics," he said. " If your defini­ tion of a university is an organization that has a classics department, than you're go­ ing to have to do something to breath some life into classics." Mortimer said in addition to liberal arts courses that no longer attract enough students, many of the “ peripheral pro- All IN-HOUSE Dry Cleaning O Includes Bulk (5 ib. m in.) and u p Clean-n-steam til Page 4 State Press Tuesday, February 3,1981 ________________________________________ _____ — ______________ _____ opining» The greatest resource of the ocean is not material but the boundless spring of inspiration and well-being we gain from her. Yet we risk poisoning the sea forever just when we are learning her science, art, and philosophy and how to live in her embrace. _ Jacque# C o u s te a u state press " Portik Take a d iv e ... Dan Pingelton opinion ed. Descend below the gentle, soft, turquoise waves and enter another reality, Pirouette in slow-motion through warm, liquid space. Watch creatures wearing col­ ors so brilliant they seem unreal, except that they glide only inches away from your suspended body. Things unknown to you, even through books and films, crawl, wiggle or glide through their habits of living with little con­ cern for your out-of-place body. Illuminated and warmed by sunlight filtering through the soothing water, life here proceeds main­ ly undeterred by happenings of another world only inches away, bordered by a nonex is tant interface separating water and air. THIS IS A W ORLD in the waters off Florida near Key Largo, the beginning of the Florida Keys. Those who breathe air and who have come to positions of authority have designated this existence as the John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park — the on­ ly underwater park in the country. Containing the only living reef formations along the Atlantic coast, the park was established in 1963 after President Eishenhower proclaimed the area a na­ D R IL L PO R O IL ? I D O N 'T SU P P O SE y o u 'v e COWSIDERED THE EWVIBDNMEWTM. tional preserve. As Craig Savoye, of the Christian Science Monitor, noted in a recent article, Pen­ nekamp, until last month, was only one of three underwater areas protected by the government. THE M AR IN E SAN CTU ARIES PRO­ GR A M , set up in 1972, also includes an area off Cape Hatteras, N .C and near Santa Bar­ bara, Calif On Ja n . 16, President Carter signed an executive order setting aside three more areas as marine sanctuaries. As Savoye observed, environmentalists are lauding the protection of the areas — one near San Francisco, one off the Georgia coast and another in the Florida Keys — as the possible beginning of a long-range system of “ underwater national parks,” although the sanctuaries are currently run by the Department of Commerce, and not the Department of the Interior. AND O F CO U R SE, as with any restric­ tion, despite the precious things which they preserve, some sanctuaries and parks are bound to be criticized by offshore oil drilling companies, as Savoye points out. That day will come when a large oil deposit is located beneath the quiet sands of a park or sanctuary. Oil is of course precious, as is the life from whence it came. Unfortunately, both are becoming rarer with each rise and fall of the tide. When the decision must be made, let’s hope appreciation for irreplacable natural wonders will be considered just as impor­ tant as money and the need for energy. HAZARDSl The Ban Editor is contemptuous, unreasonable, intolerant Editor: Mr. Dan Pingelton, in his column of Ja n . 29, criticized the decision of the student Executive Committee to dis­ countenance further efforts to show X-rated films on campus. He did not, however, think it necessary to defend his position, but instead relied on, first, an implicit contradic­ tion: . . the ASASU Executive Committee snatched away con­ stitutional rights of every ASU student.. . . ” Presumably he meant the right to express, and hear ex­ pressed, ideas, which right, by making that very assertion, he was exercising. Secondly, Mr. Pingelton makes use of a logical fallacy. Thus: “ Tne majority of comments [made during the meeting at which the decision was reached] supported constitutional rights, dealing with facts, ideals, law s. . “ Ideals,” particularly, is not a word one would expect to find in the vocabulary within which Mr. Pingelton’s own reasoning confines him. For his tacit premise is that there is an absolute right of expression, in which case no one idea may be thought superior and thus given preference to another; his “ ideal” is a world in which all ideals are equal, and therefore not ideals at all. It is this reasoning that com­ pels him to regard an X-rated film morally as good as any other film. Thirdly, Mr. Pingelton makes two appalling exagérations : “ . . . the committee voted this University into a Soviet state of b ein g.. . . ” From which it is apparent either that the writer hasn't the most elementary notion of totalitarianism, or that he makes comparisons rather for their effect than with regard to their import. He considers “ eloquent” this declaration of Mr. Mark Barnes’ , from whom, one supposes, Mr. Pingelton aquired [sic] his faculty for overstatement: “ ASASU is now setting the law for the United States of Am erica.” In fact, the Committee has simply done what is principally asked of it: decided for what purposes University funds will and will not be spent, which practice the state Attorney General, Mr. Corbin, has expressly approved. Finally, predictably, Mr. Pingelton derided members of the Committee. By this point in the article, however, it was understood that Mr. Pingelton is himself insufferably the very things he means to criticize. That is, he is contemp­ tuous, unreasonable, and intolorant. Matthew Scully Government Executive Committee Member Film censors are contemptible and repulsive Editor: A SU should not ban X-rated films. Ir­ respective of the fact that many of them may be considered revolting in their por­ nographic filth, there are also many X-rated films in which explicit sex and violence — even to “ excess” — is indeed only a means to a more creative and sometimes more pro­ found end. The grotesque perversion of John Waters’ film s, for example, is excessive by most standards; but when viewed from a disinterested perspective, e .g ., refusing to pervert aesthetic considerations with ethical ones, the films become quite comic, in addition to satirizing sex, violence, and perversion per se. Susan Son tag, in her essay, “ The Por­ nographic Imagination,” had this to say: “ . . . The matter at stake is not ‘human’ [non-pornographic] versus ‘inhum an’ [pornographic] but in an infinitely varied register of forms and tonalities for transposing the human voice into . . . narritive.” More succinctly, the philosopher Paul Goodman stated that “ the question is not whether pornography, but the quality of por­ nography.” This is quite perceptive. Indeed, there are fanatics about to whom the ques­ tion is whether pornography. Matthew Scully, of the ASASU Senate, has admitted to me that he has never seen an X rated film . How then is he to be trusted when he states that “ no X-rated film can meet the University’s standards of virtue and decen­ cy ?” (State Press, Ja n . 29). Scully is indeed an ignoramus who: 1) Condemns things of which he is wholly naive; and 2) Possesses no aesthetic sensibility whatsoever. Scully and his sympathizers are contemptable because they have attempted censorship; and they have become repulsive because they have succeeded in it. What these people fail to see is that no form of censorship has a place at ASU or any university. . To address the argument that Scully put forth when I spoke with him: It is not the case, say I, that a university has an obliga­ tion of moral leadership per se. Moral leadership per se is nothing but the inculca­ tion of others’ morals. The ASU community is comprised of legal adults no longer under their parents’ supervision. Shouldn’t we be our own self-censors, then? I say yes. We should be able to choose our own poison — or rude nectar — from a max­ imum potential availibility of culture. Leadership has no place dictating the tastes of its constituents. Leadership should only suggest. Scully and his morally righteous colleagues who are tragically at the helm of A SU ’s student government .are not sug­ gesting, they are dictating, censoring and banning. This is sad, indeed. Finally, if ASU wants to be considered a serious university devoted to broad­ mindedness, people should take care to ex­ press their outrage if they feel it. Maybe the ASA SU ’s tragic decision can be reversed, for the sake of the University’s reputation. Sam Pratt Protection for women is primary goal of ASU police Editor: In response to Pam Bookstrom’s letter to the State Press concerning the A .S .U . Police weekly crime report, I would like to offer some comments. First of all, the intent of the.weekly crime report is to keep the campus com­ munity informed with respect to those crimes oc­ curring on campus so that individuals will be more crime conscious, not less, thereby maintaining a con­ stan t aw areness with regard to their personal security. Secondly, the reports are for one week at a time. A new reporting year com­ menced on January 1,1981, consequently Ms. Bookstrom’s incident was in­ cluded in the 1980 compila­ tion. State Press did not publish from December 5 through January 13, which was during sem ester break. A sim ilar incident to Ms. Books trom’s occurred in the vicinity of Packard Stadium in January 1960, wherein a coed was abcontiniMd pag« 5 Tuesday, February 3, 1981 State Press Page 5 New Waves By G ary M arkstein - GREAT LATELY HOWEVER, 5HE'S BEEN INFLUENCED BY THE WOMiNè MOVEMENT AND 6 IKYING ID &B 'THE COMPLETE INDEPENDENT <; WOMAN, FREE from MALE , "DOMINANCE"... -WE'RE GOINGOUT \ \TD DINNER ID j é f TYTw\Di5CUSG IT 1 M A f r# ^ ducted and sexu ally assaulted after being taken to a remote area in the city of Phoenix. A suspect in this case was indicted by a County Grand Ju ry in May, 1980. In addition, a suspect is currently in the Maricopa County jail who is alleged to be Ms. Bookstrom’s assailant. In all major crimes against persons which oc­ cur in our jurisdiction, we very diligently attempt to not only keep our clientele informed, but also request their assistance in solving the incidents. State Press has, on a number of occa­ sions, published com ­ posites and the particulars of such serious crimes in the interest of public ser­ vice. The A .S.U . police is a member of a criminal in­ telligence compact, which includes virtually all the valley's law enforcement agencies. Each time a violent crime occurs in our jurisdiction, a comprehen­ sive report and a composite is disseminated to all the participating agencies in an effort to bring the criminal to justice. The intent of this letter is not to m inim ize Ms. Bookstrom’s concerns. She is to be commended for her desire to instill a higher degree of personal security awareness on the part of our campus community. Too often individuals become victims uninten­ tionally because they are lulled into a sense of false security. The real fact of the matter is, ASU is an “ V » GET PAID FOR LYING DOWN ON THE JOB! EARN UP TO $95.00 PER MONTH DONATING PLASMA m ore letters continued from peg« 4 SHE'G PAYIN6. open campus, unfenced and traversed by public streets. Criminals and deviates from the outside gravitate to our campus to prey on our students, faculty and staff. Almost 2,000 women reside in the women's dor­ mitories on the north side of campus. There are 425 parking spaces immediate­ ly surrounding the Palo Verde complexes and Manzanita Hall. In reality, this means not everyone who drives a car can park within a few steps of their living quarters. For women, this does pose a security risk if closein parking is not available. We recognize the problem and have given women's safety our highest priority and have initiated a number of programs to enhance their personal security. Examples are: 1) A crime resistance/ seif defense program for women has been offered by campus police each semester since 1975. Over 1500 women have participated in this pro­ gram, which is recog­ nized state-wide. 2) P o lice o ffice rs, security officers and stu­ dent aides are assigned to the parking lots and housing areas in the vicinity of the women's r e s id e n c e areas throughout the week dur­ ing primetime. 3) A shuttle service is operated between the women’s dorms and Hayden Library during the evening hours, Mon­ day through Thursday. 4) Women who work late may telephone cam ­ pus police for an escort from the parking lots. They will be assisted, if at all possible, when of­ ficers are not occupied with other pressing crim e or em ergency calls. 5) R e p r e s e n ta t iv e s from campus police, on an on-going basis, make personal appearances before women’s groups on campus and address women’s safety and crime prevention con­ cepts. 6) Full use of the stu­ dent newspaper is made to inform the public about the threat of crime on our premises. 7) We actively utilize plain-clothes officers in the capacity of a crime prevention task force, w hich c o n c e n tr a te s primarily on sex crimes. Finally, comparatively speaking, in relation to other Universities which are similar in size to ASU, we stack up very well in combatting crim e. We realize, however, that our system is not foolproof, nor is anyone's for that matter; unfortunately, we will con­ tinue to have crimes of various types occurring in our jurisdiction. We have a commitment to reducing the threat of crime and have made pro­ tection for women as our most important objective. To this end, we solicit the support and assistance of those we serve. George N. Bays Director Campus Security 1 Tempe Plasma Corp. 933 E . U N IV E R S IT Y 894-1338 New Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 8-6 Fri. 8-3 New Donors: Mon. & Wed. 9:30-4:30 Tues. & Thurs. 9:30-2:30 ☆ This ad worth $5.00 for new donors ☆ TRAVH. Mp APViHTORi. W fo excneAtexr... A LS TjE *wifv Ir n V A f 1 J r 1 v v X V j L —• M j t j r*vl Lri«™ / u !> r'* e x ^ •N A V Y c e Navy Surface Warfare Officer. It's not your ordinary job. It’s world travel — more places, people and sights than most people experience in a lifetime. It's responsibility — 10,000 tons of ship, and 15-40 men and women working for you to get the job done. Start calling the shots — l l e n t pay and benefits, and the finest management training anywhere, Sign up at Career Services Center, Feb. 3, 4 and 5 or write Navy Management Programs, 317 N. m • Central Ave., Phoenix, AZ 85004. O F F I C L R S G E T R E S P O N S IB IL IT Y F A S T — a ONE OF THE ALL-TIME GREAT DEALS 1 OVER 25 WONDERFUL YEARS SERVING THE VALLEY RESTAURANT M E X IC A N F O O D O U R S P E C IA L T Y American Food Also Served TEMPE 3138 S. Mill Ave. Southern & Mill in the SM ITTY’S CENTER 966-0776 HOURS; Monday - Saturday 11:30 a.m . -1 0 :0 0 p.m. MESA 932 E. Main 2 blocks west of Stapley 964-7881 HOURS: M on.-Fri. 11:30-3:00, 4:30-10:00 Sat. 11:30-10:00 CLOSED SUNDAY FREE PIZZA Buy Any Large, Receive a Medium FREE (with sam e number of toppings) Offer not valid on takeout. Only one coupon per pizza, please. Expires 2/28/81. G O O D O N L Y AT 1035 S. Rural (Across from ASU) 968-4606 J Page 6 State Press Tuesday, February 3,1981 Video games invade universities By D avid Schwartz Staff photo by ffogar i-ataman Students crowd the game room daily In the MU and wait In line to play their favorite electronic video games. Flying asteroids streaking a thousand miles per hour are on a collision course with a starship. The ship has been hit and is on the brink of disaster. The scene is not from a late-night science fiction thriller but part of the new video game frenzy sweeping college campuses across the nation. Video games are the latest in a long line of electronic games and are receiving increas­ ing popular support, according to the owner of Tempe’s Pinball Wizard on University Drive. Craig Palermo, whose clientele it primarily ASU students, said the students who come to play seek relief from their textbooks and a temporary break from reality. He added in the coming years video games will become three-dimensional, allowing players even more of an escape in­ to the world of the future. “ Some players get on the machines with the skill to stay on them 24 hours a d ay.” Palermo said. “ But the average player just gets on the machine to kill a few hours and relieve the pressures and stress of school. ’ ’ Tony Moresca, MU assistant recreation director, said the video games are always crowded with long lines of students waiting to have a crack at outer space adventure “ This is the first time we’ve had a con tingent of video-players in the regional championships,” Moresca added. The MU held a video game contest over the weekend to pick two ASU represen tatives to play in the regional tournament The Association of College Unions is spon­ soring the regional contest in Salt Lake City, Utah, Feb. 12 to 14 with teams from five Southwestern states competing in more than 10 events. Jon Sand, a freshman accounting major who will compete in Salt Lake City, said he has been playing the video games for a year now, with mixed success. “ Sometimes you get a streak going and feel like the machine will never beat you. but then there are times when you feel like you'll never win,” said Sand, who practices for a couple of hours twice a week on the videogames. He added the low turnout combined with "a bit of luck” pushed him over the top in the MU competition. Sand said he entered the tournament at the last minute and did not take it seriously until the competition was well underway. W IZ A R D S A Unisex Hairstyling Studio For after the The National Association of Accountants on Campus will meet at 4 p.m. today in the MU W est Cochise Room. The Native American Student Association will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in the NASA Office in the MU and will attend the ASASU meeting at 5 p.m. A regular meeting will take place afterward in the MU Yavapai Room to discuss themes for Culture Week. holiday dull-drums, cheer up your life The Blue Key honor fraternity will meet at 5:30 p.m. today in the MU Santa Cruz Room. Dues will be col­ lected. with a care-free perm and make your Campus Crusade for Christ will meet from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. today in the P.V. Main Cafeteria. days brighter. The Civilian Space Organization will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in the MU Apache Room. The Citizen’s Party of Tempo will meet at 8 p.m. today in the MU Yuma Room. The Nutrition Club will meet at 8:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Feb. 4. The first meeting will be in the Home Economics Building, room 224 and the second meeting will be in the Home Economics Building, room 147. The Christian Coalition will meet at 12:30 p.m. Feb. 4 in Danforth Chapel. “The Listening Room,” Bible readings without commentary (continuation of the Gospel of John) will be presented. All Saints Newman Center will hold a five-week course on bioethics starting at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 4 at the All Saints Newman Center. Friar Dominic, O.P. is offer­ ing the course. For more information call 967-7823. Phi Alpha Theta, the history club, will meet at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 4 in the MU Mohave Room. Dr. Anthony Garavente, assistant professor of Chinese history, will speak on “ First Impressions of the Peking Trials." The Chicano Theatre will meet at 7 p.m. Feb. 5 in the MU Mohave Room to organize to eventually do a show for campus and off-campus groups. Everyone is invited. The American Indian Science and Engineering Stu­ dent Chapter of ASU will meet at 7 p.m. Feb. 5 at Pro­ fessor Art Dean’s residence. The Gay Academic Union will meet at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 5 in the MU. LOTS OF SNOW a t TEUURIDE NOW! Save money — Stay at Rico . . . 25 miles south of ski area THE INN AT RICO Dbl. room/bath .................................$30.00 b e d * ..................................................... $14.00 Double occupancy...........................$25.00* ‘ Shared bath Continental breakfast included. Group rates available. Call: Phoenix 258-8375 Rico [303] 967-2314 10% discount with this ad. HUMHflMMttlNHMHIiaiillUHinillittllllllllllllllllHIIIMUIItllHIIHlIHUIIIHIIII , 967-2360 /S • * SATISFACTION GUARANTEED 1041 E. Lem on AYEAROUTOFCOLLEGE* ANDASTRAUSSISMAKINGAVIATION HISTORYIN THEARMY. "I got into ROTC really just to see what it was all about For me, it all couldn't have worked out better Army ROTCgot Anda Strauss off to a good start Maybe it can do the same for you. To find out. stop by your Army ROTC office on campus And begin your future as an officer Tm being assigned to a Chinook helicopter unit in Germany as a test pilot and maintenanceofficer. and I'm proud that I’ll be the first woman to have that assignment over there It s a real thrill for me "So was learning how to fly a helicopter. It takes a lot more skill than an airplane. If you think college is demanding, flight school is even tougher. It's not only academically demanding, it's really mentally demanding as well as physically. "In Germany, I'll have a chance to use some of the leadership and management techniques I learned in ROTC. It's going to be a real challenge having command responsibilities. ATA.S.U. SEE CAPTAIN,CRAIG SCOTT ROOM 240 OLD MAIN 2nd Lt And a Straus* wa.s a political *cienee major at Wake Ft »rest and a member ot Arms ROTC ARM Y RO fC. BE A LL YOU CAN BE. Tuesday, February 3, 1981 State Press Page 7 Abortion conflict hits Constitution By Sharon E . Butthard The first Constitutional convention to be held in the United States since 1787 could occur in the 1980s if pro-life groups are successful in lobbying state legislatures nation-wide Pro-life groups are asking state legislatures to pass resolu­ tions calling for a Constitutional convention to ban legal abor­ tions. No one knows how such a convention would change or amend the U.S. Constitution as we know it today, according to ASU professors in political science, constitutional history, and constitutional law. An Arizona House of Representatives resolution passed in January calls for a convention for “ the sole and exclusive purpose" of dealing with a right-to-life amendment. The resolution, sponsored by Rep. Jim Skelly, RScottsdale, passed 31-25. The state Senate Judiciary Committee voted down the resolution 9-1 on Monday. The call for a Constitutional convention to ban abortion has been passed by 19 states in the last five years, according to Paul Steiner, public affairs director of Planned Parenthood. Proponents suggest the convention could be limited to discussion of a proposed human life amendment, but there is nothing in the Constitution to prevent participants from rewriting the document, Dean Alan Matheson of the ASU col­ lege of law said. “ There is a possibility they could go beyond the limited focus (of the human life amendment),” Matheson said. Professor George Paulsen, who teaches constitutional history, said he did not think it would be possible to limit the scope of a Constitutional convention. Paulsen said "presumably a new Constitution could be written.” He would not be in favor of a Constitutional convention even if the scope was limited to the abortion issue, he said. “ This (abortion) is the kind of social question, which in my opinion, is not the kind of thing that should be considered by an amendment to the Constitution, ’ ' Paulsen said. Dr. John White, a political science professor, said the Con­ stitution does not set any rules pertaining to a Constitutional convention, which suggests it is possible to limit the issues being discussed. White said people who fear a repeal of the Bill of Rights through the convention are sharing an *‘alarmist view. “ The danger of the Constitution being scrapped isn’t at all urgent," White said. "M y guess is that if a convention was called for a limited proposal, they would deal with the issue at hand and not jump the fence. ” Dr. Bruce Mason, a political science professor, said no one can predict the results of a Constitutional convention, since the only precedent is the 1787 convention. Delegates to that convention overstepped the authority granted by Congress, Mason said. Rather than amending the Articles of Confederation, which was the purpose of the convention, delegates wrote an entire­ ly new Constitution, he said. Ratification procedures were changed so the Constitution only required acceptance by nine instead of the 13 colonies necessary under the Articles of Confederation, Mason said. Also, the state legislative approval required by the Articles was bypassed in favor of state conventions with elected delegates, he said. Citing that precedent, Mason said he is not in favor of a convention being called today. “ I don’t believe that the people who would be likely to call one at the present time would be as amenable to civil rights as were the ones who called the first one several hundred years ago,” Mason said. Groups involved with pressuring for a pro-life Con­ stitutional convention would probably move on to require prayer in public schools and to reverse search and seizure laws perceived to protect criminals, he added. Model Search! Plaza 3 Model & Talent Agency, is conducting an international catalog MODEL SEARCH at ASU! W ednesday, February 4, 1981 Memorial Union 9:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. : We require females be 5' 7" - 511 and males be 5 10 - 6 1 Prior modeling is not necessary1 Call Career Service at 965-2396 to arrange your appointment ■ This is your big chance , do it NOW1 SPEND SPRING in HAW AII Depart Phoenix March 6 mm $ |*% Per Parson Doubts Occupancy 9 Days — 8 Nights | |J W INCLUDES: • Round-trip air fare (hot meal and wine) •O n e night in Los Angeles •7 nights in Waikiki at Waikiki Resort (one block from beach) •Flow er Lei greeting •W elcom e Continental Breakfast •1 day car rental per room •Pearl Harbor Cruise •Transfers and Portage w ai Pasley s COMPLIMENTARY HAIRCUTS Give your favorite sweetheart a lift with a good hairstyle for a Valentine g if t . . . [10 Seats Available at $485.00 without Los Angelas Overnight] ^ALLE_J TfWEL \ /B M T ut & Style $10 Includes: 707 S. Forest Tempe, AZ 85281 967-9403 R ei Exp. 2-15-81 OLYMPIC HAIRCUTTERS 6 W . 7th St. Tempe, Arizona 966-2679 Not Valid W ith Any Other Offer THE GREAT RIMG EXCHANGE. (Or How To Get Your College Ring For Less.) Trade up. Trade in. And save. Because ArtCarved offers you the unique opportun­ ity to trade in your 10K gold high school ring. You can save up to $90 on the college ring of your choice. And ArtCarved offers twenty different styles from which to choose. G et ready for T h e Great Ring Exchange. You can’t afford to pass it up. Æ TÇ^COLLEGE IR V ERINGS D Symbolizing your ability to achieve. February 2 - 6 UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE M EMORIAL UNION l>l.\/.\ i 4 3 4 3 N. 16th St. / P hoenix, AZ 8 5 0 1 6 1313 W. S o u th ern / Mesa» AZ 8 5 2 0 2 Deposit required Master Charge or Visa accepted. © 1980 ArtCarved College Rings Page 8 State Presa Tuesday, February 3,1981 PERSONAL INCOME TAX & BOOKKEEPING Your home or my office. Reasonable rates. 967-8300 993-5399 PRIVATE & CONFIDENTIAL Mail Receiving Service Temporary or Permanent. $12.75/Three Months P O Box & Street Address plus call-in service. The Private Mailbox Corner of Forest & University 987-8300 universal travel SPRING BREAK m arch 7 to u MAZATLAN Jargon • • By Gaye Gould Every campus has its own jargon or shortcuts to communication. Dr J J Lamberts, an ASU professor who teaches Current English Usage, said words can be used to identify people regionally, educationally or by age. A person who hasn’t been to college does not have the "privilege of speaking of econorsoc,” Lamberts said, On e v e ry cam p u s, students soon find ways of sh o rte n in g n am es of buildings, activities and programs, he said. The M em orial Union becomes the MU or the “ M oo” . M a th e m a tic s becomes math. Lamberts said slang terms usually are started by high school students who are “ just discovering things their parents never knew about” and need new words to express these profound discoveries. College students, away from home for the first time, • coin many words for drinking and sex to show off their “ manlihood” or newfound freedom, he added. “ What some people regard as slang, other people regard as standard E n g lis h ," Lamberts said. Jargon shifts naturally with the times and some expressions just die a natural death. Lamberts said two words that were common in 1945 were "dust up” and “ hassle” (same meaning). Dust 7 Nights at the Plaza Gaviotas Hotel. Roundtrip Air from Phoenix. Rates from $250 per person. HAWAII 7 Nights at the Malia Hotel in Waikiki. Round-trip Air from Phoenix. Rates from $527 per person. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: 894-9620 425 S. Mill Ave. D O S O M E T H IN G N IC E , FOR Y O U R SE LF Discover how much more there is to life when you are free from the burden of excess weight LO SE 17 T O 25 P O U N D S IN JU S T 6 W EEK S And that rate of reduction can he sustained until you have lost 50, 75 or even 100 pounds and more! CALL TODAY A N D S T A R T L O S IN G W E IG H T TO M ORROW ! / / d iet CENTER^ 1801 S. JEN TILLY • Suite D-8 • 967-1371 Slang del up is long gone, but hassle is still around. Lamberts said he has not heard much of the recent ASU jargon because “ this kind of thing doesn’t really jump across certain barriers. “ Students don't think we were once young,” he said. “ To them, professors live only in classrooms, libraries and books — especially professors in English.” Instructors have a professional jargon, which is beyond the comprehension of “ outsiders,” Lamberts said. The following is a partial list of campus slang collected from A SU students: Airhead — an attractive m a le or fe m a le , not necessarily one of higher intelligence. You can hear the wind whistle as they walk by. Babe — a nice-looking woman. Bad — good. Bag rays — getting tan. The reason why 36,000 of ASU's students are here. Beat — exhausted, a totally worn-out object. The BOSS — Bruce Springsteen. Bookin' — studying, usually experienced the night before finals. Bent out of shape — really angry, watch out! Bogus action — out of the question. Phony. Dumb. Bomb out — fail. Bozo—a right-winger. Brewskie— beer. Bummer — anything that is depressing. Burn out — describes someone who gets plastered, soused, annihilated, baked, blasted, blown away, buzzed, faced, trashed, zonked, wasted, stupid or ripped too often or a person who is just SELL US SOMETHING! e L J L L H tft iE E C "It's a GREEK W ORLD INTERESTED? Anyone interested, com e to the orientation February 7 - 6 p.m. Palo Verde Main - Cafeteria Open House Parties begin The Buffalo Exchange Ltd. BUYING ★ TRADING * SELLING The Best In New & Recycled Clothing & Accessories • • • • • VINTAGE PERIOD FUNK CHIC PREPPY • IMPORTS • DESIGNER • HANDCRAFTED • ETHNIC • BOUTIQUE Sunday, February 8 For further information TEMPE 3 East Fifth Street • 968-2557 call Sarah Petrie at 965-6547 Hours: 10-5:30 Mon.-Sat., Closed Sundays a total was! A Case of l the way yoi after being The Cham rock band the nation, Catch Z ’s/S Choke — ' when they prise quizzi Cosmic — « cosmic thir man. Cosmo — dresses s Cosmopolit Crash — to after a thre Damn trail heard mut an ASU 1 shows up I classbegai Decked out Dementite becomes prove he’s i Disco-boy Revolting hours on s< hours danc the appro and gold ch Klaff four basket w< shoelace t> rangement Frat rat necessary. Fuzzy stu< technical jors. G .D .I. — dependent. Goat roper Go for it favorite te Jim m y Me G .Q . — a sharply, f< “ Gentleme Hanging — Ja p — J Princess, Lost — a pi it. Tuesday, February 3,1981 State Press Page 9 School Bus Charter j defines student communication ASU Special 50% Discount a total waste of a life. A Case of the Helicopters — the way you feel the morning after being burnt out. The Chameleons — a punk rock band that’s sweeping the nation. Catch Z ’s/Z out — sleep. Choke — what students do when they’re handed sur­ prise quizzes, bomb out. Cosmic — a space cadet does cosmic things, like — far out man. Cosmo — a woman who dresses stylishly, as in Cosmopolitan magazine. Crash — to sleep like a baby after a three-day party. Damn tram — students are heard muttering this when an ASU transport vehicle shows up ten minutes after class began. Decked out — dressed up. Dementite — a person who becomes conventional to prove he’s radical. Disco-boy —. the Jo h n Revolting type. Spends two hours on school work and ten hours dancing, decked out in the appropriate silk shirt and gold chain. Fluff Course — Underwater basket weaving, remedial shoelace tying. Cosmic rear­ rangement. Mental hygiene. Frat rat — no explanation necessary. Fuzzy studies — any non­ technical liberal arts ma­ jors. G .D .I. — God Damn In­ dependent. Non-g(r)eeks Goat roper — Redneck. Go for it — go after it. A favorite term of Kristy and Jim m y McNichol. G .Q . — a man who dresses sharply, fashionably, as in “ Gentlemen’s Quarterly.” Hanging — loitering, ja p — Jewish American Princess. Lost — a person who is out of it. Munch out — to stuff yourself with food rapidly Munchiemen — the people who run the food wagons around campus Nerd or Nurd — someone with a 4.0 G P A . Can be located in Hayden Library Friday through Sunday. The pits — boring, stupid, depressing, a real bummer. Psychadelic yawn — throw­ ing up Pumped — getting excited over something or someone. Punk — part of the New Wave rock'n roil spiel. Strange modes of dress, as in sw im m ing goggles and spandex. Sketchy — a gross, dis­ gusting, socially unaccept­ able girl, a hippie. Snakey — The kind of woman who snakes along wearing Candies and a bikini . . C h aC haCha. Sorority Bitch — needs no explanation. Space — a person who is just plain weird, as in “ space case” or “ he’s spaced." Suds — beer. “ Drink some suds.” Tuma course — this is special for all you engineer­ ing majors, a rough course, to put it mildly. Vegged out — to hang out and do nothing but vegetate. What a heat — bummer. You’ve been taken. Wired — overly tired or keyed up. Zot — a certain species of a person, recognizable on sight. A nurd of the first magnitude. 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M -F 7:30 am - 5 pm W eekends 9 am - 5 pm G ra d u a te s : Systems Engineering ' and Analysis before you Equipment Design and Development Software Systems Development In p u t y o u r F u tu re a t E S L ... -ON CAMPUSINTERVIEWS T U ESD A Y FE B R U A R Y 3 IT’S N O I THAT G O O D ENGINEERS CHOSE US (ALL CIVILIANS) I It w o* in»*r**»lng work with computer*, aircraft, jot engine* and m any other kind* o f equipment and accemorie* belonging to the Air Force (w e aren't recruiting for the military—w e’re civilian* ). lit w o* eur permanent location in O klahom a City, with moderate w eather, low coat living—especially for home* and apartment*, and a w ide variety o f life-style*. |lt wo* eur faater-than-average advancement to better-then- overog p a y , benefit* and long-range stability. CONTACT Y O U * PLACEMENT OFFICE F O * DETAILS OR WRITE TO: MR. RILL HINES EMPLOYMENT OFFICE ON CAMPUS: ORLA CITY AIR LOGISTICS CENTER W« O f OK «quoi opportunity »«ployer TINKER AFS. 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ESL INCORPORATED A SUBSIDIARY OF fRW INC a creative environment for creative people Page 10 State Press Tuesday, February 3,1981 Profs teach new musical techniques to American students in Saudi Arabia the schools visited by Stocker's group were well in­ formed about the hostage issue and excited about the Jan . 20 release. But Stocker said most Saudi Arabians were indif­ ferent about the U.S. hostages. "There was very little outside information about the hostages and it wasn’t a very big deal to the Saudi Ara­ bians, who depend very heavily on American technology,” he said. Stocker said he views the country as, “ one huge con­ struction project waiting to be finished. ” “ They depend on America for the highly technical work, such as drilling for oil, controlling air traffic and working computers. Stocker said the Saudi Arabians think Americans are “ impure” and only accept them in the country because they are needed. “ The country has billions of dollars but needs our 20th century know-how,” he said. Stocker said because Americans are in great de­ mand, the wages for certain jobs are better in Saudi Arabia than in America. “ A school teacher who would make 915,000 here can make $40,000 in Saudi Arabia," he said. ASU was chosen for the tour because of its strong choir and music education department, Stocker said. Stocker said the chances are good ASU will return to Saudi Arabia and will possibly be invited to visit other countries for the same purpose. Stocker estimated the trip cost between $12,000 and $15,000. G M M A 6 E O B ITER NATIONAL FOLK BALLET OF YUGOSLAVIA W ednesday, February 4 * 8 p.m. H ere’s family entertainm ent presented by a joyous and colorful company of 45 dancers and musicians direct from Belgrade and the six republics of Yugoslavia. Tickets: $9, $8, $7 • Reserved Student Series Tickets Available at the Gammage Bos. THERE'LL ALWAYS BE AN ENGLAND Narrated By Dr. Charles Forbes Taylor Saturday, February 7 * 8 p.m. From the Druid cerem onies at Stonehenge to ultra­ modern London buildings. Dr. Taylor narrates his fulllength color film that traces the history of England from ancient tim es to the present. Tickets: $3 in advance; $3.50 at the door • C H R IS T O P H E R P A R K E N IN G Guitar M onday, February 9 * 8 p.m. More about Christopher Parkening is one of the most brilliant guitarists in the world and his concerts are magnificent virtuoso performances. Here's classical guitar at its best! Marylene Freshley, a Review Commission member, said the legislation could affect ASU in the areas of solar energy, computer services, speech and hearing, hearing aid evalua­ tions and dispensing of hearing aids. “ There should be an understanding and some lines drawn as to what is education and what isn’t,” Freshley said. mnzRTiRn'8 1 • FERRANTE & TEICHER Duo Piano Thursday, February 12 • 8 p .m . See and hear why Ferrante & Teicher are the m ost sought after com bination in show business when they m ake an encore appearance at G am m age. You'll be delighted, enthralled and totally entertained. Tickets: $9, $8, $7 w ith during MOMENTS TO REMEMBER COLLEGE TOURS SPRING BREAK Featuring The Ink Spots The Four Lads The Four Freshmen 8 Days - 8 Nights ♦ 1 6 8 00 By Holiday Train Saturday, February 1 4 * 8 p.m. 1000 STUDENTS from ASU and 15 Other Colleges TRIPS: 1A: 18: Leaves Arrives Leaves Arrives AN EVENING WITH CHET ATKINS OPTIONS: B: C: 0: E: Spend a nostalgic evening with some voices from yesteryear. The Ink Spots, Four Lads and Four Freshmen appear at Gam m age Center in one performance only. Get your tickets early! Tickets: $8.50, $7.50 Friday afternoon, March 6, from N ogales, Mexico back in Nogales, Saturday morn, M arch 14. Saturday afternoon, M arch 7, from Nogales, Mexico back to Nogales, Sunday m orn, M arch 15. Sleeping C abin on train lim ited am ount for only an additional $20.00 per person round trip departing from Nogales A: 2 persons per one bed com partm ent (with bathroom) AA: 4 person per tw o bed com partm ent (with bathroom ) Two people per room $50.00 extra per person at th e De C im a Hotel El Cid H otel (available on Trips 1A, 1B, ONLY) $70.00 extra per person (the El Cid is the newest, m ost luxurious hotel in Mexico, norm al rates exceed $100.00 a day). El Pescador OR O ceana Palace Hotels $20.00 per person Fly round-trip M azatlan for only $299 to tal package. Includes: 1 extra night M azatlan, round-trip transfers airport to hotel. Saturday, February 21 • 8 p.m. Chet Atkins has been hailed as the "Most Popular Guitarist In the Country Field." Be m the audience as Chet Atkins brings his special style and personality to Gam m age Center. Tickets: $9, $8 TRIP INCLUDES: TRAIN TRANSPORTATION FROM M EXICO BORDER TO MAZATLAN (M AZATLAN IS 800 M ILES BELOW THE BORDER) — LODGING — 4 PER ROOM IN C HO ICE BEACH FRONT HOTELS, FREE COCKTAIL PARTIES EACH N IG H T IN MAZATLAN, FREE COLLEGE TOURS T-SHIRT, PLUS M ANY OTHER EXCITING BENEFITS TO BE DETAILED IN YOUR ITINERARY. FRED WARING And the Young Pennsylvanians A $20.00 non-refundable deposit is required to reserve your trip. The balance is due 20 days before departure. Mail a check or money order to College Tours, 4554 N. Central, Suite 101, Phoenix, AZ 85012. For additional information call 263-8520. FAREWELL TOUR To insure your reservation fill out the information below and send a $20.00 check or money order to COLLEGE TOURS, 4554 N. Central, Suite 101, Phoenix, AZ 85012 263-8520 You'll want to buy your tickets early for this salute to "The Man Who Taught America How To Sing ' Monday, February 23 • 8 p.m. | I Tickets; $8.50, $7.50, $6.50 NAME ___ _CITY_ A D D R ES S . ROOM M A TES (if k n o w n ). I will want: Trip 1A_ C H EC K O P TIO N S . Trip 1B_ . Trip 2A _ _Trip 2B_ Option A_ . Option AA . Option B_ (2 persons) (4 persons) _Trip3_ . Option C_ . Trip 4_ . Trip 5_ . Option D_ . Trip6_ O ption E . [A DIVISION OF CERKVENIK-ANDERSON TRAVEL] . Trip 7_ ASU ■mill.... Hill— bookstores in 1978-79 were books, a higher percentage of in­ structional items than any other Pacific 10 Conference schools. Brown said another area in question is whether private bookstores will gain access to the dorms to buy back books at the end of a semester. Tickets: $8, $7, $6 (University Discount Until 6 p.m., Evening of Performance) * Student Series events ere eveileble to full-time ASU students. One ticket mey be purchesed lor $1 by presenting a photo 10 and activity card. A maximum of two $1 tickets mey be purchased by presenting two photo ID cards end two activity cards. One guest ticket, at lull price, mey be purchased with a student ticket. For additional information, please call the Gammage Box Office, 965-3434 ■■■MM— continued from peg# 1 A: ■I ........I .................... ill. By Gib by Gorman Four members of A SU ’s music faculty have returned from a "tremendously successful” two week trip to Saudi Arabia where they taught American junior high and high school students advanced music techniques, the associate director of choirs said. “ The students were very hungry for ideas and we were very successful in teaching them new musical techniques,” Dr. David Stocker said. Stocker, who headed the group, said the professors upgraded the musical knowledge of music and choir students in 10 different American schools throughout Saudi Arabia. “ We went to each of the 10 schools individually and went over music skills with them. Then we met Jan . 29 for a music festival in which all the (250) students par­ ticipated,” he added. The festival was held in Dhahran, a city built for Americans by a Saudi Arabian oil company, Stocker said. The city, which has a population of about 25,000 peo­ ple, is similar to a military base, Stocker said. “ It was a tremendous experience because the children have no contact with any culture except what is brought in ," he added. The trip was sponsored in part by Aramco, a Saudi Arabian oil company, and the American schools visited by the ASU team. The other faculty on the trip were Dr. George Umbers on, director of the ASU School of Music; Dr. Robert Miller, assistant director; and Dr. Robert Flemming, associate director of bands at ASU. Two former U .S. hostages’ children attending one of Tuesday, February 3,1981 State Press Page 11 INTERVIEWING? The Roberts Discount Clothing Co. can dress you properly at a price you can afford. Designer and brand name suits from $124.99. • Pierre Cardin • Yves Saint Laurent • Brookfield • Cricketeer lí B B IIIIIB W ^ ............ Brooks looks for M ajor stay By Kevin Widlic With all the hoopla in New York over the signing of baseball superstar Dave Winfield to the Yankees, another younger star is hoping for the same future in the same town. Hubie Brooks, in the New York Met organization, was in Tempe Sunday for the annual ASU-Alumni baseball exhibi tion. The former shortstop for ASU Coach Jim Brock's baseball championship team in 1977, and national runnerup team in '78, has found the going tough in rising to major league status. After being the third player chosen in the 1979 draft. Brooks took his glittering statistics not to New York, but to Jackson, Miss., in the AA Texas League. And the problems Brooks en­ countered weren't only on the diamond, but also with the old black/white racial troubles. “ It was really hard going to a place like that. I'd never seen things like it before,” Brooks said. “ The fans were such diehard fans, I guess they expected so much out of a person that’s been so highly talked about — maybe I just wasn't what they thought," he added. "That was only for the first half of the season, though, the second half was just fine. “ Here there’s nothing like that.” Brooks played in 112 games for Jackson, hitting .305 while scoring 68 runs and stealing 14 bases. But he also made another change, moving from shortstop to third base. continued page 14 Hours Mon . Thurs . F rM O fo 9 Tues., Wed., Set 10 to 6 Sun. Noon to 5 »Fast, expert alterations 10% OFF With This Ad "Why should they play a guy who's 30 years old and not give me an opportunity to play, when I can contribute a little bit more?" —Hubie Brooks m Poca Kieeui O n t c r DISCOUNT CLOTHING 1130 W , Southern A ve (N e x t to Sobo ») Mena • 834-3764 Locally ownad. operated 4 affiliated with Robert» Tire» and Tri-State Tire». Sub H at ZjoekStyle (Vim ndw ictus \r 14" 16" H—«Mf p«pp«l real Ha Ha m*r fir — Pepper Otala— Teay*» Wpealel I I I I I I *po O FF 4 25 5 10 510 510 510 510 5 10 510 5 10 510 510 510 4 75 575 575 575 575 5 75 575 5 75 575 5 75 5 75 575 900 75 85 100 700 800 Me»e*4 beef 1'eMrwni II.MM a I It««*« 4 ..ntl».. T2on-mext subs t i’g«fartM MU»**«— 4 It«««« b tMteitnM*« WE DELIVER H írtH m u fttyte - Iloable tbleb en— •I MI evira ANY LA R G E 16~ PIZZA A FTER 5 P .M 50c Delivery Charge OPEN EOR LUNCH VALID ON DELIVERY “1 l i e F i n e s t P i z z a I n One Coupon Per Customer Expires 2/9/81. ■ — jfddim un J 75 4 50 4 50 4 50 4 50 450 4 50 450 450 4 50 4.50 4 50 monger. T e m p e !" •♦+} Specialties d n the house {+♦* itrmd ».RO .... lili am II pcppi IS. Iilut Urrliv. - uu .ul.till- N tin.//¡lit W«*‘l«* all A «OXCivil '.Mill Ilium III.Ilk -I Mtain lit NiMH* 4.M . i t » t m ii-.liiii< iiiis, N iiitis /u rt Hu cln • -* « n tji|H 'I m fiiixU -iDialum mu., , «. iiiimiiui Veaet ar ian ss.».»* Ask about vegetarian . * non_meat foodour ilems. 967-3073 ★ «1*• AM ,mmin..i,in-., M m 1»nh.«- •»finmis. limn N -*do A. AO 606 S. IVIill if 967-2941 NO C H E C K S , PLEA SE ....... «lim...................................... W ARM WATERBEDS. Hubie Brooks rf RICH DUNCAN'S AUTOM OTIVE SERVICE 1850 E. First St., Tempe _________ 967-4851_________ Improve gas m ileage M E X IC A N BEACH RESORTS BEYO N D YO U R WILDEST DREAMS. with a professional tune-up. I Engine Tune-up *21.95 + PARTS Most 4 cyl. cars 6 cyl. $25.95 8 cyl. $32.95 N 1st Street 3rd St. ■ River Bottom ~im~ State Registered Emissions Analyzer Hayden Road Perry Lane i • Install New Spark Plugs •C o m p ressio n Test • Install New Points & C ondenser • Set Tim in g, Dwell & C arburetor' •C h eck Em issions • Road Test University Price Road Includes: \bur cares will float away in the soothing warmth o f Mexico's Pacific waters. It's only a few short hours away. Just pick a 4 day/3 night dream vacation. Then pick up Continental’s watered-down airfare. And you’ ll be sailing away with one o f the best bargains in Mexico. For details or reservations call your travel agent or Continental Airlines at 258-8911. L A P A Z . STAYAJ EL PRESIDENT! SUR. $79. Sightsee this historical city overlooking the glittering Sea o f Cortez. Then dive into every watersport under the sun. From deep sea fishing to waterskiing. City tour included. M A N ZA N ILLO . TENM SOL/CLUB SA N T IA G O . $109 Enjoy the rustic charm of this sleepy A ll prices quoted per person, double occupancy. A irfa re not included fishing port village. Or thrill to jetset life. Stay at Las Hadas with its own nightclubs, 2(X) foot lagoonshaped swimming pools, miniature tropical islands, exotic birds and swimup bars—for as low as $259. PUERTO VALLARTA STAY AT PLA ZA LAS G LO R IA S. $119 Discover this luxurious resort amid sun-drenched beaches and tropical jungles. Also a romantic sunset cruise on the beautiful Bay of Banderas complete with mariachis and open bar. C A B O SAN LU CA S. STAY AT HOTEL SO LM A R . $129 Walk on your own private beach for hours without seeing a soul. Or get into a gotxi water fight. This sport fishing paradise teems with marlin, sail fish and dorado. For added excitement, you'll take a boat trip through natural rock arches flanking Cabo. "ices subject to cluinyc w ithout prior notice. Seasonal surcharge nwv apply The Proud Bird with the Golden Tail. CONTINENTAL A IRLIN ES# U.S.A. Canada/Mexico/Hawaii/MicronesiaAustralia/New Zealand/Fiji/Samoa, and the Orient. Page 12 State Press Tuesday, February 3,1981 NCAA programcries out for assistance By Pete Pritco When athletes receive scholarships for their talents in their respective sports, they immediately are on the receiving end of a free education, as well as free room and board. In other words it’s receive, receive, receive. But now, through a new program being started here at ASU, the athletes can begin to give some, too The NCAA Volunteer For Youth program is the perfect place for the athletes to begin. What this program does is to set up kids, not necessari­ ly underpriviged ones, with an athlete on a one to one basis. Sort of like the Big Brother and Big Sister pro­ grams. "We want the athletes to give these kids, of all socioeconomic backrounds, someone to look up to,” said Bob Schaefer, who serves as one of four national directors of the organization. "These kids are kids that could use a little boost,” Schaefer said. “ So we assign athletes to help make a good impression on these kids, because they somehow look up to the college athlete. ” Sch aefer, along with Audrey West, is here to set up the program, which is already on 44 campuses throughout the country. “ If any ASU athletes are interested in working with kids, we would love to have them,” Schaefer said. “ But I would like to warn them that there is some time commit­ ment.” But Schaefer, who par­ ticipated in the program while playing hockey and tennis at Miami of Ohio University, says the relacontinued page 13 Looking Great!! Feeling Good!! 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Tuesday, February 3, 1981 S tate Press Page 13 MLEriss. a Ami*y College basketball i f LSAT getting exploited? &GMAT More about Youth continued from page 12 tionship that the athlete will acquire with the youngster will be very rewarding. “ I was the studentdirector at my campus, but I also was matched with an eighth-grade boy," Schaefer said. "H e was the only child in his fam ily, and his parents were older people. So he needed someone he could relate to better. “ We would go play tennis, skate or even go to a Cincin­ nati Reds gam e," he said. “ I spent a year and a half with the youngster and it was a very rewarding experience. In fact we still keep in touch." The V F Y (the name the program goes by) was started on the campus of Stanford University, when it was first called the Stanford Youth Program. One of the first par­ ticipants of that program was a football player, who has just recently made some big waves in the media circle —Jim Plunkett. “ Plunkett was involved with the program in 1969," S c h a e fe r s a id . “ A lso Reginald King, now playing with the Kansas City Kings, was involved with the pro­ gram while at the University of Alabam a." Because the program is run by the N CAA, any athlete that chooses to work with the program has access to all campus facilities for recreational purpose. Also if the athlete wants to take the youngster to an ASU athletic event, they can receive com­ plimentary tickets from the athletic department. “ We know that this is a total volunteer program, so we do the best we can for the athletes to make it fun for the kids," Schaefer said. “ We are going to raise funds, so that if an athlete spends some money on say dinner, he can be reimbursed. ” If any ASU athlete is in­ terested in the program, there will be an organiza­ tional meeting 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the football lounge located in the Univer­ sity Activity Center. “ This is a good chance for the athlete to give a little of themselves,” Schaefer said. “ College is a time where all we think about is me, me, me. This program helps them to think more than just about themselves." For the many lonely kids in the valley, we can only hope that the ASU athletes will take this program with more than just a grain of salt. It's not unusual that all dif- from its original 32 teams to ferent parts of the country an unheard of 40 teams? favor one collegiate basketWith this increase, college b a ll c o n fe re n c e over basketball's regular season another means less and less — much With all the many different like that of the National Association, conferences around the B asketball country, it is not hard to see where more than half of the why the competition is at it’s league's teams (12 of 23) best and players become make it to the playoffs. The regular season has more prominent. Let's face it, there are a lot of great col­ now turned into a mere struggle for bragging rights lege basketball teams today. But why must the National in each conference, as many Collegiate Athletic Associa­ of the teams from the difcontinued pro« 15 tion tournament expand 4C Full ( H Service B S Copies* V S 3C Self Service Copies Becom e an A lphaG raphlcs University C lub M em ber! 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Anache fin Tempe) Page 14 State Press Tuesday, February 3,1981 More about ASU graduate hopes to stay in the majors continued from pogo 11 “ I enjoy it (at third). That’s where I ’m going to make it at for the Mete,” he said. “ It’s strange, though. One year you play one position, the next year you play another position, and the next year you play another position. I can’t fight it.” Brooks holds many records at ASU , among those is the highest career batting average of .396. He also had two long hitting streaks in 1978, of 36 and 24 games (both in a 68 game season). Brooks cracked out 126 hits in '78, which still stands as an NCAA record “ I enjoyed every minute of it here. By leaving here and go­ ing there (Jackson) was kind of a letdown,” he said. “ Things just weren't that good there. “ Ju st being a minor league ball player is sorta tough to handle.” The speedy Brooks started last season in Jackson before advancing to the AAA Tidewater Tides and finishing September for the Mete in the Big Apple. “ It looks good. I should make it this year at third, but there’s one thing,” Brooks said. “ They signed Mike Cubbage, a seven-year veteran, at the age of 30, which has never played on a regular basis in the major leagues. “ I look at it like this. I’m much younger, I can give ’em a good 10-15 years. Why should they play a guy who’s 30 years old and not give me an opportunity to play, when I can con­ tribute a little bit more? “ I really think I can, but . . . ” Brooks’ two-year stint for the Sun Devils was played alongside keystone mate Bobby Horner. Horner was drafted first in 1979, two players ahead of Hubie. However, while Brooks was toiling in the minors, Horner was drilling major league pitchers for the Atlanta Braves. Horner eventually was named National League Rookie-ofthe-Year and gained instant star recognition. “ I ’m glad for Bob,” Brooks said. “ You have to look at it from the draft. You have to say — what does a ball club need? In Atlanta's situation, they need­ ed Bob. In New York’s situation, they really didn’t need me that badly because they didn’t know what they needed. “ I ’m still happy for Bob, anything he does. It’s nice for peo­ ple to say I played next to him during a lot of his amateur days,” he said. “ It makes me and everyone here at ASU, and their pro­ gram, look better.” Brooks started in left field for the Alumni Sunday, during their 16-8 defeat at the hands of this year’s Devil squad. Com­ ing back to Tempe to visit old mentors and friends was quite a thrill for the up-and-coming Hubie Brooks. “ It’s beautiful here. You see people around you who really care. That’s something that’s lacking in professional ball. On the professional level people don’t really care, sometimes it’s a numbers game, sometimes it’s strictly business,” Brooks said. “ I ’m just glad I didn’t play in the minor leagues for five or six years. “ I ’m glad that Coach Brock gave me the opportunity to play here,” he added. “ Being here is generally close to the big leagues. “ I ’d never trade my collegiate career for anthing else in the world, nothing at a ll.” TH E ULTIMATE TAN // i ou ve got it w f 77 help vou * k eepi‘- . . I f you don t we II help you get ------------- ELECTROLYSIS Introductory Offer 50% OFF Treatment Bring Ad For Student Discount At Tanfastic our revolutionary new ultraviolet tanning technique will help you get the look you want and keep it! After only 10 visits you will develop a good base tan. Then, you have 10 more visits to maintain your golden look. 20 visit program is only $35. Call about FREE complimentaryvisit 75 CALL FOR APPOINTM ENT 969-6186 , ,> 1 \\ Expires 2-9-81. ASU • 1406 E. Broadway Mesa _J O FF Your Choice of Flavors Limit 3 per coupon. PROFESSIONAL ELECTROLYSIS of BROADWAY 915 E. BROADWAY (at RURAL) LUCKY CENTER—TEMPE—966-8950 Expires 4/14/81. Valentine's Specials AT YO UR LOCAL FIRESTONE STORE McClintock & Apache 966-7206 SAVE? SAVE? Prices Reduced? Prices Reduced? -------------------------------------------------1 LUBE, OIL & FILTER O ur autom otive pros w ill lubri­ cate your car’s chassis, drain old oil and add up to five quarts of new oil, plus install a new Firestone oil filter. Call for an ap po intm en t. L GAS SAVING TUNE-UP PLUS LUBE & OIL CHANGE W e ’ll install new resistor plugs, ignition points and condenser; adjust carburetor; set point dw ell and tim ing; test battery and charging system s. W e ’ll also lubricate car’s chassis and add up to five quarts of new o il. FRONT END ALIGNMENT QW 88 | MOST ______ CARS__ 4 CYL. Reg. $40.00 $40001 AO I 6 CYL $4C00! Reg. $48.00 All Am erican cars except Chevettes and com pacts with front wheel drive a n d /o r M acPherson suspension. Parts extra if needed. IN C LU D E S: Factory pre-arced lin ing s, R ebuilt wheel cylinders & calipers, Resur­ faced brake drum s and rotors, Re­ packed front wheel bearings. M aster cylinder inspection, N ew return spring co m b ikit and new disc m oun t­ ing hardware, Inspect brake hose, bleeding system and adding fluid, and road test car. 30,000/3 YEAR LIMITED WARRANTY DISK/DRUM BRAKE OVERHAUL T h is t ir e i s PRICED RIGHT? FIRESTONE DELUXE CHAMPION POLYESTER CORD . S f T f T Q J m iJ A g Wilshire Plaza/2515 N. Scottsdale Rd., Suite 2 Open Mon.-Fri. 9-8 p.m. • Sat. 9-4 p.m. • 949-9339 LARGE (24 oz.) SHAKES, FLOATS or SODAS Professional Permanent Removal For Men and Women •Face «Legs «Arms «Body $C00 O EI E I2 Bp I it. KITcSlE* The Hair You Hate Gone Forever s Size Black P155/80D13 24 B78-13 27 •08-13 29 A78A13 08-14 29 D78-I4 30 blackw all E78-14 31 PLU SF.E.T. 1.48 F78-14 34 AND OLD TIRE 5-RIB THREAD F tr 1.49 1.77 1.94 1.92 1 96 2.12 2.23 S»2e Black f LT 5.80-15 164 30 1.71 6.00- 1’iL 31 F78-15 2.31 34 G 78-15 2.46 36 H78-15 2.66 38 2.96 L78 15 41 Price» plu. ux end old tire ‘ 5 - r ib tre a d W h ite w a lls l o i p ric e d to o ' ALL OFFERS EXPIRE FEB. 14, 1981. OO I Tuesday, February 3,1981 State Press Page 15 More about The STATE PRESS disclaims all responsibility for quality and prices of goods and services offered in both classified and display advertising by its advertisers. Hoops CLASSIFIEDS conttmud from p tg t 13 ferent leagues make it to the tourney (either NCAA or Na­ tional Invitational Tourna­ ment) without having to win their conference. The influx of more teams into the college postseason tourneys seems as if the NCAA and the N IT commit­ tees are only hyping the sport of college basketball as if it were merely show. At this juncture is where we must draw the line. College hoops is exciting in itself and draws people from all over to not only witness a basketball game, but also revive their old college spirit that much of them surely miss. Thousands of fans pack sometimes tiny arenas to see their favorite team play the enemy just to go crazy for two hours, and when it’s over, say how nice it was forgetting the world for the afternoon or evening. So why must the college sport be hyped? Moola. The more the sport is hyped, the more the teams are televised and the more money the schools pull in. To a true-blue college basketball fan, seeing athletic departments and the NCAA looking at the game only for monetary benefit is sickening. The same goes for the networks that televise the events. Why does it have to turn in­ to big business? Why do teams go overboard in recruiting top-name players just to put together a team that will get televised every other week (and sometimes more)? Because in the process, the institutions pretend they’re doing it for the good of the game and the good of col­ legiate athletics. And what’s worse is they play on the fans’ emotions — everyone wants to pull for a winner. Too much emphasis has been placed on winning. Win­ ning is the best — if your pro­ gram, not just your team, is the best. Go ahead, pump up the amount of teams in the tour­ naments so we can all see our favorites in there. The great teams will breeze to the final of their respective regionals, if not the final four, when we should be seeing teams like Indiana (Big 10 leader) and DePaul face each other in the opening rounds. Announccmcnt« FREE TALK ON “Christ — The Light Shining In Darkness” February 6,1981 12:00 Noon East Cochise Room Memorial Union A qu estion and answ er ses­ sion w ill follow the talk sponsored by The Christian Science O rganization at ASU 2 /4 Automobiles 1976 PORSCHE 914/2.0. Beautiful metallic blue. Tan interior. Excellent condition. One owner. Air, mags, full equipment. 98175 by owner, 839*9858. Poommote FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted. 2-bath, 2-bedroom apartment, furnished. 9230. Pool end utilities included. Clubhouse. jacuzzl. 839*8384__ __ __ FUN WORK, cosm etic counter, no ex­ perience, flexible hours. Cali today 9583700, Valley Reporters._______________ FEMALE HOUSEMATE to share 4-bdrm home located only 1 mile west of ASU (near Universtty/Prteat). Private room, air conditioned, w ash e r/d rye r, dishw asher, fenced yard, garage storage $ 1 10/month, 'A utilities. Cali Fred, Sylvia or Kevin at 894-6881 after 6 p.m._________________________ _____ UNIQUELY FURNISHED studio, 9130 monthly, near ahopping, busing, 950* 3700, Vailay Reporters, 2226 S. McClin* toclt. WESTERN STYLE 2-bedroom, 9175 monthly or lease. Immediate occupan­ cy. For details, 956*3730, Valley Reporters.__________ __________ SPRING SPECIAL 1st m onth's rent 'h price. S tudios, 1-bedroom . 2-bed­ room , 2-bath. N ear ASU - M otorola and shopping. Security deposit fully refundable. 833-2511 or 833-7186 5 /1 1974 VW. 92.000. Negotiable. 894*9283 For Sole Babysitting wanted BABYSITTING: FACULTY wife and mom will look after one or two more. Ex­ social worker and child care specialist. 839*5438. D ay Care STUDENTS CHILD Care Center has five full'time openings for children 2 and 3 years old. Call 894-9370._____________ AAA PROPERTIES end Loan G.I., one dollar down, rent with option to buy. Home near ASU. Try 9496.997-7155. 1953 STREAMLINE TRAILER, 28x8. ex­ cellent condition, ideal for student. Call _____ after 5 p.m., 831-8802. Sewing Machine, Free Arm. 1981 deluxe model — does everything. New — full orig­ inel guerentee. Coet $499.00. Will sacrifice, $105.00. Call 948-8448, Private Home. 5/1 For Rent/Leose ALL UTILITIES paid, furnished studio and one bedroom. Campus Inn Apts., a stone’s throw from Lew College. 628 E. Apache, 968*8110.___________________ 995 ALL UTILITIES included. Prime location, available now. Don’t miss. 9563700, Valley Reporters._______________ CLOSE TO campus, 3 blocks, one bedroom apartment, x-large, nicely fur­ nished with all utilities paid. Bail Lanai Apartments, 1137 E. Orange, 966*9531. EXTRA NICE 3-bedroom, large kitchen, refrigerator, stove, dishwasher, much more. 958-3700, Valley Reporters._____ 9180 RENTS CLEAN cottage. Great for couple or singles. All modem appliancea. 958-3700, Valley Reporters. SUPER 2-3 bedroom, only $200 mon­ thly. Yard for kids and pets. Call 9563700, Valley Reporters._______________ Don’t languish at lunch! For great food and talk, try TUESDAY LUNCH at Baker Center. 11:30 a.m . to 1 p.m. ONLY ___ 99c '( $4 HILLEL 967-7563 SALE Barb*/ Doik Room 202A E. UNIVERSITY ENLARGEMENTS ,17c 1.00 2.50 7.75 H elp Wonted EARN GOOD money! Flexible hours for students. Part- or full-time available from Tempe office. Mr Stevens at 987 8680.______________________________ Fam ily and adult area. 2 pools, 2 laundry room s, play­ ground. SALE FROM YOUR NEGATIVE For Bent/leo«e SHADY YARD, 9230. Private home, available now. Small deposit, nice quiet area. 996-3700^alley Reporter!.______ H elp Wonted AUTO MECHANIC, starting $7.00 hour­ ly, some experience required. 958-3700. Valley Reporters. 2228 S. McClintock, Suite 200.__________________________ ATTN: COLLEGE srs. and grads. Sales with mobility toward management. Teaching, coaching, sales exp. helpful, but not necessary. All expense paid training program, full corporate benefits. Send resume to: Valley Con­ cepts, Inc., 740 E. Flynn Lane, Phoenix, Arizona 85014, Attn: Personnel._______ BLUE JEANS ok, light typing, good phone voice. Apply today. 958-3700, Valley Reporter«.__________________ _ 30c 2.00 4.00 9.95 MUSIC MAJOR to do basic lead sheets from cassette tape recording. Call Randy, 253*0864.________________________ PART TIME PEOPLE for phone work. Monday-Friday. 5-9 p.m. 40th St. and Broadway area. Call Julia, 3*5 p.m., 243* 7127. Hourly wage and commiaaton. PART TIME CLERICAL help! We can work around your hours. Walking distance from college. Call Diane. 9678011.______________________________ STUDENTS CHILD Care Center needs two child care workers, work study qualified; 11*3 and 1:30*5:30. Call 8949370.______________________________ TELEPHONE FUN, gals with mature voice, part-time 12 to 4 and 4 to 8. 93.50 hour. Call 231-0470.__________________ WORK STUDY students needed for an­ nual tela fund. Hours 8-10 p.m. Mon.Thurs. On campus at Development Center. Call Karan or Joe, 985*7501. WANTED: FEMALE haircutting models for Olympic Halrcutters. 968*2679. J ewelry PAYING HIGHEST prices for scrap gold. 10K—89/DWT, 14K— 129/DWT, 18K— 169/DWT Also buying diamonds, silver coins and sterling flatware. Free in-home estimates. 988-8637. Lo»t/Found LOST! GOLD Sieko watch between Neeb Hall and corner of Mill-University Anne, 894*0347. Reward._____________ LOST. WEDDING ring on January 28, in the Business Administration Building. 9200 reward. Call 973-1568. M iscellaneous OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer/year round. Europe, S. A m er, Australia, Asia. All fields. 9500-91,200 monthly. Sightsee­ ing. Free info, write: IJC, Box 52-AZ3. Corona Del Mar, CA 92625. M otorcycles HONDA CB 125S, excellent condition; includes two helmets; gets 120 mpg. Great buy! Call Kathy after 5 p.m. 9500 (only has 2,500 miles). 894-0920._______ Personal BABYSITTER/HOUSEKEEPER wanted. Light housecleaning; cook suppers; "supervise” two teenagers 14 years and 16 years old, 3*6 p.m. M*F. Must have car and references. 945/week and er­ rand mileage and suppers. Call Stefan ie, 244-5130 or 244-4995 (work), or 838*1843 (home).____________________ HELP! WE are graduate students work­ ing on a research project regarding adolescent pregnancy and educational attainment. If you gave birth as an adolescent, ages 19 or younger, are presently attending ASU, and are will­ ing to take part in a 15-minute interview, contact: Karen Turanchik, 831-7819, or Michele Coils, 965-8782. Everything will be confidential._____________________ EASY MONEY and evening hours. Can you guess the job? Wrong! It’s telephone sales, immediate openings. 968-4853. MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE rates too high? Best rates for preferred or high risk. Call Steve, 287-0799. Lundell Inaurance Agency.____________________ DO YOU HAVE VISION PROBLEMS? WE HAVE THE AFFORDABLE SOLUTION! CONTACT LENSES GLASSES 89.95 STUDENT DISCOUNT * FROM YOUR SLIDES 3x5 5x7 8x10 11 x 1 4 Storio Component System 1981 model still In un-epened carton. AM/FM storno rodio, B.S.R. turntable, cassette player, recorder, speakers. Full original guarantee. Cost S3S0.00. Must sell lor $165.00. Call «40-5440. Private Home. 5/1 GENERAL EXPERIENCE, light typing, $5.00 hourly, great atmosphere, now hir­ ing. 958*3700, Valley Reporters 20 % 2000 G en eral Exam * Contact Lens Exam * 3000 whm FEMALE: CLOSE to ASM ^ oom m large t h '* * * tment. 9115/mo - wiectric. Two heated pools. Regena or Lias, 894-8100. jw n r oom HAVE OWN ROOM mshed Washei C » N c e 8318, 9 8 - v . z i or om fur- U -E - ' ASU. 831- LANDLORDS AND renters!! Finding apartment cost draining your pockets? Cut expenses, share with a roommate. Call A&R Roommate Service, 241-0811. OWN ROOM in 4-bedroom house. Pool, washer, dryer. 9118 plus v* utilities. Male or female. Roommate Rob, Marty. Tim, 987-2336.______________________ NEW Proof Sheets Black & White or Color Overnight 2x3 Poster ’ from Black & White or Color Prints *9.95 Valid thru 2-14-81. B R IN G AD W ITH ORD ER 120 E. University Tempe, AZ "In the Arches" 966-9006 W E ACCEPT VISA & MASTER CHARGE CHIMNEY FIRE Don’t risk one. Call the Village Chimney Sweep for a free in­ spection 248*3535. T ravel ORIVE CARS free to most points of the United States, over 21. Scheall Driveaway, 991-5533. LOW LOW AIRFARES C all S undance Travel fo r free travel service to H aw aii, M exico , Europe, O rien t, and A frica. C all M esa 835-6888, or S cottsd ale 949-1118. 2 /4 Typing A-1 WORK. Close to ASU. IBM Salactrie. Reasonable. Mrs. Oakley, 987-0802. ACCURATE AND neat typing. 91.00 per page. Very close to campus on Apache. Lisa, 988-5558______________________ ROOMMATERS: ROOMMATE referral service. Cut rant in half! All ages, tastes, backgrounds. 910.50 with place, $7.10 without place. Call 982*1110. ACCURATE TYPING: spelling, grammar and punctuation. Special one-day ser­ vice for procrastinators! Call Joan, 8390772.______________________________ ROOMMATES WANTED Four bedroom townhouse, Scottsdale. $17S/month and share utilitie s. Call Roger, 994-1824. ACADEMIC TYPING. Dissertations, term papers, manuscripts, typing in Spanish. General, scientific, medical, technical. Cyndy, 988-3827___________ ROOMMATES WANTED for three bedroom, two bath, beautiful, newly fur­ nished condominium. Pools, tennis courts, microwave, dishwasher, washer/dryer, and other extras. Will be ready for three nice responsible girls. February 23rd-March 1st. $150/2 people 1-bedroom; $200/1 person own bedroom. 982*0580.__________________ ROOMMATE WANTED, male or female. Unfurnished room near school. Very neat. 9100 plus V!> utilities. Contact Kurt, 839*2841 nights.________________ SUPER SPECIAL for a non-smoker All your housing expenses for only 9129/monthl Includes furnished room in private home, 1Vfe mile from ASU. All utilities, phone, kitchen, laundry, no lease. 9888288._____________________ SHARE THREE bedroom, 2-bath townhouse one mile from ASU. Washer/dryer, pool, dishwasher, lots more! 9175/month includes utilities. 894-0203.___________________________ ARE YOU the type? If not. call LuAnn. IBM Selectric. All work guaranteed. 9664103.____________________________ _ A-1 PROFESSIONAL typing near cam­ pus. Dissertations, term papers, etc. New IBM Electronic. 91.00/page. Linda. 967-4908. BETTER TYPING. Business degree. Four years experience. IBM Correcting Selectric. McClintock and Baseline location. 839*8028.___________________ CUSTOM TYPING. Correcting Selectric. Barbara, 340 E. Balboa, off Collage between Broadway and Southern. 9660961._______________________________ FAST, ACCURATE typing. Self correc­ ting typewriter. Call Sallee, 968-8791 or 989-5257 after 5,_____________________ TWO ROOMS for rent in 3-bedroom house, 1200 block of W. 9th. 9150 per month plus Vt utilities. 994-4597.______ PROFESSIONAL PREPARATION of term papers, theses, dissertations, manuscripts, resumes and application letters. Reasonable rates. The Writing Center, a word processing service bureau. 201 East Southern #206, Tempe. 894-9689.____________________ Service« TYPING, NEAR ASU. Research papers, theses, dissertations. English degree. Editing. Seven years experience. 9674443._______________________________ CUSTOM SCREEN printed. T-shirts for your club or organization. Call Bruce at 968*4407 evenings.__________________ GOOD STUDENTS qualify save 25% on auto insurance, non-smokers 18%. Call Steve Lundell, ASU Representative, Farmers Insurance, 835*1480. TYPING: CORRECTING Selectric. Theses, term papers, etc. Call Pam, 969* 2098._______________________________ TYPING, 91.00 PAGE. Broadway and McClintock. Lisa, 967*3243, leave message.___________________________ W onted Have unwanted facial or body hair removed permanently by electrolysis. FREE consults* tion. Loceted In Tempe. Cell Sheron, 839-1885. Ask for your studont discount. CASH FOR gold, diamonds, silver, pocket watches, old jewelry. Mill Ave. Jewelers, 968*5967.__________________ NEED MONEY? Paying top prices for gold jewelry, class rings, diamonds, silver coins, etc. Free in-home estimates. Call anytime. Joe, 988*8637. 2 /2 7 f G o o d Egg O m elettes Ï | I I ONLY 1*39 lean ham H A M and CHEESE . . ■O RIENTAL I Good 7®30am6 -1 1 :0 0 a m | . . . your choice, and served w / Toasted Bagel | DENVER . . DR. BRUCE T. WAGNER Services | ham chunks, fresh green pepper I and onion. shrim p, S w iss cheese and I bean sprouts. 120 E. University (in the Arches] Tempe, Az. OPEN M -F 7:30 am - 5 pm W eekends 9 am - 5 pm u bast fc c c tc y Page 16 State Press Tuesday, February 3,1981 Gymnasts e y e ' Husker m eet By Tony Alba The ASU men’s gymnastics team may face its stiffest test of the season when they entertain the University of Nebraska Cornhuskers at 2 p.m. Sunday in the University Activity Center, according to ASU head Coach Don Robinson. “ They are a very strong team with few weak spots,” Robinson said. “ Hopefully they ’ll make a few mistakes. "This year’s Nebraska team may be just as strong as last year’s national championship team .” Nebraska is led by all-around performers Phil Cahoy, Jim Mikus, Jam es Hartung, and Scott Johnson and by Steve Elliot in the floor exercises. Robinson feels that Elliot is one of the best tumblers in the world today, but he and Hartung are questionable for the meet. “ Elliot has a diving meet against Oklahoma on Saturday,” Nebraska head Coach Francis Allen said. “ If the meet ends early, he’ll fly into Tempe, otherwise he won’t make the trip.” Hartung is still recovering from an ankle dislocation suf­ fered two weeks ago, so it is still not known to what extent he will participate. Nebraska is coming off a loss to Iowa State, while ASU is coming off a second-place finish to U CLA in a six-way meet last weekend. ASU finished ahead of UA, New Mexico, Loui­ siana State and Minnesota in the meet. Robinson feels that it was a good meet to have for his gym ­ nasts. “ We found out how tough U CLA is, but we also know now that we can beat them,” he said. “ We performed well, but we’ll have to do better against Nebraska to beat them. ’' ASU was ranked fourth in the nation on points last week behind Iowa State, Oklahoma and UCLA. ASU assistant coach and former Olympic gold medalist Kurt Thomas will play a key role in helping the team prepare for Nebraska. Robinson feels that Thomas has contributed greatly to the gymnastics program. “ Kurt is a superstar,” he said. “ He has helped strengthen us in every aspect. He is known in just about every country in the world which gives us an international program. ’ ’ Robinson thinks that a large turnout will help A SU ’s chances against Nebraska. “ I would like to appeal to everyone, particularly the students, to come out and attend this meet and all of our meets,” he said. “ If people would just come and see us once, our program would sell itself. Each and every year, new ^ gold fashions come * in and your old gold jewelry becomes outdated .unstylish! So, why let your old gold styles just sit and collect dust? Cash-In at top dollar values! * Bring in your unwanted gold jewelry & we'll aive you CASH...the highest prices paid for ■ r_ ,Æ . SSe^nûza JEWELRY DIAMOND CUTTING 130 E. U N IV E R S ITY , TEM PE • 967-8917 "In the Arches" M EM BER A M E R IC A N G E M S O C IE T Y ( A c / * ) The career decision youm ake today could influence national security tom orrow Tom H art Staff photo by Lara Jonas CONTACT LENSES * 7 SOFT 4 10% DISCOUNT ON FRAMES 9 5 10% For Most Soft Lenses SMSHT KUIflT br aast SIFTURSS DISCOUNT ON LENSES OR GLASSES $ 7 9 9 5 OUR NEW LOCATION INCLUDESAN OUTSTANDING FRAME DISPLAY HARD TRIAL W EARING PERIOD FOR CONTACT LENSES •S oft Contact Lenses For Astigmatism Available •Professional Fee Not Included Fill your doctor's prescription. FOR APPOINTMENT OR INFORMATION EYE EXA M 941 5228 DR. W.G. AMES O P T O M E T R IS T 2 * 3 6 6 6 N. MILLER RD. mSm S u ite 114 S c o tts d a le OPEN FOR GLASSES Tu ♦18 Sal ^ v L Y F , i> L ^A ^ Invites You H TC » To Pig Out Philadelphia Style With This LATE LUNCH SPECIAL COUPON After 2:00 Expires Feb. 20, 1981 Check Daily Selections For A Chance To Save Up To $1.00 TOWER CENTER CORNER OF UNIVERSITY A MYRTLE 966-9479 communicapons-related problems, performing longrange mathematical rosearch or evaluating new For professionals at NSA contribute to the dual missions of foreign intelligence production and communications security Our Electronic Engineers, Computer Scientists and Mathematicians are working with systems at the cutting edge of technology. Career opportunities and challenge await you in any of these NSA career fiekh. Electronic Engineering: There are oppor (unities in a variety of research and development projects ranging bom Individual equipments to very complex interactive systems involving large numbers of microprocessors, mini-computers and computer graphics Professional growth is enhanced through interaction with highly experienced NSA professionals and through contacB in the industrial and academic worlds Facilities for engineering analysis and design automation are among the best available. Caaptrtcr Science: At NSA you'll discover one of the largest computer installations in the world with! almost every major vendor of computer equipment represented. NSA careers provide mixtures of such discipline as systems analysis and design, scientific applications programming, data base management systems, operating systems, computer networiting/ security and graphics. M athcaM teka: You'II work on diverse Agency problems applying a variety of mathematical disci­ pline. Specific asagnments might include solving technique for communications security. UagaJftK NSA oilers a wide range of challeng­ ing assignments for Slavic, Near Eastern and Asian language majors involving translation, transcription and analysts/reporting Newly-hired linguists can court on receiving atfeanoed training in their primary language and can plan on many years of continued professional growth NSA also offers a salary and benefit program that's truly competitive with private industry There are asagnments for those who wish to travel and abundant good living in the Baltimore-WashmjJon area for those who wish to stay close to home Counties cukural. historical, recreational and educational opportunitie are just minute away from NSAs convenient suburban location At NSA your figure will be United to the nations. The vital role that the National Security Agency plays demands and ensures constant challenge and profes­ sional growth 1b find out more about NSA career opportunitie. schedule an interview through your college placement office. For additional information on the National I i Security Agency, fill in the information blank below and send it to Mr. Bernard Sorrell, College Recruit­ ment Manager. National Security Agency Atm Office of Employment (M32R), Fort George G Meade, Maryland 20755. An Equal Opportunity Employer. U.S citizenship required. The National ( ^ ’¡ S e c u r i t y Agency More than ju st a career. [" i d like mow intormaiioo about carter opportunities with NSA • Name (print) --------------------------- — —— ............. I Address ----------------------------------• ---------------- _________ _________ Phone No -------------------Degree L m i. . I mversitv ................... to * ..—-